summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--14908-8.txt3916
-rw-r--r--14908-8.zipbin0 -> 58641 bytes
-rw-r--r--14908-h.zipbin0 -> 61978 bytes
-rw-r--r--14908-h/14908-h.htm4001
-rw-r--r--14908.txt3916
-rw-r--r--14908.zipbin0 -> 58616 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
9 files changed, 11849 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/14908-8.txt b/14908-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b0d595a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/14908-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,3916 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections of Bytown and Its Old
+Inhabitants, by William Pittman Lett
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Recollections of Bytown and Its Old Inhabitants
+
+Author: William Pittman Lett
+
+Release Date: February 4, 2005 [EBook #14908]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS OF BYTOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ RECOLLECTIONS
+
+ OF
+
+ BYTOWN
+
+ AND ITS
+
+ OLD INHABITANTS
+
+ BY
+
+ WILLIAM PITTMAN LETT.
+
+ OTTAWA:
+
+ "CITIZIEN" PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY, SPARKS STREET
+
+ 1874.
+
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+As no book, small or great--gay or grave, witty or sublime, scientific,
+dramatic, poetic, tragic, historical, metaphysical, philosophical,
+polemical, wise or otherwise--can be considered complete, particularly
+at the beginning, without a preface; I have deemed it expedient that the
+contents of the following pages should be dignified by a few lines of an
+introductory nature.
+
+It was not my intention when I commenced these reminiscences to publish
+them in their present form, neither had I any idea of their extending
+beyond a few hundred lines. That I have changed my mind is entirely
+owing to the solicitations of friends desirous of having them in compact
+shape, and not to any particular ambition of my own to write a book.
+
+I do not pretend to present the reader with anything perfect in rhythm,
+polished in measure, or labored in style of construction. I have aimed
+at the truth, and imagine I have hit it.
+
+My object has been, simply, to gather together as many of the names and
+incidents connected with Bytown's early history as memory alone could
+recal. My desire has been to rescue from oblivion--as far as my humble
+efforts could conduce to such a desirable end--what otherwise might
+possibly have been forgotten. In the contemplation of those names and
+incidents, I have often, recently, overlooked the fact that I now live
+in a City with nearly thirty thousand inhabitants, and that its name is
+Ottawa. It has, nevertheless, been to me a pleasant labor of love to
+walk in memory among the men and the habitations of byegone times.
+
+Doubtless, of the inhabitants of dear old Bytown, there are some among
+the dead and others among the living, whose names may not be found in
+this little work. These broken links in the chain will be to me a source
+of regret. To the shades of the departed and to the ears of the living,
+whom I would not willingly have overlooked without
+
+ "A smile or a grasp of the hand passing on."
+
+I shall only say, as an atonement for the unwitting lapses of an
+imperfect memory, in the language once used by a friend and countryman
+in my hearing, as he passed a very pretty girl: "Remember, my dear, that
+I do not pass you with my heart."
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITTMAN LETT.
+
+OTTAWA, MARCH, 1873.
+
+
+
+
+BYTOWN.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+In '28, on Patrick's Day,
+At one p.m., there came this way
+From Richmond, in the dawn of spring,
+He who doth now the glories sing
+Of ancient Bytown, as 'twas then,
+A place of busy working men,
+Who handled barrows and pickaxes,
+Tamping irons and broadaxes,
+And paid no Corporation taxes;
+Who, without license onward carried
+All kinds of trade, but getting married;
+Stout, sinewy, and hardy chaps,
+Who'd take and pay back adverse raps,
+Nor ever think of such a thing
+As squaring off outside the ring,
+Those little disagreements, which
+Make wearers of the long robe rich.
+Such were the men, and such alone,
+Who quarried the vast piles of stone,
+Those mighty, ponderous, cut-stone blocks,
+With which Mackay built up the Locks.
+The road wound round the Barrack Hill,
+By the old Graveyard, calm and still;
+It would have sounded snobbish, very,
+To call it then a Cemetery--
+Crossed the Canal below the Bridge,
+And then struck up the rising ridge
+On Rideau Street, where Stewart's Store
+Stood in the good old days of yore;
+There William Stewart flourished then,
+A _man_ among old Bytown's men;
+And there, Ben Gordon ruled the roast,
+Evoking many a hearty toast,
+And purchase from the throngs who came
+To buy cheap goods in friendship's name.
+Friend Ben, dates back a warm and true heart
+To days of Mackintosh and Stewart.
+Beside where Aumond and Barreille
+Their fate together erst did try,
+In the old "French Store," on whose card
+_Imprimis_ was J. D. Bernard.
+"_Grande Joe_," still sturdy, stout and strong.
+Long be he so! Will o'er my song,
+Bend kindly, and perhaps may sigh,
+While rapidly o'er days gone by,
+He wanders back in memory.
+Aye, sigh, for when he look's around,
+How few, alas! can now be found,
+Who heard the shrill meridian sound
+Of Cameron's bugle from the hill,
+How few, alas! are living still--
+How few who saw in pride pass on
+The Sappers with their scarlet on,
+Their hackle plumes and scales of brass,
+Their stately tread as on they pass.
+I seem to see them through the shade
+Of years, in warlike pomp arrayed,
+Marching in splendid order past,
+Their bugles ringing on the blast,
+Their bayonets glittering in the sun,
+The vision fades, the dream is done.
+Below the Bridge, at least below,
+Where stands the Sappers' structure now,
+You had to pass in going down
+From Upper to the Lower Town;
+For, reader, then, no bridge was there,
+Where afterwards with wondrous care,
+And skilful hands; the Sappers made
+That arch which casts into the shade
+All other arches in the land,
+By which Canals and streams are span'd;
+The passing wayfarer sees nought
+But a stone bridge by labor wrought,
+The Poet's retrospective eye
+Searching the depths of memory,
+A monument to Colonel By,
+Beholds, enduring as each pile
+Which stands beside the Ancient Nile,
+As o'er the past my vision runs,
+Gazing on Bytown's elder sons,
+The portly Colonel I behold
+Plainly as in the days of old,
+Conjured before me at this hour
+By memory's undying power;
+Seated upon, his great black steed
+Of stately form and noble breed.
+A man who knew not how to flinch--
+A British soldier every inch.
+Courteous alike to low and high
+A gentleman was Colonel By!
+And did I write of lines three score
+About him, I could say no more.
+Howard and Thompson then kept store
+Down by "the Creek," almost next door,
+George Patterson must claim a line
+Among the men of auld lang syne;
+A man of very ancient fame,
+Who in old '27 came.
+One of the first firm doth remain,
+He is our worthy Chamberlain,
+Who ne'er in life's farce cut a dash
+On other people's errant cash;
+Who guards, as it is right well known,
+Better than e'er he did his own,
+The people's money, firm and sure,
+To the last cent, safe and secure.
+And opposite across the street,
+A friend or foe could always meet
+A man deserving hero's title,
+Uncompromising Watson Litle!
+A stern upholder of the law
+Who ne'er in justice found a flaw,
+With well charged blunderbuss in hand
+He asked not order or command,
+But sallied forth _semper paratus_
+To aid the _Posse Comitatus_!
+"Peace to his ashes!" many a score
+Of heads he smashed in days of yore!
+Where is the marble slab to show
+Where Watson Litle's dust lies low?
+Close by "the Creek," on the south side
+Of Rideau Street, did then reside
+John Cuzner, a British tar,
+For pluck renown'd both near and far!
+Nor would I willingly forget
+While tracing recollections met
+Of other days, and from the past
+Collecting memories fading fast,
+Of lines our earliest purveyor,
+John MacNaughton, the Surveyor,
+The only one who then was quite
+At home with the theodolite,
+And boxed the trembling compass well,
+Before the days of Robert Bell.
+A little further up the street,
+James Martin's name the eye did greet
+A round faced Caledonian, who
+Good eating and good drinking knew;
+And "Four-pence-half-penny" McKenzie
+Daily vended wolsey linsey,
+Next door to one of comic cheer
+Acknowledged the best auctioneer,
+That ever knock'd a bargain down,
+Or bidder if he chanced to frown;
+He set himself up in the end
+As Carleton's most worthy friend
+And by _vox populi_ was sent
+To Parliament to represent
+The men of Carleton, one and all,
+In ancient Legislative Hall.
+And by "The Tiger" sleek and fat,
+Our old friend "Jimmy Johnston" sat,
+The corner stock'd with silks and ribbon,
+Was kept and owned by Miss Fitzgibbon.
+A good stand it has ever been
+For commerce in this busy scene;
+Stand oft of idler and of scorner,
+I mean the modern "Howell's Corner,"
+Called after "Roderick of the sword,"
+Once well known Chairman of School Board.
+And down below near Nicholas Street,
+A quiet man each morn you'd meet
+At ten a.m., his pathway wending,
+With steps to Ordnance office bending,
+A mild man and an unassuming,
+Health and good nature ever blooming
+Seem'd stamped upon his smiling face,
+Where time had scarcely left its trace;
+_Semper idem_ let me beg
+Thy pardon, honest William Clegg!
+Nor must, although his bones are rotten,
+The ancient Mosgrove be forgotten,
+A man of kindly nature, he
+Has left a spot in memory
+While gazing on each vanish'd scene
+That still remains both fresh and green
+For when in heat of hurling bent
+The ball oft through his window went,
+He pitch'd it to us out again,
+And ask'd no payment for the pane.
+On Sussex Street, James Inglis flourish'd,
+A cannie Scot, and well he nourish'd
+A very thriving dry goods trade,
+And "piles" of good hard silver made,
+Almost amongst the forest trees,
+By furs from Aborigines.
+No "Hotel" then was in the town,
+"The British" in its old renown,
+Of our Hotels the ancient mother
+Had not one stone laid on another;
+Donald McArthur in a cavern
+Of wood sustained his ancient tavern,
+And there the best of cheer was found
+Within old Bytown's classic ground;
+And now I'll close my roll of fame
+With a most well-remember'd name,
+A man of dignity supreme
+Rises to view in memory's dream,
+Ultra in Toryism's tariff,
+Was Simon Fraser, Carleton's Sheriff,
+Personified by the third vowel,
+Forerunner of W.F. Powell,
+A high and most important man
+In the renown'd old Fraser Clan,
+Who well had worn the Highland tartan,
+For he was bold as any Spartan,
+And did his duty mildly, gravely,
+And wore the sword and cocked hat bravely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Come, now, my gentle Muse, once more,
+Come with me to the days of yore,
+And let us wake, with friendly hand
+The memories of that distant land,
+The past; and while thy minstrel weaves
+A chaplet from the Sybil leaves
+Of recollection--let the light
+Of truth upon his lines be bright.
+May he with reverential tread
+Approach the dwellings of the dead,
+Seeking for some sweet flower of good
+Within their solemn solitude:
+And if he finds in fadeless bloom
+Around some well remember'd tomb,
+Some cherish'd record of the past
+Which has defied time's rudes blast,
+And down futurity's deep vale
+Shed fragrance on the passing gale,
+Love's labor, then, the task will be,
+My gentle Muse, for thee and me.
+'Mongst those of old remember'd well,
+John Wade doth in my memory dwell,
+A wit of most undoubted feather--
+A mighty advocate of leather--
+A solemn man too, when required.
+With healing instincts deeply fired,
+He with claw-instrument could draw
+Teeth deftly from an aching jaw,
+And ready was his lancet too
+When nothing short of blood would do;
+Relieved he many a racking pain,
+When shall we see his like again?
+And William Tormey, stern and straight,
+A man who came ere '28,
+Chief of the men who kept the fire on
+And hammer'd the strong bands of iron,
+Which first securely bound together
+The old lock gates through wind and weather,
+The old Town Council minutes bear
+The record that his name is there.
+And Thomas Hanly, loud the praise
+I gave him in my early days
+For bread, that Eve might tempted be
+To eat, had it grown on that tree,
+On which hung the forbidden fruit
+Whose seed gave earth's ills their sad root.
+Friend Tom dealt in the rising leaven
+In the old days of '27,
+With "Jemmy Lang," an ancient Scot,
+Who ne'er the barley bree forgot;
+An honest, simple man was he
+As ever loved good company;
+And Tom McDermott, while I twine
+The names of yore in song of mine,
+Can I forget a name like thine?
+Ah, no! although thine ashes rest
+Beneath our common mother's breast,
+No name more spotless doth engage
+My muse, or grace my tuneful page.
+Stern Matthew Connell, fiery Celt,
+Below the present Bywash dwelt,
+Beside John Cowan, o'er whose grave
+The grass of '32 did wave.
+No man got in a passion faster
+Than did old Bytown's first postmaster;
+Yet was he a most upright man,
+And well the old machinery "ran"
+When mail bags came on horse's back
+Before we had a railway track,
+And their arrival on each morn
+Was signall'd by an old tin horn.
+Peace to his shade! in '32
+The cholera Matthew Connell slew.
+Kind reader, let me pass awhile,
+Beside the "Bywash," deem'd so vile,
+Then called "the Creek"--though now the pest--
+The festering miasmatic nest
+Of Boards of Health, who dread infection--
+My very heart's sincere affection
+Clings fondly to that old creek still;
+For oft in boyhood's joyous thrill,
+O'er its ice-bosom in wild play
+I chased the ball in youth's bright day.
+With young companions loved and dear!
+How few of such, alas! are here
+To listen to the bye-gone story
+Of the old Creek's vanish'd glory!
+'Twixt "wooden lock" and Rideau Street,
+Young Bytown oft was wont to meet--
+To struggle in the "shinny game;"
+Ah! then it was a place of fame,
+Full sixty feet from shore to shore,
+While now it measures scarce a score;
+Modern improvement has prevail'd--
+Its fair proportions are curtail'd;
+Its banks filled in, more space to gain.
+Its stream, by many a filthy drain,
+Which once was rapid, always clear,
+Changed into color worse than beer,
+To cool and icy scowling scan,
+Of rigid, total abstinence man.
+Gone is its fair renown of yore,
+It's schoolboy battles all are o'er,
+Which made it then a "Campo Bello"
+For many an embryo daring fellow--
+Too young to know what men of sense
+Have called the art of self-defence;
+There buttons flew, from stitching riven,
+Black eyes and bloody noses given--
+Even conflicts national took place,
+Among old Bytown's youthful race.
+Why not? for children bigger grown
+I rave sometimes down the gauntlet thrown
+For cause as small, and launch'd afar
+The fierce and fiery bolts of war,
+Simply to find out which was best.
+Cæsar or Pompey by the test.
+In those past combats "rich and rare"
+Luke Cuzner always had his share.
+For Luke in days of _auld lang syne_
+Did most pugnaciously incline,
+Never to challenge slack or slow,
+And never stain'd by "coward's blow."
+The Joyces too, Mick, John and Walter,
+In battle's path did seldom falter,
+But "Jimmy," in those days of grace
+Held a peacemaker's blessed place,
+Nor has he wander'd far astray
+From the same calm and tranquil way.
+The belt was worn by any one
+Who had the latest battle won,
+'Till Simon Murphy's springing bound
+Lit on that ancient battle ground,
+And from that hour he was King
+Of our young pugilistic ring!
+But here I'd like to pause a minute
+And go to Hull--there's something in it
+That to the hour of life's December
+I shall endeavor to remember.
+The old "Columbian" schoolhouse, where
+In childhood's dawn I did repair;
+It was a famous strict old school
+Sway'd by the ancient birchen rule,
+The place where youthful ignorance brought us,
+The spot where famed James Agnew taught us;
+A Scot was he of good condition,
+A man of nerve and erudition,
+A strict disciplinarian, who
+Knew well what any boy could do,
+And woe to him who did not do it
+For he got certain cause to rue it.
+No sinner ever dreaded Charon,
+Nor was the mighty rod of Aaron,
+By ancient Egypt's magic men,
+In Pharoah's old despotic reign,
+More feared as symbol of a God
+Than was by us James Agnew's rod;
+With it he batter'd arithmetic,
+Lore practical and theoretic
+Latin too, and English grammar
+Into your head, a perfect "crammar,"
+Was Agnew's most persuasive rod,
+Nor less his magisterial nod.
+How would such stern tuition suit
+In our Collegiate Institute?
+Amongst the unforgotten few
+Who rise to memory's magic view,
+While winging on her backward flight,
+My schoolfellow, Alonzo Wright,
+Appears a lad of slender frame,
+I cannot say he's still the same,
+Except in soul, for that sublime
+Has soar'd above the touch of time,
+And in "immortal youth" appears,
+Unchanged by circumstance or years,
+A good fellow, this was his name
+At school, methinks he's still the same.
+May he give powers of swift volition
+To all who offer opposition
+To him in the approaching "scrimmage,"
+For what is but a brazen image
+At best, a people's approbation,
+Which sometimes with the situation,
+Changes as egg in hand of wizard,
+Or color in chameleon lizard.
+There too, are Job and David Moore,
+Bill Northgraves mentioned not before,
+Who in the little school-house red
+On early education fed.
+And Thomas Curtis Brigham, too,
+Lennox and Christopher in view,
+Arise before my sight,
+Strongly defined in memory's light,
+And Wright both Ruggles and Tiberias,
+And Wyman who was seldom serious,
+Poor fellow! in life's manly bloom
+He slept in an untimely tomb.
+Time fails me, or I fain would tell
+Of many more remembered well,
+But end I here my present strain
+Till memory wakes it up again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+I cross the Ottawa once more.
+From Hull again to Bytown's shore.
+And for a moment I behold
+The river as it was of old,
+Swelling, majestic in its pride,
+A glorious stream from side to side!
+A "Grand River" was Ottawa then,
+The pride of ancient lumbermen,
+By slabs and sawdust undefiled.
+The joy of nature's dusky child,
+Who's matchless, perfect bark canoe
+Oft o'er its crystal bosom flew--
+Not bridged all o'er like shaking bogs
+By endless booms of dirty logs,
+Which to the thrifty and the wise
+Are doubtless marks of enterprise,
+And evidences too of health,
+Of pocket and commercial wealth,
+Yet sadly, sometimes out of place,
+And serious blots on Nature's face.
+What would big Indian "Clouthier" say--
+The red-skinn'd Samson could he stray
+From the happy hunting ground away--
+Could he behold the stream to-day--
+The great Kah-nah-jo, where the God
+Of the Algonquins used to nod
+In dreamy slumber 'mid the smoke
+Which from the mighty cataract broke,
+Hemm'd in by sawmills, booms and piers--
+The features of a thousand years
+Of beauty ruthlessly defaced--
+The landmarks of the past displaced,
+And little left to tell the story
+Of Ottawa's departed glory;
+But water running where it ran
+When the red deer chase began.
+'Twould startle even Philemon Wright
+With all his wisdom and foresight.
+Could he arise, good man of old,
+And modern Ottawa behold,
+He'd feel himself a stranger too--
+'Mid scenes of wonder strange and new--
+In Hull, of little worth for tillage,
+The spot on which he built his village.
+Return I now, this slight digression
+Was worth the time, I've an impression;
+Clouthier, the Indian, was a giant,
+And "Squire Wright," strong, self-reliant,
+Was he who o'er the border came
+And gave to Hull its ancient fame;
+A man of enterprise and spirit
+Who in this history well doth merit,
+Such place of prominence as can
+Be given to such a stirring man.
+On the way back I see the ground
+Where ferrying Odium was found,
+And afterwards, next in progression,
+Friend John Bedard came in possession,
+And certainly much money made
+By a successful carrying trade.
+The place seems alter'd, art and skill
+Have built up Wright and Batson's mill
+At the old wharf, or near at hand,
+Where the first steamer used to land,
+Before even that small craft could ride
+At any wharf on Bytown's side.
+And not far off, in days of yore
+A cottage stood--'tis there no more,
+And if there ever was a spot
+Where friend and foe a welcome got--
+Where generous hospitality
+Presided o'er the banquet free,
+And friendship's hand for rich and poor
+Was ever opening the door--
+That spot was where that cottage stood,
+Embowered in the cedar wood,
+And he who there resided with
+An open heart, was old Ralph Smith!
+In memory I behold him now,
+With sparkling eye and lofty brow,
+And round the table amply spread,
+Are Patton, Henry, Ralph and Ned,
+And Dolly--blessed be her shade!
+Who, such nice things for schoolboys made,
+And made them feel just as no other
+On earth could do except their mother.
+But I must hurry, or I own,
+I ne'er shall reach the Upper Town,
+For there I'll find an ancient throng
+To link together in my song,
+And I shall wake them up ere long.
+'Mongst those of olden time who came
+Was one whose engineering fame
+Was brilliant--let none call be braggart
+While speaking thus of John MacTaggart,
+A genius of the highest grade
+In that most scientific trade,
+Who plann'd with wise, consummate skill,
+Even from the lock-gates lowest sill
+To Kingston Mills, the undertaking
+Which cost such time and cash in making,
+Rideau Canal, the work of years,
+And England's Royal Engineers.
+Brother of Isaac, once known hero
+As Corporation Engineer,
+Or Street Surveyor in that time
+When Ottawa's fur was not so prime,
+Whom well of old the writer knew,
+And as he comes up for review--
+Like volume taken from the shelf--
+He harm'd no one but himself,
+Is all his bitterest foe can say
+Of Isaac who has passed away.
+And James Fitzgibbon, where is he?
+Beneath the weeping willow tree,
+Retired, quiet-going man
+Who ne'er his head 'gainst faction ran.
+And close upon his fading track
+I see the shadow of James Black,
+Who once on Rideau Street kept store
+In the remember'd days of yore,
+A stirring, active man was he,
+Genteel, polite to a degree,
+That customers were always fain
+Who saw him once to call again;
+His wife in the old churchyard lay--
+Her epitaph I know to-day.
+And there stands Thomas Burrows, too,
+As he appeared before my view,
+Leaning upon his garden gate
+Beside the Creek in '28;
+He held of trust, an office high
+Under the reign of Colonel By.
+And Tom McDonald, as we then
+Were wont to call the best of men;
+A man of spirit rare was he
+Who never had an enemy.
+And there, too, Captain Victor goes
+With most aristocratic nose,
+And manners haughty with the ring
+Of _ton_ when George the Fourth was king.
+And Lieut. Pooley, for whose skill
+The "Gully" bridge is named so still,
+Ask Lyman Perkins, if you doubt it,
+And he will tell you all about it.
+And Dr. Tuthill, who with skill
+Could cure more readily than kill,
+Physic'd, emetic'd, too, and clyster'd,
+And _con amore_, bled and blister'd,
+In the old Hospital, which stood
+Unscathed by tempest, fire, or flood,
+For fifty years, to be down cast,
+By chance, or carelessness, at last,
+Theme for conjecture, most prolific,
+Another phase of the Pacific
+Railway which will cause a broil,
+Unless 'tis built on British soil!
+And there, too, Joseph Coombs was found,
+With solemn step his march around
+Among the patients, pacing slowly--
+Disciple of the meek and lowly,
+Who afterwards oft turned the key
+On many a goodly company.
+In that strong work of mason's trowel,
+Ruled now by Alexander Powell.
+And William Addison, no more--
+As trim a soldier as e'er wore
+The uniform, or bravely bore
+His head erect, with step as light
+As wings that touch the air in flight.
+Well had he won and kept from harm
+The honor'd stripes upon his arm.
+Such men as he have been the stay
+Of Britain in her darkest day!
+And Sergeant Johnston who, with skill,
+The raw and awkward squad could drill--
+A warrior in air and tone,
+Who had his country service done--
+Straight as a ramrod, and his might
+Of voice would Lambkin's soul delight.
+And brave John Murphy--champion John!
+I can't forget as I pass on.
+As fine a fellow as e'er wore
+The scarlet coat in days of yore.
+With upright form of manliest grace,
+With wondrous beauty in his face,
+And perfect symmetry of limb;
+Appollo might have envied him!
+And then he was as brave and true
+As e'er the sword or bayonet drew,
+Full many a battle did he fight,
+His injured comrade's wrongs to right;
+For well he knew each mood and tense
+Of the old art of self-defence;
+And woe to him who dared a fling
+With bold John Murphy in the ring.
+There many a pugilistic martyr
+Met his match and caught a Tartar.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Near where the George Street market stood
+Lived William Northgraves, then a good
+And skilful watch-maker, who's chime
+Did regulate the march of time,
+And Arthur Hopper, sporting blade,
+Was in the same time serving trade,
+Though guiltless of the modern tricks
+Of time serving in politics;
+He made gold rings for bridal matches,
+As well as cleaned and mended watches.
+And last of old watchmakers three,
+I mention mild Maurice Dupuis,
+Who's even tenor ne'er did vary
+From the upright and exemplary,
+At Corcoran's corner, now the stand
+For carters, very near at hand,
+Dwelt one who's unforgotten name
+Is worthy of poetic fame;
+With scientific sleight he bled,
+And then anatomized the dead.
+With hand so wonderfully skill'd,
+Victims delighted to be killed,
+Came willingly to yield up life,
+An offering to Tom Hickey's knife;
+So high his sense of honor ran,
+The butcher in the gentleman
+Merged so completely, you'd be lost,
+Which in him to admire the most;
+By ancient poets it was sung
+Those whom the gods love all die young,
+Tom Hickey's early death did prove
+That those die young whom all men love.
+I must not here omit the name
+Of Heubach from my roll of fame,
+He passes under memory's scan
+A simple minded honest man,
+With manners quiet, mild and bland,
+An emigrant from fatherland.
+And Joseph Nadeau, far and near
+Famed 'mongst the boys for good _La Tir_
+And old John Cochran stern and tall,
+Immoveable as a stone wall!
+Staunch to his principles stood he,
+No matter what the cost might be;
+Oh! for a few of his old stamp,
+To trim with fire the waning lamp!
+And Louis Grison, worthy man,
+In "Maville's village," first began
+His little trade, which wider spread
+As ancient Bytown went ahead.
+Two rows of houses built of wood,
+Near Enoch Walkley's brewery stood
+With narrow little street between,
+This was the village that I mean.
+Then William Graham kept the peace
+Of all the town with perfect ease;
+Potato whiskey then was cheap,
+And we had little peace to keep.
+Such monstrous practice was unknown
+As kicking when a man was down,
+Though many a stunning blow was felt,
+None ever struck below the belt;
+The ring was form'd, and fair play
+Reign'd without challenge at each fray,
+And never yet, that I could hear,
+Did constable e'er interfere,
+Or even think that amongst crimes
+Rank'd this brave pastime of old times.
+Then Martin Hennessy was young,
+A Hercules with sinews strung;
+You might as well an anvil "lick,"
+Or stand against a horse's kick
+And fear not shattered rib or jaw
+As risk a smash from Martin's paw.
+I've seen him in the days of yore
+His fist crash through a panel door.
+Martin soon ran his wild race out,
+For "Doctor" Whitney with a "clout"
+Of a great bludgeon laid him out
+Heady for _post mortem_ and bier,
+Thus ended Martin's rough career.
+Ah! those were happy halcyon days,
+Well worthy of immortal lays.
+Here I must summon from the band
+Of the departed shadowy land
+George Parsons, and his name entwine
+In this poetic wreath of mine.
+Beside the creek his name I meet
+On the west side of William street,
+Twas called "the lane," ere legislation
+Gave it its present designation;
+Admirers of steeds fleet and game
+Will not forget George Parson's name.
+And I would be worse than a Turk,
+Did I forget George Robert Burke,
+A man who mingled not in strife,
+Nor ever did in all his life
+An act to cause a blush of shame
+On any face that bears his name!
+Nor can I Archie Foster pass,
+Too soon departed, too, alas!
+A man of feelings warm and kind--
+A friend who never left behind
+A friendly act, if in his power
+To act the friend in trouble's hour,
+Ah! 'twas a melancholy day
+When Archie Foster passed away.
+And now a man with learning's grace
+And mildness pictured in his face
+Stands forth in retrospection's ray
+As if it was but yesterday,
+It is the good Hugh Hagan's shade
+Who's precepts many a scholar made.
+Nor would my reminiscent eye
+While scanning erudition's sky,
+Fail to perceive through cloud and storm
+Friend James Maloney's stately form--
+A fixed star in the Teacher's heaven
+Since the old days of '27,
+When learning's every art and rule,
+In the old Mathematic School,
+According to education laws
+He taught--and ne'er forget the "taws."
+The handle was just two feet long,
+And well he trounced the noisy throng!
+At the west border of the swamp
+Where cedars grew mid mosses damp,
+Just at the corner where to-day
+Ben Huckell doth his name display,
+In other days dwelt William May,
+A member of the old "Alliance"
+Which easily put at defiance
+The conflagrations that were seen
+"Like Angel's visits far between,"
+For Bytown then was almost free
+From an Insurance Company!
+Poor fellow! by a sudden stroke
+Death's gloomy shadow o'er him broke,
+Upon that well remembered day--
+When the old town was wild and gay.
+From verdant vale to sunny ridge,
+On which the new Suspension Bridge
+Was opened--and crowds congregated
+To see it then "inaugurated."
+To use a word from Uncle Sam,
+The concourse was a perfect jam.
+'Twas built by Alexander Christie,
+From the land of mountains misty;
+And though the whirlwind and the storm
+For years have revelled on its form--
+Though ponderous loads for many a year
+Have passed it o'er from from far and near,
+It stands in strength unshaken still,
+A monument of art and skill;
+Long may the builder dash the tide
+Of Jordan's swelling surge aside;
+And when the lot of all mankind
+Overtakes him, may he safely find
+A bridge across to Canaan's shore,
+To pass in peace death's valley o'er.
+While rambling backwards up life's hill,
+I meet the stern Paul Joseph Gill,
+A man with much tuition fraught,
+Who youth at the old creek side taught,
+Where Thomas Dowsley doth display,
+His maps of land for sale to-day.
+Paul Joseph Gill could with a frown
+Keep juvenile offenders down;
+His ruler flat I can't forget,
+My fingers seem to tingle yet,
+As recollection o'er me brings
+That ruler amongst other things,
+Which come around me link by link,
+While of the vanished past I think.
+John Frost, too, rises up before
+My vision of the time that's o'er;
+He built upon foundation damp,
+In Lower Town's great cedar swamp,
+Which stretched from Sussex Street to where
+That engineering structure fair--
+The fond-admiring eye doth greet,
+Spanning the stream at Ottawa Street.
+And "Sandy" Graham, strange it is,
+That I thus far his name should miss,
+While tracing from the scenes gone by
+Each unforgotten memory
+Sandy was, aye, a joyous blade,
+And many a good stroke of trade
+He with commercial wisdom made,
+In other times when he was young,
+And Yankee silver round was flung
+With lavish hand by low and high
+In the good days of Colonel By.
+And William Hunton, who came late,
+If I am right, in '28,
+And many a good quart of whiskey,
+To make the old Bytonians frisky--
+And many a pound of Twankay tea
+And Muscovado vended he,
+For Howard and Thompson in the time
+When cash was plenty and trade prime.
+Friend Tom a little later came,
+A youth then of quite slender frame.
+In form he's something still the same--
+Though time has taken from his heel
+The spring it used of old to feel.
+And streaked his locks with silver, too,
+Which long withstood all time could do,
+Yet in the dream that's passed away
+I see Tom Hunton of to-day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+And John McGraves, the chandler, why
+Could I so long have passed him by?
+By accident I've turned a leaf
+Which brings him out in bold relief
+A plain and unassuming man
+Was John; his candles never ran.
+And many in this ancient place
+Owed him a debt for a clean face.
+William Kipp, too, doth memory greet,
+In a small shop on Rideau Street,
+A man of gentlemanly kind,
+With a well-cultivated mind;
+And Commissary Strachan, too,
+And Oriel, who had much to do
+Paying the debts of Waterloo,
+And many another battle field
+Where Britons fought and did not yield.
+And old John Ring, "good gracious me!"
+I had almost forgotten thee--
+Thou "Silky" John of other years,
+Gone from this dreary vale of tears,
+A passing shade, and more's the pity,
+For thou wert ever gay and witty.
+And Charles Baines, an old time lawyer,
+Stood here professional top sawyer;
+He owned a bull dog, arrant thief!
+Who plundered Agar Yielding's beef;
+And when friend Yielding sought for law,
+To deal with canine of such maw,
+"Why, there is just one simple way,"
+Said Charley, "Make the owner pay;"
+"I thank you for your judgment brief,"
+Said Agar, "pay me for the beef."
+"Seven and sixpence worth of prog,
+Was bolted by _your_ big bull dog."
+"All right," said Charley, like a flash,
+And quickly handed o'er the cash;
+But, as friend Yielding turned to go,
+"Come back," said Charley, "for you owe
+Just seven and sixpence for advice,
+So hand it over in a trice."
+While on the past I now reflect,
+I well and clearly recollect
+John Wilson, who kept office here,
+And afterwards a Judge austere
+Of the Queen's Bench or Common Pleas,
+Sat with much dignity and ease.
+'Tis past, I shall not here relate
+Young Robert Lyon's luckless fate,
+Nor shall I stir the tomb and tell
+Why he an early victim fell
+At folly's shrine, as he who bends
+A martyr to ill-judging friends,
+Will always fall; but end I here
+This record of his short career.
+Honor, indeed! thy shrine appears,
+Surrounded by a sea of tears.
+George Shouldice is a man of old,
+Henry was too, who 'neath the mould
+Lies slumbering in solemn rest--
+He many a pompous body drest
+With garments fine and quite exotic,
+When fashion was not so despotic.
+And Charles Friel, an early man
+With Bytown's history began,
+A man of ready tongue and wit,
+A politician who could hit
+And sway with eloquence the throng,
+Which shouts alike for right or wrong.
+Father of Henry James, who died.
+Just as his eye of hope descried
+The goal he labored to attain--
+The honors he had fought to gain.
+Tis no uncommon thing to find
+A little man with full grown mind:
+And 'mongst those who have gone to rest--
+Who of their chances made the best
+In life's o'er turning changing reel,
+I freely rank Henry J. Friel.
+And Daniel Fisher, too, is gone,
+Of Scotia's children he was one
+Who clothed the naked in his day--
+That is, the naked who could pay.
+I have a friendly feeling yet
+For him, for I can ne'er forget
+The jacket blue which first I wore
+In the old cherished days of yore,
+That jacket which I don'd with pride.
+Caused me to feel a man beside
+The urchin in the pinafore
+Which I had just arisen o'er;
+In Daniel Fisher's shop 'twas made--
+Headquarters of the fig-leaf trade.--
+In that most ancient grand device
+Which had its rise in Paradise.
+I see as on I hurry past,
+Pat Duggan, who blew vulcan's blast,
+And friend Kehoe, who with hand neat
+Fitted the shoes to horse's feet;
+And John McGivern, the baker,
+And Robert Wanless, harness-maker;
+And William Atkins, who is still
+Holding his own upon the hill
+Of life, though slowly wending
+Towards the goal that has no ending;
+And Silas Burpee, pious man,
+Who in the early ages ran
+With drums and belts and wheels complete
+A turning mill on old York Street--
+Upon the very spot, now thought of
+Where gander's head George Shouldice shot off,
+With an old smooth-bore, but would not
+That day attempt a second shot;
+'Twas wise of George, a second shot
+Might have consigned to luckless pot,
+His marksman's name, and half a shilling,
+His renown in the art of killing.
+It was a stirring place of trade
+Where famous spinning tops were made.
+And splendid water power was found
+Where now there's nought but solid ground,
+Covered with numerous loads of wood,
+A costly item bad or good.
+In modern times--of old it stood,
+Maple at ninety cents a cord,
+Just four and six-pence, by my word!
+And Julius Burpee, gone! well, well!
+He kept the old Rideau Hotel,
+Where man and beast could get the best
+And truly find the traveller's rest.
+Julius still might living be
+Were it not for the "barley bree."
+And Edward Darcey too, appears.
+And Jeffry Nolan, who in years
+Gone by, was stout and strong in fight.
+And in the conflict always right,
+Before the days when frolic's King
+McDougall "made Dungarven ring!"
+Frank's arm then, as mine, was strong,
+None but himself in all the throng
+So far the ponderous sledge could hurl,
+Until at last with dexterous whirl,
+"The school master" defiant came
+And walked off champion of the game.
+From first to last I've found him true,
+McDougal _ciamar tha sibhn dieugh_?
+And Charles Sparrow, where, oh, where
+Is he who once was Bytown's Mayor,
+Ere, J.B. Turgeon took the chair?
+Lost 'mid the overwhelming blaze
+Of changes new; gone from the gaze
+Of public life, like many a man
+Who, once for public honors ran.
+And George and Robert Lang are gone,
+Men of intelligence and tone,
+Who held positions marked and high
+In Bytown's old society.
+Nor has amongst the ancient few
+Captain McKinnon from my view--
+Though long a tenant of the tomb--
+Faded into oblivion's gloom.
+If Roderick Stewart now was near,
+He'd pour into my listening ear
+A tale I would delight to hear,
+Of other men of other times,
+Who's names may have escaped my rhymes.
+The Captain lived, a man discreet,
+Near where the ancient arch did meet
+O'er famous little Sussex Street,
+For there a tragedy took place
+Which here the muse with truth shall trace.
+A boy stood near that arch of old
+Upon a wintry day--'twas cold,
+Tired of sleighing down the hill,
+He for a moment there stood still,
+That boy sits now with pen in hand,
+From memory's photographic land
+Painting in colors fair and true
+The vanished scenes which once he knew.
+As thus he rested taking breath,
+He little dreamed of blood or death.
+Up Rideau Street a man there came,
+Charles McStravick was his name.
+A tall, lithe, active fellow, he,
+As in a thousand you could see;
+A white blanket _capote_ he wore,
+And jauntily himself he bore,
+He stepped beneath the arch, and then
+Rushed at him fiercely two strong men.
+Both with surprise and dread were scan'd.
+One had a loaded whip in hand,
+The other a short bludgeon bore,
+And in a moment, all was o'er!
+Three blows, a crash, a stream of blood.
+All of the victim bad or good
+In life, was in an instant crushed
+To dust--off the assailants rushed,
+And none can tell from then 'till now
+The hands that laid McStravick low,
+Nor does he who relates the story
+Know more of that occurrence gory
+My history would be faithless here
+Did "Happy Jimmy" not appear,
+An innocent good natured soul
+As ever loved the flowing bowl--
+An institution of the day
+That like himself hath passed away,
+Was "Happy Jimmy," he who made
+A vagrant's life a merry trade.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+And now, kind reader, I behold
+Before me, as in days of old,
+Bold Paddy Whelan, Wexford Paddy
+Surely of noisy men the daddy;
+A man of most Herculean form,
+Who roamed through sunshine and through storm,
+And sounded loud in other days
+His notes in Hamnett Pinhey's praise--
+And well he might sing with loud swell,
+"The Lamb of March" deserved it well!
+A man of learning, wit, and sense,
+No shallow thing of vain pretence,
+The true stamp of the current guinea
+Bore March's Father, Hamnett Pinhey.
+To "Muddy Little York" went he,
+The Independent and the Free
+To represent with power effective
+Amid the wisdom most collective,
+In the old days of Compact Rule
+Ere Grittism yet had gone to school;
+Dalhousie District's Archives too,
+Can show what he was wont to do.
+Paddy, though not of _genus feræ,_
+Was yet a queer _lusus naturæ_;
+His vital organs played beneath
+A shield of solid bone 'till death,
+Without a yielding space between,
+Where ribs in other men are seen,
+Though not a feathered bird, his toes
+Were web'd as well the writer knows,
+And joined in one in style most rare
+His molars and incisors were;
+His voice, when at its loudest swell,
+Was like a railway whistle's yell;
+In stature he was six feet tall,
+So there is Paddy for you all!
+But strike I now a strain sublime,
+A touch heroic into rhyme.
+As memory doth with truth uncoil
+The history of old Bob Boyle,
+A British soldier, bold and free,
+Of the old Ninety-Ninth was he,
+Who bravely fought and 'scaped from harm,
+At Lundy's Lane and Crysler's Farm,
+And gallantly his bayonet bore,
+At Fort Niagara, and the shore
+Of Sackett's Harbor trod of yore,
+When "Uncle Sam," our friend and brother,
+Or cousin, kicked up such a "bother"
+In 1812, and tried
+In vain to lower Britain's pride,
+By cutting from her parent side,
+By a Cæsarean operation,
+The proudest offspring of the nation!
+The Union Jack, thank heaven! still
+Floats proudly over vale and hill,
+Of this Dominion grand of ours;
+And shattered be the vital powers,
+By fatal stroke, like that which slew,
+Sennacherib's Assyrian crew,
+Of him who's traitor hand shall dare
+To furl one fold that flutters there!
+And palsied be the traitor tongue,
+And from its root uptorn and wrung,
+That dares to utter but one word
+To weaken the soul-anchored cord,
+Which binds Canadians heart and hand
+In love to the old Mother Land!
+Bob Boyle, "I thank thee" that thy name
+Hath stirred the patriotic flame,
+In days like these, when treason's veil
+Drops when passions fierce assail,
+And leaves exposed to public view
+The traitor double-dyed in hue!
+Hear, spawn of disaffection's thrall!
+Rouge, Annexationist and all
+This--ere the Union Jack shall fall,
+The path of treason red with blood
+Shall sink beneath a crimson flood,
+While o'er it from the highest crag,
+Will wave the glorious meteor flag!
+I've wandered somewhat from my track,
+But quietly I now come back;
+Into my train of thought there blew
+A passing spark, away it flew,
+And I was gone before I knew--
+Like nitro-glycerine it sprung,
+And from the pathway I was flung.
+Yet no uncertain sound give I,
+I risk it as a prophecy.
+By George Street north, I pass and see
+There Pierre Desloges, a man was he,
+But little known beyond the spot
+Where first he built his little cot.
+And Alexander Ethier too,
+A carpenter, both good and true
+Beside him dwelt, where busy feet,
+Pass onward to Dalhousie Street.
+And now I think it passing strange
+That in wild fancy's flitting range
+I have not seen and mark'd before
+John Litle standing at his door--
+In Sussex Street where erst, kept he
+An Inn of quite a good degree
+Of excellence in the old time
+Which has evoked this lengthy rhyme,
+John was a man of sturdy frame
+As any that hath borne his name.
+Even Brave Bob Elliot would delight
+His prowess to behold in fight;
+And Robert Elliott was not slow
+To give or to resent a blow
+In other days, when not as now.
+The olive branch of peace is seen
+Between the orange and the green.
+And Richard Stethem in the haze
+Of Bytown's distant early days
+Before my vision doth appear,
+To claim his right of entry here.
+And Robert Stethem, too, his brother,
+Of village denizens another;
+John Miller too, of leather fame,
+Who from the County Wexford came,
+And first made here such boots and shoes
+As fashion could not now refuse
+In this fastidious age to take
+And wear them for their matchless make.
+And how have I not had before
+James Anderson, a man of yore,
+Who pitched his tent in days gone by
+'Mong Bytown's ancient company,
+An honest hearted jovial Scot
+As e'er in exile cast his lot
+'Mongst those who pioneered the track
+Down which my memory's muse looks back.
+And now as I stretch forth my hand
+In search of one from Paddy's land,
+A man of wit and humour rare,
+I touch him still and find him there.
+From Erin, scarcely from Armagh,
+To Carleton came Denis McGrath,
+Loud has his North Hibernian tongue
+Upon the Byward market rung
+For six and thirty years; in truth,
+I've known him since the days of youth,
+John Litle can my tale review
+Of Denis, he will find it true.
+And John Macdonald, of the Isles,
+With face clad in perennial smiles,
+Knight of the knock-down hammer, he
+Claims passing notice now from me--
+A well read man, for truth to tell,
+He studied Burns and Byron well;
+And which two of the wizard few
+Have touched with tuneful hand so true.
+The throbbing pulses of the soul,
+Which vibrate 'neath their wild control.
+Friend John Macdonald, here's my hand,
+Thou relic of the vanished land!
+Michael McBean I can't pass by,
+He kept of old a grocery--
+Just opposite McDougal's gate,
+Where the big auger hangs in state.
+Richard McCann, too, did abide
+In peace the Sappers' Bridge beside,
+In house we ne'er shall see again,
+Once tenanted by Andrew Main--
+A cannie, sober, honest Scot,
+Was Andrew Main--an humble lot,
+With patient industry he bore,
+Till fortune smiled, and then a store
+He opened, in extensive way,
+Where William Fingland keeps to-day.
+Peter A. Egleson to boot,
+The young idea how to shoot,
+On George Street north, in days gone by
+Taught in his own academy;
+At length the birch he threw aside,
+And floated proudly on the tide
+Of commerce--and his name appears
+Where it was found in other years.
+Next Richard Thomas comes to view,
+And Nat and Jonas Barry too,
+All plasterers of the old time
+Who made their bread by sand and lime.
+Joachim Valiquette, a baker,
+And Joseph Valiquette, shoemaker,
+A votary of the rod and line
+When summer evenings are fine,
+He like a nightingale can sing
+A holy strain--as well as bring
+From well known spot--a goodly string
+Of fish upon a Thursday night
+That Friday may be kept all right.
+Gone is our friend Peter Riel
+Whom old Bytonians once knew well;
+An innocent good man was he,
+Given sometimes to a little spree;
+Once member of the Council here,
+He gave forth many a loyal cheer,
+And sat triumphal carriage on,
+In state with Queen Victoria's Son,
+When Albert Edward came this way
+A royal visit here to pay.
+My song complete would not appear
+Unless "the Major's" name were here;
+His regimental number now
+I can't recall--but this I know,
+He bravely marched with battle brand
+Among the guardians of the land,
+Ready alike to fall or stand
+As duty's accents gave command;
+Far might yon seek, and find not then
+A soul more genial amongst men,
+A lot unmarked by mortal ills
+Is all I wish to Major Wills.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+Though strictly not of Bytown fame,
+I can't forget John Egan's name,
+It well deserves what I can give,
+To make it unforgotten live;
+For 'mongst the sons of enterprise,
+Who rose with Bytown's early rise,
+When "Norway Pine" was number one,
+John Egan stands almost alone--
+The king of the Grand River, then
+The Wellington of lumber men
+A man of boundless energy,
+And vast capacity was he,
+All difficulties had to fly,
+And cower before his dauntless eye!
+Right well may Aylmer mourn and boast
+The enterprising son she lost,
+Upon the day when from earth's toil
+He "shuffled off the mortal coil."
+And N.H. Baird, of old was here,
+A scientific engineer;
+And Finland, the contractor, who
+With coach and four the streets drove through,
+The grandest carriage of the kind
+E'er seen in Bytown--with behind--
+In gorgeous and artistic glare,
+A lion and an eagle--where
+Is friend Perkins? he can still
+Remember that old eagle's bill.
+And Captain Andrew Wilson, O!
+I've got an old sea lion now,
+Who saw the flash of Nelson's eye,
+Amid the smoke of victory,
+Both at Trafalgar and the Nile.
+Aye, saw the hero's dying smile
+Of triumph, when his cruise was o'er,
+And to the vast eternal shore,
+Launched forth by death's o'erwhelming gale
+His gallant spirit spread its sail!
+O'er flowing bowl with might and main,
+He fought his battle's o'er again,
+Talked of chain shot, and "Stinkpot's" stench,
+And hated cordially the French,
+Whom he believed were but created
+To be by sailors killed and hated
+What e'er he was, what passage o'er,
+He took to the mysterious shore,
+Old Charon never cleft the wave.
+Yet with a soul more true and brave!
+And Baptiste Homier, when alive,
+I think had children twenty-five,
+Presided o'er a tavern neat,
+On the south side of Rideau street.
+A place well known both near and far,
+And there John Johnston kept the bar,
+Related backward up the stream,
+To him who had the lucky dream;
+With the old Chief, who in "a fix"
+Was found before old '76.
+Colonial history has told
+The story in the days of old.
+The Indian dreamed, the General lost
+His uniform, but to his cost
+The wily chieftain quickly found
+The General's dream, bought solid ground,
+And Martin, James, and Darby Keally
+From the green land of the "Shillaly."
+Richard Fitzsimmons, too, was found,
+The Paganini of sweet sound
+In days gone by, with memories big,
+And well he danced an Irish jig.
+Most incomplete would be my tale,
+Did I not draw aside the veil,
+And bring from distant vistas through,
+The ancient fiddler into view.
+While strolling downward by the locks,
+One of those reminiscent knocks
+I felt, which brought my eye before
+Another of the men of yore;
+I gazed, as the dim shadow neared,
+And then before my sight appeared
+The recollection of a name,
+'Twas Commissary Ashworth came.
+And not far off, with business look
+And pen in hand o'er ponderous book,
+I see another friend of youth
+Noted for probity and truth;
+'Tis Thomas Donelly, worthy man!
+Whom now with memory's eye I scan.
+Still as the mist of memory clears,
+I meet the men of other years;
+Another page I now unfold,
+And Captain Bolton I behold,
+Or Major Bolton, if you will,
+Who lived upon the "Major's Hill,"
+Which got his rank and bears it still.
+It used to be in days gone by,
+"The Colonel's Hill," a rank more high,
+And worthy of the ancient trees,
+Whose foliage rustled in the breeze,
+Where pigeons, in their annual flight,
+Were wont by thousands to alight,
+O! many a fusilade I've seen,
+Of flint locks in its bowers green;
+It got the name recorded here,
+From Colonel By, who first lived there;
+'Twas then a grove of thickest shade,
+What civilization's hand hath made,
+The Indian, with its withering skill,
+It has done for the "Colonel's Hill."
+Who comes, so centaur like in grace,
+Good spirits pictured in his face?
+'Tis Isaac Smith, let truth not vary,
+A gentleman from Tipperary,
+Beloved by all, 'twere hard to mate him,
+He had no enemies to hate him,
+His friends were neither scarce nor few
+They numbered every soul he knew.
+Who e'er remembers Isaac Smith,
+Mounted top boots and breeches with,
+Upon his stately old black mare
+Will recollect a horseman rare.
+Christopher Carlton, where art thou?
+Come here, old friend, I want thee now
+To ramble back with me again
+To where of old McPherson and Crane,
+And Francis Clemow, too, I think,
+Did business at the Basin's brink.
+And Bindon Burton Alton, who
+Has vanished from terrestial view;
+The poet with the flashing eye--
+The true born son of minstrelsy!
+Who sang so sweetly, memory still
+Trembles with the undying thrill.
+Which throbbed in melting tones of fire
+From Bindon Burton Alton's lyre,
+Alas! alas! that such a soul
+Should sink a victim to the bowl.
+Thomas MacKay, who's worthy name
+Is well known even to modern fame.
+The worth which honest men revere
+Deserves a fitting record here.
+With mighty gangs he excavated
+The ancient quarry situated
+On west side of "the Major's Hill."
+Which modern hands find hard to till;
+The stones from thence by powder rent
+To build the seven Canal Locks went.
+The Sappers' Bridge, too, was erected
+By blocks of limestone thence ejected.
+Like many another rising man.
+Mackay for ancient Russell "ran"
+To use a term, which means to-day
+That he runs best who best can pay!
+The declaration found him seated
+And his antagonist defeated.
+New honors came his name to greet,
+A Legislative Councillor's seat
+Was given next to Russell's pride,
+Clad with which dignity he died.
+And no more upright man has e'er
+Deserving of the post sat there.
+And William Stewart, too, who's name
+Elsewhere has graced my roll of fame,
+Was as the reader will remember,
+For Bytown long ago a member,
+Good representative he made,
+And his constituents ne'er betrayed,
+We were by taxes lightly rated
+When Bytown was incorporated,
+By the Bill by him presented
+When he this village represented
+In '47, the year, no other,
+When to that stingy old step mother,
+The County of Carleton we were tied
+And had our temper sorely tried.
+This was before Lord Sydenham's reign
+Which gave that legislative strain
+To our Colonial Constitution,
+And made a legal institution,
+The Bill Municipal in Legislation,
+The often tinkered act which rules the nation.
+And James Stewart, a medico
+Of the old school of long ago,
+A votary of potent pill,
+And lancet too for many an ill.
+And not a whit more given to kill
+His patients, say these truthful rhymes.
+Than M.D's of more modern times,
+And now I think it only fair
+To mention here Doctor O'Hare,
+Who of old Bytown formed a part,
+And practised the assuaging art
+Before the time of Scanlon's tarry,
+Before the days of Edward Barry
+Who in his person did combine
+The medical and legal line,
+Exhibiting as his degree
+Upon his card J.P.M.D."
+He gave to Bytown's sporting men
+Such Fox-hunt as we ne'er again
+Shall see; ah! 'twas a joyful day,
+When Barry with tin horn away,
+In glory on "Bob Logie's" back,
+Followed the variegated pack
+Yelping in chorus o'er the plain,
+We'll never see such sport again!
+Who would at length the story hear,
+Can ask the Sheriff, he was there,
+And bravely in his headlong way
+Did "Shamrock" carry him that day,
+Close in the terror stricken wake
+Of Reynard, over bush and brake,
+James Fraser, too, can tell the tale,
+For he went over hill and dale,
+And swamp and fence and ditch and bush,
+Foremost in the determined rush.
+To get up first and win the brush,
+While loud above the yelling din,
+Sounded the Doctor's horn of tin,
+That hunt the public health to save
+Was the best prescription e'er he gave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+Can I, an ancient friend, pass by,
+Who even to-day still greets my eye,
+And brings up among modern men
+The dearly cherish'd past again?
+'Tis far, far back, I scarce can fix
+The date, perhaps, 'twas '26,
+When he, in Huntly, on a farm,
+Once tried his unaccustomed arm
+At work for which 'twas never made,
+In that most independent trade.
+He left Bucolics, trees, and all,
+And moved away to Montreal,
+To teach, as better him did suit,
+"The young idea how to shoot."
+And many a youth has blest the day
+Of Alexander Workman's sway.
+I'll say no more, lest I should be
+Accused, perhaps, of flattery.
+'Twould scarcely here be out of place
+If Edward Griffin's smiling face
+I should present in colors true--
+In good Samaritanic view;
+The patron of Joe Lee, whose name
+Is known to histrionic fame;
+Who play'd at Shylock on the stage,
+When tragedy was more the rage
+Than in this sad degenerate age.
+And where art thou, my friend, George Story,
+A man of yore, though not yet hoary?
+The even tenor of thy way
+Hast thou maintain'd for many a day;
+They tell us within human range
+That mortal things are given to change,
+It may be so, yet thou art still
+But little changed, though down the hill
+Quietly gliding, still thou hast
+An air about thee of the past;
+Who knew thee thirty years ago
+At the first glance would know thee now.
+And Thomas Story--modest man--
+As well as any other can,
+Or, he may think, much better too,
+Suit habit's taste in me or you,
+In coat artistically made
+According to that ancient trade,
+Which had its rise in solitude,
+Where Adam lived before the flood--
+Is still Tom Story of the past,
+Long may his life's fair measure last
+And Sandy Mowat, here's a line
+To thee, in memory of lang syne;
+Fond wert thou of the target ground--
+Fond of a rifle and a hound;
+Dost thou remember Bearbrook's brink
+And the old shanty without "chink,"
+Or door to stop the piercing gale
+That whirled along the snow-clad vale,
+Where Peter McArthur, you and I,
+Once slept beneath a wintry sky;
+While through the roof in splendor bright
+We saw the guardians of the night--
+The snow-storm of the coming day--
+The savage wounded buck at bay--
+And how we lost and found our way?
+Dost thou forget the strain of glee
+That from deep slumber's arms roused thee?
+Dost thou remember who did ride
+The bounding wounded buck astride,
+And whose the crimsoned hunting knife
+That ended there the quarry's life.
+Then "Eastman's Springs" were little known
+To few beyond we three alone.
+And Malcolm Ferguson, oh why,
+Should memory's record pass thee by?
+An artist of the gentle trade,
+By whom Bytonians were arrayed
+Most fashionably in old times.
+When dross among the social crimes
+Held not the rank which modern art
+Hath given it in fashion's mart.
+An agile fireman, danger-proof,
+As ever struggled up a roof,
+Or to the midnight summons sprang
+When the alarm signal rang;
+As cat or squirrel of active limb--
+A "ridge-pole" was a street to him.
+The old extinguishers of flame
+Will well remember Malcolm's name.
+As the long past I wander through,
+Michael O'Reilly comes to view;
+A man of stature, somewhat brief,
+Who largely dealt of old in beef,
+In that cheap time when scanty coin
+Was ample for the fattest loin,
+Rounds, chops, and beefsteaks were not gold
+In those delightful days of old.
+'Tis true the tallow-candle's light
+Was all the ray that cheered the night,
+Before our first assizes term
+Was dignified by actual sperm--
+The real thing--no "Belmont's" then
+Were found among the sons of men.
+Another name remembrance brings,
+The muse of old John Darcey sings,
+In numbers almost a magician--
+A wonderful arithmetician,
+Whose mode with all others "collided,"
+Who added, multiplied, divided,
+And even substracted by such rules
+As ne'er were known or taught at schools.
+No learned professor of the birch
+E'er left John Darcey in the lurch;
+No pedagogue was ever able
+To con his arithmetic table.
+And Edward Darcey--no relation--
+Except in name, to old Equation,
+A son of Crispin, a sole nailer,
+Who owned a curly dog called "Sailor"--
+A noble, liver-hue'd retriever,
+Who'd make one almost a believer
+In canine intellectual merit
+Which dogs as well as men inherit.
+Louis Pinard, in ancient times,
+Was always ready with the "dimes"--
+Excuse the slang--which a disgrace is--
+At gallopping or trotting races,
+And A.P. Lesperance beside him,
+A good horse kept, and well could ride him,
+When horsemanship was more in fashion
+Than sitting still and laying lash on,
+In four-wheeled vehicle at ease,
+Which modern Jehuism doth please.
+And Galipean, who kept good whiskey,
+And old Jamaica to make frisky
+The visitors to his retreat,
+On the east side of Sussex Street,
+Close to the very spot, I think,
+Where now James Thompson deals in mink,
+Otter and other kinds of fur,
+Prime and unprime, without demur.
+'Twas at this inn one afternoon
+In '33, the month was June,
+That Martin Hennessy once tried
+On horseback up the stairs to ride.
+And would have done so, but for this,
+A pistol shot that did not miss,
+Which gave him, oh, most foul disgrace!
+A charge of buckshot in the face,
+Which spoiled his beauty without doubt.
+And knocked his "dexter peeper" out.
+And E.S. Lyman, old cathartic!
+With lengthy form and features arctic--
+Dispenser of blisters, pills and potions,
+Boluses and specific lotions,
+And panaceas in variety
+To cram the ailing to satiety--
+Succeeded Auld, Apothecary,
+A scientific quoiter, very,
+Who righted phisiologic faults
+With Calomel and Epsom Salts,
+And made prescriptions up with skill
+Of _aqua pura_, which doth still
+Maintain its place as chief ingredient,
+In every mixture, quite expedient,
+He kept his drug shop at the spot
+Where hospitality has got
+Her Shiboleth from land of Tara,
+Under the rule of Pat. O'Meara!
+And Richard Kneeshaw, man of science,
+Who placed in _reason_ such reliance,
+As made him almost think salvation
+Could not be found in revelation:
+Chemist and druggist by profession,
+He held within his mind's possession
+Vast stores of knowledge, ever breeding
+Ideas new from constant reading.
+And Henry Bishoprick, a wise man,
+Who acted druggist and exciseman,
+And seized at loaded pistol's muzzle
+Contrabandistas, who could puzzle
+An ordinary Gager's cunning
+When tea and whiskey they were running.
+And William Henry Baldwin, too,
+Who first appeared in public view
+At the old Albion, where in state,
+Bob Graham rules the roast of late;
+Son of a U.E. Loyalist,
+Who found his way out of the mist
+Republican which played such tricks
+With loyalty in '76,
+He came, as many another came
+To Canada, in Britain's name,
+To live his life and die beside
+The flag that's still his country's pride!
+Thomas Gillespie Burns, "T.G.,"
+I have not quite forgotten thee;
+Thou wert an early importation
+From Erin's Isle, and thy migration
+Did little damp in heart or hand
+Thy love for the old parent land,
+Who's green is greener in its pride
+Of bloom than all the world beside!
+Thy boast has always been true blue--
+To British institutions true!
+And William Rogerson, 'tis well
+That I of him should something tell--
+A tall, majestic, looking son
+Of Caledonia--he was one,
+In early times, who carried on
+The lumber traffic with a will,
+When such names as Price and McGill
+Were standards in the staple trade
+Which Bytown Ottawa hath made.
+And William Dunning, who kept store
+The first old County Gaol before,
+Where now the Albion proudly stands
+And flourishes in other hands,
+And Clements Bradley, who lived near
+The border long ago, was here;
+An agriculturist of yore,
+Who settled near the Rideau's shore,
+And opened 'mid primeval trees
+A pathway for the passing breeze.
+Full half a century has flown
+Since the first tree he tumbled down,
+And yet his strength seems still unspent,
+His step is firm, his back unbent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+Pierre Rocque, thou ancient man of stone!
+I had almost let thee alone;
+But 'twere not well to leave behind,
+A man of such a rocky kind;
+Thy Christian name is stone--that's hard,
+Rock is thy surname, saith the Bard
+Thou art an adamantine card.
+And Baptist Cantin, too, it seems,
+Appears 'mongst recollections' dreams,
+A carpenter of worth and note,
+Who ne'er asked sixpence for his vote.
+Helaire Pinard presents his face,
+And cheerfully I give him place,
+A quiet, rare man, be it known,
+Who minds no business but his own.
+Joseph Paquette, to thee I give
+A line to make thy memory live,
+'Mid earliest recollections, thou
+Art not the one least thought of now;
+Something far better than mere fame
+Is thine, it is an honest name!
+Thomas E. Woodbury, who made
+Tin cans and stovepipes, when the trade
+And town was in an infant state,
+Back in the days of '28.
+And Fletcher, an old Yankee, who
+Taught school and flogged his scholars, too
+With a good health-inspiring cat,
+My blessing on his old white hat!
+Tho' scarce, entitled like the rest
+By early advent, I think best
+To name "The Orator of the West,"
+James Spencer Lidstone, child of song,
+The "man of memory," vast and long,
+Who had, reader you need not start,
+All Milton's Paradise by heart;
+Strange mixture he of prose and rhyme,
+Ridiculous, and the sublime
+In him were singularly blended;
+Where one began or the other ended,
+It would be difficult to tell.
+He played his part in each so well,
+James Spencer Lidstone, fare thee well!
+And 'mongst the ancient sons of fame
+Who says that Dinny Cantlin's name
+Does not deserve a line or two
+In these old chronicles most true?
+Dinny was just four feet in length,
+Although a man of pith and strength,
+His arm was always ready, too,
+All rowdyism to subdue.
+When special constable one day,
+He captured in some sudden fray
+A fellow six feet high, or taller,
+And held him firmly by the collar;
+And Dinny, as he upward gazed
+At the colossus, o'er him raised,
+Exclaimed, "escape now, if you can,
+You're in the clutches of a man!"
+Dinny had a commanding eye,
+His hat was eighteen inches high
+Come next to view, Denis O'Neill,
+A ship carpenter, who laid the keel
+Of many a vessel in his day,
+And still he clinks and caulks away.
+James Finch, too, who died here of late,
+Was one of those of '28,
+Or '27 it may be,
+Comes nearer to the certainty;
+James Finch sledged stoutly with a will,
+In the old forge on "Major's Hill,"
+In '29, he once lay still
+For fifteen minutes on the ground
+Insensible to sight or sound,
+'Twas a stone that almost killed him quite,
+In a most lively faction fight
+In Bytown's celebrated fair,
+When stones flew thickly through the air,
+I can't forget it, I was there;
+Its history I'll not jot down
+Until I get to Upper Town.
+And Charles Rowan, well I know,
+The reader sought for him ere now,
+What shall I of friend Charlie say,
+Who came from Connaught all the way?
+Who well can speak the celtic tongue
+In which the Irish mintrels sung.
+When famous Malachi of old
+The collar wore of beaten gold,
+Torn fiercely from the haughty Dane
+By his right arm in battle slain!
+Charlie is mild and full of meekness,
+Horses with him have been a weakness:
+A clipper spanking between traces
+He used to drive at trotting races,
+And then his powers of selection
+In liquor almost touch perfection.
+Next comes James Whitty, man of old,
+Who once was a young sailor bold,
+A quiet, little Wexford man,
+Who warmed his jacket at Japan,
+And "dashed his buttons" gaily, too,
+In China with the pig-tailed crew;
+Ere he in times that are no more
+On Ottawa's bosom tugged an oar.
+John Ashfield now in sight appears,
+A gunsmith of the faded years;
+Just as flint locks began to lapse,
+He came in with percussion caps.
+Here, too, is William Graham, the same,
+Who from Fermanagh County came,
+And many a hard earned shilling made
+By groceries and general trade;
+Father of him once called "Black Bill,"
+That we might designate him still,
+From him of Madawaska note,
+Who oft on timber was afloat,
+And who has claim in song of mine
+To something o'er a passing line.
+Companion of my early youth,
+When time with us was young; and truth
+Was all we knew in life's fair spring,
+Thy name doth recollections bring
+Long slumbering in "oblivions vale,"
+'Till waked by memory's passing gale;
+With thee I strayed in days of yore
+Beside old "Goodwood's" pleasant shore;
+Each unforgotten scene by thee
+Is brought to life again for me;
+A child again with thee I stand,
+Among that childish happy band,
+Who thought not, dreamt not, that the day
+Of early bliss would pass away;
+No retrospect can be more fair
+That that I see behind me there,
+Friend William Graham, I wish thee well,
+But this to thee I need not tell.
+Who is he with the cassock on,
+Who bursts my second sight upon,
+A merry twinkle in his eye,
+Not sanctimonious, nor yet sly,
+His country, one can scarcely miss
+Such pure Hibernian brogue is his?
+Tis surely Father Heron's gait,
+Bytown's first priest in '28.
+Close in canonical degree,
+John Cannon's stately form I see,
+In bigotry no stern red-tapist,
+Favorite of Protestant and Papist;
+A jovial blade with soul elastic,
+No gloomy-faced ecclesiastic,
+He ruled his congregation well,
+Nor taught them that the path to hell
+Was thronged by those who made digression
+From penance, fasting and confession.
+And there with academic birch,
+Stands Anslie of the English Church,
+Who preached in Hull and Bytown too,
+Of old, to many a godless crew,
+Assembled on each Sabbath day
+To pass an idle hour away,
+Though doubtless some went there to pray,
+While here I pass in swift review
+The reverend and pious few,
+Who stood as finger posts of yore,
+Pointing the way to Canaan's shore,
+John Carroll surely should appear,
+And take his proper station here,
+An honest Wesleyan was he,
+Who never knew hypocrisy.
+George Poole in days more distant still,
+In the little church on "Sandy Hill,"
+Which gave its name to "Chapel Street,"
+His congregation oft did meet.
+And John C. Davidson, also,
+Was one of those who long ago
+'Mid primal darkness, thick and gross,
+Unfurled the banner of the cross;
+A Methodist both sound and prime
+He was esteemed in the old time,
+'Till something gave his faith a lurch,
+And he bolted to the English Church,
+In which 'tis said that he is quite
+"A burning and a shining light."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+And now another man I seek,
+Who lived on George Street, by the creek,
+Lo! memory's telescopic eye
+At once John Taillon's shade brings nigh,
+And as his form approaches near,
+His laugh I almost seem to hear.
+One of those lost with much regret,
+James Leamy, I would not forget,
+Though not a man of '28,
+His early and untimely fate--
+His merry life and tragic fall,
+Are in the memory of all.
+And Andrew Leamy in his time,
+Was head of many a stirring "shine;"
+A man of mark he might be singled,
+In whom the good and bad commingled,
+In equal balance in such way,
+That each in turn had its sway;
+He's gone! the grass grows o'er his head;
+The muse deals gently with the dead.
+James Devlin, where are you old man,
+Whose fingers o'er the catgut ran?
+Professor of the art to foil
+Both "treason, stratagem and spoil,"
+In days which now are but a riddle,
+When William Murphy played the fiddle
+So merrily, long, long ago,
+To trip of "light fantastic toe."
+Fond were you of the rod and line
+When sport and profit did combine
+In other days, when mighty Bass
+And Pickerel lay upon the grass
+Beside you, as with practised hand,
+You hauled the scaly kings to land
+Night-lines and gill-nets, may they be
+Accurst--have ruined you and me!
+And left us nought but "tommy cods"
+As trophies for our idle rods.
+Who is he with such pompous air--
+Such magic curl of scented hair,
+With glass stuck tightly o'er one eye
+To scan the common passer by,
+While every air betokens well
+The presence of a "howling swell?"
+'Tis Henry Howard Burgess, O!
+To him Dundreary's self were slow.
+And Thomas Burgess, too, was here,
+A swell, though not quite so severe.
+And the two Johnston's, born twins,
+As like each other as two pins,
+Clerks in the Ordnance Office were
+And surely a most proper pair.
+John Grant, too, who quite early came,
+A constable of ancient fame,
+Who kept the peace, right well, 'tis true,
+When he had nothing else to do.
+Few were the summonses he got,
+Warrants fell seldom to his lot;
+The town was not by courts infested,
+People liked not to be arrested,
+And seldom were--for to the Ring
+Complainants did their troubles bring,
+And there found justice, sometimes too much
+Redress, of which they oft did rue much.
+J.B. Lavois, with thee I close
+My lengthy memories of those
+I knew of old in Lower Town,
+Though last, not least in size, I own.
+A butcher of the olden time,
+Who furnished roasts and steaks most prime,
+In the old George Street Market House,
+Where cats held many a grand carouse,
+Ere rats to Bytown emigrated
+In swarms pestiferous and hated.
+And if I have forgotten one,
+Whom memory could not fasten on,
+Let him feel no neglecting smart,
+I have not passed him with my heart,
+I've done my best 'neath friendship's spoil,
+So Lower Bytown now farewell!
+
+
+
+
+
+UPPER TOWN.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+And now, kind reader, westward ho!
+Across the Sappers' Bridge we go;
+When first in youth I cross'd it o'er,
+The arch was wood, "and nothing more"--
+As Edgar A. Poe doth remark
+About that raven big and dark--
+The wooden span, I mean, stretched o'er
+The channel's width from shore to shore,
+On which skilled artificers laid
+The arch of stone, so truly made,
+And strong, that it to-day appears,
+After the crush of forty years
+And more, impervious to decay,
+As if 'twere built but yesterday.
+I stand upon the western side,
+And see in all its verdant pride
+The hill crowned with its ancient trees,
+Who's foliage rustled in the breeze
+For centuries, all branching wide,
+Standing untouched on every side;
+A spot where the Algonquin _magi_,
+May have reclined "_sub tegmine fagi_;"
+For when across the Sapper's Bridge,
+The prospect was a fine beech ridge,
+And "Gibson's corner," in old time,
+For squirrel hunting was most prime,
+"Prime" is a somewhat slangy phrase
+For these high philologic days,
+And in connexion, be it stated,
+With a spot to science dedicated.
+J.H.P. Gibson's astral lecture
+Will place this fact beyond conjecture.
+Bound that old spot now thronged by all,
+Has many a chipmonk met his fall
+By dart from youthful sportsman's bow,
+Which laid the striped beech-nutter low.
+No central Ottawa was then,
+As now, resort of busy men--
+The first stone of our centre town
+By Mason's hand was not laid down;
+A forest path across the hill
+To Bank Street led--the place was still;
+No noisy vehicle passed there,
+The dwellers of the wood to scare.
+The road for carriages led round
+Old Bytown's ancient burial ground,
+Upon the hill's south eastern base,
+Of which there is not now a trace;
+And spreading off in endless green
+To the canal the bush was seen--
+The ancient forest--then the deer
+To Bank Street Church's site was near,
+And ruffed-grouse, wrongly named partridges,
+Whirled and drum'd between the ridges,
+Black ducks and Teal did oft alight
+In ponds round Corkstown from their flight,
+And when the swamp down Slater Street
+Was cleared, a dozen snipes would greet
+At every step the sportman's eye,
+O! glorious spot of days gone by.
+To listen, ah! 'twas splendid fun!
+To Commissary Oriel's gun,
+As with a quick well practiced eye
+He made the quivering feathers fly!
+There was not then one cabin sill
+Laid down on famed Ashburnham Hill,
+Who's heights with pine and hemlock crowned,
+Towered o'er the wooded landscape round.
+Then Bradish Billings farmed away
+Where his descendants live to-day,
+A man of enterprising fame,
+Who from the land of pumpkin's came,
+And pitched his tent in honor's track
+Beneath the glorious Union Jack!
+Then Colonel By was in a jam
+Erecting the first hogsback dam,
+Which vanished with Spring's sweeping flood;
+But science made the structure good
+By the advice of one, no civil
+Engineer, with whom a level
+Or other instrument of science,
+Had not the most remote alliance.
+'Twas built as he proposed--I'm sorry
+His name from memory I can't worry,
+If Lyman Perkins was beside me,
+To it he certainly could guide me.
+For he has got, of ancient bore,
+A well authenticated store.
+Now first among our old landmarks,
+Comes Laird of Bytown, Nicholas Sparks,
+Who came across in '26
+From Hull, his lucky fate to fix
+Upon a bush farm which he bought
+For sixty pounds--and little thought,
+While grumbling at a price so high,
+That fortune had not passed him by.
+He little dreamed of Ottawa now,
+When 'mongst the stumps his wooden plough
+Stir'd the first sod in times of old;
+He knew not then, that 'twas not mould
+He turne'd up, and tilled, but gold.
+'Tis not my business here to flatter,
+Or with enconiums to bespatter
+The shadows of departed men
+Whom we shall never see again.
+Yet I may say, who knew him well,
+And of him would not falsehood tell,
+That as poor human nature ran,
+He was an honest upright man,
+"Close fisted" as the need occurred,
+Yet one who always kept his word.
+Whate'er the cost--I say no more
+Of Nicholas Sparks--who for the shore
+Unknown, has shaken out his sail
+Where riches are of no avail
+To win calm sea or favoring gale
+And Lyman Perkins, what of thee,
+Will pass for current coin from me?
+Thou art a man of early date--
+Of '27 or '28--
+in Bytown's history, and 'tis said,
+Though hard to drive, thou may'st be led,
+That is, if one could just agree
+In view and argument with thee;
+When standing in the days of yore
+At "Pooley's Bridge," thine eye ran o'er
+The picture with a prescient glance;
+Experience taught thee that thy chance
+Was then--thy foresight came
+To aid thee in life's winning game.
+Although no silver spoon was in
+Thy mouth, when to this world of sin
+Thou camest, thou hast forged from fate
+A path in life most fortunate;
+To praise thee I shall take no pains,
+Thy enterprise has brought thee gains--
+'Tis something to be born with brains!
+Daniel O'Connor there doth stand,
+One of the old departed band--
+Another of the pioneers
+Of Bytown in its early years;
+In memory's magic glass I see
+Him as he first appeared to me
+In '28 when passing down
+Through the main street in Upper Town.
+A merchant of a distant date
+Before the days of '28,
+And County Treasurer was he,
+Long, too, a Carleton J.P.,
+Ere Courts of Justice were installed,
+When Bytown "Nepean Point" was called;
+In politics he was a Tory,
+And thus doth end of him my story.
+Nathaniel Sherrold Blasdell, too,
+Who once a blacksmith's bellows blew
+In the old forge, which in the shade
+Of the Russell House still undecayed,
+Stands firm a landmark of the past,
+How long will such old memories last?
+He, too, was one of those who's hand
+Built up the bulwarks of the land,
+I say unto such men as he,
+_Requiescat in pace_.
+And Doctor Rankin, there he goes,
+With solemn brow and turned out toes
+Upon his mottled bob-tailed horse,
+Who's canter said, the patients worse,
+Or better, as the trusty steed
+Did indicate by passing speed.
+John Burrows, too, with serious air,
+Sung hymns and offered frequent prayer,
+And taught a Sunday School with might,
+To spread religion's early light,
+He held a post in other years
+Among the Royal Engineers,
+With Colonel By, a right-hand man,
+His course of favor he began,
+And once owned much of the wild land
+Upon which Ottawa doth stand.
+John Ghitty is a favorite name,
+His old hotel was known to fame,
+And travellers from far and near,
+Called at his temple of good cheer.
+A mason of most high degree,
+In the craft's early dawn was he.
+So much respected was he here,
+That unbought friendship o'er his bier
+Shed many a sad regretful tear.
+And surly old James Doran, too,
+A warrior of Waterloo,
+Kept with a despot's iron hand,
+The best hotel in all the land;
+Who entered there of human kind
+Was forced to leave his dog behind,
+For Doran had a frowning face
+For each and all the canine race.
+And Daniel Fisher, who kept store
+On Wellington's west side of yore,
+A most experienced auctioneer
+In somewhat more contracted sphere,
+Than circles trade's expanding flow
+Round Bermingham, McLean and Rowe
+And Michael Burke, who kept a still--
+And made beer down below the hill
+Where malt and hops together came,
+And gave the "Brewery Hill" its name--
+That hill with pathway to the right,
+Where Bank Street ends upon the height.
+And many a barrel of his beer
+Went down, the Irish heart to cheer,
+When ancient crowds did celebrate
+St. Patrick's Day in '28.
+But patriotism's spirit rose;
+From words contention went to blows,
+And ere the little "scrimmage" ended
+A crack that never could be mended,
+Was in a luckless cranium made,
+By one whom justice never paid;
+I cannot tell what colored ribbon
+He wore--his name was Dan McGibbon.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+George William Baker, better known
+As "Captain Baker" in the town.
+Who oft the mailbag's lock untied
+Long after Matthew Connell died--
+Long after Helen Denny's hand
+Sent postal letters o'er the land;
+An Englishman of good degree,
+A Justice of the Peace was he,
+And Captain of Artillery--
+If memory has not gone astray--
+He was in his life's early day,
+He shewed his claims to education
+In County Council legislation,
+Where he in intellectual pride
+Sat long by Hamnett Pinhey's side,
+Our Local Parliament's since then
+Have seldom witnessed two such men
+Paymaster Rudyerd, too, I scan,
+A most important gentleman,
+Who carried in the days of old
+The Governmental bags of gold;
+Yet never did one less resemble
+He, of the twelve who did dissemble,
+And for the thirty pieces paid,
+His master cruelly betrayed.
+And John McCarthy, who can say
+That he's a man of yesterday?
+Through the dim maze of vanished year
+His name to memory appears,
+A dealer in strong leather ware
+That stood the worst of wear and tear
+Since paths of '27 he trod,
+His eye hath seen the grassy sod
+O'er many a friend--let's hope no foe--
+With whom he started long ago,
+In the long race down life's steep hill
+On which he treads securely still.
+Captain Letreton, too, I see,
+An officer of high degree.
+The owner, ere the days of rats,
+Of that wide district called "the Flats"
+In modern times, where I behold,
+A pinery as in days of old.
+And Isaac Firth, an old John Bull,
+Of milk of human kindness full,
+Of rotund form and smiling face,
+Who kept an entertaining place
+For travel-worn and weary fellows
+Who landed where Caleb S. Bellows,
+Out on "the Point" his habitation
+Built in a pleasant situation,
+Before the days when piles of lumber
+Did first fair nature's face encumber;
+Quite near the spot where first with skill
+John Perkins built his little mill,
+Where Philip Thompson many a year
+Ago, commenced his bright career,
+And took the ebbing of the tide,
+Which into golden waves did glide;
+He man'd his craft and steered her well
+O'er placid calm and tossing swell,
+And independent of the gale
+Hath snap'd his oar and furled his sail.
+'Twas just above "the whitefish hole,"
+How dear that spot is to my soul!
+There Allan Cameron and I
+Together many a day did hie,
+To haul the silvery shining prey
+From out the whirling eddy's spray;
+In July, '32, to land,
+I drew two barrels with my own hand,
+The trophies of the hook and line
+In the dear days of auld lang syne
+That was the fatal month and year
+When cholera was rampant here;
+Malignant Asiatic type,
+Which from the book of life did wipe
+The name of many a sturdy one
+'Twixt rise and setting of the sun.
+Dread terror brooded o'er the land,
+While the destroying angel's hand
+Smote here and there each deadly blow,
+Which laid in dust the proudest low!
+As I remember--those fared worst,
+Who in that dismal time were curst
+With dangerous and insatiate thirst.
+And H.V. Noel, surely here
+His name is worthy to appear;
+'Mongst those whom I so long have known,
+Tis strange that he has not outgrown
+The friendship of the early few
+Into who's confidence he grew,
+By the unchanging honest course
+He steered for better or for worse,
+Well has he worn, long may he bear
+Up stoutly 'gainst the world's care!
+John Cruickshank of the kirk, who prayed
+Beneath the old white birch's shade--
+The old white birch--that sacred trust!
+Improvement's hand hath to the dust
+Upturned to make frontal space
+For temple of more modern grace,
+A grander altar than of yore,
+The ancient "Black mouth's" knelt before.
+And Robert Sheriff, stately man,
+Who the Crown Timber Office "ran"--
+To use a well worn Yankee phrase
+Unknown in Bytown's early days.
+And A.J. Christie, what shall I
+Say of this old celebrity?
+An M.D. of exceeding skill
+Who dealt in lancet, leech and pill,
+Cantharides and laudanum, too,
+When milder measures would not do;
+A polished scholar and a sage,
+A thinker far before his age,
+A writer of sarcastic vein
+And philosophic depth, who's train
+Of thought was comprehensive, deep,
+Peace to his ashes! let him sleep!
+In ancient times his prophet eye
+Saw Bytown's future destiny,
+Fools laughed and disbelieved the seer
+Who's second sight saw triumph near--
+A scene which fortune did fulfil
+The Parliament on "Barrack Hill!"
+And Lawyer Hagerman I knew,
+When lawyers little had to do--
+Their briefs were few, their fees were brief,
+And brief had been their Sunday beef,
+Had they nought else to fill their maw
+Than the proceeds of briefless law;
+For litigation had not then
+Curst Bytown's early race of men!
+And Robert Drummond, Engineer,
+Who built across the "_Grande Chaudiere_"
+The old "Swing Bridge," which many a day
+Amid the "Kettle's" curling spray,
+From side to side did gently sway.
+The adamantine iron tether
+Which chained two provinces together,
+Ere legislation's fiat came
+With moral might to do the same.
+Well's and McCrea of lumbering note,
+Who had on many a stream afloat
+Vast rafts of red pine timber, when
+White pine was little thought of; then
+Oak, elm, cedar and red pine
+And staves, together did combine,
+With now and then a mast or spar,
+To make up what would go at par,
+At Stadacona--old Quebec--
+Where brave Montgomery got a check
+In a most bootless, foolish strife,
+Which cost him his undaunted life--
+Where Arnold got a broken thigh,
+Ere at West Point his treachery
+Brought Major Andre without hope
+To Washington's relentless rope!
+To Wolfe I'd like to wander back,
+But 'twill not do, so to my track
+I now reluctantly return,
+Who next is ready for the urn?
+Adam Hood Burwell is the man,
+An English Churchman he began,
+But ended a most shining light,
+A mystic, full-fledged Irvingite,
+With pinions rustling for a sphere
+Of usefulness he found not here.
+Another of the reverend throng
+I'll introduce, 'tis S.S. Strong,
+A man who's memory I recall
+As one respected here by all,
+An honor to his cloth and race,
+With whom no strange fire left its trace,
+Upon the shrine where truth he found,
+Who preached and practiced precepts sound,
+Nor wore his shoes on hallowed ground.
+William and Hugh Calder's names
+Arise, and now present their claims
+To immortality in rhyme,
+Both merchants of the olden time.
+John Anderson, a merchant was,
+And dealt with profit and with loss
+In groceries and dainty "grub,"
+With wine, Jamaica, rum and shrub,
+That had no leaves upon its stem,
+Though beads like dewdrops did begem
+Its ruby rippling diadem.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+"And "Little Johnny Robertson,"
+But lately from amongst us gone,
+Took both his "sneeshin" and his glass,
+And let the tide of fortune pass.
+And Ewen Cameron, who died
+By cholera in manhood's pride;
+A Caledonian lithe and strong,
+As fancy paints the dauntless throng,
+Who dashed with claymore down the slope,
+On red Culloden's grave of hope.
+And Peter Aylen, who could tell
+The path he trod of yore as well
+As I, who from an early day
+Knew Peter Aylen's every way?
+'Tis not my purpose to indite
+A history of his life; or write
+A record of his strange career,
+To interest the reader here.
+Howe'er his stirring life you scan,
+You'll find that Aylen was a man!
+Afraid of nought that ever wore
+The human shape on Ottawa's shore!
+Chief of the "shiners," it was said,
+Cæsar or nothing--never led--
+But always foremost in the fray,
+Was ever Peter Aylen's way.
+A heavy lumberer Peter was,
+When lumbering was like pitch and toss,
+To-day success, to-morrow loss.
+But let him rest, he sleeps beside
+The Ottawa's majestic tide!
+Perhaps I'd better mention here
+Who and what the "shiners" were,
+Who gave of yore such sturdy thumps,
+And brought forth phrenologic bumps
+Unknown to scan of craniology,
+With bludgeons or aid of geology.
+A band of Irish raftsmen, who
+Were to each other always true,
+Combined together, war they made,
+To banish from the lumber trade
+All French-Canadian competition
+By dooming it to abolition;
+They made the wild attempt, at least,
+To extirpate poor Jean Baptiste.
+Among their victims they enrol'd him,
+And made the place too hot to hold him,
+Yet were the tales that rumor told,
+Worse than the shiners' acts of old,
+Though memory's charged with many a fray
+That happened in the early day,
+When shiners with an iron hand
+Reigned here the terror of the land!
+Few were the victims of the strife--
+If any--and the loss of life,
+Was fanciful much more than real
+In that blood-letting old ordeal.
+Among the medico's of old,
+Doctor Stratford I behold,
+Who foolishly I thought deemed best
+To emigrate towards the West,
+And leave behind a work which few
+Could with a single lancet do
+When venesection--old idea,
+Combined with the Phamacopeiæ
+Was patent as a panacea
+For almost every mortal ill,
+Like calomel jalap, or blue pill.
+He disappeared from healing fame,
+And young Edward Vancortlandt came;
+For he was young and active, too,
+When first he met the minstrel's view,
+And striding rapidly did go
+Along full forty years ago!
+VanCortlandt's had a long career
+Since first he bled and blistered here;
+His own hand hath his fortune made--
+His own hand the foundation laid--
+And if success, with hoards of wealth
+He has not now--the public health
+Has never suffered at his hand;
+Nor has the mystic spirit land
+Been peopled by the shades of those
+Who in their last dissolving throes,
+Gave evidence that power to kill
+Was mingled with Vancortlandt's skill--
+When to that distant coast he'll steer,
+No crowd of ghosts will hover near,
+And cry out. "Van, you sent us here!"
+Edward McGillivray, how is this,
+That I by accident should miss
+So long an ancient name like thine,
+'Twould be unpardonable, if mine
+The fault to leave thy well-known name
+Unwritten in my roll of fame?
+Bytown was young, and so wert thou,
+Years long before the "Shannon's" prow
+Cleft Ottawa's bosom on her way
+To Grenville in our early day.
+No steam whistle's discordant yell
+Shrieked on the evening zephyr's swell;
+But from her deck the cannon's din
+Told Bytown that the boat was in,
+And at the sound the signal man
+His banner up the flagstaff ran.
+It was a good old time when thou
+Bought beavers at a price which now,
+When beaver skins are somewhat rare,
+Would cause even Chauncey Bangs to stare.
+Yes, 'twas a fine old time for trade,
+Money was plenty--easy made,
+And thou wert, aye, a canine blade.
+Patrick Delaney home has gone
+From earthly toil, and he was one
+Of those who in the distant past,
+His lot in Upper Town had cast.
+James Elder, a majestic Scot!
+On whom of old it was my lot
+To look with veneration's eye.
+Kept Bytown's staid academy;
+And here I dwell with fond delight,
+And view again with memory's sight
+The stately teacher in his chair,
+King of the throng assembled there.
+Now Allan Cameron comes to view,
+And William Stubbs, there he is too.
+Wellington Wright, too, I behold,
+And wild Jack Adamson, the bold.
+The Anderson's, both James and John,
+And Stephen Lett, my mother's son,
+Who stood upon Parnassus' crown
+By might of Genius, and looked down
+To where with errant steps I strayed
+Around its base beneath the shade.
+And many more were pupils there,
+Where are they? "echo answers, where?"
+In fancy I away have stepped
+From where his school James Elder kept,
+In that old house remembered well,
+After, as Joseph Kirk's Hotel,
+Ere it was haunted by a sound
+Which shed such melody around,
+Sweet almost as the songs of Zion,
+From violin of Robinson Lyon,
+Who drew such music from its strings,
+Scotch reels, strathspeys and highland flings,
+And Irish jigs in variation,
+As made one feel that "all creation"
+Could scarcely match his wizard spell,
+'Twas he that played the fiddle well!
+And Edward Malloch, gone to rest,
+Was not the worst, nor yet the best,
+Perhaps, 'mongst those of other days
+To whom I dedicate these lays.
+I knew him well in '25,
+When Richmond Village was alive,
+While Bytown's head was scarcely seen,
+Emerging from the forest green.
+A captain of Artillery
+In '37's hot time was he,
+When Louis Joseph Papineau
+Sought British power to overthrow;
+And William L. McKenzie tried
+O'er loyalty and truth to ride;
+Each found the path, for what he wanted,
+Too hot to walk in--and "levanted;"
+Von Shoultz, a soldier abler, riper,
+Remained behind and "paid the piper!"
+Even I, poetic man of peace,
+Have often marched and stood at ease,
+Beside the Richmond guns, brought here
+To thunder o'er the _Grande Chaudière_,
+At the great Union celebration,
+The new bridge's inauguraton;
+One thing is certain, those brass guns
+Were ne'er seen more by Richmond's sons.
+They fell prey to official nabbing,
+And Governmental red tape grabbing,
+Like plunder from the vanquished harried,
+To Montreal off they were carried!
+Malloch was member many a year
+For Carleton when votes were not dear--
+When damaged eyes, and smashed proboscis
+Would follow, as the smallest losses.
+The offer of a vile bank note
+As price of an elector's vote.
+Gold, said the sage, perhaps 'twas law,
+On Dian's lap the snow can thaw;
+And gold has purchased many a seat
+Where the "collective wisdom" meet,
+And many go to represent
+The weight of cash corrupt which sent
+Them wandering wickedly astray
+From honor's seldom trodden way.
+Where now, is Turner, who of yore,
+Kept school near the old Ottawa's shore?
+And Heath who came across the line
+In able teaching here to shine?
+And old John Stilman, who shoes made,
+And flourished in St. Crispin's trade?
+William McCullough, where is he?
+Gone to the unknown country--
+A steady, harmless, quiet man,
+Who here in '32 began
+A race unmixed with hate or strife,
+Which ended only with his life.
+And Reuben Traveller, who's tongue
+Oft in the old assizes rung--
+Though given to mirth, a wondrous crier,
+Who lived near John Sweetman, the dyer
+'Twas all the same, for either side
+Or both old Reuben Traveller cried--
+Cried for the man who won law's race--
+Cried for the man who lost his case--
+Cried for the criminal acquitted--
+Cried for the guilty when outwitted--
+He cried for loss or gain of pelf--
+For every one except himself;
+Reuben was a celebrity,
+We seldom meet with such as he.
+John Rochester, a man of old,
+Who's life a tale of goodness told,
+He steered through time from envy free,
+You'd scarcely find an enemy,
+Who o'er his honored dust would dare
+Defame the ashes resting there;
+For such as he laws ne'er were made,
+Peace to his gentle vanished shade!
+Well, will it be for James and John
+If they walk the same path upon
+Which their departed sire trod
+With love alike to man and God!
+James Joynt is 'mong the living yet
+A printer of the old _Gazette_.
+Who plied the typographic trade
+Ably in Bytown's first decade.
+And taught the art of Caxton well,
+And thoroughly to John George Bell,
+Who in our village made a racket,
+In the old columns of the _Packet_,
+Where every one got "tit for tat"
+From dear departed "Old White Hat!"
+Who thought Reformers could not err,
+And laid the lash on Dawson Kerr,
+Whom he in bitter hues did paint
+A sinner, and called him "the saint."
+A journal of more modern date
+Than the _Gazette_, who's early fate,
+Was Phoenix-like to rise resplendent
+From ashes of the _Independent_,
+Which had at periods now and then,
+Emitted Sparks from Johnston's pen,
+Which meteor-like shot forth in pride,
+Blazed, flickered, then collapsed and died.
+And Robert Hardy's name I find,
+In the old days long left behind.
+James Matthews, too, in death's repose,
+In early times was one of those
+Who helped to build the ancient town,
+Which modern taste is pulling down,
+Assisted now and then by fires,
+Past recollections primal pyres.
+John Bennett, cord-wainer of yore,
+And volunteer in Rifle corps,
+With muzzle-loaders past and gone,
+Gallant and brave old Number One!
+Our civic army's primal rib,
+Once called by Alexander Gibb,
+"The Sleepy's," in the good old time
+When he dealt in both prose and rhyme,
+And made opponents fume and fret
+With caustic in the old _Gazette_--
+Rhyme, too, in which a critic's claw
+Could scarcely fasten on a flaw,
+His verse was standard like his law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+John Cobb, I'll take a glance at thee,
+Firm standard of Free Masonry!
+Mine eye delights to rest upon
+Thy iron frame, old "Uncle John."
+If honesty and simple truth
+E'er "flourished in Immortal youth,"
+Where time can ne'er their glories rob,
+They rest with thee, my friend, John Cobb!
+And Dudley Booth, what shall I say
+Of this strange mortal passed away?
+His was a genius burning bright
+With brilliant and uncertain light--
+Proud in inventive dignity,
+And dark in inmate mystery,
+It flickered only, when sublime,
+It might have left a light for time,
+And wondering mortals to admire,
+Tis gone! I saw its flame expire.
+And John R. Stanley was among
+Old Bytown's well remembered throng,
+Whom memory's tuneful measure bears
+Back from the shades of other years.
+R.W. Cruice in ancient days
+Was fond of mirth and sporting ways;
+I had almost forgot to tell
+How he on horseback cut a swell,
+And made a fleet and daring rush
+At Barry's hunt and won "the brush,"
+When sportsmen gathered full of glee
+Around the famed J.P., M.D.
+And here diverging from my road
+Into a little episode,
+I'll tear at once with gesture brief
+From memory's book a comic leaf,
+A tale from cobweb's volume hoary
+Of this Sangrado in his glory,
+Many will recollect the story.
+Edward Barry, grave J.P.,
+Sometimes was given to a spree,
+Which interfered with the precision
+Of magisterial decision.
+So Edward Barry jumped the hedge
+And took the frigid temperance pledge;
+But soon the Justice of the Peace
+Found himself often ill at ease;
+Pains through his gastric regions ran,
+Too hard even for a temperance man.
+Then Barry M.D., in a trice,
+Gave Barry J.P. an advice,
+After a careful diagnosis,
+Which placed him on a bed of roses,
+And eased his pains beyond description--
+A dose of brandy the prescription--
+Oft as required to be repeated--
+With which the learned J.P. was treated;
+And history affirms that he
+Oft took the prescribed remedy.
+John Cameron, oft called "Black John,"
+Comes o'er my dream of old, as one
+Who should not now forgotten be
+In this memorial strain by me,
+In days of yore, his true-nosed hounds
+To the Chaudiere with certain bounds,
+Oft chased the anther'd buck before
+Their deep-mouthed yells to Ottawa's shore.
+He was a sportsman keen and true,
+Who dearly loved the "view halloo!"
+And Graves, who near the old Scotch Kirk
+Dwelt 'neath the shadow of the "birk;"
+And Isaac Cluff appears in view,
+A loyalist, both staunch and true;
+James "Kennedy, the carter," too,
+Who the first truck through Bytown drew
+With the assistance of a horse,
+I mean, to be exact, of course.
+And "old Ben. Rathwell," now I've hit on,
+A true and honest hearted Briton,
+As ever crossed Atlantic's wave
+To found a home and find a grave.
+And William Colter now doth rise
+Before my retrospective eyes,
+A saddler far from democratic--
+Professor most aristocratic,
+In art which claims the highest feather
+Among the fashioners of leather;
+An active springing step had he
+As now his form appears to me;
+Early he went to that far bourne
+"From whence no travellers return."
+Thomas M. Blasdell, step this way,
+And tell me how you feel to-day?
+You thought I'd pass and let you go,
+Old twisted groove! but 'tis not so,
+Like charcoal, brimstone and salpetre.
+I'll touch you off now in short metre.
+'Tis long since first your eye, my man,
+Along the rifle barrel ran;
+The "crotch" or "globe" was all the same,
+If you could only see the game.
+Or the "bulls-eye," the missile flew
+Into its centre straight and true,
+In the old days when practiced eye
+Was light, shade and trajectory.
+Does your keen eye obey your will,
+Is your hand quite as steady still
+As when you knocked the turkey's o'er,
+At twenty rods in days of yore?
+My blessing day and night upon
+The memory of the time that's gone.
+And Sergeant Major Ritchie, there
+He stands before my vision, where
+In youth I used to see him stand
+On Barrack Hill with cane in hand.
+For many a year ere death's disaster
+He held the post of Barrack Master,
+And amongst people who reflected
+Most highly always was respected.
+I had almost forgotten one
+Who's name should not be left alone
+In dark oblivion's envious shade
+While I the silent past invade--
+To light up the forgotten gloom;
+To rescue from time's early tomb
+And touch with friendly hand, and give
+To fading memories power to live.
+'Mongst men of enterprising fame,
+I can't pass George Buchanan's name;
+He built our first old timber slide,
+Down which the red pine cribs did glide;
+And afterwards with strength and skill,
+And an indomitable will,
+At the great Rapids of the _Chats_,
+Suspended nature's changeless laws,
+And by an artificial path
+Triumphed o'er the cataract's wrath!
+While standing quietly on shore,
+Watching the freight the current bore,
+A sudden crash from careless oar
+Ended his enterprising life,
+And made a widow of his wife.
+The public mourned, its great heart bled,
+With genuine sorrow for the dead.
+'Tis but as yesterday to me,
+The history of that tragedy.
+Ere to the fair green now I go,
+I'll stir up the old "Buffalo."
+John Heney, who his mark has made
+In speculation's shifting trade,
+And built up with both brick and stone,
+Memorials, which, when he is gone,
+In Ottawa will securely stand,
+Proofs of his enterprising hand.
+Some years ago in learned debate,
+In Council Hall he sat in state.
+And in his record there you'll find,
+Nothing unfriendly or unkind.
+And while as gently I jog on,
+I cannot, pass by "honest John!"
+"Shaun Rhua," designating name,
+Who from the County Cavan came,
+And in the Upper Town first started.
+Young, enterprising, and light hearted.
+At Civic Board for many a year,
+For By Ward doth his name appear;
+And I can say, who ought to know,
+As far as my researches go,
+No public act has stain left on
+The well-earned name of "honest John!"
+Turk, Jew, and heathen all the same,
+Speak kindly of John Heney's name.
+Mark Bishoprick has gone at last,
+An aged pilgrim from the past,
+Burdened with many years he stood
+Almost alone in solitude,
+A record of an age that's gone,
+Who's lengthened shadow rested on
+The present, ere the distant light
+Sunk into everlasting night.
+
+
+
+
+CORKSTOWN.
+
+
+ "Mother McGinty won't forget
+ To keep the tally mark."
+ (OLD SONG.)
+
+
+In days of yore, within a call
+Of where stands now the City Hall,
+A village built of mud and wood,
+In all its glory, Corkstown stood,
+Two rows of cabins in the swamp--
+Begirt by ponds and vapors damp
+And aromatic cedar trees
+Who's branches caught the passing breeze--
+Stretched upward on the western side
+Of the "Deep Cut," where then were plied
+The spade and pickaxe side by side;
+For, by the shade of Colonel By,
+Who shaped this city's destiny!
+There delved full many a hard case in,
+That channel to the Canal Basin.
+There, then dwelt many a sturdy blade,
+Adepts at handling the spade,
+And bruisers at the wheeling trade,
+As witness the vast mounds of clay
+Remaining on the banks to-day.
+Lovers of poteen strong and clear,
+In preference to rum or beer,
+Sons of the sod who'd knock you down
+For half a word 'gainst Cork's own town,
+And kick you then for falling too,
+To prove that the old mountain dew
+Had frolic in it raw and strong,
+As well as music, love and song.
+And there in whitewashed shanty grand,
+With kegs and bottles on each hand,
+Her face decked with a winning smile,
+Her head with cap of ancient style,
+Crowned arbiter of frolic's fate,
+Mother McGinty sat in state,
+And measured out the mountain dew
+To those whom strong attraction drew
+Within the circle of her power,
+To while away a leisure hour.
+She was the hostess and the host,
+She kept the reckoning, ruled the roast,
+And swung an arm of potent might
+That few would dare to brave in fight;
+Yet was she a good-natured soul,
+As ever filled the flowing bowl;
+In sooth she dealt in goodly cheer,
+Half-pints of whiskey, quarts of beer,
+Strong doses of sweet peppermint,
+Fine old Jamaica without stint,
+And shrub--a cordial then well known--
+Her thirsty customers poured down,
+Nor dreamed of headaches, or of ills,
+For nought killed then, but doctors' pills!
+The song, the dance, and glass went round,
+The precincts of that classic ground;
+And when bent on a tearing spree,
+Filled full of grog and jollity,
+The bacchanalian rant they made
+Would please even old Anacreon's shade,
+While o'er them the athletic charms
+Of the stern hostess's bare arms,
+Struck terror and kept order in
+The revel's hottest, wildest din!
+For cash or credit bartered she,
+The prime ingredients of a spree;
+And he stood always above par
+Who never stone threw at the bar;
+And when a man had spent his all,
+She chalked the balance on the wall.
+Figures or letters she knew not,
+But what a customer had got
+By hieroglyphics well she knew,
+For there exposed to public view
+Each debtor's tally great and small
+Appeared upon the bar-room wall.
+A short stroke for a half-pint stood,
+A longer for a quart was good,
+While something like an Eagle's talon
+Upon her blackboard was a gallon.
+And woe to him, who soon or late
+His tally did not liquidate;
+For when her goodly company
+Were all assembled for a spree,
+She read off each delinquent's score,
+And at his meanness loudly swore,
+And threatened when he next appeared,
+Unless the entry all was cleaed,
+To lay on future drinks a stricture,
+And photograph, perhaps, his picture
+In pewter, for the unpaid tally,
+As given, I think, in C. O'Malley.
+Old Corkstown was a merry place
+On pay-day, when the soaking race
+Assembled full of fun and glee
+At Mother McGinty's for a spree,
+No total abstinence was known
+In those days in that little town,
+Nor many nasal organs tainted
+For lack of time to get them painted;
+No moderate drinker showed his face
+Within that much resorted place,
+For temperance had not then began
+To trench upon the rights of man,
+Sure had he trod on danger's edge
+Who dared there to propose the pledge.
+Such monstrous doctrine there had been
+Followed by "wigs upon the green."
+None there refused the offered glass,
+Or dared to let the bottle pass
+For, _casus belli_ this was strong,
+Unless with a good roaring song
+The recreant could in his defence
+Atone for such _most strange_ offence.
+Sometimes, nay oft, upon the street
+Antagonistic friends would meet
+By chance, or by some other charm,
+To try each other's strength of arm,
+And without legal process settle
+Disputes, like men of taste and mettle;
+And while strict "Fair Play" ruled the fight,
+It was a sort of rough delight
+For youthful souls while hanging round
+That ancient famous battle ground,
+To note who first the claret drew--
+who first down his opponent threw--
+Who first produced the limner's dyes
+Beneath his neighbor's damaged eyes,
+Or sowed the trodden ground beneath
+With smashed incisors, like the teeth,
+The dragon's tusks of ancient ken
+From which sprung hosts of armed men.
+Such pastime was a frequent thing,
+The entertainment of the ring,
+Without equestrian or clown
+Was often seen in Cork's own town,
+And best, for impecunious boys
+Who boasted few of modern joys,
+Who daily went to see the play
+Had no admission fee to pay.
+But gone is Corkstown, vanished too
+The whitewashed shanty from our view,
+Where once the minstrel's youthful eyes
+Beheld strange orgies with surprise.
+In dust its stalwart hostess now,
+Reposes, placid is the brow
+That once frowned terror o'er the throng
+While revelling in the dance and song,
+Gone with them are the fading dyes
+Which tinged fair childhood's happy skies,
+The brilliant firmament of youth
+Has vanished, and but leaves the truth
+Written wherever mortals range
+That things below are doomed to change.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIR OF 1829.
+
+
+Now, reader, you and I must start
+Together with both hand and heart,
+Off to the far-famed level of green,
+Which once in verdure lay between
+The old Scotch Kirk, and where now Hall
+Confectionery sells to all;
+And we shall pass as something new,
+Old scenes before us in review,
+And I shall fire up these rhymes
+With battles of the good old times;
+And out of what I shall relate
+No single case for magistrate,
+Or stern judge to adjudicate
+Arose, for then, a bloody nose,
+Or broken head, between fair foes,
+Was counted neither loss nor gain,
+Nor thought of 'till they met again.
+'Twas in the glorious olden time
+When smashing craniums was no crime--
+When people got no invitation
+At half-past nine for presentation
+Of damaged eye and broken skin,
+To answer for nocturnal sin
+Before that tribunal where bail
+Can't always keep one out of jail.
+'Twas in July in '29,
+If true this memory of mine,
+At early morn upon that green
+Were many tents of canvas seen
+Within which might be found good cheer
+In whiskey kegs and kegs of beer;
+And on a little table, too,
+Tin measures were exposed to view,
+For thirsty souls their clay to slake,
+And draughts of inspiration take--
+For then the numbers were but few,
+Who shun'd the sparkling mountain dew,
+And people under no pretence
+Could dream of total abstinence:
+Even John B. Gough's most magic sway
+Had failed in Bytown's early day.
+Vast was the throng assembled there
+At Bytown's first and greatest Fair,
+And merry were the antics seen
+Upon that famous ancient green.
+'Twas not to buy or sell they came
+From far and near, the blind and lame,
+The grave, the merry, sad and gay,
+Upon that old eventful day;
+They all assembled, wild and free,
+To have a ranting, roaring spree!
+And, by the shadows of the past!
+Frolic flew furious and fast,
+And many a head was pillowed on
+Old mother earth ere set of sun.
+A fiddler here the catgut drew,
+And there a highland piper, too,
+Shrieked forth with loud and stirring bar,
+The boding battle-notes of war!
+And lavishly the whiskey flew
+Among that mirth devoted crew,
+As oft into the tents they ran
+To renovate the inner man.
+'Twas twelve o'clock, and all was well,
+"And merry as a marriage bell,"
+Thought one might see just here and there
+Legs seeming somewhat worse of wear,
+And in the air perhaps might hear
+The prescient sounds of conflict near,
+For Irish accents there were many,
+Cork, Tipperary, and Kilkenny.
+'Twas afternoon, and frolic's pacing
+Was then diversified by racing,
+Then soon was cleared of busy feet
+The race course, old Wellington street,
+Bets then were made, and up the money,
+Pat Ryan's horse, and Davy's pony,
+Together entered for the match--
+Perhaps it would be called a "scratch"
+Race in the turfs expressive phrase
+Unknown in Bytown's early days.
+Fair, free and gallantly they started,
+And headlong up the street they darted,
+While loudly sounded cheer on cheer
+As swift the winning post they near;
+They ran together without check,
+And passed it almost neck and neck,
+So close, the judges, though they tried,
+The winning horse could not decide.
+The race was o'er and down the brakes,
+Each party shouted for the stakes;
+And loud and fierce the clamor rose,
+And words soon lost themselves in blows;
+The very stones began to speak,
+And skulls, of course, began to break,
+And black thorns and maple sticks
+Played such fantastic ugly tricks,
+That soon the well thronged battle plain
+Was strewn with bodies of the slain--
+The "Kilt," who fell to rise again
+Without the doctor's mystic aid,
+And plunge once more into the raid.
+Stones flew in showers, the windows shook
+Around that famous Donnybrook,
+While Tipperary's battle yell,
+Did loudly o'er the conflict swell!
+And many a celt with accent racy
+Roared for a Sleavin or a Casey!
+And fierce the struggle raged around
+Where the seven Sleavin's stood their ground--
+Seven brothers, back to back they stood
+Like hero's, though their streaming blood
+Told how they bravely turned at bay
+'Gainst hundreds in that savage fray!
+O'erpowered at last they did retreat
+Face to the foe, still in defeat,
+Defiant as they moved along
+Pursued by the relentless throng!
+They reached their home, shut fast the door,
+And stood within upon the floor,
+Ready to meet the coming foe,
+Who in their vengeance were not slow.
+Stones showered from the assailing crew,
+In pieces every window flew,
+Then, with a loud and savage yell
+They rushed to storm the citadel!
+A gun-barrel through a broken pane
+Made the invaders pause again,
+A sharp axe sticking through another,
+Their thirst for slaughter seemed to smother;
+A battle council then took place,
+And very soon there was no trace,
+Of conflict or of bloody fray
+Round where the Sleavin's stood at bay!
+Thus ended By-town's first old Fair,
+A Donnybrook most rich and rare;
+This annal of the olden time
+Was not premeditated crime,
+It sprung from what forms quite a part
+Of every genuine Irish heart,
+A sort of _Faugh a-Ballagh_ way
+That sticks to Irishmen to-day.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Recited by the author in "Her Majesty's Theatre," at a
+Festival of the Mechanics' Institute in March_, 1868.
+
+
+In such a gay and festive scene as this,
+My worthy friends, it may not be amiss
+To mingle with the general notes of glee,
+A rhyme or too, even if not poesy.
+Indulge me while in rude unpolished verse,
+The promptings of the muse I now rehearse,
+And O! deal gently with me while I try
+To bring the vanished past before your eye,
+Fond recollections rapidly takes wing
+The fading scenes of other days to sing,
+The good old days, the dear old times of yore,
+Which you and I, alas! shall see no more:
+When all around the spot on which I stand
+Was trackless forest and primeval land--
+The "Barrack Hill," a wilderness all o'er,
+And Lower Town to Rideau's ancient shore
+A gloomy cedar swamp, the haunt of deer,
+In which the ruffed grouse drum'd when spring was near,
+While here and there a giant pine on high
+Towered with its spreading branches to the sky!
+I have the little village in my eye,
+Before the locks were built by Colonel By,
+Before the Sappers threw the ponderous arch,
+O'er the Canal, to aid improvement's march,
+Ere by the muscular canaller's spade
+The ground was broken where the "Deep Cut's" made--
+Long ere the iron bond of union span'd
+The vast _Kah-nah-jo_, wonder of our land!
+Here mighty Ottawa, in its grandest phase
+Bears some resemblance to its better days,
+Ere sawdust, slabs, and stern improvement gave
+A turbid deathstroke to its limpid wave!
+That good old time, 'tis pleasant to recal,
+When one religion almost served for all--
+When men together could in friendship join--
+When battered buttons passed for genuine coin--
+And silver pieces, do not think it strange,
+Were cut in too, and four, to make small change,
+When banks were few, suspensions heard of not,
+And specie was the only cash we got,
+Hard silver with no discount on our dollars,
+Ere brokers reigned, or flourished paper collars.
+Tho' dim the light of learning's genial rays
+Amongst the masses in those bygone days--
+Tho' daily papers, modern luxury's food,
+The bold apostles of the public good,
+The tribunes of the people were not found
+On guard our infant liberties around,
+Tho' institutions based on mental light,
+Shed scanty radiance o'er that primal night,
+Tho' science, wealth and philosophic lore
+Were _rara aves_ upon Ottawa's shore;
+Tho' commerce scarce had spread her gilded wings,
+The herald of a costlier state of things;
+Tho' such an institution as our own,
+Was to our early pioneers unknown,
+An institution, let me say, in short,
+Worthy of every patriot's support;
+Established on a comprehensive base.
+Where every man of worth may find his place--
+temple of intelligence to give
+To mind the sustenance on which to live,
+Tho' all such modern glories then were rare,
+Yet old Bytonians did not badly fare.
+Churches were few in that benighted time,
+Seldom was heard the Sabbath's welcome chime--
+Yet brotherhood abounded in the land,
+And charity with soft and tender hand
+Relieved distress, and made the weeper smile,
+Scarce conscious of the good she did the while,
+And not the worst among poor sons of men,
+Money was plenty in the village then,
+For Mother Britain with a lavish hand
+Scattered her treasures over all the land.
+Simplicity then held her peaceful reign,
+And vice and crime were seldom in her train.
+No litigation marked our young career,
+No Police Magistrate with brow severe,
+And frown of justice upon trembling crime,
+Made culprits shiver in that happy time;
+Neighbor to neighbor owed so little grudge,
+Disputes were settled then without the Judge--
+The learned profession boasted not one gown,
+And but one lancet was in all the town--
+And it was busy, and got wondrous praise,
+For venesection flourished in those days.
+People owed little, and were seldom sued,
+No bailiff marred our ancient solitude;
+Duns were a nuisance in our soil not grown,
+Fifteen per cent, was totally unknown!
+Things then were taken as they happened quite,
+And insults were decided by a fight,
+In boyhood I have witnessed many a fray
+Within the ring by daylight and fair play--
+No constable poked his unwelcome nose
+Between the pastime of two transient foes,
+Who choose like Sayers and Heenan to decide
+Their difference with strong sinews on each side.
+We had no sidewalks then, not much taxation,
+No lock-up, county gaol, no corporation,
+No aldermanic wisdom, and no mayor,
+To fill with dignity the civic chair;
+No tax collector with his pressing bill
+To cause consumption in an empty till;
+Corrupt electors trod not freedom's ground,
+No purchaseable franchise could be found--
+Money was not the "altar and the God,"
+Before which manhood bowed a venal clod!
+The reign of truth, ere politics was made
+By infamy a money-making trade!
+No costly vehicles with horses gay,
+In gilded trappings graced that ancient day;
+Pedestrianism was fashionable then,
+For boys were boys, as 'twas, and men were men.
+And girls were what they always were, the best
+Blossoms in the gardens of the blest!
+One steamer only cleft the Ottawa's spray,
+But did not, like the "Queen," come every day.
+No railroad engine snorted o'er the plain,
+Dragging along behind its ponderous train--
+No telegraphic line with speed of light
+Scattered intelligence with lightning flight;
+No gas-flame shed its artificial ray,
+Turning nocturnal darkness into day--
+The tallow candle blazed away supreme,
+And of the age of coal oil did not dream;
+Yet, 'twas "a gay old time," a happy time,
+And could I strike an upward note sublime,
+I'd strain my very heartstrings with the blast
+Of glory that I'd give the fine old past!
+But times are changed, and things are altered too,
+Fair civilization bursts upon our view;
+The old men of the old time have been laid
+In peace beneath the weeping willow's shade;
+The middle-aged are in the yellow leaf,
+Life's evening evanescent, sad and brief--
+The little children who flourished then
+Are now the mothers of our land, and men--
+The wilderness has vanished, the old trees
+Have disappeared before improvement's breeze;
+Commercial enterprise is busy now,
+The Ottawa's breast is cleft by many a prow,
+The roaring, rushing locomotives scour
+Along the track at forty miles an hour--
+The electric current cleaves the ambient air,
+Shooting the rays of thought round everywhere,
+Darting like sunbeams to the left and right,
+The swift-winged messengers of mental light!
+Disturbing 'neath the billows of the deep,
+The ocean monsters from their dreamy sleep;
+Cleaving resistless through the watery waste
+A miracle not dreamt of in the past,
+Annihilating time, and leaving space,
+Like Noah's dove, without a resting place!
+Thy fame, too, "old brown Bess," hath passed away,
+And rifled guns in war and peace hold sway,
+And Britain's wooden walls with all their glories,
+Are now but one of fame's immortal stories!
+But while I cast my wondering eyes around
+How grand the sight which doth their vision bound;
+A city stands in fair and youthful grace,
+Where once old Bytown had its primal place;
+And lo! in grandeur towering the skies
+In marbled splendor upon yonder hill,
+Our Legislative Temples proudly rise,
+A columned glory of the artist's skill!
+Thanks to our gracious Queen, who's royal hand
+Made Ottawa chief city of the land!
+Thanks to the men who fought through good and ill
+The fight of right, and bravely battled still;
+Who stood unshaken, firm in their adhesion,
+Till victory crowned Her Majesty's decision!
+God bless our New Dominion! may it be
+Granted a proud and happy destiny;
+Ontario and Quebec go hand in hand
+With Nova Scotia and New Brunswick's land;
+Those noble borderers of the rushing wave
+Grand, fitting birthplace of the free and brave!
+May Newfoundland, British Columbia true,
+Prince Edward Island join the Union, too,
+And the vast regions of the far North-West,
+Awake to form a nation great and blest!
+May all in common brotherhood unite
+To live in peace, or for our freedom fight
+Beneath the flag for which our fathers died,
+And left us as their legacy and pride!
+May heaven give strength and energy to those
+Who from political convulsion's throes--
+A proud example to the sons of earth,
+Brought union and an empire into birth!
+May wisdom guide them as they onward steer
+The vessel of the State in her career--
+Smooth be the wave and gentle be the gales
+That fill our ark of safety's well trim'd sails--
+Strong be the vision of the pilot, too,
+To keep the port of union full in view,
+Until the anchor's cast, the sails are furled,
+A spectacle of envy to the world!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections of Bytown and Its Old
+Inhabitants, by William Pittman Lett
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS OF BYTOWN ***
+
+***** This file should be named 14908-8.txt or 14908-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/4/9/0/14908/
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/14908-8.zip b/14908-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d04788c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/14908-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/14908-h.zip b/14908-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a5501ae
--- /dev/null
+++ b/14908-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/14908-h/14908-h.htm b/14908-h/14908-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0b6a8e5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/14908-h/14908-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,4001 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+<html>
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Recollections Of Bytown And Its Old Inhabitants, By William Pittman Lett.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ P { margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ }
+ HR { width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ }
+ BODY{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+ // -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections of Bytown and Its Old
+Inhabitants, by William Pittman Lett
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Recollections of Bytown and Its Old Inhabitants
+
+Author: William Pittman Lett
+
+Release Date: February 4, 2005 [EBook #14908]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS OF BYTOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<h1>RECOLLECTIONS</h1>
+<h4>OF</h4>
+<h1>BYTOWN</h1>
+<h4>AND ITS</h4>
+<h3>OLD INHABITANTS</h3>
+<h4>BY</h4>
+<hr style="width: 10%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: .1em;" />
+<h3>WILLIAM PITTMAN LETT.</h3>
+<hr style="width: 10%; margin-top: .1em; margin-bottom: 1em;" />
+<br />
+<br />
+<h5>OTTAWA:</h5>
+<h5>"CITIZIEN" PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY, SPARKS STREET</h5>
+<h6>1874.</h6>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+
+<h3>INTRODUCTION.</h3>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">As no book, small or great&#8212;gay or grave, witty or sublime,
+scientific, dramatic, poetic, tragic, historical, metaphysical, philosophical,
+polemical, wise or otherwise&#8212;can be considered complete,
+particularly at the beginning, without a preface; I have deemed it
+expedient that the contents of the following pages should be dignified
+by a few lines of an introductory nature.</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">It was not my intention when I commenced these reminiscences
+to publish them in their present form, neither had I any idea of
+their extending beyond a few hundred lines. That I have changed
+my mind is entirely owing to the solicitations of friends desirous of
+having them in compact shape, and not to any particular ambition
+of my own to write a book.</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">I do not pretend to present the reader with anything perfect
+in rhythm, polished in measure, or labored in style of construction.
+I have aimed at the truth, and imagine I have hit it.</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">My object has been, simply, to gather together as many of the
+names and incidents connected with Bytown's early history as memory
+alone could recal. My desire has been to rescue from oblivion&#8212;as far
+as my humble efforts could conduce to such a desirable end&#8212;what
+otherwise might possibly have been forgotten. In the contemplation
+of those names and incidents, I have often, recently, overlooked the
+fact that I now live in a City with nearly thirty thousand inhabitants,
+and that its name is Ottawa. It has, nevertheless, been to me a
+pleasant labor of love to walk in memory among the men and the
+habitations of byegone times.</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">Doubtless, of the inhabitants of dear old Bytown, there are some
+among the dead and others among the living, whose names may not be
+found in this little work. These broken links in the chain will be
+to me a source of regret. To the shades of the departed and to the
+ears of the living, whom I would not willingly have overlooked
+without</p>
+
+<blockquote>"A smile or a grasp of the hand passing on."</blockquote>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">I shall only say, as an atonement for the unwitting lapses of
+an imperfect memory, in the language once used by a friend and
+countryman in my hearing, as he passed a very pretty girl:
+"Remember, my dear, that I do not pass you with my heart."</p>
+
+
+<p style="text-align: right; font-variant: small-caps; font-size: 95%;">William Pittman Lett.</p>
+
+<p style="font-variant: small-caps; font-size: 95%;">Ottawa, March, 1873.</p>
+
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h2>BYTOWN.</h2>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+In '28, on Patrick's Day,<br />
+At one p.m., there came this way<br />
+From Richmond, in the dawn of spring,<br />
+He who doth now the glories sing<br />
+Of ancient Bytown, as 'twas then,<br />
+A place of busy working men,<br />
+Who handled barrows and pickaxes,<br />
+Tamping irons and broadaxes,<br />
+And paid no Corporation taxes;<br />
+Who, without license onward carried<br />
+All kinds of trade, but getting married;<br />
+Stout, sinewy, and hardy chaps,<br />
+Who'd take and pay back adverse raps,<br />
+Nor ever think of such a thing<br />
+As squaring off outside the ring,<br />
+Those little disagreements, which<br />
+Make wearers of the long robe rich.<br />
+Such were the men, and such alone,<br />
+Who quarried the vast piles of stone,<br />
+Those mighty, ponderous, cut-stone blocks,<br />
+With which Mackay built up the Locks.<br />
+The road wound round the Barrack Hill,<br />
+By the old Graveyard, calm and still;<br />
+It would have sounded snobbish, very,<br />
+To call it then a Cemetery&#8212;<br />
+Crossed the Canal below the Bridge,<br />
+And then struck up the rising ridge<br />
+On Rideau Street, where Stewart's Store<br />
+Stood in the good old days of yore;<br />
+There William Stewart flourished then,<br />
+A <i>man</i> among old Bytown's men;<br />
+And there, Ben Gordon ruled the roast,<br />
+Evoking many a hearty toast,<br />
+And purchase from the throngs who came<br />
+To buy cheap goods in friendship's name.<br />
+Friend Ben, dates back a warm and true heart<br />
+To days of Mackintosh and Stewart.<br />
+Beside where Aumond and Barreille<br />
+Their fate together erst did try,<br />
+In the old "French Store," on whose card<br />
+<i>Imprimis</i> was J. D. Bernard.<br />
+"<i>Grande Joe</i>," still sturdy, stout and strong.<br />
+Long be he so! Will o'er my song,<br />
+Bend kindly, and perhaps may sigh,<br />
+While rapidly o'er days gone by,<br />
+He wanders back in memory.<br />
+Aye, sigh, for when he look's around,<br />
+How few, alas! can now be found,<br />
+Who heard the shrill meridian sound<br />
+Of Cameron's bugle from the hill,<br />
+How few, alas! are living still&#8212;<br />
+How few who saw in pride pass on<br />
+The Sappers with their scarlet on,<br />
+Their hackle plumes and scales of brass,<br />
+Their stately tread as on they pass.<br />
+I seem to see them through the shade<br />
+Of years, in warlike pomp arrayed,<br />
+Marching in splendid order past,<br />
+Their bugles ringing on the blast,<br />
+Their bayonets glittering in the sun,<br />
+The vision fades, the dream is done.<br />
+Below the Bridge, at least below,<br />
+Where stands the Sappers' structure now,<br />
+You had to pass in going down<br />
+From Upper to the Lower Town;<br />
+For, reader, then, no bridge was there,<br />
+Where afterwards with wondrous care,<br />
+And skilful hands; the Sappers made<br />
+That arch which casts into the shade<br />
+All other arches in the land,<br />
+By which Canals and streams are span'd;<br />
+The passing wayfarer sees nought<br />
+But a stone bridge by labor wrought,<br />
+The Poet's retrospective eye<br />
+Searching the depths of memory,<br />
+A monument to Colonel By,<br />
+Beholds, enduring as each pile<br />
+Which stands beside the Ancient Nile,<br />
+As o'er the past my vision runs,<br />
+Gazing on Bytown's elder sons,<br />
+The portly Colonel I behold<br />
+Plainly as in the days of old,<br />
+Conjured before me at this hour<br />
+By memory's undying power;<br />
+Seated upon, his great black steed<br />
+Of stately form and noble breed.<br />
+A man who knew not how to flinch&#8212;<br />
+A British soldier every inch.<br />
+Courteous alike to low and high<br />
+A gentleman was Colonel By!<br />
+And did I write of lines three score<br />
+About him, I could say no more.<br />
+Howard and Thompson then kept store<br />
+Down by "the Creek," almost next door,<br />
+George Patterson must claim a line<br />
+Among the men of auld lang syne;<br />
+A man of very ancient fame,<br />
+Who in old '27 came.<br />
+One of the first firm doth remain,<br />
+He is our worthy Chamberlain,<br />
+Who ne'er in life's farce cut a dash<br />
+On other people's errant cash;<br />
+Who guards, as it is right well known,<br />
+Better than e'er he did his own,<br />
+The people's money, firm and sure,<br />
+To the last cent, safe and secure.<br />
+And opposite across the street,<br />
+A friend or foe could always meet<br />
+A man deserving hero's title,<br />
+Uncompromising Watson Litle!<br />
+A stern upholder of the law<br />
+Who ne'er in justice found a flaw,<br />
+With well charged blunderbuss in hand<br />
+He asked not order or command,<br />
+But sallied forth <i>semper paratus</i><br />
+To aid the <i>Posse Comitatus</i>!<br />
+"Peace to his ashes!" many a score<br />
+Of heads he smashed in days of yore!<br />
+Where is the marble slab to show<br />
+Where Watson Litle's dust lies low?<br />
+Close by "the Creek," on the south side<br />
+Of Rideau Street, did then reside<br />
+John Cuzner, a British tar,<br />
+For pluck renown'd both near and far!<br />
+Nor would I willingly forget<br />
+While tracing recollections met<br />
+Of other days, and from the past<br />
+Collecting memories fading fast,<br />
+Of lines our earliest purveyor,<br />
+John MacNaughton, the Surveyor,<br />
+The only one who then was quite<br />
+At home with the theodolite,<br />
+And boxed the trembling compass well,<br />
+Before the days of Robert Bell.<br />
+A little further up the street,<br />
+James Martin's name the eye did greet<br />
+A round faced Caledonian, who<br />
+Good eating and good drinking knew;<br />
+And "Four-pence-half-penny" McKenzie<br />
+Daily vended wolsey linsey,<br />
+Next door to one of comic cheer<br />
+Acknowledged the best auctioneer,<br />
+That ever knock'd a bargain down,<br />
+Or bidder if he chanced to frown;<br />
+He set himself up in the end<br />
+As Carleton's most worthy friend<br />
+And by <i>vox populi</i> was sent<br />
+To Parliament to represent<br />
+The men of Carleton, one and all,<br />
+In ancient Legislative Hall.<br />
+And by "The Tiger" sleek and fat,<br />
+Our old friend "Jimmy Johnston" sat,<br />
+The corner stock'd with silks and ribbon,<br />
+Was kept and owned by Miss Fitzgibbon.<br />
+A good stand it has ever been<br />
+For commerce in this busy scene;<br />
+Stand oft of idler and of scorner,<br />
+I mean the modern "Howell's Corner,"<br />
+Called after "Roderick of the sword,"<br />
+Once well known Chairman of School Board.<br />
+And down below near Nicholas Street,<br />
+A quiet man each morn you'd meet<br />
+At ten a.m., his pathway wending,<br />
+With steps to Ordnance office bending,<br />
+A mild man and an unassuming,<br />
+Health and good nature ever blooming<br />
+Seem'd stamped upon his smiling face,<br />
+Where time had scarcely left its trace;<br />
+<i>Semper idem</i> let me beg<br />
+Thy pardon, honest William Clegg!<br />
+Nor must, although his bones are rotten,<br />
+The ancient Mosgrove be forgotten,<br />
+A man of kindly nature, he<br />
+Has left a spot in memory<br />
+While gazing on each vanish'd scene<br />
+That still remains both fresh and green<br />
+For when in heat of hurling bent<br />
+The ball oft through his window went,<br />
+He pitch'd it to us out again,<br />
+And ask'd no payment for the pane.<br />
+On Sussex Street, James Inglis flourish'd,<br />
+A cannie Scot, and well he nourish'd<br />
+A very thriving dry goods trade,<br />
+And "piles" of good hard silver made,<br />
+Almost amongst the forest trees,<br />
+By furs from Aborigines.<br />
+No "Hotel" then was in the town,<br />
+"The British" in its old renown,<br />
+Of our Hotels the ancient mother<br />
+Had not one stone laid on another;<br />
+Donald McArthur in a cavern<br />
+Of wood sustained his ancient tavern,<br />
+And there the best of cheer was found<br />
+Within old Bytown's classic ground;<br />
+And now I'll close my roll of fame<br />
+With a most well-remember'd name,<br />
+A man of dignity supreme<br />
+Rises to view in memory's dream,<br />
+Ultra in Toryism's tariff,<br />
+Was Simon Fraser, Carleton's Sheriff,<br />
+Personified by the third vowel,<br />
+Forerunner of W.F. Powell,<br />
+A high and most important man<br />
+In the renown'd old Fraser Clan,<br />
+Who well had worn the Highland tartan,<br />
+For he was bold as any Spartan,<br />
+And did his duty mildly, gravely,<br />
+And wore the sword and cocked hat bravely.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+Come, now, my gentle Muse, once more,<br />
+Come with me to the days of yore,<br />
+And let us wake, with friendly hand<br />
+The memories of that distant land,<br />
+The past; and while thy minstrel weaves<br />
+A chaplet from the Sybil leaves<br />
+Of recollection&#8212;let the light<br />
+Of truth upon his lines be bright.<br />
+May he with reverential tread<br />
+Approach the dwellings of the dead,<br />
+Seeking for some sweet flower of good<br />
+Within their solemn solitude:<br />
+And if he finds in fadeless bloom<br />
+Around some well remember'd tomb,<br />
+Some cherish'd record of the past<br />
+Which has defied time's rudes blast,<br />
+And down futurity's deep vale<br />
+Shed fragrance on the passing gale,<br />
+Love's labor, then, the task will be,<br />
+My gentle Muse, for thee and me.<br />
+'Mongst those of old remember'd well,<br />
+John Wade doth in my memory dwell,<br />
+A wit of most undoubted feather&#8212;<br />
+A mighty advocate of leather&#8212;<br />
+A solemn man too, when required.<br />
+With healing instincts deeply fired,<br />
+He with claw-instrument could draw<br />
+Teeth deftly from an aching jaw,<br />
+And ready was his lancet too<br />
+When nothing short of blood would do;<br />
+Relieved he many a racking pain,<br />
+When shall we see his like again?<br />
+And William Tormey, stern and straight,<br />
+A man who came ere '28,<br />
+Chief of the men who kept the fire on<br />
+And hammer'd the strong bands of iron,<br />
+Which first securely bound together<br />
+The old lock gates through wind and weather,<br />
+The old Town Council minutes bear<br />
+The record that his name is there.<br />
+And Thomas Hanly, loud the praise<br />
+I gave him in my early days<br />
+For bread, that Eve might tempted be<br />
+To eat, had it grown on that tree,<br />
+On which hung the forbidden fruit<br />
+Whose seed gave earth's ills their sad root.<br />
+Friend Tom dealt in the rising leaven<br />
+In the old days of '27,<br />
+With "Jemmy Lang," an ancient Scot,<br />
+Who ne'er the barley bree forgot;<br />
+An honest, simple man was he<br />
+As ever loved good company;<br />
+And Tom McDermott, while I twine<br />
+The names of yore in song of mine,<br />
+Can I forget a name like thine?<br />
+Ah, no! although thine ashes rest<br />
+Beneath our common mother's breast,<br />
+No name more spotless doth engage<br />
+My muse, or grace my tuneful page.<br />
+Stern Matthew Connell, fiery Celt,<br />
+Below the present Bywash dwelt,<br />
+Beside John Cowan, o'er whose grave<br />
+The grass of '32 did wave.<br />
+No man got in a passion faster<br />
+Than did old Bytown's first postmaster;<br />
+Yet was he a most upright man,<br />
+And well the old machinery "ran"<br />
+When mail bags came on horse's back<br />
+Before we had a railway track,<br />
+And their arrival on each morn<br />
+Was signall'd by an old tin horn.<br />
+Peace to his shade! in '32<br />
+The cholera Matthew Connell slew.<br />
+Kind reader, let me pass awhile,<br />
+Beside the "Bywash," deem'd so vile,<br />
+Then called "the Creek"&#8212;though now the pest&#8212;<br />
+The festering miasmatic nest<br />
+Of Boards of Health, who dread infection&#8212;<br />
+My very heart's sincere affection<br />
+Clings fondly to that old creek still;<br />
+For oft in boyhood's joyous thrill,<br />
+O'er its ice-bosom in wild play<br />
+I chased the ball in youth's bright day.<br />
+With young companions loved and dear!<br />
+How few of such, alas! are here<br />
+To listen to the bye-gone story<br />
+Of the old Creek's vanish'd glory!<br />
+'Twixt "wooden lock" and Rideau Street,<br />
+Young Bytown oft was wont to meet&#8212;<br />
+To struggle in the "shinny game;"<br />
+Ah! then it was a place of fame,<br />
+Full sixty feet from shore to shore,<br />
+While now it measures scarce a score;<br />
+Modern improvement has prevail'd&#8212;<br />
+Its fair proportions are curtail'd;<br />
+Its banks filled in, more space to gain.<br />
+Its stream, by many a filthy drain,<br />
+Which once was rapid, always clear,<br />
+Changed into color worse than beer,<br />
+To cool and icy scowling scan,<br />
+Of rigid, total abstinence man.<br />
+Gone is its fair renown of yore,<br />
+It's schoolboy battles all are o'er,<br />
+Which made it then a "Campo Bello"<br />
+For many an embryo daring fellow&#8212;<br />
+Too young to know what men of sense<br />
+Have called the art of self-defence;<br />
+There buttons flew, from stitching riven,<br />
+Black eyes and bloody noses given&#8212;<br />
+Even conflicts national took place,<br />
+Among old Bytown's youthful race.<br />
+Why not? for children bigger grown<br />
+I rave sometimes down the gauntlet thrown<br />
+For cause as small, and launch'd afar<br />
+The fierce and fiery bolts of war,<br />
+Simply to find out which was best.<br />
+Cæsar or Pompey by the test.<br />
+In those past combats "rich and rare"<br />
+Luke Cuzner always had his share.<br />
+For Luke in days of <i>auld lang syne</i><br />
+Did most pugnaciously incline,<br />
+Never to challenge slack or slow,<br />
+And never stain'd by "coward's blow."<br />
+The Joyces too, Mick, John and Walter,<br />
+In battle's path did seldom falter,<br />
+But "Jimmy," in those days of grace<br />
+Held a peacemaker's blessed place,<br />
+Nor has he wander'd far astray<br />
+From the same calm and tranquil way.<br />
+The belt was worn by any one<br />
+Who had the latest battle won,<br />
+'Till Simon Murphy's springing bound<br />
+Lit on that ancient battle ground,<br />
+And from that hour he was King<br />
+Of our young pugilistic ring!<br />
+But here I'd like to pause a minute<br />
+And go to Hull&#8212;there's something in it<br />
+That to the hour of life's December<br />
+I shall endeavor to remember.<br />
+The old "Columbian" schoolhouse, where<br />
+In childhood's dawn I did repair;<br />
+It was a famous strict old school<br />
+Sway'd by the ancient birchen rule,<br />
+The place where youthful ignorance brought us,<br />
+The spot where famed James Agnew taught us;<br />
+A Scot was he of good condition,<br />
+A man of nerve and erudition,<br />
+A strict disciplinarian, who<br />
+Knew well what any boy could do,<br />
+And woe to him who did not do it<br />
+For he got certain cause to rue it.<br />
+No sinner ever dreaded Charon,<br />
+Nor was the mighty rod of Aaron,<br />
+By ancient Egypt's magic men,<br />
+In Pharoah's old despotic reign,<br />
+More feared as symbol of a God<br />
+Than was by us James Agnew's rod;<br />
+With it he batter'd arithmetic,<br />
+Lore practical and theoretic<br />
+Latin too, and English grammar<br />
+Into your head, a perfect "crammar,"<br />
+Was Agnew's most persuasive rod,<br />
+Nor less his magisterial nod.<br />
+How would such stern tuition suit<br />
+In our Collegiate Institute?<br />
+Amongst the unforgotten few<br />
+Who rise to memory's magic view,<br />
+While winging on her backward flight,<br />
+My schoolfellow, Alonzo Wright,<br />
+Appears a lad of slender frame,<br />
+I cannot say he's still the same,<br />
+Except in soul, for that sublime<br />
+Has soar'd above the touch of time,<br />
+And in "immortal youth" appears,<br />
+Unchanged by circumstance or years,<br />
+A good fellow, this was his name<br />
+At school, methinks he's still the same.<br />
+May he give powers of swift volition<br />
+To all who offer opposition<br />
+To him in the approaching "scrimmage,"<br />
+For what is but a brazen image<br />
+At best, a people's approbation,<br />
+Which sometimes with the situation,<br />
+Changes as egg in hand of wizard,<br />
+Or color in chameleon lizard.<br />
+There too, are Job and David Moore,<br />
+Bill Northgraves mentioned not before,<br />
+Who in the little school-house red<br />
+On early education fed.<br />
+And Thomas Curtis Brigham, too,<br />
+Lennox and Christopher in view,<br />
+Arise before my sight,<br />
+Strongly defined in memory's light,<br />
+And Wright both Ruggles and Tiberias,<br />
+And Wyman who was seldom serious,<br />
+Poor fellow! in life's manly bloom<br />
+He slept in an untimely tomb.<br />
+Time fails me, or I fain would tell<br />
+Of many more remembered well,<br />
+But end I here my present strain<br />
+Till memory wakes it up again.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+I cross the Ottawa once more.<br />
+From Hull again to Bytown's shore.<br />
+And for a moment I behold<br />
+The river as it was of old,<br />
+Swelling, majestic in its pride,<br />
+A glorious stream from side to side!<br />
+A "Grand River" was Ottawa then,<br />
+The pride of ancient lumbermen,<br />
+By slabs and sawdust undefiled.<br />
+The joy of nature's dusky child,<br />
+Who's matchless, perfect bark canoe<br />
+Oft o'er its crystal bosom flew&#8212;<br />
+Not bridged all o'er like shaking bogs<br />
+By endless booms of dirty logs,<br />
+Which to the thrifty and the wise<br />
+Are doubtless marks of enterprise,<br />
+And evidences too of health,<br />
+Of pocket and commercial wealth,<br />
+Yet sadly, sometimes out of place,<br />
+And serious blots on Nature's face.<br />
+What would big Indian "Clouthier" say&#8212;<br />
+The red-skinn'd Samson could he stray<br />
+From the happy hunting ground away&#8212;<br />
+Could he behold the stream to-day&#8212;<br />
+The great Kah-nah-jo, where the God<br />
+Of the Algonquins used to nod<br />
+In dreamy slumber 'mid the smoke<br />
+Which from the mighty cataract broke,<br />
+Hemm'd in by sawmills, booms and piers&#8212;<br />
+The features of a thousand years<br />
+Of beauty ruthlessly defaced&#8212;<br />
+The landmarks of the past displaced,<br />
+And little left to tell the story<br />
+Of Ottawa's departed glory;<br />
+But water running where it ran<br />
+When the red deer chase began.<br />
+'Twould startle even Philemon Wright<br />
+With all his wisdom and foresight.<br />
+Could he arise, good man of old,<br />
+And modern Ottawa behold,<br />
+He'd feel himself a stranger too&#8212;<br />
+'Mid scenes of wonder strange and new&#8212;<br />
+In Hull, of little worth for tillage,<br />
+The spot on which he built his village.<br />
+Return I now, this slight digression<br />
+Was worth the time, I've an impression;<br />
+Clouthier, the Indian, was a giant,<br />
+And "Squire Wright," strong, self-reliant,<br />
+Was he who o'er the border came<br />
+And gave to Hull its ancient fame;<br />
+A man of enterprise and spirit<br />
+Who in this history well doth merit,<br />
+Such place of prominence as can<br />
+Be given to such a stirring man.<br />
+On the way back I see the ground<br />
+Where ferrying Odium was found,<br />
+And afterwards, next in progression,<br />
+Friend John Bedard came in possession,<br />
+And certainly much money made<br />
+By a successful carrying trade.<br />
+The place seems alter'd, art and skill<br />
+Have built up Wright and Batson's mill<br />
+At the old wharf, or near at hand,<br />
+Where the first steamer used to land,<br />
+Before even that small craft could ride<br />
+At any wharf on Bytown's side.<br />
+And not far off, in days of yore<br />
+A cottage stood&#8212;'tis there no more,<br />
+And if there ever was a spot<br />
+Where friend and foe a welcome got&#8212;<br />
+Where generous hospitality<br />
+Presided o'er the banquet free,<br />
+And friendship's hand for rich and poor<br />
+Was ever opening the door&#8212;<br />
+That spot was where that cottage stood,<br />
+Embowered in the cedar wood,<br />
+And he who there resided with<br />
+An open heart, was old Ralph Smith!<br />
+In memory I behold him now,<br />
+With sparkling eye and lofty brow,<br />
+And round the table amply spread,<br />
+Are Patton, Henry, Ralph and Ned,<br />
+And Dolly&#8212;blessed be her shade!<br />
+Who, such nice things for schoolboys made,<br />
+And made them feel just as no other<br />
+On earth could do except their mother.<br />
+But I must hurry, or I own,<br />
+I ne'er shall reach the Upper Town,<br />
+For there I'll find an ancient throng<br />
+To link together in my song,<br />
+And I shall wake them up ere long.<br />
+'Mongst those of olden time who came<br />
+Was one whose engineering fame<br />
+Was brilliant&#8212;let none call be braggart<br />
+While speaking thus of John MacTaggart,<br />
+A genius of the highest grade<br />
+In that most scientific trade,<br />
+Who plann'd with wise, consummate skill,<br />
+Even from the lock-gates lowest sill<br />
+To Kingston Mills, the undertaking<br />
+Which cost such time and cash in making,<br />
+Rideau Canal, the work of years,<br />
+And England's Royal Engineers.<br />
+Brother of Isaac, once known hero<br />
+As Corporation Engineer,<br />
+Or Street Surveyor in that time<br />
+When Ottawa's fur was not so prime,<br />
+Whom well of old the writer knew,<br />
+And as he comes up for review&#8212;<br />
+Like volume taken from the shelf&#8212;<br />
+He harm'd no one but himself,<br />
+Is all his bitterest foe can say<br />
+Of Isaac who has passed away.<br />
+And James Fitzgibbon, where is he?<br />
+Beneath the weeping willow tree,<br />
+Retired, quiet-going man<br />
+Who ne'er his head 'gainst faction ran.<br />
+And close upon his fading track<br />
+I see the shadow of James Black,<br />
+Who once on Rideau Street kept store<br />
+In the remember'd days of yore,<br />
+A stirring, active man was he,<br />
+Genteel, polite to a degree,<br />
+That customers were always fain<br />
+Who saw him once to call again;<br />
+His wife in the old churchyard lay&#8212;<br />
+Her epitaph I know to-day.<br />
+And there stands Thomas Burrows, too,<br />
+As he appeared before my view,<br />
+Leaning upon his garden gate<br />
+Beside the Creek in '28;<br />
+He held of trust, an office high<br />
+Under the reign of Colonel By.<br />
+And Tom McDonald, as we then<br />
+Were wont to call the best of men;<br />
+A man of spirit rare was he<br />
+Who never had an enemy.<br />
+And there, too, Captain Victor goes<br />
+With most aristocratic nose,<br />
+And manners haughty with the ring<br />
+Of <i>ton</i> when George the Fourth was king.<br />
+And Lieut. Pooley, for whose skill<br />
+The "Gully" bridge is named so still,<br />
+Ask Lyman Perkins, if you doubt it,<br />
+And he will tell you all about it.<br />
+And Dr. Tuthill, who with skill<br />
+Could cure more readily than kill,<br />
+Physic'd, emetic'd, too, and clyster'd,<br />
+And <i>con amore</i>, bled and blister'd,<br />
+In the old Hospital, which stood<br />
+Unscathed by tempest, fire, or flood,<br />
+For fifty years, to be down cast,<br />
+By chance, or carelessness, at last,<br />
+Theme for conjecture, most prolific,<br />
+Another phase of the Pacific<br />
+Railway which will cause a broil,<br />
+Unless 'tis built on British soil!<br />
+And there, too, Joseph Coombs was found,<br />
+With solemn step his march around<br />
+Among the patients, pacing slowly&#8212;<br />
+Disciple of the meek and lowly,<br />
+Who afterwards oft turned the key<br />
+On many a goodly company.<br />
+In that strong work of mason's trowel,<br />
+Ruled now by Alexander Powell.<br />
+And William Addison, no more&#8212;<br />
+As trim a soldier as e'er wore<br />
+The uniform, or bravely bore<br />
+His head erect, with step as light<br />
+As wings that touch the air in flight.<br />
+Well had he won and kept from harm<br />
+The honor'd stripes upon his arm.<br />
+Such men as he have been the stay<br />
+Of Britain in her darkest day!<br />
+And Sergeant Johnston who, with skill,<br />
+The raw and awkward squad could drill&#8212;<br />
+A warrior in air and tone,<br />
+Who had his country service done&#8212;<br />
+Straight as a ramrod, and his might<br />
+Of voice would Lambkin's soul delight.<br />
+And brave John Murphy&#8212;champion John!<br />
+I can't forget as I pass on.<br />
+As fine a fellow as e'er wore<br />
+The scarlet coat in days of yore.<br />
+With upright form of manliest grace,<br />
+With wondrous beauty in his face,<br />
+And perfect symmetry of limb;<br />
+Appollo might have envied him!<br />
+And then he was as brave and true<br />
+As e'er the sword or bayonet drew,<br />
+Full many a battle did he fight,<br />
+His injured comrade's wrongs to right;<br />
+For well he knew each mood and tense<br />
+Of the old art of self-defence;<br />
+And woe to him who dared a fling<br />
+With bold John Murphy in the ring.<br />
+There many a pugilistic martyr<br />
+Met his match and caught a Tartar.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+Near where the George Street market stood<br />
+Lived William Northgraves, then a good<br />
+And skilful watch-maker, who's chime<br />
+Did regulate the march of time,<br />
+And Arthur Hopper, sporting blade,<br />
+Was in the same time serving trade,<br />
+Though guiltless of the modern tricks<br />
+Of time serving in politics;<br />
+He made gold rings for bridal matches,<br />
+As well as cleaned and mended watches.<br />
+And last of old watchmakers three,<br />
+I mention mild Maurice Dupuis,<br />
+Who's even tenor ne'er did vary<br />
+From the upright and exemplary,<br />
+At Corcoran's corner, now the stand<br />
+For carters, very near at hand,<br />
+Dwelt one who's unforgotten name<br />
+Is worthy of poetic fame;<br />
+With scientific sleight he bled,<br />
+And then anatomized the dead.<br />
+With hand so wonderfully skill'd,<br />
+Victims delighted to be killed,<br />
+Came willingly to yield up life,<br />
+An offering to Tom Hickey's knife;<br />
+So high his sense of honor ran,<br />
+The butcher in the gentleman<br />
+Merged so completely, you'd be lost,<br />
+Which in him to admire the most;<br />
+By ancient poets it was sung<br />
+Those whom the gods love all die young,<br />
+Tom Hickey's early death did prove<br />
+That those die young whom all men love.<br />
+I must not here omit the name<br />
+Of Heubach from my roll of fame,<br />
+He passes under memory's scan<br />
+A simple minded honest man,<br />
+With manners quiet, mild and bland,<br />
+An emigrant from fatherland.<br />
+And Joseph Nadeau, far and near<br />
+Famed 'mongst the boys for good <i>La Tir</i><br />
+And old John Cochran stern and tall,<br />
+Immoveable as a stone wall!<br />
+Staunch to his principles stood he,<br />
+No matter what the cost might be;<br />
+Oh! for a few of his old stamp,<br />
+To trim with fire the waning lamp!<br />
+And Louis Grison, worthy man,<br />
+In "Maville's village," first began<br />
+His little trade, which wider spread<br />
+As ancient Bytown went ahead.<br />
+Two rows of houses built of wood,<br />
+Near Enoch Walkley's brewery stood<br />
+With narrow little street between,<br />
+This was the village that I mean.<br />
+Then William Graham kept the peace<br />
+Of all the town with perfect ease;<br />
+Potato whiskey then was cheap,<br />
+And we had little peace to keep.<br />
+Such monstrous practice was unknown<br />
+As kicking when a man was down,<br />
+Though many a stunning blow was felt,<br />
+None ever struck below the belt;<br />
+The ring was form'd, and fair play<br />
+Reign'd without challenge at each fray,<br />
+And never yet, that I could hear,<br />
+Did constable e'er interfere,<br />
+Or even think that amongst crimes<br />
+Rank'd this brave pastime of old times.<br />
+Then Martin Hennessy was young,<br />
+A Hercules with sinews strung;<br />
+You might as well an anvil "lick,"<br />
+Or stand against a horse's kick<br />
+And fear not shattered rib or jaw<br />
+As risk a smash from Martin's paw.<br />
+I've seen him in the days of yore<br />
+His fist crash through a panel door.<br />
+Martin soon ran his wild race out,<br />
+For "Doctor" Whitney with a "clout"<br />
+Of a great bludgeon laid him out<br />
+Heady for <i>post mortem</i> and bier,<br />
+Thus ended Martin's rough career.<br />
+Ah! those were happy halcyon days,<br />
+Well worthy of immortal lays.<br />
+Here I must summon from the band<br />
+Of the departed shadowy land<br />
+George Parsons, and his name entwine<br />
+In this poetic wreath of mine.<br />
+Beside the creek his name I meet<br />
+On the west side of William street,<br />
+Twas called "the lane," ere legislation<br />
+Gave it its present designation;<br />
+Admirers of steeds fleet and game<br />
+Will not forget George Parson's name.<br />
+And I would be worse than a Turk,<br />
+Did I forget George Robert Burke,<br />
+A man who mingled not in strife,<br />
+Nor ever did in all his life<br />
+An act to cause a blush of shame<br />
+On any face that bears his name!<br />
+Nor can I Archie Foster pass,<br />
+Too soon departed, too, alas!<br />
+A man of feelings warm and kind&#8212;<br />
+A friend who never left behind<br />
+A friendly act, if in his power<br />
+To act the friend in trouble's hour,<br />
+Ah! 'twas a melancholy day<br />
+When Archie Foster passed away.<br />
+And now a man with learning's grace<br />
+And mildness pictured in his face<br />
+Stands forth in retrospection's ray<br />
+As if it was but yesterday,<br />
+It is the good Hugh Hagan's shade<br />
+Who's precepts many a scholar made.<br />
+Nor would my reminiscent eye<br />
+While scanning erudition's sky,<br />
+Fail to perceive through cloud and storm<br />
+Friend James Maloney's stately form&#8212;<br />
+A fixed star in the Teacher's heaven<br />
+Since the old days of '27,<br />
+When learning's every art and rule,<br />
+In the old Mathematic School,<br />
+According to education laws<br />
+He taught&#8212;and ne'er forget the "taws."<br />
+The handle was just two feet long,<br />
+And well he trounced the noisy throng!<br />
+At the west border of the swamp<br />
+Where cedars grew mid mosses damp,<br />
+Just at the corner where to-day<br />
+Ben Huckell doth his name display,<br />
+In other days dwelt William May,<br />
+A member of the old "Alliance"<br />
+Which easily put at defiance<br />
+The conflagrations that were seen<br />
+"Like Angel's visits far between,"<br />
+For Bytown then was almost free<br />
+From an Insurance Company!<br />
+Poor fellow! by a sudden stroke<br />
+Death's gloomy shadow o'er him broke,<br />
+Upon that well remembered day&#8212;<br />
+When the old town was wild and gay.<br />
+From verdant vale to sunny ridge,<br />
+On which the new Suspension Bridge<br />
+Was opened&#8212;and crowds congregated<br />
+To see it then "inaugurated."<br />
+To use a word from Uncle Sam,<br />
+The concourse was a perfect jam.<br />
+'Twas built by Alexander Christie,<br />
+From the land of mountains misty;<br />
+And though the whirlwind and the storm<br />
+For years have revelled on its form&#8212;<br />
+Though ponderous loads for many a year<br />
+Have passed it o'er from from far and near,<br />
+It stands in strength unshaken still,<br />
+A monument of art and skill;<br />
+Long may the builder dash the tide<br />
+Of Jordan's swelling surge aside;<br />
+And when the lot of all mankind<br />
+Overtakes him, may he safely find<br />
+A bridge across to Canaan's shore,<br />
+To pass in peace death's valley o'er.<br />
+While rambling backwards up life's hill,<br />
+I meet the stern Paul Joseph Gill,<br />
+A man with much tuition fraught,<br />
+Who youth at the old creek side taught,<br />
+Where Thomas Dowsley doth display,<br />
+His maps of land for sale to-day.<br />
+Paul Joseph Gill could with a frown<br />
+Keep juvenile offenders down;<br />
+His ruler flat I can't forget,<br />
+My fingers seem to tingle yet,<br />
+As recollection o'er me brings<br />
+That ruler amongst other things,<br />
+Which come around me link by link,<br />
+While of the vanished past I think.<br />
+John Frost, too, rises up before<br />
+My vision of the time that's o'er;<br />
+He built upon foundation damp,<br />
+In Lower Town's great cedar swamp,<br />
+Which stretched from Sussex Street to where<br />
+That engineering structure fair&#8212;<br />
+The fond-admiring eye doth greet,<br />
+Spanning the stream at Ottawa Street.<br />
+And "Sandy" Graham, strange it is,<br />
+That I thus far his name should miss,<br />
+While tracing from the scenes gone by<br />
+Each unforgotten memory<br />
+Sandy was, aye, a joyous blade,<br />
+And many a good stroke of trade<br />
+He with commercial wisdom made,<br />
+In other times when he was young,<br />
+And Yankee silver round was flung<br />
+With lavish hand by low and high<br />
+In the good days of Colonel By.<br />
+And William Hunton, who came late,<br />
+If I am right, in '28,<br />
+And many a good quart of whiskey,<br />
+To make the old Bytonians frisky&#8212;<br />
+And many a pound of Twankay tea<br />
+And Muscovado vended he,<br />
+For Howard and Thompson in the time<br />
+When cash was plenty and trade prime.<br />
+Friend Tom a little later came,<br />
+A youth then of quite slender frame.<br />
+In form he's something still the same&#8212;<br />
+Though time has taken from his heel<br />
+The spring it used of old to feel.<br />
+And streaked his locks with silver, too,<br />
+Which long withstood all time could do,<br />
+Yet in the dream that's passed away<br />
+I see Tom Hunton of to-day.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+And John McGraves, the chandler, why<br />
+Could I so long have passed him by?<br />
+By accident I've turned a leaf<br />
+Which brings him out in bold relief<br />
+A plain and unassuming man<br />
+Was John; his candles never ran.<br />
+And many in this ancient place<br />
+Owed him a debt for a clean face.<br />
+William Kipp, too, doth memory greet,<br />
+In a small shop on Rideau Street,<br />
+A man of gentlemanly kind,<br />
+With a well-cultivated mind;<br />
+And Commissary Strachan, too,<br />
+And Oriel, who had much to do<br />
+Paying the debts of Waterloo,<br />
+And many another battle field<br />
+Where Britons fought and did not yield.<br />
+And old John Ring, "good gracious me!"<br />
+I had almost forgotten thee&#8212;<br />
+Thou "Silky" John of other years,<br />
+Gone from this dreary vale of tears,<br />
+A passing shade, and more's the pity,<br />
+For thou wert ever gay and witty.<br />
+And Charles Baines, an old time lawyer,<br />
+Stood here professional top sawyer;<br />
+He owned a bull dog, arrant thief!<br />
+Who plundered Agar Yielding's beef;<br />
+And when friend Yielding sought for law,<br />
+To deal with canine of such maw,<br />
+"Why, there is just one simple way,"<br />
+Said Charley, "Make the owner pay;"<br />
+"I thank you for your judgment brief,"<br />
+Said Agar, "pay me for the beef."<br />
+"Seven and sixpence worth of prog,<br />
+Was bolted by <i>your</i> big bull dog."<br />
+"All right," said Charley, like a flash,<br />
+And quickly handed o'er the cash;<br />
+But, as friend Yielding turned to go,<br />
+"Come back," said Charley, "for you owe<br />
+Just seven and sixpence for advice,<br />
+So hand it over in a trice."<br />
+While on the past I now reflect,<br />
+I well and clearly recollect<br />
+John Wilson, who kept office here,<br />
+And afterwards a Judge austere<br />
+Of the Queen's Bench or Common Pleas,<br />
+Sat with much dignity and ease.<br />
+'Tis past, I shall not here relate<br />
+Young Robert Lyon's luckless fate,<br />
+Nor shall I stir the tomb and tell<br />
+Why he an early victim fell<br />
+At folly's shrine, as he who bends<br />
+A martyr to ill-judging friends,<br />
+Will always fall; but end I here<br />
+This record of his short career.<br />
+Honor, indeed! thy shrine appears,<br />
+Surrounded by a sea of tears.<br />
+George Shouldice is a man of old,<br />
+Henry was too, who 'neath the mould<br />
+Lies slumbering in solemn rest&#8212;<br />
+He many a pompous body drest<br />
+With garments fine and quite exotic,<br />
+When fashion was not so despotic.<br />
+And Charles Friel, an early man<br />
+With Bytown's history began,<br />
+A man of ready tongue and wit,<br />
+A politician who could hit<br />
+And sway with eloquence the throng,<br />
+Which shouts alike for right or wrong.<br />
+Father of Henry James, who died.<br />
+Just as his eye of hope descried<br />
+The goal he labored to attain&#8212;<br />
+The honors he had fought to gain.<br />
+Tis no uncommon thing to find<br />
+A little man with full grown mind:<br />
+And 'mongst those who have gone to rest&#8212;<br />
+Who of their chances made the best<br />
+In life's o'er turning changing reel,<br />
+I freely rank Henry J. Friel.<br />
+And Daniel Fisher, too, is gone,<br />
+Of Scotia's children he was one<br />
+Who clothed the naked in his day&#8212;<br />
+That is, the naked who could pay.<br />
+I have a friendly feeling yet<br />
+For him, for I can ne'er forget<br />
+The jacket blue which first I wore<br />
+In the old cherished days of yore,<br />
+That jacket which I don'd with pride.<br />
+Caused me to feel a man beside<br />
+The urchin in the pinafore<br />
+Which I had just arisen o'er;<br />
+In Daniel Fisher's shop 'twas made&#8212;<br />
+Headquarters of the fig-leaf trade.&#8212;<br />
+In that most ancient grand device<br />
+Which had its rise in Paradise.<br />
+I see as on I hurry past,<br />
+Pat Duggan, who blew vulcan's blast,<br />
+And friend Kehoe, who with hand neat<br />
+Fitted the shoes to horse's feet;<br />
+And John McGivern, the baker,<br />
+And Robert Wanless, harness-maker;<br />
+And William Atkins, who is still<br />
+Holding his own upon the hill<br />
+Of life, though slowly wending<br />
+Towards the goal that has no ending;<br />
+And Silas Burpee, pious man,<br />
+Who in the early ages ran<br />
+With drums and belts and wheels complete<br />
+A turning mill on old York Street&#8212;<br />
+Upon the very spot, now thought of<br />
+Where gander's head George Shouldice shot off,<br />
+With an old smooth-bore, but would not<br />
+That day attempt a second shot;<br />
+'Twas wise of George, a second shot<br />
+Might have consigned to luckless pot,<br />
+His marksman's name, and half a shilling,<br />
+His renown in the art of killing.<br />
+It was a stirring place of trade<br />
+Where famous spinning tops were made.<br />
+And splendid water power was found<br />
+Where now there's nought but solid ground,<br />
+Covered with numerous loads of wood,<br />
+A costly item bad or good.<br />
+In modern times&#8212;of old it stood,<br />
+Maple at ninety cents a cord,<br />
+Just four and six-pence, by my word!<br />
+And Julius Burpee, gone! well, well!<br />
+He kept the old Rideau Hotel,<br />
+Where man and beast could get the best<br />
+And truly find the traveller's rest.<br />
+Julius still might living be<br />
+Were it not for the "barley bree."<br />
+And Edward Darcey too, appears.<br />
+And Jeffry Nolan, who in years<br />
+Gone by, was stout and strong in fight.<br />
+And in the conflict always right,<br />
+Before the days when frolic's King<br />
+McDougall "made Dungarven ring!"<br />
+Frank's arm then, as mine, was strong,<br />
+None but himself in all the throng<br />
+So far the ponderous sledge could hurl,<br />
+Until at last with dexterous whirl,<br />
+"The school master" defiant came<br />
+And walked off champion of the game.<br />
+From first to last I've found him true,<br />
+McDougal <i>ciamar tha sibhn dieugh</i>?<br />
+And Charles Sparrow, where, oh, where<br />
+Is he who once was Bytown's Mayor,<br />
+Ere, J.B. Turgeon took the chair?<br />
+Lost 'mid the overwhelming blaze<br />
+Of changes new; gone from the gaze<br />
+Of public life, like many a man<br />
+Who, once for public honors ran.<br />
+And George and Robert Lang are gone,<br />
+Men of intelligence and tone,<br />
+Who held positions marked and high<br />
+In Bytown's old society.<br />
+Nor has amongst the ancient few<br />
+Captain McKinnon from my view&#8212;<br />
+Though long a tenant of the tomb&#8212;<br />
+Faded into oblivion's gloom.<br />
+If Roderick Stewart now was near,<br />
+He'd pour into my listening ear<br />
+A tale I would delight to hear,<br />
+Of other men of other times,<br />
+Who's names may have escaped my rhymes.<br />
+The Captain lived, a man discreet,<br />
+Near where the ancient arch did meet<br />
+O'er famous little Sussex Street,<br />
+For there a tragedy took place<br />
+Which here the muse with truth shall trace.<br />
+A boy stood near that arch of old<br />
+Upon a wintry day&#8212;'twas cold,<br />
+Tired of sleighing down the hill,<br />
+He for a moment there stood still,<br />
+That boy sits now with pen in hand,<br />
+From memory's photographic land<br />
+Painting in colors fair and true<br />
+The vanished scenes which once he knew.<br />
+As thus he rested taking breath,<br />
+He little dreamed of blood or death.<br />
+Up Rideau Street a man there came,<br />
+Charles McStravick was his name.<br />
+A tall, lithe, active fellow, he,<br />
+As in a thousand you could see;<br />
+A white blanket <i>capote</i> he wore,<br />
+And jauntily himself he bore,<br />
+He stepped beneath the arch, and then<br />
+Rushed at him fiercely two strong men.<br />
+Both with surprise and dread were scan'd.<br />
+One had a loaded whip in hand,<br />
+The other a short bludgeon bore,<br />
+And in a moment, all was o'er!<br />
+Three blows, a crash, a stream of blood.<br />
+All of the victim bad or good<br />
+In life, was in an instant crushed<br />
+To dust&#8212;off the assailants rushed,<br />
+And none can tell from then 'till now<br />
+The hands that laid McStravick low,<br />
+Nor does he who relates the story<br />
+Know more of that occurrence gory<br />
+My history would be faithless here<br />
+Did "Happy Jimmy" not appear,<br />
+An innocent good natured soul<br />
+As ever loved the flowing bowl&#8212;<br />
+An institution of the day<br />
+That like himself hath passed away,<br />
+Was "Happy Jimmy," he who made<br />
+A vagrant's life a merry trade.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+And now, kind reader, I behold<br />
+Before me, as in days of old,<br />
+Bold Paddy Whelan, Wexford Paddy<br />
+Surely of noisy men the daddy;<br />
+A man of most Herculean form,<br />
+Who roamed through sunshine and through storm,<br />
+And sounded loud in other days<br />
+His notes in Hamnett Pinhey's praise&#8212;<br />
+And well he might sing with loud swell,<br />
+"The Lamb of March" deserved it well!<br />
+A man of learning, wit, and sense,<br />
+No shallow thing of vain pretence,<br />
+The true stamp of the current guinea<br />
+Bore March's Father, Hamnett Pinhey.<br />
+To "Muddy Little York" went he,<br />
+The Independent and the Free<br />
+To represent with power effective<br />
+Amid the wisdom most collective,<br />
+In the old days of Compact Rule<br />
+Ere Grittism yet had gone to school;<br />
+Dalhousie District's Archives too,<br />
+Can show what he was wont to do.<br />
+Paddy, though not of <i>genus feræ,</i><br />
+Was yet a queer <i>lusus naturæ</i>;<br />
+His vital organs played beneath<br />
+A shield of solid bone 'till death,<br />
+Without a yielding space between,<br />
+Where ribs in other men are seen,<br />
+Though not a feathered bird, his toes<br />
+Were web'd as well the writer knows,<br />
+And joined in one in style most rare<br />
+His molars and incisors were;<br />
+His voice, when at its loudest swell,<br />
+Was like a railway whistle's yell;<br />
+In stature he was six feet tall,<br />
+So there is Paddy for you all!<br />
+But strike I now a strain sublime,<br />
+A touch heroic into rhyme.<br />
+As memory doth with truth uncoil<br />
+The history of old Bob Boyle,<br />
+A British soldier, bold and free,<br />
+Of the old Ninety-Ninth was he,<br />
+Who bravely fought and 'scaped from harm,<br />
+At Lundy's Lane and Crysler's Farm,<br />
+And gallantly his bayonet bore,<br />
+At Fort Niagara, and the shore<br />
+Of Sackett's Harbor trod of yore,<br />
+When "Uncle Sam," our friend and brother,<br />
+Or cousin, kicked up such a "bother"<br />
+In 1812, and tried<br />
+In vain to lower Britain's pride,<br />
+By cutting from her parent side,<br />
+By a Cæsarean operation,<br />
+The proudest offspring of the nation!<br />
+The Union Jack, thank heaven! still<br />
+Floats proudly over vale and hill,<br />
+Of this Dominion grand of ours;<br />
+And shattered be the vital powers,<br />
+By fatal stroke, like that which slew,<br />
+Sennacherib's Assyrian crew,<br />
+Of him who's traitor hand shall dare<br />
+To furl one fold that flutters there!<br />
+And palsied be the traitor tongue,<br />
+And from its root uptorn and wrung,<br />
+That dares to utter but one word<br />
+To weaken the soul-anchored cord,<br />
+Which binds Canadians heart and hand<br />
+In love to the old Mother Land!<br />
+Bob Boyle, "I thank thee" that thy name<br />
+Hath stirred the patriotic flame,<br />
+In days like these, when treason's veil<br />
+Drops when passions fierce assail,<br />
+And leaves exposed to public view<br />
+The traitor double-dyed in hue!<br />
+Hear, spawn of disaffection's thrall!<br />
+Rouge, Annexationist and all<br />
+This&#8212;ere the Union Jack shall fall,<br />
+The path of treason red with blood<br />
+Shall sink beneath a crimson flood,<br />
+While o'er it from the highest crag,<br />
+Will wave the glorious meteor flag!<br />
+I've wandered somewhat from my track,<br />
+But quietly I now come back;<br />
+Into my train of thought there blew<br />
+A passing spark, away it flew,<br />
+And I was gone before I knew&#8212;<br />
+Like nitro-glycerine it sprung,<br />
+And from the pathway I was flung.<br />
+Yet no uncertain sound give I,<br />
+I risk it as a prophecy.<br />
+By George Street north, I pass and see<br />
+There Pierre Desloges, a man was he,<br />
+But little known beyond the spot<br />
+Where first he built his little cot.<br />
+And Alexander Ethier too,<br />
+A carpenter, both good and true<br />
+Beside him dwelt, where busy feet,<br />
+Pass onward to Dalhousie Street.<br />
+And now I think it passing strange<br />
+That in wild fancy's flitting range<br />
+I have not seen and mark'd before<br />
+John Litle standing at his door&#8212;<br />
+In Sussex Street where erst, kept he<br />
+An Inn of quite a good degree<br />
+Of excellence in the old time<br />
+Which has evoked this lengthy rhyme,<br />
+John was a man of sturdy frame<br />
+As any that hath borne his name.<br />
+Even Brave Bob Elliot would delight<br />
+His prowess to behold in fight;<br />
+And Robert Elliott was not slow<br />
+To give or to resent a blow<br />
+In other days, when not as now.<br />
+The olive branch of peace is seen<br />
+Between the orange and the green.<br />
+And Richard Stethem in the haze<br />
+Of Bytown's distant early days<br />
+Before my vision doth appear,<br />
+To claim his right of entry here.<br />
+And Robert Stethem, too, his brother,<br />
+Of village denizens another;<br />
+John Miller too, of leather fame,<br />
+Who from the County Wexford came,<br />
+And first made here such boots and shoes<br />
+As fashion could not now refuse<br />
+In this fastidious age to take<br />
+And wear them for their matchless make.<br />
+And how have I not had before<br />
+James Anderson, a man of yore,<br />
+Who pitched his tent in days gone by<br />
+'Mong Bytown's ancient company,<br />
+An honest hearted jovial Scot<br />
+As e'er in exile cast his lot<br />
+'Mongst those who pioneered the track<br />
+Down which my memory's muse looks back.<br />
+And now as I stretch forth my hand<br />
+In search of one from Paddy's land,<br />
+A man of wit and humour rare,<br />
+I touch him still and find him there.<br />
+From Erin, scarcely from Armagh,<br />
+To Carleton came Denis McGrath,<br />
+Loud has his North Hibernian tongue<br />
+Upon the Byward market rung<br />
+For six and thirty years; in truth,<br />
+I've known him since the days of youth,<br />
+John Litle can my tale review<br />
+Of Denis, he will find it true.<br />
+And John Macdonald, of the Isles,<br />
+With face clad in perennial smiles,<br />
+Knight of the knock-down hammer, he<br />
+Claims passing notice now from me&#8212;<br />
+A well read man, for truth to tell,<br />
+He studied Burns and Byron well;<br />
+And which two of the wizard few<br />
+Have touched with tuneful hand so true.<br />
+The throbbing pulses of the soul,<br />
+Which vibrate 'neath their wild control.<br />
+Friend John Macdonald, here's my hand,<br />
+Thou relic of the vanished land!<br />
+Michael McBean I can't pass by,<br />
+He kept of old a grocery&#8212;<br />
+Just opposite McDougal's gate,<br />
+Where the big auger hangs in state.<br />
+Richard McCann, too, did abide<br />
+In peace the Sappers' Bridge beside,<br />
+In house we ne'er shall see again,<br />
+Once tenanted by Andrew Main&#8212;<br />
+A cannie, sober, honest Scot,<br />
+Was Andrew Main&#8212;an humble lot,<br />
+With patient industry he bore,<br />
+Till fortune smiled, and then a store<br />
+He opened, in extensive way,<br />
+Where William Fingland keeps to-day.<br />
+Peter A. Egleson to boot,<br />
+The young idea how to shoot,<br />
+On George Street north, in days gone by<br />
+Taught in his own academy;<br />
+At length the birch he threw aside,<br />
+And floated proudly on the tide<br />
+Of commerce&#8212;and his name appears<br />
+Where it was found in other years.<br />
+Next Richard Thomas comes to view,<br />
+And Nat and Jonas Barry too,<br />
+All plasterers of the old time<br />
+Who made their bread by sand and lime.<br />
+Joachim Valiquette, a baker,<br />
+And Joseph Valiquette, shoemaker,<br />
+A votary of the rod and line<br />
+When summer evenings are fine,<br />
+He like a nightingale can sing<br />
+A holy strain&#8212;as well as bring<br />
+From well known spot&#8212;a goodly string<br />
+Of fish upon a Thursday night<br />
+That Friday may be kept all right.<br />
+Gone is our friend Peter Riel<br />
+Whom old Bytonians once knew well;<br />
+An innocent good man was he,<br />
+Given sometimes to a little spree;<br />
+Once member of the Council here,<br />
+He gave forth many a loyal cheer,<br />
+And sat triumphal carriage on,<br />
+In state with Queen Victoria's Son,<br />
+When Albert Edward came this way<br />
+A royal visit here to pay.<br />
+My song complete would not appear<br />
+Unless "the Major's" name were here;<br />
+His regimental number now<br />
+I can't recall&#8212;but this I know,<br />
+He bravely marched with battle brand<br />
+Among the guardians of the land,<br />
+Ready alike to fall or stand<br />
+As duty's accents gave command;<br />
+Far might yon seek, and find not then<br />
+A soul more genial amongst men,<br />
+A lot unmarked by mortal ills<br />
+Is all I wish to Major Wills.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+Though strictly not of Bytown fame,<br />
+I can't forget John Egan's name,<br />
+It well deserves what I can give,<br />
+To make it unforgotten live;<br />
+For 'mongst the sons of enterprise,<br />
+Who rose with Bytown's early rise,<br />
+When "Norway Pine" was number one,<br />
+John Egan stands almost alone&#8212;<br />
+The king of the Grand River, then<br />
+The Wellington of lumber men<br />
+A man of boundless energy,<br />
+And vast capacity was he,<br />
+All difficulties had to fly,<br />
+And cower before his dauntless eye!<br />
+Right well may Aylmer mourn and boast<br />
+The enterprising son she lost,<br />
+Upon the day when from earth's toil<br />
+He "shuffled off the mortal coil."<br />
+And N.H. Baird, of old was here,<br />
+A scientific engineer;<br />
+And Finland, the contractor, who<br />
+With coach and four the streets drove through,<br />
+The grandest carriage of the kind<br />
+E'er seen in Bytown&#8212;with behind&#8212;<br />
+In gorgeous and artistic glare,<br />
+A lion and an eagle&#8212;where<br />
+Is friend Perkins? he can still<br />
+Remember that old eagle's bill.<br />
+And Captain Andrew Wilson, O!<br />
+I've got an old sea lion now,<br />
+Who saw the flash of Nelson's eye,<br />
+Amid the smoke of victory,<br />
+Both at Trafalgar and the Nile.<br />
+Aye, saw the hero's dying smile<br />
+Of triumph, when his cruise was o'er,<br />
+And to the vast eternal shore,<br />
+Launched forth by death's o'erwhelming gale<br />
+His gallant spirit spread its sail!<br />
+O'er flowing bowl with might and main,<br />
+He fought his battle's o'er again,<br />
+Talked of chain shot, and "Stinkpot's" stench,<br />
+And hated cordially the French,<br />
+Whom he believed were but created<br />
+To be by sailors killed and hated<br />
+What e'er he was, what passage o'er,<br />
+He took to the mysterious shore,<br />
+Old Charon never cleft the wave.<br />
+Yet with a soul more true and brave!<br />
+And Baptiste Homier, when alive,<br />
+I think had children twenty-five,<br />
+Presided o'er a tavern neat,<br />
+On the south side of Rideau street.<br />
+A place well known both near and far,<br />
+And there John Johnston kept the bar,<br />
+Related backward up the stream,<br />
+To him who had the lucky dream;<br />
+With the old Chief, who in "a fix"<br />
+Was found before old '76.<br />
+Colonial history has told<br />
+The story in the days of old.<br />
+The Indian dreamed, the General lost<br />
+His uniform, but to his cost<br />
+The wily chieftain quickly found<br />
+The General's dream, bought solid ground,<br />
+And Martin, James, and Darby Keally<br />
+From the green land of the "Shillaly."<br />
+Richard Fitzsimmons, too, was found,<br />
+The Paganini of sweet sound<br />
+In days gone by, with memories big,<br />
+And well he danced an Irish jig.<br />
+Most incomplete would be my tale,<br />
+Did I not draw aside the veil,<br />
+And bring from distant vistas through,<br />
+The ancient fiddler into view.<br />
+While strolling downward by the locks,<br />
+One of those reminiscent knocks<br />
+I felt, which brought my eye before<br />
+Another of the men of yore;<br />
+I gazed, as the dim shadow neared,<br />
+And then before my sight appeared<br />
+The recollection of a name,<br />
+'Twas Commissary Ashworth came.<br />
+And not far off, with business look<br />
+And pen in hand o'er ponderous book,<br />
+I see another friend of youth<br />
+Noted for probity and truth;<br />
+'Tis Thomas Donelly, worthy man!<br />
+Whom now with memory's eye I scan.<br />
+Still as the mist of memory clears,<br />
+I meet the men of other years;<br />
+Another page I now unfold,<br />
+And Captain Bolton I behold,<br />
+Or Major Bolton, if you will,<br />
+Who lived upon the "Major's Hill,"<br />
+Which got his rank and bears it still.<br />
+It used to be in days gone by,<br />
+"The Colonel's Hill," a rank more high,<br />
+And worthy of the ancient trees,<br />
+Whose foliage rustled in the breeze,<br />
+Where pigeons, in their annual flight,<br />
+Were wont by thousands to alight,<br />
+O! many a fusilade I've seen,<br />
+Of flint locks in its bowers green;<br />
+It got the name recorded here,<br />
+From Colonel By, who first lived there;<br />
+'Twas then a grove of thickest shade,<br />
+What civilization's hand hath made,<br />
+The Indian, with its withering skill,<br />
+It has done for the "Colonel's Hill."<br />
+Who comes, so centaur like in grace,<br />
+Good spirits pictured in his face?<br />
+'Tis Isaac Smith, let truth not vary,<br />
+A gentleman from Tipperary,<br />
+Beloved by all, 'twere hard to mate him,<br />
+He had no enemies to hate him,<br />
+His friends were neither scarce nor few<br />
+They numbered every soul he knew.<br />
+Who e'er remembers Isaac Smith,<br />
+Mounted top boots and breeches with,<br />
+Upon his stately old black mare<br />
+Will recollect a horseman rare.<br />
+Christopher Carlton, where art thou?<br />
+Come here, old friend, I want thee now<br />
+To ramble back with me again<br />
+To where of old McPherson and Crane,<br />
+And Francis Clemow, too, I think,<br />
+Did business at the Basin's brink.<br />
+And Bindon Burton Alton, who<br />
+Has vanished from terrestial view;<br />
+The poet with the flashing eye&#8212;<br />
+The true born son of minstrelsy!<br />
+Who sang so sweetly, memory still<br />
+Trembles with the undying thrill.<br />
+Which throbbed in melting tones of fire<br />
+From Bindon Burton Alton's lyre,<br />
+Alas! alas! that such a soul<br />
+Should sink a victim to the bowl.<br />
+Thomas MacKay, who's worthy name<br />
+Is well known even to modern fame.<br />
+The worth which honest men revere<br />
+Deserves a fitting record here.<br />
+With mighty gangs he excavated<br />
+The ancient quarry situated<br />
+On west side of "the Major's Hill."<br />
+Which modern hands find hard to till;<br />
+The stones from thence by powder rent<br />
+To build the seven Canal Locks went.<br />
+The Sappers' Bridge, too, was erected<br />
+By blocks of limestone thence ejected.<br />
+Like many another rising man.<br />
+Mackay for ancient Russell "ran"<br />
+To use a term, which means to-day<br />
+That he runs best who best can pay!<br />
+The declaration found him seated<br />
+And his antagonist defeated.<br />
+New honors came his name to greet,<br />
+A Legislative Councillor's seat<br />
+Was given next to Russell's pride,<br />
+Clad with which dignity he died.<br />
+And no more upright man has e'er<br />
+Deserving of the post sat there.<br />
+And William Stewart, too, who's name<br />
+Elsewhere has graced my roll of fame,<br />
+Was as the reader will remember,<br />
+For Bytown long ago a member,<br />
+Good representative he made,<br />
+And his constituents ne'er betrayed,<br />
+We were by taxes lightly rated<br />
+When Bytown was incorporated,<br />
+By the Bill by him presented<br />
+When he this village represented<br />
+In '47, the year, no other,<br />
+When to that stingy old step mother,<br />
+The County of Carleton we were tied<br />
+And had our temper sorely tried.<br />
+This was before Lord Sydenham's reign<br />
+Which gave that legislative strain<br />
+To our Colonial Constitution,<br />
+And made a legal institution,<br />
+The Bill Municipal in Legislation,<br />
+The often tinkered act which rules the nation.<br />
+And James Stewart, a medico<br />
+Of the old school of long ago,<br />
+A votary of potent pill,<br />
+And lancet too for many an ill.<br />
+And not a whit more given to kill<br />
+His patients, say these truthful rhymes.<br />
+Than M.D's of more modern times,<br />
+And now I think it only fair<br />
+To mention here Doctor O'Hare,<br />
+Who of old Bytown formed a part,<br />
+And practised the assuaging art<br />
+Before the time of Scanlon's tarry,<br />
+Before the days of Edward Barry<br />
+Who in his person did combine<br />
+The medical and legal line,<br />
+Exhibiting as his degree<br />
+Upon his card J.P.M.D."<br />
+He gave to Bytown's sporting men<br />
+Such Fox-hunt as we ne'er again<br />
+Shall see; ah! 'twas a joyful day,<br />
+When Barry with tin horn away,<br />
+In glory on "Bob Logie's" back,<br />
+Followed the variegated pack<br />
+Yelping in chorus o'er the plain,<br />
+We'll never see such sport again!<br />
+Who would at length the story hear,<br />
+Can ask the Sheriff, he was there,<br />
+And bravely in his headlong way<br />
+Did "Shamrock" carry him that day,<br />
+Close in the terror stricken wake<br />
+Of Reynard, over bush and brake,<br />
+James Fraser, too, can tell the tale,<br />
+For he went over hill and dale,<br />
+And swamp and fence and ditch and bush,<br />
+Foremost in the determined rush.<br />
+To get up first and win the brush,<br />
+While loud above the yelling din,<br />
+Sounded the Doctor's horn of tin,<br />
+That hunt the public health to save<br />
+Was the best prescription e'er he gave.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+Can I, an ancient friend, pass by,<br />
+Who even to-day still greets my eye,<br />
+And brings up among modern men<br />
+The dearly cherish'd past again?<br />
+'Tis far, far back, I scarce can fix<br />
+The date, perhaps, 'twas '26,<br />
+When he, in Huntly, on a farm,<br />
+Once tried his unaccustomed arm<br />
+At work for which 'twas never made,<br />
+In that most independent trade.<br />
+He left Bucolics, trees, and all,<br />
+And moved away to Montreal,<br />
+To teach, as better him did suit,<br />
+"The young idea how to shoot."<br />
+And many a youth has blest the day<br />
+Of Alexander Workman's sway.<br />
+I'll say no more, lest I should be<br />
+Accused, perhaps, of flattery.<br />
+'Twould scarcely here be out of place<br />
+If Edward Griffin's smiling face<br />
+I should present in colors true&#8212;<br />
+In good Samaritanic view;<br />
+The patron of Joe Lee, whose name<br />
+Is known to histrionic fame;<br />
+Who play'd at Shylock on the stage,<br />
+When tragedy was more the rage<br />
+Than in this sad degenerate age.<br />
+And where art thou, my friend, George Story,<br />
+A man of yore, though not yet hoary?<br />
+The even tenor of thy way<br />
+Hast thou maintain'd for many a day;<br />
+They tell us within human range<br />
+That mortal things are given to change,<br />
+It may be so, yet thou art still<br />
+But little changed, though down the hill<br />
+Quietly gliding, still thou hast<br />
+An air about thee of the past;<br />
+Who knew thee thirty years ago<br />
+At the first glance would know thee now.<br />
+And Thomas Story&#8212;modest man&#8212;<br />
+As well as any other can,<br />
+Or, he may think, much better too,<br />
+Suit habit's taste in me or you,<br />
+In coat artistically made<br />
+According to that ancient trade,<br />
+Which had its rise in solitude,<br />
+Where Adam lived before the flood&#8212;<br />
+Is still Tom Story of the past,<br />
+Long may his life's fair measure last<br />
+And Sandy Mowat, here's a line<br />
+To thee, in memory of lang syne;<br />
+Fond wert thou of the target ground&#8212;<br />
+Fond of a rifle and a hound;<br />
+Dost thou remember Bearbrook's brink<br />
+And the old shanty without "chink,"<br />
+Or door to stop the piercing gale<br />
+That whirled along the snow-clad vale,<br />
+Where Peter McArthur, you and I,<br />
+Once slept beneath a wintry sky;<br />
+While through the roof in splendor bright<br />
+We saw the guardians of the night&#8212;<br />
+The snow-storm of the coming day&#8212;<br />
+The savage wounded buck at bay&#8212;<br />
+And how we lost and found our way?<br />
+Dost thou forget the strain of glee<br />
+That from deep slumber's arms roused thee?<br />
+Dost thou remember who did ride<br />
+The bounding wounded buck astride,<br />
+And whose the crimsoned hunting knife<br />
+That ended there the quarry's life.<br />
+Then "Eastman's Springs" were little known<br />
+To few beyond we three alone.<br />
+And Malcolm Ferguson, oh why,<br />
+Should memory's record pass thee by?<br />
+An artist of the gentle trade,<br />
+By whom Bytonians were arrayed<br />
+Most fashionably in old times.<br />
+When dross among the social crimes<br />
+Held not the rank which modern art<br />
+Hath given it in fashion's mart.<br />
+An agile fireman, danger-proof,<br />
+As ever struggled up a roof,<br />
+Or to the midnight summons sprang<br />
+When the alarm signal rang;<br />
+As cat or squirrel of active limb&#8212;<br />
+A "ridge-pole" was a street to him.<br />
+The old extinguishers of flame<br />
+Will well remember Malcolm's name.<br />
+As the long past I wander through,<br />
+Michael O'Reilly comes to view;<br />
+A man of stature, somewhat brief,<br />
+Who largely dealt of old in beef,<br />
+In that cheap time when scanty coin<br />
+Was ample for the fattest loin,<br />
+Rounds, chops, and beefsteaks were not gold<br />
+In those delightful days of old.<br />
+'Tis true the tallow-candle's light<br />
+Was all the ray that cheered the night,<br />
+Before our first assizes term<br />
+Was dignified by actual sperm&#8212;<br />
+The real thing&#8212;no "Belmont's" then<br />
+Were found among the sons of men.<br />
+Another name remembrance brings,<br />
+The muse of old John Darcey sings,<br />
+In numbers almost a magician&#8212;<br />
+A wonderful arithmetician,<br />
+Whose mode with all others "collided,"<br />
+Who added, multiplied, divided,<br />
+And even substracted by such rules<br />
+As ne'er were known or taught at schools.<br />
+No learned professor of the birch<br />
+E'er left John Darcey in the lurch;<br />
+No pedagogue was ever able<br />
+To con his arithmetic table.<br />
+And Edward Darcey&#8212;no relation&#8212;<br />
+Except in name, to old Equation,<br />
+A son of Crispin, a sole nailer,<br />
+Who owned a curly dog called "Sailor"&#8212;<br />
+A noble, liver-hue'd retriever,<br />
+Who'd make one almost a believer<br />
+In canine intellectual merit<br />
+Which dogs as well as men inherit.<br />
+Louis Pinard, in ancient times,<br />
+Was always ready with the "dimes"&#8212;<br />
+Excuse the slang&#8212;which a disgrace is&#8212;<br />
+At gallopping or trotting races,<br />
+And A.P. Lesperance beside him,<br />
+A good horse kept, and well could ride him,<br />
+When horsemanship was more in fashion<br />
+Than sitting still and laying lash on,<br />
+In four-wheeled vehicle at ease,<br />
+Which modern Jehuism doth please.<br />
+And Galipean, who kept good whiskey,<br />
+And old Jamaica to make frisky<br />
+The visitors to his retreat,<br />
+On the east side of Sussex Street,<br />
+Close to the very spot, I think,<br />
+Where now James Thompson deals in mink,<br />
+Otter and other kinds of fur,<br />
+Prime and unprime, without demur.<br />
+'Twas at this inn one afternoon<br />
+In '33, the month was June,<br />
+That Martin Hennessy once tried<br />
+On horseback up the stairs to ride.<br />
+And would have done so, but for this,<br />
+A pistol shot that did not miss,<br />
+Which gave him, oh, most foul disgrace!<br />
+A charge of buckshot in the face,<br />
+Which spoiled his beauty without doubt.<br />
+And knocked his "dexter peeper" out.<br />
+And E.S. Lyman, old cathartic!<br />
+With lengthy form and features arctic&#8212;<br />
+Dispenser of blisters, pills and potions,<br />
+Boluses and specific lotions,<br />
+And panaceas in variety<br />
+To cram the ailing to satiety&#8212;<br />
+Succeeded Auld, Apothecary,<br />
+A scientific quoiter, very,<br />
+Who righted phisiologic faults<br />
+With Calomel and Epsom Salts,<br />
+And made prescriptions up with skill<br />
+Of <i>aqua pura</i>, which doth still<br />
+Maintain its place as chief ingredient,<br />
+In every mixture, quite expedient,<br />
+He kept his drug shop at the spot<br />
+Where hospitality has got<br />
+Her Shiboleth from land of Tara,<br />
+Under the rule of Pat. O'Meara!<br />
+And Richard Kneeshaw, man of science,<br />
+Who placed in <i>reason</i> such reliance,<br />
+As made him almost think salvation<br />
+Could not be found in revelation:<br />
+Chemist and druggist by profession,<br />
+He held within his mind's possession<br />
+Vast stores of knowledge, ever breeding<br />
+Ideas new from constant reading.<br />
+And Henry Bishoprick, a wise man,<br />
+Who acted druggist and exciseman,<br />
+And seized at loaded pistol's muzzle<br />
+Contrabandistas, who could puzzle<br />
+An ordinary Gager's cunning<br />
+When tea and whiskey they were running.<br />
+And William Henry Baldwin, too,<br />
+Who first appeared in public view<br />
+At the old Albion, where in state,<br />
+Bob Graham rules the roast of late;<br />
+Son of a U.E. Loyalist,<br />
+Who found his way out of the mist<br />
+Republican which played such tricks<br />
+With loyalty in '76,<br />
+He came, as many another came<br />
+To Canada, in Britain's name,<br />
+To live his life and die beside<br />
+The flag that's still his country's pride!<br />
+Thomas Gillespie Burns, "T.G.,"<br />
+I have not quite forgotten thee;<br />
+Thou wert an early importation<br />
+From Erin's Isle, and thy migration<br />
+Did little damp in heart or hand<br />
+Thy love for the old parent land,<br />
+Who's green is greener in its pride<br />
+Of bloom than all the world beside!<br />
+Thy boast has always been true blue&#8212;<br />
+To British institutions true!<br />
+And William Rogerson, 'tis well<br />
+That I of him should something tell&#8212;<br />
+A tall, majestic, looking son<br />
+Of Caledonia&#8212;he was one,<br />
+In early times, who carried on<br />
+The lumber traffic with a will,<br />
+When such names as Price and McGill<br />
+Were standards in the staple trade<br />
+Which Bytown Ottawa hath made.<br />
+And William Dunning, who kept store<br />
+The first old County Gaol before,<br />
+Where now the Albion proudly stands<br />
+And flourishes in other hands,<br />
+And Clements Bradley, who lived near<br />
+The border long ago, was here;<br />
+An agriculturist of yore,<br />
+Who settled near the Rideau's shore,<br />
+And opened 'mid primeval trees<br />
+A pathway for the passing breeze.<br />
+Full half a century has flown<br />
+Since the first tree he tumbled down,<br />
+And yet his strength seems still unspent,<br />
+His step is firm, his back unbent.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+Pierre Rocque, thou ancient man of stone!<br />
+I had almost let thee alone;<br />
+But 'twere not well to leave behind,<br />
+A man of such a rocky kind;<br />
+Thy Christian name is stone&#8212;that's hard,<br />
+Rock is thy surname, saith the Bard<br />
+Thou art an adamantine card.<br />
+And Baptist Cantin, too, it seems,<br />
+Appears 'mongst recollections' dreams,<br />
+A carpenter of worth and note,<br />
+Who ne'er asked sixpence for his vote.<br />
+Helaire Pinard presents his face,<br />
+And cheerfully I give him place,<br />
+A quiet, rare man, be it known,<br />
+Who minds no business but his own.<br />
+Joseph Paquette, to thee I give<br />
+A line to make thy memory live,<br />
+'Mid earliest recollections, thou<br />
+Art not the one least thought of now;<br />
+Something far better than mere fame<br />
+Is thine, it is an honest name!<br />
+Thomas E. Woodbury, who made<br />
+Tin cans and stovepipes, when the trade<br />
+And town was in an infant state,<br />
+Back in the days of '28.<br />
+And Fletcher, an old Yankee, who<br />
+Taught school and flogged his scholars, too<br />
+With a good health-inspiring cat,<br />
+My blessing on his old white hat!<br />
+Tho' scarce, entitled like the rest<br />
+By early advent, I think best<br />
+To name "The Orator of the West,"<br />
+James Spencer Lidstone, child of song,<br />
+The "man of memory," vast and long,<br />
+Who had, reader you need not start,<br />
+All Milton's Paradise by heart;<br />
+Strange mixture he of prose and rhyme,<br />
+Ridiculous, and the sublime<br />
+In him were singularly blended;<br />
+Where one began or the other ended,<br />
+It would be difficult to tell.<br />
+He played his part in each so well,<br />
+James Spencer Lidstone, fare thee well!<br />
+And 'mongst the ancient sons of fame<br />
+Who says that Dinny Cantlin's name<br />
+Does not deserve a line or two<br />
+In these old chronicles most true?<br />
+Dinny was just four feet in length,<br />
+Although a man of pith and strength,<br />
+His arm was always ready, too,<br />
+All rowdyism to subdue.<br />
+When special constable one day,<br />
+He captured in some sudden fray<br />
+A fellow six feet high, or taller,<br />
+And held him firmly by the collar;<br />
+And Dinny, as he upward gazed<br />
+At the colossus, o'er him raised,<br />
+Exclaimed, "escape now, if you can,<br />
+You're in the clutches of a man!"<br />
+Dinny had a commanding eye,<br />
+His hat was eighteen inches high<br />
+Come next to view, Denis O'Neill,<br />
+A ship carpenter, who laid the keel<br />
+Of many a vessel in his day,<br />
+And still he clinks and caulks away.<br />
+James Finch, too, who died here of late,<br />
+Was one of those of '28,<br />
+Or '27 it may be,<br />
+Comes nearer to the certainty;<br />
+James Finch sledged stoutly with a will,<br />
+In the old forge on "Major's Hill,"<br />
+In '29, he once lay still<br />
+For fifteen minutes on the ground<br />
+Insensible to sight or sound,<br />
+'Twas a stone that almost killed him quite,<br />
+In a most lively faction fight<br />
+In Bytown's celebrated fair,<br />
+When stones flew thickly through the air,<br />
+I can't forget it, I was there;<br />
+Its history I'll not jot down<br />
+Until I get to Upper Town.<br />
+And Charles Rowan, well I know,<br />
+The reader sought for him ere now,<br />
+What shall I of friend Charlie say,<br />
+Who came from Connaught all the way?<br />
+Who well can speak the celtic tongue<br />
+In which the Irish mintrels sung.<br />
+When famous Malachi of old<br />
+The collar wore of beaten gold,<br />
+Torn fiercely from the haughty Dane<br />
+By his right arm in battle slain!<br />
+Charlie is mild and full of meekness,<br />
+Horses with him have been a weakness:<br />
+A clipper spanking between traces<br />
+He used to drive at trotting races,<br />
+And then his powers of selection<br />
+In liquor almost touch perfection.<br />
+Next comes James Whitty, man of old,<br />
+Who once was a young sailor bold,<br />
+A quiet, little Wexford man,<br />
+Who warmed his jacket at Japan,<br />
+And "dashed his buttons" gaily, too,<br />
+In China with the pig-tailed crew;<br />
+Ere he in times that are no more<br />
+On Ottawa's bosom tugged an oar.<br />
+John Ashfield now in sight appears,<br />
+A gunsmith of the faded years;<br />
+Just as flint locks began to lapse,<br />
+He came in with percussion caps.<br />
+Here, too, is William Graham, the same,<br />
+Who from Fermanagh County came,<br />
+And many a hard earned shilling made<br />
+By groceries and general trade;<br />
+Father of him once called "Black Bill,"<br />
+That we might designate him still,<br />
+From him of Madawaska note,<br />
+Who oft on timber was afloat,<br />
+And who has claim in song of mine<br />
+To something o'er a passing line.<br />
+Companion of my early youth,<br />
+When time with us was young; and truth<br />
+Was all we knew in life's fair spring,<br />
+Thy name doth recollections bring<br />
+Long slumbering in "oblivions vale,"<br />
+'Till waked by memory's passing gale;<br />
+With thee I strayed in days of yore<br />
+Beside old "Goodwood's" pleasant shore;<br />
+Each unforgotten scene by thee<br />
+Is brought to life again for me;<br />
+A child again with thee I stand,<br />
+Among that childish happy band,<br />
+Who thought not, dreamt not, that the day<br />
+Of early bliss would pass away;<br />
+No retrospect can be more fair<br />
+That that I see behind me there,<br />
+Friend William Graham, I wish thee well,<br />
+But this to thee I need not tell.<br />
+Who is he with the cassock on,<br />
+Who bursts my second sight upon,<br />
+A merry twinkle in his eye,<br />
+Not sanctimonious, nor yet sly,<br />
+His country, one can scarcely miss<br />
+Such pure Hibernian brogue is his?<br />
+Tis surely Father Heron's gait,<br />
+Bytown's first priest in '28.<br />
+Close in canonical degree,<br />
+John Cannon's stately form I see,<br />
+In bigotry no stern red-tapist,<br />
+Favorite of Protestant and Papist;<br />
+A jovial blade with soul elastic,<br />
+No gloomy-faced ecclesiastic,<br />
+He ruled his congregation well,<br />
+Nor taught them that the path to hell<br />
+Was thronged by those who made digression<br />
+From penance, fasting and confession.<br />
+And there with academic birch,<br />
+Stands Anslie of the English Church,<br />
+Who preached in Hull and Bytown too,<br />
+Of old, to many a godless crew,<br />
+Assembled on each Sabbath day<br />
+To pass an idle hour away,<br />
+Though doubtless some went there to pray,<br />
+While here I pass in swift review<br />
+The reverend and pious few,<br />
+Who stood as finger posts of yore,<br />
+Pointing the way to Canaan's shore,<br />
+John Carroll surely should appear,<br />
+And take his proper station here,<br />
+An honest Wesleyan was he,<br />
+Who never knew hypocrisy.<br />
+George Poole in days more distant still,<br />
+In the little church on "Sandy Hill,"<br />
+Which gave its name to "Chapel Street,"<br />
+His congregation oft did meet.<br />
+And John C. Davidson, also,<br />
+Was one of those who long ago<br />
+'Mid primal darkness, thick and gross,<br />
+Unfurled the banner of the cross;<br />
+A Methodist both sound and prime<br />
+He was esteemed in the old time,<br />
+'Till something gave his faith a lurch,<br />
+And he bolted to the English Church,<br />
+In which 'tis said that he is quite<br />
+"A burning and a shining light."<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+And now another man I seek,<br />
+Who lived on George Street, by the creek,<br />
+Lo! memory's telescopic eye<br />
+At once John Taillon's shade brings nigh,<br />
+And as his form approaches near,<br />
+His laugh I almost seem to hear.<br />
+One of those lost with much regret,<br />
+James Leamy, I would not forget,<br />
+Though not a man of '28,<br />
+His early and untimely fate&#8212;<br />
+His merry life and tragic fall,<br />
+Are in the memory of all.<br />
+And Andrew Leamy in his time,<br />
+Was head of many a stirring "shine;"<br />
+A man of mark he might be singled,<br />
+In whom the good and bad commingled,<br />
+In equal balance in such way,<br />
+That each in turn had its sway;<br />
+He's gone! the grass grows o'er his head;<br />
+The muse deals gently with the dead.<br />
+James Devlin, where are you old man,<br />
+Whose fingers o'er the catgut ran?<br />
+Professor of the art to foil<br />
+Both "treason, stratagem and spoil,"<br />
+In days which now are but a riddle,<br />
+When William Murphy played the fiddle<br />
+So merrily, long, long ago,<br />
+To trip of "light fantastic toe."<br />
+Fond were you of the rod and line<br />
+When sport and profit did combine<br />
+In other days, when mighty Bass<br />
+And Pickerel lay upon the grass<br />
+Beside you, as with practised hand,<br />
+You hauled the scaly kings to land<br />
+Night-lines and gill-nets, may they be<br />
+Accurst&#8212;have ruined you and me!<br />
+And left us nought but "tommy cods"<br />
+As trophies for our idle rods.<br />
+Who is he with such pompous air&#8212;<br />
+Such magic curl of scented hair,<br />
+With glass stuck tightly o'er one eye<br />
+To scan the common passer by,<br />
+While every air betokens well<br />
+The presence of a "howling swell?"<br />
+'Tis Henry Howard Burgess, O!<br />
+To him Dundreary's self were slow.<br />
+And Thomas Burgess, too, was here,<br />
+A swell, though not quite so severe.<br />
+And the two Johnston's, born twins,<br />
+As like each other as two pins,<br />
+Clerks in the Ordnance Office were<br />
+And surely a most proper pair.<br />
+John Grant, too, who quite early came,<br />
+A constable of ancient fame,<br />
+Who kept the peace, right well, 'tis true,<br />
+When he had nothing else to do.<br />
+Few were the summonses he got,<br />
+Warrants fell seldom to his lot;<br />
+The town was not by courts infested,<br />
+People liked not to be arrested,<br />
+And seldom were&#8212;for to the Ring<br />
+Complainants did their troubles bring,<br />
+And there found justice, sometimes too much<br />
+Redress, of which they oft did rue much.<br />
+J.B. Lavois, with thee I close<br />
+My lengthy memories of those<br />
+I knew of old in Lower Town,<br />
+Though last, not least in size, I own.<br />
+A butcher of the olden time,<br />
+Who furnished roasts and steaks most prime,<br />
+In the old George Street Market House,<br />
+Where cats held many a grand carouse,<br />
+Ere rats to Bytown emigrated<br />
+In swarms pestiferous and hated.<br />
+And if I have forgotten one,<br />
+Whom memory could not fasten on,<br />
+Let him feel no neglecting smart,<br />
+I have not passed him with my heart,<br />
+I've done my best 'neath friendship's spoil,<br />
+So Lower Bytown now farewell!<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h2>UPPER TOWN.</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+And now, kind reader, westward ho!<br />
+Across the Sappers' Bridge we go;<br />
+When first in youth I cross'd it o'er,<br />
+The arch was wood, "and nothing more"&#8212;<br />
+As Edgar A. Poe doth remark<br />
+About that raven big and dark&#8212;<br />
+The wooden span, I mean, stretched o'er<br />
+The channel's width from shore to shore,<br />
+On which skilled artificers laid<br />
+The arch of stone, so truly made,<br />
+And strong, that it to-day appears,<br />
+After the crush of forty years<br />
+And more, impervious to decay,<br />
+As if 'twere built but yesterday.<br />
+I stand upon the western side,<br />
+And see in all its verdant pride<br />
+The hill crowned with its ancient trees,<br />
+Who's foliage rustled in the breeze<br />
+For centuries, all branching wide,<br />
+Standing untouched on every side;<br />
+A spot where the Algonquin <i>magi</i>,<br />
+May have reclined "<i>sub tegmine fagi</i>;"<br />
+For when across the Sapper's Bridge,<br />
+The prospect was a fine beech ridge,<br />
+And "Gibson's corner," in old time,<br />
+For squirrel hunting was most prime,<br />
+"Prime" is a somewhat slangy phrase<br />
+For these high philologic days,<br />
+And in connexion, be it stated,<br />
+With a spot to science dedicated.<br />
+J.H.P. Gibson's astral lecture<br />
+Will place this fact beyond conjecture.<br />
+Bound that old spot now thronged by all,<br />
+Has many a chipmonk met his fall<br />
+By dart from youthful sportsman's bow,<br />
+Which laid the striped beech-nutter low.<br />
+No central Ottawa was then,<br />
+As now, resort of busy men&#8212;<br />
+The first stone of our centre town<br />
+By Mason's hand was not laid down;<br />
+A forest path across the hill<br />
+To Bank Street led&#8212;the place was still;<br />
+No noisy vehicle passed there,<br />
+The dwellers of the wood to scare.<br />
+The road for carriages led round<br />
+Old Bytown's ancient burial ground,<br />
+Upon the hill's south eastern base,<br />
+Of which there is not now a trace;<br />
+And spreading off in endless green<br />
+To the canal the bush was seen&#8212;<br />
+The ancient forest&#8212;then the deer<br />
+To Bank Street Church's site was near,<br />
+And ruffed-grouse, wrongly named partridges,<br />
+Whirled and drum'd between the ridges,<br />
+Black ducks and Teal did oft alight<br />
+In ponds round Corkstown from their flight,<br />
+And when the swamp down Slater Street<br />
+Was cleared, a dozen snipes would greet<br />
+At every step the sportman's eye,<br />
+O! glorious spot of days gone by.<br />
+To listen, ah! 'twas splendid fun!<br />
+To Commissary Oriel's gun,<br />
+As with a quick well practiced eye<br />
+He made the quivering feathers fly!<br />
+There was not then one cabin sill<br />
+Laid down on famed Ashburnham Hill,<br />
+Who's heights with pine and hemlock crowned,<br />
+Towered o'er the wooded landscape round.<br />
+Then Bradish Billings farmed away<br />
+Where his descendants live to-day,<br />
+A man of enterprising fame,<br />
+Who from the land of pumpkin's came,<br />
+And pitched his tent in honor's track<br />
+Beneath the glorious Union Jack!<br />
+Then Colonel By was in a jam<br />
+Erecting the first hogsback dam,<br />
+Which vanished with Spring's sweeping flood;<br />
+But science made the structure good<br />
+By the advice of one, no civil<br />
+Engineer, with whom a level<br />
+Or other instrument of science,<br />
+Had not the most remote alliance.<br />
+'Twas built as he proposed&#8212;I'm sorry<br />
+His name from memory I can't worry,<br />
+If Lyman Perkins was beside me,<br />
+To it he certainly could guide me.<br />
+For he has got, of ancient bore,<br />
+A well authenticated store.<br />
+Now first among our old landmarks,<br />
+Comes Laird of Bytown, Nicholas Sparks,<br />
+Who came across in '26<br />
+From Hull, his lucky fate to fix<br />
+Upon a bush farm which he bought<br />
+For sixty pounds&#8212;and little thought,<br />
+While grumbling at a price so high,<br />
+That fortune had not passed him by.<br />
+He little dreamed of Ottawa now,<br />
+When 'mongst the stumps his wooden plough<br />
+Stir'd the first sod in times of old;<br />
+He knew not then, that 'twas not mould<br />
+He turne'd up, and tilled, but gold.<br />
+'Tis not my business here to flatter,<br />
+Or with enconiums to bespatter<br />
+The shadows of departed men<br />
+Whom we shall never see again.<br />
+Yet I may say, who knew him well,<br />
+And of him would not falsehood tell,<br />
+That as poor human nature ran,<br />
+He was an honest upright man,<br />
+"Close fisted" as the need occurred,<br />
+Yet one who always kept his word.<br />
+Whate'er the cost&#8212;I say no more<br />
+Of Nicholas Sparks&#8212;who for the shore<br />
+Unknown, has shaken out his sail<br />
+Where riches are of no avail<br />
+To win calm sea or favoring gale<br />
+And Lyman Perkins, what of thee,<br />
+Will pass for current coin from me?<br />
+Thou art a man of early date&#8212;<br />
+Of '27 or '28&#8212;<br />
+in Bytown's history, and 'tis said,<br />
+Though hard to drive, thou may'st be led,<br />
+That is, if one could just agree<br />
+In view and argument with thee;<br />
+When standing in the days of yore<br />
+At "Pooley's Bridge," thine eye ran o'er<br />
+The picture with a prescient glance;<br />
+Experience taught thee that thy chance<br />
+Was then&#8212;thy foresight came<br />
+To aid thee in life's winning game.<br />
+Although no silver spoon was in<br />
+Thy mouth, when to this world of sin<br />
+Thou camest, thou hast forged from fate<br />
+A path in life most fortunate;<br />
+To praise thee I shall take no pains,<br />
+Thy enterprise has brought thee gains&#8212;<br />
+'Tis something to be born with brains!<br />
+Daniel O'Connor there doth stand,<br />
+One of the old departed band&#8212;<br />
+Another of the pioneers<br />
+Of Bytown in its early years;<br />
+In memory's magic glass I see<br />
+Him as he first appeared to me<br />
+In '28 when passing down<br />
+Through the main street in Upper Town.<br />
+A merchant of a distant date<br />
+Before the days of '28,<br />
+And County Treasurer was he,<br />
+Long, too, a Carleton J.P.,<br />
+Ere Courts of Justice were installed,<br />
+When Bytown "Nepean Point" was called;<br />
+In politics he was a Tory,<br />
+And thus doth end of him my story.<br />
+Nathaniel Sherrold Blasdell, too,<br />
+Who once a blacksmith's bellows blew<br />
+In the old forge, which in the shade<br />
+Of the Russell House still undecayed,<br />
+Stands firm a landmark of the past,<br />
+How long will such old memories last?<br />
+He, too, was one of those who's hand<br />
+Built up the bulwarks of the land,<br />
+I say unto such men as he,<br />
+<i>Requiescat in pace</i>.<br />
+And Doctor Rankin, there he goes,<br />
+With solemn brow and turned out toes<br />
+Upon his mottled bob-tailed horse,<br />
+Who's canter said, the patients worse,<br />
+Or better, as the trusty steed<br />
+Did indicate by passing speed.<br />
+John Burrows, too, with serious air,<br />
+Sung hymns and offered frequent prayer,<br />
+And taught a Sunday School with might,<br />
+To spread religion's early light,<br />
+He held a post in other years<br />
+Among the Royal Engineers,<br />
+With Colonel By, a right-hand man,<br />
+His course of favor he began,<br />
+And once owned much of the wild land<br />
+Upon which Ottawa doth stand.<br />
+John Ghitty is a favorite name,<br />
+His old hotel was known to fame,<br />
+And travellers from far and near,<br />
+Called at his temple of good cheer.<br />
+A mason of most high degree,<br />
+In the craft's early dawn was he.<br />
+So much respected was he here,<br />
+That unbought friendship o'er his bier<br />
+Shed many a sad regretful tear.<br />
+And surly old James Doran, too,<br />
+A warrior of Waterloo,<br />
+Kept with a despot's iron hand,<br />
+The best hotel in all the land;<br />
+Who entered there of human kind<br />
+Was forced to leave his dog behind,<br />
+For Doran had a frowning face<br />
+For each and all the canine race.<br />
+And Daniel Fisher, who kept store<br />
+On Wellington's west side of yore,<br />
+A most experienced auctioneer<br />
+In somewhat more contracted sphere,<br />
+Than circles trade's expanding flow<br />
+Round Bermingham, McLean and Rowe<br />
+And Michael Burke, who kept a still&#8212;<br />
+And made beer down below the hill<br />
+Where malt and hops together came,<br />
+And gave the "Brewery Hill" its name&#8212;<br />
+That hill with pathway to the right,<br />
+Where Bank Street ends upon the height.<br />
+And many a barrel of his beer<br />
+Went down, the Irish heart to cheer,<br />
+When ancient crowds did celebrate<br />
+St. Patrick's Day in '28.<br />
+But patriotism's spirit rose;<br />
+From words contention went to blows,<br />
+And ere the little "scrimmage" ended<br />
+A crack that never could be mended,<br />
+Was in a luckless cranium made,<br />
+By one whom justice never paid;<br />
+I cannot tell what colored ribbon<br />
+He wore&#8212;his name was Dan McGibbon.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+George William Baker, better known<br />
+As "Captain Baker" in the town.<br />
+Who oft the mailbag's lock untied<br />
+Long after Matthew Connell died&#8212;<br />
+Long after Helen Denny's hand<br />
+Sent postal letters o'er the land;<br />
+An Englishman of good degree,<br />
+A Justice of the Peace was he,<br />
+And Captain of Artillery&#8212;<br />
+If memory has not gone astray&#8212;<br />
+He was in his life's early day,<br />
+He shewed his claims to education<br />
+In County Council legislation,<br />
+Where he in intellectual pride<br />
+Sat long by Hamnett Pinhey's side,<br />
+Our Local Parliament's since then<br />
+Have seldom witnessed two such men<br />
+Paymaster Rudyerd, too, I scan,<br />
+A most important gentleman,<br />
+Who carried in the days of old<br />
+The Governmental bags of gold;<br />
+Yet never did one less resemble<br />
+He, of the twelve who did dissemble,<br />
+And for the thirty pieces paid,<br />
+His master cruelly betrayed.<br />
+And John McCarthy, who can say<br />
+That he's a man of yesterday?<br />
+Through the dim maze of vanished year<br />
+His name to memory appears,<br />
+A dealer in strong leather ware<br />
+That stood the worst of wear and tear<br />
+Since paths of '27 he trod,<br />
+His eye hath seen the grassy sod<br />
+O'er many a friend&#8212;let's hope no foe&#8212;<br />
+With whom he started long ago,<br />
+In the long race down life's steep hill<br />
+On which he treads securely still.<br />
+Captain Letreton, too, I see,<br />
+An officer of high degree.<br />
+The owner, ere the days of rats,<br />
+Of that wide district called "the Flats"<br />
+In modern times, where I behold,<br />
+A pinery as in days of old.<br />
+And Isaac Firth, an old John Bull,<br />
+Of milk of human kindness full,<br />
+Of rotund form and smiling face,<br />
+Who kept an entertaining place<br />
+For travel-worn and weary fellows<br />
+Who landed where Caleb S. Bellows,<br />
+Out on "the Point" his habitation<br />
+Built in a pleasant situation,<br />
+Before the days when piles of lumber<br />
+Did first fair nature's face encumber;<br />
+Quite near the spot where first with skill<br />
+John Perkins built his little mill,<br />
+Where Philip Thompson many a year<br />
+Ago, commenced his bright career,<br />
+And took the ebbing of the tide,<br />
+Which into golden waves did glide;<br />
+He man'd his craft and steered her well<br />
+O'er placid calm and tossing swell,<br />
+And independent of the gale<br />
+Hath snap'd his oar and furled his sail.<br />
+'Twas just above "the whitefish hole,"<br />
+How dear that spot is to my soul!<br />
+There Allan Cameron and I<br />
+Together many a day did hie,<br />
+To haul the silvery shining prey<br />
+From out the whirling eddy's spray;<br />
+In July, '32, to land,<br />
+I drew two barrels with my own hand,<br />
+The trophies of the hook and line<br />
+In the dear days of auld lang syne<br />
+That was the fatal month and year<br />
+When cholera was rampant here;<br />
+Malignant Asiatic type,<br />
+Which from the book of life did wipe<br />
+The name of many a sturdy one<br />
+'Twixt rise and setting of the sun.<br />
+Dread terror brooded o'er the land,<br />
+While the destroying angel's hand<br />
+Smote here and there each deadly blow,<br />
+Which laid in dust the proudest low!<br />
+As I remember&#8212;those fared worst,<br />
+Who in that dismal time were curst<br />
+With dangerous and insatiate thirst.<br />
+And H.V. Noel, surely here<br />
+His name is worthy to appear;<br />
+'Mongst those whom I so long have known,<br />
+Tis strange that he has not outgrown<br />
+The friendship of the early few<br />
+Into who's confidence he grew,<br />
+By the unchanging honest course<br />
+He steered for better or for worse,<br />
+Well has he worn, long may he bear<br />
+Up stoutly 'gainst the world's care!<br />
+John Cruickshank of the kirk, who prayed<br />
+Beneath the old white birch's shade&#8212;<br />
+The old white birch&#8212;that sacred trust!<br />
+Improvement's hand hath to the dust<br />
+Upturned to make frontal space<br />
+For temple of more modern grace,<br />
+A grander altar than of yore,<br />
+The ancient "Black mouth's" knelt before.<br />
+And Robert Sheriff, stately man,<br />
+Who the Crown Timber Office "ran"&#8212;<br />
+To use a well worn Yankee phrase<br />
+Unknown in Bytown's early days.<br />
+And A.J. Christie, what shall I<br />
+Say of this old celebrity?<br />
+An M.D. of exceeding skill<br />
+Who dealt in lancet, leech and pill,<br />
+Cantharides and laudanum, too,<br />
+When milder measures would not do;<br />
+A polished scholar and a sage,<br />
+A thinker far before his age,<br />
+A writer of sarcastic vein<br />
+And philosophic depth, who's train<br />
+Of thought was comprehensive, deep,<br />
+Peace to his ashes! let him sleep!<br />
+In ancient times his prophet eye<br />
+Saw Bytown's future destiny,<br />
+Fools laughed and disbelieved the seer<br />
+Who's second sight saw triumph near&#8212;<br />
+A scene which fortune did fulfil<br />
+The Parliament on "Barrack Hill!"<br />
+And Lawyer Hagerman I knew,<br />
+When lawyers little had to do&#8212;<br />
+Their briefs were few, their fees were brief,<br />
+And brief had been their Sunday beef,<br />
+Had they nought else to fill their maw<br />
+Than the proceeds of briefless law;<br />
+For litigation had not then<br />
+Curst Bytown's early race of men!<br />
+And Robert Drummond, Engineer,<br />
+Who built across the "<i>Grande Chaudiere</i>"<br />
+The old "Swing Bridge," which many a day<br />
+Amid the "Kettle's" curling spray,<br />
+From side to side did gently sway.<br />
+The adamantine iron tether<br />
+Which chained two provinces together,<br />
+Ere legislation's fiat came<br />
+With moral might to do the same.<br />
+Well's and McCrea of lumbering note,<br />
+Who had on many a stream afloat<br />
+Vast rafts of red pine timber, when<br />
+White pine was little thought of; then<br />
+Oak, elm, cedar and red pine<br />
+And staves, together did combine,<br />
+With now and then a mast or spar,<br />
+To make up what would go at par,<br />
+At Stadacona&#8212;old Quebec&#8212;<br />
+Where brave Montgomery got a check<br />
+In a most bootless, foolish strife,<br />
+Which cost him his undaunted life&#8212;<br />
+Where Arnold got a broken thigh,<br />
+Ere at West Point his treachery<br />
+Brought Major Andre without hope<br />
+To Washington's relentless rope!<br />
+To Wolfe I'd like to wander back,<br />
+But 'twill not do, so to my track<br />
+I now reluctantly return,<br />
+Who next is ready for the urn?<br />
+Adam Hood Burwell is the man,<br />
+An English Churchman he began,<br />
+But ended a most shining light,<br />
+A mystic, full-fledged Irvingite,<br />
+With pinions rustling for a sphere<br />
+Of usefulness he found not here.<br />
+Another of the reverend throng<br />
+I'll introduce, 'tis S.S. Strong,<br />
+A man who's memory I recall<br />
+As one respected here by all,<br />
+An honor to his cloth and race,<br />
+With whom no strange fire left its trace,<br />
+Upon the shrine where truth he found,<br />
+Who preached and practiced precepts sound,<br />
+Nor wore his shoes on hallowed ground.<br />
+William and Hugh Calder's names<br />
+Arise, and now present their claims<br />
+To immortality in rhyme,<br />
+Both merchants of the olden time.<br />
+John Anderson, a merchant was,<br />
+And dealt with profit and with loss<br />
+In groceries and dainty "grub,"<br />
+With wine, Jamaica, rum and shrub,<br />
+That had no leaves upon its stem,<br />
+Though beads like dewdrops did begem<br />
+Its ruby rippling diadem.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+"And "Little Johnny Robertson,"<br />
+But lately from amongst us gone,<br />
+Took both his "sneeshin" and his glass,<br />
+And let the tide of fortune pass.<br />
+And Ewen Cameron, who died<br />
+By cholera in manhood's pride;<br />
+A Caledonian lithe and strong,<br />
+As fancy paints the dauntless throng,<br />
+Who dashed with claymore down the slope,<br />
+On red Culloden's grave of hope.<br />
+And Peter Aylen, who could tell<br />
+The path he trod of yore as well<br />
+As I, who from an early day<br />
+Knew Peter Aylen's every way?<br />
+'Tis not my purpose to indite<br />
+A history of his life; or write<br />
+A record of his strange career,<br />
+To interest the reader here.<br />
+Howe'er his stirring life you scan,<br />
+You'll find that Aylen was a man!<br />
+Afraid of nought that ever wore<br />
+The human shape on Ottawa's shore!<br />
+Chief of the "shiners," it was said,<br />
+Cæsar or nothing&#8212;never led&#8212;<br />
+But always foremost in the fray,<br />
+Was ever Peter Aylen's way.<br />
+A heavy lumberer Peter was,<br />
+When lumbering was like pitch and toss,<br />
+To-day success, to-morrow loss.<br />
+But let him rest, he sleeps beside<br />
+The Ottawa's majestic tide!<br />
+Perhaps I'd better mention here<br />
+Who and what the "shiners" were,<br />
+Who gave of yore such sturdy thumps,<br />
+And brought forth phrenologic bumps<br />
+Unknown to scan of craniology,<br />
+With bludgeons or aid of geology.<br />
+A band of Irish raftsmen, who<br />
+Were to each other always true,<br />
+Combined together, war they made,<br />
+To banish from the lumber trade<br />
+All French-Canadian competition<br />
+By dooming it to abolition;<br />
+They made the wild attempt, at least,<br />
+To extirpate poor Jean Baptiste.<br />
+Among their victims they enrol'd him,<br />
+And made the place too hot to hold him,<br />
+Yet were the tales that rumor told,<br />
+Worse than the shiners' acts of old,<br />
+Though memory's charged with many a fray<br />
+That happened in the early day,<br />
+When shiners with an iron hand<br />
+Reigned here the terror of the land!<br />
+Few were the victims of the strife&#8212;<br />
+If any&#8212;and the loss of life,<br />
+Was fanciful much more than real<br />
+In that blood-letting old ordeal.<br />
+Among the medico's of old,<br />
+Doctor Stratford I behold,<br />
+Who foolishly I thought deemed best<br />
+To emigrate towards the West,<br />
+And leave behind a work which few<br />
+Could with a single lancet do<br />
+When venesection&#8212;old idea,<br />
+Combined with the Phamacopeiæ<br />
+Was patent as a panacea<br />
+For almost every mortal ill,<br />
+Like calomel jalap, or blue pill.<br />
+He disappeared from healing fame,<br />
+And young Edward Vancortlandt came;<br />
+For he was young and active, too,<br />
+When first he met the minstrel's view,<br />
+And striding rapidly did go<br />
+Along full forty years ago!<br />
+VanCortlandt's had a long career<br />
+Since first he bled and blistered here;<br />
+His own hand hath his fortune made&#8212;<br />
+His own hand the foundation laid&#8212;<br />
+And if success, with hoards of wealth<br />
+He has not now&#8212;the public health<br />
+Has never suffered at his hand;<br />
+Nor has the mystic spirit land<br />
+Been peopled by the shades of those<br />
+Who in their last dissolving throes,<br />
+Gave evidence that power to kill<br />
+Was mingled with Vancortlandt's skill&#8212;<br />
+When to that distant coast he'll steer,<br />
+No crowd of ghosts will hover near,<br />
+And cry out. "Van, you sent us here!"<br />
+Edward McGillivray, how is this,<br />
+That I by accident should miss<br />
+So long an ancient name like thine,<br />
+'Twould be unpardonable, if mine<br />
+The fault to leave thy well-known name<br />
+Unwritten in my roll of fame?<br />
+Bytown was young, and so wert thou,<br />
+Years long before the "Shannon's" prow<br />
+Cleft Ottawa's bosom on her way<br />
+To Grenville in our early day.<br />
+No steam whistle's discordant yell<br />
+Shrieked on the evening zephyr's swell;<br />
+But from her deck the cannon's din<br />
+Told Bytown that the boat was in,<br />
+And at the sound the signal man<br />
+His banner up the flagstaff ran.<br />
+It was a good old time when thou<br />
+Bought beavers at a price which now,<br />
+When beaver skins are somewhat rare,<br />
+Would cause even Chauncey Bangs to stare.<br />
+Yes, 'twas a fine old time for trade,<br />
+Money was plenty&#8212;easy made,<br />
+And thou wert, aye, a canine blade.<br />
+Patrick Delaney home has gone<br />
+From earthly toil, and he was one<br />
+Of those who in the distant past,<br />
+His lot in Upper Town had cast.<br />
+James Elder, a majestic Scot!<br />
+On whom of old it was my lot<br />
+To look with veneration's eye.<br />
+Kept Bytown's staid academy;<br />
+And here I dwell with fond delight,<br />
+And view again with memory's sight<br />
+The stately teacher in his chair,<br />
+King of the throng assembled there.<br />
+Now Allan Cameron comes to view,<br />
+And William Stubbs, there he is too.<br />
+Wellington Wright, too, I behold,<br />
+And wild Jack Adamson, the bold.<br />
+The Anderson's, both James and John,<br />
+And Stephen Lett, my mother's son,<br />
+Who stood upon Parnassus' crown<br />
+By might of Genius, and looked down<br />
+To where with errant steps I strayed<br />
+Around its base beneath the shade.<br />
+And many more were pupils there,<br />
+Where are they? "echo answers, where?"<br />
+In fancy I away have stepped<br />
+From where his school James Elder kept,<br />
+In that old house remembered well,<br />
+After, as Joseph Kirk's Hotel,<br />
+Ere it was haunted by a sound<br />
+Which shed such melody around,<br />
+Sweet almost as the songs of Zion,<br />
+From violin of Robinson Lyon,<br />
+Who drew such music from its strings,<br />
+Scotch reels, strathspeys and highland flings,<br />
+And Irish jigs in variation,<br />
+As made one feel that "all creation"<br />
+Could scarcely match his wizard spell,<br />
+'Twas he that played the fiddle well!<br />
+And Edward Malloch, gone to rest,<br />
+Was not the worst, nor yet the best,<br />
+Perhaps, 'mongst those of other days<br />
+To whom I dedicate these lays.<br />
+I knew him well in '25,<br />
+When Richmond Village was alive,<br />
+While Bytown's head was scarcely seen,<br />
+Emerging from the forest green.<br />
+A captain of Artillery<br />
+In '37's hot time was he,<br />
+When Louis Joseph Papineau<br />
+Sought British power to overthrow;<br />
+And William L. McKenzie tried<br />
+O'er loyalty and truth to ride;<br />
+Each found the path, for what he wanted,<br />
+Too hot to walk in&#8212;and "levanted;"<br />
+Von Shoultz, a soldier abler, riper,<br />
+Remained behind and "paid the piper!"<br />
+Even I, poetic man of peace,<br />
+Have often marched and stood at ease,<br />
+Beside the Richmond guns, brought here<br />
+To thunder o'er the <i>Grande Chaudière</i>,<br />
+At the great Union celebration,<br />
+The new bridge's inauguraton;<br />
+One thing is certain, those brass guns<br />
+Were ne'er seen more by Richmond's sons.<br />
+They fell prey to official nabbing,<br />
+And Governmental red tape grabbing,<br />
+Like plunder from the vanquished harried,<br />
+To Montreal off they were carried!<br />
+Malloch was member many a year<br />
+For Carleton when votes were not dear&#8212;<br />
+When damaged eyes, and smashed proboscis<br />
+Would follow, as the smallest losses.<br />
+The offer of a vile bank note<br />
+As price of an elector's vote.<br />
+Gold, said the sage, perhaps 'twas law,<br />
+On Dian's lap the snow can thaw;<br />
+And gold has purchased many a seat<br />
+Where the "collective wisdom" meet,<br />
+And many go to represent<br />
+The weight of cash corrupt which sent<br />
+Them wandering wickedly astray<br />
+From honor's seldom trodden way.<br />
+Where now, is Turner, who of yore,<br />
+Kept school near the old Ottawa's shore?<br />
+And Heath who came across the line<br />
+In able teaching here to shine?<br />
+And old John Stilman, who shoes made,<br />
+And flourished in St. Crispin's trade?<br />
+William McCullough, where is he?<br />
+Gone to the unknown country&#8212;<br />
+A steady, harmless, quiet man,<br />
+Who here in '32 began<br />
+A race unmixed with hate or strife,<br />
+Which ended only with his life.<br />
+And Reuben Traveller, who's tongue<br />
+Oft in the old assizes rung&#8212;<br />
+Though given to mirth, a wondrous crier,<br />
+Who lived near John Sweetman, the dyer<br />
+'Twas all the same, for either side<br />
+Or both old Reuben Traveller cried&#8212;<br />
+Cried for the man who won law's race&#8212;<br />
+Cried for the man who lost his case&#8212;<br />
+Cried for the criminal acquitted&#8212;<br />
+Cried for the guilty when outwitted&#8212;<br />
+He cried for loss or gain of pelf&#8212;<br />
+For every one except himself;<br />
+Reuben was a celebrity,<br />
+We seldom meet with such as he.<br />
+John Rochester, a man of old,<br />
+Who's life a tale of goodness told,<br />
+He steered through time from envy free,<br />
+You'd scarcely find an enemy,<br />
+Who o'er his honored dust would dare<br />
+Defame the ashes resting there;<br />
+For such as he laws ne'er were made,<br />
+Peace to his gentle vanished shade!<br />
+Well, will it be for James and John<br />
+If they walk the same path upon<br />
+Which their departed sire trod<br />
+With love alike to man and God!<br />
+James Joynt is 'mong the living yet<br />
+A printer of the old <i>Gazette</i>.<br />
+Who plied the typographic trade<br />
+Ably in Bytown's first decade.<br />
+And taught the art of Caxton well,<br />
+And thoroughly to John George Bell,<br />
+Who in our village made a racket,<br />
+In the old columns of the <i>Packet</i>,<br />
+Where every one got "tit for tat"<br />
+From dear departed "Old White Hat!"<br />
+Who thought Reformers could not err,<br />
+And laid the lash on Dawson Kerr,<br />
+Whom he in bitter hues did paint<br />
+A sinner, and called him "the saint."<br />
+A journal of more modern date<br />
+Than the <i>Gazette</i>, who's early fate,<br />
+Was Phoenix-like to rise resplendent<br />
+From ashes of the <i>Independent</i>,<br />
+Which had at periods now and then,<br />
+Emitted Sparks from Johnston's pen,<br />
+Which meteor-like shot forth in pride,<br />
+Blazed, flickered, then collapsed and died.<br />
+And Robert Hardy's name I find,<br />
+In the old days long left behind.<br />
+James Matthews, too, in death's repose,<br />
+In early times was one of those<br />
+Who helped to build the ancient town,<br />
+Which modern taste is pulling down,<br />
+Assisted now and then by fires,<br />
+Past recollections primal pyres.<br />
+John Bennett, cord-wainer of yore,<br />
+And volunteer in Rifle corps,<br />
+With muzzle-loaders past and gone,<br />
+Gallant and brave old Number One!<br />
+Our civic army's primal rib,<br />
+Once called by Alexander Gibb,<br />
+"The Sleepy's," in the good old time<br />
+When he dealt in both prose and rhyme,<br />
+And made opponents fume and fret<br />
+With caustic in the old <i>Gazette</i>&#8212;<br />
+Rhyme, too, in which a critic's claw<br />
+Could scarcely fasten on a flaw,<br />
+His verse was standard like his law.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+John Cobb, I'll take a glance at thee,<br />
+Firm standard of Free Masonry!<br />
+Mine eye delights to rest upon<br />
+Thy iron frame, old "Uncle John."<br />
+If honesty and simple truth<br />
+E'er "flourished in Immortal youth,"<br />
+Where time can ne'er their glories rob,<br />
+They rest with thee, my friend, John Cobb!<br />
+And Dudley Booth, what shall I say<br />
+Of this strange mortal passed away?<br />
+His was a genius burning bright<br />
+With brilliant and uncertain light&#8212;<br />
+Proud in inventive dignity,<br />
+And dark in inmate mystery,<br />
+It flickered only, when sublime,<br />
+It might have left a light for time,<br />
+And wondering mortals to admire,<br />
+Tis gone! I saw its flame expire.<br />
+And John R. Stanley was among<br />
+Old Bytown's well remembered throng,<br />
+Whom memory's tuneful measure bears<br />
+Back from the shades of other years.<br />
+R.W. Cruice in ancient days<br />
+Was fond of mirth and sporting ways;<br />
+I had almost forgot to tell<br />
+How he on horseback cut a swell,<br />
+And made a fleet and daring rush<br />
+At Barry's hunt and won "the brush,"<br />
+When sportsmen gathered full of glee<br />
+Around the famed J.P., M.D.<br />
+And here diverging from my road<br />
+Into a little episode,<br />
+I'll tear at once with gesture brief<br />
+From memory's book a comic leaf,<br />
+A tale from cobweb's volume hoary<br />
+Of this Sangrado in his glory,<br />
+Many will recollect the story.<br />
+Edward Barry, grave J.P.,<br />
+Sometimes was given to a spree,<br />
+Which interfered with the precision<br />
+Of magisterial decision.<br />
+So Edward Barry jumped the hedge<br />
+And took the frigid temperance pledge;<br />
+But soon the Justice of the Peace<br />
+Found himself often ill at ease;<br />
+Pains through his gastric regions ran,<br />
+Too hard even for a temperance man.<br />
+Then Barry M.D., in a trice,<br />
+Gave Barry J.P. an advice,<br />
+After a careful diagnosis,<br />
+Which placed him on a bed of roses,<br />
+And eased his pains beyond description&#8212;<br />
+A dose of brandy the prescription&#8212;<br />
+Oft as required to be repeated&#8212;<br />
+With which the learned J.P. was treated;<br />
+And history affirms that he<br />
+Oft took the prescribed remedy.<br />
+John Cameron, oft called "Black John,"<br />
+Comes o'er my dream of old, as one<br />
+Who should not now forgotten be<br />
+In this memorial strain by me,<br />
+In days of yore, his true-nosed hounds<br />
+To the Chaudiere with certain bounds,<br />
+Oft chased the anther'd buck before<br />
+Their deep-mouthed yells to Ottawa's shore.<br />
+He was a sportsman keen and true,<br />
+Who dearly loved the "view halloo!"<br />
+And Graves, who near the old Scotch Kirk<br />
+Dwelt 'neath the shadow of the "birk;"<br />
+And Isaac Cluff appears in view,<br />
+A loyalist, both staunch and true;<br />
+James "Kennedy, the carter," too,<br />
+Who the first truck through Bytown drew<br />
+With the assistance of a horse,<br />
+I mean, to be exact, of course.<br />
+And "old Ben. Rathwell," now I've hit on,<br />
+A true and honest hearted Briton,<br />
+As ever crossed Atlantic's wave<br />
+To found a home and find a grave.<br />
+And William Colter now doth rise<br />
+Before my retrospective eyes,<br />
+A saddler far from democratic&#8212;<br />
+Professor most aristocratic,<br />
+In art which claims the highest feather<br />
+Among the fashioners of leather;<br />
+An active springing step had he<br />
+As now his form appears to me;<br />
+Early he went to that far bourne<br />
+"From whence no travellers return."<br />
+Thomas M. Blasdell, step this way,<br />
+And tell me how you feel to-day?<br />
+You thought I'd pass and let you go,<br />
+Old twisted groove! but 'tis not so,<br />
+Like charcoal, brimstone and salpetre.<br />
+I'll touch you off now in short metre.<br />
+'Tis long since first your eye, my man,<br />
+Along the rifle barrel ran;<br />
+The "crotch" or "globe" was all the same,<br />
+If you could only see the game.<br />
+Or the "bulls-eye," the missile flew<br />
+Into its centre straight and true,<br />
+In the old days when practiced eye<br />
+Was light, shade and trajectory.<br />
+Does your keen eye obey your will,<br />
+Is your hand quite as steady still<br />
+As when you knocked the turkey's o'er,<br />
+At twenty rods in days of yore?<br />
+My blessing day and night upon<br />
+The memory of the time that's gone.<br />
+And Sergeant Major Ritchie, there<br />
+He stands before my vision, where<br />
+In youth I used to see him stand<br />
+On Barrack Hill with cane in hand.<br />
+For many a year ere death's disaster<br />
+He held the post of Barrack Master,<br />
+And amongst people who reflected<br />
+Most highly always was respected.<br />
+I had almost forgotten one<br />
+Who's name should not be left alone<br />
+In dark oblivion's envious shade<br />
+While I the silent past invade&#8212;<br />
+To light up the forgotten gloom;<br />
+To rescue from time's early tomb<br />
+And touch with friendly hand, and give<br />
+To fading memories power to live.<br />
+'Mongst men of enterprising fame,<br />
+I can't pass George Buchanan's name;<br />
+He built our first old timber slide,<br />
+Down which the red pine cribs did glide;<br />
+And afterwards with strength and skill,<br />
+And an indomitable will,<br />
+At the great Rapids of the <i>Chats</i>,<br />
+Suspended nature's changeless laws,<br />
+And by an artificial path<br />
+Triumphed o'er the cataract's wrath!<br />
+While standing quietly on shore,<br />
+Watching the freight the current bore,<br />
+A sudden crash from careless oar<br />
+Ended his enterprising life,<br />
+And made a widow of his wife.<br />
+The public mourned, its great heart bled,<br />
+With genuine sorrow for the dead.<br />
+'Tis but as yesterday to me,<br />
+The history of that tragedy.<br />
+Ere to the fair green now I go,<br />
+I'll stir up the old "Buffalo."<br />
+John Heney, who his mark has made<br />
+In speculation's shifting trade,<br />
+And built up with both brick and stone,<br />
+Memorials, which, when he is gone,<br />
+In Ottawa will securely stand,<br />
+Proofs of his enterprising hand.<br />
+Some years ago in learned debate,<br />
+In Council Hall he sat in state.<br />
+And in his record there you'll find,<br />
+Nothing unfriendly or unkind.<br />
+And while as gently I jog on,<br />
+I cannot, pass by "honest John!"<br />
+"Shaun Rhua," designating name,<br />
+Who from the County Cavan came,<br />
+And in the Upper Town first started.<br />
+Young, enterprising, and light hearted.<br />
+At Civic Board for many a year,<br />
+For By Ward doth his name appear;<br />
+And I can say, who ought to know,<br />
+As far as my researches go,<br />
+No public act has stain left on<br />
+The well-earned name of "honest John!"<br />
+Turk, Jew, and heathen all the same,<br />
+Speak kindly of John Heney's name.<br />
+Mark Bishoprick has gone at last,<br />
+An aged pilgrim from the past,<br />
+Burdened with many years he stood<br />
+Almost alone in solitude,<br />
+A record of an age that's gone,<br />
+Who's lengthened shadow rested on<br />
+The present, ere the distant light<br />
+Sunk into everlasting night.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>CORKSTOWN.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">"Mother McGinty won't forget</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5.5em;">To keep the tally mark."</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 15em; font-variant: small-caps; font-size: 90%;">(Old Song.)</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+In days of yore, within a call<br />
+Of where stands now the City Hall,<br />
+A village built of mud and wood,<br />
+In all its glory, Corkstown stood,<br />
+Two rows of cabins in the swamp&#8212;<br />
+Begirt by ponds and vapors damp<br />
+And aromatic cedar trees<br />
+Who's branches caught the passing breeze&#8212;<br />
+Stretched upward on the western side<br />
+Of the "Deep Cut," where then were plied<br />
+The spade and pickaxe side by side;<br />
+For, by the shade of Colonel By,<br />
+Who shaped this city's destiny!<br />
+There delved full many a hard case in,<br />
+That channel to the Canal Basin.<br />
+There, then dwelt many a sturdy blade,<br />
+Adepts at handling the spade,<br />
+And bruisers at the wheeling trade,<br />
+As witness the vast mounds of clay<br />
+Remaining on the banks to-day.<br />
+Lovers of poteen strong and clear,<br />
+In preference to rum or beer,<br />
+Sons of the sod who'd knock you down<br />
+For half a word 'gainst Cork's own town,<br />
+And kick you then for falling too,<br />
+To prove that the old mountain dew<br />
+Had frolic in it raw and strong,<br />
+As well as music, love and song.<br />
+And there in whitewashed shanty grand,<br />
+With kegs and bottles on each hand,<br />
+Her face decked with a winning smile,<br />
+Her head with cap of ancient style,<br />
+Crowned arbiter of frolic's fate,<br />
+Mother McGinty sat in state,<br />
+And measured out the mountain dew<br />
+To those whom strong attraction drew<br />
+Within the circle of her power,<br />
+To while away a leisure hour.<br />
+She was the hostess and the host,<br />
+She kept the reckoning, ruled the roast,<br />
+And swung an arm of potent might<br />
+That few would dare to brave in fight;<br />
+Yet was she a good-natured soul,<br />
+As ever filled the flowing bowl;<br />
+In sooth she dealt in goodly cheer,<br />
+Half-pints of whiskey, quarts of beer,<br />
+Strong doses of sweet peppermint,<br />
+Fine old Jamaica without stint,<br />
+And shrub&#8212;a cordial then well known&#8212;<br />
+Her thirsty customers poured down,<br />
+Nor dreamed of headaches, or of ills,<br />
+For nought killed then, but doctors' pills!<br />
+The song, the dance, and glass went round,<br />
+The precincts of that classic ground;<br />
+And when bent on a tearing spree,<br />
+Filled full of grog and jollity,<br />
+The bacchanalian rant they made<br />
+Would please even old Anacreon's shade,<br />
+While o'er them the athletic charms<br />
+Of the stern hostess's bare arms,<br />
+Struck terror and kept order in<br />
+The revel's hottest, wildest din!<br />
+For cash or credit bartered she,<br />
+The prime ingredients of a spree;<br />
+And he stood always above par<br />
+Who never stone threw at the bar;<br />
+And when a man had spent his all,<br />
+She chalked the balance on the wall.<br />
+Figures or letters she knew not,<br />
+But what a customer had got<br />
+By hieroglyphics well she knew,<br />
+For there exposed to public view<br />
+Each debtor's tally great and small<br />
+Appeared upon the bar-room wall.<br />
+A short stroke for a half-pint stood,<br />
+A longer for a quart was good,<br />
+While something like an Eagle's talon<br />
+Upon her blackboard was a gallon.<br />
+And woe to him, who soon or late<br />
+His tally did not liquidate;<br />
+For when her goodly company<br />
+Were all assembled for a spree,<br />
+She read off each delinquent's score,<br />
+And at his meanness loudly swore,<br />
+And threatened when he next appeared,<br />
+Unless the entry all was cleaed,<br />
+To lay on future drinks a stricture,<br />
+And photograph, perhaps, his picture<br />
+In pewter, for the unpaid tally,<br />
+As given, I think, in C. O'Malley.<br />
+Old Corkstown was a merry place<br />
+On pay-day, when the soaking race<br />
+Assembled full of fun and glee<br />
+At Mother McGinty's for a spree,<br />
+No total abstinence was known<br />
+In those days in that little town,<br />
+Nor many nasal organs tainted<br />
+For lack of time to get them painted;<br />
+No moderate drinker showed his face<br />
+Within that much resorted place,<br />
+For temperance had not then began<br />
+To trench upon the rights of man,<br />
+Sure had he trod on danger's edge<br />
+Who dared there to propose the pledge.<br />
+Such monstrous doctrine there had been<br />
+Followed by "wigs upon the green."<br />
+None there refused the offered glass,<br />
+Or dared to let the bottle pass<br />
+For, <i>casus belli</i> this was strong,<br />
+Unless with a good roaring song<br />
+The recreant could in his defence<br />
+Atone for such <i>most strange</i> offence.<br />
+Sometimes, nay oft, upon the street<br />
+Antagonistic friends would meet<br />
+By chance, or by some other charm,<br />
+To try each other's strength of arm,<br />
+And without legal process settle<br />
+Disputes, like men of taste and mettle;<br />
+And while strict "Fair Play" ruled the fight,<br />
+It was a sort of rough delight<br />
+For youthful souls while hanging round<br />
+That ancient famous battle ground,<br />
+To note who first the claret drew&#8212;<br />
+who first down his opponent threw&#8212;<br />
+Who first produced the limner's dyes<br />
+Beneath his neighbor's damaged eyes,<br />
+Or sowed the trodden ground beneath<br />
+With smashed incisors, like the teeth,<br />
+The dragon's tusks of ancient ken<br />
+From which sprung hosts of armed men.<br />
+Such pastime was a frequent thing,<br />
+The entertainment of the ring,<br />
+Without equestrian or clown<br />
+Was often seen in Cork's own town,<br />
+And best, for impecunious boys<br />
+Who boasted few of modern joys,<br />
+Who daily went to see the play<br />
+Had no admission fee to pay.<br />
+But gone is Corkstown, vanished too<br />
+The whitewashed shanty from our view,<br />
+Where once the minstrel's youthful eyes<br />
+Beheld strange orgies with surprise.<br />
+In dust its stalwart hostess now,<br />
+Reposes, placid is the brow<br />
+That once frowned terror o'er the throng<br />
+While revelling in the dance and song,<br />
+Gone with them are the fading dyes<br />
+Which tinged fair childhood's happy skies,<br />
+The brilliant firmament of youth<br />
+Has vanished, and but leaves the truth<br />
+Written wherever mortals range<br />
+That things below are doomed to change.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>THE FAIR OF 1829.</h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+Now, reader, you and I must start<br />
+Together with both hand and heart,<br />
+Off to the far-famed level of green,<br />
+Which once in verdure lay between<br />
+The old Scotch Kirk, and where now Hall<br />
+Confectionery sells to all;<br />
+And we shall pass as something new,<br />
+Old scenes before us in review,<br />
+And I shall fire up these rhymes<br />
+With battles of the good old times;<br />
+And out of what I shall relate<br />
+No single case for magistrate,<br />
+Or stern judge to adjudicate<br />
+Arose, for then, a bloody nose,<br />
+Or broken head, between fair foes,<br />
+Was counted neither loss nor gain,<br />
+Nor thought of 'till they met again.<br />
+'Twas in the glorious olden time<br />
+When smashing craniums was no crime&#8212;<br />
+When people got no invitation<br />
+At half-past nine for presentation<br />
+Of damaged eye and broken skin,<br />
+To answer for nocturnal sin<br />
+Before that tribunal where bail<br />
+Can't always keep one out of jail.<br />
+'Twas in July in '29,<br />
+If true this memory of mine,<br />
+At early morn upon that green<br />
+Were many tents of canvas seen<br />
+Within which might be found good cheer<br />
+In whiskey kegs and kegs of beer;<br />
+And on a little table, too,<br />
+Tin measures were exposed to view,<br />
+For thirsty souls their clay to slake,<br />
+And draughts of inspiration take&#8212;<br />
+For then the numbers were but few,<br />
+Who shun'd the sparkling mountain dew,<br />
+And people under no pretence<br />
+Could dream of total abstinence:<br />
+Even John B. Gough's most magic sway<br />
+Had failed in Bytown's early day.<br />
+Vast was the throng assembled there<br />
+At Bytown's first and greatest Fair,<br />
+And merry were the antics seen<br />
+Upon that famous ancient green.<br />
+'Twas not to buy or sell they came<br />
+From far and near, the blind and lame,<br />
+The grave, the merry, sad and gay,<br />
+Upon that old eventful day;<br />
+They all assembled, wild and free,<br />
+To have a ranting, roaring spree!<br />
+And, by the shadows of the past!<br />
+Frolic flew furious and fast,<br />
+And many a head was pillowed on<br />
+Old mother earth ere set of sun.<br />
+A fiddler here the catgut drew,<br />
+And there a highland piper, too,<br />
+Shrieked forth with loud and stirring bar,<br />
+The boding battle-notes of war!<br />
+And lavishly the whiskey flew<br />
+Among that mirth devoted crew,<br />
+As oft into the tents they ran<br />
+To renovate the inner man.<br />
+'Twas twelve o'clock, and all was well,<br />
+"And merry as a marriage bell,"<br />
+Thought one might see just here and there<br />
+Legs seeming somewhat worse of wear,<br />
+And in the air perhaps might hear<br />
+The prescient sounds of conflict near,<br />
+For Irish accents there were many,<br />
+Cork, Tipperary, and Kilkenny.<br />
+'Twas afternoon, and frolic's pacing<br />
+Was then diversified by racing,<br />
+Then soon was cleared of busy feet<br />
+The race course, old Wellington street,<br />
+Bets then were made, and up the money,<br />
+Pat Ryan's horse, and Davy's pony,<br />
+Together entered for the match&#8212;<br />
+Perhaps it would be called a "scratch"<br />
+Race in the turfs expressive phrase<br />
+Unknown in Bytown's early days.<br />
+Fair, free and gallantly they started,<br />
+And headlong up the street they darted,<br />
+While loudly sounded cheer on cheer<br />
+As swift the winning post they near;<br />
+They ran together without check,<br />
+And passed it almost neck and neck,<br />
+So close, the judges, though they tried,<br />
+The winning horse could not decide.<br />
+The race was o'er and down the brakes,<br />
+Each party shouted for the stakes;<br />
+And loud and fierce the clamor rose,<br />
+And words soon lost themselves in blows;<br />
+The very stones began to speak,<br />
+And skulls, of course, began to break,<br />
+And black thorns and maple sticks<br />
+Played such fantastic ugly tricks,<br />
+That soon the well thronged battle plain<br />
+Was strewn with bodies of the slain&#8212;<br />
+The "Kilt," who fell to rise again<br />
+Without the doctor's mystic aid,<br />
+And plunge once more into the raid.<br />
+Stones flew in showers, the windows shook<br />
+Around that famous Donnybrook,<br />
+While Tipperary's battle yell,<br />
+Did loudly o'er the conflict swell!<br />
+And many a celt with accent racy<br />
+Roared for a Sleavin or a Casey!<br />
+And fierce the struggle raged around<br />
+Where the seven Sleavin's stood their ground&#8212;<br />
+Seven brothers, back to back they stood<br />
+Like hero's, though their streaming blood<br />
+Told how they bravely turned at bay<br />
+'Gainst hundreds in that savage fray!<br />
+O'erpowered at last they did retreat<br />
+Face to the foe, still in defeat,<br />
+Defiant as they moved along<br />
+Pursued by the relentless throng!<br />
+They reached their home, shut fast the door,<br />
+And stood within upon the floor,<br />
+Ready to meet the coming foe,<br />
+Who in their vengeance were not slow.<br />
+Stones showered from the assailing crew,<br />
+In pieces every window flew,<br />
+Then, with a loud and savage yell<br />
+They rushed to storm the citadel!<br />
+A gun-barrel through a broken pane<br />
+Made the invaders pause again,<br />
+A sharp axe sticking through another,<br />
+Their thirst for slaughter seemed to smother;<br />
+A battle council then took place,<br />
+And very soon there was no trace,<br />
+Of conflict or of bloody fray<br />
+Round where the Sleavin's stood at bay!<br />
+Thus ended By-town's first old Fair,<br />
+A Donnybrook most rich and rare;<br />
+This annal of the olden time<br />
+Was not premeditated crime,<br />
+It sprung from what forms quite a part<br />
+Of every genuine Irish heart,<br />
+A sort of <i>Faugh a-Ballagh</i> way<br />
+That sticks to Irishmen to-day.<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 30%; white-space: nowrap;">
+<h3>LINES</h3>
+<br />
+<p style="text-align: center;"><i>Recited by the author in "Her Majesty's Theatre,"<br />
+at a Festival of the Mechanics' Institute<br />
+in March, 1868.</i></p>
+<br />
+<br />
+In such a gay and festive scene as this,<br />
+My worthy friends, it may not be amiss<br />
+To mingle with the general notes of glee,<br />
+A rhyme or too, even if not poesy.<br />
+Indulge me while in rude unpolished verse,<br />
+The promptings of the muse I now rehearse,<br />
+And O! deal gently with me while I try<br />
+To bring the vanished past before your eye,<br />
+Fond recollections rapidly takes wing<br />
+The fading scenes of other days to sing,<br />
+The good old days, the dear old times of yore,<br />
+Which you and I, alas! shall see no more:<br />
+When all around the spot on which I stand<br />
+Was trackless forest and primeval land&#8212;<br />
+The "Barrack Hill," a wilderness all o'er,<br />
+And Lower Town to Rideau's ancient shore<br />
+A gloomy cedar swamp, the haunt of deer,<br />
+In which the ruffed grouse drum'd when spring was near,<br />
+While here and there a giant pine on high<br />
+Towered with its spreading branches to the sky!<br />
+I have the little village in my eye,<br />
+Before the locks were built by Colonel By,<br />
+Before the Sappers threw the ponderous arch,<br />
+O'er the Canal, to aid improvement's march,<br />
+Ere by the muscular canaller's spade<br />
+The ground was broken where the "Deep Cut's" made&#8212;<br />
+Long ere the iron bond of union span'd<br />
+The vast <i>Kah-nah-jo</i>, wonder of our land!<br />
+Here mighty Ottawa, in its grandest phase<br />
+Bears some resemblance to its better days,<br />
+Ere sawdust, slabs, and stern improvement gave<br />
+A turbid deathstroke to its limpid wave!<br />
+That good old time, 'tis pleasant to recal,<br />
+When one religion almost served for all&#8212;<br />
+When men together could in friendship join&#8212;<br />
+When battered buttons passed for genuine coin&#8212;<br />
+And silver pieces, do not think it strange,<br />
+Were cut in too, and four, to make small change,<br />
+When banks were few, suspensions heard of not,<br />
+And specie was the only cash we got,<br />
+Hard silver with no discount on our dollars,<br />
+Ere brokers reigned, or flourished paper collars.<br />
+Tho' dim the light of learning's genial rays<br />
+Amongst the masses in those bygone days&#8212;<br />
+Tho' daily papers, modern luxury's food,<br />
+The bold apostles of the public good,<br />
+The tribunes of the people were not found<br />
+On guard our infant liberties around,<br />
+Tho' institutions based on mental light,<br />
+Shed scanty radiance o'er that primal night,<br />
+Tho' science, wealth and philosophic lore<br />
+Were <i>rara aves</i> upon Ottawa's shore;<br />
+Tho' commerce scarce had spread her gilded wings,<br />
+The herald of a costlier state of things;<br />
+Tho' such an institution as our own,<br />
+Was to our early pioneers unknown,<br />
+An institution, let me say, in short,<br />
+Worthy of every patriot's support;<br />
+Established on a comprehensive base.<br />
+Where every man of worth may find his place&#8212;<br />
+temple of intelligence to give<br />
+To mind the sustenance on which to live,<br />
+Tho' all such modern glories then were rare,<br />
+Yet old Bytonians did not badly fare.<br />
+Churches were few in that benighted time,<br />
+Seldom was heard the Sabbath's welcome chime&#8212;<br />
+Yet brotherhood abounded in the land,<br />
+And charity with soft and tender hand<br />
+Relieved distress, and made the weeper smile,<br />
+Scarce conscious of the good she did the while,<br />
+And not the worst among poor sons of men,<br />
+Money was plenty in the village then,<br />
+For Mother Britain with a lavish hand<br />
+Scattered her treasures over all the land.<br />
+Simplicity then held her peaceful reign,<br />
+And vice and crime were seldom in her train.<br />
+No litigation marked our young career,<br />
+No Police Magistrate with brow severe,<br />
+And frown of justice upon trembling crime,<br />
+Made culprits shiver in that happy time;<br />
+Neighbor to neighbor owed so little grudge,<br />
+Disputes were settled then without the Judge&#8212;<br />
+The learned profession boasted not one gown,<br />
+And but one lancet was in all the town&#8212;<br />
+And it was busy, and got wondrous praise,<br />
+For venesection flourished in those days.<br />
+People owed little, and were seldom sued,<br />
+No bailiff marred our ancient solitude;<br />
+Duns were a nuisance in our soil not grown,<br />
+Fifteen per cent, was totally unknown!<br />
+Things then were taken as they happened quite,<br />
+And insults were decided by a fight,<br />
+In boyhood I have witnessed many a fray<br />
+Within the ring by daylight and fair play&#8212;<br />
+No constable poked his unwelcome nose<br />
+Between the pastime of two transient foes,<br />
+Who choose like Sayers and Heenan to decide<br />
+Their difference with strong sinews on each side.<br />
+We had no sidewalks then, not much taxation,<br />
+No lock-up, county gaol, no corporation,<br />
+No aldermanic wisdom, and no mayor,<br />
+To fill with dignity the civic chair;<br />
+No tax collector with his pressing bill<br />
+To cause consumption in an empty till;<br />
+Corrupt electors trod not freedom's ground,<br />
+No purchaseable franchise could be found&#8212;<br />
+Money was not the "altar and the God,"<br />
+Before which manhood bowed a venal clod!<br />
+The reign of truth, ere politics was made<br />
+By infamy a money-making trade!<br />
+No costly vehicles with horses gay,<br />
+In gilded trappings graced that ancient day;<br />
+Pedestrianism was fashionable then,<br />
+For boys were boys, as 'twas, and men were men.<br />
+And girls were what they always were, the best<br />
+Blossoms in the gardens of the blest!<br />
+One steamer only cleft the Ottawa's spray,<br />
+But did not, like the "Queen," come every day.<br />
+No railroad engine snorted o'er the plain,<br />
+Dragging along behind its ponderous train&#8212;<br />
+No telegraphic line with speed of light<br />
+Scattered intelligence with lightning flight;<br />
+No gas-flame shed its artificial ray,<br />
+Turning nocturnal darkness into day&#8212;<br />
+The tallow candle blazed away supreme,<br />
+And of the age of coal oil did not dream;<br />
+Yet, 'twas "a gay old time," a happy time,<br />
+And could I strike an upward note sublime,<br />
+I'd strain my very heartstrings with the blast<br />
+Of glory that I'd give the fine old past!<br />
+But times are changed, and things are altered too,<br />
+Fair civilization bursts upon our view;<br />
+The old men of the old time have been laid<br />
+In peace beneath the weeping willow's shade;<br />
+The middle-aged are in the yellow leaf,<br />
+Life's evening evanescent, sad and brief&#8212;<br />
+The little children who flourished then<br />
+Are now the mothers of our land, and men&#8212;<br />
+The wilderness has vanished, the old trees<br />
+Have disappeared before improvement's breeze;<br />
+Commercial enterprise is busy now,<br />
+The Ottawa's breast is cleft by many a prow,<br />
+The roaring, rushing locomotives scour<br />
+Along the track at forty miles an hour&#8212;<br />
+The electric current cleaves the ambient air,<br />
+Shooting the rays of thought round everywhere,<br />
+Darting like sunbeams to the left and right,<br />
+The swift-winged messengers of mental light!<br />
+Disturbing 'neath the billows of the deep,<br />
+The ocean monsters from their dreamy sleep;<br />
+Cleaving resistless through the watery waste<br />
+A miracle not dreamt of in the past,<br />
+Annihilating time, and leaving space,<br />
+Like Noah's dove, without a resting place!<br />
+Thy fame, too, "old brown Bess," hath passed away,<br />
+And rifled guns in war and peace hold sway,<br />
+And Britain's wooden walls with all their glories,<br />
+Are now but one of fame's immortal stories!<br />
+But while I cast my wondering eyes around<br />
+How grand the sight which doth their vision bound;<br />
+A city stands in fair and youthful grace,<br />
+Where once old Bytown had its primal place;<br />
+And lo! in grandeur towering the skies<br />
+In marbled splendor upon yonder hill,<br />
+Our Legislative Temples proudly rise,<br />
+A columned glory of the artist's skill!<br />
+Thanks to our gracious Queen, who's royal hand<br />
+Made Ottawa chief city of the land!<br />
+Thanks to the men who fought through good and ill<br />
+The fight of right, and bravely battled still;<br />
+Who stood unshaken, firm in their adhesion,<br />
+Till victory crowned Her Majesty's decision!<br />
+God bless our New Dominion! may it be<br />
+Granted a proud and happy destiny;<br />
+Ontario and Quebec go hand in hand<br />
+With Nova Scotia and New Brunswick's land;<br />
+Those noble borderers of the rushing wave<br />
+Grand, fitting birthplace of the free and brave!<br />
+May Newfoundland, British Columbia true,<br />
+Prince Edward Island join the Union, too,<br />
+And the vast regions of the far North-West,<br />
+Awake to form a nation great and blest!<br />
+May all in common brotherhood unite<br />
+To live in peace, or for our freedom fight<br />
+Beneath the flag for which our fathers died,<br />
+And left us as their legacy and pride!<br />
+May heaven give strength and energy to those<br />
+Who from political convulsion's throes&#8212;<br />
+A proud example to the sons of earth,<br />
+Brought union and an empire into birth!<br />
+May wisdom guide them as they onward steer<br />
+The vessel of the State in her career&#8212;<br />
+Smooth be the wave and gentle be the gales<br />
+That fill our ark of safety's well trim'd sails&#8212;<br />
+Strong be the vision of the pilot, too,<br />
+To keep the port of union full in view,<br />
+Until the anchor's cast, the sails are furled,<br />
+A spectacle of envy to the world!<br />
+</div>
+<br />
+<br />
+<hr />
+<br />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections of Bytown and Its Old
+Inhabitants, by William Pittman Lett
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS OF BYTOWN ***
+
+***** This file should be named 14908-h.htm or 14908-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/4/9/0/14908/
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/14908.txt b/14908.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fef01b9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/14908.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,3916 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections of Bytown and Its Old
+Inhabitants, by William Pittman Lett
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Recollections of Bytown and Its Old Inhabitants
+
+Author: William Pittman Lett
+
+Release Date: February 4, 2005 [EBook #14908]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS OF BYTOWN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ RECOLLECTIONS
+
+ OF
+
+ BYTOWN
+
+ AND ITS
+
+ OLD INHABITANTS
+
+ BY
+
+ WILLIAM PITTMAN LETT.
+
+ OTTAWA:
+
+ "CITIZIEN" PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY, SPARKS STREET
+
+ 1874.
+
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+As no book, small or great--gay or grave, witty or sublime, scientific,
+dramatic, poetic, tragic, historical, metaphysical, philosophical,
+polemical, wise or otherwise--can be considered complete, particularly
+at the beginning, without a preface; I have deemed it expedient that the
+contents of the following pages should be dignified by a few lines of an
+introductory nature.
+
+It was not my intention when I commenced these reminiscences to publish
+them in their present form, neither had I any idea of their extending
+beyond a few hundred lines. That I have changed my mind is entirely
+owing to the solicitations of friends desirous of having them in compact
+shape, and not to any particular ambition of my own to write a book.
+
+I do not pretend to present the reader with anything perfect in rhythm,
+polished in measure, or labored in style of construction. I have aimed
+at the truth, and imagine I have hit it.
+
+My object has been, simply, to gather together as many of the names and
+incidents connected with Bytown's early history as memory alone could
+recal. My desire has been to rescue from oblivion--as far as my humble
+efforts could conduce to such a desirable end--what otherwise might
+possibly have been forgotten. In the contemplation of those names and
+incidents, I have often, recently, overlooked the fact that I now live
+in a City with nearly thirty thousand inhabitants, and that its name is
+Ottawa. It has, nevertheless, been to me a pleasant labor of love to
+walk in memory among the men and the habitations of byegone times.
+
+Doubtless, of the inhabitants of dear old Bytown, there are some among
+the dead and others among the living, whose names may not be found in
+this little work. These broken links in the chain will be to me a source
+of regret. To the shades of the departed and to the ears of the living,
+whom I would not willingly have overlooked without
+
+ "A smile or a grasp of the hand passing on."
+
+I shall only say, as an atonement for the unwitting lapses of an
+imperfect memory, in the language once used by a friend and countryman
+in my hearing, as he passed a very pretty girl: "Remember, my dear, that
+I do not pass you with my heart."
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITTMAN LETT.
+
+OTTAWA, MARCH, 1873.
+
+
+
+
+BYTOWN.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+In '28, on Patrick's Day,
+At one p.m., there came this way
+From Richmond, in the dawn of spring,
+He who doth now the glories sing
+Of ancient Bytown, as 'twas then,
+A place of busy working men,
+Who handled barrows and pickaxes,
+Tamping irons and broadaxes,
+And paid no Corporation taxes;
+Who, without license onward carried
+All kinds of trade, but getting married;
+Stout, sinewy, and hardy chaps,
+Who'd take and pay back adverse raps,
+Nor ever think of such a thing
+As squaring off outside the ring,
+Those little disagreements, which
+Make wearers of the long robe rich.
+Such were the men, and such alone,
+Who quarried the vast piles of stone,
+Those mighty, ponderous, cut-stone blocks,
+With which Mackay built up the Locks.
+The road wound round the Barrack Hill,
+By the old Graveyard, calm and still;
+It would have sounded snobbish, very,
+To call it then a Cemetery--
+Crossed the Canal below the Bridge,
+And then struck up the rising ridge
+On Rideau Street, where Stewart's Store
+Stood in the good old days of yore;
+There William Stewart flourished then,
+A _man_ among old Bytown's men;
+And there, Ben Gordon ruled the roast,
+Evoking many a hearty toast,
+And purchase from the throngs who came
+To buy cheap goods in friendship's name.
+Friend Ben, dates back a warm and true heart
+To days of Mackintosh and Stewart.
+Beside where Aumond and Barreille
+Their fate together erst did try,
+In the old "French Store," on whose card
+_Imprimis_ was J. D. Bernard.
+"_Grande Joe_," still sturdy, stout and strong.
+Long be he so! Will o'er my song,
+Bend kindly, and perhaps may sigh,
+While rapidly o'er days gone by,
+He wanders back in memory.
+Aye, sigh, for when he look's around,
+How few, alas! can now be found,
+Who heard the shrill meridian sound
+Of Cameron's bugle from the hill,
+How few, alas! are living still--
+How few who saw in pride pass on
+The Sappers with their scarlet on,
+Their hackle plumes and scales of brass,
+Their stately tread as on they pass.
+I seem to see them through the shade
+Of years, in warlike pomp arrayed,
+Marching in splendid order past,
+Their bugles ringing on the blast,
+Their bayonets glittering in the sun,
+The vision fades, the dream is done.
+Below the Bridge, at least below,
+Where stands the Sappers' structure now,
+You had to pass in going down
+From Upper to the Lower Town;
+For, reader, then, no bridge was there,
+Where afterwards with wondrous care,
+And skilful hands; the Sappers made
+That arch which casts into the shade
+All other arches in the land,
+By which Canals and streams are span'd;
+The passing wayfarer sees nought
+But a stone bridge by labor wrought,
+The Poet's retrospective eye
+Searching the depths of memory,
+A monument to Colonel By,
+Beholds, enduring as each pile
+Which stands beside the Ancient Nile,
+As o'er the past my vision runs,
+Gazing on Bytown's elder sons,
+The portly Colonel I behold
+Plainly as in the days of old,
+Conjured before me at this hour
+By memory's undying power;
+Seated upon, his great black steed
+Of stately form and noble breed.
+A man who knew not how to flinch--
+A British soldier every inch.
+Courteous alike to low and high
+A gentleman was Colonel By!
+And did I write of lines three score
+About him, I could say no more.
+Howard and Thompson then kept store
+Down by "the Creek," almost next door,
+George Patterson must claim a line
+Among the men of auld lang syne;
+A man of very ancient fame,
+Who in old '27 came.
+One of the first firm doth remain,
+He is our worthy Chamberlain,
+Who ne'er in life's farce cut a dash
+On other people's errant cash;
+Who guards, as it is right well known,
+Better than e'er he did his own,
+The people's money, firm and sure,
+To the last cent, safe and secure.
+And opposite across the street,
+A friend or foe could always meet
+A man deserving hero's title,
+Uncompromising Watson Litle!
+A stern upholder of the law
+Who ne'er in justice found a flaw,
+With well charged blunderbuss in hand
+He asked not order or command,
+But sallied forth _semper paratus_
+To aid the _Posse Comitatus_!
+"Peace to his ashes!" many a score
+Of heads he smashed in days of yore!
+Where is the marble slab to show
+Where Watson Litle's dust lies low?
+Close by "the Creek," on the south side
+Of Rideau Street, did then reside
+John Cuzner, a British tar,
+For pluck renown'd both near and far!
+Nor would I willingly forget
+While tracing recollections met
+Of other days, and from the past
+Collecting memories fading fast,
+Of lines our earliest purveyor,
+John MacNaughton, the Surveyor,
+The only one who then was quite
+At home with the theodolite,
+And boxed the trembling compass well,
+Before the days of Robert Bell.
+A little further up the street,
+James Martin's name the eye did greet
+A round faced Caledonian, who
+Good eating and good drinking knew;
+And "Four-pence-half-penny" McKenzie
+Daily vended wolsey linsey,
+Next door to one of comic cheer
+Acknowledged the best auctioneer,
+That ever knock'd a bargain down,
+Or bidder if he chanced to frown;
+He set himself up in the end
+As Carleton's most worthy friend
+And by _vox populi_ was sent
+To Parliament to represent
+The men of Carleton, one and all,
+In ancient Legislative Hall.
+And by "The Tiger" sleek and fat,
+Our old friend "Jimmy Johnston" sat,
+The corner stock'd with silks and ribbon,
+Was kept and owned by Miss Fitzgibbon.
+A good stand it has ever been
+For commerce in this busy scene;
+Stand oft of idler and of scorner,
+I mean the modern "Howell's Corner,"
+Called after "Roderick of the sword,"
+Once well known Chairman of School Board.
+And down below near Nicholas Street,
+A quiet man each morn you'd meet
+At ten a.m., his pathway wending,
+With steps to Ordnance office bending,
+A mild man and an unassuming,
+Health and good nature ever blooming
+Seem'd stamped upon his smiling face,
+Where time had scarcely left its trace;
+_Semper idem_ let me beg
+Thy pardon, honest William Clegg!
+Nor must, although his bones are rotten,
+The ancient Mosgrove be forgotten,
+A man of kindly nature, he
+Has left a spot in memory
+While gazing on each vanish'd scene
+That still remains both fresh and green
+For when in heat of hurling bent
+The ball oft through his window went,
+He pitch'd it to us out again,
+And ask'd no payment for the pane.
+On Sussex Street, James Inglis flourish'd,
+A cannie Scot, and well he nourish'd
+A very thriving dry goods trade,
+And "piles" of good hard silver made,
+Almost amongst the forest trees,
+By furs from Aborigines.
+No "Hotel" then was in the town,
+"The British" in its old renown,
+Of our Hotels the ancient mother
+Had not one stone laid on another;
+Donald McArthur in a cavern
+Of wood sustained his ancient tavern,
+And there the best of cheer was found
+Within old Bytown's classic ground;
+And now I'll close my roll of fame
+With a most well-remember'd name,
+A man of dignity supreme
+Rises to view in memory's dream,
+Ultra in Toryism's tariff,
+Was Simon Fraser, Carleton's Sheriff,
+Personified by the third vowel,
+Forerunner of W.F. Powell,
+A high and most important man
+In the renown'd old Fraser Clan,
+Who well had worn the Highland tartan,
+For he was bold as any Spartan,
+And did his duty mildly, gravely,
+And wore the sword and cocked hat bravely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Come, now, my gentle Muse, once more,
+Come with me to the days of yore,
+And let us wake, with friendly hand
+The memories of that distant land,
+The past; and while thy minstrel weaves
+A chaplet from the Sybil leaves
+Of recollection--let the light
+Of truth upon his lines be bright.
+May he with reverential tread
+Approach the dwellings of the dead,
+Seeking for some sweet flower of good
+Within their solemn solitude:
+And if he finds in fadeless bloom
+Around some well remember'd tomb,
+Some cherish'd record of the past
+Which has defied time's rudes blast,
+And down futurity's deep vale
+Shed fragrance on the passing gale,
+Love's labor, then, the task will be,
+My gentle Muse, for thee and me.
+'Mongst those of old remember'd well,
+John Wade doth in my memory dwell,
+A wit of most undoubted feather--
+A mighty advocate of leather--
+A solemn man too, when required.
+With healing instincts deeply fired,
+He with claw-instrument could draw
+Teeth deftly from an aching jaw,
+And ready was his lancet too
+When nothing short of blood would do;
+Relieved he many a racking pain,
+When shall we see his like again?
+And William Tormey, stern and straight,
+A man who came ere '28,
+Chief of the men who kept the fire on
+And hammer'd the strong bands of iron,
+Which first securely bound together
+The old lock gates through wind and weather,
+The old Town Council minutes bear
+The record that his name is there.
+And Thomas Hanly, loud the praise
+I gave him in my early days
+For bread, that Eve might tempted be
+To eat, had it grown on that tree,
+On which hung the forbidden fruit
+Whose seed gave earth's ills their sad root.
+Friend Tom dealt in the rising leaven
+In the old days of '27,
+With "Jemmy Lang," an ancient Scot,
+Who ne'er the barley bree forgot;
+An honest, simple man was he
+As ever loved good company;
+And Tom McDermott, while I twine
+The names of yore in song of mine,
+Can I forget a name like thine?
+Ah, no! although thine ashes rest
+Beneath our common mother's breast,
+No name more spotless doth engage
+My muse, or grace my tuneful page.
+Stern Matthew Connell, fiery Celt,
+Below the present Bywash dwelt,
+Beside John Cowan, o'er whose grave
+The grass of '32 did wave.
+No man got in a passion faster
+Than did old Bytown's first postmaster;
+Yet was he a most upright man,
+And well the old machinery "ran"
+When mail bags came on horse's back
+Before we had a railway track,
+And their arrival on each morn
+Was signall'd by an old tin horn.
+Peace to his shade! in '32
+The cholera Matthew Connell slew.
+Kind reader, let me pass awhile,
+Beside the "Bywash," deem'd so vile,
+Then called "the Creek"--though now the pest--
+The festering miasmatic nest
+Of Boards of Health, who dread infection--
+My very heart's sincere affection
+Clings fondly to that old creek still;
+For oft in boyhood's joyous thrill,
+O'er its ice-bosom in wild play
+I chased the ball in youth's bright day.
+With young companions loved and dear!
+How few of such, alas! are here
+To listen to the bye-gone story
+Of the old Creek's vanish'd glory!
+'Twixt "wooden lock" and Rideau Street,
+Young Bytown oft was wont to meet--
+To struggle in the "shinny game;"
+Ah! then it was a place of fame,
+Full sixty feet from shore to shore,
+While now it measures scarce a score;
+Modern improvement has prevail'd--
+Its fair proportions are curtail'd;
+Its banks filled in, more space to gain.
+Its stream, by many a filthy drain,
+Which once was rapid, always clear,
+Changed into color worse than beer,
+To cool and icy scowling scan,
+Of rigid, total abstinence man.
+Gone is its fair renown of yore,
+It's schoolboy battles all are o'er,
+Which made it then a "Campo Bello"
+For many an embryo daring fellow--
+Too young to know what men of sense
+Have called the art of self-defence;
+There buttons flew, from stitching riven,
+Black eyes and bloody noses given--
+Even conflicts national took place,
+Among old Bytown's youthful race.
+Why not? for children bigger grown
+I rave sometimes down the gauntlet thrown
+For cause as small, and launch'd afar
+The fierce and fiery bolts of war,
+Simply to find out which was best.
+Caesar or Pompey by the test.
+In those past combats "rich and rare"
+Luke Cuzner always had his share.
+For Luke in days of _auld lang syne_
+Did most pugnaciously incline,
+Never to challenge slack or slow,
+And never stain'd by "coward's blow."
+The Joyces too, Mick, John and Walter,
+In battle's path did seldom falter,
+But "Jimmy," in those days of grace
+Held a peacemaker's blessed place,
+Nor has he wander'd far astray
+From the same calm and tranquil way.
+The belt was worn by any one
+Who had the latest battle won,
+'Till Simon Murphy's springing bound
+Lit on that ancient battle ground,
+And from that hour he was King
+Of our young pugilistic ring!
+But here I'd like to pause a minute
+And go to Hull--there's something in it
+That to the hour of life's December
+I shall endeavor to remember.
+The old "Columbian" schoolhouse, where
+In childhood's dawn I did repair;
+It was a famous strict old school
+Sway'd by the ancient birchen rule,
+The place where youthful ignorance brought us,
+The spot where famed James Agnew taught us;
+A Scot was he of good condition,
+A man of nerve and erudition,
+A strict disciplinarian, who
+Knew well what any boy could do,
+And woe to him who did not do it
+For he got certain cause to rue it.
+No sinner ever dreaded Charon,
+Nor was the mighty rod of Aaron,
+By ancient Egypt's magic men,
+In Pharoah's old despotic reign,
+More feared as symbol of a God
+Than was by us James Agnew's rod;
+With it he batter'd arithmetic,
+Lore practical and theoretic
+Latin too, and English grammar
+Into your head, a perfect "crammar,"
+Was Agnew's most persuasive rod,
+Nor less his magisterial nod.
+How would such stern tuition suit
+In our Collegiate Institute?
+Amongst the unforgotten few
+Who rise to memory's magic view,
+While winging on her backward flight,
+My schoolfellow, Alonzo Wright,
+Appears a lad of slender frame,
+I cannot say he's still the same,
+Except in soul, for that sublime
+Has soar'd above the touch of time,
+And in "immortal youth" appears,
+Unchanged by circumstance or years,
+A good fellow, this was his name
+At school, methinks he's still the same.
+May he give powers of swift volition
+To all who offer opposition
+To him in the approaching "scrimmage,"
+For what is but a brazen image
+At best, a people's approbation,
+Which sometimes with the situation,
+Changes as egg in hand of wizard,
+Or color in chameleon lizard.
+There too, are Job and David Moore,
+Bill Northgraves mentioned not before,
+Who in the little school-house red
+On early education fed.
+And Thomas Curtis Brigham, too,
+Lennox and Christopher in view,
+Arise before my sight,
+Strongly defined in memory's light,
+And Wright both Ruggles and Tiberias,
+And Wyman who was seldom serious,
+Poor fellow! in life's manly bloom
+He slept in an untimely tomb.
+Time fails me, or I fain would tell
+Of many more remembered well,
+But end I here my present strain
+Till memory wakes it up again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+I cross the Ottawa once more.
+From Hull again to Bytown's shore.
+And for a moment I behold
+The river as it was of old,
+Swelling, majestic in its pride,
+A glorious stream from side to side!
+A "Grand River" was Ottawa then,
+The pride of ancient lumbermen,
+By slabs and sawdust undefiled.
+The joy of nature's dusky child,
+Who's matchless, perfect bark canoe
+Oft o'er its crystal bosom flew--
+Not bridged all o'er like shaking bogs
+By endless booms of dirty logs,
+Which to the thrifty and the wise
+Are doubtless marks of enterprise,
+And evidences too of health,
+Of pocket and commercial wealth,
+Yet sadly, sometimes out of place,
+And serious blots on Nature's face.
+What would big Indian "Clouthier" say--
+The red-skinn'd Samson could he stray
+From the happy hunting ground away--
+Could he behold the stream to-day--
+The great Kah-nah-jo, where the God
+Of the Algonquins used to nod
+In dreamy slumber 'mid the smoke
+Which from the mighty cataract broke,
+Hemm'd in by sawmills, booms and piers--
+The features of a thousand years
+Of beauty ruthlessly defaced--
+The landmarks of the past displaced,
+And little left to tell the story
+Of Ottawa's departed glory;
+But water running where it ran
+When the red deer chase began.
+'Twould startle even Philemon Wright
+With all his wisdom and foresight.
+Could he arise, good man of old,
+And modern Ottawa behold,
+He'd feel himself a stranger too--
+'Mid scenes of wonder strange and new--
+In Hull, of little worth for tillage,
+The spot on which he built his village.
+Return I now, this slight digression
+Was worth the time, I've an impression;
+Clouthier, the Indian, was a giant,
+And "Squire Wright," strong, self-reliant,
+Was he who o'er the border came
+And gave to Hull its ancient fame;
+A man of enterprise and spirit
+Who in this history well doth merit,
+Such place of prominence as can
+Be given to such a stirring man.
+On the way back I see the ground
+Where ferrying Odium was found,
+And afterwards, next in progression,
+Friend John Bedard came in possession,
+And certainly much money made
+By a successful carrying trade.
+The place seems alter'd, art and skill
+Have built up Wright and Batson's mill
+At the old wharf, or near at hand,
+Where the first steamer used to land,
+Before even that small craft could ride
+At any wharf on Bytown's side.
+And not far off, in days of yore
+A cottage stood--'tis there no more,
+And if there ever was a spot
+Where friend and foe a welcome got--
+Where generous hospitality
+Presided o'er the banquet free,
+And friendship's hand for rich and poor
+Was ever opening the door--
+That spot was where that cottage stood,
+Embowered in the cedar wood,
+And he who there resided with
+An open heart, was old Ralph Smith!
+In memory I behold him now,
+With sparkling eye and lofty brow,
+And round the table amply spread,
+Are Patton, Henry, Ralph and Ned,
+And Dolly--blessed be her shade!
+Who, such nice things for schoolboys made,
+And made them feel just as no other
+On earth could do except their mother.
+But I must hurry, or I own,
+I ne'er shall reach the Upper Town,
+For there I'll find an ancient throng
+To link together in my song,
+And I shall wake them up ere long.
+'Mongst those of olden time who came
+Was one whose engineering fame
+Was brilliant--let none call be braggart
+While speaking thus of John MacTaggart,
+A genius of the highest grade
+In that most scientific trade,
+Who plann'd with wise, consummate skill,
+Even from the lock-gates lowest sill
+To Kingston Mills, the undertaking
+Which cost such time and cash in making,
+Rideau Canal, the work of years,
+And England's Royal Engineers.
+Brother of Isaac, once known hero
+As Corporation Engineer,
+Or Street Surveyor in that time
+When Ottawa's fur was not so prime,
+Whom well of old the writer knew,
+And as he comes up for review--
+Like volume taken from the shelf--
+He harm'd no one but himself,
+Is all his bitterest foe can say
+Of Isaac who has passed away.
+And James Fitzgibbon, where is he?
+Beneath the weeping willow tree,
+Retired, quiet-going man
+Who ne'er his head 'gainst faction ran.
+And close upon his fading track
+I see the shadow of James Black,
+Who once on Rideau Street kept store
+In the remember'd days of yore,
+A stirring, active man was he,
+Genteel, polite to a degree,
+That customers were always fain
+Who saw him once to call again;
+His wife in the old churchyard lay--
+Her epitaph I know to-day.
+And there stands Thomas Burrows, too,
+As he appeared before my view,
+Leaning upon his garden gate
+Beside the Creek in '28;
+He held of trust, an office high
+Under the reign of Colonel By.
+And Tom McDonald, as we then
+Were wont to call the best of men;
+A man of spirit rare was he
+Who never had an enemy.
+And there, too, Captain Victor goes
+With most aristocratic nose,
+And manners haughty with the ring
+Of _ton_ when George the Fourth was king.
+And Lieut. Pooley, for whose skill
+The "Gully" bridge is named so still,
+Ask Lyman Perkins, if you doubt it,
+And he will tell you all about it.
+And Dr. Tuthill, who with skill
+Could cure more readily than kill,
+Physic'd, emetic'd, too, and clyster'd,
+And _con amore_, bled and blister'd,
+In the old Hospital, which stood
+Unscathed by tempest, fire, or flood,
+For fifty years, to be down cast,
+By chance, or carelessness, at last,
+Theme for conjecture, most prolific,
+Another phase of the Pacific
+Railway which will cause a broil,
+Unless 'tis built on British soil!
+And there, too, Joseph Coombs was found,
+With solemn step his march around
+Among the patients, pacing slowly--
+Disciple of the meek and lowly,
+Who afterwards oft turned the key
+On many a goodly company.
+In that strong work of mason's trowel,
+Ruled now by Alexander Powell.
+And William Addison, no more--
+As trim a soldier as e'er wore
+The uniform, or bravely bore
+His head erect, with step as light
+As wings that touch the air in flight.
+Well had he won and kept from harm
+The honor'd stripes upon his arm.
+Such men as he have been the stay
+Of Britain in her darkest day!
+And Sergeant Johnston who, with skill,
+The raw and awkward squad could drill--
+A warrior in air and tone,
+Who had his country service done--
+Straight as a ramrod, and his might
+Of voice would Lambkin's soul delight.
+And brave John Murphy--champion John!
+I can't forget as I pass on.
+As fine a fellow as e'er wore
+The scarlet coat in days of yore.
+With upright form of manliest grace,
+With wondrous beauty in his face,
+And perfect symmetry of limb;
+Appollo might have envied him!
+And then he was as brave and true
+As e'er the sword or bayonet drew,
+Full many a battle did he fight,
+His injured comrade's wrongs to right;
+For well he knew each mood and tense
+Of the old art of self-defence;
+And woe to him who dared a fling
+With bold John Murphy in the ring.
+There many a pugilistic martyr
+Met his match and caught a Tartar.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Near where the George Street market stood
+Lived William Northgraves, then a good
+And skilful watch-maker, who's chime
+Did regulate the march of time,
+And Arthur Hopper, sporting blade,
+Was in the same time serving trade,
+Though guiltless of the modern tricks
+Of time serving in politics;
+He made gold rings for bridal matches,
+As well as cleaned and mended watches.
+And last of old watchmakers three,
+I mention mild Maurice Dupuis,
+Who's even tenor ne'er did vary
+From the upright and exemplary,
+At Corcoran's corner, now the stand
+For carters, very near at hand,
+Dwelt one who's unforgotten name
+Is worthy of poetic fame;
+With scientific sleight he bled,
+And then anatomized the dead.
+With hand so wonderfully skill'd,
+Victims delighted to be killed,
+Came willingly to yield up life,
+An offering to Tom Hickey's knife;
+So high his sense of honor ran,
+The butcher in the gentleman
+Merged so completely, you'd be lost,
+Which in him to admire the most;
+By ancient poets it was sung
+Those whom the gods love all die young,
+Tom Hickey's early death did prove
+That those die young whom all men love.
+I must not here omit the name
+Of Heubach from my roll of fame,
+He passes under memory's scan
+A simple minded honest man,
+With manners quiet, mild and bland,
+An emigrant from fatherland.
+And Joseph Nadeau, far and near
+Famed 'mongst the boys for good _La Tir_
+And old John Cochran stern and tall,
+Immoveable as a stone wall!
+Staunch to his principles stood he,
+No matter what the cost might be;
+Oh! for a few of his old stamp,
+To trim with fire the waning lamp!
+And Louis Grison, worthy man,
+In "Maville's village," first began
+His little trade, which wider spread
+As ancient Bytown went ahead.
+Two rows of houses built of wood,
+Near Enoch Walkley's brewery stood
+With narrow little street between,
+This was the village that I mean.
+Then William Graham kept the peace
+Of all the town with perfect ease;
+Potato whiskey then was cheap,
+And we had little peace to keep.
+Such monstrous practice was unknown
+As kicking when a man was down,
+Though many a stunning blow was felt,
+None ever struck below the belt;
+The ring was form'd, and fair play
+Reign'd without challenge at each fray,
+And never yet, that I could hear,
+Did constable e'er interfere,
+Or even think that amongst crimes
+Rank'd this brave pastime of old times.
+Then Martin Hennessy was young,
+A Hercules with sinews strung;
+You might as well an anvil "lick,"
+Or stand against a horse's kick
+And fear not shattered rib or jaw
+As risk a smash from Martin's paw.
+I've seen him in the days of yore
+His fist crash through a panel door.
+Martin soon ran his wild race out,
+For "Doctor" Whitney with a "clout"
+Of a great bludgeon laid him out
+Heady for _post mortem_ and bier,
+Thus ended Martin's rough career.
+Ah! those were happy halcyon days,
+Well worthy of immortal lays.
+Here I must summon from the band
+Of the departed shadowy land
+George Parsons, and his name entwine
+In this poetic wreath of mine.
+Beside the creek his name I meet
+On the west side of William street,
+Twas called "the lane," ere legislation
+Gave it its present designation;
+Admirers of steeds fleet and game
+Will not forget George Parson's name.
+And I would be worse than a Turk,
+Did I forget George Robert Burke,
+A man who mingled not in strife,
+Nor ever did in all his life
+An act to cause a blush of shame
+On any face that bears his name!
+Nor can I Archie Foster pass,
+Too soon departed, too, alas!
+A man of feelings warm and kind--
+A friend who never left behind
+A friendly act, if in his power
+To act the friend in trouble's hour,
+Ah! 'twas a melancholy day
+When Archie Foster passed away.
+And now a man with learning's grace
+And mildness pictured in his face
+Stands forth in retrospection's ray
+As if it was but yesterday,
+It is the good Hugh Hagan's shade
+Who's precepts many a scholar made.
+Nor would my reminiscent eye
+While scanning erudition's sky,
+Fail to perceive through cloud and storm
+Friend James Maloney's stately form--
+A fixed star in the Teacher's heaven
+Since the old days of '27,
+When learning's every art and rule,
+In the old Mathematic School,
+According to education laws
+He taught--and ne'er forget the "taws."
+The handle was just two feet long,
+And well he trounced the noisy throng!
+At the west border of the swamp
+Where cedars grew mid mosses damp,
+Just at the corner where to-day
+Ben Huckell doth his name display,
+In other days dwelt William May,
+A member of the old "Alliance"
+Which easily put at defiance
+The conflagrations that were seen
+"Like Angel's visits far between,"
+For Bytown then was almost free
+From an Insurance Company!
+Poor fellow! by a sudden stroke
+Death's gloomy shadow o'er him broke,
+Upon that well remembered day--
+When the old town was wild and gay.
+From verdant vale to sunny ridge,
+On which the new Suspension Bridge
+Was opened--and crowds congregated
+To see it then "inaugurated."
+To use a word from Uncle Sam,
+The concourse was a perfect jam.
+'Twas built by Alexander Christie,
+From the land of mountains misty;
+And though the whirlwind and the storm
+For years have revelled on its form--
+Though ponderous loads for many a year
+Have passed it o'er from from far and near,
+It stands in strength unshaken still,
+A monument of art and skill;
+Long may the builder dash the tide
+Of Jordan's swelling surge aside;
+And when the lot of all mankind
+Overtakes him, may he safely find
+A bridge across to Canaan's shore,
+To pass in peace death's valley o'er.
+While rambling backwards up life's hill,
+I meet the stern Paul Joseph Gill,
+A man with much tuition fraught,
+Who youth at the old creek side taught,
+Where Thomas Dowsley doth display,
+His maps of land for sale to-day.
+Paul Joseph Gill could with a frown
+Keep juvenile offenders down;
+His ruler flat I can't forget,
+My fingers seem to tingle yet,
+As recollection o'er me brings
+That ruler amongst other things,
+Which come around me link by link,
+While of the vanished past I think.
+John Frost, too, rises up before
+My vision of the time that's o'er;
+He built upon foundation damp,
+In Lower Town's great cedar swamp,
+Which stretched from Sussex Street to where
+That engineering structure fair--
+The fond-admiring eye doth greet,
+Spanning the stream at Ottawa Street.
+And "Sandy" Graham, strange it is,
+That I thus far his name should miss,
+While tracing from the scenes gone by
+Each unforgotten memory
+Sandy was, aye, a joyous blade,
+And many a good stroke of trade
+He with commercial wisdom made,
+In other times when he was young,
+And Yankee silver round was flung
+With lavish hand by low and high
+In the good days of Colonel By.
+And William Hunton, who came late,
+If I am right, in '28,
+And many a good quart of whiskey,
+To make the old Bytonians frisky--
+And many a pound of Twankay tea
+And Muscovado vended he,
+For Howard and Thompson in the time
+When cash was plenty and trade prime.
+Friend Tom a little later came,
+A youth then of quite slender frame.
+In form he's something still the same--
+Though time has taken from his heel
+The spring it used of old to feel.
+And streaked his locks with silver, too,
+Which long withstood all time could do,
+Yet in the dream that's passed away
+I see Tom Hunton of to-day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+And John McGraves, the chandler, why
+Could I so long have passed him by?
+By accident I've turned a leaf
+Which brings him out in bold relief
+A plain and unassuming man
+Was John; his candles never ran.
+And many in this ancient place
+Owed him a debt for a clean face.
+William Kipp, too, doth memory greet,
+In a small shop on Rideau Street,
+A man of gentlemanly kind,
+With a well-cultivated mind;
+And Commissary Strachan, too,
+And Oriel, who had much to do
+Paying the debts of Waterloo,
+And many another battle field
+Where Britons fought and did not yield.
+And old John Ring, "good gracious me!"
+I had almost forgotten thee--
+Thou "Silky" John of other years,
+Gone from this dreary vale of tears,
+A passing shade, and more's the pity,
+For thou wert ever gay and witty.
+And Charles Baines, an old time lawyer,
+Stood here professional top sawyer;
+He owned a bull dog, arrant thief!
+Who plundered Agar Yielding's beef;
+And when friend Yielding sought for law,
+To deal with canine of such maw,
+"Why, there is just one simple way,"
+Said Charley, "Make the owner pay;"
+"I thank you for your judgment brief,"
+Said Agar, "pay me for the beef."
+"Seven and sixpence worth of prog,
+Was bolted by _your_ big bull dog."
+"All right," said Charley, like a flash,
+And quickly handed o'er the cash;
+But, as friend Yielding turned to go,
+"Come back," said Charley, "for you owe
+Just seven and sixpence for advice,
+So hand it over in a trice."
+While on the past I now reflect,
+I well and clearly recollect
+John Wilson, who kept office here,
+And afterwards a Judge austere
+Of the Queen's Bench or Common Pleas,
+Sat with much dignity and ease.
+'Tis past, I shall not here relate
+Young Robert Lyon's luckless fate,
+Nor shall I stir the tomb and tell
+Why he an early victim fell
+At folly's shrine, as he who bends
+A martyr to ill-judging friends,
+Will always fall; but end I here
+This record of his short career.
+Honor, indeed! thy shrine appears,
+Surrounded by a sea of tears.
+George Shouldice is a man of old,
+Henry was too, who 'neath the mould
+Lies slumbering in solemn rest--
+He many a pompous body drest
+With garments fine and quite exotic,
+When fashion was not so despotic.
+And Charles Friel, an early man
+With Bytown's history began,
+A man of ready tongue and wit,
+A politician who could hit
+And sway with eloquence the throng,
+Which shouts alike for right or wrong.
+Father of Henry James, who died.
+Just as his eye of hope descried
+The goal he labored to attain--
+The honors he had fought to gain.
+Tis no uncommon thing to find
+A little man with full grown mind:
+And 'mongst those who have gone to rest--
+Who of their chances made the best
+In life's o'er turning changing reel,
+I freely rank Henry J. Friel.
+And Daniel Fisher, too, is gone,
+Of Scotia's children he was one
+Who clothed the naked in his day--
+That is, the naked who could pay.
+I have a friendly feeling yet
+For him, for I can ne'er forget
+The jacket blue which first I wore
+In the old cherished days of yore,
+That jacket which I don'd with pride.
+Caused me to feel a man beside
+The urchin in the pinafore
+Which I had just arisen o'er;
+In Daniel Fisher's shop 'twas made--
+Headquarters of the fig-leaf trade.--
+In that most ancient grand device
+Which had its rise in Paradise.
+I see as on I hurry past,
+Pat Duggan, who blew vulcan's blast,
+And friend Kehoe, who with hand neat
+Fitted the shoes to horse's feet;
+And John McGivern, the baker,
+And Robert Wanless, harness-maker;
+And William Atkins, who is still
+Holding his own upon the hill
+Of life, though slowly wending
+Towards the goal that has no ending;
+And Silas Burpee, pious man,
+Who in the early ages ran
+With drums and belts and wheels complete
+A turning mill on old York Street--
+Upon the very spot, now thought of
+Where gander's head George Shouldice shot off,
+With an old smooth-bore, but would not
+That day attempt a second shot;
+'Twas wise of George, a second shot
+Might have consigned to luckless pot,
+His marksman's name, and half a shilling,
+His renown in the art of killing.
+It was a stirring place of trade
+Where famous spinning tops were made.
+And splendid water power was found
+Where now there's nought but solid ground,
+Covered with numerous loads of wood,
+A costly item bad or good.
+In modern times--of old it stood,
+Maple at ninety cents a cord,
+Just four and six-pence, by my word!
+And Julius Burpee, gone! well, well!
+He kept the old Rideau Hotel,
+Where man and beast could get the best
+And truly find the traveller's rest.
+Julius still might living be
+Were it not for the "barley bree."
+And Edward Darcey too, appears.
+And Jeffry Nolan, who in years
+Gone by, was stout and strong in fight.
+And in the conflict always right,
+Before the days when frolic's King
+McDougall "made Dungarven ring!"
+Frank's arm then, as mine, was strong,
+None but himself in all the throng
+So far the ponderous sledge could hurl,
+Until at last with dexterous whirl,
+"The school master" defiant came
+And walked off champion of the game.
+From first to last I've found him true,
+McDougal _ciamar tha sibhn dieugh_?
+And Charles Sparrow, where, oh, where
+Is he who once was Bytown's Mayor,
+Ere, J.B. Turgeon took the chair?
+Lost 'mid the overwhelming blaze
+Of changes new; gone from the gaze
+Of public life, like many a man
+Who, once for public honors ran.
+And George and Robert Lang are gone,
+Men of intelligence and tone,
+Who held positions marked and high
+In Bytown's old society.
+Nor has amongst the ancient few
+Captain McKinnon from my view--
+Though long a tenant of the tomb--
+Faded into oblivion's gloom.
+If Roderick Stewart now was near,
+He'd pour into my listening ear
+A tale I would delight to hear,
+Of other men of other times,
+Who's names may have escaped my rhymes.
+The Captain lived, a man discreet,
+Near where the ancient arch did meet
+O'er famous little Sussex Street,
+For there a tragedy took place
+Which here the muse with truth shall trace.
+A boy stood near that arch of old
+Upon a wintry day--'twas cold,
+Tired of sleighing down the hill,
+He for a moment there stood still,
+That boy sits now with pen in hand,
+From memory's photographic land
+Painting in colors fair and true
+The vanished scenes which once he knew.
+As thus he rested taking breath,
+He little dreamed of blood or death.
+Up Rideau Street a man there came,
+Charles McStravick was his name.
+A tall, lithe, active fellow, he,
+As in a thousand you could see;
+A white blanket _capote_ he wore,
+And jauntily himself he bore,
+He stepped beneath the arch, and then
+Rushed at him fiercely two strong men.
+Both with surprise and dread were scan'd.
+One had a loaded whip in hand,
+The other a short bludgeon bore,
+And in a moment, all was o'er!
+Three blows, a crash, a stream of blood.
+All of the victim bad or good
+In life, was in an instant crushed
+To dust--off the assailants rushed,
+And none can tell from then 'till now
+The hands that laid McStravick low,
+Nor does he who relates the story
+Know more of that occurrence gory
+My history would be faithless here
+Did "Happy Jimmy" not appear,
+An innocent good natured soul
+As ever loved the flowing bowl--
+An institution of the day
+That like himself hath passed away,
+Was "Happy Jimmy," he who made
+A vagrant's life a merry trade.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+And now, kind reader, I behold
+Before me, as in days of old,
+Bold Paddy Whelan, Wexford Paddy
+Surely of noisy men the daddy;
+A man of most Herculean form,
+Who roamed through sunshine and through storm,
+And sounded loud in other days
+His notes in Hamnett Pinhey's praise--
+And well he might sing with loud swell,
+"The Lamb of March" deserved it well!
+A man of learning, wit, and sense,
+No shallow thing of vain pretence,
+The true stamp of the current guinea
+Bore March's Father, Hamnett Pinhey.
+To "Muddy Little York" went he,
+The Independent and the Free
+To represent with power effective
+Amid the wisdom most collective,
+In the old days of Compact Rule
+Ere Grittism yet had gone to school;
+Dalhousie District's Archives too,
+Can show what he was wont to do.
+Paddy, though not of _genus ferae,_
+Was yet a queer _lusus naturae_;
+His vital organs played beneath
+A shield of solid bone 'till death,
+Without a yielding space between,
+Where ribs in other men are seen,
+Though not a feathered bird, his toes
+Were web'd as well the writer knows,
+And joined in one in style most rare
+His molars and incisors were;
+His voice, when at its loudest swell,
+Was like a railway whistle's yell;
+In stature he was six feet tall,
+So there is Paddy for you all!
+But strike I now a strain sublime,
+A touch heroic into rhyme.
+As memory doth with truth uncoil
+The history of old Bob Boyle,
+A British soldier, bold and free,
+Of the old Ninety-Ninth was he,
+Who bravely fought and 'scaped from harm,
+At Lundy's Lane and Crysler's Farm,
+And gallantly his bayonet bore,
+At Fort Niagara, and the shore
+Of Sackett's Harbor trod of yore,
+When "Uncle Sam," our friend and brother,
+Or cousin, kicked up such a "bother"
+In 1812, and tried
+In vain to lower Britain's pride,
+By cutting from her parent side,
+By a Caesarean operation,
+The proudest offspring of the nation!
+The Union Jack, thank heaven! still
+Floats proudly over vale and hill,
+Of this Dominion grand of ours;
+And shattered be the vital powers,
+By fatal stroke, like that which slew,
+Sennacherib's Assyrian crew,
+Of him who's traitor hand shall dare
+To furl one fold that flutters there!
+And palsied be the traitor tongue,
+And from its root uptorn and wrung,
+That dares to utter but one word
+To weaken the soul-anchored cord,
+Which binds Canadians heart and hand
+In love to the old Mother Land!
+Bob Boyle, "I thank thee" that thy name
+Hath stirred the patriotic flame,
+In days like these, when treason's veil
+Drops when passions fierce assail,
+And leaves exposed to public view
+The traitor double-dyed in hue!
+Hear, spawn of disaffection's thrall!
+Rouge, Annexationist and all
+This--ere the Union Jack shall fall,
+The path of treason red with blood
+Shall sink beneath a crimson flood,
+While o'er it from the highest crag,
+Will wave the glorious meteor flag!
+I've wandered somewhat from my track,
+But quietly I now come back;
+Into my train of thought there blew
+A passing spark, away it flew,
+And I was gone before I knew--
+Like nitro-glycerine it sprung,
+And from the pathway I was flung.
+Yet no uncertain sound give I,
+I risk it as a prophecy.
+By George Street north, I pass and see
+There Pierre Desloges, a man was he,
+But little known beyond the spot
+Where first he built his little cot.
+And Alexander Ethier too,
+A carpenter, both good and true
+Beside him dwelt, where busy feet,
+Pass onward to Dalhousie Street.
+And now I think it passing strange
+That in wild fancy's flitting range
+I have not seen and mark'd before
+John Litle standing at his door--
+In Sussex Street where erst, kept he
+An Inn of quite a good degree
+Of excellence in the old time
+Which has evoked this lengthy rhyme,
+John was a man of sturdy frame
+As any that hath borne his name.
+Even Brave Bob Elliot would delight
+His prowess to behold in fight;
+And Robert Elliott was not slow
+To give or to resent a blow
+In other days, when not as now.
+The olive branch of peace is seen
+Between the orange and the green.
+And Richard Stethem in the haze
+Of Bytown's distant early days
+Before my vision doth appear,
+To claim his right of entry here.
+And Robert Stethem, too, his brother,
+Of village denizens another;
+John Miller too, of leather fame,
+Who from the County Wexford came,
+And first made here such boots and shoes
+As fashion could not now refuse
+In this fastidious age to take
+And wear them for their matchless make.
+And how have I not had before
+James Anderson, a man of yore,
+Who pitched his tent in days gone by
+'Mong Bytown's ancient company,
+An honest hearted jovial Scot
+As e'er in exile cast his lot
+'Mongst those who pioneered the track
+Down which my memory's muse looks back.
+And now as I stretch forth my hand
+In search of one from Paddy's land,
+A man of wit and humour rare,
+I touch him still and find him there.
+From Erin, scarcely from Armagh,
+To Carleton came Denis McGrath,
+Loud has his North Hibernian tongue
+Upon the Byward market rung
+For six and thirty years; in truth,
+I've known him since the days of youth,
+John Litle can my tale review
+Of Denis, he will find it true.
+And John Macdonald, of the Isles,
+With face clad in perennial smiles,
+Knight of the knock-down hammer, he
+Claims passing notice now from me--
+A well read man, for truth to tell,
+He studied Burns and Byron well;
+And which two of the wizard few
+Have touched with tuneful hand so true.
+The throbbing pulses of the soul,
+Which vibrate 'neath their wild control.
+Friend John Macdonald, here's my hand,
+Thou relic of the vanished land!
+Michael McBean I can't pass by,
+He kept of old a grocery--
+Just opposite McDougal's gate,
+Where the big auger hangs in state.
+Richard McCann, too, did abide
+In peace the Sappers' Bridge beside,
+In house we ne'er shall see again,
+Once tenanted by Andrew Main--
+A cannie, sober, honest Scot,
+Was Andrew Main--an humble lot,
+With patient industry he bore,
+Till fortune smiled, and then a store
+He opened, in extensive way,
+Where William Fingland keeps to-day.
+Peter A. Egleson to boot,
+The young idea how to shoot,
+On George Street north, in days gone by
+Taught in his own academy;
+At length the birch he threw aside,
+And floated proudly on the tide
+Of commerce--and his name appears
+Where it was found in other years.
+Next Richard Thomas comes to view,
+And Nat and Jonas Barry too,
+All plasterers of the old time
+Who made their bread by sand and lime.
+Joachim Valiquette, a baker,
+And Joseph Valiquette, shoemaker,
+A votary of the rod and line
+When summer evenings are fine,
+He like a nightingale can sing
+A holy strain--as well as bring
+From well known spot--a goodly string
+Of fish upon a Thursday night
+That Friday may be kept all right.
+Gone is our friend Peter Riel
+Whom old Bytonians once knew well;
+An innocent good man was he,
+Given sometimes to a little spree;
+Once member of the Council here,
+He gave forth many a loyal cheer,
+And sat triumphal carriage on,
+In state with Queen Victoria's Son,
+When Albert Edward came this way
+A royal visit here to pay.
+My song complete would not appear
+Unless "the Major's" name were here;
+His regimental number now
+I can't recall--but this I know,
+He bravely marched with battle brand
+Among the guardians of the land,
+Ready alike to fall or stand
+As duty's accents gave command;
+Far might yon seek, and find not then
+A soul more genial amongst men,
+A lot unmarked by mortal ills
+Is all I wish to Major Wills.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+Though strictly not of Bytown fame,
+I can't forget John Egan's name,
+It well deserves what I can give,
+To make it unforgotten live;
+For 'mongst the sons of enterprise,
+Who rose with Bytown's early rise,
+When "Norway Pine" was number one,
+John Egan stands almost alone--
+The king of the Grand River, then
+The Wellington of lumber men
+A man of boundless energy,
+And vast capacity was he,
+All difficulties had to fly,
+And cower before his dauntless eye!
+Right well may Aylmer mourn and boast
+The enterprising son she lost,
+Upon the day when from earth's toil
+He "shuffled off the mortal coil."
+And N.H. Baird, of old was here,
+A scientific engineer;
+And Finland, the contractor, who
+With coach and four the streets drove through,
+The grandest carriage of the kind
+E'er seen in Bytown--with behind--
+In gorgeous and artistic glare,
+A lion and an eagle--where
+Is friend Perkins? he can still
+Remember that old eagle's bill.
+And Captain Andrew Wilson, O!
+I've got an old sea lion now,
+Who saw the flash of Nelson's eye,
+Amid the smoke of victory,
+Both at Trafalgar and the Nile.
+Aye, saw the hero's dying smile
+Of triumph, when his cruise was o'er,
+And to the vast eternal shore,
+Launched forth by death's o'erwhelming gale
+His gallant spirit spread its sail!
+O'er flowing bowl with might and main,
+He fought his battle's o'er again,
+Talked of chain shot, and "Stinkpot's" stench,
+And hated cordially the French,
+Whom he believed were but created
+To be by sailors killed and hated
+What e'er he was, what passage o'er,
+He took to the mysterious shore,
+Old Charon never cleft the wave.
+Yet with a soul more true and brave!
+And Baptiste Homier, when alive,
+I think had children twenty-five,
+Presided o'er a tavern neat,
+On the south side of Rideau street.
+A place well known both near and far,
+And there John Johnston kept the bar,
+Related backward up the stream,
+To him who had the lucky dream;
+With the old Chief, who in "a fix"
+Was found before old '76.
+Colonial history has told
+The story in the days of old.
+The Indian dreamed, the General lost
+His uniform, but to his cost
+The wily chieftain quickly found
+The General's dream, bought solid ground,
+And Martin, James, and Darby Keally
+From the green land of the "Shillaly."
+Richard Fitzsimmons, too, was found,
+The Paganini of sweet sound
+In days gone by, with memories big,
+And well he danced an Irish jig.
+Most incomplete would be my tale,
+Did I not draw aside the veil,
+And bring from distant vistas through,
+The ancient fiddler into view.
+While strolling downward by the locks,
+One of those reminiscent knocks
+I felt, which brought my eye before
+Another of the men of yore;
+I gazed, as the dim shadow neared,
+And then before my sight appeared
+The recollection of a name,
+'Twas Commissary Ashworth came.
+And not far off, with business look
+And pen in hand o'er ponderous book,
+I see another friend of youth
+Noted for probity and truth;
+'Tis Thomas Donelly, worthy man!
+Whom now with memory's eye I scan.
+Still as the mist of memory clears,
+I meet the men of other years;
+Another page I now unfold,
+And Captain Bolton I behold,
+Or Major Bolton, if you will,
+Who lived upon the "Major's Hill,"
+Which got his rank and bears it still.
+It used to be in days gone by,
+"The Colonel's Hill," a rank more high,
+And worthy of the ancient trees,
+Whose foliage rustled in the breeze,
+Where pigeons, in their annual flight,
+Were wont by thousands to alight,
+O! many a fusilade I've seen,
+Of flint locks in its bowers green;
+It got the name recorded here,
+From Colonel By, who first lived there;
+'Twas then a grove of thickest shade,
+What civilization's hand hath made,
+The Indian, with its withering skill,
+It has done for the "Colonel's Hill."
+Who comes, so centaur like in grace,
+Good spirits pictured in his face?
+'Tis Isaac Smith, let truth not vary,
+A gentleman from Tipperary,
+Beloved by all, 'twere hard to mate him,
+He had no enemies to hate him,
+His friends were neither scarce nor few
+They numbered every soul he knew.
+Who e'er remembers Isaac Smith,
+Mounted top boots and breeches with,
+Upon his stately old black mare
+Will recollect a horseman rare.
+Christopher Carlton, where art thou?
+Come here, old friend, I want thee now
+To ramble back with me again
+To where of old McPherson and Crane,
+And Francis Clemow, too, I think,
+Did business at the Basin's brink.
+And Bindon Burton Alton, who
+Has vanished from terrestial view;
+The poet with the flashing eye--
+The true born son of minstrelsy!
+Who sang so sweetly, memory still
+Trembles with the undying thrill.
+Which throbbed in melting tones of fire
+From Bindon Burton Alton's lyre,
+Alas! alas! that such a soul
+Should sink a victim to the bowl.
+Thomas MacKay, who's worthy name
+Is well known even to modern fame.
+The worth which honest men revere
+Deserves a fitting record here.
+With mighty gangs he excavated
+The ancient quarry situated
+On west side of "the Major's Hill."
+Which modern hands find hard to till;
+The stones from thence by powder rent
+To build the seven Canal Locks went.
+The Sappers' Bridge, too, was erected
+By blocks of limestone thence ejected.
+Like many another rising man.
+Mackay for ancient Russell "ran"
+To use a term, which means to-day
+That he runs best who best can pay!
+The declaration found him seated
+And his antagonist defeated.
+New honors came his name to greet,
+A Legislative Councillor's seat
+Was given next to Russell's pride,
+Clad with which dignity he died.
+And no more upright man has e'er
+Deserving of the post sat there.
+And William Stewart, too, who's name
+Elsewhere has graced my roll of fame,
+Was as the reader will remember,
+For Bytown long ago a member,
+Good representative he made,
+And his constituents ne'er betrayed,
+We were by taxes lightly rated
+When Bytown was incorporated,
+By the Bill by him presented
+When he this village represented
+In '47, the year, no other,
+When to that stingy old step mother,
+The County of Carleton we were tied
+And had our temper sorely tried.
+This was before Lord Sydenham's reign
+Which gave that legislative strain
+To our Colonial Constitution,
+And made a legal institution,
+The Bill Municipal in Legislation,
+The often tinkered act which rules the nation.
+And James Stewart, a medico
+Of the old school of long ago,
+A votary of potent pill,
+And lancet too for many an ill.
+And not a whit more given to kill
+His patients, say these truthful rhymes.
+Than M.D's of more modern times,
+And now I think it only fair
+To mention here Doctor O'Hare,
+Who of old Bytown formed a part,
+And practised the assuaging art
+Before the time of Scanlon's tarry,
+Before the days of Edward Barry
+Who in his person did combine
+The medical and legal line,
+Exhibiting as his degree
+Upon his card J.P.M.D."
+He gave to Bytown's sporting men
+Such Fox-hunt as we ne'er again
+Shall see; ah! 'twas a joyful day,
+When Barry with tin horn away,
+In glory on "Bob Logie's" back,
+Followed the variegated pack
+Yelping in chorus o'er the plain,
+We'll never see such sport again!
+Who would at length the story hear,
+Can ask the Sheriff, he was there,
+And bravely in his headlong way
+Did "Shamrock" carry him that day,
+Close in the terror stricken wake
+Of Reynard, over bush and brake,
+James Fraser, too, can tell the tale,
+For he went over hill and dale,
+And swamp and fence and ditch and bush,
+Foremost in the determined rush.
+To get up first and win the brush,
+While loud above the yelling din,
+Sounded the Doctor's horn of tin,
+That hunt the public health to save
+Was the best prescription e'er he gave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+Can I, an ancient friend, pass by,
+Who even to-day still greets my eye,
+And brings up among modern men
+The dearly cherish'd past again?
+'Tis far, far back, I scarce can fix
+The date, perhaps, 'twas '26,
+When he, in Huntly, on a farm,
+Once tried his unaccustomed arm
+At work for which 'twas never made,
+In that most independent trade.
+He left Bucolics, trees, and all,
+And moved away to Montreal,
+To teach, as better him did suit,
+"The young idea how to shoot."
+And many a youth has blest the day
+Of Alexander Workman's sway.
+I'll say no more, lest I should be
+Accused, perhaps, of flattery.
+'Twould scarcely here be out of place
+If Edward Griffin's smiling face
+I should present in colors true--
+In good Samaritanic view;
+The patron of Joe Lee, whose name
+Is known to histrionic fame;
+Who play'd at Shylock on the stage,
+When tragedy was more the rage
+Than in this sad degenerate age.
+And where art thou, my friend, George Story,
+A man of yore, though not yet hoary?
+The even tenor of thy way
+Hast thou maintain'd for many a day;
+They tell us within human range
+That mortal things are given to change,
+It may be so, yet thou art still
+But little changed, though down the hill
+Quietly gliding, still thou hast
+An air about thee of the past;
+Who knew thee thirty years ago
+At the first glance would know thee now.
+And Thomas Story--modest man--
+As well as any other can,
+Or, he may think, much better too,
+Suit habit's taste in me or you,
+In coat artistically made
+According to that ancient trade,
+Which had its rise in solitude,
+Where Adam lived before the flood--
+Is still Tom Story of the past,
+Long may his life's fair measure last
+And Sandy Mowat, here's a line
+To thee, in memory of lang syne;
+Fond wert thou of the target ground--
+Fond of a rifle and a hound;
+Dost thou remember Bearbrook's brink
+And the old shanty without "chink,"
+Or door to stop the piercing gale
+That whirled along the snow-clad vale,
+Where Peter McArthur, you and I,
+Once slept beneath a wintry sky;
+While through the roof in splendor bright
+We saw the guardians of the night--
+The snow-storm of the coming day--
+The savage wounded buck at bay--
+And how we lost and found our way?
+Dost thou forget the strain of glee
+That from deep slumber's arms roused thee?
+Dost thou remember who did ride
+The bounding wounded buck astride,
+And whose the crimsoned hunting knife
+That ended there the quarry's life.
+Then "Eastman's Springs" were little known
+To few beyond we three alone.
+And Malcolm Ferguson, oh why,
+Should memory's record pass thee by?
+An artist of the gentle trade,
+By whom Bytonians were arrayed
+Most fashionably in old times.
+When dross among the social crimes
+Held not the rank which modern art
+Hath given it in fashion's mart.
+An agile fireman, danger-proof,
+As ever struggled up a roof,
+Or to the midnight summons sprang
+When the alarm signal rang;
+As cat or squirrel of active limb--
+A "ridge-pole" was a street to him.
+The old extinguishers of flame
+Will well remember Malcolm's name.
+As the long past I wander through,
+Michael O'Reilly comes to view;
+A man of stature, somewhat brief,
+Who largely dealt of old in beef,
+In that cheap time when scanty coin
+Was ample for the fattest loin,
+Rounds, chops, and beefsteaks were not gold
+In those delightful days of old.
+'Tis true the tallow-candle's light
+Was all the ray that cheered the night,
+Before our first assizes term
+Was dignified by actual sperm--
+The real thing--no "Belmont's" then
+Were found among the sons of men.
+Another name remembrance brings,
+The muse of old John Darcey sings,
+In numbers almost a magician--
+A wonderful arithmetician,
+Whose mode with all others "collided,"
+Who added, multiplied, divided,
+And even substracted by such rules
+As ne'er were known or taught at schools.
+No learned professor of the birch
+E'er left John Darcey in the lurch;
+No pedagogue was ever able
+To con his arithmetic table.
+And Edward Darcey--no relation--
+Except in name, to old Equation,
+A son of Crispin, a sole nailer,
+Who owned a curly dog called "Sailor"--
+A noble, liver-hue'd retriever,
+Who'd make one almost a believer
+In canine intellectual merit
+Which dogs as well as men inherit.
+Louis Pinard, in ancient times,
+Was always ready with the "dimes"--
+Excuse the slang--which a disgrace is--
+At gallopping or trotting races,
+And A.P. Lesperance beside him,
+A good horse kept, and well could ride him,
+When horsemanship was more in fashion
+Than sitting still and laying lash on,
+In four-wheeled vehicle at ease,
+Which modern Jehuism doth please.
+And Galipean, who kept good whiskey,
+And old Jamaica to make frisky
+The visitors to his retreat,
+On the east side of Sussex Street,
+Close to the very spot, I think,
+Where now James Thompson deals in mink,
+Otter and other kinds of fur,
+Prime and unprime, without demur.
+'Twas at this inn one afternoon
+In '33, the month was June,
+That Martin Hennessy once tried
+On horseback up the stairs to ride.
+And would have done so, but for this,
+A pistol shot that did not miss,
+Which gave him, oh, most foul disgrace!
+A charge of buckshot in the face,
+Which spoiled his beauty without doubt.
+And knocked his "dexter peeper" out.
+And E.S. Lyman, old cathartic!
+With lengthy form and features arctic--
+Dispenser of blisters, pills and potions,
+Boluses and specific lotions,
+And panaceas in variety
+To cram the ailing to satiety--
+Succeeded Auld, Apothecary,
+A scientific quoiter, very,
+Who righted phisiologic faults
+With Calomel and Epsom Salts,
+And made prescriptions up with skill
+Of _aqua pura_, which doth still
+Maintain its place as chief ingredient,
+In every mixture, quite expedient,
+He kept his drug shop at the spot
+Where hospitality has got
+Her Shiboleth from land of Tara,
+Under the rule of Pat. O'Meara!
+And Richard Kneeshaw, man of science,
+Who placed in _reason_ such reliance,
+As made him almost think salvation
+Could not be found in revelation:
+Chemist and druggist by profession,
+He held within his mind's possession
+Vast stores of knowledge, ever breeding
+Ideas new from constant reading.
+And Henry Bishoprick, a wise man,
+Who acted druggist and exciseman,
+And seized at loaded pistol's muzzle
+Contrabandistas, who could puzzle
+An ordinary Gager's cunning
+When tea and whiskey they were running.
+And William Henry Baldwin, too,
+Who first appeared in public view
+At the old Albion, where in state,
+Bob Graham rules the roast of late;
+Son of a U.E. Loyalist,
+Who found his way out of the mist
+Republican which played such tricks
+With loyalty in '76,
+He came, as many another came
+To Canada, in Britain's name,
+To live his life and die beside
+The flag that's still his country's pride!
+Thomas Gillespie Burns, "T.G.,"
+I have not quite forgotten thee;
+Thou wert an early importation
+From Erin's Isle, and thy migration
+Did little damp in heart or hand
+Thy love for the old parent land,
+Who's green is greener in its pride
+Of bloom than all the world beside!
+Thy boast has always been true blue--
+To British institutions true!
+And William Rogerson, 'tis well
+That I of him should something tell--
+A tall, majestic, looking son
+Of Caledonia--he was one,
+In early times, who carried on
+The lumber traffic with a will,
+When such names as Price and McGill
+Were standards in the staple trade
+Which Bytown Ottawa hath made.
+And William Dunning, who kept store
+The first old County Gaol before,
+Where now the Albion proudly stands
+And flourishes in other hands,
+And Clements Bradley, who lived near
+The border long ago, was here;
+An agriculturist of yore,
+Who settled near the Rideau's shore,
+And opened 'mid primeval trees
+A pathway for the passing breeze.
+Full half a century has flown
+Since the first tree he tumbled down,
+And yet his strength seems still unspent,
+His step is firm, his back unbent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+Pierre Rocque, thou ancient man of stone!
+I had almost let thee alone;
+But 'twere not well to leave behind,
+A man of such a rocky kind;
+Thy Christian name is stone--that's hard,
+Rock is thy surname, saith the Bard
+Thou art an adamantine card.
+And Baptist Cantin, too, it seems,
+Appears 'mongst recollections' dreams,
+A carpenter of worth and note,
+Who ne'er asked sixpence for his vote.
+Helaire Pinard presents his face,
+And cheerfully I give him place,
+A quiet, rare man, be it known,
+Who minds no business but his own.
+Joseph Paquette, to thee I give
+A line to make thy memory live,
+'Mid earliest recollections, thou
+Art not the one least thought of now;
+Something far better than mere fame
+Is thine, it is an honest name!
+Thomas E. Woodbury, who made
+Tin cans and stovepipes, when the trade
+And town was in an infant state,
+Back in the days of '28.
+And Fletcher, an old Yankee, who
+Taught school and flogged his scholars, too
+With a good health-inspiring cat,
+My blessing on his old white hat!
+Tho' scarce, entitled like the rest
+By early advent, I think best
+To name "The Orator of the West,"
+James Spencer Lidstone, child of song,
+The "man of memory," vast and long,
+Who had, reader you need not start,
+All Milton's Paradise by heart;
+Strange mixture he of prose and rhyme,
+Ridiculous, and the sublime
+In him were singularly blended;
+Where one began or the other ended,
+It would be difficult to tell.
+He played his part in each so well,
+James Spencer Lidstone, fare thee well!
+And 'mongst the ancient sons of fame
+Who says that Dinny Cantlin's name
+Does not deserve a line or two
+In these old chronicles most true?
+Dinny was just four feet in length,
+Although a man of pith and strength,
+His arm was always ready, too,
+All rowdyism to subdue.
+When special constable one day,
+He captured in some sudden fray
+A fellow six feet high, or taller,
+And held him firmly by the collar;
+And Dinny, as he upward gazed
+At the colossus, o'er him raised,
+Exclaimed, "escape now, if you can,
+You're in the clutches of a man!"
+Dinny had a commanding eye,
+His hat was eighteen inches high
+Come next to view, Denis O'Neill,
+A ship carpenter, who laid the keel
+Of many a vessel in his day,
+And still he clinks and caulks away.
+James Finch, too, who died here of late,
+Was one of those of '28,
+Or '27 it may be,
+Comes nearer to the certainty;
+James Finch sledged stoutly with a will,
+In the old forge on "Major's Hill,"
+In '29, he once lay still
+For fifteen minutes on the ground
+Insensible to sight or sound,
+'Twas a stone that almost killed him quite,
+In a most lively faction fight
+In Bytown's celebrated fair,
+When stones flew thickly through the air,
+I can't forget it, I was there;
+Its history I'll not jot down
+Until I get to Upper Town.
+And Charles Rowan, well I know,
+The reader sought for him ere now,
+What shall I of friend Charlie say,
+Who came from Connaught all the way?
+Who well can speak the celtic tongue
+In which the Irish mintrels sung.
+When famous Malachi of old
+The collar wore of beaten gold,
+Torn fiercely from the haughty Dane
+By his right arm in battle slain!
+Charlie is mild and full of meekness,
+Horses with him have been a weakness:
+A clipper spanking between traces
+He used to drive at trotting races,
+And then his powers of selection
+In liquor almost touch perfection.
+Next comes James Whitty, man of old,
+Who once was a young sailor bold,
+A quiet, little Wexford man,
+Who warmed his jacket at Japan,
+And "dashed his buttons" gaily, too,
+In China with the pig-tailed crew;
+Ere he in times that are no more
+On Ottawa's bosom tugged an oar.
+John Ashfield now in sight appears,
+A gunsmith of the faded years;
+Just as flint locks began to lapse,
+He came in with percussion caps.
+Here, too, is William Graham, the same,
+Who from Fermanagh County came,
+And many a hard earned shilling made
+By groceries and general trade;
+Father of him once called "Black Bill,"
+That we might designate him still,
+From him of Madawaska note,
+Who oft on timber was afloat,
+And who has claim in song of mine
+To something o'er a passing line.
+Companion of my early youth,
+When time with us was young; and truth
+Was all we knew in life's fair spring,
+Thy name doth recollections bring
+Long slumbering in "oblivions vale,"
+'Till waked by memory's passing gale;
+With thee I strayed in days of yore
+Beside old "Goodwood's" pleasant shore;
+Each unforgotten scene by thee
+Is brought to life again for me;
+A child again with thee I stand,
+Among that childish happy band,
+Who thought not, dreamt not, that the day
+Of early bliss would pass away;
+No retrospect can be more fair
+That that I see behind me there,
+Friend William Graham, I wish thee well,
+But this to thee I need not tell.
+Who is he with the cassock on,
+Who bursts my second sight upon,
+A merry twinkle in his eye,
+Not sanctimonious, nor yet sly,
+His country, one can scarcely miss
+Such pure Hibernian brogue is his?
+Tis surely Father Heron's gait,
+Bytown's first priest in '28.
+Close in canonical degree,
+John Cannon's stately form I see,
+In bigotry no stern red-tapist,
+Favorite of Protestant and Papist;
+A jovial blade with soul elastic,
+No gloomy-faced ecclesiastic,
+He ruled his congregation well,
+Nor taught them that the path to hell
+Was thronged by those who made digression
+From penance, fasting and confession.
+And there with academic birch,
+Stands Anslie of the English Church,
+Who preached in Hull and Bytown too,
+Of old, to many a godless crew,
+Assembled on each Sabbath day
+To pass an idle hour away,
+Though doubtless some went there to pray,
+While here I pass in swift review
+The reverend and pious few,
+Who stood as finger posts of yore,
+Pointing the way to Canaan's shore,
+John Carroll surely should appear,
+And take his proper station here,
+An honest Wesleyan was he,
+Who never knew hypocrisy.
+George Poole in days more distant still,
+In the little church on "Sandy Hill,"
+Which gave its name to "Chapel Street,"
+His congregation oft did meet.
+And John C. Davidson, also,
+Was one of those who long ago
+'Mid primal darkness, thick and gross,
+Unfurled the banner of the cross;
+A Methodist both sound and prime
+He was esteemed in the old time,
+'Till something gave his faith a lurch,
+And he bolted to the English Church,
+In which 'tis said that he is quite
+"A burning and a shining light."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+And now another man I seek,
+Who lived on George Street, by the creek,
+Lo! memory's telescopic eye
+At once John Taillon's shade brings nigh,
+And as his form approaches near,
+His laugh I almost seem to hear.
+One of those lost with much regret,
+James Leamy, I would not forget,
+Though not a man of '28,
+His early and untimely fate--
+His merry life and tragic fall,
+Are in the memory of all.
+And Andrew Leamy in his time,
+Was head of many a stirring "shine;"
+A man of mark he might be singled,
+In whom the good and bad commingled,
+In equal balance in such way,
+That each in turn had its sway;
+He's gone! the grass grows o'er his head;
+The muse deals gently with the dead.
+James Devlin, where are you old man,
+Whose fingers o'er the catgut ran?
+Professor of the art to foil
+Both "treason, stratagem and spoil,"
+In days which now are but a riddle,
+When William Murphy played the fiddle
+So merrily, long, long ago,
+To trip of "light fantastic toe."
+Fond were you of the rod and line
+When sport and profit did combine
+In other days, when mighty Bass
+And Pickerel lay upon the grass
+Beside you, as with practised hand,
+You hauled the scaly kings to land
+Night-lines and gill-nets, may they be
+Accurst--have ruined you and me!
+And left us nought but "tommy cods"
+As trophies for our idle rods.
+Who is he with such pompous air--
+Such magic curl of scented hair,
+With glass stuck tightly o'er one eye
+To scan the common passer by,
+While every air betokens well
+The presence of a "howling swell?"
+'Tis Henry Howard Burgess, O!
+To him Dundreary's self were slow.
+And Thomas Burgess, too, was here,
+A swell, though not quite so severe.
+And the two Johnston's, born twins,
+As like each other as two pins,
+Clerks in the Ordnance Office were
+And surely a most proper pair.
+John Grant, too, who quite early came,
+A constable of ancient fame,
+Who kept the peace, right well, 'tis true,
+When he had nothing else to do.
+Few were the summonses he got,
+Warrants fell seldom to his lot;
+The town was not by courts infested,
+People liked not to be arrested,
+And seldom were--for to the Ring
+Complainants did their troubles bring,
+And there found justice, sometimes too much
+Redress, of which they oft did rue much.
+J.B. Lavois, with thee I close
+My lengthy memories of those
+I knew of old in Lower Town,
+Though last, not least in size, I own.
+A butcher of the olden time,
+Who furnished roasts and steaks most prime,
+In the old George Street Market House,
+Where cats held many a grand carouse,
+Ere rats to Bytown emigrated
+In swarms pestiferous and hated.
+And if I have forgotten one,
+Whom memory could not fasten on,
+Let him feel no neglecting smart,
+I have not passed him with my heart,
+I've done my best 'neath friendship's spoil,
+So Lower Bytown now farewell!
+
+
+
+
+
+UPPER TOWN.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+And now, kind reader, westward ho!
+Across the Sappers' Bridge we go;
+When first in youth I cross'd it o'er,
+The arch was wood, "and nothing more"--
+As Edgar A. Poe doth remark
+About that raven big and dark--
+The wooden span, I mean, stretched o'er
+The channel's width from shore to shore,
+On which skilled artificers laid
+The arch of stone, so truly made,
+And strong, that it to-day appears,
+After the crush of forty years
+And more, impervious to decay,
+As if 'twere built but yesterday.
+I stand upon the western side,
+And see in all its verdant pride
+The hill crowned with its ancient trees,
+Who's foliage rustled in the breeze
+For centuries, all branching wide,
+Standing untouched on every side;
+A spot where the Algonquin _magi_,
+May have reclined "_sub tegmine fagi_;"
+For when across the Sapper's Bridge,
+The prospect was a fine beech ridge,
+And "Gibson's corner," in old time,
+For squirrel hunting was most prime,
+"Prime" is a somewhat slangy phrase
+For these high philologic days,
+And in connexion, be it stated,
+With a spot to science dedicated.
+J.H.P. Gibson's astral lecture
+Will place this fact beyond conjecture.
+Bound that old spot now thronged by all,
+Has many a chipmonk met his fall
+By dart from youthful sportsman's bow,
+Which laid the striped beech-nutter low.
+No central Ottawa was then,
+As now, resort of busy men--
+The first stone of our centre town
+By Mason's hand was not laid down;
+A forest path across the hill
+To Bank Street led--the place was still;
+No noisy vehicle passed there,
+The dwellers of the wood to scare.
+The road for carriages led round
+Old Bytown's ancient burial ground,
+Upon the hill's south eastern base,
+Of which there is not now a trace;
+And spreading off in endless green
+To the canal the bush was seen--
+The ancient forest--then the deer
+To Bank Street Church's site was near,
+And ruffed-grouse, wrongly named partridges,
+Whirled and drum'd between the ridges,
+Black ducks and Teal did oft alight
+In ponds round Corkstown from their flight,
+And when the swamp down Slater Street
+Was cleared, a dozen snipes would greet
+At every step the sportman's eye,
+O! glorious spot of days gone by.
+To listen, ah! 'twas splendid fun!
+To Commissary Oriel's gun,
+As with a quick well practiced eye
+He made the quivering feathers fly!
+There was not then one cabin sill
+Laid down on famed Ashburnham Hill,
+Who's heights with pine and hemlock crowned,
+Towered o'er the wooded landscape round.
+Then Bradish Billings farmed away
+Where his descendants live to-day,
+A man of enterprising fame,
+Who from the land of pumpkin's came,
+And pitched his tent in honor's track
+Beneath the glorious Union Jack!
+Then Colonel By was in a jam
+Erecting the first hogsback dam,
+Which vanished with Spring's sweeping flood;
+But science made the structure good
+By the advice of one, no civil
+Engineer, with whom a level
+Or other instrument of science,
+Had not the most remote alliance.
+'Twas built as he proposed--I'm sorry
+His name from memory I can't worry,
+If Lyman Perkins was beside me,
+To it he certainly could guide me.
+For he has got, of ancient bore,
+A well authenticated store.
+Now first among our old landmarks,
+Comes Laird of Bytown, Nicholas Sparks,
+Who came across in '26
+From Hull, his lucky fate to fix
+Upon a bush farm which he bought
+For sixty pounds--and little thought,
+While grumbling at a price so high,
+That fortune had not passed him by.
+He little dreamed of Ottawa now,
+When 'mongst the stumps his wooden plough
+Stir'd the first sod in times of old;
+He knew not then, that 'twas not mould
+He turne'd up, and tilled, but gold.
+'Tis not my business here to flatter,
+Or with enconiums to bespatter
+The shadows of departed men
+Whom we shall never see again.
+Yet I may say, who knew him well,
+And of him would not falsehood tell,
+That as poor human nature ran,
+He was an honest upright man,
+"Close fisted" as the need occurred,
+Yet one who always kept his word.
+Whate'er the cost--I say no more
+Of Nicholas Sparks--who for the shore
+Unknown, has shaken out his sail
+Where riches are of no avail
+To win calm sea or favoring gale
+And Lyman Perkins, what of thee,
+Will pass for current coin from me?
+Thou art a man of early date--
+Of '27 or '28--
+in Bytown's history, and 'tis said,
+Though hard to drive, thou may'st be led,
+That is, if one could just agree
+In view and argument with thee;
+When standing in the days of yore
+At "Pooley's Bridge," thine eye ran o'er
+The picture with a prescient glance;
+Experience taught thee that thy chance
+Was then--thy foresight came
+To aid thee in life's winning game.
+Although no silver spoon was in
+Thy mouth, when to this world of sin
+Thou camest, thou hast forged from fate
+A path in life most fortunate;
+To praise thee I shall take no pains,
+Thy enterprise has brought thee gains--
+'Tis something to be born with brains!
+Daniel O'Connor there doth stand,
+One of the old departed band--
+Another of the pioneers
+Of Bytown in its early years;
+In memory's magic glass I see
+Him as he first appeared to me
+In '28 when passing down
+Through the main street in Upper Town.
+A merchant of a distant date
+Before the days of '28,
+And County Treasurer was he,
+Long, too, a Carleton J.P.,
+Ere Courts of Justice were installed,
+When Bytown "Nepean Point" was called;
+In politics he was a Tory,
+And thus doth end of him my story.
+Nathaniel Sherrold Blasdell, too,
+Who once a blacksmith's bellows blew
+In the old forge, which in the shade
+Of the Russell House still undecayed,
+Stands firm a landmark of the past,
+How long will such old memories last?
+He, too, was one of those who's hand
+Built up the bulwarks of the land,
+I say unto such men as he,
+_Requiescat in pace_.
+And Doctor Rankin, there he goes,
+With solemn brow and turned out toes
+Upon his mottled bob-tailed horse,
+Who's canter said, the patients worse,
+Or better, as the trusty steed
+Did indicate by passing speed.
+John Burrows, too, with serious air,
+Sung hymns and offered frequent prayer,
+And taught a Sunday School with might,
+To spread religion's early light,
+He held a post in other years
+Among the Royal Engineers,
+With Colonel By, a right-hand man,
+His course of favor he began,
+And once owned much of the wild land
+Upon which Ottawa doth stand.
+John Ghitty is a favorite name,
+His old hotel was known to fame,
+And travellers from far and near,
+Called at his temple of good cheer.
+A mason of most high degree,
+In the craft's early dawn was he.
+So much respected was he here,
+That unbought friendship o'er his bier
+Shed many a sad regretful tear.
+And surly old James Doran, too,
+A warrior of Waterloo,
+Kept with a despot's iron hand,
+The best hotel in all the land;
+Who entered there of human kind
+Was forced to leave his dog behind,
+For Doran had a frowning face
+For each and all the canine race.
+And Daniel Fisher, who kept store
+On Wellington's west side of yore,
+A most experienced auctioneer
+In somewhat more contracted sphere,
+Than circles trade's expanding flow
+Round Bermingham, McLean and Rowe
+And Michael Burke, who kept a still--
+And made beer down below the hill
+Where malt and hops together came,
+And gave the "Brewery Hill" its name--
+That hill with pathway to the right,
+Where Bank Street ends upon the height.
+And many a barrel of his beer
+Went down, the Irish heart to cheer,
+When ancient crowds did celebrate
+St. Patrick's Day in '28.
+But patriotism's spirit rose;
+From words contention went to blows,
+And ere the little "scrimmage" ended
+A crack that never could be mended,
+Was in a luckless cranium made,
+By one whom justice never paid;
+I cannot tell what colored ribbon
+He wore--his name was Dan McGibbon.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+George William Baker, better known
+As "Captain Baker" in the town.
+Who oft the mailbag's lock untied
+Long after Matthew Connell died--
+Long after Helen Denny's hand
+Sent postal letters o'er the land;
+An Englishman of good degree,
+A Justice of the Peace was he,
+And Captain of Artillery--
+If memory has not gone astray--
+He was in his life's early day,
+He shewed his claims to education
+In County Council legislation,
+Where he in intellectual pride
+Sat long by Hamnett Pinhey's side,
+Our Local Parliament's since then
+Have seldom witnessed two such men
+Paymaster Rudyerd, too, I scan,
+A most important gentleman,
+Who carried in the days of old
+The Governmental bags of gold;
+Yet never did one less resemble
+He, of the twelve who did dissemble,
+And for the thirty pieces paid,
+His master cruelly betrayed.
+And John McCarthy, who can say
+That he's a man of yesterday?
+Through the dim maze of vanished year
+His name to memory appears,
+A dealer in strong leather ware
+That stood the worst of wear and tear
+Since paths of '27 he trod,
+His eye hath seen the grassy sod
+O'er many a friend--let's hope no foe--
+With whom he started long ago,
+In the long race down life's steep hill
+On which he treads securely still.
+Captain Letreton, too, I see,
+An officer of high degree.
+The owner, ere the days of rats,
+Of that wide district called "the Flats"
+In modern times, where I behold,
+A pinery as in days of old.
+And Isaac Firth, an old John Bull,
+Of milk of human kindness full,
+Of rotund form and smiling face,
+Who kept an entertaining place
+For travel-worn and weary fellows
+Who landed where Caleb S. Bellows,
+Out on "the Point" his habitation
+Built in a pleasant situation,
+Before the days when piles of lumber
+Did first fair nature's face encumber;
+Quite near the spot where first with skill
+John Perkins built his little mill,
+Where Philip Thompson many a year
+Ago, commenced his bright career,
+And took the ebbing of the tide,
+Which into golden waves did glide;
+He man'd his craft and steered her well
+O'er placid calm and tossing swell,
+And independent of the gale
+Hath snap'd his oar and furled his sail.
+'Twas just above "the whitefish hole,"
+How dear that spot is to my soul!
+There Allan Cameron and I
+Together many a day did hie,
+To haul the silvery shining prey
+From out the whirling eddy's spray;
+In July, '32, to land,
+I drew two barrels with my own hand,
+The trophies of the hook and line
+In the dear days of auld lang syne
+That was the fatal month and year
+When cholera was rampant here;
+Malignant Asiatic type,
+Which from the book of life did wipe
+The name of many a sturdy one
+'Twixt rise and setting of the sun.
+Dread terror brooded o'er the land,
+While the destroying angel's hand
+Smote here and there each deadly blow,
+Which laid in dust the proudest low!
+As I remember--those fared worst,
+Who in that dismal time were curst
+With dangerous and insatiate thirst.
+And H.V. Noel, surely here
+His name is worthy to appear;
+'Mongst those whom I so long have known,
+Tis strange that he has not outgrown
+The friendship of the early few
+Into who's confidence he grew,
+By the unchanging honest course
+He steered for better or for worse,
+Well has he worn, long may he bear
+Up stoutly 'gainst the world's care!
+John Cruickshank of the kirk, who prayed
+Beneath the old white birch's shade--
+The old white birch--that sacred trust!
+Improvement's hand hath to the dust
+Upturned to make frontal space
+For temple of more modern grace,
+A grander altar than of yore,
+The ancient "Black mouth's" knelt before.
+And Robert Sheriff, stately man,
+Who the Crown Timber Office "ran"--
+To use a well worn Yankee phrase
+Unknown in Bytown's early days.
+And A.J. Christie, what shall I
+Say of this old celebrity?
+An M.D. of exceeding skill
+Who dealt in lancet, leech and pill,
+Cantharides and laudanum, too,
+When milder measures would not do;
+A polished scholar and a sage,
+A thinker far before his age,
+A writer of sarcastic vein
+And philosophic depth, who's train
+Of thought was comprehensive, deep,
+Peace to his ashes! let him sleep!
+In ancient times his prophet eye
+Saw Bytown's future destiny,
+Fools laughed and disbelieved the seer
+Who's second sight saw triumph near--
+A scene which fortune did fulfil
+The Parliament on "Barrack Hill!"
+And Lawyer Hagerman I knew,
+When lawyers little had to do--
+Their briefs were few, their fees were brief,
+And brief had been their Sunday beef,
+Had they nought else to fill their maw
+Than the proceeds of briefless law;
+For litigation had not then
+Curst Bytown's early race of men!
+And Robert Drummond, Engineer,
+Who built across the "_Grande Chaudiere_"
+The old "Swing Bridge," which many a day
+Amid the "Kettle's" curling spray,
+From side to side did gently sway.
+The adamantine iron tether
+Which chained two provinces together,
+Ere legislation's fiat came
+With moral might to do the same.
+Well's and McCrea of lumbering note,
+Who had on many a stream afloat
+Vast rafts of red pine timber, when
+White pine was little thought of; then
+Oak, elm, cedar and red pine
+And staves, together did combine,
+With now and then a mast or spar,
+To make up what would go at par,
+At Stadacona--old Quebec--
+Where brave Montgomery got a check
+In a most bootless, foolish strife,
+Which cost him his undaunted life--
+Where Arnold got a broken thigh,
+Ere at West Point his treachery
+Brought Major Andre without hope
+To Washington's relentless rope!
+To Wolfe I'd like to wander back,
+But 'twill not do, so to my track
+I now reluctantly return,
+Who next is ready for the urn?
+Adam Hood Burwell is the man,
+An English Churchman he began,
+But ended a most shining light,
+A mystic, full-fledged Irvingite,
+With pinions rustling for a sphere
+Of usefulness he found not here.
+Another of the reverend throng
+I'll introduce, 'tis S.S. Strong,
+A man who's memory I recall
+As one respected here by all,
+An honor to his cloth and race,
+With whom no strange fire left its trace,
+Upon the shrine where truth he found,
+Who preached and practiced precepts sound,
+Nor wore his shoes on hallowed ground.
+William and Hugh Calder's names
+Arise, and now present their claims
+To immortality in rhyme,
+Both merchants of the olden time.
+John Anderson, a merchant was,
+And dealt with profit and with loss
+In groceries and dainty "grub,"
+With wine, Jamaica, rum and shrub,
+That had no leaves upon its stem,
+Though beads like dewdrops did begem
+Its ruby rippling diadem.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+"And "Little Johnny Robertson,"
+But lately from amongst us gone,
+Took both his "sneeshin" and his glass,
+And let the tide of fortune pass.
+And Ewen Cameron, who died
+By cholera in manhood's pride;
+A Caledonian lithe and strong,
+As fancy paints the dauntless throng,
+Who dashed with claymore down the slope,
+On red Culloden's grave of hope.
+And Peter Aylen, who could tell
+The path he trod of yore as well
+As I, who from an early day
+Knew Peter Aylen's every way?
+'Tis not my purpose to indite
+A history of his life; or write
+A record of his strange career,
+To interest the reader here.
+Howe'er his stirring life you scan,
+You'll find that Aylen was a man!
+Afraid of nought that ever wore
+The human shape on Ottawa's shore!
+Chief of the "shiners," it was said,
+Caesar or nothing--never led--
+But always foremost in the fray,
+Was ever Peter Aylen's way.
+A heavy lumberer Peter was,
+When lumbering was like pitch and toss,
+To-day success, to-morrow loss.
+But let him rest, he sleeps beside
+The Ottawa's majestic tide!
+Perhaps I'd better mention here
+Who and what the "shiners" were,
+Who gave of yore such sturdy thumps,
+And brought forth phrenologic bumps
+Unknown to scan of craniology,
+With bludgeons or aid of geology.
+A band of Irish raftsmen, who
+Were to each other always true,
+Combined together, war they made,
+To banish from the lumber trade
+All French-Canadian competition
+By dooming it to abolition;
+They made the wild attempt, at least,
+To extirpate poor Jean Baptiste.
+Among their victims they enrol'd him,
+And made the place too hot to hold him,
+Yet were the tales that rumor told,
+Worse than the shiners' acts of old,
+Though memory's charged with many a fray
+That happened in the early day,
+When shiners with an iron hand
+Reigned here the terror of the land!
+Few were the victims of the strife--
+If any--and the loss of life,
+Was fanciful much more than real
+In that blood-letting old ordeal.
+Among the medico's of old,
+Doctor Stratford I behold,
+Who foolishly I thought deemed best
+To emigrate towards the West,
+And leave behind a work which few
+Could with a single lancet do
+When venesection--old idea,
+Combined with the Phamacopeiae
+Was patent as a panacea
+For almost every mortal ill,
+Like calomel jalap, or blue pill.
+He disappeared from healing fame,
+And young Edward Vancortlandt came;
+For he was young and active, too,
+When first he met the minstrel's view,
+And striding rapidly did go
+Along full forty years ago!
+VanCortlandt's had a long career
+Since first he bled and blistered here;
+His own hand hath his fortune made--
+His own hand the foundation laid--
+And if success, with hoards of wealth
+He has not now--the public health
+Has never suffered at his hand;
+Nor has the mystic spirit land
+Been peopled by the shades of those
+Who in their last dissolving throes,
+Gave evidence that power to kill
+Was mingled with Vancortlandt's skill--
+When to that distant coast he'll steer,
+No crowd of ghosts will hover near,
+And cry out. "Van, you sent us here!"
+Edward McGillivray, how is this,
+That I by accident should miss
+So long an ancient name like thine,
+'Twould be unpardonable, if mine
+The fault to leave thy well-known name
+Unwritten in my roll of fame?
+Bytown was young, and so wert thou,
+Years long before the "Shannon's" prow
+Cleft Ottawa's bosom on her way
+To Grenville in our early day.
+No steam whistle's discordant yell
+Shrieked on the evening zephyr's swell;
+But from her deck the cannon's din
+Told Bytown that the boat was in,
+And at the sound the signal man
+His banner up the flagstaff ran.
+It was a good old time when thou
+Bought beavers at a price which now,
+When beaver skins are somewhat rare,
+Would cause even Chauncey Bangs to stare.
+Yes, 'twas a fine old time for trade,
+Money was plenty--easy made,
+And thou wert, aye, a canine blade.
+Patrick Delaney home has gone
+From earthly toil, and he was one
+Of those who in the distant past,
+His lot in Upper Town had cast.
+James Elder, a majestic Scot!
+On whom of old it was my lot
+To look with veneration's eye.
+Kept Bytown's staid academy;
+And here I dwell with fond delight,
+And view again with memory's sight
+The stately teacher in his chair,
+King of the throng assembled there.
+Now Allan Cameron comes to view,
+And William Stubbs, there he is too.
+Wellington Wright, too, I behold,
+And wild Jack Adamson, the bold.
+The Anderson's, both James and John,
+And Stephen Lett, my mother's son,
+Who stood upon Parnassus' crown
+By might of Genius, and looked down
+To where with errant steps I strayed
+Around its base beneath the shade.
+And many more were pupils there,
+Where are they? "echo answers, where?"
+In fancy I away have stepped
+From where his school James Elder kept,
+In that old house remembered well,
+After, as Joseph Kirk's Hotel,
+Ere it was haunted by a sound
+Which shed such melody around,
+Sweet almost as the songs of Zion,
+From violin of Robinson Lyon,
+Who drew such music from its strings,
+Scotch reels, strathspeys and highland flings,
+And Irish jigs in variation,
+As made one feel that "all creation"
+Could scarcely match his wizard spell,
+'Twas he that played the fiddle well!
+And Edward Malloch, gone to rest,
+Was not the worst, nor yet the best,
+Perhaps, 'mongst those of other days
+To whom I dedicate these lays.
+I knew him well in '25,
+When Richmond Village was alive,
+While Bytown's head was scarcely seen,
+Emerging from the forest green.
+A captain of Artillery
+In '37's hot time was he,
+When Louis Joseph Papineau
+Sought British power to overthrow;
+And William L. McKenzie tried
+O'er loyalty and truth to ride;
+Each found the path, for what he wanted,
+Too hot to walk in--and "levanted;"
+Von Shoultz, a soldier abler, riper,
+Remained behind and "paid the piper!"
+Even I, poetic man of peace,
+Have often marched and stood at ease,
+Beside the Richmond guns, brought here
+To thunder o'er the _Grande Chaudiere_,
+At the great Union celebration,
+The new bridge's inauguraton;
+One thing is certain, those brass guns
+Were ne'er seen more by Richmond's sons.
+They fell prey to official nabbing,
+And Governmental red tape grabbing,
+Like plunder from the vanquished harried,
+To Montreal off they were carried!
+Malloch was member many a year
+For Carleton when votes were not dear--
+When damaged eyes, and smashed proboscis
+Would follow, as the smallest losses.
+The offer of a vile bank note
+As price of an elector's vote.
+Gold, said the sage, perhaps 'twas law,
+On Dian's lap the snow can thaw;
+And gold has purchased many a seat
+Where the "collective wisdom" meet,
+And many go to represent
+The weight of cash corrupt which sent
+Them wandering wickedly astray
+From honor's seldom trodden way.
+Where now, is Turner, who of yore,
+Kept school near the old Ottawa's shore?
+And Heath who came across the line
+In able teaching here to shine?
+And old John Stilman, who shoes made,
+And flourished in St. Crispin's trade?
+William McCullough, where is he?
+Gone to the unknown country--
+A steady, harmless, quiet man,
+Who here in '32 began
+A race unmixed with hate or strife,
+Which ended only with his life.
+And Reuben Traveller, who's tongue
+Oft in the old assizes rung--
+Though given to mirth, a wondrous crier,
+Who lived near John Sweetman, the dyer
+'Twas all the same, for either side
+Or both old Reuben Traveller cried--
+Cried for the man who won law's race--
+Cried for the man who lost his case--
+Cried for the criminal acquitted--
+Cried for the guilty when outwitted--
+He cried for loss or gain of pelf--
+For every one except himself;
+Reuben was a celebrity,
+We seldom meet with such as he.
+John Rochester, a man of old,
+Who's life a tale of goodness told,
+He steered through time from envy free,
+You'd scarcely find an enemy,
+Who o'er his honored dust would dare
+Defame the ashes resting there;
+For such as he laws ne'er were made,
+Peace to his gentle vanished shade!
+Well, will it be for James and John
+If they walk the same path upon
+Which their departed sire trod
+With love alike to man and God!
+James Joynt is 'mong the living yet
+A printer of the old _Gazette_.
+Who plied the typographic trade
+Ably in Bytown's first decade.
+And taught the art of Caxton well,
+And thoroughly to John George Bell,
+Who in our village made a racket,
+In the old columns of the _Packet_,
+Where every one got "tit for tat"
+From dear departed "Old White Hat!"
+Who thought Reformers could not err,
+And laid the lash on Dawson Kerr,
+Whom he in bitter hues did paint
+A sinner, and called him "the saint."
+A journal of more modern date
+Than the _Gazette_, who's early fate,
+Was Phoenix-like to rise resplendent
+From ashes of the _Independent_,
+Which had at periods now and then,
+Emitted Sparks from Johnston's pen,
+Which meteor-like shot forth in pride,
+Blazed, flickered, then collapsed and died.
+And Robert Hardy's name I find,
+In the old days long left behind.
+James Matthews, too, in death's repose,
+In early times was one of those
+Who helped to build the ancient town,
+Which modern taste is pulling down,
+Assisted now and then by fires,
+Past recollections primal pyres.
+John Bennett, cord-wainer of yore,
+And volunteer in Rifle corps,
+With muzzle-loaders past and gone,
+Gallant and brave old Number One!
+Our civic army's primal rib,
+Once called by Alexander Gibb,
+"The Sleepy's," in the good old time
+When he dealt in both prose and rhyme,
+And made opponents fume and fret
+With caustic in the old _Gazette_--
+Rhyme, too, in which a critic's claw
+Could scarcely fasten on a flaw,
+His verse was standard like his law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+John Cobb, I'll take a glance at thee,
+Firm standard of Free Masonry!
+Mine eye delights to rest upon
+Thy iron frame, old "Uncle John."
+If honesty and simple truth
+E'er "flourished in Immortal youth,"
+Where time can ne'er their glories rob,
+They rest with thee, my friend, John Cobb!
+And Dudley Booth, what shall I say
+Of this strange mortal passed away?
+His was a genius burning bright
+With brilliant and uncertain light--
+Proud in inventive dignity,
+And dark in inmate mystery,
+It flickered only, when sublime,
+It might have left a light for time,
+And wondering mortals to admire,
+Tis gone! I saw its flame expire.
+And John R. Stanley was among
+Old Bytown's well remembered throng,
+Whom memory's tuneful measure bears
+Back from the shades of other years.
+R.W. Cruice in ancient days
+Was fond of mirth and sporting ways;
+I had almost forgot to tell
+How he on horseback cut a swell,
+And made a fleet and daring rush
+At Barry's hunt and won "the brush,"
+When sportsmen gathered full of glee
+Around the famed J.P., M.D.
+And here diverging from my road
+Into a little episode,
+I'll tear at once with gesture brief
+From memory's book a comic leaf,
+A tale from cobweb's volume hoary
+Of this Sangrado in his glory,
+Many will recollect the story.
+Edward Barry, grave J.P.,
+Sometimes was given to a spree,
+Which interfered with the precision
+Of magisterial decision.
+So Edward Barry jumped the hedge
+And took the frigid temperance pledge;
+But soon the Justice of the Peace
+Found himself often ill at ease;
+Pains through his gastric regions ran,
+Too hard even for a temperance man.
+Then Barry M.D., in a trice,
+Gave Barry J.P. an advice,
+After a careful diagnosis,
+Which placed him on a bed of roses,
+And eased his pains beyond description--
+A dose of brandy the prescription--
+Oft as required to be repeated--
+With which the learned J.P. was treated;
+And history affirms that he
+Oft took the prescribed remedy.
+John Cameron, oft called "Black John,"
+Comes o'er my dream of old, as one
+Who should not now forgotten be
+In this memorial strain by me,
+In days of yore, his true-nosed hounds
+To the Chaudiere with certain bounds,
+Oft chased the anther'd buck before
+Their deep-mouthed yells to Ottawa's shore.
+He was a sportsman keen and true,
+Who dearly loved the "view halloo!"
+And Graves, who near the old Scotch Kirk
+Dwelt 'neath the shadow of the "birk;"
+And Isaac Cluff appears in view,
+A loyalist, both staunch and true;
+James "Kennedy, the carter," too,
+Who the first truck through Bytown drew
+With the assistance of a horse,
+I mean, to be exact, of course.
+And "old Ben. Rathwell," now I've hit on,
+A true and honest hearted Briton,
+As ever crossed Atlantic's wave
+To found a home and find a grave.
+And William Colter now doth rise
+Before my retrospective eyes,
+A saddler far from democratic--
+Professor most aristocratic,
+In art which claims the highest feather
+Among the fashioners of leather;
+An active springing step had he
+As now his form appears to me;
+Early he went to that far bourne
+"From whence no travellers return."
+Thomas M. Blasdell, step this way,
+And tell me how you feel to-day?
+You thought I'd pass and let you go,
+Old twisted groove! but 'tis not so,
+Like charcoal, brimstone and salpetre.
+I'll touch you off now in short metre.
+'Tis long since first your eye, my man,
+Along the rifle barrel ran;
+The "crotch" or "globe" was all the same,
+If you could only see the game.
+Or the "bulls-eye," the missile flew
+Into its centre straight and true,
+In the old days when practiced eye
+Was light, shade and trajectory.
+Does your keen eye obey your will,
+Is your hand quite as steady still
+As when you knocked the turkey's o'er,
+At twenty rods in days of yore?
+My blessing day and night upon
+The memory of the time that's gone.
+And Sergeant Major Ritchie, there
+He stands before my vision, where
+In youth I used to see him stand
+On Barrack Hill with cane in hand.
+For many a year ere death's disaster
+He held the post of Barrack Master,
+And amongst people who reflected
+Most highly always was respected.
+I had almost forgotten one
+Who's name should not be left alone
+In dark oblivion's envious shade
+While I the silent past invade--
+To light up the forgotten gloom;
+To rescue from time's early tomb
+And touch with friendly hand, and give
+To fading memories power to live.
+'Mongst men of enterprising fame,
+I can't pass George Buchanan's name;
+He built our first old timber slide,
+Down which the red pine cribs did glide;
+And afterwards with strength and skill,
+And an indomitable will,
+At the great Rapids of the _Chats_,
+Suspended nature's changeless laws,
+And by an artificial path
+Triumphed o'er the cataract's wrath!
+While standing quietly on shore,
+Watching the freight the current bore,
+A sudden crash from careless oar
+Ended his enterprising life,
+And made a widow of his wife.
+The public mourned, its great heart bled,
+With genuine sorrow for the dead.
+'Tis but as yesterday to me,
+The history of that tragedy.
+Ere to the fair green now I go,
+I'll stir up the old "Buffalo."
+John Heney, who his mark has made
+In speculation's shifting trade,
+And built up with both brick and stone,
+Memorials, which, when he is gone,
+In Ottawa will securely stand,
+Proofs of his enterprising hand.
+Some years ago in learned debate,
+In Council Hall he sat in state.
+And in his record there you'll find,
+Nothing unfriendly or unkind.
+And while as gently I jog on,
+I cannot, pass by "honest John!"
+"Shaun Rhua," designating name,
+Who from the County Cavan came,
+And in the Upper Town first started.
+Young, enterprising, and light hearted.
+At Civic Board for many a year,
+For By Ward doth his name appear;
+And I can say, who ought to know,
+As far as my researches go,
+No public act has stain left on
+The well-earned name of "honest John!"
+Turk, Jew, and heathen all the same,
+Speak kindly of John Heney's name.
+Mark Bishoprick has gone at last,
+An aged pilgrim from the past,
+Burdened with many years he stood
+Almost alone in solitude,
+A record of an age that's gone,
+Who's lengthened shadow rested on
+The present, ere the distant light
+Sunk into everlasting night.
+
+
+
+
+CORKSTOWN.
+
+
+ "Mother McGinty won't forget
+ To keep the tally mark."
+ (OLD SONG.)
+
+
+In days of yore, within a call
+Of where stands now the City Hall,
+A village built of mud and wood,
+In all its glory, Corkstown stood,
+Two rows of cabins in the swamp--
+Begirt by ponds and vapors damp
+And aromatic cedar trees
+Who's branches caught the passing breeze--
+Stretched upward on the western side
+Of the "Deep Cut," where then were plied
+The spade and pickaxe side by side;
+For, by the shade of Colonel By,
+Who shaped this city's destiny!
+There delved full many a hard case in,
+That channel to the Canal Basin.
+There, then dwelt many a sturdy blade,
+Adepts at handling the spade,
+And bruisers at the wheeling trade,
+As witness the vast mounds of clay
+Remaining on the banks to-day.
+Lovers of poteen strong and clear,
+In preference to rum or beer,
+Sons of the sod who'd knock you down
+For half a word 'gainst Cork's own town,
+And kick you then for falling too,
+To prove that the old mountain dew
+Had frolic in it raw and strong,
+As well as music, love and song.
+And there in whitewashed shanty grand,
+With kegs and bottles on each hand,
+Her face decked with a winning smile,
+Her head with cap of ancient style,
+Crowned arbiter of frolic's fate,
+Mother McGinty sat in state,
+And measured out the mountain dew
+To those whom strong attraction drew
+Within the circle of her power,
+To while away a leisure hour.
+She was the hostess and the host,
+She kept the reckoning, ruled the roast,
+And swung an arm of potent might
+That few would dare to brave in fight;
+Yet was she a good-natured soul,
+As ever filled the flowing bowl;
+In sooth she dealt in goodly cheer,
+Half-pints of whiskey, quarts of beer,
+Strong doses of sweet peppermint,
+Fine old Jamaica without stint,
+And shrub--a cordial then well known--
+Her thirsty customers poured down,
+Nor dreamed of headaches, or of ills,
+For nought killed then, but doctors' pills!
+The song, the dance, and glass went round,
+The precincts of that classic ground;
+And when bent on a tearing spree,
+Filled full of grog and jollity,
+The bacchanalian rant they made
+Would please even old Anacreon's shade,
+While o'er them the athletic charms
+Of the stern hostess's bare arms,
+Struck terror and kept order in
+The revel's hottest, wildest din!
+For cash or credit bartered she,
+The prime ingredients of a spree;
+And he stood always above par
+Who never stone threw at the bar;
+And when a man had spent his all,
+She chalked the balance on the wall.
+Figures or letters she knew not,
+But what a customer had got
+By hieroglyphics well she knew,
+For there exposed to public view
+Each debtor's tally great and small
+Appeared upon the bar-room wall.
+A short stroke for a half-pint stood,
+A longer for a quart was good,
+While something like an Eagle's talon
+Upon her blackboard was a gallon.
+And woe to him, who soon or late
+His tally did not liquidate;
+For when her goodly company
+Were all assembled for a spree,
+She read off each delinquent's score,
+And at his meanness loudly swore,
+And threatened when he next appeared,
+Unless the entry all was cleaed,
+To lay on future drinks a stricture,
+And photograph, perhaps, his picture
+In pewter, for the unpaid tally,
+As given, I think, in C. O'Malley.
+Old Corkstown was a merry place
+On pay-day, when the soaking race
+Assembled full of fun and glee
+At Mother McGinty's for a spree,
+No total abstinence was known
+In those days in that little town,
+Nor many nasal organs tainted
+For lack of time to get them painted;
+No moderate drinker showed his face
+Within that much resorted place,
+For temperance had not then began
+To trench upon the rights of man,
+Sure had he trod on danger's edge
+Who dared there to propose the pledge.
+Such monstrous doctrine there had been
+Followed by "wigs upon the green."
+None there refused the offered glass,
+Or dared to let the bottle pass
+For, _casus belli_ this was strong,
+Unless with a good roaring song
+The recreant could in his defence
+Atone for such _most strange_ offence.
+Sometimes, nay oft, upon the street
+Antagonistic friends would meet
+By chance, or by some other charm,
+To try each other's strength of arm,
+And without legal process settle
+Disputes, like men of taste and mettle;
+And while strict "Fair Play" ruled the fight,
+It was a sort of rough delight
+For youthful souls while hanging round
+That ancient famous battle ground,
+To note who first the claret drew--
+who first down his opponent threw--
+Who first produced the limner's dyes
+Beneath his neighbor's damaged eyes,
+Or sowed the trodden ground beneath
+With smashed incisors, like the teeth,
+The dragon's tusks of ancient ken
+From which sprung hosts of armed men.
+Such pastime was a frequent thing,
+The entertainment of the ring,
+Without equestrian or clown
+Was often seen in Cork's own town,
+And best, for impecunious boys
+Who boasted few of modern joys,
+Who daily went to see the play
+Had no admission fee to pay.
+But gone is Corkstown, vanished too
+The whitewashed shanty from our view,
+Where once the minstrel's youthful eyes
+Beheld strange orgies with surprise.
+In dust its stalwart hostess now,
+Reposes, placid is the brow
+That once frowned terror o'er the throng
+While revelling in the dance and song,
+Gone with them are the fading dyes
+Which tinged fair childhood's happy skies,
+The brilliant firmament of youth
+Has vanished, and but leaves the truth
+Written wherever mortals range
+That things below are doomed to change.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIR OF 1829.
+
+
+Now, reader, you and I must start
+Together with both hand and heart,
+Off to the far-famed level of green,
+Which once in verdure lay between
+The old Scotch Kirk, and where now Hall
+Confectionery sells to all;
+And we shall pass as something new,
+Old scenes before us in review,
+And I shall fire up these rhymes
+With battles of the good old times;
+And out of what I shall relate
+No single case for magistrate,
+Or stern judge to adjudicate
+Arose, for then, a bloody nose,
+Or broken head, between fair foes,
+Was counted neither loss nor gain,
+Nor thought of 'till they met again.
+'Twas in the glorious olden time
+When smashing craniums was no crime--
+When people got no invitation
+At half-past nine for presentation
+Of damaged eye and broken skin,
+To answer for nocturnal sin
+Before that tribunal where bail
+Can't always keep one out of jail.
+'Twas in July in '29,
+If true this memory of mine,
+At early morn upon that green
+Were many tents of canvas seen
+Within which might be found good cheer
+In whiskey kegs and kegs of beer;
+And on a little table, too,
+Tin measures were exposed to view,
+For thirsty souls their clay to slake,
+And draughts of inspiration take--
+For then the numbers were but few,
+Who shun'd the sparkling mountain dew,
+And people under no pretence
+Could dream of total abstinence:
+Even John B. Gough's most magic sway
+Had failed in Bytown's early day.
+Vast was the throng assembled there
+At Bytown's first and greatest Fair,
+And merry were the antics seen
+Upon that famous ancient green.
+'Twas not to buy or sell they came
+From far and near, the blind and lame,
+The grave, the merry, sad and gay,
+Upon that old eventful day;
+They all assembled, wild and free,
+To have a ranting, roaring spree!
+And, by the shadows of the past!
+Frolic flew furious and fast,
+And many a head was pillowed on
+Old mother earth ere set of sun.
+A fiddler here the catgut drew,
+And there a highland piper, too,
+Shrieked forth with loud and stirring bar,
+The boding battle-notes of war!
+And lavishly the whiskey flew
+Among that mirth devoted crew,
+As oft into the tents they ran
+To renovate the inner man.
+'Twas twelve o'clock, and all was well,
+"And merry as a marriage bell,"
+Thought one might see just here and there
+Legs seeming somewhat worse of wear,
+And in the air perhaps might hear
+The prescient sounds of conflict near,
+For Irish accents there were many,
+Cork, Tipperary, and Kilkenny.
+'Twas afternoon, and frolic's pacing
+Was then diversified by racing,
+Then soon was cleared of busy feet
+The race course, old Wellington street,
+Bets then were made, and up the money,
+Pat Ryan's horse, and Davy's pony,
+Together entered for the match--
+Perhaps it would be called a "scratch"
+Race in the turfs expressive phrase
+Unknown in Bytown's early days.
+Fair, free and gallantly they started,
+And headlong up the street they darted,
+While loudly sounded cheer on cheer
+As swift the winning post they near;
+They ran together without check,
+And passed it almost neck and neck,
+So close, the judges, though they tried,
+The winning horse could not decide.
+The race was o'er and down the brakes,
+Each party shouted for the stakes;
+And loud and fierce the clamor rose,
+And words soon lost themselves in blows;
+The very stones began to speak,
+And skulls, of course, began to break,
+And black thorns and maple sticks
+Played such fantastic ugly tricks,
+That soon the well thronged battle plain
+Was strewn with bodies of the slain--
+The "Kilt," who fell to rise again
+Without the doctor's mystic aid,
+And plunge once more into the raid.
+Stones flew in showers, the windows shook
+Around that famous Donnybrook,
+While Tipperary's battle yell,
+Did loudly o'er the conflict swell!
+And many a celt with accent racy
+Roared for a Sleavin or a Casey!
+And fierce the struggle raged around
+Where the seven Sleavin's stood their ground--
+Seven brothers, back to back they stood
+Like hero's, though their streaming blood
+Told how they bravely turned at bay
+'Gainst hundreds in that savage fray!
+O'erpowered at last they did retreat
+Face to the foe, still in defeat,
+Defiant as they moved along
+Pursued by the relentless throng!
+They reached their home, shut fast the door,
+And stood within upon the floor,
+Ready to meet the coming foe,
+Who in their vengeance were not slow.
+Stones showered from the assailing crew,
+In pieces every window flew,
+Then, with a loud and savage yell
+They rushed to storm the citadel!
+A gun-barrel through a broken pane
+Made the invaders pause again,
+A sharp axe sticking through another,
+Their thirst for slaughter seemed to smother;
+A battle council then took place,
+And very soon there was no trace,
+Of conflict or of bloody fray
+Round where the Sleavin's stood at bay!
+Thus ended By-town's first old Fair,
+A Donnybrook most rich and rare;
+This annal of the olden time
+Was not premeditated crime,
+It sprung from what forms quite a part
+Of every genuine Irish heart,
+A sort of _Faugh a-Ballagh_ way
+That sticks to Irishmen to-day.
+
+
+
+
+LINES
+
+_Recited by the author in "Her Majesty's Theatre," at a
+Festival of the Mechanics' Institute in March_, 1868.
+
+
+In such a gay and festive scene as this,
+My worthy friends, it may not be amiss
+To mingle with the general notes of glee,
+A rhyme or too, even if not poesy.
+Indulge me while in rude unpolished verse,
+The promptings of the muse I now rehearse,
+And O! deal gently with me while I try
+To bring the vanished past before your eye,
+Fond recollections rapidly takes wing
+The fading scenes of other days to sing,
+The good old days, the dear old times of yore,
+Which you and I, alas! shall see no more:
+When all around the spot on which I stand
+Was trackless forest and primeval land--
+The "Barrack Hill," a wilderness all o'er,
+And Lower Town to Rideau's ancient shore
+A gloomy cedar swamp, the haunt of deer,
+In which the ruffed grouse drum'd when spring was near,
+While here and there a giant pine on high
+Towered with its spreading branches to the sky!
+I have the little village in my eye,
+Before the locks were built by Colonel By,
+Before the Sappers threw the ponderous arch,
+O'er the Canal, to aid improvement's march,
+Ere by the muscular canaller's spade
+The ground was broken where the "Deep Cut's" made--
+Long ere the iron bond of union span'd
+The vast _Kah-nah-jo_, wonder of our land!
+Here mighty Ottawa, in its grandest phase
+Bears some resemblance to its better days,
+Ere sawdust, slabs, and stern improvement gave
+A turbid deathstroke to its limpid wave!
+That good old time, 'tis pleasant to recal,
+When one religion almost served for all--
+When men together could in friendship join--
+When battered buttons passed for genuine coin--
+And silver pieces, do not think it strange,
+Were cut in too, and four, to make small change,
+When banks were few, suspensions heard of not,
+And specie was the only cash we got,
+Hard silver with no discount on our dollars,
+Ere brokers reigned, or flourished paper collars.
+Tho' dim the light of learning's genial rays
+Amongst the masses in those bygone days--
+Tho' daily papers, modern luxury's food,
+The bold apostles of the public good,
+The tribunes of the people were not found
+On guard our infant liberties around,
+Tho' institutions based on mental light,
+Shed scanty radiance o'er that primal night,
+Tho' science, wealth and philosophic lore
+Were _rara aves_ upon Ottawa's shore;
+Tho' commerce scarce had spread her gilded wings,
+The herald of a costlier state of things;
+Tho' such an institution as our own,
+Was to our early pioneers unknown,
+An institution, let me say, in short,
+Worthy of every patriot's support;
+Established on a comprehensive base.
+Where every man of worth may find his place--
+temple of intelligence to give
+To mind the sustenance on which to live,
+Tho' all such modern glories then were rare,
+Yet old Bytonians did not badly fare.
+Churches were few in that benighted time,
+Seldom was heard the Sabbath's welcome chime--
+Yet brotherhood abounded in the land,
+And charity with soft and tender hand
+Relieved distress, and made the weeper smile,
+Scarce conscious of the good she did the while,
+And not the worst among poor sons of men,
+Money was plenty in the village then,
+For Mother Britain with a lavish hand
+Scattered her treasures over all the land.
+Simplicity then held her peaceful reign,
+And vice and crime were seldom in her train.
+No litigation marked our young career,
+No Police Magistrate with brow severe,
+And frown of justice upon trembling crime,
+Made culprits shiver in that happy time;
+Neighbor to neighbor owed so little grudge,
+Disputes were settled then without the Judge--
+The learned profession boasted not one gown,
+And but one lancet was in all the town--
+And it was busy, and got wondrous praise,
+For venesection flourished in those days.
+People owed little, and were seldom sued,
+No bailiff marred our ancient solitude;
+Duns were a nuisance in our soil not grown,
+Fifteen per cent, was totally unknown!
+Things then were taken as they happened quite,
+And insults were decided by a fight,
+In boyhood I have witnessed many a fray
+Within the ring by daylight and fair play--
+No constable poked his unwelcome nose
+Between the pastime of two transient foes,
+Who choose like Sayers and Heenan to decide
+Their difference with strong sinews on each side.
+We had no sidewalks then, not much taxation,
+No lock-up, county gaol, no corporation,
+No aldermanic wisdom, and no mayor,
+To fill with dignity the civic chair;
+No tax collector with his pressing bill
+To cause consumption in an empty till;
+Corrupt electors trod not freedom's ground,
+No purchaseable franchise could be found--
+Money was not the "altar and the God,"
+Before which manhood bowed a venal clod!
+The reign of truth, ere politics was made
+By infamy a money-making trade!
+No costly vehicles with horses gay,
+In gilded trappings graced that ancient day;
+Pedestrianism was fashionable then,
+For boys were boys, as 'twas, and men were men.
+And girls were what they always were, the best
+Blossoms in the gardens of the blest!
+One steamer only cleft the Ottawa's spray,
+But did not, like the "Queen," come every day.
+No railroad engine snorted o'er the plain,
+Dragging along behind its ponderous train--
+No telegraphic line with speed of light
+Scattered intelligence with lightning flight;
+No gas-flame shed its artificial ray,
+Turning nocturnal darkness into day--
+The tallow candle blazed away supreme,
+And of the age of coal oil did not dream;
+Yet, 'twas "a gay old time," a happy time,
+And could I strike an upward note sublime,
+I'd strain my very heartstrings with the blast
+Of glory that I'd give the fine old past!
+But times are changed, and things are altered too,
+Fair civilization bursts upon our view;
+The old men of the old time have been laid
+In peace beneath the weeping willow's shade;
+The middle-aged are in the yellow leaf,
+Life's evening evanescent, sad and brief--
+The little children who flourished then
+Are now the mothers of our land, and men--
+The wilderness has vanished, the old trees
+Have disappeared before improvement's breeze;
+Commercial enterprise is busy now,
+The Ottawa's breast is cleft by many a prow,
+The roaring, rushing locomotives scour
+Along the track at forty miles an hour--
+The electric current cleaves the ambient air,
+Shooting the rays of thought round everywhere,
+Darting like sunbeams to the left and right,
+The swift-winged messengers of mental light!
+Disturbing 'neath the billows of the deep,
+The ocean monsters from their dreamy sleep;
+Cleaving resistless through the watery waste
+A miracle not dreamt of in the past,
+Annihilating time, and leaving space,
+Like Noah's dove, without a resting place!
+Thy fame, too, "old brown Bess," hath passed away,
+And rifled guns in war and peace hold sway,
+And Britain's wooden walls with all their glories,
+Are now but one of fame's immortal stories!
+But while I cast my wondering eyes around
+How grand the sight which doth their vision bound;
+A city stands in fair and youthful grace,
+Where once old Bytown had its primal place;
+And lo! in grandeur towering the skies
+In marbled splendor upon yonder hill,
+Our Legislative Temples proudly rise,
+A columned glory of the artist's skill!
+Thanks to our gracious Queen, who's royal hand
+Made Ottawa chief city of the land!
+Thanks to the men who fought through good and ill
+The fight of right, and bravely battled still;
+Who stood unshaken, firm in their adhesion,
+Till victory crowned Her Majesty's decision!
+God bless our New Dominion! may it be
+Granted a proud and happy destiny;
+Ontario and Quebec go hand in hand
+With Nova Scotia and New Brunswick's land;
+Those noble borderers of the rushing wave
+Grand, fitting birthplace of the free and brave!
+May Newfoundland, British Columbia true,
+Prince Edward Island join the Union, too,
+And the vast regions of the far North-West,
+Awake to form a nation great and blest!
+May all in common brotherhood unite
+To live in peace, or for our freedom fight
+Beneath the flag for which our fathers died,
+And left us as their legacy and pride!
+May heaven give strength and energy to those
+Who from political convulsion's throes--
+A proud example to the sons of earth,
+Brought union and an empire into birth!
+May wisdom guide them as they onward steer
+The vessel of the State in her career--
+Smooth be the wave and gentle be the gales
+That fill our ark of safety's well trim'd sails--
+Strong be the vision of the pilot, too,
+To keep the port of union full in view,
+Until the anchor's cast, the sails are furled,
+A spectacle of envy to the world!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections of Bytown and Its Old
+Inhabitants, by William Pittman Lett
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS OF BYTOWN ***
+
+***** This file should be named 14908.txt or 14908.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/4/9/0/14908/
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/14908.zip b/14908.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..197267c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/14908.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..521de41
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14908 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14908)