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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Pictures of Canadian Life, by J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+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: Pictures of Canadian Life
+ A Record of Actual Experiences
+
+
+Author: J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 13, 2012 [eBook #38858]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PICTURES OF CANADIAN LIFE***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1886 T. Fisher Unwin edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+ NOTE TO PAGE 56.
+
+Sir Charles Tupper tells me that I was totally misinformed. I am sorry
+to have been led astray, and have pleasure in making the correction,
+which was received, unfortunately, after the chapter had been worked off.
+
+ [Picture: Dr. Barnardo’s Distributing Home for Children, Peterborough,
+ Ontario]
+
+
+
+
+
+ PICTURES
+ OF
+ CANADIAN LIFE
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A Record of Actual Experiences
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BY
+ J. EWING RITCHIE
+
+ AUTHOR OF ‘EAST ANGLIA,’ ‘BRITISH SENATORS,’ ‘ON THE
+ TRACK OF THE PILGRIM FATHERS,’ ETC., ETC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _WITH TWELVE ILLUSTRATIONS_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ London
+ T. FISHER UNWIN
+ 26, PATERNOSTER SQUARE
+ 1886.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. Introductory.—Canadian Territory and 1
+ Population
+ II. Off With The Emigrants—The Voyage Out—The 16
+ ‘Sarnia’—The Cod-Fishery
+ III. Arrival at Quebec 33
+ IV. At Montreal, and on to Ottawa—Interviewing and 45
+ Interviewed
+ V. Toronto—The Town—The People—Canadian 74
+ Authors—The Leader of the Opposition
+ VI. Off to the North-West—Niagara—Lake 104
+ Superior—The Canadian Pacific Railway—At
+ Winnipeg
+ VII. Life on the Prairie 148
+ VIII. Amongst the Cow-Boys 174
+ IX. In the Rockies—Holt City—Life in the Camp—A 194
+ Rough Ride—The Kicking Horse Lake—British
+ Columbia
+ X. Dangers of the Rockies—Prairie Fires—The 225
+ Return—Port Arthur—Emigrants
+ XI. Back to England—Canadian Hospitality—The 245
+ ‘Assyrian Monarch’—Home
+ XII. Colonization in Canada 255
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ PAGE
+Dr. Barnardo’s Distributing Home for Children, _Frontispiece_
+Peterborough, Ontario
+Falls of Montmorenci—Quebec—Junction of the River 48
+Ottawa and St. Lawrence, Montreal
+King Street, Toronto 78
+Second Year on a Prairie Farm, Canadian North-West 134
+Calico Island, Saskatchewan River, Canadian 135
+North-West
+Hunting Scene on the Souris River 145
+Souris Valley, Manitoba 147
+Pioneer Store at Brandon in 1882 162
+Harvesting on the Bell Farm—Indian Head, N.W.T. 172
+Mount Stephen in the Rocky Mountains, On the Line 197
+of the Canadian Pacific Railway
+Thunder Bay, Lake Superior 242
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY.—CANADIAN TERRITORY AND POPULATION.
+
+Lunching one day in Toronto with one of the aldermen of that thriving
+city (I may as well frankly state that we had turtle-soup on the
+occasion), he remarked that he had been in London the previous summer,
+and that he was perfectly astonished at the idea Englishmen seemed to
+have about Canada. He was particularly indignant at the way in which it
+was coolly assumed that the Canadians were a barbarous people, planted in
+a wilderness, ignorant of civilization, deficient in manners and
+customs—a well-meaning people, of whom in the course of ages something
+might be made, but at present in a very nebulous and unsatisfactory
+state. It seems my worthy friend had gone to hear a popular Q.C.—a
+gentleman of Liberal proclivities, very anxious to write M.P. after his
+name—deliver a lecture to the young men of the Christian Association in
+Exeter Hall on Canada. Never was a man more mortified in all his life
+than was the alderman in question. All the time the lecture was being
+delivered, he said, he held down his head in shame. ‘I felt,’ said he,
+rising to a climax, ‘as if I must squirm!’ What ‘squirming’ implies the
+writer candidly admits that he has no idea. Of course, it means
+something very bad. All he can say is, that it is his hope and prayer
+that in the following pages he may set no Canadian squirming. He went
+out to see the nakedness, or the reverse, of the land, to ask the
+emigrants how they were getting on, to judge for himself whether it was
+worth any Englishman’s while to leave home and friends to cross the
+Atlantic and plant himself on the vast extent of prairie stretching
+between Winnipeg and the Rocky Mountains. What he heard and saw is
+contained in the following pages, originally published in the _Christian
+World_, and now reproduced as a small contribution to a question which
+rises in importance with the increase of population and the growing
+difficulty of getting a living at home.
+
+As a rule, the English know little more of Canada than that it belongs to
+us—that it is very cold there in winter and very hot in summer. I
+happened to be on board the _Worcester_ training-ship on the last
+occasion of the prizes being given away, and was not surprised to find
+that Canada was especially referred to as illustrating the defective
+geographical knowledge of the young cadets. In the _London Citizen_ a
+few weeks later there was still grosser display of ignorance on the part
+of a writer who had gone to Montreal to attend the meetings of the
+British Association there, and who complained bitterly of the lack of
+garden-parties and champagne lunches. This victim of misplaced
+confidence owned that he had to put up with tea and coffee and
+non-intoxicating beverages when he did so far condescend as to accept
+Canadian hospitality. Yet the writer of that letter was a barrister, at
+this very time a candidate for Parliament. Had he an atom of
+common-sense, he might have known—this distinguished barrister and
+ornament of the British Association for the Advancement of Science—that
+Canada is a young country; that its wealth is still undeveloped; that the
+greater part of it is prairie; that the settler—in his heroic efforts to
+subdue Nature, to make the wilderness to rejoice and blossom as the rose,
+to build up a grand nation in that quarter of the globe, to spread in a
+region larger than the United States the Anglo-Saxon laws and
+civilization and tongue—has to renounce luxury, to scorn delights, to
+live laborious days. Canada is not the place for members of the British
+Association who long for the flesh-pots of Egypt or the champagne-cup.
+In Canada one has to live simply and to work hard. He who does so work,
+though in England he may die a pauper, there becomes a man. Canada
+offers to all independence, a fertile soil, a bracing air. At present
+there is little chance of the majority of its people being enervated by
+luxury or demoralized by wealth.
+
+Canada is a country, however, with room and scope for millions who must
+starve and die in Europe. Its area is 3,470,392 square miles, and its
+most southern point reaches the 42nd parallel of latitude. It possesses
+thousands of square miles of the finest forests on the continent, widely
+spread coal fields, extensive and productive fisheries, and rivers and
+lakes of unequalled extent. The country is divided into eight provinces,
+as follows: Nova Scotia, containing 20,907 square miles; New Brunswick,
+27,174; Prince Edward Island, 2,133; Quebec, 188,688; Ontario, 101,733;
+Manitoba, 123,200; the North West, 2,665,252; British Columbia, 341,305.
+Newfoundland lies outside the Dominion, for reasons best known to itself.
+
+According to the census taken in 1881, the population at that time
+numbered 4,324,810, distributed as follows: Nova Scotia, 440,572; New
+Brunswick, 321,233; Prince Edward Island, 108,891; Quebec, 1,359,027;
+Ontario, 1,923,228; Manitoba, 65,954; the North West, 56,446; British
+Columbia, 49,459. These figures must be much added to if we would get an
+idea of the growth of population, especially in the North West, which has
+increased by leaps and bounds. Up to 1870 it was as it had been since
+the charter of Charles II.—the happy hunting-ground of the Hudson Bay
+Company. As late as 1870 it had no railway communication, no towns or
+villages, few post-offices, and no telegraph. There must be a million of
+people settled there by this time, and yet it is a wilderness almost
+untrod by man. The origins of the populations are returned as follows:
+891,248 English and Welsh; 957,408 Irish; 699,863 Scotch; 1,298,929
+French; 254,319 Germans. The balance is made up of Dutch, Scandinavians,
+and Italians. A large number of persons who were born in the United
+States are to be found in Canada—and why not? They have in Canada a
+government quite as free as in the United States, though the Canadians
+prefer to have a holiday on the Queen’s birthday rather than the 4th of
+July, and an English Viceroy—who at any rate is a gentleman—to an
+American President. Anywhere in Canada the Englishman is at home. The
+people have an English look. Directly you pass the border into the
+States you see the difference. There is an astonishing contrast between
+the healthy Canadian and the lean and yellow Yankee.
+
+Canadian history is one record of toil and struggle—of the advance of the
+whites, of the retreat of the native races. Foremost in suffering were
+the French. In 1608 the first permanent settlement in Canada was made by
+Champlain, who founded Quebec, and afterwards discovered the lake which
+still bears his name. It was he who taught the Iroquois to stand in awe
+of gunpowder; but, alas! familiarity bred contempt, and the Red Indian
+was more than once on the point of exterminating the white man. It was
+only by the intercession of the Saints that the feeble colony was
+preserved. At Montreal, for instance, the advanced guard of the
+settlements, some two hundred Iroquois fell upon twenty-six Frenchmen.
+The Christians were out-matched eight to one, but, says the Chronicle,
+‘the Queen of Heaven was on their side, and the Son of Mary refuses
+nothing to His holy Mother. Through her intercession the Iroquois shot
+so wildly, that at their first fire every bullet missed its mark, and
+they met with a bloody defeat.’ No wonder the French were animated with
+renewed zeal. Father Le Mercier writes: ‘On the day of Visitation of the
+Holy Virgin, the chief Aontarisati, so regretted by the Iroquois, was
+taken prisoner by our Indians, instructed by our fathers, and baptized;
+and on the same day, being put to death, I doubt not he thanked the
+Virgin for his misfortune and the blessing that followed, and he prayed
+to God for his countrymen.’
+
+It was no common faith that led the French monks to seek to make Canada
+theirs. Their sufferings from cold, from starvation, from the savages,
+from want of all the comforts of life, seem to have been as much as
+mortal men could bear. But they made many converts. On one occasion,
+when the French Chaumont had delivered an address, his Indian auditors
+declared that if he had spoken all day they should not have had enough of
+it. ‘The Dutch,’ said they, ‘have neither brains nor tongues; they never
+tell us about paradise or hell. On the contrary, they lead us into bad
+ways.’ Nothing could daunt the Jesuits—not the loss of all they had, nor
+protracted suffering, nor cruel death. ‘The blood of the martyrs is the
+seed of the Church,’ said one of them; ‘and if we die by the fires of the
+Iroquois, we shall have won eternal life by snatching souls from the
+fires of hell.’
+
+Let us listen to Chaumont again, as he stands before his savage
+hearers—he and his companions having first, with clasped hands, sung the
+‘Veni Creator’: ‘It is not trade that brings us here. Do you think that
+your beaver-skins can pay us for all our toil and dangers? Keep them, if
+you like; or, if any fall into our hands, we shall use them only for your
+service. We seek not the things that perish. It is for the faith that
+we have left our homes, to live in your hovels of bark and eat food which
+the beasts of our country would scarcely touch. We are the messengers
+whom God has sent to tell you that His Son became a man for the love of
+you; that this man, the Son of God, is the Prince and Master of men; that
+He has prepared in heaven eternal joys for those who obey Him, and
+kindled the fires of hell for those who will not receive His Word. If
+you reject it, whoever you are—Onondaga, Seneca, Mohawk, Cayuga, or
+Oneida—know that Jesus Christ, who inspires my heart and my voice, will
+one day plunge you into hell. Be not the authors of your own
+destruction. Accept the truth; listen to the voice of the Omnipotent!’
+
+Wonderful miracles sustained and renewed this ardent faith. In the
+autumn of 1657, there was a truce with the Iroquois, under cover of which
+three or four of them came to the Montreal settlement. Nicholas Godé and
+Jean Pière were on the roof of their house, laying thatch, when one of
+his visitors aimed his arquebuse at Saint Pière, and brought him to the
+ground like a wild turkey from a tree. The assassins, having cut off his
+head and carried it home to their village, were amazed to hear it speak
+to them in good Iroquois, scold them for their perfidy, and threaten them
+with the vengeance of heaven; and we are told they continued to hear its
+voice of admonition even after scalping it and throwing away the skull.
+
+During a great part of this period, the French population was less than
+three thousand. How was it they were not destroyed? Mr. Parkman tells
+us for two reasons. In the first place, the settlements were grouped
+around three fortified posts—Quebec, Three Rivers, and Montreal—which, in
+time of danger, gave an asylum to the fugitive inhabitants; and secondly,
+their assailants were distracted by other wars. It was their aim to
+balance the rival settlements of the Hudson and the St. Lawrence. It was
+well for Canada when France lost hold of her. In 1666, Louis the Great
+handed her over, bound hand and foot, to a company of merchants—the
+Company of the West, as it was called. As, according to the edict, the
+chief object in view was the glory of God, the Company was required to
+supply its possessions with a sufficient number of priests, and
+diligently exclude all teachers of false doctrine. It was empowered to
+build forts and war-ships, cast cannon, wage war, make peace, establish
+courts, appoint judges, and otherwise to act as sovereign within its own
+dominions. A monopoly of trade was granted it for forty years, and
+Canada was the chief sufferer; but at any rate the peopling of Canada was
+due to the king. Colbert did the work and the king paid for it.
+Protestants were objected to. Girls, to be wives to the emigrants, were
+sent out from Dieppe and Rochelle. In time, girls of indifferent virtue,
+under the care of duennas, emigrated to meet the growing demand for
+wives. ‘I am told,’ writes La Houtan, ‘that the plumpest were taken
+first, because it was thought, being less active, they were more likely
+to keep at home, and that they could resist the winter cold still
+better.’ Further, such was the paternal care of the king for Canada,
+that he attempted to found a colonial noblesse, and offered bounties for
+children. The noblesse were a doubtful boon: industrious peasants were
+much more to be desired. Leading lazy lives, many of the gentilhommes
+soon drifted into the direst poverty. The Canadians had one
+advantage—their morals were well looked after by the priests, who kindly
+took charge of their education as well. Compared with the New England
+man, the habitant had very much the advantage. He was a skilful
+woodsman, able to steer his canoe, a soldier and a hunter. Nevertheless,
+when Wolfe’s army had scaled the heights of Abraham, and won Canada for
+the British, it was the beginning of a new life.
+
+‘England,’ writes Mr. Parkman, ‘imposed by the sword on reluctant Canada
+the boon of rational and ordered liberty. A happier calamity never
+befell a people than the conquest of Canada by the British arms.’ But it
+was not till the American Revolution had broken out, and the royalists
+left the States to found in Canada a strong colony attached to the
+British Crown, that Canada may be really said to have been a part and
+parcel of the Empire, bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh. It was
+necessary to move many of the French Canadians elsewhere; and those who
+remained, still for long looked with an unfriendly eye on England and her
+rule.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+OFF WITH THE EMIGRANTS—THE VOYAGE OUT—THE ‘SARNIA’ THE COD-FISHERY.
+
+One Wednesday at the end of April, last year, St. Pancras Railway Station
+was the scene of a display not often matched even in these demonstrative
+days. Mr. J. J. Jones, of the Samaritan Mission, had arranged to take
+out a party of five hundred emigrants to Canada—the first party of the
+season. The event seemed to create no little excitement in philanthropic
+circles. The Lord Mayor had promised to be there, but he was detained in
+the City, possibly in defence of the ancient Corporation of which he has
+become the champion; but he sent a cordial letter, as did many other
+distinguished people, to express sympathy and goodwill.
+
+In the absence of the Lord Mayor, the Earl of Shaftesbury, after the
+emigrants had been got together in a waiting-room, presided at a farewell
+meeting, which ought to have sent the emigrants in the best of spirits to
+the new homes they expect to find on the other side of the Atlantic.
+They would, said his lordship, still be under the reign of our Queen.
+They would confer a great blessing on the country whither they were
+going, and they would show what they could do as good citizens in
+subduing and replenishing the earth, and in spreading over the world the
+Anglo-Saxon race. He hoped that the young men present would come back to
+England for wives, and ended with his best wishes for all in the way of a
+safe voyage and temporal and spiritual good.
+
+The Earl of Carnarvon, who next spoke, had this advantage over the noble
+chairman, in that he had made a trip to Canada himself. The emigrants,
+he said, would encounter difficulties. They were not going to a
+paradise, but they would find that they had a better chance of getting a
+living in the New World; especially if they avoided bad company and the
+crowded towns, and got into the country, and underwent a certain
+preparatory training. As to Canada, it was a country in which a man
+would succeed who had health and strength and industry, and a good head
+and a good heart, and the fear of God to teach him that honesty was the
+best policy.
+
+Sir Henry Tyler, M.P., the chairman of the Grand Trunk Railway, followed
+in a similar strain. The people were not crowded up in Canada as they
+were here. It was a grand country for honest, hard-working men and
+well-behaved women; but he recommended them at first to seek good honest
+people to work with, rather than high wages. Turning to the young women,
+he assured them they would find good husbands in Canada—a remark which
+seemed to give them much satisfaction; and he hoped that they would have
+large families when they married, as large families were a blessing out
+there.
+
+Then came forward Mr. Clare Sewell Read, M.P., who, as a countryman, said
+he saw some country bumpkins in the party, and he could assure them, as
+he had been in Canada, its soil was unrivalled for fertility.
+
+Lord Napier of Magdala followed, and then came the Hon. Donald A. Smith,
+one of the directors of the Canadian Pacific Railway, to tell how people
+prospered in Canada who behaved well and worked hard. The Rev. Oswald
+Dykes and the Rev. Burman Cassin also addressed the audience; and there
+were others, such as the Earl of Aberdeen, the Rev. W. Tyler, and the
+Rev. Styleman Herring, who were ready to say a few words had time
+permitted; but the train had to be packed up with passengers and luggage,
+and there was no time to spare.
+
+In a few minutes they were off, amidst tears and cheers, while Mr. Jones
+and I, with Mr. Alexander Begg, of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and the
+remainder of the emigrants, followed. A little after five we arrived at
+Liverpool, and then Mr. Jones had to work like a horse.
+
+Meanwhile, I, with a couple of artistic friends, who are to sketch us,
+all took our ease in our inn, from which comfortable quarters I felt
+sadly indisposed to stir; but I had to see the emigrants off, and my
+heart sank into my shoes as, looking at the hundreds swarming the
+platform, and the pyramids of luggage, and then at the _Sarnia_ moored in
+mid-stream, the thought suggested itself, How on earth can they all be
+stowed away?—a query which, however, was soon settled, as, at a later
+hour, I found myself on board the _Sarnia_, leaving smoky Liverpool
+behind, and with the ship’s head turned to the sunset ‘and the baths of
+all the Western stars.’
+
+The _Sarnia_, it may be as well to inform my readers, is one of the
+screw-steamers running between Quebec and Liverpool, by the Dominion
+Line, which line commenced its gay career in 1870. I ought to be very
+happy on board, since I learn, from the attentive perusal of documents
+lying in the cabin, that, owing to the lines in the model, the rolling of
+the ship is to a great extent, not destroyed, but reduced, making a
+considerable decrease in sea-sickness, and that in the book of rules and
+regulations compiled for the guidance of the Dominion Line officers, they
+must run no risk which might by any possibility result in accident to the
+ship, and that they are further requested to bear in mind that the safety
+of the lives and property entrusted to their care is the ruling principle
+that should govern them in the management of their ships. I almost fancy
+I must have thrown away my money in insuring my life against loss and my
+person against accidents. What have I to fear, if the rules and
+regulations of the company be observed? I am very glad, as it is, I did
+not insure for a larger sum, though the agent, who, of course, had his
+eye on the extra commission, was kind enough to suggest it were well to
+insure for the larger sum, _in case the ship went down_!—a thing not to
+be dreamed of.
+
+I have consulted that oracle of our fathers—Francis Moore. In his ‘Vox
+Stellarum’ he tells me, to my comfort and satisfaction, that after the
+25th of April the winds will be light. Francis Moore, you may tell me,
+is not weatherwise. Are the scientific meteorologists, with their
+forecasts, wiser? It is hard to say.
+
+It is a comfort to think that the emigrants are well off for literature.
+The _Graphic_ company—whose last dividend, I learn, was a good deal over
+a hundred per cent.—have sent a tremendous packet of _Graphics_. The
+Bible Society sent Testaments. The Religious Tract Society have placed
+at Mr. Jones’s disposal tracts and books. The Rev. Newman Hall has sent
+250 books, while a goodly packet of the ‘Family Circle Edition’ of the
+_Christian World_ will, I dare say, be in much request—quite as much as
+the five hundred sheets of hymns which the Earl of Aberdeen brought with
+him on Wednesday to St. Pancras as his contribution to the common stock.
+Yes, indeed, as my Welsh friends would say, the lines for us are cast in
+pleasant places, and we have a goodly heritage. It is to be hoped it may
+be so.
+
+I never saw a more tidy lot of emigrants—some of them evidently the right
+class to get on. I had an amusing chat with one, who told me what
+inquiries he had made before he would entrust Mr. J. J. Jones with ‘Cæsar
+and his fortunes.’ If the emigrants are all like him, the Yankees, if
+there be such in Canada, will find it rather difficult to take them in.
+We swarm with children and babies. I fear some of us will wish, before
+we reach the St. Lawrence, that good King Herod was on board. Of course,
+these are not my sentiments. I suppose most of us were babies once—there
+is every reason to believe that I was; nevertheless, the most gushing
+mother will admit that there are times when even the sweetest of babes
+ceases to charm. My companions in the smoking-room the first night were,
+however, by no means babes. I had not been there half-an-hour before I
+was offered 34,000 acres of land—abounding with fish and game, and all
+that the carnal heart could desire—a decided bargain. I did not close
+with the offer. Perhaps I ought to have done so. But such earthly
+grandeur is beyond my dreams.
+
+Nothing can be drearier or more monotonous than a trip to Canada in the
+early season of the year. After you leave Ireland, you see no
+ships—nothing but the sea, grey and dull as the heaven above. Now and
+then a whale comes up to blow, and that is all; and when the wind blows
+hard, you get nothing but big, lumpy waves, which set the ship rolling,
+and add only to the discomforts. And then you are on the Newfoundland
+banks, where you may spend dull days and duller nights—now going at
+half-speed, now stopping altogether, while the fog-horn blows dismally
+every few minutes, and whence you can see scarcely the length of the ship
+ahead.
+
+Like Oscar Wilde, I own that I am very much disappointed with the
+Atlantic. The icebergs are monotonous—when you have seen one, that is
+enough. In the saloon, we are a sad, dull party; even in the
+smoking-room, one can scarcely get up a decent laugh. I pity the poor
+emigrants in the steerage, whom a clever young Irish journalist on board,
+with the instinct of his race, has failed to excite into a proper state
+of indignation on account of the discomforts of the voyage, and the
+hardness of the potatoes—always a matter of complaint in all the ships
+that I have ever been on board of.
+
+The raw, cold, damp fog has taken all the starch out of the steerage
+passengers, always the first to grumble on sea, as they are on shore; yet
+on one occasion they did go so far as to send a deputation to the
+captain, and what, think you, was their grievance?—that they had no sauce
+to their fish!—a grievance of little account, when one thinks of the
+sauce we had served up in the saloon.
+
+As a rule, the steerage passengers are a difficult body to deal with;
+they seem so helpless, and require so much looking after. Mr. Jones has
+enough to do to look after his. If they lose anything, however paltry,
+he is appealed to. If they require anything not provided in the bill of
+fare, he is sent for. It is very clear to me that his party have great
+advantages. He has taken down all their occupations, and when we arrive
+at Quebec they will all, if possible, be provided with employment, and
+will be at once forwarded to their destination, without loss of time or
+expenditure of cash. Many of them are also assisted by his Society with
+small sums of money, and in every way they are helped as few other
+emigrants are.
+
+We have on board a party of fifty-one lads, sent out by Dr. Bowman
+Stephenson, who has a depôt somewhere near Hamilton, and a helper is on
+board to take care of them. Some of them are of very juvenile years,
+and, it is to be believed, in Canada will find a far more favourable lot
+than they ever could in the streets and slums of the East End.
+
+‘What are you going to do?’ said I to one of them the other morning.
+
+‘Please, sir, I am going to be adopted,’ was the reply; and adopted he
+will be by some worthy couple who, having no children of their own, are
+ready to give the little outcast a home such as he never could have found
+in the old country.
+
+We have also an agent on board, who, for a certain sum, agrees to take
+young fellows out and to find them suitable situations. That is a course
+I should not recommend. A young fellow had far better keep that extra
+cash in his pocket, get out as far into the North-west as he can, there
+hire himself to some settler, who at this time of year is sure to be in
+need of his services, and then in a year or two he will be able to get a
+grant of land on his own account, on which, after three years of real
+hard work, he will be able to live in peace and comfort, and to achieve
+an independence of which he has no chance on our side of the Atlantic.
+
+It quite grieves me to think of the poor farmers I have known at home,
+wasting their time and capital and strength in a hopeless effort to make
+both ends meet, who might be doing well out here, with the certainty that
+their families will be left in a comfortable position as far as this
+world’s goods are concerned. One thing, however, I must strongly impress
+upon the emigrant, and that is, the necessity of coming out in the
+spring.
+
+It is madness to cross the Atlantic in the autumn; when he lands at
+Quebec, he will find nothing to do, and must live on his capital, or
+starve till next spring; and if I might recommend a ship, it certainly
+would be the _Sarnia_, on which I now write. She is slow but sure. Her
+commander, Captain Gibson, is all that a captain should be—not a
+brilliant conversationalist, not one of those men who set the table in a
+roar; but cautious, skilful, fully alive to the responsibilities of his
+position and the dangers of his calling. As to the dangers, it is
+impossible to exaggerate them. There are more than a thousand of us on
+board, and were anything to happen, not more than three hundred of us
+could, I should think, be crowded into the boats, provided that the sea
+were quite calm, and that we had plenty of time to leave the ship; and in
+a panic and in bad weather, it is clear that even such boats as the
+_Sarnia_ is supplied with would be of little avail. Safety seems to me a
+mere matter of chance. You hit on an iceberg, and down goes the ship
+with all on board, leaving no record behind.
+
+As a matter of fact, I believe these big steamers often, on a dark night,
+run down the vessels engaged in fishing off the Newfoundland banks. When
+we passed, the season had scarcely commenced. It is in May, towards the
+end of the month, that the fishing commences. The chief fishermen are
+the French, who mostly hail from St. Malo, and who have in the Gulf of
+Newfoundland two small islands, which they use for fish-curing. You get
+an idea of the extent of these fisheries, when I tell you that the total
+value of them amounts to three millions a year, and that the supply seems
+inexhaustible. Romanists and High Churchmen who indulge in salt cod in
+Lent have little cause to fear that that aid to true religion will
+cease—at any rate, in our time. The fishing season lasts until November,
+when the shoals pass on to their winter quarters in deeper waters.
+
+The delicate and the consumptive have many reasons for thankfulness in
+connection with this fishery. What they would do without the cod-liver
+oil, which has saved and lengthened many a valuable life, it were hard to
+say. It is to England that almost all the cod-liver oil comes. The cod
+roe, pickled and barrelled, is exported almost entirely to France, where
+it is in great demand, as ground-bait for the sardine fishery. How great
+that demand is, the reader will at once perceive when I tell him that no
+fewer than 13,000 boats on the coast of Brittany are engaged in the
+sardine fishery alone.
+
+I ought to say that these Quebec steamers are, as regards saloon
+accommodation, and the class of people you meet with on board, not quite
+on a par with those which ply between Liverpool and New York. Perhaps
+the latter are fitted up almost too splendidly. ‘When the stormy winds
+do blow’—when everyone is ill—when you are in that happy state of mind
+when man delights you not, or woman either—the gilded saloons, the velvet
+cushions, the plate glass and ornamented panels, seem quite out of place;
+to say nothing of the luxurious dinners, which not everyone is able to
+enjoy. Such things are better fitted for summer seas and summer skies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+ARRIVAL AT QUEBEC.
+
+Once more I am on _terra firma_, and on Canadian soil, where I breathe a
+balmier air and rejoice in a clearer atmosphere than you in England can
+have any idea of. After all, we were in twenty-four hours before the
+mail steamer, the _Sarmatian_, which you must own is a feather in the cap
+of the _Sarnia_. One hears much of the St. Lawrence, but it is hard to
+exaggerate its beauties. When you are fairly in it, after having escaped
+the fog of the Newfoundland Banks and the icebergs of the Gulf, on you
+sail all day and night amidst islands, and past mountains, their tops
+covered with snow, stretching far away into the interior, guarding lands
+yet waiting to be tilled, and primeval forests yet ignorant of the
+woodcutter’s axe. A hardy people, mostly of French extraction, inhabit
+that part of the province of Quebec; but as you reach nearer to the
+capital, the land becomes flatter, and the signs of human settlement more
+frequent in the shape of wooden houses, each with its plot of ground,
+where the rustics carry on the daily work of the farm, or in the shape of
+villages, inhabited by ship-wrecked fishermen, who have intermarried with
+the French, and whose children, if they bear the commonest of English
+names, are at the same time utterly ignorant, not only of the tongue that
+Shakespeare spake, but of the faith and morals Milton held. They are a
+lazy people, living chiefly on the harvest of the sea, and doing little
+when that harvest is over. Men are wanted to cut down timber, and they
+come in gangs of two or three hundred, and spend a week in riotous
+debauchery before they can be got to work. Few English settlers go into
+that region, yet they can easily make a living there if they are inclined
+to rough it in the bush, and are not afraid of coarse living and hard
+work. Villages, churches, hotels, are all built of wood on a stone
+foundation, and, painted as the houses are, they remind one not a little
+of Zaandam, and the little wooden cottages you may see in that old
+quarter of the world. But the original colonists are a poor people,
+living frugally and with little desire for the comforts and luxuries of
+life. It is the same in Quebec, where the poor all talk French, and
+where the Protestants are in a very small minority. In Quebec there is
+little to attract the stranger. It looks its best at it stands on its
+picturesque rock rising out of the St. Lawrence. You see the French
+University, founded as far back as 1663 by that De Laval whose name is so
+deeply interwoven with the French history of the province. It is thus
+that his contemporaries describe him. ‘He began,’ writes Mother
+Juchiereau de Saint Denis, Superior of the Hôtel Dieu, ‘in his tenderest
+years the study of perfection, and we have reason to believe he reached
+it, since every virtue which St. Paul demands in a bishop was seen and
+admired in him.’ Mother Marie, Superior of the Ursulines, wrote: ‘I will
+not say that he is a saint, but I may say with truth that he lives like a
+saint and an apostle. We have ample evidence of the austerity of his
+life. His servant, a lay-brother, testified after his death that he
+slept on a hard bed, and would not suffer it to be changed, even when it
+became full of fleas. So great was his charity that he gave fifteen
+hundred or two thousand francs to the poor every year.’ ‘I have seen
+him,’ writes Houssart, ‘keep cooked meat five or six, seven or eight
+days, in the heat of summer, and when it was all mouldy and wormy, he
+washed it in warm water, and ate it, and told me it was very good. I
+determined to keep everything I could that had belonged to his holy
+person, and after his death to soak bits of linen in his blood when his
+body was opened, and take a few bones and cartilages from his breast, cut
+off his hair, and keep his clothes and such things to serve as most
+precious relics.’
+
+Then you see the spire of the English Cathedral, a very plain building,
+and higher up still, the modern Parliament House, but recently erected.
+Further on, you see the Dufferin Promenade, which is a lasting record to
+the most popular of English Governors-General; and higher up still is the
+citadel, and beyond that are the plains of Abraham, where Wolfe fell in
+the hour of victory.
+
+The Presbyterians and Wesleyans have good congregations, but the Baptists
+are not strong, in spite of the wonderful vitality of the aged pastor,
+Mr. Marsh, who, octogenarian as he is, seemed much more able to climb the
+heights than the writer, who perhaps was a little out of condition on
+account of the laziness of sea life. One of the buildings with which I
+was most pleased was that of the Young Men’s Christian Association (built
+partly by the munificence of Mr. George Williams, of London, the founder
+of the Young Men’s Christian Associations all the world over), which is
+quite a credit to the place, and from the top of which you get a
+magnificent view of the quaint old city, with its gates and narrow
+streets, and the pleasant suburbs, and the far-away plains and hills,
+amongst which the St. Lawrence or the river Charles, which runs into it
+here, urges on its wild career.
+
+‘In a city where we have to contend,’ says the last Report of the
+Association, ‘against great disadvantages, where the Protestant
+population seems to be gradually diminishing, and the young men seeking
+other fields of enterprise, it is a matter of sincere thankfulness that
+we have not to record a retrograde movement.’ It was with regret that I
+saw that the Independent church, which is a fine one, has had to close
+its doors. Another disadvantage resulting from this decay of
+Protestantism is, that the Protestants have to bear more than their fair
+share of taxation, as the Roman Catholic churches and convents and
+nunneries, which are wealthy, are exempt from taxation altogether. I
+fancy, also, that the men employed at the extensive wharves are doing all
+they can to drive the trade away, as they impose such regulations as to
+the number of men to be employed in loading or unloading ships, that now
+many of them load lower down the river. However, the place is busy
+enough, especially on the other side of the river, where the steamers
+land their passengers, and where Miss Richardson has established a
+comfortable home for girls and young women—which I inspected—free of
+expense, as they arrive from England, and seeks to plant them out where
+their services may be required.
+
+ [Picture: Falls of Montmorenci, Quebec]
+
+One of our latest lady writers is very enthusiastic on the subject of
+Quebec. I am sorry to say I cannot share in that enthusiasm, and I was
+by no means disconsolate that I could not stay to attend a convivial
+meeting to which I was invited by a French colonist, one of our
+fellow-passengers. I was soon tired of its dusty and narrows streets,
+and its pavements all made of boards, and its priests and nuns. There
+are no shops to look at worth speaking of, and the idea of riding in one
+of the _caleches_ was quite out of the question. Nothing more rickety in
+the shape of a riding machine was ever invented. It seemed to me that
+they were sure to turn over as soon as you turned the corner. The
+_caleche_ is simply a little sledge on wheels. As a sledge I fancy it is
+delightful, though by no means up to the sledges I have driven on the
+Elbe in hard winters in days long long departed; but as a carriage, drawn
+by a broken-down horse, with a driver almost as wild as the original
+Indian, the _caleche_, I own, finds little favour in my eyes. Up the
+town there does not seem much life. There is plenty of it, however, in
+the shipping district, where a great deal of building is going on.
+
+Of one thing I must complain in connection with emigration, and that is
+the pity the emigrants land at Quebec at all. The steamers all go up to
+Montreal after they have shot down their helpless crowd of emigrants on
+the wharf, where they have to spend a dreary day waiting to get their
+luggage. How much more pleasant it would be to take them right on to
+Montreal, which, at any rate, is the destination of ninety-nine out of a
+hundred at the very least. As it is, they are taken on by a special
+train, which starts no one knows when, and which arrives at Montreal at
+what hour it suits the railway authorities. In that respect, it seems to
+me, there is room for great improvement; but on this head I speak
+diffidently, as, perhaps, the steamship owners and the railway companies
+know their own business better than I do. The trip is a picturesque one,
+and can be enjoyed in these short nights better on the deck of a steamer
+than in a railway-car. [I am glad to hear since writing the above that
+this state of things will not further exist, and that every arrangement
+is now being made by the Canadian Pacific Railway authorities for the
+speedy transfer from the steamer to the train.] The more I see of
+matters, the clearer it seems to me that large parties of emigrants
+should not be sent out by themselves, but that they should be under the
+care of some one who knows the country and the railway officials.
+
+I am sorry to say, as regards some of the better class of emigrants, the
+long delay at Quebec gave them an opportunity of getting drunk, of which
+they seemed gladly to have availed themselves. The future of some of
+these young fellows it is not difficult to predict. In a little while
+they will have exhausted their resources, and will return home disgusted
+with Canada, and swearing that it is impossible to get a living there.
+There was no need for them to go to an hotel at all. In the yard there
+was a capital shed fitted up for refreshments. I had there a plate of
+good ham, bread-and-butter and jam, and as much good tea as I wanted—all
+for a shilling. It was a boon indeed to the emigrants we had landed from
+the _Sarnia_ to find such a place at their disposal.
+
+As to myself, I need not assure you I was glad enough to find myself in a
+Pullman car, bound for Montreal. I shed no tears as we left Quebec far
+behind, and glided on under a cloudless, moonlit sky, serenaded by those
+Canadian nightingales, the frogs. At first I felt a little difficulty in
+retiring to rest. As a modest man, I was inclined to object to the
+presence of so many ladies, although we had been on the best of terms
+during our voyage out. It is true that they had their husbands with
+them, but nevertheless I felt uncomfortable, and vowed I would retreat to
+the smoking-room. However, I was over-persuaded, and lay down with the
+rest; though more than once that eventful night I was awoke by awful
+sounds, reminding me rather of the hoarse roar of the Atlantic in a storm
+than of the peaceful slumbers of a Pullman car.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+AT MONTREAL, AND ON TO OTTAWA—INTERVIEWING AND INTERVIEWED.
+
+One discovery I have made since I have been here is that Canada has its
+clouded skies and its rainy days, and that a Canadian spring may be quite
+as ungenial as an English one. Yet it is, I still see, the country for a
+working man. And I write this in full knowledge of the fact that here at
+Montreal the charitable, on whom the poor depend—for there is no poor-law
+in this country, and let us hope, seeing what mischief has been done by
+poor-laws, there may never be one—have been sorely exercised this winter
+how to feed the hungry, and to clothe the naked, and to find the outcast
+a home. But, mind you, I only recommend the place for the poor
+agricultural labourer or artisan; and already I find the larger portion
+of such who have come out with me are in full work, and are thankful that
+they have come, but they had to take anything that was offered. It is
+clear this is not the country for clerks and shop-lads, and the secretary
+of the Young Men’s Christian Association—which I find here to be a
+flourishing institution—writes:
+
+‘Young men are coming by each steamer. Many of them are introduced to us
+with excellent recommendations, and have occupied good positions in
+England. Some have left their situations on the representation of
+railway and steamboat agents as to the opportunities in this country. We
+find it absolutely impossible to secure employment for them in many
+cases, business in every department has been so dull. Almost all the
+houses have been employing hands that they could dispense with. Reports
+from the West show the market glutted as bad as in Montreal.’ And I fear
+things have not improved since.
+
+It is cruel to get such young men out of England. They are worse off
+here than they would be at home. It is curious to note, in connection
+with emigration, the evident desire of the educated mechanic to keep his
+rivals out. ‘By all means bid them stop at home,’ he cries, ‘or wages
+will be lower in the colonies.’ Already I have been interviewed by a
+working-class official here, and that is his cry. And I give it for what
+it may be worth, merely remarking that such illustrations as he gave in
+support of his views turned out to be the merest moonshine.
+
+ [Picture: Junction of the River Ottawa and St. Lawrence, Montreal]
+
+Now let me speak of Montreal, which I entered with pleasure, and leave
+with regret. It is the chief city of Canada, and is built on the
+northern bank of the St. Lawrence, where the muddy Ottawa, after a course
+of 600 miles, debouches into it. You arrive by a grand railway bridge,
+which is one of the wonders of this part of the world. The population is
+nearly 200,000, of which two-thirds are French or Irish, and Roman
+Catholic. It abounds with every sign of prosperity, and, as a city,
+would be a credit to the old country. The river front is lined with
+steamers loading for England. The principal thoroughfares contain lofty
+buildings, and shops as spacious as any of our best, whilst its hotels
+altogether throw ours into the shade; and then, in the suburbs the
+merchants live in palaces, whilst handsome churches attest the wealth, if
+not the piety, of all classes of the population. I fear Mammon worship
+is the prevailing form of idolatry, yet I cannot shut my eyes to the fact
+that the early settlement of the place was the result of religious
+enthusiasm, and that it was an attempt to found in America a veritable
+kingdom of God as understood by the Roman Catholics; but all that is
+past, and the chief topics of interest are the prices of pork, or the
+state of the market as regards butter and cheese. Let me remind you that
+such is the goodness of the cheese of Canada, all made in factories, that
+nearly as much cheese finds its way into the English market from Montreal
+as from New York.
+
+One thing especially strikes me, and that is the muscular character of
+the young men. Montreal is a great place for athletes. Montreal has
+hundreds of such, as it is not only a centre of commerce, but the most
+important manufacturing city in the Dominion—3,000 hands are employed in
+the manufacture of boots and shoes. Then there are here the largest
+sugar refineries and cotton mills and silk and cloth factories in Canada,
+and the result is that, as these factories are nursed by Protection, the
+towns are unnaturally crowded, and the people all over the country have
+to pay high prices for inferior articles, and the Canadians, who ought to
+be making cheese and butter, and growing corn for the artisans of
+Lancashire, are doing all they can to reduce their best and most natural
+customers to a state of starvation. ‘It is a shame,’ said a Canadian
+manufacturer to me, only in language a little more emphatic, ‘that
+England allows any of her colonies to put prohibitory duties on British
+products.’ And I quite agree with my friend that it is a shame.
+However, as long as the present Canadian Government are in power, there
+is no chance of Free Trade. It was the Protection cry that placed the
+Conservatives in power. With so many French as there are in Canada,
+vainly dreaming of a restoration of French rule, it is idle to talk of
+the interests of the mother country. Nor does Great Britain deserve very
+well of the Canadians. Up to almost the present time it has held them to
+be of little account, and, as we all know, it is not so very long since
+it suffered Brother Jonathan to annex that part of Maine in which
+Portland is situated, and thus to deprive Canada of its only winter
+harbour.
+
+For one thing Montreal is to be highly commended, and that is on account
+of its hotels. The Windsor Hotel, in Dominion Square, is one of the
+finest hotels in America, and as you enter you are quite bewildered at
+the magnificence of the entrance-hall. A curious thing happened to me
+there. Mr. Hoyle and Mr. Barker, of the U.K. Alliance, had come there
+after a pilgrimage in the States, and it was determined to give them a
+reception. I had a ticket, and went for about an hour, chatting
+pleasantly with readers, who had known me by repute, and were glad to
+shake hands with me. Imagine my horror when, in the next morning’s
+paper, I read that the reception had been got up by Temperance friends
+for me, as well as Messrs. Hoyle and Barker, and that my humble name
+figured first on the list. Perhaps this was meant as a consolation to
+me. I had been interviewed on the previous day, and the papers had
+spoken of me in such complimentary terms that I felt almost a lion.
+
+Alas! in America interviewing is quite a common-place affair, and it
+gives no _éclat_ to be interviewed. People sat smoking in the hall as I
+passed, utterly unconscious of the fact. Yet the reporters did their
+best. One of them called after I was gone to bed. He said he was not
+going to be scooped out by the other fellow, whatever that may mean.
+Virtue in his case was not rewarded. I kept to my bed, and left the
+enterprising reporter to do the best he could.
+
+I ought to say a word of the hotel at which I stopped—the Lawrence Hall,
+in James’s Street—which I strongly recommend to all, especially to such
+of my friends as may be contemplating a visit to Montreal. The bedrooms
+are beautifully clean, the cooking is excellent, and the service is
+admirable. It enjoys a tremendous amount of support. I was there just
+forty-eight hours, and I counted as many as two hundred names of arrivals
+after me, and yet, in spite of the crowd, there was ample accommodation
+for all, and I and my friends dined as comfortably and quietly as if we
+had been at home. The proprietor, Mr. Hogan, is a gentleman with whom it
+is a pleasure to converse. Nor are his charges high.
+
+It is a sight to sit in the hall and watch the ever-shifting crowd, or to
+stray into the shaving apartment, where a dozen barbers are always hard
+at work. I own I became a victim, and paid a shilling for a performance
+which in London only costs me sixpence; but in London I simply have my
+hair cut, here I was under the care of a ‘professional artist.’ I quote
+his card: ‘Physiognomical hairdresser, facial operator, cranium
+manipulator, and capillary abridger.’ I could not think of offering so
+distinguished a professor less than a shilling. But the fact is, you
+can’t travel cheaply either in Canada or the United States.
+
+It goes sadly against the grain to pay fivepence for having one’s boots
+blacked, and the way in which your change is doled out to you is not
+pleasant, and adds materially to the difficulties of the situation. For
+instance, I had a certain American coin the other day pressed into my
+reluctant hands on the express understanding that it was to go for ten
+cents. I paid it to a ferryman, who said it was only worth eight, and
+then, on that supposition, he managed to cheat me; and I had to appeal to
+a friend of mine, who told me that I had not the right change, before I
+could get the man to give me my due; directly, however, the mistake was
+pointed out he rectified it, thus acknowledging, in the most barefaced
+manner, his attempt to cheat; and the beauty of it was, I was with a
+great man of the place, who witnessed the whole transaction, and never
+said a word, apparently looking upon it as a matter of course.
+
+I fear there is a good deal of villainy in the world, and that it is not
+confined to America. Travellers are bound to be victimised, and the best
+thing you can do is to laugh. I own I did so at Liverpool the other day,
+as I was waiting for the tugboat to take me off to the _Sarnia_. I knew
+that I had not made a mistake, I knew that the tug was sure to come; yet
+four big hulking fellows with brazen faces would have made me believe
+that I was too late for the tug, and that my only chance of getting on
+board was for me to let them row me out. In that case the attempt was
+the more rascally, as from a small row-boat I could never have boarded
+the _Sarnia_ had I tried. Yet there they stood—sullen and expectant—for
+a quarter of an hour, taking me, possibly, for a bigger fool even than I
+look.
+
+‘It is a pity,’ said a Canadian lady to me, ‘that Queen Victoria’—for
+whom all Canada prays that long may she reign over us, happy and
+glorious—‘fixed upon Ottawa as the site of the Government.’
+
+I am very much inclined to a similar feeling. At Montreal the change of
+water affected me very disagreeably. At Ottawa I was completely floored.
+It is a curious fact that almost everyone who goes to Ottawa is taken
+ill. I was complaining of my first terrible night to Sir Leonard Tilley,
+the Finance Minister, and he said that when he first came to Ottawa it
+was the same with him.
+
+A lady told me that Lady Tupper, who has just left the Colony for
+England, where, it is said, her lord and master hopes to find a seat in
+the Imperial Parliament—a consummation devoutly to be wished, as to my
+mind it is clear that all our colonies should have representatives in
+Parliament—made a similar complaint as to the effect of the place on her
+children, and I have it on the best authority that scarcely a session
+passes but an M.P. pays the penalty of a residence in Ottawa.
+
+In my case I was preserved, as the man in the ‘Arabian Nights’ says, for
+the greater misfortunes yet to befall me by the use of Dr. Browne’s
+far-famed ‘Chlorodyne’—an indispensable requisite, I am bound to say,
+when an emigrant takes his trial trip to Canada. I know not who is the
+inventor—I believe it is what we call a patent medicine—that is, a
+medicine not sanctioned by the faculty—but, as has been observed of the
+Pickwick pen, it is indeed a boon and a blessing to men. I used
+‘Chlorodyne,’ and was soon all right. Sir Leonard Tilley told me he did
+the same, and no one should go to Ottawa without having a small bottle of
+it in his carpet-bag.
+
+Yet Ottawa is not without a certain freshness of beauty that one
+associates _primâ facie_ with perfect health. The stately Government
+buildings, all of grey stone, are placed on a hill, whence you have a
+peerless view of river and country and distant hill, and far away forests
+all around. A more picturesque site it would be assuredly most difficult
+to find. As to the town itself, it is a curious compound—almost Irish in
+that respect—of splendour and meanness. There are magnificent shops—and
+then you come to wooden shanties, which in such a city ought long ere
+this to have been improved off the face of the earth. If on a rainy day,
+unless very careful, you attempt to cross the streets, you are in danger
+of sticking in the mud, which no one seems to ever think of removing, and
+in many parts there are disgraceful holes in the plank pavement on which
+you walk, which are dangerous, especially to the aged and infirm.
+
+In Ottawa the contrasts are more violent than I have seen elsewhere.
+Everyone comes to the place. It is the headquarters of the Dominion. I
+met there statesmen, adventurers, wild men of the woods, or prairie,
+deputies from Manitoba, lawyers from Quebec, sharpers and honest men, all
+staying at one hotel; and it seemed strange to sit at dinner and see
+great rough fellows, with the manners of ploughmen, quaffing their costly
+champagne, and fancying themselves patterns of gentility and taste. In
+one thing they disappointed me. Sir Charles Tupper was to leave for
+England, and his admirers met outside the hotel to see him off. There
+was a carriage and four to convey him to the station, and other carriages
+followed. There was a military band in attendance, much to the disgust
+of the Opposition journals—and yet, in spite of all, the cheers which
+followed the departing statesman were so faint as to be perfectly
+ridiculous to a British ear, and seemed quite out of proportion to all
+the display that had been made. Certainly they seemed quite childish
+compared with those which greeted a certain individual, whose name
+delicacy forbids my mentioning, when, on the last night on board the
+_Sarnia_, he ventured humbly to reply to the toast of the Press which had
+been given in the smoking-room by a Quebec artist returning home from
+study in Paris.
+
+In Ottawa, certainly, there is no demand for emigrants, unless it be good
+female servants, who are wanted much more, and can have much more
+comfortable living, at home. A lady asked me to send her a few good
+servants from England. I replied that my wife wanted them as much as she
+did, and that it was my duty to attend to her requirements first.
+
+It is curious the airs the raw servant-girls from Ireland give themselves
+out here. One day, when I was at Peterborough, one of the head-quarters
+of the lumber trade—which yesterday was a dense forest, and is now a town
+of 8,000 people—I heard of the arrival of a lot of girls from Galway.
+The drill-hall was set apart for their use, and there they were
+respectfully waited on by the chief ladies of the district in need of
+that rarest of created beings—a good maid-of-all-work. In this
+particular case one of the arrivals was fixed on.
+
+‘What can you do?’ said the lady.
+
+The girl seemed uncertain on that point.
+
+‘Can you wash?’
+
+‘Oh no!’
+
+‘Can you cook?’
+
+‘Oh no!’
+
+‘Can you do housemaid’s work?’
+
+Well, she thought she could.
+
+Then came the question of wages.
+
+‘Will you take eight dollars a month?’
+
+No, she would not. Would she accept of nine? Oh no! Would she take
+ten? Certainly not.
+
+‘What do you want?’ said the lady, beginning to be alarmed.
+
+‘They told me I was to have twelve dollars a month,’ said the girl, and
+that put a stop to the negotiation.
+
+When I state that an English sovereign is worth at this time four dollars
+and eighty-six cents, I think you will agree with me that this charming
+daughter of Erin somewhat overrated the value of her services. The
+Canadians are a well-to-do people, but they cannot afford twelve dollars
+a month for a mere housemaid. I think it would be well if the
+respectable young women—of whom there are thousands in England who do not
+care for the pittance given to a governess, and who prefer the life of a
+lady-help—were to come out. They would soon be appreciated.
+
+The average girl selected to be sent out to the colony, so far as I have
+seen her, is not a model of loveliness or utility. Were I a Canadian
+mother, I would sooner have a lady-help. Nor need the lady-help be
+afraid of the roughness of her lot. In Ontario, all the difficulties of
+the pioneers of civilization have long since disappeared. One hears
+strange tales of what those brave men and delicately nurtured ladies had
+to suffer.
+
+I have seen two—whom I had known when a boy—who were familiar with the
+best of London literary society, who figured in all the annuals of the
+season, who were famous in their day, whose sires came over with William
+the Conqueror. They were sisters, and married two officers, who had land
+allotted to them in Canada, and brought out these wellborn and delicately
+nurtured women into what was then a waste, howling wilderness, where they
+had to slave as no servant-girl slaves in England, and to fight with the
+severity of the climate in a way of which the present generation of
+Canadians have no idea. Only think, for instance, of your joint roasting
+at the fire on one side and freezing on the other! In the settled parts
+of Canada, such horrors are now amongst the pleasant reminiscences of the
+past.
+
+But I must return to Ottawa, where the universal testimony of all the
+heads of the Government was to the effect that Canada is the place for
+the poor, hard-working man. There is an emigration-office in every town,
+where the emigrant is sure to hear of work, if work is to be had.
+
+Canada is a charming place for the traveller. He sees friends
+everywhere. Mr. John H. Pope, Minister of Agriculture, and Mr. John
+Lowe, Secretary, were especially useful in aiding me. As I called on the
+Minister of Finance, he insisted on my seeing the Premier—Sir John
+Macdonald—who came out of a Council to give me a friendly chat for half
+an hour, and who kindly asked me to call on him again on my return. In
+Canada the Council sits almost daily, and the sitting generally lasts
+from two till six, as all the business which is left in England to the
+departments, in Canada is transacted in the Council. Sir John seemed to
+think that a good deal of time was wasted in speeches in Parliament,
+which were intended not for the House, but for the constituents outside:
+in this respect the Canadian Parliament much resembles a more august
+assembly nearer home.
+
+I had also the honour of an interview with the Marquis of Lansdowne at
+the Government House, in a pretty park about a mile out of the town. His
+lordship enjoys his residence at Ottawa very much, and said he should
+leave it with regret. His idea seemed to be that now was the time for
+English farmers with a little capital to come out to Ontario, as the old
+farmers are selling off their farms and going further, to take up large
+tracts of land in the North-West; and I think many English farmers would
+be wise if they adopted some such plan. The Province is called the
+Garden of Canada.
+
+At present I have seen no very superior land. There is a good deal of
+sand where I have been and wheat-growing is out of the question; but the
+barley is excellent, and is in great demand in the United States, and a
+good deal of money is made by raising stock and horses. At any rate, no
+farmer here is in danger of losing all his capital—most of them are well
+off, and their sons and daughters prosper as well.
+
+Let me give a few further particulars respecting Sir John
+Macdonald—perhaps the most abused, and the hardest working man, in all
+Canada. He has good Scotch blood in his veins. In the thirteenth
+century one of his ancestors looms up as Lord of South Kintyre and the
+Island of Islay. When the emigration movement to Canada began, a
+descendant of this Macdonald settled in Kingston, then the most important
+town in Upper Canada, and, next to Halifax and Quebec, the strongest
+fortress in British North America. He was accompanied by the future
+Premier, then a lad of five years of age. The boy was placed at the
+Royal Grammar School of Kingston, under the tuition of Dr. Wilson, a
+fellow of the University of Oxford, and subsequently under that of Mr.
+George Baxter. Meanwhile, his father moved to Quinté Bay, near the Lake
+of the Mountain, a lonely, wild country, in which the future Canadian
+statesman was often to be seen in the holiday time, with a fishing rod in
+his hand, with other companions as gay-hearted as himself. At that time
+he is described as having ‘a very intelligent and pleasing face, strange
+furry-looking hair, that curled in a dark mass, and a striking nose.’
+
+Indeed, Sir John’s admirers see in him a resemblance to the late Lord
+Beaconsfield, and that there is a slight resemblance the most superficial
+observer must admit. As a lad, Sir John seems to have specially
+distinguished himself in mathematics. His master also, we are told,
+frequently exhibited the clean-kept books of young Macdonald to some
+careless student for emulation, and as often selected specimens of the
+neat penmanship of the boy, to put to shame some of the slovenly writers
+of his class.
+
+At sixteen young Macdonald commenced the study of law, to which he
+devoted three years. The gentleman to whom he was articled speaks of him
+as the most diligent student he had ever seen. Before he was twenty-one
+years of age he was admitted to the Bar, opened an office at Kingston,
+and at once began to practise his profession. ‘He was,’ says a
+fellow-student, ‘an exemplary young man, and had the goodwill of
+everybody. He remained closely at his business, never went about
+spreeing, or losing his time, with the young men of his own age and
+standing, did not drive fast horses, but was always to be found at his
+post in his office, courteous, obliging, and prompt.’ When Sir John
+commenced his legal career, the country was full of revolution, and every
+county in Canada had its Radicals ready to take up muskets or pitchforks
+against the oppressor. Sir John, though a Tory, was often the means of
+doing good service to his friends of the opposite party. In defending a
+rebel who was tried for murder, the future Premier gained his first legal
+success. It was a time of intense excitement, and crowds thronged to see
+the prisoners and hear the trials. Everyone was struck with the masterly
+character of Sir John’s defence; and though they knew it was not within
+the power of human tongue or brain to save the prisoner, they admired the
+skill with which he marshalled his arguments, the tact he displayed in
+his appeal to the judges, and, above all, the deep interest he displayed
+in the cause of his unfortunate client. This was in 1838; from that date
+Sir John was looked to as a rising man. In a little while afterwards he
+commenced his stormy political career.
+
+In 1841 Kingston was made the seat of Government, and Sir John was
+returned to Parliament, in place of a politician who had lost his
+popularity. The assembly was an excited one, and everyone made furious
+speeches, with the exception of the new member, who sat unmoved at his
+desk while the fray went on, looking, says a gentleman who well remembers
+him there, half contemptuous and half careless. In 1844, he commenced
+his executive career by being appointed to the Standing Orders Committee.
+His first speech was delivered with an easy air of confidence, as
+captivating as it was rare. The time ripened rapidly. The old Tory
+Compact Party was being swiftly broken up, and when Lord Elgin arrived in
+Canada, a new Government was formed, with Sir John as Receiver-General.
+In a little while he was moved to the Office of Crown Lands, then the
+most important department in the public service, and one that in the past
+had been most shamefully, if not most criminally abused, but he was soon
+out of office, and a new Ministry came into force, pledged to a Bill for
+the indemnification of parties in Lower Canada whose property had been
+destroyed in the rebellion. There were awful riots. The Parliament
+buildings in Montreal were burned, and it seemed as if the old feud
+between Frenchman and Englishman had been roused, never more to die.
+
+Lord Elgin was ready to return to England The reformers were strong, but
+Macdonald did not despair. The new Government, amongst other things,
+were pledged to increased parliamentary representation, the abolition of
+seignorial tenure, and the secularization of the Clergy Reserves. Of the
+Government that attempted to do this, Sir John was a bitter opponent, on
+the ground that they had hesitated about questions which had set the
+country in a blaze. The Government had to retire, and in the
+Liberal-Conservative Ministry which succeeded to office we find Mr.
+Macdonald Attorney General, and he held office till he was defeated in
+his Militia Bill. He returned to office, however, in time to carry a
+confederation of the Colonies, and to become Premier, when Lord Monck was
+Governor-General.
+
+Since he has been at the head of affairs the Hudson Bay Company has
+handed over its gigantic territory in the North West to the Dominion.
+That great work, the Canada Pacific Railway, has nearly been brought to a
+successful termination, and Canada has taken a leap upwards and onwards
+to matured life and independence, of which not yet have we seen the end.
+It is a terrible scene of personal attack, political life in Canada.
+Even since Parliamentary Government has been established, the fight
+between the ins and the outs has been bitter and constant. No one can
+understand it, unless he is a native of the country; and it says much for
+Sir John that he has risen to the top, and kept himself there so long.
+To have done so, he must have possessed more merit than his enemies give
+him credit for.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+TORONTO—THE TOWN—THE PEOPLE—CANADIAN AUTHORS—THE LEADER OF THE
+OPPOSITION.
+
+Toronto, or the Queen City of the West, as she loves to call herself,
+stands upon the north shore of Lake Ontario, and has not only achieved a
+great success, but may be said, in spite of all the moving to the
+North-West of which we hear so much, to have a great future before it, on
+account of its position with regard to railways, which alone in this
+great country decide the fate of towns and cities. Immediately in front
+is a broad bay, from which you get an imposing view of the city, while
+its forest of spires and factory chimneys gives evidence of prosperous
+and busy life. I have never been in a city where the Sabbath was more
+strictly observed. The omnibus ceases to run on a Sunday, the cab is
+locked up, and even the cigar-store is closed. At seven on Saturday
+evening all the liquor-shops are shut, and in Toronto, as in all the
+Province, no one can buy a drop of whisky, or wine, or beer, till a
+decent hour on Monday morning. It is true, I was invited one Sunday to
+go and have a glass of whisky and water—an offer which, it is needless to
+say, I refused; but then, had I accepted the offer, I should have had to
+go into a club of which my friend was a member. In Canada, as in
+England, the club-member may indulge his taste, however strictly the
+abstinence of his less fortunate brother may be enforced by law. But the
+Sunday quiet of Toronto is remarkable. There are few people but
+church-goers in the streets, and the churches of all religious
+denominations are quite as numerous and quite as handsome as any we have
+in England. They are all built on a larger scale, and are all
+well-filled. On Sunday evening I had to light my way into the
+Congregational church, of which Dr. Wild is the minister. He hails from
+America, and is quite the sensation of the hour. There was no
+standing-room anywhere, and as I made to the door I met many coming away.
+However, I had made up my mind to hear the Doctor, and hear him I did.
+It seems that the subscribers have a door to themselves; I made for it,
+and luckily found a chair, which I wedged in under the platform. As I
+entered, the Doctor was making the people laugh by answering questions
+that had been sent to him in writing. Then we had quite a service of
+song. The choir behind him performed, a lady sang a solo, the
+congregation joined in a well-known English hymn. The Doctor prayed, and
+then we had a sermon about Revelation, containing much that was very
+effective, if not about his text, at any rate about that mysterious part
+of Scripture from which the text was taken. The Doctor is now in the
+prime of life, and his preaching powerful and effective. The audience
+consisted chiefly of men; perhaps that may be considered in the Doctor’s
+favour. One thing did surprise me, and that was to see seated at a table
+right under the pulpit platform a reporter coolly taking notes. Our
+English reporters in a place of worship on a Sunday are certainly more
+modest, and prefer to blush unseen.
+
+Toronto rises up, with its grand public buildings, proudly from the
+shore. The site of the city was very marshy, and at one time it was
+known as Muddy York. Only yesterday a lady was telling me how her mother
+was near losing her life in the mud of the chief street, leaving behind
+her the English pattens of which she was so proud. The further from the
+lake, the more the land rises, till you reach where, as Tom Moore wrote—
+
+ ‘The blue hills of old Toronto shed
+ Their evening shadows o’er Ontario’s bed.’
+
+ [Picture: King Street, Toronto]
+
+In 1812 the population of the place was under 1,000. It is now,
+including the suburbs, where some of the wealthiest citizens live in
+houses as well-built and as luxuriously fitted up as any in London, about
+116,000. King Street, the principal one, is built up with substantial
+brick and stone buildings, many of which are equal to any on the American
+Continent. Forty years since, it was completely composed of wooden
+structures, and was barely passable to pedestrians. Now, it is adorned
+with stately stores, where the latest novelties of the Old World and the
+New are ostentatiously displayed. The public buildings are quite an
+ornament to the place, and the offices of the leading newspaper, _The
+Toronto Mail_, are one of the sights of the city. The yearly civic
+income and expenditure is over 2,000,000 dollars, and the assessed value
+of property last year was 61,942,581 dollars. The streets are spacious,
+well laid out, and regularly built. The two main arteries of the city
+are King and George Streets, which, crossing each other at right angles,
+divide the city into four large sections. I don’t think house-rent is
+cheap. I have been in one or two private houses, the rents of which
+seemed to me certainly dearer than would be the rents of similar houses
+in London. But, then, in Toronto—think of it, O respected
+Paterfamilias!—the best cuts of meat are about eightpence a pound, and
+prime butter is not much more, and—Sir Henry Thompson will rejoice to
+hear this—there is a plentiful supply of fish. The city also boasts of
+fine theatres, and halls, and colleges; while the Episcopalian Cathedral
+in James Street possesses the celebrated chimney and illuminated clock
+which took the first prize at the Vienna Exhibition, and which was
+purchased by the citizens, and presented to the Dean and churchwardens of
+the place on Christmas-eve, 1876. They tell me, however, that the
+strongest body of Christians in the city is that of the Wesleyans. I am
+staying at Walker House, the most comfortable place which I have
+discovered thus far. Toronto itself offers few opportunities to the
+emigrant, and the citizens are not enthusiastic in his favour. I met a
+reverend gentleman from England here, who, the other night, at a meeting
+of mechanics, vainly endeavoured to say a word in favour of emigration,
+and had to desist under the threat that if he did not they would knock
+off his head. The mechanics here are very much afraid that if more of
+their own class come out, wages will be lowered. Nor are Irish emigrants
+in much favour here, as they stop in the city instead of going into the
+country in search of work, and have to be supported by the charitable and
+humane. Only a few days since a large batch of Irish arrived. Work had
+been found for them which they agreed to accept, and they were on the
+point of being forwarded, when they were got at by the Irish already in
+the city, and now they refuse to budge.
+
+The other day I met Dr. Barnardo’s agent, who has come out with some of
+his trained boys to settle them in Peterborough, where Mr. G. A. Cox, the
+Mayor of the place, has kindly given a commodious house for their use.
+Already, I believe, the Doctor has sent out 780 boys and about 470 girls,
+who have all been planted out. Mr. W. Williams, of the _Chichester_ and
+_Arethusa_, has sent many more, and so have others, of whom I hope to
+hear tidings in the course of my travel. The manager of Dr. Barnardo’s
+home at Peterborough, in answer to inquiries from the farmers and others,
+writes that boys from seven to twelve years of age are usually sent out
+on terms of _adoption_, to be treated in every respect as children of the
+household, and to receive, on attaining their twenty-first birthday, a
+sum of not less than one hundred and fifty dollars. Boys of thirteen and
+over are hired as ‘helps,’ at wages varying from thirty-five to
+ninety-five dollars per annum, with lodging, food, and medical
+attendance. Girls are sent out at ages ranging from four to sixteen
+years. Those of eleven and under are usually _adopted_ into families;
+while those of twelve and upwards are hired at wages from two dollars to
+nine dollars a month, with board, lodging, washing, and medical
+attendance. The utmost care is taken that these children should be
+placed in good hands. The applicant for a child has to get his letter
+recommended by a clergyman or magistrate; then he has to give his
+Christian name and surname in full, his address, his occupation; to say
+if he hires his farm, or if it is his own; whether he is a member of a
+Christian Church; what work the child will have to perform; on what terms
+the child comes into the family; what length of engagement is desired;
+what church the child will attend; and so on.
+
+Moreover, Dr. Barnardo’s system provides for the regular and frequent
+visitation of every young emigrant at his or her place of employment; the
+girls by a lady of great experience, the boys by a gentleman. By this
+means the children are never lost sight of, and trustworthy reports of
+their progress and whereabouts are periodically furnished to the heads of
+the institution in England.
+
+Now, I call attention to this plan, not merely to increase confidence in
+the labours of philanthropists who are sending out children to Canada,
+but in order to raise the question, why it is only the children of the
+destitute and the wild arabs of the street that are to have this
+advantage. There must be many poor people in England who have sons,
+perhaps a little too plucky for home, who could pay to send out their
+lads, and would be glad to do so, if they saw a chance of their being
+placed in good hands. There are many boys who would be glad to leave the
+somewhat overcrowded house, and who would rejoice to fight the battle of
+life in the New World under such advantageous conditions. Why should
+they not have a chance? Why should the destitute only be looked after?
+Why should not some one in the same way lend a helping hand to the honest
+son of the honest working man? It may be that his father may be too old
+to emigrate. It may be that he is doing fairly well at home, and that it
+is not worth his while to emigrate. But why should not his son have a
+chance, and be sent out under a system as excellent as that to which I
+have referred? Assuredly that is a question to be asked by others.
+
+But Dr. Barnardo says in his magazine, _Night and Day_, that much injury
+to the work of emigration has been effected by supposing that boys who
+have committed grave moral faults can do well, if only shipped off to
+Canada. He contends that a number of young fellows of _that_ sort sent
+to Canada, would seriously prejudice the prospects of emigration
+generally; and he urges in very strong terms that none but boys and girls
+of thoroughly good physique, industrious, honest, and of good general
+character, should be encouraged to emigrate upon any pretext whatever.
+
+Previous to my leaving Toronto I had the pleasure of an interview with
+the Hon. Edward Blake, the head of the Opposition, whose utterances are
+watched and waited for by all parties in the State with breathless
+interest. Travelling from Winnipeg, I had listened to a conversation on
+that gentleman’s merits by two young gentlemen—who were a little
+incoherent in their language, owing to the quantity of refreshment they
+had on board—which certainly somewhat raised my expectations. Nor was I
+disappointed on my personal interview with the subject of their praise.
+
+The Hon. Edward Blake is a man in the prime of life, of fresh complexion,
+of more than average height and build, with a keen and intellectual face.
+He was born in Canada, was educated at the University, followed his
+father in the profession of the bar, and as a cross-examiner, especially
+of an unwilling witness, and in the art of turning a man inside out, may
+claim to have no equal in Canada at the present time. He has visited
+Europe more than once—at one time in an official capacity—has mixed with
+our public men as well as with those of the Continent, has been in
+office, and, it is believed, will soon be in office again. He received
+me with great courtesy, and talked on things in general in a lively and
+interesting manner. On the Province of Ontario as a home for the British
+farmer he had much to say.
+
+Taking me to the map hanging up in his office, and pointing to the
+district between Toronto and Detroit, he affirmed that there was no finer
+land to be found anywhere in the United States. His first constituency
+was a very poor one—consisting of English settlers and others who had
+gone there with very little, if any, money, and they had all done well,
+and their children were now mostly wealthy men. He did not approve of
+the Government plan of emigration; but he did think there was a fine
+field in Canada for the British farmer and his men. As to mechanics, he
+thought the look-out was poor. The mechanic in that part of the world
+leads a very migratory life. Such was the facility offered by railways,
+which ran in all directions, that a slight rise in the rate of wages
+would send him wherever that rise was to be found. At the present time
+there was a depression of trade in the United States, and wages were low.
+In Canada the wages were a little higher, and he looked to an emigration
+from the United States; and then the wages in Canada would go down.
+
+The British mechanic would thus have to face a double difficulty—the
+competition of the Canadian and the American mechanic alike. I must add,
+however, that this was not the view of an English mechanic who had been
+settled in Toronto some years, and with whom, subsequently, I had some
+chat. His opinion was that any first-class English mechanic who came out
+would do well, while he frankly admitted that an inferior hand would have
+no chance whatever.
+
+But to return to Mr. Blake. It is evident, though he and his party are
+supposed to be in favour of Free Trade—and it is a matter of fact that
+they were driven from place and power by a Protectionist outcry—that he
+does not consider the question of Free Trade from an English standpoint
+at all. It will be long ere Canada will lift up her voice in favour of
+Free Trade. In Canada there is no such thing as direct taxation, and as
+money has to be raised for the support of Government, it is felt it is
+easier to do that by means of a duty on foreign manufactures than by
+taking it directly out of the pockets of the people.
+
+Just now there is a feeling growing up in favour of Free Trade with
+America; but that will not aid the British manufacturer one jot. The
+system of duties between Canada and America is an enormous nuisance, when
+one thinks of the daily personal and commercial intercourse between the
+two countries. For instance, I lost by changing English money into
+Canadian dollars; and then again, when I had to change Canadian dollars
+into American greenbacks, I had to submit to a further loss. This was
+not pleasant, especially when you remember that every time you cross the
+frontier—and people are doing it daily—you have to submit to a
+disagreeable examination on the part of Custom House officers. Surely
+Canada and America will before long have to come to a better
+understanding than that which at present exists. Of course, I write
+under correction. I am an outsider.
+
+‘Can you tell me,’ I said to the Hon. E. Blake, ‘how I am to get to a
+knowledge of Canadian politics?’
+
+His reply, and it was delivered with a smile, was:
+
+‘By living in the country some five or six years.’
+
+Under such circumstances I feel, with the poet, that ‘where ignorance is
+bliss ’tis folly to be wise.’
+
+On one thing Mr. Blake was silent—nor did I allude to it: that was the
+question of Canadian independence. It is raised in many quarters, it is
+almost daily discussed in the Canadian newspapers. People are waiting to
+hear what Mr. Blake has to say on it. At present the oracle is dumb.
+When the question is settled you may be sure sentiment will have little
+to do with it; on this side of the Atlantic, at any rate, that sort of
+thing goes a very little way when the almighty dollar is at stake. But
+the question to be asked is, How long Canadian independence will stand
+the cry for annexation with the United States that will then be raised?
+
+One of the pleasures attending my visit to Toronto was the finding out
+Mrs. Moodie—whose ‘Roughing It in the Bush’ did so much to help English
+people to understand the hardships of Canadian life some forty years ago.
+She was the youngest sister of Agnes Strickland; and, like her, wrote
+books for children, and tales and poems for the annuals, then the rage.
+She then married a Major Moodie, and went out to Canada, and I had not
+seen her since I was a raw lad; but of her kindness and her talent I had
+a distinct impression, and it was with real pleasure that I found her
+living at an advanced age—but in peace and comfort—at her son’s, a
+gentleman connected with the Inter-Colonial Railway. The sprightly lady
+of 1834, eager and enthusiastic, had become an elderly one in 1884; yet
+time had dealt gently with her, and her youth seemed to me to revive as
+she talked of her old Suffolk home, and of men and women long since gone
+over to the majority.
+
+I was glad to find that she had made her mark in Canadian literature. An
+intelligent Canadian critic, Mr. J. E. Collins, whose acquaintance I was
+privileged to make—as well as that of his friend, Mr. Charles Robins, a
+poet of whom Canada may well be proud—writes of Mrs. Moodie: ‘So perfect
+a picture is Mrs. Moodie’s book of the struggles, the hopes, the dark
+days, and the sun-spots of that obscure life that fell to her lot in the
+forest depths, that its whisperings form a delightful music to the
+memory. The style is limpid as a running brook, picturesque, and
+abounding with touches that show a keen insight into character, and an
+accurate observation of external things. There is no padding or fustian
+in the book, and no word is squandered, Mrs. Moodie regarding the mission
+of language to be to convey thought, not to put on a useless parade.’
+
+Mrs. Moodie has been living in Canada now fifty years, and loves to talk
+of the old country, especially of the people with whom she associated
+when, as Susannah Strickland, she used to stay in London with Pringle,
+the Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society, whose beautiful poem, ‘Afar in
+the desert I love to ride,’ is still a favourite with the English public.
+But she has no wish to come back to England—her family are all well
+settled in Canada. She lives with one of her sons, and her daughter,
+Mrs. Chamberlain, of Ottawa, has won deserved fame by her beautiful
+illustrations of Canadian flowers and lichens.
+
+English readers who may remember Mrs. Moodie as one of the gifted
+Strickland sisters will be glad to learn that she is regarded as one of
+the pioneers of Canadian literature, and although born near the beginning
+of the present century, possesses a mental vigour and active memory rare
+in one so aged. She told me anecdotes of myself when a boy that I had
+quite forgotten, and retains in old age the enthusiasm for which she was
+remarkable when young. Some of her ghost-stories were capital. For
+instance, one night, when her sister Agnes was lying sick, in the old
+hall at Reydon, Suffolk, and was being nursed by her sister Jane, there
+came to them a tall, stately figure in white, with long garments trailing
+behind her. Of course, Agnes and her sister were very much frightened at
+the apparition, which stood at the door, pointed her finger at Agnes,
+hissed at her, and then disappeared. Other stories followed, equally
+interesting, in which Mrs. Moodie, it was evident, firmly believed.
+
+It was during her long and lonely residence in the woods that Mrs. Moodie
+performed most of her literary work. While her husband was away crushing
+the Rebellion, she wrote her ‘Roughing It in the Bush,’ which did more to
+establish her fame in Canada and in England than any of her previous
+productions. It is probably the best picture we have of Canadian life at
+that time, and written in a style of composition charming, if only on
+account of its ease. Undisturbed by household cares, she wrote no less
+than fifteen books for children; a larger work, ‘Life in the Clearings,’
+and in addition contributed a mass of matter to the old Canadian
+_Literary Garland_, sufficient to fill several large volumes. ‘I
+remember seeing Carlyle once,’ she said, ‘but he was such a
+crabbed-looking man that I did not care to make his acquaintance. In
+fact, his appearance was quite the reverse of pleasing, but he was an
+honest, close-fisted man, I dare say.’ She had a good deal to say of
+Cruikshank, who lived next door to Pringle. ‘I went to hear Dan
+O’Connell,’ she continued, ‘on the Anti-Slavery question. He was
+completely dressed in green—green coat, green vest, green
+pants—everything green but his boots. I was greatly amused at his
+opening remark, “Ladies and gentlemen,” he began, “England reminds me in
+this great question of a large lion that has been sleeping a good many
+years, commencing to rouse itself, stretch, yawn, and wag its tail.” For
+days after, that lion, with its wagging tail, came visibly before me.’
+She also remembered Shiel, who began his speech in Exeter Hall, then
+quite a new building, by saying that he was afraid he would not be able
+to make himself heard, and then roared so that he might have been heard
+at Somerset House. She saw the man in armour proclaim King William in
+Cheapside, and it touched her to tears when all the people cried: ‘God
+save the King!’ ‘At one time,’ she said, ‘I helped Pringle to edit one
+of his annuals. Proctor sent in his poem on “The Sea, the Sea,” and
+after reading it I recommended it for publication, but Pringle rejected
+it. However, afterwards he found out his mistake when the poem,
+published in another channel, brought fame to its author.’
+
+Mrs. Moodie seemed to think that it was a great privilege to have been in
+London while the Catholic Emancipation Act and the Reform Bills were
+carried, and still in her comfortable house in Toronto loves to talk of
+the bustle and excitement of the time. I was privileged twice to see
+her, and then we parted, never more to meet—in this world, at least.
+
+Near Peterborough, about a hundred and fifty miles from Toronto, I found
+another far-famed Canadian authoress, Mrs. Traill, whose ‘Backwoods of
+Canada,’ published when I was a lad by the Society for the Diffusion of
+Useful and Entertaining Knowledge, and now, I believe, by Messrs.
+Routledge and Sons, was a delight to me in my young days. I remember her
+well as a young woman, tall and stately, with a wonderful flow of
+talk—enthusiastic as a worshipper of nature—ever ready to write of
+Suffolk lanes, with all their richness of floral and animal life; of
+Suffolk copses, where the birds sang, and the partridge and the pheasant
+and the timid hare found shelter; of farmers, then merry, and of
+peasants, then contented with their humble lot.
+
+In person she was attractive, the most so, to my mind, of all the
+Strickland family, and she was very stately in manner, for was not her
+maiden name Katherine Parr Strickland, and had she not some of the blood
+of that family allied to royalty in her veins? The Stricklands came of
+an ancient and honoured line, and besides that, there is a great deal in
+names, as the reader of ‘Tristram Shandy’ and ‘Kenelm Chillingly’
+perfectly understands. What could you expect of a Katherine Parr
+Strickland but queenly manner, as assuredly the young lady who bore that
+name had?
+
+When I was a lad, she married a Major Traill, and accompanied her sister,
+Mrs. Moodie, to Canada. I cannot think how ladies thus tenderly nursed
+could have done anything of the kind—or, having done it, how they could
+have survived the hardships they were called to endure. The lot in their
+case was by no means cast in pleasant places. Mrs. Moodie, in her
+delightful book, ‘Roughing It in the Bush,’ says: ‘A large number of the
+immigrants were officers of the army and navy, with their families—a
+class perfectly unfitted by their previous habits and standing in society
+for contending with the stern realities of emigrant life in the
+backwoods. A class formed mainly from the younger scions of great
+families, naturally proud, and not only accustomed to command, but to
+receive implicit obedience from the people under them, are not men
+adapted to the hard toil of the woodman’s life.’
+
+Yet it was to such a life Major Traill took his handsome and accomplished
+wife; but Mrs. Traill in her backwoods settlement was not forgetful of
+the literary vocation to which she had dedicated her early youth. I have
+already referred to her ‘Backwoods of Canada’; that was in due time
+followed by a volume equally worthy of public favour, under the title of
+‘Ramblings in a Canadian Forest.’ Indeed, she and her sister may claim
+to have been the pioneers of Canadian literature; and their brother,
+Lieutenant-Colonel Strickland, may also claim to be placed in that
+category by his work, ‘Twenty-seven Years in Canada West,’ a record of
+his own experiences, abounding with numerous realistic touches. He
+settled his family near his sister; and at Lakefield, near Peterborough,
+the residence of Mrs. Traill, there is quite a colony of Stricklands, who
+have all done well, so people tell me, at the lumber trade.
+
+I am glad I paid Mrs. Traill a visit. It was a long and wearisome ride,
+but I was well repaid by a short interview with one with whom I was
+familiar half a century back. Lakefield is a charming spot, and Mrs.
+Traill’s wooden but picturesque cottage overlooks a lovely scene of trees
+and hills, and water and grass. At any rate, in the early spring it has
+a neat little garden; in new countries neat little gardens are rare.
+
+Mrs. Traill has seen great changes in her time. When she came there,
+there were only one or two houses in Peterborough; all was forest, and
+now it has a mayor and a town-hall, and is one of the nicest towns in
+that part of Canada. Mrs. Traill’s cottage is fitted up with English
+comfort and taste. She has around her books and photographs of loving
+relatives. She showed me a book of hers recently published by Messrs.
+Nelson and Sons. As a Canadian authoress, she has done much to
+commemorate the beauty of Canadian forests, and writes of their floral
+charms with all the tenderness and grace with which I remember her
+sketches of East Anglian rural life were richly adorned. She is now hard
+at work with a new volume on Canadian lichens and flowers.
+
+As we stood talking at the window—the sunbeams played gaily on the blue
+waters of the lake or river beneath (in Canada there are so many rivers
+and lakes that you can scarcely tell which is which, or where the one
+ends or the other begins)—fairy flowers were beginning to gem her lawn;
+and the American robin redbreast, a far larger bird than ours, and other
+birds, still more graceful, flew among the trees—I felt how, in such a
+spot, one weary of the world could lead a tranquil life.
+
+Mrs. Traill must be an advanced octogenarian—she is older than Mrs.
+Moodie, and Mrs. Moodie claims to be far over eighty. Yet Mrs. Traill
+retains her conversational power intact, and is full as ever of ‘the lore
+that nature brings,’ and is as enthusiastic as ever in its pursuit. As
+much as ever her manners are queenlike. They have never left her, in
+spite of all the hardships she has had to undergo as wife and mother in
+the wilderness, and her face still retains something of the freshness and
+fairness of her youth. She is a wonderful old lady, and Canada must be a
+wonderful country for such.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+OFF TO THE NORTH-WEST—NIAGARA—LAKE SUPERIOR—THE CANADIAN PACIFIC
+RAILWAY—AT WINNIPEG.
+
+As in duty bound, I have reached Niagara Falls, and from motives equally
+conscientious forbear to trouble you with either poetry or prose on the
+scene that now meets my eye. In seeing them I have an advantage—that in
+this early season of the year I am alone and free from the crowd of
+visitors that sometimes infest the spot. As it is, there is quite enough
+of modern civilization there to disturb the poetry of the place; and the
+scream of the steam-engine sadly interferes with the enjoyment of that
+everlasting roar which rises as the vast body of waters tumbles over the
+falls—raising up majestic mountains of mist—and then sweeps grandly to
+the rapids, in the raging whirlpools of which poor Captain Webb lost his
+life, or, in plainer words, committed suicide. Then there are the
+cabmen, who will not give you a moment’s peace, and affect not to
+understand you when you intimate that you prefer to walk rather than to
+ride; and a grand walk it is, about a mile from the station on the
+Canadian side. Far, far below is the river—a chasm in a mass of old dark
+rock—into which you peer with wondering eyes till the brain is almost
+dizzy. Words fail to convey the impressions, as passing cloud and
+fleeting sunshine add to the marvellous beauty of the spot. I scrambled
+down to where the ferry-boat is, and drank in all the charm of the place,
+not caring to be ferried across, quite satisfied with watching the
+eternal fall of water as I sat there—a mere human speck in that
+mysterious grandeur. The white man has come and made the place his own.
+He has now thrown three bridges across it, and on the American side has
+built a brewery, whose ‘Niagara ales’ are famous all over the American
+Continent. I am glad to say that it is only on the Canadian side that
+you have a good view of the Falls; but on neither side is there what
+there ought to be, a wilderness. On each side there are houses and
+hotels, and churches, all the way; and I was offered Guinness’s Dublin
+Stout and Bass’s Pale Ale, just as if I were dining in a Fleet Street
+restaurant. On my return I met a funeral procession. Death had come
+into one of the wooden houses on the side, and the friends and relatives
+had ridden in their buggies and country carts to pay the last tribute of
+respect to the deceased. Yes; death is lord of life—in the New World as
+well as in the Old.
+
+I went then by way of Hamilton, through a district as fertile and as
+well-farmed as any in England, looking far more civilized than any part I
+have yet seen. There are no stumps of trees in the ground, as there are
+elsewhere, and the houses look as if they had been built long enough to
+allow of home comforts; and, as Hamilton is the place to which many of
+our poor lads are sent, I was glad to feel that in such a district they
+would have few hardships to encounter, and would have every chance of
+getting on. Here at one time there were bears and wolves; but they have
+long since disappeared before the march of their master, man. It is not
+so long since there was quail shooting on the very site of the city of
+Toronto, and hawks would carry off the chickens the earlier emigrants
+were attempting painfully to rear, and the Indians were also unwelcome
+guests. I have heard of an old Scotch settler who, as his last resort,
+invoked the aid of bagpipes, wherewith to frighten his unwelcome guests;
+but even that did not frighten the Indians, who carried off the contents
+of his potato ground, undisturbed by a musical performance which would
+have struck terror into the stoutest English heart. Well, all that wild
+forest region is now the home of peace and plenty, and distant be the day
+when Professor Goldwin Smith’s idea will be realized, and it has been
+peacefully annexed by the United States. Out in Canada that idea finds
+little favour. Why should it? It is a favourite boast with Americans
+that Canada will ultimately be theirs. I am sure that is not a favourite
+idea of the Canadians themselves. Great Britain, it is to be hoped, will
+be as loyal to Canada as Canada is to her.
+
+The thing is not to be settled quite so easily as Professor Goldwin Smith
+anticipates. In Quebec Province we have a million of French Canadians,
+who make no secret of their preference to a French rather than an English
+alliance, and who are quite prepared to act accordingly, as soon as
+British authority shall have become relaxed. Then we have the Acadians
+of Nova Scotia, who would probably follow the lead of French Canada; nor
+could the few Britishers of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island escape
+the same fate. France is quite prepared to increase her influence in
+this part of the world. Indeed, at the present moment there is talk of
+her buying the island of Anticosti, which, as you may be aware, though
+almost uninhabited now—save in the summer, when the fishermen go
+there—makes a very respectable appearance in the river St. Lawrence.
+Then we come to Ontario, which, placed as she is, could not withstand an
+attack from the United States.
+
+Once upon a time the Yankees did make an attempt of the kind—that was in
+1837—an attempt which the loyal men of Canada helped Sir Francis Head to
+put down. Toronto escaped, though she had the enemy at her very gates.
+I must say that all the Canadians with whom I have spoken have no wish to
+become Americans. For one thing, they say they can’t afford it.
+Government is more costly in America than in Canada. I admit as much as
+anyone the right of the people to decide their fate. If the Canadians
+prefer to live under the star-spangled banner, it is vain for us to
+attempt to retain them. But the danger is the indifference of the
+English public as to the value of such a colony as that of Canada, a
+country bigger than all Europe, and at present with a sparse population
+only equalling that of London. A few brief facts will show the
+importance of the North-West to the English, not merely as a field for
+emigration, but for other reasons as well.
+
+From Liverpool to Winnipeg, _viâ_ Hudson’s Bay, the distance is less by
+1,100 miles than by way of the St. Lawrence, and they are now talking of
+making a railway along that route. From Liverpool to China and Japan,
+_viâ_ the northern route, the distance is 1,000 miles shorter than by any
+other line. It is really 2,000 miles shorter than by San Francisco and
+New York. How immense, then, will be the power which the possession of
+Hudson’s Bay, and of the railway route through to the Pacific, must
+confer upon Great Britain, so long as she holds it under safe
+control!—and where is the nation that can prevent her so holding it, as
+long as her fleets command the North Atlantic? It is utterly
+inconceivable that English statesmen would be found so mad or so
+unpatriotic as thus to throw away the key of the world’s commerce, by
+neglecting or surrendering British interests in the North-West. Our
+great cities would not sanction such a policy for an instant. England
+could better afford to give up the Suez Canal, or be rid of her South
+African colonies. The interests of the two countries are inseparable.
+We require the North-West to send us grain. She requires us as her best
+customer. Manitoba has her natural market in Great Britain, and in the
+near future Great Britain will have her best customers in Manitoba and
+the North-Western Provinces.
+
+It is to the credit of the Canadians—that is, if figures may be
+trusted—that they spend less on drink, and more on education, than we do
+in the Old Country.
+
+Party feeling runs high; but it is difficult to an outsider to understand
+what is the line of separation between the ins and the outs. An English
+writer tells us that she once asked a member of the Greek Opposition in
+Parliament, what was the difference between them and the Government.
+‘Why,’ was his reply, ‘it is this. If M. Tricoupi says we want
+railroads, we say, “No; we want canals.” If he says a thing must be done
+by horses, we say, “No; it must be done by oxen.”’ It is just the same
+here. What one party proposes the other opposes. The present rulers
+rode into power on the wings of Protection. They are Tories; but it is
+to be feared the Liberals would have done the same, had they had a
+chance. It is the fashion to use very bad language, and to imply the
+worst of motives to your opponents; and it is in this easy way the
+Canadian newspapers fill up their columns when they are not—and this
+seems their great mission—quarrelling with one another.
+
+The country farmers, who are much keener men of business than their
+fellow farmers in the Old Country, care little about politics. At the
+last election a friend of mine said to a farmer, ‘Have you voted?’ ‘Oh
+yes!’ was the reply. ‘Well, for which party?’ Ah, that was a question
+he could not answer. He had voted as his neighbour told him; and he knew
+that his neighbour was a real good man, and that he would not give him
+bad advice. So long as voters are thus simple, elections will be a
+mockery and a sham.
+
+I have left Toronto behind, and here I am on Lake Superior, the largest
+body of fresh water in the world—so large is it, that if you immerse in
+it Great Britain and Ireland, and add the Isle of Man and the Isle of
+Wight, there would still be a respectable amount of water to
+spare—enough, at any rate, to make a river as long as the Thames, which
+we in England hold to be a very decent sort of river indeed. As I came
+up the St. Lawrence, some of the Canadians, who are, as they may well be,
+proud of their grand river, asked me what I thought of it. My reply was
+that for a colony so young, it was a very tidy sort of river indeed; and
+I may say the same of the enormous body of water on which I am now
+floating. It is a big thing indeed—as might be expected, where both
+Canada and the United States contribute to its bigness. We are in the
+middle of the lake, having Michigan on one side. Already we have stopped
+twice—once to take a pilot, and then again at Le Sault, where we had to
+stay while we waited our turn to enter the canal which connects the
+Georgian Bay to Lake Superior. There, indeed, we were made conscious of
+the fact that we were within the United States, as the banner of the
+stars and stripes floated proudly on each side of us, and there were a
+few soldiers in blue regimentals standing on the wharf, to say nothing of
+loafers, and boys and girls and half-breeds, to welcome our arrival.
+
+For one thing I felt proud of my country. The Americans have nothing
+here equal to the _Algoma_, a crack steamer built on the Clyde for the
+Canadian Pacific Railway, and to which, at this present moment, are
+entrusted Cæsar and his fortunes. It is only the second trip the
+_Algoma_ has made, as for the greater season of the year this immense
+water-way, incredible as it seems to us, is a solid block of ice, and we
+have it all around us still. I boarded the _Algoma_ on Saturday
+afternoon, after a rapid run by rail from Toronto, which city we left in
+the morning at half-past eleven, and I assure you I was glad the journey
+was safely over, as once or twice it seemed to me, at one or two of the
+curves, the cars were very near leaving the rails; and the boy—they are
+all boys here—who had to attend to the brake, gave me a grin, as if he
+thought that we had much to be thankful for that we kept the track at
+all. I presume I shall get used to that sort of thing, but at present
+the sensation experienced in rounding some of the curves is more novel
+than agreeable.
+
+We are a very miscellaneous company on board, chiefly Toronto traders and
+stalwart boys from Manitoba, who have been enjoying a holiday in Upper
+Canada, and emigrants. Gloves are unknown, likewise hats and
+shirt-collars are the exception rather than the rule. As to having one’s
+boots blackened, that is rather an expensive luxury, when you recollect
+the charge is fivepence a pair, and no one on board apparently has had
+his boots blackened for the last week or two; and I question much whether
+I shall require any of Day and Martin till I get back to Toronto again—an
+event which will take place apparently about the time of the Greek
+kalends. Hitherto I have managed the blacking difficulty most
+effectively. As far as Toronto I travelled with my London friend, who,
+aware of the custom of the country, had provided himself with the needful
+materials for the fitting amount of polish, and who generously permitted
+me to reap the benefit of his superior knowledge. My first attempt, I
+fear, was a failure. In my bedroom at the hotel I set to work, and soon
+acquired the requisite amount of polish; but, alas! I had forgotten the
+effect of blacking on clean sheets, and to my horror I discovered the
+bed-linen was, at any rate, as plentifully covered with blacking as ‘them
+precious boots.’ However, I did not regret the catastrophe, as I hoped
+it might teach the landlord it would be cheaper to get the boots of his
+guests blackened in an efficient manner, than to leave such unskilful
+amateurs as myself to do it on their own account.
+
+Life on board the _Algoma_ is as agreeable as can well be imagined. We
+have three good meals a day. I am writing in a magnificent saloon,
+nearly three hundred feet long, and if the nights are cold, as they
+always are on the lakes, I have a cabin all to myself, and by heaping the
+bed-clothes for two berths on my bed, and throwing a heavy great-coat
+over them, I manage to keep myself warm for the night. The scenery by
+day is magnificent, as we sail in and out among a thousand isles, all
+richly wooded to the water’s edge, with here and there a little village,
+or small settlement, where the woodmen ply their calling—the results of
+which may be seen now in a raft being towed by a tug, to be shipped lower
+down to Liverpool or Glasgow, or in stacks of planks along the shore.
+Further behind is the mainland, with rock and wood in endless succession.
+At Sault St. Marie, the river is celebrated for its fish, and as you pass
+through the canal, you have plenty of Indian canoes paddling about, with
+a man at the stern to seize the fish by a hand-net: the white fish of
+Lake Superior is held to be a great delicacy. After a day and night, we
+get into the open lake, out of sight of land, and then we land at Port
+Arthur, whence we take the train to Winnipeg, where I hope to hear a
+scrap of English news.
+
+I have but one complaint to make, and that is, on the Sunday we had no
+service of any kind. I am not, nor ever was, a stickler for forms; but
+there are times, especially as many now on board may be planted far away
+from any religious observance, when it seems to me a simple service might
+be the means of strengthening old impressions, and perhaps planting new
+ones. One thinks of that fine old hymn of Andrew Marvel’s:
+
+ ‘What can we do but sing His praise,
+ Who guides us through the watery maze?’
+
+And an hour or so thus spent, surely may be quite as helpful to the
+higher life we all dream of, at any rate, as the favourite occupation of
+the majority—smoking and spitting, or the study of the maps of the
+district to which we are all rapidly approaching. I had a queer chat
+this morning with an old Canadian farmer who landed at Le Sault. He was
+pleased to hear that I had been at Yarmouth in Norfolk. His mother was a
+Clarke of Yarmouth. Did I know any of the Clarkes of Yarmouth? I
+replied that I had not that pleasure, but that I knew many of the
+Clarkes, and that they were a highly-respectable family indeed.
+
+Well, I have now done with Ontario, and you ask me what I think of it? I
+reply that it is a beautiful country, and that it has room for any amount
+of farm labourers and servant girls. I have been talking with a
+gentleman this morning, who tells me that he pays his groom about £6 a
+month, and that he boards him as well. He tells me of a Scotch labourer
+who came out without £1 in his pocket, and who has just died worth
+£12,000.
+
+At Ottawa I saw a large lumber-yard worth many thousand pounds, which was
+the property of one who came from England as a working man. As to
+mechanics, I fear the case is different. In Ontario, in all the towns,
+the mechanics have strong unions, and they do all they can to keep out
+emigrants of that class, fearing that their own wages will be reduced.
+This dog-in-the-manger policy prevails everywhere, and many mechanics,
+directly they land, are thus frightened by them, and want to get back to
+England at once. There are two sides to every question. All I can say
+is, that while a mechanic’s representative, at Montreal, was telling me
+that there was no room for mechanics, and was doing all he could to
+induce those who came out with me to return to England at once, I saw an
+advertisement with my own eyes in a local paper (I am sorry I have
+forgotten the name) for five hundred mechanics, who were immediately
+wanted. A man who has got a good situation in England would be a fool to
+give it up and come out; but I believe a mechanic who has a head on his
+shoulders—who is young and in good health, and knows how to take
+advantage of his situation—may find a living even in Ontario. This is my
+deliberate conviction, after all I have seen and heard, and with the full
+knowledge that in Montreal, and Ottawa, and Toronto, there is a pauper
+class as badly off as any of the denizens of our London slums. The
+people I most pity are the young fellows who in England have had the
+training of gentlemen, and who are sadly out of place in Canada, and whom
+the Canadian mothers dread, fearing that they may corrupt the native
+youth. Many of them, however, are decent fellows; but nevertheless,
+there is no room for them, unless they go out to Manitoba, and get some
+farmer to give them board and lodging for their work. I parted with
+quite a pang with one such on Friday, at Toronto. He was the nephew of a
+well-known noble lord, and really seemed a very decent sort of fellow.
+‘What can you do?’ I said to him. ‘Oh, I can row and play cricket,’ was
+his reply. Unfortunately, Canada is not much of a country for
+cricket—the summer season is too short; and I felt that my young friend,
+unless he could turn his hand to something more useful or lucrative, had
+better have remained at home.
+
+The pleasant steamship journey ended, I landed at Port Arthur—a town
+situated in one of the loveliest bays I have yet seen, almost surrounded
+by weird and fantastic rocks—with a view to run by the Canadian Pacific
+as far as Winnipeg. As I landed a bill met my eye: ‘Wanted, a hundred
+rock-men and fifty labourers;’ and that seemed to me an indication that
+emigrants need not go begging for work in that particular locality. Port
+Arthur, which stands near the ancient Hudson Bay Company’s station of
+Fort William, was in a state of intense activity. Every one was building
+wooden houses and shops who could do so. According to all appearances,
+it is certainly a busy place; but architecturally I cannot say that it is
+of much account. The main street opens on to the railway, along which
+the engines, ringing a doleful bell in order to bid passengers keep out
+of the way, pass every few minutes. Then there are wooden shops and
+wooden hotels, and the usual concourse of rough, unwashed, half-dressed
+loafers in the streets. Behind them is the forest and in front the bay,
+with its waters almost as clear as those of the Baltic, and almost as
+blue as those of Naples. Yet I certainly got very heartily tired of Port
+Arthur, and so, I am sure, did all my travelling companions, who sat on
+the planks or on the wooden pavement, which, being raised above the road,
+made passable seats, or on the bits of rock which the railway builders
+had been too busy to remove, wondering at what hour the train would
+start. I pitied the poor emigrants, with their children, and their beds,
+and their household furniture, as they sat there, hour after hour, in
+that hot and sandy street. We landed at eleven, having made the whole
+distance from Toronto—a run of about eight hundred miles—in exactly two
+days and two nights—not quite so long as Jonah was in the whale’s belly,
+but we certainly got over more ground than he did. When were we to
+start? No one knew. It takes a long time to get out £4,000 worth of
+freight and passengers’ luggage, and that is what the _Algoma_ had on
+board. The worst of railway travelling in Canada is that there is no one
+of whom you can ask a question. There may be a station-master, there may
+be a whole herd of officials, there may be an army of porters, but
+Canadians in one respect resemble the Americans—and that is, that they
+think it inconsistent with their manly dignity to wear any kind of garb
+which can in any possible way distinguish them from the crowd of
+lookers-on, always to be met with in a railway station, so that the
+railway traveller is always in a perplexity. When we got on shore we
+were told that we should start in half an hour. Then came word that we
+were to be off at half-past one, and so, as soon as the cars were made
+up, we joyfully climbed into them—and the steps are in many cases so high
+that it is hard work climbing into them; but still we were no further on
+our way, and it was not till a little before four that, after many false
+starts, we could fairly believe that we were off. Oh, it was wearisome
+work, but then it may be asked, Whoever travels on a railway for
+pleasure? It is true these big American cars have certain advantages
+ours lack. You can change your position; you can talk without breaking a
+blood-vessel; and you can see more of the country, especially as they do
+not go the pace we are accustomed to at home; but there is such a
+confusion of persons in them, that to one accustomed to the society to be
+met with in an English first-class carriage, the result is anything but
+pleasing. In the Canadian first-class carriage Jack and his master ride
+side by side, unless the latter takes a berth in a sleeping car, for
+which he has to pay extra. As I did not feel inclined to give three
+dollars for a night’s unquiet rest, I took my chance with the first-class
+car company, and I can assure you that by the time the dim grey of
+morning glimmered on the horizon, I had heartily repented of my decision.
+The night was so cold that everything in the way of ventilation was
+stopped up. The car was quite full, and few of my fellow travellers
+seemed to have had much regard for soap and water. It is true there was
+a lavatory attached to the car, but there was neither water nor soap nor
+towels, and the neatness of the lavatory in other respects only seemed to
+me to make matters worse. I must say that the car, which was built in
+Canada, was a remarkably handsome one, with its dark wood panels
+beautifully carved, and its seats all lined with red velvet; yet when I
+left it in the morning it was in a filthy state. I also found in it
+agreeable society, but there were many who could not truthfully be
+included in such a category—rough men and women with whom in England you
+would not care to travel in a third-class carriage: but I am an
+Englishman, and may be pardoned for not knowing any better. It is to the
+same defect, perhaps, that I may trace the disappointment I felt at the
+refreshment sheds, in which we were permitted to snatch a hasty meal,
+waited on by a man in shirt-sleeves. Certainly we do that part of our
+business better at home. The Canadian Pacific have a dining-room of
+their own at Winnipeg, and there, if possible, the traveller should
+endeavour to secure a meal.
+
+But oh, that ride! I shall never forget it. Burns tells us that Nature
+tried her ’prentice hand on man
+
+ ‘And then she made the lassies, oh!’
+
+I think Nature must have made that part of Canada which lies between Port
+Arthur and Winnipeg before she tried her hand on Great Britain and
+Ireland. It is true some part of it has an exquisite combination of wood
+and water and rock, but the greater part was either forest or gigantic
+plains or valleys of stone—which seemed to shut all hope from the
+spectator. In Canada—that is, along the railway lines—there is little
+life in the forest, few flowers display their loveliness, and no
+song-birds warble in the trees. All is still—or would be, were it not
+for the peculiar croaking of the frogs, to be heard like so many hoarse
+whistles from afar. You go miles and miles without seeing a farm or even
+a log-hut. In one place I saw an Indian wigwam, much resembling a
+gipsy’s tent, and a large canoe; but dwellings of any kind are the
+exception, not the rule. The train every now and then stops, but you see
+no station, and why we stop is only known to the engine-driver. We take
+no passengers up, and we set none down, or hardly ever. The people who
+get in at Port Arthur only want to be taken to Winnipeg. There is no
+traffic along the line, because there are no inhabitants along the line,
+and for the greater part of the way it is not only a solitary ride, but a
+rough one as well. As you get nearer Winnipeg, the road is easier, and
+the pace is more rapid. You leave behind you rocks and forests, and
+reach an open plain on which you see, perhaps, a dozen cows, where
+millions might fatten and feed. A good deal of this land, I am told,
+belongs to the half-breeds. In time it is to be hoped that they may
+utilize it more than they seem to do now.
+
+A great change is impending over this part of the world. Even that stony
+district of which I wrote, and which seemed to me as the abomination of
+desolation, is, I hear, full of mineral wealth, which will be brought to
+light as soon as a certain boundary difficulty is settled—Ontario and
+Manitoba at present are each contending for the prize—and the decision of
+the question must shortly take place.
+
+Perhaps the one thing that has most struck me with admiration is the
+pluck which has given birth to the Canadian Pacific Railway, by means of
+which the emigrant is taken from his landing in Quebec to his destination
+on the slopes of the Pacific, without ever leaving the Canadian soil. It
+is a patriotic enterprise, for under the former system the emigrant who
+intended to settle in Canada, and who, in reality, was wanted there, was
+often tempted to change his mind and to settle in the United States. It
+was a bold enterprise, for the cost was enormous, and Canada is not a
+wealthy country. It was an enterprise which was made the subject of
+party conflict. Appalling difficulties have had to be surmounted by the
+engineers. Yet all have been vanquished, and in a few months this grand
+scheme will be an accomplished fact, and you will be carried direct from
+one side of this enormous continent to the other. I think Sir John
+Macdonald is to be congratulated for the courage and tenacity he has
+displayed on the subject, through good or bad report, and too much praise
+cannot be awarded to Mr. George Stephens, who has been the ruling spirit
+and life of the undertaking from the first, and I am sure that such
+railway officials as those I have met, such as Mr. Van Horne, have proved
+loyal coadjutors, evincing a similar wide grasp of mind and readiness of
+resource for which Sir John himself is distinguished.
+
+In England they are well represented by Mr. Begg, who, as he knows the
+district well, can speak of it with a confidence and certainty possessed
+by no one else. It is to him the credit must be given of the Manitoba
+farm in the Forestry Exhibition at Edinburgh last autumn, which was
+visited with much interest by the Prince of Wales and Mr. Gladstone, and
+to which I was glad to see, for I was there several days, the Scotch
+farmers and agriculturists paid particular attention. Such men are an
+honour to Canada, and may be ranked amongst its best friends. It is to
+them that Canada owes her present proud position and ability to find
+happy homes for the tens of thousands of England and the Continent, whom
+she has rescued from starvation, and whom she has placed in the way to
+insure wealth and health and happiness. I find even poor persecuted Jews
+driven from Russia on this fertile land, who, under these favouring
+skies, have learned to become prosperous farmers. One may well be proud
+of Canada, and be proud to think Canada belongs to us. When Bret Harte
+asks,
+
+ ‘Is our civilization a failure,
+ Is the Caucasian played out?’
+
+I answer in Canada with an emphatic No! Canada is redolent of industrial
+success. The very air of the place is full of hope.
+
+ [Picture: Second Year on a Prairie Farm, Canadian North-West]
+
+Not only has the Canadian Pacific Railway opened up the country, but it
+has established experimental farms in different parts, in order to test
+the capabilities of the soil and the advantages or disadvantages of the
+climate. It is said, and extensively believed, that the soil between
+Moose Jaw and Calgary is made up of desert and alkali lands, and entirely
+unfit for cultivation. With a view to correct that idea, ten farms were
+established at the following stations: 1, Secretan; 2, Rush Lake; 3,
+Swift Current; 4, Gull Lake; 5, Maple Creek; 6, Forres; 7, Dunmore; 8,
+Stair (these two being the nearest stations east and west of Medicine Hat
+at the crossing of the Saskatchewan River); 9, Tilley, and 10, Gleichen,
+the last being within view of the Rocky Mountains. The breaking
+throughout was found to be easy, the soil in every case good and in most
+instances excellent, ranking with the choicest lands in the Company’s
+more eastern belt: wherever the rating of the soil is lowered, according
+to the Company’s standard, owing to its being of a lighter grade, the
+inferiority will be compensated for by the certainty of the grain
+maturing more rapidly.
+
+ [Picture: Calico Island, Saskatchewan River, Canadian North-West]
+
+In a pamphlet just issued it is stated that the average from all the
+farms was as follows:
+
+ ‘Wheat 21½ bushels; oats, 44¼; barley, 23¼; peas, 12½.
+
+ ‘The above yields were ascertained by accurately chaining the ground
+ and weighing the grain, this work being done by a qualified Dominion
+ Land Surveyor, and the results, both favourable and otherwise, have
+ been fully given.
+
+ ‘At each farm about one acre of spring wheat and oats were sown and
+ harrowed in in the fall when breaking was done. Much of this grain
+ germinated during the mild weather of November and December, at which
+ time it showed green above the ground, and as a consequence it was
+ nearly all killed during the winter, and the ground had to be resown
+ in spring. Some small pieces of wheat which were not entirely killed
+ out were left; and, though the straw showed a rank growth, with heads
+ and grain much larger than that sown in spring, the crop ripened very
+ unevenly and much later. Fall sowing of spring wheat, which has
+ proved successful in Manitoba, is not likely to be a success in the
+ western country, as the winter is much more mild and open, and the
+ grain liable to germinate and be killed. Fall wheat has not, as far
+ as we are aware, been tried, and there seems no reason why it should
+ not prove successful.
+
+ ‘The results obtained, considering the manner in which the land was
+ treated, proved much more satisfactory than was anticipated, and
+ show—
+
+ ‘1st—That for grain growing, the land in this section of country is
+ capable of giving as large a wheat yield per acre as the heavier
+ lands of Manitoba.
+
+ ‘2nd—That a fair crop can be obtained the first year of settlement on
+ breaking.
+
+ ‘3rd—That for fall seeding with spring grain on the western plains, a
+ satisfactory result cannot be looked for with any degree of
+ certainty.
+
+ ‘4th—That cereals, roots, and garden produce can be successfully
+ raised at an elevation of 3,000 feet above the sea-level.
+
+ ‘5th—That seeding can be done sufficiently early to allow of all the
+ crop being harvested before the first of September.’
+
+And I hear of many who have done well—some of whom came out without a
+rap—and who enjoy a robust health unknown to them at home.
+
+Perhaps nowhere has a village so suddenly sprung up into a city as at
+Winnipeg, which first obtained notoriety by the advent of Lord Garnet
+Wolseley, then a young man, who came to suppress the rebellion raised
+there by a half-breed of the name of Riel, a daring young French
+Canadian, wily as a savage, brilliant and energetic. In 1870 he appealed
+to the prejudices and fears of the half-breeds, and in a few days had 400
+men at his back. Owing to the clemency—perhaps mistaken—of his captors,
+Riel escaped the punishment due to his crimes. In 1873 he was enrolled
+as a member of Parliament, notwithstanding that at one time a reward of
+5,000 dollars had been offered for his apprehension as a murderer.
+
+The name of Winnipeg was then little known outside Manitoba. It was
+built by traders, who wished to rival Fort Garrey, then the headquarters
+of the Hudson’s Bay Company, and to carry on a free trade on their own
+account. After the suppression of the rebellion, Manitoba had a local
+Parliament, which met at Winnipeg, and also sent its representatives to
+the Dominion Parliament. The place grew rapidly, though even at that
+time Mr. Mackenzie, Sir John Macdonald’s political opponent, declared
+that a cart track was good enough for Manitoba for many years to come.
+In 1875 the total population was 3,031 assessed and 2,000 non-assessed,
+which was a pretty respectable increase, considering that in 1869 there
+were hardly a hundred settlers in the place. As late as 1876 the sport
+of wolf-hunting was carried on by several of the inhabitants just outside
+the city. Now it has churches, banks, schools, manufactures, and
+mercantile men of great energy and high standing; and has become,
+especially since the Pacific Railway Company has made it one of their
+great stations, the gateway of the North-West. Settlers came crowding in
+from all quarters, and in ten months, in 1878, 600,592 acres of land were
+located. In 1879 Winnipeg boasted of a street extension of 83 miles, and
+then came the bridge over the Red River to render the town easy of access
+to all new-comers. Intoxicated with success, what the Americans call a
+‘boom’ was created a year or two since, which seemed to have made
+everyone lose his wits. There was no end to speculation in town lots;
+merchants, tradesmen, professional men, could think of nothing else. The
+bottom, however, soon fell out, and at this time Winnipeg is in rather a
+depressed state; but it is clear, from its peculiar position, that this
+depression can only be temporary. It is destined to be the great
+distributing and railway centre of the vast North-West. The town has now
+a population of 26,000, and three daily papers, besides weekly ones. Ten
+years hence, it is predicted, she will be ten times her present size.
+Her wharves will be lined with steamboats; her river-banks with
+elevators; industries and manufactures will spring up in her midst, and
+her streets will be fuller of life than they are to-day.
+
+Winnipeg stands low, and at certain seasons—that is, when the thaw
+commences—it is liable to floods; but the air is singularly pure and
+bracing—while I write the sky is an azure blue—and the hottest days are
+followed by cool nights. The inhabitants all seem to be in the
+possession of good health. Then the water was said to be bad, whereas I
+find it to be quite the reverse. The supply of gas is poor, and it seems
+rarely used. The one great drawback is Winnipeg mud.
+
+The streets, all of them, are as broad as Portland Place, only with
+handsomer shops. I fear in wet weather they must be almost impassable.
+As it is, the sides are now dried up, as if they were ploughed, and
+carriages seem to make their way with considerable difficulty; but there
+is a magnificent broad wooden side walk to all the streets, while in the
+middle sufficient smoothness has been attained for the due working of
+street railways, which seem to be in a satisfactory condition. I have
+also been agreeably disappointed with the hotels, which I was told were
+all bad and all tremendously dear. On the contrary, I have found in the
+new Douglas Hotel, in the main street, as good accommodation as I
+require, and at a very reasonable rate; while the proprietor—Mr. Bennett,
+a worthy Scotchman—does all he can for the comfort of his guests, having
+introduced into this far distant land all the latest improvements, such
+as heating the place by steam and the use of electric bells.
+
+A walk in the city is amusing. Grand shops and well-built offices
+everywhere attract the eye. Ladies in the latest fashion meet you one
+minute, and the next you jostle a swarthy Indian, half civilized, and his
+squaw, still less civilized than himself. Odd fur-skins are exposed for
+sale, while a stuffed bear adorns the main street, up and down which run
+all day long the newsboys with the latest telegrams from London, or
+Paris, or New York. To-day I have seen a photograph of the original
+fireman of the ‘Rocket,’ who lives here, and has made a large fortune by
+contracts. Unfortunately, at this time he is absent from home, and I
+fear I shall not have a chance of interviewing him. Religion flourishes
+here. There are about fifteen churches and chapels in the city, and the
+Young Men’s Christian Association is in a very successful condition. Of
+Protestant bodies, the leading ones are the Presbyterians, the
+Methodists, and the Episcopalians. In connection with the Cathedral of
+St. Boniface, the oldest church in the city, it is interesting to note
+that the bells came originally from Birmingham, by Hudson’s Bay, and that
+after the destruction of the building the remains of the metal were
+gathered up and sent to Birmingham, whence they have again come back
+after an interval of three years. The city stands in the midst of a
+fertile plain, adequate to the support of any amount of population. But
+the land is far better further on. At Manitoba, for instance, the soil
+is much finer. Manitoba is an Indian name denoting the Voice of God. It
+seems that the rocks on the river are cavernous, and that at certain
+seasons of the year the wind strikes them with such force as to produce a
+singular reverberation, which the rude Indian, whose untutored mind
+teaches him to see God in the cloud and hear Him in the wind, considered
+to be no less than the utterance of the Deity Himself.
+
+ [Picture: Hunting scene on the Souris River, Manitoba]
+
+Just now people are rather exercised with the Indians, who have been
+placed in reserves where they cannot get a living, and who, besides, find
+their location an unhealthy swamp. One of the Winnipeg journals is very
+indignant, and says this is what may be expected from the Government.
+From all I can learn, the Indians are sturdy maintainers of their rights,
+and take care that the Government shall not easily overreach them; and
+perhaps, on the whole, the Indians are better off under Canadian than
+they would be under American government. Indeed, people say they are
+very good fellows when uncorrupted by Englishmen. The emigrant in these
+parts must not be surprised at the occasional appearance of an Indian;
+and perhaps it is well that the farmer takes care of his horses. I am
+sorry for the poor Indian, who is the original owner of the soil, and
+whom, perhaps, one day Mr. Henry George may see fit to visit with a view
+to the recovery of his rights and the redress of his wrongs. When that
+is the case, the emigrant will have to pack up and return to his native
+land. Till that is the case, however, he may safely cross the water, and
+avail himself of the advantages offered him by the Dominion Government;
+but to do that he must have at least £200, and then he can stock his farm
+and keep himself till the return for his labours comes in.
+
+ [Picture: Souris Valley, Manitoba]
+
+‘The worst of all our books on emigration,’ said the editor of one of the
+dailies to me, ‘is that they give too glowing an estimate of the state of
+affairs. They say a farmer will do well with £100. This is not
+sufficient capital as a rule to start with. It is true there have been
+instances where settlers have succeeded on this sum, but with such a sum
+as £200, Manitoba offers the farmer advantages such as no other place
+offers him.’ Here, also, the regular farm-hand is sure of his living. I
+see an attempt is being made by a gentleman, now in Winnipeg, to plant
+out a couple of hundred boys—and I hear there is room for them. But
+there is little building going on in Winnipeg, and the mechanic need not
+trouble himself to come here. All in this part are loud in condemnation
+of emigration from the East-end of London. Those poor of the
+East-end—alas! neither the Old World nor the New seems to know what to do
+with them. Since this was written I see the Manitoba Mortgage and
+Investment Company have declared a dividend of eight per cent., an
+indication that at any rate in their part of the world money is being
+made.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+LIFE ON THE PRAIRIE.
+
+‘You will find Moose Jaw a very pretty place,’ said a gentleman to me as
+I left Winnipeg; and certainly it is a pretty place, though not exactly
+according to an Englishman’s idea of prettiness.
+
+It consists of a railway-station and an assemblage of wooden huts and
+shops, which have all been called into existence within the last twelve
+months. It boasts a weekly organ (such as it is), two or three places of
+worship, one or two billiard-rooms, and a post-office—not a tent, as in
+some parts of the country in which I have been, but a real wooden-house.
+The shopkeepers seem to have nothing to do, and the pigs perambulate the
+streets, evidently enjoying the fine freedom allowed them in this part of
+the world. There are at this time about 700 or 800 settlers, some of the
+farmers who came out last year having moved further west.
+
+I am writing in the railway-station, in the waiting-rooms of which are
+many farmers, all on their way to Calgary—for which place, also, I am
+bound, expecting to start at the very inconvenient hour of two p.m.
+
+The scene, as I sit, is not cheering. Far as the eye can reach there is
+the prairie. It was the same all the way from Winnipeg. It will be the
+same all the way to Calgary, some 400 or 500 miles hence. It is
+intensely hot, and men and women sit in the open air, under such shade as
+the wooden houses afford. It is intensely cold in the winter. Not a
+tree is to be seen, or a hill, or a farmhouse; nothing to relieve the
+monotony of the sea of grass land on every side, except here and there a
+prairie fire—the first step to be taken before the farmer commences the
+cultivation of the soil; and I must own a prairie fire by night is rather
+a pretty sight.
+
+I parted last night with a General and his wife, who have come to settle
+about forty miles off. At present he and his family have no fresh meat,
+and he has to make an arrangement with a Brandon butcher, about a hundred
+and fifty miles off, to supply him with a Sunday joint. Tinned meats his
+family have tried, and he has got with him a fresh joint of meat, which
+he purchased in Winnipeg; but there are prairie chickens always to be
+had, and in some places, as we came along, we saw an abundance of wild
+ducks on the Assiniboine River, and in swamps, over which we rushed in
+the Pullman car.
+
+This luxury cannot be expected in Moose Jaw. Here there is no water at
+all. Last year the farmers had no rain, and they fear they will have
+none now. As it is, the prairie begins to look a little scorched. I
+should be loth to spend the remainder of my days here; but a farmer may
+make a living, and so may a farm-labourer. As to any other class of
+people here, there is no opening at all. The town is full of
+shopkeepers, barristers, auctioneers, and dealers. Mechanics who come
+out will starve. When the land around is taken up they will have a
+chance, but not till then.
+
+As I sit, a dark figure beckons me to come to him. He has a Jim Crow
+hat, a blanket around his martial form, and a gayer one in front. He has
+rings in his ears, bracelets on his arms, and a string of some kind of
+beads around his neck. He offers me his hand, and I shake it. Then I
+commence a conversation. ‘What you called?’ I say. He makes an
+unintelligible reply. ‘You Smith, or Brown, or Jones, or Robinson?’ I
+ask; and again he gives an unintelligent grunt. I offer him a cigar, and
+he sits down on his haunches in the shade. He is one of the Black Bull
+men, who have been chased from the States, in consequence of having made
+that part of the world too hot for them. They are not natives of this
+country, but have settled in the prairie two or three miles off. I tell
+him to be a good boy, and I dare say he will obey my injunction as
+literally as any other man in England or anywhere else.
+
+Again I look, and two red-coated warriors greet me. They are on the
+look-out for contraband, and are as fine and clean and well-set fellows
+as any I have seen anywhere. They belong to the mounted police, and live
+chiefly in the saddle, as there are but five hundred of them to all this
+gigantic North-West. I had already made their acquaintance. At the
+first station we came to after leaving Manitoba, one of them came into
+the car, gave a searching glance all round, and then walked out. ‘What
+was that for?’ I asked the General. ‘Oh! he has come to see if we have
+any whisky. They are very particular. I was coming this way once, when
+a fellow traveller took out his pocket flask and began drinking. The
+mounted policeman who saw him do it immediately took his flask from him,
+and emptied it there and then.’ This strict prohibition is the result,
+not of the prevalence of Temperance sentiment in the North-West, but
+rather of fear of the Indians, who are better shots than the mounted
+police, although not so well provided with fire-arms. The people seem to
+anticipate that the law will be relaxed when the whites are more numerous
+and the Indians fewer. The law has had good results, nevertheless. In
+obedience to it the German gives up his lager-beer. And next to the
+Scotch the Germans make the best emigrants.
+
+The General tells me such is the fineness of the climate that he finds he
+can get on very well without his customary glass of grog. At Moose Jaw
+the inhabitants take to Hop Bitters instead, and one of the institutions
+of the place is the Hop Bitters Brewery.
+
+I believe you may keep whisky if you get a permit, and a permit is not
+difficult, I understand, to get.
+
+I am sorry to say the General, in spite of the mounted police, offered me
+a drop of whisky, and at a later period a friend, as we sat smoking,
+asked me if I was ready for a ‘smile.’ Of course, in my ignorance, I
+replied in the affirmative. Diving under his seat, he brought out a fine
+bottle of real Scotch, and, mixing it with water, offered me a ‘smile.’
+You may be sure I indignantly refused. You cannot expect me to be a
+party to the violation of the law.
+
+These Indians just now are creating a little apprehension, especially the
+tribe under the renowned Yellow Calf, who it was hoped had taken to
+farming, and who last year had a good crop, and bought a reaping machine;
+but the Indians are very restless, and Yellow Calf has sent a messenger
+to rouse the tribes, and a strong party of the mounted police are
+detached to watch his movements. They are dying off the face of the
+earth, and we may well suppose that they bear no love to the white man,
+who has taken possession of the lands which they once knew to be their
+own. Here the people evidently think that the sooner the Indians are
+exterminated the better. The men do not work; all that is done by the
+squaws—wretched women with long black hair, and little black eyes as
+round as beads, and who rejoice in blankets quite as unromantic, but
+quite as comfortable, as those of their lords and masters. Hitherto, I
+have not made way with the dusky beauties, but I may be more successful
+by-and-by.
+
+I believe the Indians have a real grievance against the Canadian
+Government. It was agreed that they should be settled in reserves, and
+that they should have a certain amount of food supplied. This compact
+was fairly observed by the Canadian Government; but in an evil hour they
+made this part of their duty over to contractors, and we know what
+contractors are, all the world over. The Indians say faith has not been
+kept with them, and it is to be feared that they have good reason for
+saying so. Just now they are starving, as this is the close season, and
+they are not permitted to hunt or fish. They say that there is no close
+season as far as the stomach is concerned, and from personal experience I
+may say I believe they are right.
+
+It is now noon on the prairie, and I am dying of the heat. Oh, for the
+forest shade! Oh, for the crystal stream! Alas! the water here is not
+good for the stranger, and I fear to touch it. At Toronto I managed
+pretty well on Apollinaris water; but out here nothing of the kind is to
+be had. What am I to do? The beef here is so tough that you can’t cut
+it with a knife, and must have belonged to the oldest importation from my
+native land; and I have to pay a price for which I can have a luxurious
+repast in London. O Spiers and Pond! O Gordon and Co.! O respected
+Ring and Brymer, under whose juicy joints and sparkling wines the ancient
+Corporation of London renews its youth! How my soul longs for your
+flesh-pots in this dry and thirsty land, where no water is! I have been
+out on the prairie under the burning sun. It is cracked, and parched,
+and bare, and the flowers refuse to bloom, and only the gigantic
+grasshopper or the pretty but repulsive snake meets my eye. That dim
+line, protracted to the horizon east and west, is the railroad. That
+far-off collection of sheds is the rising town of Moose Jaw. That blue
+line on the horizon, which makes me pant for the sea, is a mirage. Far
+off are some white tents glistening in the sun. They are the wigwams of
+the Indians.
+
+Like the Wandering Jew, again I urge on my wild career, and here I am
+with noble savages—so hideous that words fail to tell their hideousness.
+No wonder the squaws are bashful. They have little to be proud of,
+though they have necklaces and rings and ornaments around their belts,
+and gay shawls, which have come from some far away factory. Some of them
+have put a streak of red paint where the black hair divides. Others are
+painted as much as any Dowager of Mayfair, and have ear ornaments that
+reach down to the middle. Not one is fairly passable.
+
+Rousseau and the sentimentalists, who talk of the savage, greatly err in
+their estimate of that noble individual. He is lazy and filthy,
+gluttonous, and would be a wine-bibber had he the chance. I looked into
+his tent, and there he was sitting naked, whilst his squaw was cooking a
+bit of a horse with the hair on for his dinner. He is unpleasant as a
+neighbour for many reasons, and is indifferent how he gets a dollar, or
+how his squaw earns it either. All along the prairie he seems to have
+nothing to do but to rush to the nearest railway station, and sit there
+all day in the hope that some passing traveller may give him tobacco or
+cash, the only two things on earth he seems to care for. Apparently, the
+mothers are fond of their young. The men are clever at stealing horses,
+and the traveller must look after his horses by night, or he may find
+them, as friends of my own did, gone in the morning. But to return to
+the prairie, it is an awful place to travel in alone; it is so easy to
+lose one’s way. I heard wonderful stories in this respect. Fancy being
+lost on the prairie; nothing but the grass to eat; nothing but the sky to
+look at; nothing in the shape of human speech to listen to. Out here by
+myself, I felt more than once how appropriate the language of the poet
+beloved by our grandmothers:
+
+ ‘O Solitude, where are the charms
+ That sages have seen in thy face?
+ Better dwell in the midst of alarms,
+ Than reign in this horrible place.’
+
+There is a good deal of hardship to be encountered by any who would
+penetrate to the dim and mysterious region we denominate the North-West.
+For instance, I left Moose Jaw at half-past two yesterday morning by a
+train timed to arrive there at a quarter-past one; at which unreasonable
+hour I had to leave my bed, just as I was getting into a sound sleep, and
+to catch the train, which was so crowded that I could scarcely get a
+seat, and the atmosphere of which was not redolent of the odours of Araby
+the Blest. There I had to sit till the time I mention, as the engine
+managed to get off the line. Deeply do I pity the poor emigrants tempted
+into this part of the world by the delusive utterances of sham emigration
+agents at home and local journals—which, when they are not abusing one
+another, seem to delight in giving representations of the country by no
+means literally to be depended on; the only thing to do is to go to the
+fountain head—the Government office. People who make up their minds to
+come into these parts must learn to put up with a good deal. Here is a
+sad case, a very exceptional one, I admit, but I am bound to tell the
+whole truth. I quote from a Winnipeg paper: ‘David Kirkpatrick, his
+wife, and nine children, the eldest a girl of twelve, arrived from
+Scotland on Wednesday. A part of the voyage was made on board the
+_Algoma_. The cold was intense, and many of the passengers suffered
+severely. Among these was Mrs. Kirkpatrick. The exposure, in her case,
+brought on a kind of low fever, and the poor woman died yesterday
+morning. The husband’s case is deplorable. With nine children on his
+hands, what is he to do? He has a longing desire to get back to his
+friends in Scotland, but has not the means. Will the public come to his
+rescue? He and his helpless children are to be found in the immigrant
+sheds.’ I fear such cases are far from uncommon. Imagine a poor woman
+leaving her native land, crossing the restless Atlantic, perhaps feeble
+with poor living, and worried with the care of nine helpless children,
+perhaps scarce recovered from sea-sickness, put on board an emigrant
+train, snatching hasty meals, or such accommodation as is provided at the
+expense of Dominion Government (I do not blame them or the railway
+authorities, they do all they can), travelling at uncertain hours, and
+arriving at her destination utterly overcome by fatigue. What wonder is
+it that a poor woman now and then sacrifices her life in the attempt to
+build up a new home in this Promised Land? No wonder that now and then
+death comes to such just as they reach Jordan and think that they are to
+reap the fruit of all their weary toil.
+
+ [Picture: Pioneer Store at Brandon in 1882]
+
+As I left Brandon on my way hither I saw by the side of one of the
+stations quite a little village of tents. ‘What is that?’ said I to one
+of the mounted police. ‘The emigrants,’ was his reply. ‘They do say,’
+said he slowly, ‘that there is some sickness amongst them.’ Whether the
+rumour was founded on fact I had no time to inquire, but certainly, when
+one thinks of the hardships of the emigrants’ lot, and the peculiar
+unfitness of many of them to stand hardships, I should not be surprised
+to learn that such was the case. The further I come out, the less demand
+I find for emigrants. It is only ploughmen who are wanted here. The man
+who will succeed is the farmer with a small capital. He has a splendid
+chance. When the country is settled the mechanic may have his turn.
+
+But remember, after all has been said and done, this is the Great Lone
+Land. Emigration here is but a drop in the ocean as regards results. I
+am now some 850 miles to the north-west of Winnipeg. The country is an
+unbroken level, and, with the exception of Brandon and Moose Jaw, you see
+hardly a farmhouse, hardly any ploughed land, no sheep grazing on the
+downs, no herds fattening in the prairie; not a single tree to hide one
+from the snows of winter or the suns of summer. By day you melt in the
+sun, by night you shiver with the cold. When we came to a swamp now and
+then we saw a few wild ducks. Once in the course of the weary ride we
+saw two or three deer. All the rest was a parched plain, with here and
+there some lovely flowers, and with buffalo bones bleaching wherever you
+turn your eye. In some parts the soil was strongly impregnated with
+alkali, so much so, indeed, that it made the ground white, and left a
+crust of what looked like ice on the lakes and ponds. Can that huge
+region ever grow wheat and fatten flocks? The experience of the
+experimental farms proves that it will. All I know is that ages must
+elapse before Moose Jaw shall be a Manchester, or Brandon, in spite of
+its many advantages, the headquarters of the agricultural interest, with
+a corn market equalling that of Norwich or Ipswich. Yet there are parts
+of Manitoba which contain undoubtedly as fine corn-growing country as any
+in the world.
+
+This is especially true of the new tract of country opened up by the
+Canadian Pacific in the south-west. As a rule, the further from the
+railway the land is, the better it is. At the same time, it is to be
+remembered that a farmer who has no railway access is at a great
+disadvantage, and that in the winter it is no joke sending a man with a
+team of oxen and a waggon-load of produce twenty or thirty miles across
+the prairie, where a snowstorm, or ‘a blorrard’ at any time, may occur.
+
+This is the great drawback of Manitoba: it has no trees. In Ontario the
+farmer has his crops protected by a belt of trees from the inclemency of
+the weather. But, then, in Manitoba the farmer has this advantage, that
+he has not to devote the greater part of his time and money to the
+cutting down of his trees. He has only to plough the soil, and there is
+an abundant harvest. If Manitoba lacks trees, it is expected to yield a
+plentiful supply of coal. As I came along last night we saw a station
+supplied with gas. It appears that in boring for water they discovered
+gas, which they now utilize to light the station and to work a steam
+engine. This was not, however, in Manitoba, but in Alberta, just after
+we had left Medicine Hat, that pretty oasis in the desert, with the usual
+supply of hotels, billiard-rooms, and stores, and where I came into
+contact with the Cree Indians, a race even uglier than the Sioux Indian,
+whom I found at Moose Jaw. They have higher cheekbones, and don’t plait
+their hair, and some of the old men reminded me not a little in outline
+of the late Lord Beaconsfield, whom the Canadians consider Sir John
+Macdonald strongly resembles.
+
+It is curious to note how the buffalo has vanished from the region which
+was formerly his happy hunting-ground. He has now forsaken the country;
+you see only his bones and his track. Some people say that the railway
+has done it, and others that the destruction is the work of the
+Americans, who say, ‘Kill the buffalo and you get rid of the Indians.’
+These latter are to be met with everywhere, clad in flannel garments
+radiant with all the hues of the rainbow. Chiefly they affect
+blankets—red, blue, or green. At Calgary I came across more of them—this
+time of the Blackfoot tribe. There is very little difference in any of
+them. In one thing they all resemble each other, that is, they don’t
+seem to care much about work. As English does not happen to be one of
+their accomplishments, my intercourse with them has been of a somewhat
+limited character.
+
+For the sake of intending emigrants let me dispel a couple of popular
+errors. One that the heat is most enjoyable; another, that it is a cheap
+country to come to. Neither assertion is exactly the truth. As I write
+the heat is insufferable, and yet this is early spring. I saw snow
+yesterday in a hollow of the hills not yet melted, and last night,
+sleeping in a stuffy Pullman car full of people, I was awoke with the
+cold. The other fallacy which I would expose is that this is a cheap
+country. On the contrary, it is nothing of the kind. Paxton Hood, if I
+remember aright, once gave a lecture on America under the title of the
+‘Land of the Big Dollar.’ If I were to lecture on Canada I should call
+it the ‘Land of the Little Dollar.’ A dollar here is of no account.
+This morning I went into a shop and had a bottle of ginger-beer, and the
+cost was one shilling; and this, too, after I had been administering a
+little ‘soft sawder’ to the fair American damsel who waited on me (she
+was from Michigan, and was remarkably wide awake), in the mistaken hope
+that she would be a little reasonable in her charge. Everyone smokes
+cigars all day long, and yet Canadian cigars are as costly as they are
+atrocious. Fortunately one can’t spend money in drink, as that is
+prohibited, and the chemists at Calgary have recently got into a scrape
+for supplying customers with essence of lemon, by means of which they
+manage to fuddle themselves. The price of fruit is prohibitory;
+cucumbers, such as you in London would give three halfpence for, are here
+at Calgary as much as a shilling. Eggs are four shillings a dozen; meat
+and bacon and ham are as dear as in England, and not a quarter so good.
+I am appalled as I see how the money goes; I fear to be stranded at the
+foot of the Rockies. If I get back to the west I shall have to work my
+passage back to England as fireman or stoker, or in some such ignoble
+capacity. If I was younger I would turn gardener. I believe anyone who
+would come out here with sufficient capital to plant a nursery ground or
+to stock a good fruit garden would make a lot of money, as the farmers,
+of course, do not think of such things, and the supply is quite unequal
+to the demand. In Calgary they did not have three inches of frost all
+last winter. It is true they have even now a sharp nip of frost; but I
+hear of peas flourishing at a farmer’s close by, and the region abounds
+with wild strawberries and raspberries and cherries. If they grow wild,
+surely they will equally prosper under more careful culture.
+
+A Special Committee of the Dominion House of Commons which was appointed
+last session to obtain evidence upon the agricultural industries of the
+country, examined several witnesses as to the suitability of Canada, and
+especially of the Canadian North-West, for the growth of forest and fruit
+trees. The testimony given showed that there are many varieties of fruit
+which thrive in Great Britain, Germany, Russia, and other European
+countries, which would, if transplanted, be equally suited to the climate
+of the North-West, it being stated that excellent fruit is grown in great
+quantities in Europe at points where the temperature ranges considerably
+lower than it does in Canada. It is urged that the example of the
+Russian and German Governments should be followed in the establishment of
+plantations of fruit trees and experimental farms in different parts of
+the Dominion, to test the kind of trees and fruits best suited to the
+different localities.
+
+Since my return the following paper has been put into my hands:—‘The
+following is a reliable estimate of this season’s wheat crop in Manitoba
+and the North-West Territories:—Estimated wheat acreage in Manitoba,
+350,000; yield at 23 bushels per acre, 8,000,000; estimated wheat acreage
+in North-West Territories, 65,000; yield at 23 bushels per acre, or
+1,500,000 bushels—a total of 415,000 acres and 9,500,000 bushels.
+Deducting 2,760,000 bushels for home consumption and seed, a surplus
+remains of 6,740,000 bushels. Everything now points to a larger yield
+per acre than that of 1883.
+
+ [Picture: Harvesting on the Bell Farm, Indian Head, N.W.I.]
+
+‘Operations have been carried on very extensively this season at the Bell
+Farm, in the Canadian North-West, which is said to be the largest farm in
+the world. Though this is but the second year of cultivation, there are
+already 8,000 acres under crop, 5,000 to 6,000 of which are under wheat,
+and a portion of the remainder under flax. Last year 10,000 bushels were
+exported from the farm, and the excellence of the grain secured for it a
+good price in the market. The crop of this year is estimated to be 40
+per cent. better. Experts from Montana who have recently visited this
+section of the Canadian North-West, state that they never saw any grain
+in the United States to equal that on and around the Bell Farm.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+AMONGST THE COW-BOYS.
+
+I am writing from Calgary, a little but growing collection of huts and
+wooden houses planted on a lovely plain with hills all around, a river at
+my feet, on the banks of which some poplars flourish, and I can almost
+fancy I am in Derbyshire itself. It is a gay place, this rising town, at
+the foot, as it were, of the Rockies, and just now is unusually gay, as
+the Queen’s birthday is being celebrated with athletic sports and a ball;
+and, besides, a new clergyman has made his appearance, the Rev. Parks
+Smith, from a Bermondsey parish, who is to preach in the new Assembly
+Hall, which is to be set apart as a church on Sundays. I am going to
+hear him, and already I feel somewhat of a Pharisee—I have on a clean
+collar, which I religiously preserved for the occasion, and have had my
+boots blackened. The sight is so novel that I have spent half an hour on
+the prairie contemplating the effect of that operation. Already I feel
+six inches higher.
+
+I can’t say that I think quite so much of Calgary as do the people who
+live in it. In splendour, in wealth, in dignity, and importance, they
+evidently anticipate it will be a second Babylon. Well, a good deal has
+to be done first. The situation is pleasant, I admit. You incline to
+think well of Calgary after the dreary ride across the prairie, and you
+have quite a choice of hotels, and of shops, all well stocked; but then
+these shops are little better than huts, and the hotels certainly don’t
+throw the shops into the shade.
+
+For instance, I am in the leading hotel. It is too far from the railway,
+but that is because the C.P.R. have moved their station a little further
+on, where the new town of Calgary is springing up. We have an open room,
+where I am writing—a dark dining-room on one side, and then, on the
+other, a little row of closets, which they dignify by the name of
+bedrooms. I am the proud possessor of one. It holds a bed, whereon, I
+own, I slept soundly; a row of pegs, on which to hang one’s clothes; and
+a little shelf, on which is placed a tiny wash-hand basin; while above
+that is a glass, in which it is impossible to get a good view of
+yourself—a matter of very small consequence, as the glass certainly
+reflects very poorly the looker’s personal charms, whatever they may be.
+I ought to have said there is a window; and as my bedroom is on the
+ground floor (upper rooms are rare in these wooden houses in the
+North-West), I am much exercised in my mind as to whether that window may
+not be opened in the course of the night, and the roll of dollars I have
+hidden under my pillow carried off. Then, just as I am getting into bed,
+I discover somebody else’s boots. That is awkward—very. It is with a
+sigh of relief I discover that they are not feminine. Suppose the owner
+of those boots comes into my bedroom and claims to be the rightful owner?
+Suppose he resorts to physical force? Suppose, in such a case, I got the
+worst of it?
+
+Fortunately, before I can answer these questions satisfactorily to
+myself, I am asleep, and yet they are not so irrelevant as you fancy.
+
+Last night, for instance, as I was sitting in the cool air, smoking one
+of the peculiarly bad cigars in which the brave men of Canada greatly
+rejoice, and for which they pay as heavily as if they were of the finest
+brands, a half-drunken man came up, abusing me in every possible way,
+threatening to smash every bone in my body, and altogether behaving
+himself in a way the reverse of polite. Perhaps you say, Why did you not
+knock him down? In novels heroes always do, and come clear off; but I am
+not writing fiction, and in real life I have always found discretion to
+be the better part of valour. The fact is, the fellow was a strapping
+Hercules, and I could see in a moment, if the appeal were to force, what
+the issue might be. Yet I had not done anything intentionally to offend
+him. He had come galloping up to the hotel, as they all do here—the
+horses are not trained to trot—and his horse had bucked him off. I
+believe I did say something to a friend of a mildly critical nature, but
+I question whether the rider heard it. The fact was, he was angry at
+having been thrown, and seeing that I was a stranger, he evidently
+thought he could pour the vials of his wrath on me. I must admit that in
+a little while he came up and apologized, and there was an end of the
+matter. But the worst part of it was that his friend remarked to me that
+this drunken insulting ruffian was one of the best fellows in the place.
+If so, Calgary has to be thankful for very small mercies indeed.
+
+You ask, How could the fellow be drunk, seeing that there is a
+prohibitory liquor-law in existence? I have every reason to believe that
+Calgary is a very drunken place, nevertheless. I have already referred
+to one case of drunkenness. I may add that, in the afternoon of the same
+day, I had seen another in the shape of an old gentleman who was going to
+head a revolt which would cut off the North-West from the Dominion, and
+which would make her a Crown colony. He was very drunk as he stood on
+the bar opposite me declaiming all this bunkum. I remarked his state to
+the landlord, who seemed to feel how unfair it was that men could get
+drunk on the sly, and that a decent landlord, like himself, should be
+deprived of the privilege of selling them decent liquor. I own it is
+very hard on the publicans. At Moose Jaw one of them told me he would
+give five hundred pounds for a liquor license. ‘They call this a free
+country,’ said an indignant English settler to me, ‘and yet I can’t get a
+drop of good liquor. Pretty freedom, ain’t it?’ Unfortunately, the
+Government, while it prohibits the sale of liquor, does not exterminate
+the desire for it—perhaps only increases it—as we always cry for what we
+can’t get. Unfortunately, also, it is true that, as long as this demand
+exists, the supply will be found somehow.
+
+In Montana there are a lot of blackguards and daredevils who will run the
+thing in somehow. Liquor is also brought in by the railway as coal-oil,
+oatmeal, flour, varnish, and then it is doctored up and sold at £1 the
+bottle to the thirsty souls. Now, what is the consequence? Why, that,
+as a local journal remarks, liquor is sold; the dealers are pests and
+outlaws; they sell their poison for ten times the price of what people
+who don’t belong to the Blue Ribbon Army call good liquor, and then
+vanish with their ill-gotten money out of the country, excepting such as
+they may leave behind them in the shape of fines, when found out. I do
+think the hotel-keeper has much reason to complain of prohibition. It
+presses hardly on him, and does not put drunkenness down. I mentioned
+these facts to a Baptist minister from England, whom I met in Toronto.
+He would not believe them; I gave him cuttings from newspapers to support
+my view. His reply was that they were hoaxes. I have now been in
+Calgary a day, and already I find that these hoaxes, as my friend calls
+them, are veritable facts.
+
+I believe that many of my travelling companions were a little fresh last
+night, from their soberness and dejection of manner this morning. They
+were away down town, and had not returned when I retired to rest; and
+this morning several of the householders complain of having had their
+doors knocked at at most unseasonable hours.
+
+At meals I meet queer company. We have a Chinese cook. I have a faint
+idea that he has murderous designs on us all, his smile is so childlike
+and bland; yet I prefer his placid pleasant round face to those of his
+female helps, sour and ill-looking, who earn wages such as an English
+servant-girl never dreams of. His messes seem to be appreciated, and
+little is left after meal-time. It is enough for me to see the men eat.
+Every particle of food is conveyed into the mouth by means of the knife,
+which is also freely used if sugar or salt be required. Our dining-room
+is simply a shed, and a very dark one, having a canvas on one side and
+unpainted deal on the other. Few houses at Calgary are painted, though a
+painted house looks so much prettier than a deal one that I wonder
+painting is not more resorted to, especially when you remember how paint
+preserves the wood. Many of the houses here are brought all the way from
+Ontario, and, perhaps, this accounts for their smallness. They chiefly
+consist of two rooms, one a shop, the other a sitting and night-room; and
+the larger number have been erected within the last few months. What we
+call in England a gentleman’s house, I should say does not exist in the
+whole district. A gentleman would find existence intolerable here,
+though the air is fine, and the extent of the prairie is unbounded.
+There are two newspapers in the town, and the professions are all well
+represented.
+
+As to my companions, the less I say of them the better. They are young
+and vigorous, and use language not generally tolerated in polite society.
+Their talk is chiefly of horses and bets. They ride recklessly up and
+down the dusty path which forms the main street, and would not break
+their hearts if they knocked a fellow down; or they drive light waggons
+on four wheels, creating the most overwhelming clouds of dust as they
+rush by. As to their saddles, they are as unlike English ones as can
+well be imagined, rising at each end, so as to give the rider a very safe
+seat, while their stirrups are as long almost as the foot itself; but the
+saddles have this advantage, that they never give the horses sore backs.
+As to the horses, they are all branded, and turned loose on to the
+prairie when not required. Most of the men are prospectors—people who go
+round the country in search of mines; or cow-boys—that is, men employed
+in the cattle ranches in the district. The cowboy is a fearful sight.
+His hands and face are as brown as leather, he wears a straw hat—or one
+of felt—with a very wide brim. His coat or jacket is, perhaps, decorated
+with Indian work. Around his waist he wears a belt, which he makes
+useful in many ways. Then he has brown leather leggings, ornamented down
+the sides with leather fringes, and on his heels he puts a tremendous
+pair of spurs. The men on the mountains have much the same style of
+dress, and are fine specimens of muscular, rather than intellectual or
+moral, development. On the whole, I am not unduly enamoured of these
+pioneers of civilization; but, then, I was born in the old country, and
+learned Dr. Watts’s hymns, and was taught to—
+
+ ‘Thank the goodness and the grace
+ That on my birth has smiled,
+ And made me in these Christian days
+ A happy English child.’
+
+I see a good deal more of Calgary than I wish to. I feel that I have
+been made a fool of by the station-master. I am, as you may be aware, at
+the foot of the Rocky Mountains. They are some 60 miles off, yet;
+already I have seen their far-off peaks, glistening with snow, rising
+into the summer sky. As I have got so far, I must see them. There are
+trees up there, and the sight of a tree would be good for sore eyes;
+there are cooling shades out there, and here, though it is but early
+morning, it is too hot to stir. The scenery out there is the finest to
+be seen in all the Canadian continent, and I would carry away with me, to
+think of in after years, something of their beauty. I travelled all this
+way for that purpose, and hoped to have been off before, and now find I
+must wait, owing to a blunder on the part of the station-master. He
+promised he would let me know if he sent a freight-train to the Rocky
+Mountains. Well, he sent off a train at one o’clock this morning, and
+never let me know anything about it, and the consequence is I must stay
+two more days in this dreary spot, without conveniences such as I could
+find in the meanest cottage in England, and at a cost which would enable
+me to live in luxury and fare sumptuously at home. One lesson I have
+learned, which I repeat for the benefit of my readers. Never depend upon
+other people; hear all they say, and then act for yourself. Had I done
+so, I should have been now in the Rocky Mountains. I trusted in others,
+and I am, in consequence, the victim of misplaced confidence.
+
+I gather a few items of interest to intending emigrants. Crops raised in
+the vicinity of Calgary during 1883 gave the following yields per
+acre:—Wheat, 33 bushels; barley, 40 bushels; oats, 60 bushels. The
+Government farm a few miles off, which I have visited, does well. The
+country round offers especial advantages to sheep and dairy farmers,
+cheese manufacturers, and hog raisers. My own impression is, and I have
+mentioned it to several persons who all think it excellent, that any man
+would easily make his fortune who set up a poultry farm. Eggs and fowls
+are almost entirely unknown, and if the producer did not find a market
+here, he could easily send his produce by the railway to where it was
+wanted. Eggs and fowls help one as well as anything to keep body and
+soul together.
+
+I am glad I went to church yesterday. My presence there gave quite a
+tone to the place (said the head man to me this morning), and so far I
+may presume I did good service. The congregation consisted chiefly of
+men, and the collection amounted to nearly 16 dollars—pretty good,
+considering (said the above mentioned gentleman) there are two or three
+schism shops in the place. In the evening I went to the Wesleyan
+Methodist schism shop, as he called it, and heard a sermon, which touched
+me more than any sermon I have heard a long time. As I came out the
+effect was startling. The sun was sinking in crimson glory just behind
+the green hills by which Calgary is surrounded. Far off a dim splendour
+of pink testified to the existence of a prairie fire, while before me
+stood a gigantic Indian, with his big black head rising out of a pyramid
+of gorgeous robes, really dazzling to behold. There is an Indian Mission
+near here, but the Indians are not the only heathens out here.
+
+I have just had a ride in a buck-cart, which is the kind of vehicle the
+colonists use. It is of boards on four wheels, on which is placed a seat
+for a couple of persons, while the luggage is piled up behind. Some of
+them have springs, as fortunately was the case with the one on which I
+rode, or I should have had a very uncomfortable ride indeed. Perhaps I
+ought not to be so angry with the station-master as I was when I
+interviewed him this morning. I have just seen a man who got on to the
+freight train, but he tells me it was so uncomfortable that he preferred
+to wait, and got off after he had taken his passage.
+
+Money seems scarce. I have just been to the post-office to send a letter
+to England. The postmaster could give me no change, and I had to take
+post-cards instead. I suppose all the money goes to the smugglers. In
+this small town 500 dollars are sent weekly to Winnipeg for liquor; so
+much for prohibition in Calgary.
+
+As there is no bank here, people find it hard to get money. A young man
+waiting here to make up a mining party for the Rockies, tells me he had
+to telegraph to Toronto for 500 dollars, which were sent in the shape of
+a post-office order. The postmaster charged him five dollars for cashing
+the order. I have just heard of a loan of 300 dollars effected; the
+borrower has agreed to pay, in the shape of interest, the moderate sum of
+four dollars a month.
+
+Calgary, according to some, can have no enduring prosperity; if so, the
+land-grabbers who have scattered themselves all over it will be deeply
+disappointed.
+
+Edmonton, where they get gold out of the river sand, and where they have
+already a kind of dredging machine employed for that purpose, it is said,
+will shortly have a railway to itself, and the men from the mountains,
+who are the mainstay of Calgary, will go that way.
+
+I fancy I hear some one exclaim: On those wide plains over which sweeps
+the ice-laden air of the Rockies, what pleasant walks you must have! My
+dear sir, you are quite mistaken. Perhaps, as you set out, there comes a
+herd of wild horses—and then I remember how poor George Moore was knocked
+down by one, and avoid the boundless prairie accordingly.
+
+Then there are the dogs, ‘their name is Legion,’ and they are big, and as
+wild as they are big, and I am not partial to hydrophobia. No; it is
+better to sit at the door of my tent and watch the flight of the horses,
+the fights of the dogs, and the stream of dust a mile long which denotes
+that some Jehu is at hand, who will pull up at the door, deeply drink
+water, smoke a cigar, use a little strong language, and then mount again
+and ride off into boundless space.
+
+Here and there a pedestrian may be seen making his way to his solitary
+hut or shop, where at no time do you see any sign of life; and how the
+people here make a living (with the exception of the hotel-keepers, who
+are always busy) puzzles me. I meet good fellows, I own. They are
+friendly in their way. As humour is a thing unknown in Canada and the
+North-West, they generally grin when I make a remark, which I do at very
+protracted intervals, fearing to be worn out before the long day is done.
+Nevertheless, I begin to doubt whether I am not relapsing into the wild
+life of those around me. Fortunately, I have not yet acquired the habit
+of speaking through my nose, nor do I make that fearful sound—a hawking
+in the throat—which is a signal that your neighbour is preparing to
+expectorate, and which renders travelling, even in a first-class car,
+almost insupportable; but my hands are tanned. I sit with my waistcoat
+open, and occasionally in my shirt-sleeves. I care little to make any
+effort to be polite; I am clean forgetting all my manners, and feel that
+in a little while I shall be as rough as a cow-boy, or as the wild wolf
+of the prairie. It is clear I must not tarry at Calgary too long.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+IN THE ROCKIES—HOLT CITY—LIFE IN THE CAMP—A ROUGH RIDE—THE KICKING HORSE
+LAKE—BRITISH COLUMBIA.
+
+I am writing from Holt City—so named after a famous contractor out
+here—in the middle of the Rocky Mountains. Here the rail comes, but no
+further, as yet, though some 2,000 men are at work a few miles ahead, and
+making incredible speed in the construction of this gigantic
+intercolonial undertaking—an undertaking which would have been completed
+by this time had the late Sir Hugh Allan (the founder of the Allan line
+of steamers) and Sir John Macdonald had their way.
+
+I left Calgary without shedding a tear—the train was only three hours
+late—after remarking to the manager of the leading hotel that, much as I
+had enjoyed myself under his humble but hospitable roof, I would give him
+leave to charge me twenty dollars a day if ever he caught me within his
+doors again.
+
+When the train arrived, of course there was no room. This is the working
+season, and the C.P.R., as everyone calls it in Canada, is hurrying on
+men to the front as fast as they can be got.
+
+However, I was permitted to get inside the mail van, in company with a
+contractor, his wife, and a baby, which behaved itself as well as could
+be expected under the circumstances; a lady who was going to visit her
+husband, one of the contractors on the line; and an invalid from
+Pennsylvania, who did not seem much to enjoy that rough mode of
+travelling. We reached Holt City about eleven, when it was quite dark,
+and the only bed I could find was a shelf in the van, on which I was glad
+to lie down—but not, alas! to sleep. Had I got out, I should have been
+lost, or run over by an engine—that is positive, as there is no road,
+only divers rails, as, for instance, the Continental Hotel at Newhaven.
+I am now writing in the post-office, which seems the great social centre
+of the place, though the mail only leaves twice a week. It is a
+decent-sized tent, with a desk and counter in the middle for the sale of
+stamps and cigars and the delivery of letters. Behind it are a couple of
+beds on which men are reposing in a way that I envy, and covered with
+buffalo skins—the possession of which I envy them still more. In front
+is a table, fitted up with old papers and a couple of uncommonly
+uncomfortable benches, whereon are sitting various loafers, smoking and
+talking, and warming themselves as best they can at the big stove—one of
+which you now see in every Canadian house, and which but feebly keeps out
+the raw cold of the morning.
+
+ [Picture: Mount Stephen in the Rocky Mountains on the Line of the
+ Canadian Pacific Railway]
+
+Holt City is admirably located, to use an American phrase which I
+heartily detest. It is a clearance in the forest, bordered by the Bow
+River, which dashes foaming along. There is a shed, which does duty for
+a railway station; a collection of tents, in which the _employés_ of the
+company dwell, or which hold the large stores it collects here; a large
+shed for meals, a railway car, in which Mr. John Ross, the able
+administrator of the C.P.R. in these parts, resides with his accomplished
+wife; and further off are other tents, which do duty as hotels,
+billiard-rooms, and shops. Up here, I see little to remind me of the Old
+Country, except bottles of Stephens’ inks, of Aldersgate Street, London,
+which, says the head accountant, are the only inks on which they can
+rely.
+
+We are in a valley—a valley high up among the mountains—as fair as that
+in which Rasselas studied to be a virtuous prince, but of a character
+common in the length and breadth of the Rockies. I have seen scores of
+valleys as fair; and yet I own the exquisite loveliness of the spot—at
+any rate, in summer time—is marvellous. Around me rise Alps on Alps, up
+into the cloudless blue. Firs, all larch and pine, in all the freshness
+of their new-found greenery, clothe their base; while the snow, in
+wreaths like marble, glistens on their dark sides or crowns their rugged
+peaks. It would seem as if there could be no world beyond. It is really
+wonderful what pleasant nooks of this kind one sees everywhere. I
+stopped at one such last night, a station called Canmore, which, however,
+seemed to be the fairest of them all—and so the fish think, as the
+station-master tells me he often catches speckled trout seven or eight
+pounds in weight. Very near are valuable sulphur and other springs, and
+when the railway shall be completed, I look forward to the time when
+Pullman cars shall come here laden with health seekers from all parts of
+the world, who are fond of fishing and fine air.
+
+I had a narrow escape from not coming here at all. When we stopped at
+Canmore for our evening meal, I found I was utterly unable to climb back
+into the mail van. I may be young in heart, but, alas! I have lost
+somewhat of the agility of early youth. I mentioned this to the
+station-master and guard, who both promised me repeatedly that they would
+have the train drawn up for me. Knowing this, I listened unconcernedly
+to the cry of ‘All on board!’ Judge, then, of my horror when I saw the
+train gradually gliding past.
+
+‘Jump into the last car,’ cried the guard, as he saw me looking daggers
+at him.
+
+Fortunately I succeeded in doing so: it is easier to get on to an
+American car when in motion than on an English one, on account of its
+peculiar construction. This is fortunate, as the railway passenger in
+Canada has to trust entirely to himself. He is ignored by guards and
+porters and station-master altogether. Unfortunately, I jumped on to the
+car sacred to the person of Sir John McNeil, and I was requested by the
+black cook to move off, which I declined doing till we reached the next
+station, when I moved into another car, and created not a little laughter
+as I told my story. It is to be trusted that Sir John enjoyed himself
+all the more for having got rid of my vulgar presence. I hope Sir John
+may enlighten his friends on his return; but I fear he will gain little
+knowledge of the people or the country, travelling in such a way.
+Perhaps he will learn as much about it as the Marquis of Lorne, or the
+Earl of Carnarvon, who recommends the poor people of the East-end to come
+to Canada, where the chances are they will be worse off than they are at
+home. Canada requires hardy, muscular men—if with money in their pockets
+so much the better—not the refuse of our towns.
+
+Again, I repeat, people in England ought to have fuller information about
+Canada ere they go thither. It is a fortune for the strong man, but even
+he has to run risks. Everywhere I hear of what is called mountain fever,
+or Red River fever, or fever with some other name which stands for
+typhoid disease. Grand and beautiful as is the country, fertile as is
+the soil, people forget to observe sanitary laws at times and suffer in
+consequence. But I must own that all the men I met in Holt City were
+pictures of health and strength. For one thing, the company feeds them
+well. I have just breakfasted in camp with the men. We had good coffee
+and fried ham and other good things for breakfast, and good tins of
+preserved fruits, to which everyone did justice. Everyone here has to
+rough it. I washed this morning in the open air, having myself ladled
+into a tin basin the water out of a cask in which still floated the
+broken ice.
+
+Holt City is, I suppose, the head-quarters of the C.P.R. Yet it is a
+place by itself. Nothing can be rougher than the rail from here to
+Calgary, or finer than the view. It is an advantage that the trains are
+so slow, as you have more time to enjoy the scenery, which has almost
+shaken my attachment to the Hebrides, though one misses the purple
+heather which lends such a charm to the grey hills of the North. But
+comparisons are odious, and the Rockies, in all their charms, must be
+seen to be appreciated. It was a wonderful view I had last night as I
+sat on the steps of the last car, drinking in all the strange beauties of
+the place. We were climbing hour by hour a wilderness of mountains. We
+were hemmed in by them from afternoon till night came down upon the face
+of the earth. Mostly they were black, with snowy variations; some were
+bare, others clothed with verdure. Some raised their heads in the clear
+blue sky as fortresses, others were peaks, others ragged and uneven,
+shapeless masses of matter growing out of one another. Some seemed to
+like good company, others stood solitary and apart.
+
+In the dells and shadows there are tales yet to be told. For instance,
+here are some remains of the ancient road to British Columbia. Here, a
+man tells me, last year there was a terrible tragedy. An English
+gentleman and his son were camping near the spot. There came a forest
+fire. Awful to relate, when the son had time to look around him, his
+father was burnt to death. Fearful are some of the solitudes through
+which the passenger plunges. The bear and the eagle have them entirely
+to themselves. Few have explored them; fewer still have scaled the
+mountain heights by which they are girdled. But nowadays one is in
+search of silver or gold or coal, and has no time to think of mountain
+grandeur. Cities rise and fall very quickly here. Silver City, for
+instance, where we stopped last night, was all the rage a year or two
+ago. It is now deserted. Yet people say silver is still to be found
+there, and at Calgary, as an illustration of the fact, a ‘prospector’
+showed me a fine specimen of silver, at the same time asking me to come
+and see the shaft. I replied I was as fond of silver as he was, but I
+sought it in another way.
+
+But to return to the Rockies. I wonder not that in times past the
+Indians saw in them the home of the gods, or that there the scientist
+discovers in them the source of the whirlwind or the storm.
+
+I am again train-bound. No one knows when we may have a train from the
+east, and till we have one it is impossible for me to get away.
+Physically, perhaps, this is a good thing for me, as it enables me to
+recuperate. Here I am, 5,000 or 6,000 feet above the level of the sea,
+breathing mountain air, and luxuriating in mountain scenery. Last night
+I slept in a caboose, and it was the best night’s rest I have had for a
+long time. I went to bed at nine and was up again at five. Do my
+readers know what a caboose is? It is a railway luggage-car on wheels.
+Mine is rather a superior one, and has an upper and a lower chamber, and
+has in the upper chamber a row of shelves, which do service as beds. I
+had one of these to myself, and, as I was well provided with blankets,
+did not much grieve at the absence of linen sheets.
+
+My dear old friend, Mrs. Moodie, wrote a capital book, called ‘Roughing
+It in the Bush.’ Assuredly I may, one of these days, write one on
+roughing it in the Rockies, though the keeper of the caboose, out of
+respect for my age and infirmities, does all he can to make me
+comfortable. Already I feel the better for the air. For the first time
+since I have been in Canada I have felt hungry; for the first time, also,
+since I have been in Canada I have not had to physic myself with
+chlorodyne. A month up here in the Rockies would make a young man of me
+or of anyone else. I must be off before I become as gay as a horse fed
+on beans. This is, I take it, the real and sufficient reason of the
+peculiar spirits of the mountaineers, who rather alarmed me with their
+liveliness at Calgary. Their exuberance is due to air, and air alone.
+As I sit, a long row of mules files past; a man is riding at the head,
+the others follow with their burdens packed on their backs. He is a
+‘prospector,’ and is on his way to the other side. Already as many as a
+thousand such have gone the same road this summer.
+
+The mountains are full of wealth—in the shape of gold or silver, or coal
+or slate, or other precious commodities. Hitherto the cost of conveyance
+has kept people away. The opening of the C.P.R. will remove that
+inconvenience. They will have a chance now of getting rid of their
+minerals, when discovered, and of fetching up their stores from the East
+at less expense. As it is, things are dear enough in Holt City. For
+instance, if I send or receive a letter, I have to pay the postmaster a
+few cents in addition to the usual postage-stamp. Calgary I thought bad
+enough, but up here prices may be quoted as much higher. Yesterday I had
+a ride over the mountains. It will be long before I take such a ride
+again. No English coachman would drive such a road for five hundred a
+year. No English carriage could stand it, nor English horses either. I
+expected the buggy, as it was called, to be shattered into atoms every
+minute—it looked so light and frail, and the horses—a handsome pair, the
+property of Mr. Ross—to be ruined for life; yet we got safely to the
+front—where the men are hard at work cutting down trees, removing earth,
+tunnelling, and pushing on the work with all their might; and there, I
+must say, there are openings for any number of men who like to come out.
+Last year little was done in the winter, because the contractors believed
+the climate would be against them. No one before then had wintered in
+the Rockies, and everyone believed the climate to be much worse than it
+really is.
+
+But to return to the ride. I yet feel it in every bone in my body, as
+all the time I had to hold on to my seat like grim death. Sometimes the
+coachman was high above me; sometimes I was at the top and he at the
+bottom; now we were deep in the mud, the next moment high and dry on a
+formidable boulder, bigger than a hogshead, and came down with a bang,
+which sent me quivering all over. Here we were with the water up to the
+floor; and then we came on a mudbank quite as deep. Not an inch of the
+ground was level. It was all collar work or the reverse. Fortunately we
+were shaded by the firs which climb all the mountains out here, or the
+heat would have been unbearable. As to conversation, that was quite out
+of the question, though the ‘boy’ who drove me came when a child from
+Devonshire, and had a strong wish to see the old country again, of whose
+lanes, yellow with primroses, and cottages bright with roses and
+honeysuckles, and farmhouses green with ivy, he had a very vivid
+recollection. He made a lot of money, he said. Indeed, he had more than
+he knew what to do with. Last winter, for instance, he stopped a month
+in Winnipeg, and spent there four hundred dollars. ‘How did it all go?’
+‘Oh! in treating the boys!’ was his answer. I rather intimated that was
+a poor way of using his money. ‘Oh!’ said he, ‘they all do it. That is
+the way of the boys in this country!’ I was glad to hear him say that he
+thought of taking a farm soon, and was putting by the money for that
+purpose. The Rocky Mountains cannot be a bad place for a ‘boy.’ One of
+them yesterday told me how he had vainly written to his father to come
+out, who was now in the old country breaking stones on the road. Here,
+at any rate, he would have been better off. It is a long journey, I
+know, for the British emigrant. We are more than 1,000 miles from
+Winnipeg, and the ride is a dreary one till you reach the Rockies. The
+run to Winnipeg from Toronto by Port Arthur and Owen Sound is a real
+enjoyment. It took us two days and two nights to reach Port Arthur from
+Toronto, and the trip from Port Arthur to Winnipeg is accomplished easily
+in twenty hours.
+
+‘Any bears about here?’ said I to the ‘boy,’ in one of the few minutes
+allowed for conversation in the course of our rough ride yesterday.
+
+‘Not many. I seed one near where we are passing. He was a black bear,
+and stood up and looked at me, and then I looked at him. I wished I’d
+had a gun, and then I would have shot him.’
+
+Fortunately I saw no bear, black or brown, in the woods as we drove
+amongst them; scarcely a bird—only one, an owl I think, on the top of a
+tree, which never moved, though we were close upon it. ‘Do you make any
+difference in work on Sunday?’ I asked of one of the men. ‘Oh no; Sunday
+ain’t of much account here.’ This is to be regretted, if only for
+physical considerations. Everyone can work all the better for a day of
+rest. Again, I think the C.P.R. injures itself in this way, that it may
+lose the services of useful men who like to keep the Sabbath, either from
+physical or religious considerations. As a matter of fact, I found many
+did take a rest on Sunday, and it was amusing to see how the morning was
+devoted to haircutting and shaving and mending clothes in the open air.
+A man, I know, can spend his Sunday at honest work better than in
+drinking. But when we think of the wild life of the miners and navvies
+in the ends of the earth—a life so wild that the C.P.R. has got a law
+passed to forbid the sale of intoxicating drink, and people are appalled
+when they read, in spite of the law, whisky is supplied to men who have a
+large number of revolvers at their side—it seems that a little provision
+might be made for the religious wants of the community. The philosopher
+will laugh, I admit. My reply is: Men were lifted out of degradation by
+the Christian religion in some form or other, and as we root that out we
+may expect society to retrograde. These men to the front will pay for
+looking after. They are fine fellows mostly. At any rate, they are the
+pioneers of modern civilization, and should be reverenced as such. They
+are to be honoured for their work’s sake. They plant, we gather the
+fruit. They sow the seed, we reap the harvest, and their work remains a
+monument of perseverance, of the benefits of the Union, of enterprise,
+and capital and skill. That Canada has thus carried the railway and the
+telegraph across the Rockies shows that England and America will have to
+look to their industrial laurels.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am alive, I am thankful to say; but it seems to me that I should have
+left my bones on the Kicking Horse Lake, which lies on the slope of the
+Rockies, situated in British Columbia, where the scenery becomes grander
+and the air balmier as it comes up laden with the soft breeze of the
+Pacific. You see that at once in the superior size of the trees which
+clothe the sides of that part of the Rockies.
+
+As far as what the navvies call the front, I had the benefit of the
+temporary railway by which Mr. Ross sends his labourers. It is then the
+great difficulties of the work commence, as the rocks are tremendous, and
+one of the tunnels making will be three-quarters of a mile long.
+
+This hot weather I can scarce imagine how the men and horses stand the
+work; of the former, some were digging, others cutting down the trees,
+others removing rocks, others filling up the swamps. Here the waggons
+were being laden with stores to be sent further to the front; now and
+then a long trail of mules sweeps by with miners and miners’ stores, and
+I plunge into the forest, shaded from the fierce sun by the tall firs,
+and as I struggle in the swamps caused by the melting snows, I can
+realize something of the hardships of the early travellers—hardships of
+which the tourist, when the rail is completed, will have no idea, though
+he will be a little alarmed as the mountains drop away beneath his feet
+for more than a hundred miles to the Columbia river, while the narrow
+track of rails winds along its sides. In the winter this pass, when
+covered with snow, is very dangerous, and many are the mules and horses
+dashed to pieces over the precipice.
+
+The lake, when I reach it, is full of ice and snow, and all round the
+mountains rear their snow-capped heads. One of the peculiarities of this
+region is the abundance of water in some shape or other, and the shadows
+on the lakes reflect as a mirror all the surrounding scene—the dark
+forest at the base, the masses of slate-like rock above, the snow in all
+its radiant white higher up, the unclouded azure that crowns and
+glorifies all.
+
+Heated and tired, I throw myself on the moss, and realize, in all its
+intensity, the appalling loneliness of forest life—I startle three wild
+ducks, that is all. Down on my left comes the rushing torrent in a
+series of picturesque waterfalls into the lake. I climb the mountain by
+the side of them. The water sends to me an ice-laden air, which revives
+me as I struggle upwards and onwards, watching the whirlpools and
+cascades as the water angrily struggles to force its way through the iron
+barriers by which it is hemmed in. I secure a fine specimen of petrified
+moss from a stream close by. But I may not linger. Already I feel weak
+as I plunge into the frozen snow, or sink where the sun has melted it
+into morass, or stumble over an old moss-grown trunk, or climb the big
+trunks which the axeman has already levelled, or pass the streams which
+intersect the plain on logs off which I expect to slip every moment.
+Then I come to the railway men, and avail myself of the imperfect and
+unconnected track which they have formed; but now the sun beats fiercely
+on me, and I can scarcely put one foot before another. The spirit is
+willing, but the flesh is weak. Fortunately, I reach the tent of a good
+Samaritan. I refresh myself with water from the crystal stream. I lunch
+on bread and cheese, with tea kindly fetched from the company’s hut, but
+I have to lie down three hours before I feel myself equal to urging on my
+wild career again.
+
+British Columbia seems at present to be chiefly occupied by miners. No
+other kind of emigrants are needed there. The country is mountainous—a
+regular sea of mountains; but, writes an occasional correspondent of _The
+Toronto Mail_, ‘there are beautiful valleys, far surpassing anything you
+have in Ontario, and the mountains and hills furnish pasture.
+Considering the climate, the rich soil, and the high price paid for all
+farming produce, I believe there cannot be a more desirable place for the
+farmer. I have no hesitation in saying that a farm of fifty acres is
+worth more than a hundred in the East. All you have to do is to sow your
+land with good seed and you are sure of a bountiful return. No weevil,
+midge, wire-worm, potato bug, nor, in fact, any farmers’ pests, exist
+here. There are no scorching hot days and sultry nights; no heavy frost
+or deep snow to impede work; consequently you are not driven like a slave
+for six months and frozen in for the other six, but have steady work all
+the year round.’
+
+Other writers bear a similar testimony. With all its advantages,
+however, the country has one drawback—the scarcity and high price of
+labour. It seems well looked after by the Episcopalians, who have a
+Bishop here and several clergymen, and, as I may suppose the other
+denominations are equally in earnest and equally active, it is clear
+settlers may enjoy the advantages of the forms of religious life with
+which they are familiar, and under which they have been reared.
+
+British Columbia, which entered the Canadian Confederation in 1871, is
+the most westerly of the Canadian Provinces. It has a coast-line on the
+Pacific Ocean of about 600 miles, that is, in a straight line. If its
+almost innumerable indentations and bays were measured, the coast-line
+would extend to several thousands of miles.
+
+The area of the Province, according to the Census measurement, is 341,305
+square miles. Its position on the American continent is one of great
+commercial importance, and its resources are in keeping with its
+position. If it were to be described from the characteristics of its
+climate, its mineral wealth, and its natural commercial relations, it
+might be said to be the Great Britain and California combined of the
+Dominion of Canada.
+
+The Province is divided into two parts: the Islands, of which Vancouver
+is the principal, and the Mainland. Vancouver is about 300 miles long,
+with an average breadth of about sixty miles, containing an area of about
+20,000 square miles.
+
+British Columbia has numerous harbours and rivers, some of which are of
+importance, and all are remarkable for their bountiful, in fact
+wonderful, supplies of fish. The scenery which it possesses is
+magnificently beautiful.
+
+The climate on the coast is more equable and much milder in winter than
+in any other part of Canada; but as the mountains are ascended, greater
+cold prevails, with more snow, and the characteristics of greater dryness
+of atmosphere which mark the climate of the interior of the continent are
+found.
+
+The population of British Columbia, by the Census of 1881, did not exceed
+49,459, of which 25,661 were Indians. This comparatively sparse
+population is due to the hitherto isolated position of the Province; but
+now that railway communication between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans
+through the Dominion of Canada is being rapidly pushed forward to
+completion by a route which offers the easiest gradients and the most
+important natural commercial advantages of any possible line across the
+continent of America, the inducements the Province offers to settlers are
+beginning to attract the attention, as well of the emigrating classes of
+the Old World, as of the migrating classes of this continent; and
+population is already beginning to flow rapidly in. It is beyond doubt
+that the percentage of increase which will be shown at the next decennial
+Census will be a statistical fact to excite men’s wonder. Its fisheries,
+its forests, its mineral resources, will provide work for thousands who
+are starving at home. And it will be easily reached when the Canadian
+Pacific Railway is completed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have now reached the end of my journey, and I sum up my emigration
+experiences. The emigrant, if strong and industrious, and ready to take
+advantage of opportunities, and not averse to roughing it, will be sure
+to find work; but he must be shy, if he has cash, of land schemers, and I
+would advise him, if he thinks of settling, not to be in a hurry about
+it, but to take time to look around. I have seen as fine farming country
+as anywhere in the world. I have seen other parts where no one can get a
+living. Amongst the emigrants I see many who must succeed anywhere, and
+many who will go to the wall wherever they may be.
+
+Let me give you another illustration of the bursting of an emigration
+scheme. The London dailies often have advertisements offering for a
+certain bonus to provide young men with homes where farming in all its
+branches is taught. The London (Ont.) papers tell how a number of young
+fellows have been taken in in this way. They paid the advertisers sums
+from thirty pounds upwards, in addition to their passage money, the
+consideration being that on their arrival in Ontario they were to be
+placed on farms and kept there at the agent’s expense. Of course, when
+they reached their journey’s end, no farmers were to be found. If a
+young Englishman wishes to try farming in Canada, he cannot do better
+than hire himself to a farmer for a year or two and keep his money in his
+pocket for the purchase of a farm.
+
+But even then he must not buy a farm till he knows something about it,
+and he cannot be long out here before he will find out where the good
+land is. A Canadian whom I met at Calgary, told me that he knew a farm
+near Toronto which was regularly in the market every year. It is safe to
+be bought by an Englishman, who tries it for a time, gives it up in
+despair, and then it comes into the market again.
+
+‘Are there any stones on the farm?’ asked an Englishman, after he had
+purchased his farm.
+
+‘I only saw one,’ was the encouraging reply: and it was a truthful one.
+There was but one stone, but then it embraced the surface of the whole
+farm.
+
+The English purchaser must have his wits about him. Here he is by many
+regarded as a stranger, and they take him in. The poet tells us where
+ignorance is bliss ’tis folly to be wise. Ignorance is not bliss in
+Canada, emigrants really must have their wits about them or they will
+suffer much.
+
+Near Moosomin there is some fine country where many English have settled.
+Only last week an Englishman selected a farm in that locality for a
+homestead. He at once proceeded there, having at considerable expense
+hired a conveyance for his wife and four children. When he got there he
+found the land already occupied. To add to his troubles, when he
+returned to Moosomin one of his children died; the result is that the
+wife has grown home-sick, the poor man disheartened; he wants to return
+to England, but he has already exhausted his means. This want of harmony
+between the land office and the guides, according to _The Manitoba Free
+Press_, is said to be of frequent occurrence. The Dominion Government
+ought to see to this. They are eager to promote emigration, but many
+such cases will make English farmers naturally a little reluctant to come
+out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+DANGERS OF THE ROCKIES.—PRAIRIE FIRES.—THE RETURN.—PORT ARTHUR.—MIGRANTS.
+
+There is a great deal of snow in the Rockies. In June that snow begins
+to melt. The result is, a violent body of water rushes down, which makes
+the railway people very uncomfortable.
+
+On Sunday I met the engine-driver of the train by which I was to travel
+east next morning. At Holt City it seems no one knows from what
+particular spot the train will start.
+
+‘You won’t start without me?’ I said.
+
+‘No; I will look to see whether you are on board.’
+
+‘But,’ said I, ‘you must leave at five, whether I am on board or not.’
+
+‘Oh! as to that,’ he said, ‘no one can make me start before I am ready.
+But,’ said he, ‘perhaps we may not get away at all. I don’t like the
+look of the bridge, and there is a deal of water about.’
+
+I smiled incredulously. Had not I seen, only an hour before, with my own
+eyes, a special train arrive from the west filled with labourers and
+freight? If that could cross in safety, surely our lighter train could
+do the same.
+
+Thus reasoning, I lay down with a light heart in my caboose, having
+invoked, not the saints, but every decent Christian I could find, to take
+care that I might be aroused at four p.m., in order that I might have a
+good wash before I started on my little run of 1,500 miles, as far as
+Port Arthur.
+
+Just as I was falling into the arms of Morpheus, to speak poetically—a
+habit to which I was much given in my earlier days—a fellow-traveller
+came rushing into the caboose, saying timidly:
+
+‘You’d better get on board at once. The bridge has given way, and they
+may go across at once,’ and so saying, he left me in the dark.
+
+However, I managed to jump out of my bed, collect my luggage, and
+scramble down the plank, the only and somewhat perilous means of access
+to my caboose, and stumble along the confusing lines of railway by which
+Holt City is adorned, and climb up into a car, wondering much all the
+while why we should start at all, when the bridge had partly given way,
+or whether I had come all that distance merely to find a watery grave.
+In the car I found a company as grotesque and rough as any I had yet seen
+anywhere, discussing the situation with more or less earnestness.
+
+The bridge, I heard, was being repaired; that was a comfort. But still
+no one knew when we should start. Now and then we moved a few feet
+forward, or a few feet backward; but, in reality, I believe we remained
+in the same position all night, and started at the usual hour next
+morning. But the horror of that night was something inexpressible.
+Sleep was quite out of the question. You can’t sleep in an American
+railway-car unless you are a navvy or a contractor—who can sleep
+anywhere. In England, even in a third-class carriage, the chances are
+you can lie down at your full length and sleep. In Canada you can’t do
+that, as the seats are too short. So there I sat, bolt upright, all
+through that tedious night, watching for the light of day, while my
+companions sat smoking and talking and expectorating. In a playful
+moment one of them suggested that they should all take off their boots.
+Fortunately the proposition did not meet with universal approval, and I
+was saved that horror.
+
+In the Rockies life is not all beer and ’baccy. One day there was an
+alarm of fire. It seems the woods are on fire all day long, and week
+after week. In this way much valuable timber is destroyed, and no one
+knows who does the mischief, or how it will terminate. Daily we saw the
+smoke of a forest fire; one day the flames came so close to Holt City
+that everyone was alarmed. If a spark or two reached the place where the
+explosives were stored, Holt City and all its inhabitants might have been
+blown to atoms. Down in the prairies fire does a vast amount of mischief
+to the settler, who awakes in the night to find his tent or house reduced
+to ashes, and all his worldly goods destroyed. Such cases are of
+frequent occurrence, especially at this season of the year, when the
+settler sets fire to the prairie before ploughing, or to insure a better
+crop of grass. One dark night, in particular, I remember the prairie
+fire lent quite a mournful grandeur to the scene. Then there came a day
+I shall never forget as long as I live. A Canadian summer may have its
+peculiar charms, but I candidly own, not being a salamander, it is far
+too hot for me. On that particular day the heat was intense. It
+affected everyone. Those who dared drank gallons of iced water, others
+pulled off their coats and collars and lay down on the cushions with
+which the sleeping-car is plentifully provided, and went off to sleep.
+It was in vain one tried to pass away the time in smoking—it was too hot
+for that. Newspapers and cheap novels were all neglected—conversation
+was out of the question. Everyone seemed on the point of giving up the
+ghost. Even the blackie, who invariably acts as conductor to the
+sleeping-car—and who is about the only civil official (with the exception
+of the steamboat attendants, who are models of good behaviour) one meets
+in Canadian travel, seemed, thinly clad as he was, quite overcome. The
+sun took all the colour out of his cheeks, and he became quite
+pale—almost white.
+
+In the course of our return journey we stopped at Moose Jaw for supper,
+and then I witnessed a new development of prairie life in the shape of a
+thunder-storm, which seemed to me unusually vivid and protracted. The
+lightning was grand as it swept over the wide sea of grass, making
+everything as bright as noon-day, and then all was dark again. It
+brought us a rain that had really healing in its wings. While the heat
+lasted I was a martyr to prickly heat. It seemed to me that I was going
+to have small-pox or measles. I had little pimples all over me, and as
+to my wrists, they were really painful, and I could not keep from
+scratching with a vivacity which a Scotchman might have envied. Was it
+that vulgar disease to which, it is said, the gallant Scot is peculiarly
+liable? I could not say. I had shaken hands with so many filthy
+Indians, and it might be that, as I learn they are much afflicted in that
+way. Happily the thunder-storm cooled the air, and I felt all the better
+for it. When I got as far as Port Arthur, and inhaled the cool air of
+Lake Superior, I suffered no more from unpleasant irritation of the skin.
+It was with joy I embarked on the C.P.R.’s fine steamer, the _Alberta_,
+for Owen Sound. But even travelling on Lake Superior has its
+disadvantages. The water of the Lake is intensely cold, and when the sun
+beats fiercely on it there is sure to be a fog. Such happened to be the
+case on my return, and we ploughed slowly along for a while, seeing
+hardly anything of the beauty of the scene, while every few minutes we
+were cheered by the dismal notes of the fog-horn. Fortunately the fog
+lifted, and then what a display we had of islands, green as emerald, on
+the tranquil sea! I must add, also, I had good company everywhere, with
+the exception of the great Sir John M’Neill, who had his meals apart from
+us at a table all to himself, and an English clergyman from
+Staffordshire, whom a Canadian gentleman described to me as ‘a regular
+crank,’ whatever that may mean. The parson is going to write a book, so
+he tells the people; but he shuns me, which is a pity, as I met a friend
+at Calgary who told me they had great fun with the parson on their way up
+from Winnipeg, telling him all sorts of cock-and-bull stories, which he
+greedily entered in his note-book.
+
+I must give you one more sketch of a Canadian town as an illustration of
+the enterprise and pluck which are the main characteristics of the
+Canadian of to-day. If you look at the map, you will see Port Arthur is
+situated in Thunder Bay, and Thunder Bay, when you pass the rocky barrier
+by which it is encircled, opens out into Lake Superior.
+
+Thunder Bay is a sheet of water some 13 by 19 miles in area, sheltered
+from the wild storms which sweep over the northern lakes by the Pie and
+Welcome Islands and the Thunder Cape on one side, and by the terraced
+bluffs of ever-green forest on the other; forming thus an unsurpassed
+harbour for extent and accommodation, and having claim to be what its
+admirers say it is, the prettiest of all the American Lakes.
+
+It is not an agricultural district that surrounds Port Arthur, though it
+is a fact that there are vast stretches of rich lands within its borders,
+including the Kamanistique and other valleys, on which at least 3,000
+families could settle and get a good living by agriculture.
+
+The timber resources of the surrounding country, which must find its
+centre and point of collection in the quiet waters of the bay, comprise
+thousands of square miles of spruce and other trees; while iron, copper,
+zinc, and silver are to be found in the neighbouring rocks. Gold also is
+said to be hidden in the bowels of the earth; though not yet discovered
+in paying quantities. However this may be, one thing is clear, that from
+Thunder Bay the whole agricultural exports of the countless fertile acres
+of the Canadian North-West must find an outlet. Truly did the Marquis of
+Lorne, when here, describe it as ‘The Silver Gate.’
+
+Port Arthur—as it was termed when Sir Garnet Wolseley arrived here on his
+way to suppress the Riel revolt in the North-West, out of compliment to
+the Duke of Connaught—is in reality one of the few places in Canada that
+have a history. As early as the beginning of the sixteenth century, some
+of the French settlers had formed an idea that the great Lake Superior
+was a highway to the vast fur-producing countries of the North-West,
+although not till 1641 did any white man venture upon its waters. In
+1678 a Frenchman built himself a house in the vicinity of Port Arthur,
+and commenced trading with the surrounding Indians for their furs.
+
+In 1857 the attention of the Canadian Government was called to the spot,
+and they sent out commissioners to explore, who, in 1859, published a
+report which created quite a sensation all over Canada. In due time the
+C.P.R., which is the great mainspring of all the North-West, took up Port
+Arthur, had all their stores and men carted there, and now Port Arthur
+has a grand future before it, of which it is impossible to predict the
+whole extent. I have great faith in Port Arthur. It must in time be
+another Montreal or Toronto. Moose Jaw is going down. It will be long
+before Calgary will be much of a place. The Silver City is half
+deserted; and at Winnipeg the boom has burst and bankruptcy prevails; but
+Port Arthur is bound to go ahead.
+
+I spent there a night on my return, and saw a marvellous change—even
+since my visit there a fortnight previously. Then people were hard at
+work putting up wooden shops; now those shops are fitted up with glass
+fronts, and already filled with merchandise from all quarters of the
+earth, though in many cases the upper parts of the building are in an
+incomplete state. Every day ships arrive from the American side; thus,
+within a couple of days previous to my arrival, 20,000 tons of coal had
+been landed. There are steamers of all sorts and sizes in the harbour,
+constantly coming in or going out. On one side a new elevator has been
+erected, on the other side is a great store of lumber and a saw-mill.
+
+Yesterday Port Arthur was a township, now it is incorporated as a city,
+and rejoices in a mayor. The place is full of hotels, which charge high
+prices, give very little for the money, and do a roaring trade. A very
+handsome English church is being erected; just by, the Presbyterians are
+building one equally handsome, only a little smaller. The Roman
+Catholics make quite a grand show with their brick church and convent and
+schools, while the Methodists have a very plain and ugly imitation of an
+English church, with its steeple all in wood and painted white, which
+attests, at any rate, if not their taste, their influence and wealth. I
+visited the school-room, which was filled with bright and well-fed boys
+and girls, where the children are taught free, as they are all over
+Canada—where they have, by-the-bye, a compulsory law, which is never
+enforced, as it is impossible to do so. And then I made my way to the
+best-looking building in the town—the emigrants’ shed—where already 3,600
+emigrants have this season been lodged gratis by the Dominion Government
+previous to their passing onwards to the North-West.
+
+People tell me there is no room for mechanics in Canada. In Port Arthur
+I see them in constant demand. At one shop window I see a notice to the
+effect that 10 carpenters are required, at another a demand for painters,
+while a third shop window seeks to secure good tinsmiths. At the chief
+draper’s shop there is a notice stating four good assistants are
+required. What a pity the discontented men whom I left at Montreal,
+because work was not offered them immediately they landed, did not come
+thus far! As to rockmen and labourers, they are wanted by the hundred.
+Surely, Port Arthur must be a good place for the working man and the
+working girl. Even at Calgary they were paying the female helps at the
+hotel—as sour a set as I ever saw—and who were constantly quarrelling
+with John Smith, the Chinaman cook—as much as 40 dollars a month. But
+even out here a man must have brains.
+
+‘I came out here seven years ago,’ said a gentleman to me as we sat on
+one of the rocks which line Port Arthur, ‘and could find nothing to do.
+I was brought up in a foundry, and had saved 1,100 dollars. I went all
+round; no one could give me a job. Then I began buying a few hides; this
+brought me into contact with a great fur merchant at Chicago—he employed
+me as his agent at 80 dollars a month. Then I gave that up and turned
+miller, and the year before last I traded to the extent of a quarter of a
+million dollars. Last year I was too eager, and lost a lot of money; but
+this year I hope to get it all back again.’
+
+Why cannot an English emigrant be equally successful? Is it because we
+do not send out the right sort of men?
+
+‘There is not one man in a hundred that comes out here from London who is
+of any use,’ said an old Toronto trader—himself an Englishman—to me. ‘I
+never call myself an Englishman,’ said he. ‘When I go to London I always
+say I am a Canadian. I am ashamed of the name of Englishman. What would
+Sir Garnet Wolseley have done when he was here had it not have been for
+the Canadian Volunteers?’
+
+I am glad to hear, however, that he had nothing but praise for the Scotch
+settlers Lady Cathcart was sending out. She advances them money, and
+they pay her back a good rate of interest. Why cannot other people do
+the same? Another question, also, may be asked: Why cannot certain
+Canadian land companies, who really offer purchasers a fair bargain, put
+up a few houses on their separate farms? The settler has to build his
+house under every disadvantage. I am sure they could build the houses by
+contract at half the expense; and they could have a mortgage on the farm,
+which would ensure them in every case against loss, and which might add
+materially to their profits as well.
+
+If the crops this year turn out well in the North-West, and, according to
+present prospects, there is every reason to suppose they will, the
+farmers will pour into the country in a way which they have never done
+before, and the prosperity of the North-West will be placed on a solid
+basis. Be that as it may, there are bright days in store for Port
+Arthur.
+
+On the green forest, rising up above the town and overlooking Thunder
+Bay, it is intended to build a first-class summer hotel for the comfort
+of holiday makers and health seekers. There the visitor will enjoy fine
+cool air in the sultry heat of summer, while bathing in the lake will
+invigorate his enfeebled frame. The waters abound with fish. Islands
+and lakes and rivers tempt the yachtsman. If the workmen who squander
+their hard-earned wages in reckless drunkenness would but learn to be
+sober, few places on the Canadian lakes would be more enjoyable than Port
+Arthur.
+
+ [Picture: Thunder Bay, Lake Superior]
+
+I cannot leave Canada without speaking of its Grand Trunk Railway, which
+meets the emigrant at Port Levi when he lands at Quebec, and which he
+will undoubtedly often patronise if he tarries long in the land. It has
+built the Victoria Bridge at Montreal, one of the wonders of Canada—a
+tubular structure of magnificent proportions, which spans the St.
+Lawrence, and gives uninterrupted communication to the western traffic
+with that of the United States. Including the abutments, the bridge is
+9,084 feet in length. The tubes rest on twenty-four piers, the main
+tubes being sixty feet above the level of the river. It may well be
+called the Grand Trunk Railway, as it operates under one management over
+six thousand miles of first-class railway road. Having close connection
+at Port Huron, Detroit and Chicago with the principal Western American
+lines, it offers great advantages to emigrants to all parts of the
+compass. At Montreal I had the pleasure of a long chat with Mr. Joseph
+Hickson, the general manager, who takes a deep interest in the subject of
+emigration, and Mr. W. Wainwright, the assistant-manager, to whom I am
+indebted and grateful for many acts of kindness, especially welcome to
+the stranger in a strange land. It is the Grand Trunk that takes the
+traveller over Niagara Falls—on the International Suspension Bridge
+connecting the Canadian Railways with those of the States. This
+structure, which is 250 feet above the water, commands a fine view up to
+the Falls. It is to be feared that as long as Canada and the United
+States have separate tariffs there will be not a little smuggling along
+this bridge. When I was there I heard of a Canadian judge, who with his
+family had been stopping at one or other of the hotels on the Canadian
+side. One fine morning some of the ladies of the party walked off to the
+American side, and returned laden with bargains which had paid no duty.
+In their innocence they boasted of the little transaction to the judge.
+‘How can I,’ said he indignantly, ‘punish people for smuggling, if I find
+my own family do it?’ and the ladies had to pay the duty, so the story
+goes, after all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+BACK TO ENGLAND.—CANADIAN HOSPITALITY.—THE ASSYRIAN MONARCH.—HOME.
+
+My time was up, and I had to be off, after we got a look at pleasant
+London in the wood, as my Canadian friends who have been to England call
+it. I came back from Chicago to New York, and had again to encounter the
+horrors of nights in a Pullman sleeping-car. Why cannot the railway
+authorities separate the part of the car devoted to the gentlemen from
+that part inhabited by the ladies? The way in which the sexes are mixed
+up at night is, to say the least, unpleasant. I shall never forget my
+last experience in a Pullman sleeping-car. An ancient dame with blue
+spectacles, my _vis-à-vis_, as the shades of evening came on, gave me the
+horrors. In my despair I began undressing, thinking that the outraged
+female would rush away in disgust. Alas! she had stronger nerves than I
+calculated, and there she sat gazing serenely with her tinted orbs till I
+plunged myself behind my curtained berth, to encounter, early in the
+morning, once more those eyes.
+
+New York and Boston are full of fairy forms. Why don’t they travel? The
+change would be pleasant for sore eyes like mine.
+
+No wonder I sat all that night thinking of the great kindness I had
+received in Canada, and regretting especially that I had refused an
+invitation to dine that evening at the home of one of the leading
+barristers of Toronto, to meet some clergymen there who were familiar
+with my name, and who wished to meet me.
+
+Surely I did wrong to leave Toronto, with all its friendly faces and
+kindly hearts. It will be long ere I cease to remember how the Canadians
+made me at home, as I met them on the rail, or on the boat, or in the
+hotel.
+
+Said a London Evangelist to me: ‘You will find the Canadians a cold
+people, who will show you no hospitality. While I was there not one of
+them invited me to have a cup of tea.’
+
+All I can say is, I found the Canadians quite the reverse. But then my
+friend went on a mission, and is a man of very serious views, while I
+travelled merely to see a land of whose wonders I had heard much, to talk
+to sinners as well as saints, and to learn from them what I could.
+
+I was a great reformer once myself, and had glorious visions which never
+came to pass. In youth we have all such dreams. Now, as the days darken
+round me and the years, I seek to put up with the shortcomings of my
+brother-man, trusting that he in his Christian charity may extend a
+similar forbearance to my own.
+
+I came back in the _Assyrian Monarch_. I was glad I did so. That fine
+ship has a distinguished record. It has carried no end of theatricals to
+New York; it did the same kind office for Jumbo: it carried troops and
+horses to Egypt; and when we English undertook to punish Arabi, it was a
+home for the refugees for a while.
+
+Perhaps we have no ship more noticeable than the _Assyrian Monarch_,
+belonging to the Monarch Line, which runs weekly, I fancy, between New
+York and London.
+
+It is a great treat in the fine weather to take that route. You are a
+little longer at sea—you glide along the south coast till you reach the
+Scilly Isles, and the ships of the company are all that can be desired.
+
+It is a great deal of trouble and expense to some to go with all their
+goods and chattels to Liverpool, then unpack them, and get them down to
+the landing-stage, and then repack them in one or other of the far-famed
+steamers of that busy spot, and all this you save if you patronize the
+ships of the Monarch Line, which carry chiefly cargo, with a few saloon
+passengers as well.
+
+We had a very heavy cargo on board the _Assyrian Monarch_ as we came back
+from New York. We carried 260 bullocks, besides cheese and grain, to
+make glad the heart and fill the stomach, and thus one felt that if the
+screw were to fail or the fog to hinder a rapid transit, there was corn
+in Egypt, and that there was something to fall back on. Happily, we were
+not driven to that alternative. We fared well in the saloon of the
+_Assyrian Monarch_; so well, indeed, that a poor elderly lady, who seemed
+at death’s door when we started, became quite vigorous, comparatively
+speaking, by the time we ended our voyage.
+
+We had more freedom in the way of sitting up late and having lights than
+is possible in a crowded passenger ship, and we came more into contact
+with the captain of the ship and his merry men.
+
+In the case of the _Assyrian Monarch_ this was a great advantage, as
+Captain Harrison is a good companion as well as an able navigator, and I
+felt myself safe in his hands, that is, as far as anyone can be safe at
+sea.
+
+Further, I felt that the chances were in my favour. The _Assyrian
+Monarch_ had carried over the Atlantic, in stormy weather, the
+highly-respected and ever-to-be-regretted by Londoners Jumbo; surely it
+could be trusted to perform the same kind office for myself in the summer
+season, when the air is still and the seas are calm; and so it did,
+though every now and then we encountered that greatest of all dangers at
+sea, fog, more or less dense, especially on the Banks of Newfoundland,
+where the ice-laden waters of the Arctic come in contact with the warmer
+waves of the Gulf Stream. As our course was very fortunately much to the
+south, we had a good deal of the latter.
+
+That Gulf Stream was a revelation to me. When I took my morning bath it
+seemed as if I were in warm water, and the new forms of life it fostered
+and developed were particularly pleasant to a casual observer like
+myself. There one could see the nautilus, or the Portugeuse man-of-war,
+as it is familiarly termed, in the language of the poet,
+
+ ‘Put out a tier of oars on either side,
+ Spread to the wafting breeze a twofold sail,’
+
+and cruel, big-headed sharks, which, indeed, followed us almost all the
+way to England (the fact is that now, when so many cattle are thrown
+overboard, the Atlantic abounds with sharks), and lovely flying-fish like
+streaks of silver flashing along the deep and boundless blue ocean. Of
+these latter one flew on board. It met with a cruel fate. It was eaten
+by the first officer of the _Assyrian Monarch_ for breakfast. It ought
+to have choked him. It did nothing of the kind; he, hardened sinner that
+he was, enjoyed it greatly, and said that it was as good as a whiting.
+
+In the Gulf Stream we found the usual number of whales and porpoises.
+The latter would play around the bow or race along the side of the ship
+in considerable quantities of all sorts of sizes. There were other fish
+of which I know not the names to be seen occasionally leaping out of the
+water as high and repeatedly as possible, as if a shark were in their
+midst seeking whom he might devour.
+
+One sight I shall never forget in the Gulf Stream. It was that of a
+tortoise. I was leaning over the ship’s side, when something big and
+round seemed to be coming to the surface. I could not make out what it
+was; then all at once the truth flashed upon me as he wobbled along,
+paddling with his fins, his head erect, his little eyes peering at the
+ship as if he wondered what the dickens it was, and what business it had
+there. He seemed to be treading the water.
+
+ ‘I saw him but a moment,
+ But methinks I see him now.’
+
+The sight gave me quite an appetite, though my friend Sir Henry Thompson
+will insist upon it that turtle soup is made of conger-eel, but in the
+wide Atlantic one has time to think of such things; day by day passes and
+you see nothing but the ocean—not even a distant sail, or the smoke of a
+passing steamer.
+
+People complain of the uneventfulness of life on board a ship. That,
+however, is a matter of great thankfulness. A collision or a shipwreck
+are exciting, but they are disagreeable, nevertheless. It seems the
+homeward voyage is always the pleasantest as far as the sea is concerned,
+the wind being more frequently in the west than in any other quarter.
+Perhaps that is one reason why the Americans are so ready to cross the
+Atlantic. When I left New York, Cook’s office, in the Broadway, was full
+of tourists, including Mrs. Langtry and other distinguished personages.
+Mr. John Cook seems as popular in New York as he is elsewhere. Indeed, I
+was confidentially informed that he was engaged in organizing a
+personally-conducted tour for the relief of Gordon and the capture of the
+Mahdi, and I hear from Egypt that he has a chance of being made Khedive,
+a position which I am certain he would fill with credit to himself and
+advantage to the people. Of course, there is a little exaggeration in
+this, but the American tourist has good reason to revere the name of
+Cook, and so have we all. As much as anyone he has promoted travel
+between the Old World and the New, and has made us better friends. It is
+to be hoped that every steamer that crosses the Atlantic does something
+similar.
+
+I must own, however, that the nearer I approached England the more I felt
+ashamed of my native land. The weather was villainous. It rained every
+day, and the worst of it was, I had had the audacity to assure the
+Americans on board that we had dry weather in England, that occasionally
+we saw the sun, and that we were not a web-footed race. Fortunately, at
+the time of writing this I have not yet encountered any of my American
+friends, or I should feel, as they say, uncommonly mean. However, the
+weather was fine enough to admit of a good look at Bishop’s Rock, the
+name of the lighthouse at the Scilly Isles, where we got our first sight
+of land; you can imagine how we all rushed on deck to see that. In fine
+weather, I say, by all means return from America in one of the fine,
+steady, well-built ships of the Monarch Line. The scenery is far finer
+than that offered by Queenstown and Liverpool. You have the Scilly Isles
+to look at, and the Land’s End, and the Lizards. At Portland Bill we
+laid off till a pilot came on board, and we had a good look at the
+establishment where so many smart men are sent for a season, and Weymouth
+heading the distant bay; and then what a fine sweep you have up the
+Channel—crowded with craft of all kinds, from the eight thousand ton
+steamer to the frail and awkward fishing lugger—and round the Nore;
+whilst old towns and castles, speaking not alone of the living present,
+but of the dead and buried past, are to be seen. Even Americans, fond as
+they are of modern life, feel the charm of that; whilst to the returning
+traveller the landscape speaks of ‘home, sweet home.’
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+COLONIZATION IN CANADA.
+
+I was glad to see, the other day, Mr. Morley’s letter advocating the
+propriety of taking up land and settling on it some of the too numerous
+class who drift into our great cities, finding no work to do in the
+country, there to lead indifferent lives and come to an untimely end.
+
+It is a step I have repeatedly advocated. Land is cheap enough now;
+there is no occasion to wait for an Act of Parliament. It is as easy to
+buy an estate, and to split it up into small portions, of which each
+shareholder will become in time the proprietor, as to form a building
+society, and thus enable any man to become his own landlord. But there
+are certain drawbacks. There is the parson to be dealt with, who will be
+sure to claim his higher tithes; there are burdens on property, of which
+the working man, who is told by Mr. Chamberlain that he is more heavily
+taxed than any other class of the community (is not the reverse of this
+the case?), has no idea; and last, and not least, there is the unfitness
+for peasant proprietorship of the average English workman, who has no
+idea of living on the scant fare of the peasant proprietor of Belgium or
+France, or, I fear, of working as hard. Granting, however, that he does,
+the great fact remains, that peasant proprietorship is no remedy for all
+the ills of life, and that France has its surplus population quite as
+badly off, and a great deal more difficult to deal with than our own.
+
+What is to be done to relieve the distress, the existence of which all
+must own and deplore? I answer, Emigrate.
+
+Emigration is the natural means of relieving the poverty of a nation.
+Every man is an emigrant. No one lives and dies in the village in which
+he was born. He finds his way to the neighbouring town in search of
+work; then to the great metropolis; then across the water to one or other
+of our colonies.
+
+Greece and Rome realized the fact that under no conditions could a
+certain tract of territory maintain more than a certain number of people,
+and had their settled plans of emigration. In England, at any rate since
+the days of the Pilgrim Fathers, we have too much left the matter to
+chance, and an ordinary emigrant, with the ordinary want of backbone, it
+seems to me, is just as likely to go to the dogs in New York, or Toronto,
+or Melbourne, as in London. What we want is what is now being attempted
+by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, the leading members of
+which have established a Church Colonization Land Society. Its object is
+to assist, in a practicable, businesslike manner, on a remunerative
+basis, the great and pressing work of emigration to the British colonies
+in connection with the Church of England.
+
+This society, I learn from a proof of a circular just placed in my hands,
+issued by Canon Prothero, the chairman, will, under proper safeguards,
+render temporary pecuniary aid in such cases as approve themselves to the
+council, take charge of the emigrants on the journey to the colony,
+provide for their settlement on lands selected, from those acquired by
+the society, provide temporary dwellings until the emigrants can put
+together their own (the materials for which may be bought ready to hand,
+or the society itself can erect dwellings for them), will break up the
+land if desired, and secure for the emigrant religious services similar
+to those enjoyed at home.
+
+The society have secured land in Manitoba, near the railway, which land
+has been selected by a practical farmer, a Yorkshireman, who is to act as
+local manager. The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge have laid
+particular stress in looking after the spiritual welfare of emigrants in
+all our colonies; and in Liverpool, as some of my readers may be aware,
+the society have placed the Rev. J. Bridger, of St. Nicholas Church, as
+emigrants’ chaplain; chaplains have also been appointed at several other
+ports, such as Plymouth, Glasgow, Cork, and Londonderry; but, as is
+manifest, the great centre of emigration is Liverpool, and there Mr.
+Bridger finds his hands full.
+
+No pains are spared to show every attention to emigrants going from or
+arriving at Liverpool, and occasionally Mr. Bridger sails with the first
+party of emigrants to their new homes. It seems to me that the idea of
+the Church Colonization Society is the right one; but that it might be
+further extended by sending out at the same time the schoolmaster, and
+the doctor, and the storekeeper, and the shoemaker, and tailor, and
+baker, and butcher, and thus forming a village community.
+
+It is at home impossible to realize the solitariness of the settler’s
+life, far away from friends and the civilizing and elevating influences
+of home. I met men in the North-West who seemed to have almost lost the
+power of speech, so long had they been left on their homesteads alone.
+Emigration in communities would do away with this state of things. At
+present it is a serious sacrifice for a man with a family to emigrate
+into a new country. It is not good for man to be alone. As a rule, he
+degenerates on the prairie; civilization is the gift of towns to
+humanity. A man does not live on bread alone. He needs that his heart
+and head be stimulated by contact with his fellow-men; not, as in the old
+country, in consequence of the extensive competition, by rivalry for the
+crust of bread, but by mutual aid and companionship in the great work of
+subduing the wilderness and making it to rejoice and blossom as the rose.
+
+In a month or two the emigration season will have commenced, and there is
+no time to spare. Why cannot other denominations do what the Church of
+England is now preparing to do? Canada can feed and fatten millions, who
+in England will have to live as a burden on the community. There is many
+a man who does ill here who would do well there. We are all more or less
+the creatures of circumstances. In England the beershop has degraded the
+community, and many a man finds it hard to get away from its foul
+companionship: here, he declines into a criminal or a sot; there, not
+only will he be neither the one nor the other, but he will develop all
+the better tendencies of his character, and become a man. Make him a
+peasant-proprietor at home, and the chances are the old Adam in him will
+be too strong. Plant him in a colony, he feels in a new world, with a
+new aim. Here, he is looked down on: there, he is hailed as a man and a
+brother. We who are old must stop at home; but there is no reason why
+our sons should do so. Why should a young man be a drudge because his
+father was a mere hewer of wood and drawer of water, when in a colony
+there are many ways of becoming well-off to a man who has good muscles
+and brains, has the sense to avail himself of opportunity when it occurs,
+and to keep his money in his pocket? I say Canada, because Canada is
+easy to get at, and is yet almost in a virgin state. It is only recently
+that it has been opened up by the Canadian Government and the Canadian
+Pacific Railway. I say Canada, because Canada is English, and I am an
+Englishman; because the Canadian Government does all it can to help the
+emigrant; and because the Canadians are mostly healthy, honest men.
+Englishmen thrive there better, at any rate, than they do in the United
+States, or in South Africa. Arrangements for a colony can easily be
+made. In London, the Canadian Pacific Railway have a fine office in
+Cannon Street, where you can see for yourself what are the results of
+farming in the North-West, and where you will find its courteous and
+intelligent representative, Mr. Alexander Begg, whose only fault is that
+he will persist in maintaining that the English climate is killing him,
+and that he enjoys much better health in that frosty Canada, the cold of
+which is a bugbear that has kept too many away. Go to him, and he will
+tell you where to plant your colony. The money which is now squandered
+in keeping paupers at home surely might be better spent in forming
+village communities in the boundless plains of the North-West. Let
+Dissenters imitate the Church. Let them have their communities as the
+Church of England seek to have theirs. Some people say the Salvationists
+are a nuisance in our crowded cities: let General Booth betake himself to
+Manitoba; he will find few people to complain of his processions there.
+
+But this is no subject to trifle about; day by day the poor are becoming
+poorer, and the middle-classes and the rich also. The leaders of the
+coming democracy seem unwilling to recognise that fact, and are angry
+when I tell them it is better to emigrate than to agitate in the old
+country for the ruin of the capitalist, the destruction of our trade, the
+abolition of the landlord, the advent of the working man’s candidate, and
+the rights of man. Are they the friends of the poor who bid him stay
+where he is to cheapen the labour market, already overstocked; to crowd
+the cities with an unwholesome pauperism; to see his sons ripen into
+thieves, and his daughters cast on the streets; and to look forward to
+the workhouse as the refuge of his old age? Even if we had a revolution
+as complete as that of France, what then? Over-population will breed
+sorrow and sickness and want and despair all the same. In Canada, the
+man who cares to work is sure of his reward; he has a future before him
+and his.
+
+I am glad to find, since the above was written, there has been formed by
+the Congregational Union a special emigration scheme, of which the Rev.
+Andrew Mearns, of the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, is Secretary, and
+that they have already sent out over a hundred qualified emigrants. The
+outfit and passage money of each man costs £7, and it is proposed to give
+each £2 when he arrives in Canada. The men to be selected are drawn from
+the ranks of the unemployed who are brought together at the various
+Mission Halls. The case of each applicant is fully examined, and the men
+themselves are thoroughly tested as to their honest desire and ability to
+work. The men having been approved and their record found satisfactory,
+they are sent to the emigration agent of the colony, who also examines
+into the cases of the various applicants. This acceptance having been
+notified, the next and, perhaps, the greatest difficulty is to provide a
+temporary home for them in the colony to which they are to be sent. As
+the result of much labour, each man will be sent to the care of some
+gentleman in the colony, who will see that he is properly provided for,
+and started in a fair way to obtain work. They are thus going to various
+towns in the Dominion, such as Kingston, Ontario, Ottawa, Hamilton,
+London, Toronto, St. Thomas’s, Bellville, and Guelph. Among those to
+whom introduction has been given are directors of railways, officers of
+Christian Associations, gardeners, farmers, merchants, and various
+ministers of influence. It is almost unnecessary to add that the
+spiritual needs of the men have not been forgotten, and in the kit of
+each one have been packed a Bible, supplied by the kindness of the Bible
+Society—who have intimated their willingness to make a similar
+presentation to every man the Union sends out—and an assortment of
+suitable and practical religious literature.
+
+Thus far have I told the story of my Canadian experiences. Those who
+wish to fully pursue the subject will do well to get ‘Picturesque
+Canada,’ now being published by Messrs. Cassell and Co.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD, SURREY.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PICTURES OF CANADIAN LIFE***
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Pictures of Canadian Life, by J. Ewing Ritchie</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Pictures of Canadian Life, by J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+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: Pictures of Canadian Life
+ A Record of Actual Experiences
+
+
+Author: J. Ewing Ritchie
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 13, 2012 [eBook #38858]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PICTURES OF CANADIAN LIFE***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1886 T. Fisher Unwin edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">Note to
+page</span> 56.</p>
+<p>Sir Charles Tupper tells me that I was totally
+misinformed.&nbsp; I am sorry to have been led astray, and have
+pleasure in making the correction, which was received,
+unfortunately, after the chapter had been worked off.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p0.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Dr. Barnardo&rsquo;s Distributing Home for Children,
+Peterborough, Ontario"
+title=
+"Dr. Barnardo&rsquo;s Distributing Home for Children,
+Peterborough, Ontario"
+src="images/p0.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h1>PICTURES<br />
+<span class="smcap">of</span><br />
+CANADIAN LIFE</h1>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">A Record of Actual Experiences</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+J. EWING RITCHIE</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">author
+of</span> &lsquo;<span class="smcap">east anglia</span>,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;<span class="smcap">british senators</span>,&rsquo;
+&lsquo;<span class="smcap">on the</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">track of the pilgrim fathers</span>,&rsquo;
+<span class="smcap">etc.</span>, <span
+class="smcap">etc.</span></p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>WITH TWELVE
+ILLUSTRATIONS</i></p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">London<br />
+<span class="smcap">t. fisher unwin</span><br />
+26, <span class="smcap">paternoster square</span><br />
+1886.</p>
+<h2><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+v</span>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p><span class="smcap">chapter</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="smcap">page</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">I.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Introductory.&mdash;Canadian Territory and Population</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">II.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Off With The Emigrants&mdash;The Voyage Out&mdash;The
+&lsquo;Sarnia&rsquo;&mdash;The Cod-Fishery</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page16">16</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">III.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Arrival at Quebec</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page33">33</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>At Montreal, and on to Ottawa&mdash;Interviewing and
+Interviewed</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page45">45</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">V.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Toronto&mdash;The Town&mdash;The People&mdash;Canadian
+Authors&mdash;The Leader of the Opposition</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page74">74</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Off to the North-West&mdash;Niagara&mdash;Lake
+Superior&mdash;The Canadian Pacific Railway&mdash;At Winnipeg</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page104">104</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Life on the Prairie</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page148">148</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Amongst the Cow-Boys</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page174">174</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><a name="pagevi"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. vi</span>IX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>In the Rockies&mdash;Holt City&mdash;Life in the
+Camp&mdash;A Rough Ride&mdash;The Kicking Horse
+Lake&mdash;British Columbia</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page194">194</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">X.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Dangers of the Rockies&mdash;Prairie Fires&mdash;The
+Return&mdash;Port Arthur&mdash;Emigrants</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page225">225</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Back to England&mdash;Canadian Hospitality&mdash;The
+&lsquo;Assyrian Monarch&rsquo;&mdash;Home</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page245">245</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Colonization in Canada</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page255">255</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><a name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. vii</span>LIST
+OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="smcap">page</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Dr. Barnardo&rsquo;s Distributing Home for Children,
+Peterborough, Ontario</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><i>Frontispiece</i></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Falls of Montmorenci&mdash;Quebec&mdash;Junction of the
+River Ottawa and St. Lawrence, Montreal</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page48">48</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>King Street, Toronto</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page78">78</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Second Year on a Prairie Farm, Canadian North-West</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page134">134</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Calico Island, Saskatchewan River, Canadian North-West</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page135">135</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Hunting Scene on the Souris River</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page145">145</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Souris Valley, Manitoba</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page147">147</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Pioneer Store at Brandon in 1882</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page162">162</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Harvesting on the Bell Farm&mdash;Indian Head, N.W.T.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page172">172</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p><a name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+viii</span>Mount Stephen in the Rocky Mountains, On the Line of
+the Canadian Pacific Railway</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page197">197</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Thunder Bay, Lake Superior</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page242">242</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 1</span>CHAPTER
+I.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">INTRODUCTORY.&mdash;CANADIAN TERRITORY AND
+POPULATION.</p>
+<p>Lunching one day in Toronto with one of the aldermen of that
+thriving city (I may as well frankly state that we had
+turtle-soup on the occasion), he remarked that he had been in
+London the previous summer, and that he was perfectly astonished
+at the idea Englishmen seemed to have about Canada.&nbsp; He was
+particularly indignant at the way in which it was coolly assumed
+that the Canadians were a barbarous people, planted in a
+wilderness, <a name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+2</span>ignorant of civilization, deficient in manners and
+customs&mdash;a well-meaning people, of whom in the course of
+ages something might be made, but at present in a very nebulous
+and unsatisfactory state.&nbsp; It seems my worthy friend had
+gone to hear a popular Q.C.&mdash;a gentleman of Liberal
+proclivities, very anxious to write M.P. after his
+name&mdash;deliver a lecture to the young men of the Christian
+Association in Exeter Hall on Canada.&nbsp; Never was a man more
+mortified in all his life than was the alderman in
+question.&nbsp; All the time the lecture was being delivered, he
+said, he held down his head in shame.&nbsp; &lsquo;I felt,&rsquo;
+said he, rising to a climax, &lsquo;as if I must
+squirm!&rsquo;&nbsp; What &lsquo;squirming&rsquo; implies the
+writer candidly admits that he has no idea.&nbsp; Of course, it
+means something very bad.&nbsp; All he can say is, that it is his
+hope and prayer that in the following pages he may set no
+Canadian squirming.&nbsp; He went out to see the nakedness, or
+the reverse, of the land, to ask <a name="page3"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 3</span>the emigrants how they were getting
+on, to judge for himself whether it was worth any
+Englishman&rsquo;s while to leave home and friends to cross the
+Atlantic and plant himself on the vast extent of prairie
+stretching between Winnipeg and the Rocky Mountains.&nbsp; What
+he heard and saw is contained in the following pages, originally
+published in the <i>Christian World</i>, and now reproduced as a
+small contribution to a question which rises in importance with
+the increase of population and the growing difficulty of getting
+a living at home.</p>
+<p>As a rule, the English know little more of Canada than that it
+belongs to us&mdash;that it is very cold there in winter and very
+hot in summer.&nbsp; I happened to be on board the
+<i>Worcester</i> training-ship on the last occasion of the prizes
+being given away, and was not surprised to find that Canada was
+especially referred to as illustrating the defective geographical
+knowledge of the young cadets.&nbsp; In <a name="page4"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 4</span>the <i>London Citizen</i> a few weeks
+later there was still grosser display of ignorance on the part of
+a writer who had gone to Montreal to attend the meetings of the
+British Association there, and who complained bitterly of the
+lack of garden-parties and champagne lunches.&nbsp; This victim
+of misplaced confidence owned that he had to put up with tea and
+coffee and non-intoxicating beverages when he did so far
+condescend as to accept Canadian hospitality.&nbsp; Yet the
+writer of that letter was a barrister, at this very time a
+candidate for Parliament.&nbsp; Had he an atom of common-sense,
+he might have known&mdash;this distinguished barrister and
+ornament of the British Association for the Advancement of
+Science&mdash;that Canada is a young country; that its wealth is
+still undeveloped; that the greater part of it is prairie; that
+the settler&mdash;in his heroic efforts to subdue Nature, to make
+the wilderness to rejoice and blossom as the rose, to build up a
+grand nation in that quarter <a name="page5"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 5</span>of the globe, to spread in a region
+larger than the United States the Anglo-Saxon laws and
+civilization and tongue&mdash;has to renounce luxury, to scorn
+delights, to live laborious days.&nbsp; Canada is not the place
+for members of the British Association who long for the
+flesh-pots of Egypt or the champagne-cup.&nbsp; In Canada one has
+to live simply and to work hard.&nbsp; He who does so work,
+though in England he may die a pauper, there becomes a man.&nbsp;
+Canada offers to all independence, a fertile soil, a bracing
+air.&nbsp; At present there is little chance of the majority of
+its people being enervated by luxury or demoralized by
+wealth.</p>
+<p>Canada is a country, however, with room and scope for millions
+who must starve and die in Europe.&nbsp; Its area is 3,470,392
+square miles, and its most southern point reaches the 42nd
+parallel of latitude.&nbsp; It possesses thousands of square
+miles of the finest forests on the continent, widely spread coal
+<a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>fields,
+extensive and productive fisheries, and rivers and lakes of
+unequalled extent.&nbsp; The country is divided into eight
+provinces, as follows: Nova Scotia, containing 20,907 square
+miles; New Brunswick, 27,174; Prince Edward Island, 2,133;
+Quebec, 188,688; Ontario, 101,733; Manitoba, 123,200; the North
+West, 2,665,252; British Columbia, 341,305.&nbsp; Newfoundland
+lies outside the Dominion, for reasons best known to itself.</p>
+<p>According to the census taken in 1881, the population at that
+time numbered 4,324,810, distributed as follows: Nova Scotia,
+440,572; New Brunswick, 321,233; Prince Edward Island, 108,891;
+Quebec, 1,359,027; Ontario, 1,923,228; Manitoba, 65,954; the
+North West, 56,446; British Columbia, 49,459.&nbsp; These figures
+must be much added to if we would get an idea of the growth of
+population, especially in the North West, which has increased by
+leaps and bounds.&nbsp; Up to 1870 <a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>it was as it had been since the
+charter of Charles II.&mdash;the happy hunting-ground of the
+Hudson Bay Company.&nbsp; As late as 1870 it had no railway
+communication, no towns or villages, few post-offices, and no
+telegraph.&nbsp; There must be a million of people settled there
+by this time, and yet it is a wilderness almost untrod by
+man.&nbsp; The origins of the populations are returned as
+follows: 891,248 English and Welsh; 957,408 Irish; 699,863
+Scotch; 1,298,929 French; 254,319 Germans.&nbsp; The balance is
+made up of Dutch, Scandinavians, and Italians.&nbsp; A large
+number of persons who were born in the United States are to be
+found in Canada&mdash;and why not?&nbsp; They have in Canada a
+government quite as free as in the United States, though the
+Canadians prefer to have a holiday on the Queen&rsquo;s birthday
+rather than the 4th of July, and an English Viceroy&mdash;who at
+any rate is a gentleman&mdash;to an American President.&nbsp;
+Anywhere in Canada the Englishman <a name="page8"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 8</span>is at home.&nbsp; The people have an
+English look.&nbsp; Directly you pass the border into the States
+you see the difference.&nbsp; There is an astonishing contrast
+between the healthy Canadian and the lean and yellow Yankee.</p>
+<p>Canadian history is one record of toil and struggle&mdash;of
+the advance of the whites, of the retreat of the native
+races.&nbsp; Foremost in suffering were the French.&nbsp; In 1608
+the first permanent settlement in Canada was made by Champlain,
+who founded Quebec, and afterwards discovered the lake which
+still bears his name.&nbsp; It was he who taught the Iroquois to
+stand in awe of gunpowder; but, alas! familiarity bred contempt,
+and the Red Indian was more than once on the point of
+exterminating the white man.&nbsp; It was only by the
+intercession of the Saints that the feeble colony was
+preserved.&nbsp; At Montreal, for instance, the advanced guard of
+the settlements, some two hundred Iroquois fell upon twenty-six
+Frenchmen.&nbsp; The Christians were out-matched <a
+name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>eight to one,
+but, says the Chronicle, &lsquo;the Queen of Heaven was on their
+side, and the Son of Mary refuses nothing to His holy
+Mother.&nbsp; Through her intercession the Iroquois shot so
+wildly, that at their first fire every bullet missed its mark,
+and they met with a bloody defeat.&rsquo;&nbsp; No wonder the
+French were animated with renewed zeal.&nbsp; Father Le Mercier
+writes: &lsquo;On the day of Visitation of the Holy Virgin, the
+chief Aontarisati, so regretted by the Iroquois, was taken
+prisoner by our Indians, instructed by our fathers, and baptized;
+and on the same day, being put to death, I doubt not he thanked
+the Virgin for his misfortune and the blessing that followed, and
+he prayed to God for his countrymen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It was no common faith that led the French monks to seek to
+make Canada theirs.&nbsp; Their sufferings from cold, from
+starvation, from the savages, from want of all the comforts of
+life, seem to have been as much as mortal <a
+name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>men could
+bear.&nbsp; But they made many converts.&nbsp; On one occasion,
+when the French Chaumont had delivered an address, his Indian
+auditors declared that if he had spoken all day they should not
+have had enough of it.&nbsp; &lsquo;The Dutch,&rsquo; said they,
+&lsquo;have neither brains nor tongues; they never tell us about
+paradise or hell.&nbsp; On the contrary, they lead us into bad
+ways.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nothing could daunt the Jesuits&mdash;not the
+loss of all they had, nor protracted suffering, nor cruel
+death.&nbsp; &lsquo;The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the
+Church,&rsquo; said one of them; &lsquo;and if we die by the
+fires of the Iroquois, we shall have won eternal life by
+snatching souls from the fires of hell.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Let us listen to Chaumont again, as he stands before his
+savage hearers&mdash;he and his companions having first, with
+clasped hands, sung the &lsquo;Veni Creator&rsquo;: &lsquo;It is
+not trade that brings us here.&nbsp; Do you think that your
+beaver-skins can pay us for all our toil and <a
+name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+11</span>dangers?&nbsp; Keep them, if you like; or, if any fall
+into our hands, we shall use them only for your service.&nbsp; We
+seek not the things that perish.&nbsp; It is for the faith that
+we have left our homes, to live in your hovels of bark and eat
+food which the beasts of our country would scarcely touch.&nbsp;
+We are the messengers whom God has sent to tell you that His Son
+became a man for the love of you; that this man, the Son of God,
+is the Prince and Master of men; that He has prepared in heaven
+eternal joys for those who obey Him, and kindled the fires of
+hell for those who will not receive His Word.&nbsp; If you reject
+it, whoever you are&mdash;Onondaga, Seneca, Mohawk, Cayuga, or
+Oneida&mdash;know that Jesus Christ, who inspires my heart and my
+voice, will one day plunge you into hell.&nbsp; Be not the
+authors of your own destruction.&nbsp; Accept the truth; listen
+to the voice of the Omnipotent!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Wonderful miracles sustained and renewed <a
+name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>this ardent
+faith.&nbsp; In the autumn of 1657, there was a truce with the
+Iroquois, under cover of which three or four of them came to the
+Montreal settlement.&nbsp; Nicholas God&eacute; and Jean
+Pi&egrave;re were on the roof of their house, laying thatch, when
+one of his visitors aimed his arquebuse at Saint Pi&egrave;re,
+and brought him to the ground like a wild turkey from a
+tree.&nbsp; The assassins, having cut off his head and carried it
+home to their village, were amazed to hear it speak to them in
+good Iroquois, scold them for their perfidy, and threaten them
+with the vengeance of heaven; and we are told they continued to
+hear its voice of admonition even after scalping it and throwing
+away the skull.</p>
+<p>During a great part of this period, the French population was
+less than three thousand.&nbsp; How was it they were not
+destroyed?&nbsp; Mr. Parkman tells us for two reasons.&nbsp; In
+the first place, the settlements were grouped around three
+fortified posts&mdash;Quebec, Three <a name="page13"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 13</span>Rivers, and Montreal&mdash;which, in
+time of danger, gave an asylum to the fugitive inhabitants; and
+secondly, their assailants were distracted by other wars.&nbsp;
+It was their aim to balance the rival settlements of the Hudson
+and the St. Lawrence.&nbsp; It was well for Canada when France
+lost hold of her.&nbsp; In 1666, Louis the Great handed her over,
+bound hand and foot, to a company of merchants&mdash;the Company
+of the West, as it was called.&nbsp; As, according to the edict,
+the chief object in view was the glory of God, the Company was
+required to supply its possessions with a sufficient number of
+priests, and diligently exclude all teachers of false
+doctrine.&nbsp; It was empowered to build forts and war-ships,
+cast cannon, wage war, make peace, establish courts, appoint
+judges, and otherwise to act as sovereign within its own
+dominions.&nbsp; A monopoly of trade was granted it for forty
+years, and Canada was the chief sufferer; but at any rate the
+peopling of <a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+14</span>Canada was due to the king.&nbsp; Colbert did the work
+and the king paid for it.&nbsp; Protestants were objected
+to.&nbsp; Girls, to be wives to the emigrants, were sent out from
+Dieppe and Rochelle.&nbsp; In time, girls of indifferent virtue,
+under the care of duennas, emigrated to meet the growing demand
+for wives.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am told,&rsquo; writes La Houtan,
+&lsquo;that the plumpest were taken first, because it was
+thought, being less active, they were more likely to keep at
+home, and that they could resist the winter cold still
+better.&rsquo;&nbsp; Further, such was the paternal care of the
+king for Canada, that he attempted to found a colonial noblesse,
+and offered bounties for children.&nbsp; The noblesse were a
+doubtful boon: industrious peasants were much more to be
+desired.&nbsp; Leading lazy lives, many of the gentilhommes soon
+drifted into the direst poverty.&nbsp; The Canadians had one
+advantage&mdash;their morals were well looked after by the
+priests, who kindly took charge of their education as well.&nbsp;
+<a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>Compared
+with the New England man, the habitant had very much the
+advantage.&nbsp; He was a skilful woodsman, able to steer his
+canoe, a soldier and a hunter.&nbsp; Nevertheless, when
+Wolfe&rsquo;s army had scaled the heights of Abraham, and won
+Canada for the British, it was the beginning of a new life.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;England,&rsquo; writes Mr. Parkman, &lsquo;imposed by
+the sword on reluctant Canada the boon of rational and ordered
+liberty.&nbsp; A happier calamity never befell a people than the
+conquest of Canada by the British arms.&rsquo;&nbsp; But it was
+not till the American Revolution had broken out, and the
+royalists left the States to found in Canada a strong colony
+attached to the British Crown, that Canada may be really said to
+have been a part and parcel of the Empire, bone of our bone and
+flesh of our flesh.&nbsp; It was necessary to move many of the
+French Canadians elsewhere; and those who remained, still for
+long looked with an unfriendly eye on England and her rule.</p>
+<h2><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+16</span>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">OFF WITH THE EMIGRANTS&mdash;THE VOYAGE
+OUT&mdash;THE &lsquo;SARNIA&rsquo; THE COD-FISHERY.</p>
+<p>One Wednesday at the end of April, last year, St. Pancras
+Railway Station was the scene of a display not often matched even
+in these demonstrative days.&nbsp; Mr. J. J. Jones, of the
+Samaritan Mission, had arranged to take out a party of five
+hundred emigrants to Canada&mdash;the first party of the
+season.&nbsp; The event seemed to create no little excitement in
+philanthropic circles.&nbsp; The Lord Mayor had promised to be
+there, but he was detained in the City, possibly in defence of
+the ancient Corporation of which he has become the champion; but
+he sent a cordial letter, as did <a name="page17"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 17</span>many other distinguished people, to
+express sympathy and goodwill.</p>
+<p>In the absence of the Lord Mayor, the Earl of Shaftesbury,
+after the emigrants had been got together in a waiting-room,
+presided at a farewell meeting, which ought to have sent the
+emigrants in the best of spirits to the new homes they expect to
+find on the other side of the Atlantic.&nbsp; They would, said
+his lordship, still be under the reign of our Queen.&nbsp; They
+would confer a great blessing on the country whither they were
+going, and they would show what they could do as good citizens in
+subduing and replenishing the earth, and in spreading over the
+world the Anglo-Saxon race.&nbsp; He hoped that the young men
+present would come back to England for wives, and ended with his
+best wishes for all in the way of a safe voyage and temporal and
+spiritual good.</p>
+<p>The Earl of Carnarvon, who next spoke, had this advantage over
+the noble chairman, <a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+18</span>in that he had made a trip to Canada himself.&nbsp; The
+emigrants, he said, would encounter difficulties.&nbsp; They were
+not going to a paradise, but they would find that they had a
+better chance of getting a living in the New World; especially if
+they avoided bad company and the crowded towns, and got into the
+country, and underwent a certain preparatory training.&nbsp; As
+to Canada, it was a country in which a man would succeed who had
+health and strength and industry, and a good head and a good
+heart, and the fear of God to teach him that honesty was the best
+policy.</p>
+<p>Sir Henry Tyler, M.P., the chairman of the Grand Trunk
+Railway, followed in a similar strain.&nbsp; The people were not
+crowded up in Canada as they were here.&nbsp; It was a grand
+country for honest, hard-working men and well-behaved women; but
+he recommended them at first to seek good honest people to work
+with, rather than high wages.&nbsp; <a name="page19"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 19</span>Turning to the young women, he
+assured them they would find good husbands in Canada&mdash;a
+remark which seemed to give them much satisfaction; and he hoped
+that they would have large families when they married, as large
+families were a blessing out there.</p>
+<p>Then came forward Mr. Clare Sewell Read, M.P., who, as a
+countryman, said he saw some country bumpkins in the party, and
+he could assure them, as he had been in Canada, its soil was
+unrivalled for fertility.</p>
+<p>Lord Napier of Magdala followed, and then came the Hon. Donald
+A. Smith, one of the directors of the Canadian Pacific Railway,
+to tell how people prospered in Canada who behaved well and
+worked hard.&nbsp; The Rev. Oswald Dykes and the Rev. Burman
+Cassin also addressed the audience; and there were others, such
+as the Earl of Aberdeen, the Rev. W. Tyler, and the Rev. Styleman
+Herring, who were ready to say a few words <a
+name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>had time
+permitted; but the train had to be packed up with passengers and
+luggage, and there was no time to spare.</p>
+<p>In a few minutes they were off, amidst tears and cheers, while
+Mr. Jones and I, with Mr. Alexander Begg, of the Canadian Pacific
+Railway, and the remainder of the emigrants, followed.&nbsp; A
+little after five we arrived at Liverpool, and then Mr. Jones had
+to work like a horse.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, I, with a couple of artistic friends, who are to
+sketch us, all took our ease in our inn, from which comfortable
+quarters I felt sadly indisposed to stir; but I had to see the
+emigrants off, and my heart sank into my shoes as, looking at the
+hundreds swarming the platform, and the pyramids of luggage, and
+then at the <i>Sarnia</i> moored in mid-stream, the thought
+suggested itself, How on earth can they all be stowed
+away?&mdash;a query which, however, was soon settled, as, at a
+later hour, I found myself on <a name="page21"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 21</span>board the <i>Sarnia</i>, leaving
+smoky Liverpool behind, and with the ship&rsquo;s head turned to
+the sunset &lsquo;and the baths of all the Western
+stars.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The <i>Sarnia</i>, it may be as well to inform my readers, is
+one of the screw-steamers running between Quebec and Liverpool,
+by the Dominion Line, which line commenced its gay career in
+1870.&nbsp; I ought to be very happy on board, since I learn,
+from the attentive perusal of documents lying in the cabin, that,
+owing to the lines in the model, the rolling of the ship is to a
+great extent, not destroyed, but reduced, making a considerable
+decrease in sea-sickness, and that in the book of rules and
+regulations compiled for the guidance of the Dominion Line
+officers, they must run no risk which might by any possibility
+result in accident to the ship, and that they are further
+requested to bear in mind that the safety of the lives and
+property entrusted to their care is the ruling principle that
+should <a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+22</span>govern them in the management of their ships.&nbsp; I
+almost fancy I must have thrown away my money in insuring my life
+against loss and my person against accidents.&nbsp; What have I
+to fear, if the rules and regulations of the company be
+observed?&nbsp; I am very glad, as it is, I did not insure for a
+larger sum, though the agent, who, of course, had his eye on the
+extra commission, was kind enough to suggest it were well to
+insure for the larger sum, <i>in case the ship went
+down</i>!&mdash;a thing not to be dreamed of.</p>
+<p>I have consulted that oracle of our fathers&mdash;Francis
+Moore.&nbsp; In his &lsquo;Vox Stellarum&rsquo; he tells me, to
+my comfort and satisfaction, that after the 25th of April the
+winds will be light.&nbsp; Francis Moore, you may tell me, is not
+weatherwise.&nbsp; Are the scientific meteorologists, with their
+forecasts, wiser?&nbsp; It is hard to say.</p>
+<p>It is a comfort to think that the emigrants are well off for
+literature.&nbsp; The <i>Graphic</i> <a name="page23"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 23</span>company&mdash;whose last dividend, I
+learn, was a good deal over a hundred per cent.&mdash;have sent a
+tremendous packet of <i>Graphics</i>.&nbsp; The Bible Society
+sent Testaments.&nbsp; The Religious Tract Society have placed at
+Mr. Jones&rsquo;s disposal tracts and books.&nbsp; The Rev.
+Newman Hall has sent 250 books, while a goodly packet of the
+&lsquo;Family Circle Edition&rsquo; of the <i>Christian World</i>
+will, I dare say, be in much request&mdash;quite as much as the
+five hundred sheets of hymns which the Earl of Aberdeen brought
+with him on Wednesday to St. Pancras as his contribution to the
+common stock.&nbsp; Yes, indeed, as my Welsh friends would say,
+the lines for us are cast in pleasant places, and we have a
+goodly heritage.&nbsp; It is to be hoped it may be so.</p>
+<p>I never saw a more tidy lot of emigrants&mdash;some of them
+evidently the right class to get on.&nbsp; I had an amusing chat
+with one, who told me what inquiries he had made before he would
+entrust Mr. J. J. Jones with &lsquo;C&aelig;sar <a
+name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>and his
+fortunes.&rsquo;&nbsp; If the emigrants are all like him, the
+Yankees, if there be such in Canada, will find it rather
+difficult to take them in.&nbsp; We swarm with children and
+babies.&nbsp; I fear some of us will wish, before we reach the
+St. Lawrence, that good King Herod was on board.&nbsp; Of course,
+these are not my sentiments.&nbsp; I suppose most of us were
+babies once&mdash;there is every reason to believe that I was;
+nevertheless, the most gushing mother will admit that there are
+times when even the sweetest of babes ceases to charm.&nbsp; My
+companions in the smoking-room the first night were, however, by
+no means babes.&nbsp; I had not been there half-an-hour before I
+was offered 34,000 acres of land&mdash;abounding with fish and
+game, and all that the carnal heart could desire&mdash;a decided
+bargain.&nbsp; I did not close with the offer.&nbsp; Perhaps I
+ought to have done so.&nbsp; But such earthly grandeur is beyond
+my dreams.</p>
+<p>Nothing can be drearier or more monotonous <a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>than a trip
+to Canada in the early season of the year.&nbsp; After you leave
+Ireland, you see no ships&mdash;nothing but the sea, grey and
+dull as the heaven above.&nbsp; Now and then a whale comes up to
+blow, and that is all; and when the wind blows hard, you get
+nothing but big, lumpy waves, which set the ship rolling, and add
+only to the discomforts.&nbsp; And then you are on the
+Newfoundland banks, where you may spend dull days and duller
+nights&mdash;now going at half-speed, now stopping altogether,
+while the fog-horn blows dismally every few minutes, and whence
+you can see scarcely the length of the ship ahead.</p>
+<p>Like Oscar Wilde, I own that I am very much disappointed with
+the Atlantic.&nbsp; The icebergs are monotonous&mdash;when you
+have seen one, that is enough.&nbsp; In the saloon, we are a sad,
+dull party; even in the smoking-room, one can scarcely get up a
+decent laugh.&nbsp; I pity the poor emigrants in the steerage,
+whom a clever young Irish <a name="page26"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 26</span>journalist on board, with the
+instinct of his race, has failed to excite into a proper state of
+indignation on account of the discomforts of the voyage, and the
+hardness of the potatoes&mdash;always a matter of complaint in
+all the ships that I have ever been on board of.</p>
+<p>The raw, cold, damp fog has taken all the starch out of the
+steerage passengers, always the first to grumble on sea, as they
+are on shore; yet on one occasion they did go so far as to send a
+deputation to the captain, and what, think you, was their
+grievance?&mdash;that they had no sauce to their fish!&mdash;a
+grievance of little account, when one thinks of the sauce we had
+served up in the saloon.</p>
+<p>As a rule, the steerage passengers are a difficult body to
+deal with; they seem so helpless, and require so much looking
+after.&nbsp; Mr. Jones has enough to do to look after his.&nbsp;
+If they lose anything, however paltry, he is appealed to.&nbsp;
+If they require anything not provided in the bill of fare, he is
+sent for.&nbsp; It <a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+27</span>is very clear to me that his party have great
+advantages.&nbsp; He has taken down all their occupations, and
+when we arrive at Quebec they will all, if possible, be provided
+with employment, and will be at once forwarded to their
+destination, without loss of time or expenditure of cash.&nbsp;
+Many of them are also assisted by his Society with small sums of
+money, and in every way they are helped as few other emigrants
+are.</p>
+<p>We have on board a party of fifty-one lads, sent out by Dr.
+Bowman Stephenson, who has a dep&ocirc;t somewhere near Hamilton,
+and a helper is on board to take care of them.&nbsp; Some of them
+are of very juvenile years, and, it is to be believed, in Canada
+will find a far more favourable lot than they ever could in the
+streets and slums of the East End.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What are you going to do?&rsquo; said I to one of them
+the other morning.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Please, sir, I am going to be adopted,&rsquo; was the
+reply; and adopted he will be by <a name="page28"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 28</span>some worthy couple who, having no
+children of their own, are ready to give the little outcast a
+home such as he never could have found in the old country.</p>
+<p>We have also an agent on board, who, for a certain sum, agrees
+to take young fellows out and to find them suitable
+situations.&nbsp; That is a course I should not recommend.&nbsp;
+A young fellow had far better keep that extra cash in his pocket,
+get out as far into the North-west as he can, there hire himself
+to some settler, who at this time of year is sure to be in need
+of his services, and then in a year or two he will be able to get
+a grant of land on his own account, on which, after three years
+of real hard work, he will be able to live in peace and comfort,
+and to achieve an independence of which he has no chance on our
+side of the Atlantic.</p>
+<p>It quite grieves me to think of the poor farmers I have known
+at home, wasting their time and capital and strength in a
+hopeless <a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+29</span>effort to make both ends meet, who might be doing well
+out here, with the certainty that their families will be left in
+a comfortable position as far as this world&rsquo;s goods are
+concerned.&nbsp; One thing, however, I must strongly impress upon
+the emigrant, and that is, the necessity of coming out in the
+spring.</p>
+<p>It is madness to cross the Atlantic in the autumn; when he
+lands at Quebec, he will find nothing to do, and must live on his
+capital, or starve till next spring; and if I might recommend a
+ship, it certainly would be the <i>Sarnia</i>, on which I now
+write.&nbsp; She is slow but sure.&nbsp; Her commander, Captain
+Gibson, is all that a captain should be&mdash;not a brilliant
+conversationalist, not one of those men who set the table in a
+roar; but cautious, skilful, fully alive to the responsibilities
+of his position and the dangers of his calling.&nbsp; As to the
+dangers, it is impossible to exaggerate them.&nbsp; There are
+more than a thousand of us on board, and were anything to happen,
+<a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>not more
+than three hundred of us could, I should think, be crowded into
+the boats, provided that the sea were quite calm, and that we had
+plenty of time to leave the ship; and in a panic and in bad
+weather, it is clear that even such boats as the <i>Sarnia</i> is
+supplied with would be of little avail.&nbsp; Safety seems to me
+a mere matter of chance.&nbsp; You hit on an iceberg, and down
+goes the ship with all on board, leaving no record behind.</p>
+<p>As a matter of fact, I believe these big steamers often, on a
+dark night, run down the vessels engaged in fishing off the
+Newfoundland banks.&nbsp; When we passed, the season had scarcely
+commenced.&nbsp; It is in May, towards the end of the month, that
+the fishing commences.&nbsp; The chief fishermen are the French,
+who mostly hail from St. Malo, and who have in the Gulf of
+Newfoundland two small islands, which they use for
+fish-curing.&nbsp; You get an idea of the extent of these
+fisheries, when I tell you that the total <a
+name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>value of them
+amounts to three millions a year, and that the supply seems
+inexhaustible.&nbsp; Romanists and High Churchmen who indulge in
+salt cod in Lent have little cause to fear that that aid to true
+religion will cease&mdash;at any rate, in our time.&nbsp; The
+fishing season lasts until November, when the shoals pass on to
+their winter quarters in deeper waters.</p>
+<p>The delicate and the consumptive have many reasons for
+thankfulness in connection with this fishery.&nbsp; What they
+would do without the cod-liver oil, which has saved and
+lengthened many a valuable life, it were hard to say.&nbsp; It is
+to England that almost all the cod-liver oil comes.&nbsp; The cod
+roe, pickled and barrelled, is exported almost entirely to
+France, where it is in great demand, as ground-bait for the
+sardine fishery.&nbsp; How great that demand is, the reader will
+at once perceive when I tell him that no fewer than 13,000 boats
+on the coast of Brittany are engaged in the sardine fishery
+alone.</p>
+<p><a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>I ought
+to say that these Quebec steamers are, as regards saloon
+accommodation, and the class of people you meet with on board,
+not quite on a par with those which ply between Liverpool and New
+York.&nbsp; Perhaps the latter are fitted up almost too
+splendidly.&nbsp; &lsquo;When the stormy winds do
+blow&rsquo;&mdash;when everyone is ill&mdash;when you are in that
+happy state of mind when man delights you not, or woman
+either&mdash;the gilded saloons, the velvet cushions, the plate
+glass and ornamented panels, seem quite out of place; to say
+nothing of the luxurious dinners, which not everyone is able to
+enjoy.&nbsp; Such things are better fitted for summer seas and
+summer skies.</p>
+<h2><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">ARRIVAL AT QUEBEC.</p>
+<p>Once more I am on <i>terra firma</i>, and on Canadian soil,
+where I breathe a balmier air and rejoice in a clearer atmosphere
+than you in England can have any idea of.&nbsp; After all, we
+were in twenty-four hours before the mail steamer, the
+<i>Sarmatian</i>, which you must own is a feather in the cap of
+the <i>Sarnia</i>.&nbsp; One hears much of the St. Lawrence, but
+it is hard to exaggerate its beauties.&nbsp; When you are fairly
+in it, after having escaped the fog of the Newfoundland Banks and
+the icebergs of the Gulf, on you sail all day and night amidst
+islands, and past mountains, their tops covered with snow,
+stretching far away into the interior, <a name="page34"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 34</span>guarding lands yet waiting to be
+tilled, and primeval forests yet ignorant of the
+woodcutter&rsquo;s axe.&nbsp; A hardy people, mostly of French
+extraction, inhabit that part of the province of Quebec; but as
+you reach nearer to the capital, the land becomes flatter, and
+the signs of human settlement more frequent in the shape of
+wooden houses, each with its plot of ground, where the rustics
+carry on the daily work of the farm, or in the shape of villages,
+inhabited by ship-wrecked fishermen, who have intermarried with
+the French, and whose children, if they bear the commonest of
+English names, are at the same time utterly ignorant, not only of
+the tongue that Shakespeare spake, but of the faith and morals
+Milton held.&nbsp; They are a lazy people, living chiefly on the
+harvest of the sea, and doing little when that harvest is
+over.&nbsp; Men are wanted to cut down timber, and they come in
+gangs of two or three hundred, and spend a week in riotous
+debauchery before they can <a name="page35"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 35</span>be got to work.&nbsp; Few English
+settlers go into that region, yet they can easily make a living
+there if they are inclined to rough it in the bush, and are not
+afraid of coarse living and hard work.&nbsp; Villages, churches,
+hotels, are all built of wood on a stone foundation, and, painted
+as the houses are, they remind one not a little of Zaandam, and
+the little wooden cottages you may see in that old quarter of the
+world.&nbsp; But the original colonists are a poor people, living
+frugally and with little desire for the comforts and luxuries of
+life.&nbsp; It is the same in Quebec, where the poor all talk
+French, and where the Protestants are in a very small
+minority.&nbsp; In Quebec there is little to attract the
+stranger.&nbsp; It looks its best at it stands on its picturesque
+rock rising out of the St. Lawrence.&nbsp; You see the French
+University, founded as far back as 1663 by that De Laval whose
+name is so deeply interwoven with the French history of the
+province.&nbsp; It is thus that his contemporaries <a
+name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>describe
+him.&nbsp; &lsquo;He began,&rsquo; writes Mother Juchiereau de
+Saint Denis, Superior of the H&ocirc;tel Dieu, &lsquo;in his
+tenderest years the study of perfection, and we have reason to
+believe he reached it, since every virtue which St. Paul demands
+in a bishop was seen and admired in him.&rsquo;&nbsp; Mother
+Marie, Superior of the Ursulines, wrote: &lsquo;I will not say
+that he is a saint, but I may say with truth that he lives like a
+saint and an apostle.&nbsp; We have ample evidence of the
+austerity of his life.&nbsp; His servant, a lay-brother,
+testified after his death that he slept on a hard bed, and would
+not suffer it to be changed, even when it became full of
+fleas.&nbsp; So great was his charity that he gave fifteen
+hundred or two thousand francs to the poor every
+year.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I have seen him,&rsquo; writes
+Houssart, &lsquo;keep cooked meat five or six, seven or eight
+days, in the heat of summer, and when it was all mouldy and
+wormy, he washed it in warm water, and ate it, and told me it was
+very <a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+37</span>good.&nbsp; I determined to keep everything I could that
+had belonged to his holy person, and after his death to soak bits
+of linen in his blood when his body was opened, and take a few
+bones and cartilages from his breast, cut off his hair, and keep
+his clothes and such things to serve as most precious
+relics.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then you see the spire of the English Cathedral, a very plain
+building, and higher up still, the modern Parliament House, but
+recently erected.&nbsp; Further on, you see the Dufferin
+Promenade, which is a lasting record to the most popular of
+English Governors-General; and higher up still is the citadel,
+and beyond that are the plains of Abraham, where Wolfe fell in
+the hour of victory.</p>
+<p>The Presbyterians and Wesleyans have good congregations, but
+the Baptists are not strong, in spite of the wonderful vitality
+of the aged pastor, Mr. Marsh, who, octogenarian as he is, seemed
+much more able to climb the <a name="page38"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 38</span>heights than the writer, who perhaps
+was a little out of condition on account of the laziness of sea
+life.&nbsp; One of the buildings with which I was most pleased
+was that of the Young Men&rsquo;s Christian Association (built
+partly by the munificence of Mr. George Williams, of London, the
+founder of the Young Men&rsquo;s Christian Associations all the
+world over), which is quite a credit to the place, and from the
+top of which you get a magnificent view of the quaint old city,
+with its gates and narrow streets, and the pleasant suburbs, and
+the far-away plains and hills, amongst which the St. Lawrence or
+the river Charles, which runs into it here, urges on its wild
+career.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;In a city where we have to contend,&rsquo; says the
+last Report of the Association, &lsquo;against great
+disadvantages, where the Protestant population seems to be
+gradually diminishing, and the young men seeking other fields of
+enterprise, it is a matter of sincere thankfulness <a
+name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>that we have
+not to record a retrograde movement.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was with
+regret that I saw that the Independent church, which is a fine
+one, has had to close its doors.&nbsp; Another disadvantage
+resulting from this decay of Protestantism is, that the
+Protestants have to bear more than their fair share of taxation,
+as the Roman Catholic churches and convents and nunneries, which
+are wealthy, are exempt from taxation altogether.&nbsp; I fancy,
+also, that the men employed at the extensive wharves are doing
+all they can to drive the trade away, as they impose such
+regulations as to the number of men to be employed in loading or
+unloading ships, that now many of them load lower down the
+river.&nbsp; However, the place is busy enough, especially on the
+other side of the river, where the steamers land their
+passengers, and where Miss Richardson has established a
+comfortable home for girls and young women&mdash;which I
+inspected&mdash;free of expense, as they arrive from England, and
+<a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>seeks to
+plant them out where their services may be required.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p40.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Falls of Montmorenci, Quebec"
+title=
+"Falls of Montmorenci, Quebec"
+src="images/p40.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>One of our latest lady writers is very enthusiastic on the
+subject of Quebec.&nbsp; I am sorry to say I cannot share in that
+enthusiasm, and I was by no means disconsolate that I could not
+stay to attend a convivial meeting to which I was invited by a
+French colonist, one of our fellow-passengers.&nbsp; I was soon
+tired of its dusty and narrows streets, and its pavements all
+made of boards, and its priests and nuns.&nbsp; There are no
+shops to look at worth speaking of, and the idea of riding in one
+of the <i>caleches</i> was quite out of the question.&nbsp;
+Nothing more rickety in the shape of a riding machine was ever
+invented.&nbsp; It seemed to me that they were sure to turn over
+as soon as you turned the corner.&nbsp; The <i>caleche</i> is
+simply a little sledge on wheels.&nbsp; As a sledge I fancy it is
+delightful, though by no means up to the sledges I have driven on
+the Elbe in hard winters in days long long <a
+name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>departed; but
+as a carriage, drawn by a broken-down horse, with a driver almost
+as wild as the original Indian, the <i>caleche</i>, I own, finds
+little favour in my eyes.&nbsp; Up the town there does not seem
+much life.&nbsp; There is plenty of it, however, in the shipping
+district, where a great deal of building is going on.</p>
+<p>Of one thing I must complain in connection with emigration,
+and that is the pity the emigrants land at Quebec at all.&nbsp;
+The steamers all go up to Montreal after they have shot down
+their helpless crowd of emigrants on the wharf, where they have
+to spend a dreary day waiting to get their luggage.&nbsp; How
+much more pleasant it would be to take them right on to Montreal,
+which, at any rate, is the destination of ninety-nine out of a
+hundred at the very least.&nbsp; As it is, they are taken on by a
+special train, which starts no one knows when, and which arrives
+at Montreal at what hour it suits the railway authorities.&nbsp;
+In that <a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+42</span>respect, it seems to me, there is room for great
+improvement; but on this head I speak diffidently, as, perhaps,
+the steamship owners and the railway companies know their own
+business better than I do.&nbsp; The trip is a picturesque one,
+and can be enjoyed in these short nights better on the deck of a
+steamer than in a railway-car.&nbsp; [I am glad to hear since
+writing the above that this state of things will not further
+exist, and that every arrangement is now being made by the
+Canadian Pacific Railway authorities for the speedy transfer from
+the steamer to the train.]&nbsp; The more I see of matters, the
+clearer it seems to me that large parties of emigrants should not
+be sent out by themselves, but that they should be under the care
+of some one who knows the country and the railway officials.</p>
+<p>I am sorry to say, as regards some of the better class of
+emigrants, the long delay at Quebec gave them an opportunity of
+getting drunk, of which they seemed gladly to have <a
+name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>availed
+themselves.&nbsp; The future of some of these young fellows it is
+not difficult to predict.&nbsp; In a little while they will have
+exhausted their resources, and will return home disgusted with
+Canada, and swearing that it is impossible to get a living
+there.&nbsp; There was no need for them to go to an hotel at
+all.&nbsp; In the yard there was a capital shed fitted up for
+refreshments.&nbsp; I had there a plate of good ham,
+bread-and-butter and jam, and as much good tea as I
+wanted&mdash;all for a shilling.&nbsp; It was a boon indeed to
+the emigrants we had landed from the <i>Sarnia</i> to find such a
+place at their disposal.</p>
+<p>As to myself, I need not assure you I was glad enough to find
+myself in a Pullman car, bound for Montreal.&nbsp; I shed no
+tears as we left Quebec far behind, and glided on under a
+cloudless, moonlit sky, serenaded by those Canadian nightingales,
+the frogs.&nbsp; At first I felt a little difficulty in retiring
+to rest.&nbsp; As a modest man, I was inclined to object to the
+<a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>presence
+of so many ladies, although we had been on the best of terms
+during our voyage out.&nbsp; It is true that they had their
+husbands with them, but nevertheless I felt uncomfortable, and
+vowed I would retreat to the smoking-room.&nbsp; However, I was
+over-persuaded, and lay down with the rest; though more than once
+that eventful night I was awoke by awful sounds, reminding me
+rather of the hoarse roar of the Atlantic in a storm than of the
+peaceful slumbers of a Pullman car.</p>
+<h2><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+45</span>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">AT MONTREAL, AND ON TO
+OTTAWA&mdash;INTERVIEWING AND INTERVIEWED.</p>
+<p>One discovery I have made since I have been here is that
+Canada has its clouded skies and its rainy days, and that a
+Canadian spring may be quite as ungenial as an English one.&nbsp;
+Yet it is, I still see, the country for a working man.&nbsp; And
+I write this in full knowledge of the fact that here at Montreal
+the charitable, on whom the poor depend&mdash;for there is no
+poor-law in this country, and let us hope, seeing what mischief
+has been done by poor-laws, there may never be one&mdash;have
+been sorely exercised this winter how to feed the hungry, and to
+clothe the naked, and to find <a name="page46"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 46</span>the outcast a home.&nbsp; But, mind
+you, I only recommend the place for the poor agricultural
+labourer or artisan; and already I find the larger portion of
+such who have come out with me are in full work, and are thankful
+that they have come, but they had to take anything that was
+offered.&nbsp; It is clear this is not the country for clerks and
+shop-lads, and the secretary of the Young Men&rsquo;s Christian
+Association&mdash;which I find here to be a flourishing
+institution&mdash;writes:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Young men are coming by each steamer.&nbsp; Many of
+them are introduced to us with excellent recommendations, and
+have occupied good positions in England.&nbsp; Some have left
+their situations on the representation of railway and steamboat
+agents as to the opportunities in this country.&nbsp; We find it
+absolutely impossible to secure employment for them in many
+cases, business in every department has been so dull.&nbsp;
+Almost all the houses have been employing hands that they <a
+name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>could
+dispense with.&nbsp; Reports from the West show the market
+glutted as bad as in Montreal.&rsquo;&nbsp; And I fear things
+have not improved since.</p>
+<p>It is cruel to get such young men out of England.&nbsp; They
+are worse off here than they would be at home.&nbsp; It is
+curious to note, in connection with emigration, the evident
+desire of the educated mechanic to keep his rivals out.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;By all means bid them stop at home,&rsquo; he cries,
+&lsquo;or wages will be lower in the colonies.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Already I have been interviewed by a working-class official here,
+and that is his cry.&nbsp; And I give it for what it may be
+worth, merely remarking that such illustrations as he gave in
+support of his views turned out to be the merest moonshine.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p48.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Junction of the River Ottawa and St. Lawrence, Montreal"
+title=
+"Junction of the River Ottawa and St. Lawrence, Montreal"
+src="images/p48.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Now let me speak of Montreal, which I entered with pleasure,
+and leave with regret.&nbsp; It is the chief city of Canada, and
+is built on the northern bank of the St. Lawrence, <a
+name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>where the
+muddy Ottawa, after a course of 600 miles, debouches into
+it.&nbsp; You arrive by a grand railway bridge, which is one of
+the wonders of this part of the world.&nbsp; The population is
+nearly 200,000, of which two-thirds are French or Irish, and
+Roman Catholic.&nbsp; It abounds with every sign of prosperity,
+and, as a city, would be a credit to the old country.&nbsp; The
+river front is lined with steamers loading for England.&nbsp; The
+principal thoroughfares contain lofty buildings, and shops as
+spacious as any of our best, whilst its hotels altogether throw
+ours into the shade; and then, in the suburbs the merchants live
+in palaces, whilst handsome churches attest the wealth, if not
+the piety, of all classes of the population.&nbsp; I fear Mammon
+worship is the prevailing form of idolatry, yet I cannot shut my
+eyes to the fact that the early settlement of the place was the
+result of religious enthusiasm, and that it was an attempt to
+found in America <a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+49</span>a veritable kingdom of God as understood by the Roman
+Catholics; but all that is past, and the chief topics of interest
+are the prices of pork, or the state of the market as regards
+butter and cheese.&nbsp; Let me remind you that such is the
+goodness of the cheese of Canada, all made in factories, that
+nearly as much cheese finds its way into the English market from
+Montreal as from New York.</p>
+<p>One thing especially strikes me, and that is the muscular
+character of the young men.&nbsp; Montreal is a great place for
+athletes.&nbsp; Montreal has hundreds of such, as it is not only
+a centre of commerce, but the most important manufacturing city
+in the Dominion&mdash;3,000 hands are employed in the manufacture
+of boots and shoes.&nbsp; Then there are here the largest sugar
+refineries and cotton mills and silk and cloth factories in
+Canada, and the result is that, as these factories are nursed by
+Protection, the towns are unnaturally crowded, and the people all
+over <a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>the
+country have to pay high prices for inferior articles, and the
+Canadians, who ought to be making cheese and butter, and growing
+corn for the artisans of Lancashire, are doing all they can to
+reduce their best and most natural customers to a state of
+starvation.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is a shame,&rsquo; said a Canadian
+manufacturer to me, only in language a little more emphatic,
+&lsquo;that England allows any of her colonies to put prohibitory
+duties on British products.&rsquo;&nbsp; And I quite agree with
+my friend that it is a shame.&nbsp; However, as long as the
+present Canadian Government are in power, there is no chance of
+Free Trade.&nbsp; It was the Protection cry that placed the
+Conservatives in power.&nbsp; With so many French as there are in
+Canada, vainly dreaming of a restoration of French rule, it is
+idle to talk of the interests of the mother country.&nbsp; Nor
+does Great Britain deserve very well of the Canadians.&nbsp; Up
+to almost the present time it has held them <a
+name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>to be of
+little account, and, as we all know, it is not so very long since
+it suffered Brother Jonathan to annex that part of Maine in which
+Portland is situated, and thus to deprive Canada of its only
+winter harbour.</p>
+<p>For one thing Montreal is to be highly commended, and that is
+on account of its hotels.&nbsp; The Windsor Hotel, in Dominion
+Square, is one of the finest hotels in America, and as you enter
+you are quite bewildered at the magnificence of the
+entrance-hall.&nbsp; A curious thing happened to me there.&nbsp;
+Mr. Hoyle and Mr. Barker, of the U.K. Alliance, had come there
+after a pilgrimage in the States, and it was determined to give
+them a reception.&nbsp; I had a ticket, and went for about an
+hour, chatting pleasantly with readers, who had known me by
+repute, and were glad to shake hands with me.&nbsp; Imagine my
+horror when, in the next morning&rsquo;s paper, I read that the
+reception had been got up by Temperance friends for me, as <a
+name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>well as
+Messrs. Hoyle and Barker, and that my humble name figured first
+on the list.&nbsp; Perhaps this was meant as a consolation to
+me.&nbsp; I had been interviewed on the previous day, and the
+papers had spoken of me in such complimentary terms that I felt
+almost a lion.</p>
+<p>Alas! in America interviewing is quite a common-place affair,
+and it gives no <i>&eacute;clat</i> to be interviewed.&nbsp;
+People sat smoking in the hall as I passed, utterly unconscious
+of the fact.&nbsp; Yet the reporters did their best.&nbsp; One of
+them called after I was gone to bed.&nbsp; He said he was not
+going to be scooped out by the other fellow, whatever that may
+mean.&nbsp; Virtue in his case was not rewarded.&nbsp; I kept to
+my bed, and left the enterprising reporter to do the best he
+could.</p>
+<p>I ought to say a word of the hotel at which I
+stopped&mdash;the Lawrence Hall, in James&rsquo;s
+Street&mdash;which I strongly recommend to all, especially to
+such of my friends as <a name="page53"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 53</span>may be contemplating a visit to
+Montreal.&nbsp; The bedrooms are beautifully clean, the cooking
+is excellent, and the service is admirable.&nbsp; It enjoys a
+tremendous amount of support.&nbsp; I was there just forty-eight
+hours, and I counted as many as two hundred names of arrivals
+after me, and yet, in spite of the crowd, there was ample
+accommodation for all, and I and my friends dined as comfortably
+and quietly as if we had been at home.&nbsp; The proprietor, Mr.
+Hogan, is a gentleman with whom it is a pleasure to
+converse.&nbsp; Nor are his charges high.</p>
+<p>It is a sight to sit in the hall and watch the ever-shifting
+crowd, or to stray into the shaving apartment, where a dozen
+barbers are always hard at work.&nbsp; I own I became a victim,
+and paid a shilling for a performance which in London only costs
+me sixpence; but in London I simply have my hair cut, here I was
+under the care of a &lsquo;professional artist.&rsquo;&nbsp; I
+quote his card: <a name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+54</span>&lsquo;Physiognomical hairdresser, facial operator,
+cranium manipulator, and capillary abridger.&rsquo;&nbsp; I could
+not think of offering so distinguished a professor less than a
+shilling.&nbsp; But the fact is, you can&rsquo;t travel cheaply
+either in Canada or the United States.</p>
+<p>It goes sadly against the grain to pay fivepence for having
+one&rsquo;s boots blacked, and the way in which your change is
+doled out to you is not pleasant, and adds materially to the
+difficulties of the situation.&nbsp; For instance, I had a
+certain American coin the other day pressed into my reluctant
+hands on the express understanding that it was to go for ten
+cents.&nbsp; I paid it to a ferryman, who said it was only worth
+eight, and then, on that supposition, he managed to cheat me; and
+I had to appeal to a friend of mine, who told me that I had not
+the right change, before I could get the man to give me my due;
+directly, however, the mistake was pointed out he rectified it,
+thus acknowledging, <a name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+55</span>in the most barefaced manner, his attempt to cheat; and
+the beauty of it was, I was with a great man of the place, who
+witnessed the whole transaction, and never said a word,
+apparently looking upon it as a matter of course.</p>
+<p>I fear there is a good deal of villainy in the world, and that
+it is not confined to America.&nbsp; Travellers are bound to be
+victimised, and the best thing you can do is to laugh.&nbsp; I
+own I did so at Liverpool the other day, as I was waiting for the
+tugboat to take me off to the <i>Sarnia</i>.&nbsp; I knew that I
+had not made a mistake, I knew that the tug was sure to come; yet
+four big hulking fellows with brazen faces would have made me
+believe that I was too late for the tug, and that my only chance
+of getting on board was for me to let them row me out.&nbsp; In
+that case the attempt was the more rascally, as from a small
+row-boat I could never have boarded the <i>Sarnia</i> had <a
+name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>I
+tried.&nbsp; Yet there they stood&mdash;sullen and
+expectant&mdash;for a quarter of an hour, taking me, possibly,
+for a bigger fool even than I look.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It is a pity,&rsquo; said a Canadian lady to me,
+&lsquo;that Queen Victoria&rsquo;&mdash;for whom all Canada prays
+that long may she reign over us, happy and
+glorious&mdash;&lsquo;fixed upon Ottawa as the site of the
+Government.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I am very much inclined to a similar feeling.&nbsp; At
+Montreal the change of water affected me very disagreeably.&nbsp;
+At Ottawa I was completely floored.&nbsp; It is a curious fact
+that almost everyone who goes to Ottawa is taken ill.&nbsp; I was
+complaining of my first terrible night to Sir Leonard Tilley, the
+Finance Minister, and he said that when he first came to Ottawa
+it was the same with him.</p>
+<p>A lady told me that Lady Tupper, who has just left the Colony
+for England, where, it is said, her lord and master hopes to find
+<a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>a seat in
+the Imperial Parliament&mdash;a consummation devoutly to be
+wished, as to my mind it is clear that all our colonies should
+have representatives in Parliament&mdash;made a similar complaint
+as to the effect of the place on her children, and I have it on
+the best authority that scarcely a session passes but an M.P.
+pays the penalty of a residence in Ottawa.</p>
+<p>In my case I was preserved, as the man in the &lsquo;Arabian
+Nights&rsquo; says, for the greater misfortunes yet to befall me
+by the use of Dr. Browne&rsquo;s far-famed
+&lsquo;Chlorodyne&rsquo;&mdash;an indispensable requisite, I am
+bound to say, when an emigrant takes his trial trip to
+Canada.&nbsp; I know not who is the inventor&mdash;I believe it
+is what we call a patent medicine&mdash;that is, a medicine not
+sanctioned by the faculty&mdash;but, as has been observed of the
+Pickwick pen, it is indeed a boon and a blessing to men.&nbsp; I
+used &lsquo;Chlorodyne,&rsquo; and was soon all right.&nbsp; Sir
+Leonard <a name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+58</span>Tilley told me he did the same, and no one should go to
+Ottawa without having a small bottle of it in his carpet-bag.</p>
+<p>Yet Ottawa is not without a certain freshness of beauty that
+one associates <i>prim&acirc; facie</i> with perfect
+health.&nbsp; The stately Government buildings, all of grey
+stone, are placed on a hill, whence you have a peerless view of
+river and country and distant hill, and far away forests all
+around.&nbsp; A more picturesque site it would be assuredly most
+difficult to find.&nbsp; As to the town itself, it is a curious
+compound&mdash;almost Irish in that respect&mdash;of splendour
+and meanness.&nbsp; There are magnificent shops&mdash;and then
+you come to wooden shanties, which in such a city ought long ere
+this to have been improved off the face of the earth.&nbsp; If on
+a rainy day, unless very careful, you attempt to cross the
+streets, you are in danger of sticking in the mud, which no one
+seems to ever think of removing, and in many parts <a
+name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>there are
+disgraceful holes in the plank pavement on which you walk, which
+are dangerous, especially to the aged and infirm.</p>
+<p>In Ottawa the contrasts are more violent than I have seen
+elsewhere.&nbsp; Everyone comes to the place.&nbsp; It is the
+headquarters of the Dominion.&nbsp; I met there statesmen,
+adventurers, wild men of the woods, or prairie, deputies from
+Manitoba, lawyers from Quebec, sharpers and honest men, all
+staying at one hotel; and it seemed strange to sit at dinner and
+see great rough fellows, with the manners of ploughmen, quaffing
+their costly champagne, and fancying themselves patterns of
+gentility and taste.&nbsp; In one thing they disappointed
+me.&nbsp; Sir Charles Tupper was to leave for England, and his
+admirers met outside the hotel to see him off.&nbsp; There was a
+carriage and four to convey him to the station, and other
+carriages followed.&nbsp; There was a military band in <a
+name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>attendance,
+much to the disgust of the Opposition journals&mdash;and yet, in
+spite of all, the cheers which followed the departing statesman
+were so faint as to be perfectly ridiculous to a British ear, and
+seemed quite out of proportion to all the display that had been
+made.&nbsp; Certainly they seemed quite childish compared with
+those which greeted a certain individual, whose name delicacy
+forbids my mentioning, when, on the last night on board the
+<i>Sarnia</i>, he ventured humbly to reply to the toast of the
+Press which had been given in the smoking-room by a Quebec artist
+returning home from study in Paris.</p>
+<p>In Ottawa, certainly, there is no demand for emigrants, unless
+it be good female servants, who are wanted much more, and can
+have much more comfortable living, at home.&nbsp; A lady asked me
+to send her a few good servants from England.&nbsp; I replied
+that my wife wanted them as much as she did, and <a
+name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 61</span>that it was
+my duty to attend to her requirements first.</p>
+<p>It is curious the airs the raw servant-girls from Ireland give
+themselves out here.&nbsp; One day, when I was at Peterborough,
+one of the head-quarters of the lumber trade&mdash;which
+yesterday was a dense forest, and is now a town of 8,000
+people&mdash;I heard of the arrival of a lot of girls from
+Galway.&nbsp; The drill-hall was set apart for their use, and
+there they were respectfully waited on by the chief ladies of the
+district in need of that rarest of created beings&mdash;a good
+maid-of-all-work.&nbsp; In this particular case one of the
+arrivals was fixed on.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What can you do?&rsquo; said the lady.</p>
+<p>The girl seemed uncertain on that point.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Can you wash?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh no!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Can you cook?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh no!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Can you do housemaid&rsquo;s work?&rsquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 62</span>Well,
+she thought she could.</p>
+<p>Then came the question of wages.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Will you take eight dollars a month?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>No, she would not.&nbsp; Would she accept of nine?&nbsp; Oh
+no!&nbsp; Would she take ten?&nbsp; Certainly not.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What do you want?&rsquo; said the lady, beginning to be
+alarmed.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;They told me I was to have twelve dollars a
+month,&rsquo; said the girl, and that put a stop to the
+negotiation.</p>
+<p>When I state that an English sovereign is worth at this time
+four dollars and eighty-six cents, I think you will agree with me
+that this charming daughter of Erin somewhat overrated the value
+of her services.&nbsp; The Canadians are a well-to-do people, but
+they cannot afford twelve dollars a month for a mere
+housemaid.&nbsp; I think it would be well if the respectable
+young women&mdash;of whom there are thousands in England who do
+not care for the pittance given to a governess, and <a
+name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>who prefer
+the life of a lady-help&mdash;were to come out.&nbsp; They would
+soon be appreciated.</p>
+<p>The average girl selected to be sent out to the colony, so far
+as I have seen her, is not a model of loveliness or
+utility.&nbsp; Were I a Canadian mother, I would sooner have a
+lady-help.&nbsp; Nor need the lady-help be afraid of the
+roughness of her lot.&nbsp; In Ontario, all the difficulties of
+the pioneers of civilization have long since disappeared.&nbsp;
+One hears strange tales of what those brave men and delicately
+nurtured ladies had to suffer.</p>
+<p>I have seen two&mdash;whom I had known when a boy&mdash;who
+were familiar with the best of London literary society, who
+figured in all the annuals of the season, who were famous in
+their day, whose sires came over with William the
+Conqueror.&nbsp; They were sisters, and married two officers, who
+had land allotted to them in Canada, and brought out these
+wellborn and delicately nurtured women into what was then a
+waste, howling wilderness, where <a name="page64"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 64</span>they had to slave as no servant-girl
+slaves in England, and to fight with the severity of the climate
+in a way of which the present generation of Canadians have no
+idea.&nbsp; Only think, for instance, of your joint roasting at
+the fire on one side and freezing on the other!&nbsp; In the
+settled parts of Canada, such horrors are now amongst the
+pleasant reminiscences of the past.</p>
+<p>But I must return to Ottawa, where the universal testimony of
+all the heads of the Government was to the effect that Canada is
+the place for the poor, hard-working man.&nbsp; There is an
+emigration-office in every town, where the emigrant is sure to
+hear of work, if work is to be had.</p>
+<p>Canada is a charming place for the traveller.&nbsp; He sees
+friends everywhere.&nbsp; Mr. John H. Pope, Minister of
+Agriculture, and Mr. John Lowe, Secretary, were especially useful
+in aiding me.&nbsp; As I called on the Minister of Finance, he
+insisted on <a name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+65</span>my seeing the Premier&mdash;Sir John Macdonald&mdash;who
+came out of a Council to give me a friendly chat for half an
+hour, and who kindly asked me to call on him again on my
+return.&nbsp; In Canada the Council sits almost daily, and the
+sitting generally lasts from two till six, as all the business
+which is left in England to the departments, in Canada is
+transacted in the Council.&nbsp; Sir John seemed to think that a
+good deal of time was wasted in speeches in Parliament, which
+were intended not for the House, but for the constituents
+outside: in this respect the Canadian Parliament much resembles a
+more august assembly nearer home.</p>
+<p>I had also the honour of an interview with the Marquis of
+Lansdowne at the Government House, in a pretty park about a mile
+out of the town.&nbsp; His lordship enjoys his residence at
+Ottawa very much, and said he should leave it with regret.&nbsp;
+His idea seemed to be that now was the time for English farmers
+with a little capital to come out to Ontario, <a
+name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>as the old
+farmers are selling off their farms and going further, to take up
+large tracts of land in the North-West; and I think many English
+farmers would be wise if they adopted some such plan.&nbsp; The
+Province is called the Garden of Canada.</p>
+<p>At present I have seen no very superior land.&nbsp; There is a
+good deal of sand where I have been and wheat-growing is out of
+the question; but the barley is excellent, and is in great demand
+in the United States, and a good deal of money is made by raising
+stock and horses.&nbsp; At any rate, no farmer here is in danger
+of losing all his capital&mdash;most of them are well off, and
+their sons and daughters prosper as well.</p>
+<p>Let me give a few further particulars respecting Sir John
+Macdonald&mdash;perhaps the most abused, and the hardest working
+man, in all Canada.&nbsp; He has good Scotch blood in his
+veins.&nbsp; In the thirteenth century one of his ancestors looms
+up as <a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>Lord
+of South Kintyre and the Island of Islay.&nbsp; When the
+emigration movement to Canada began, a descendant of this
+Macdonald settled in Kingston, then the most important town in
+Upper Canada, and, next to Halifax and Quebec, the strongest
+fortress in British North America.&nbsp; He was accompanied by
+the future Premier, then a lad of five years of age.&nbsp; The
+boy was placed at the Royal Grammar School of Kingston, under the
+tuition of Dr. Wilson, a fellow of the University of Oxford, and
+subsequently under that of Mr. George Baxter.&nbsp; Meanwhile,
+his father moved to Quint&eacute; Bay, near the Lake of the
+Mountain, a lonely, wild country, in which the future Canadian
+statesman was often to be seen in the holiday time, with a
+fishing rod in his hand, with other companions as gay-hearted as
+himself.&nbsp; At that time he is described as having &lsquo;a
+very intelligent and pleasing face, strange furry-looking hair,
+that curled in a dark mass, and a striking nose.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 68</span>Indeed,
+Sir John&rsquo;s admirers see in him a resemblance to the late
+Lord Beaconsfield, and that there is a slight resemblance the
+most superficial observer must admit.&nbsp; As a lad, Sir John
+seems to have specially distinguished himself in
+mathematics.&nbsp; His master also, we are told, frequently
+exhibited the clean-kept books of young Macdonald to some
+careless student for emulation, and as often selected specimens
+of the neat penmanship of the boy, to put to shame some of the
+slovenly writers of his class.</p>
+<p>At sixteen young Macdonald commenced the study of law, to
+which he devoted three years.&nbsp; The gentleman to whom he was
+articled speaks of him as the most diligent student he had ever
+seen.&nbsp; Before he was twenty-one years of age he was admitted
+to the Bar, opened an office at Kingston, and at once began to
+practise his profession.&nbsp; &lsquo;He was,&rsquo; says a
+fellow-student, &lsquo;an exemplary young man, and had the
+goodwill of everybody.&nbsp; <a name="page69"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 69</span>He remained closely at his business,
+never went about spreeing, or losing his time, with the young men
+of his own age and standing, did not drive fast horses, but was
+always to be found at his post in his office, courteous,
+obliging, and prompt.&rsquo;&nbsp; When Sir John commenced his
+legal career, the country was full of revolution, and every
+county in Canada had its Radicals ready to take up muskets or
+pitchforks against the oppressor.&nbsp; Sir John, though a Tory,
+was often the means of doing good service to his friends of the
+opposite party.&nbsp; In defending a rebel who was tried for
+murder, the future Premier gained his first legal success.&nbsp;
+It was a time of intense excitement, and crowds thronged to see
+the prisoners and hear the trials.&nbsp; Everyone was struck with
+the masterly character of Sir John&rsquo;s defence; and though
+they knew it was not within the power of human tongue or brain to
+save the prisoner, they admired the skill with which he
+marshalled <a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>his arguments, the tact he displayed in his appeal to
+the judges, and, above all, the deep interest he displayed in the
+cause of his unfortunate client.&nbsp; This was in 1838; from
+that date Sir John was looked to as a rising man.&nbsp; In a
+little while afterwards he commenced his stormy political
+career.</p>
+<p>In 1841 Kingston was made the seat of Government, and Sir John
+was returned to Parliament, in place of a politician who had lost
+his popularity.&nbsp; The assembly was an excited one, and
+everyone made furious speeches, with the exception of the new
+member, who sat unmoved at his desk while the fray went on,
+looking, says a gentleman who well remembers him there, half
+contemptuous and half careless.&nbsp; In 1844, he commenced his
+executive career by being appointed to the Standing Orders
+Committee.&nbsp; His first speech was delivered with an easy air
+of confidence, as captivating as it was rare.&nbsp; The time
+ripened rapidly.&nbsp; The <a name="page71"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 71</span>old Tory Compact Party was being
+swiftly broken up, and when Lord Elgin arrived in Canada, a new
+Government was formed, with Sir John as Receiver-General.&nbsp;
+In a little while he was moved to the Office of Crown Lands, then
+the most important department in the public service, and one that
+in the past had been most shamefully, if not most criminally
+abused, but he was soon out of office, and a new Ministry came
+into force, pledged to a Bill for the indemnification of parties
+in Lower Canada whose property had been destroyed in the
+rebellion.&nbsp; There were awful riots.&nbsp; The Parliament
+buildings in Montreal were burned, and it seemed as if the old
+feud between Frenchman and Englishman had been roused, never more
+to die.</p>
+<p>Lord Elgin was ready to return to England The reformers were
+strong, but Macdonald did not despair.&nbsp; The new Government,
+amongst other things, were pledged to <a name="page72"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 72</span>increased parliamentary
+representation, the abolition of seignorial tenure, and the
+secularization of the Clergy Reserves.&nbsp; Of the Government
+that attempted to do this, Sir John was a bitter opponent, on the
+ground that they had hesitated about questions which had set the
+country in a blaze.&nbsp; The Government had to retire, and in
+the Liberal-Conservative Ministry which succeeded to office we
+find Mr. Macdonald Attorney General, and he held office till he
+was defeated in his Militia Bill.&nbsp; He returned to office,
+however, in time to carry a confederation of the Colonies, and to
+become Premier, when Lord Monck was Governor-General.</p>
+<p>Since he has been at the head of affairs the Hudson Bay
+Company has handed over its gigantic territory in the North West
+to the Dominion.&nbsp; That great work, the Canada Pacific
+Railway, has nearly been brought to a successful termination, and
+Canada <a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 73</span>has
+taken a leap upwards and onwards to matured life and
+independence, of which not yet have we seen the end.&nbsp; It is
+a terrible scene of personal attack, political life in
+Canada.&nbsp; Even since Parliamentary Government has been
+established, the fight between the ins and the outs has been
+bitter and constant.&nbsp; No one can understand it, unless he is
+a native of the country; and it says much for Sir John that he
+has risen to the top, and kept himself there so long.&nbsp; To
+have done so, he must have possessed more merit than his enemies
+give him credit for.</p>
+<h2><a name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+74</span>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">TORONTO&mdash;THE TOWN&mdash;THE
+PEOPLE&mdash;CANADIAN AUTHORS&mdash;THE LEADER OF THE
+OPPOSITION.</p>
+<p>Toronto, or the Queen City of the West, as she loves to call
+herself, stands upon the north shore of Lake Ontario, and has not
+only achieved a great success, but may be said, in spite of all
+the moving to the North-West of which we hear so much, to have a
+great future before it, on account of its position with regard to
+railways, which alone in this great country decide the fate of
+towns and cities.&nbsp; Immediately in front is a broad bay, from
+which you get an imposing view of the city, while its forest of
+spires and factory chimneys gives evidence of prosperous and busy
+life.&nbsp; I have <a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+75</span>never been in a city where the Sabbath was more strictly
+observed.&nbsp; The omnibus ceases to run on a Sunday, the cab is
+locked up, and even the cigar-store is closed.&nbsp; At seven on
+Saturday evening all the liquor-shops are shut, and in Toronto,
+as in all the Province, no one can buy a drop of whisky, or wine,
+or beer, till a decent hour on Monday morning.&nbsp; It is true,
+I was invited one Sunday to go and have a glass of whisky and
+water&mdash;an offer which, it is needless to say, I refused; but
+then, had I accepted the offer, I should have had to go into a
+club of which my friend was a member.&nbsp; In Canada, as in
+England, the club-member may indulge his taste, however strictly
+the abstinence of his less fortunate brother may be enforced by
+law.&nbsp; But the Sunday quiet of Toronto is remarkable.&nbsp;
+There are few people but church-goers in the streets, and the
+churches of all religious denominations are quite as numerous and
+quite as handsome as any we have in England.&nbsp; <a
+name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>They are all
+built on a larger scale, and are all well-filled.&nbsp; On Sunday
+evening I had to light my way into the Congregational church, of
+which Dr. Wild is the minister.&nbsp; He hails from America, and
+is quite the sensation of the hour.&nbsp; There was no
+standing-room anywhere, and as I made to the door I met many
+coming away.&nbsp; However, I had made up my mind to hear the
+Doctor, and hear him I did.&nbsp; It seems that the subscribers
+have a door to themselves; I made for it, and luckily found a
+chair, which I wedged in under the platform.&nbsp; As I entered,
+the Doctor was making the people laugh by answering questions
+that had been sent to him in writing.&nbsp; Then we had quite a
+service of song.&nbsp; The choir behind him performed, a lady
+sang a solo, the congregation joined in a well-known English
+hymn.&nbsp; The Doctor prayed, and then we had a sermon about
+Revelation, containing much that was very effective, if not about
+his text, at any rate about that mysterious part of Scripture <a
+name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>from which
+the text was taken.&nbsp; The Doctor is now in the prime of life,
+and his preaching powerful and effective.&nbsp; The audience
+consisted chiefly of men; perhaps that may be considered in the
+Doctor&rsquo;s favour.&nbsp; One thing did surprise me, and that
+was to see seated at a table right under the pulpit platform a
+reporter coolly taking notes.&nbsp; Our English reporters in a
+place of worship on a Sunday are certainly more modest, and
+prefer to blush unseen.</p>
+<p>Toronto rises up, with its grand public buildings, proudly
+from the shore.&nbsp; The site of the city was very marshy, and
+at one time it was known as Muddy York.&nbsp; Only yesterday a
+lady was telling me how her mother was near losing her life in
+the mud of the chief street, leaving behind her the English
+pattens of which she was so proud.&nbsp; The further from the
+lake, the more the land rises, till you reach where, as Tom Moore
+wrote&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+78</span>&lsquo;The blue hills of old Toronto shed<br />
+Their evening shadows o&rsquo;er Ontario&rsquo;s bed.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p78.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"King Street, Toronto"
+title=
+"King Street, Toronto"
+src="images/p78.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>In 1812 the population of the place was under 1,000.&nbsp; It
+is now, including the suburbs, where some of the wealthiest
+citizens live in houses as well-built and as luxuriously fitted
+up as any in London, about 116,000.&nbsp; King Street, the
+principal one, is built up with substantial brick and stone
+buildings, many of which are equal to any on the American
+Continent.&nbsp; Forty years since, it was completely composed of
+wooden structures, and was barely passable to pedestrians.&nbsp;
+Now, it is adorned with stately stores, where the latest
+novelties of the Old World and the New are ostentatiously
+displayed.&nbsp; The public buildings are quite an ornament to
+the place, and the offices of the leading newspaper, <i>The
+Toronto Mail</i>, are one of the sights of the city.&nbsp; The
+yearly civic income and expenditure is over 2,000,000 dollars,
+and the assessed value of property last year <a
+name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>was
+61,942,581 dollars.&nbsp; The streets are spacious, well laid
+out, and regularly built.&nbsp; The two main arteries of the city
+are King and George Streets, which, crossing each other at right
+angles, divide the city into four large sections.&nbsp; I
+don&rsquo;t think house-rent is cheap.&nbsp; I have been in one
+or two private houses, the rents of which seemed to me certainly
+dearer than would be the rents of similar houses in London.&nbsp;
+But, then, in Toronto&mdash;think of it, O respected
+Paterfamilias!&mdash;the best cuts of meat are about eightpence a
+pound, and prime butter is not much more, and&mdash;Sir Henry
+Thompson will rejoice to hear this&mdash;there is a plentiful
+supply of fish.&nbsp; The city also boasts of fine theatres, and
+halls, and colleges; while the Episcopalian Cathedral in James
+Street possesses the celebrated chimney and illuminated clock
+which took the first prize at the Vienna Exhibition, and which
+was purchased by the citizens, and presented to the Dean <a
+name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 80</span>and
+churchwardens of the place on Christmas-eve, 1876.&nbsp; They
+tell me, however, that the strongest body of Christians in the
+city is that of the Wesleyans.&nbsp; I am staying at Walker
+House, the most comfortable place which I have discovered thus
+far.&nbsp; Toronto itself offers few opportunities to the
+emigrant, and the citizens are not enthusiastic in his
+favour.&nbsp; I met a reverend gentleman from England here, who,
+the other night, at a meeting of mechanics, vainly endeavoured to
+say a word in favour of emigration, and had to desist under the
+threat that if he did not they would knock off his head.&nbsp;
+The mechanics here are very much afraid that if more of their own
+class come out, wages will be lowered.&nbsp; Nor are Irish
+emigrants in much favour here, as they stop in the city instead
+of going into the country in search of work, and have to be
+supported by the charitable and humane.&nbsp; Only a few days
+since a large batch of Irish arrived.&nbsp; Work had been found
+<a name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>for them
+which they agreed to accept, and they were on the point of being
+forwarded, when they were got at by the Irish already in the
+city, and now they refuse to budge.</p>
+<p>The other day I met Dr. Barnardo&rsquo;s agent, who has come
+out with some of his trained boys to settle them in Peterborough,
+where Mr. G. A. Cox, the Mayor of the place, has kindly given a
+commodious house for their use.&nbsp; Already, I believe, the
+Doctor has sent out 780 boys and about 470 girls, who have all
+been planted out.&nbsp; Mr. W. Williams, of the <i>Chichester</i>
+and <i>Arethusa</i>, has sent many more, and so have others, of
+whom I hope to hear tidings in the course of my travel.&nbsp; The
+manager of Dr. Barnardo&rsquo;s home at Peterborough, in answer
+to inquiries from the farmers and others, writes that boys from
+seven to twelve years of age are usually sent out on terms of
+<i>adoption</i>, to be treated in every respect as children of
+the <a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+82</span>household, and to receive, on attaining their
+twenty-first birthday, a sum of not less than one hundred and
+fifty dollars.&nbsp; Boys of thirteen and over are hired as
+&lsquo;helps,&rsquo; at wages varying from thirty-five to
+ninety-five dollars per annum, with lodging, food, and medical
+attendance.&nbsp; Girls are sent out at ages ranging from four to
+sixteen years.&nbsp; Those of eleven and under are usually
+<i>adopted</i> into families; while those of twelve and upwards
+are hired at wages from two dollars to nine dollars a month, with
+board, lodging, washing, and medical attendance.&nbsp; The utmost
+care is taken that these children should be placed in good
+hands.&nbsp; The applicant for a child has to get his letter
+recommended by a clergyman or magistrate; then he has to give his
+Christian name and surname in full, his address, his occupation;
+to say if he hires his farm, or if it is his own; whether he is a
+member of a Christian Church; what work the child will have to
+perform; on what <a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+83</span>terms the child comes into the family; what length of
+engagement is desired; what church the child will attend; and so
+on.</p>
+<p>Moreover, Dr. Barnardo&rsquo;s system provides for the regular
+and frequent visitation of every young emigrant at his or her
+place of employment; the girls by a lady of great experience, the
+boys by a gentleman.&nbsp; By this means the children are never
+lost sight of, and trustworthy reports of their progress and
+whereabouts are periodically furnished to the heads of the
+institution in England.</p>
+<p>Now, I call attention to this plan, not merely to increase
+confidence in the labours of philanthropists who are sending out
+children to Canada, but in order to raise the question, why it is
+only the children of the destitute and the wild arabs of the
+street that are to have this advantage.&nbsp; There must be many
+poor people in England who have sons, perhaps a little too plucky
+for home, who could pay to send out their lads, and would <a
+name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>be glad to do
+so, if they saw a chance of their being placed in good
+hands.&nbsp; There are many boys who would be glad to leave the
+somewhat overcrowded house, and who would rejoice to fight the
+battle of life in the New World under such advantageous
+conditions.&nbsp; Why should they not have a chance?&nbsp; Why
+should the destitute only be looked after?&nbsp; Why should not
+some one in the same way lend a helping hand to the honest son of
+the honest working man?&nbsp; It may be that his father may be
+too old to emigrate.&nbsp; It may be that he is doing fairly well
+at home, and that it is not worth his while to emigrate.&nbsp;
+But why should not his son have a chance, and be sent out under a
+system as excellent as that to which I have referred?&nbsp;
+Assuredly that is a question to be asked by others.</p>
+<p>But Dr. Barnardo says in his magazine, <i>Night and Day</i>,
+that much injury to the work of emigration has been effected by
+supposing that boys who have committed grave moral <a
+name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 85</span>faults can do
+well, if only shipped off to Canada.&nbsp; He contends that a
+number of young fellows of <i>that</i> sort sent to Canada, would
+seriously prejudice the prospects of emigration generally; and he
+urges in very strong terms that none but boys and girls of
+thoroughly good physique, industrious, honest, and of good
+general character, should be encouraged to emigrate upon any
+pretext whatever.</p>
+<p>Previous to my leaving Toronto I had the pleasure of an
+interview with the Hon. Edward Blake, the head of the Opposition,
+whose utterances are watched and waited for by all parties in the
+State with breathless interest.&nbsp; Travelling from Winnipeg, I
+had listened to a conversation on that gentleman&rsquo;s merits
+by two young gentlemen&mdash;who were a little incoherent in
+their language, owing to the quantity of refreshment they had on
+board&mdash;which certainly somewhat raised my
+expectations.&nbsp; Nor was I disappointed <a
+name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>on my
+personal interview with the subject of their praise.</p>
+<p>The Hon. Edward Blake is a man in the prime of life, of fresh
+complexion, of more than average height and build, with a keen
+and intellectual face.&nbsp; He was born in Canada, was educated
+at the University, followed his father in the profession of the
+bar, and as a cross-examiner, especially of an unwilling witness,
+and in the art of turning a man inside out, may claim to have no
+equal in Canada at the present time.&nbsp; He has visited Europe
+more than once&mdash;at one time in an official
+capacity&mdash;has mixed with our public men as well as with
+those of the Continent, has been in office, and, it is believed,
+will soon be in office again.&nbsp; He received me with great
+courtesy, and talked on things in general in a lively and
+interesting manner.&nbsp; On the Province of Ontario as a home
+for the British farmer he had much to say.</p>
+<p>Taking me to the map hanging up in his <a
+name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>office, and
+pointing to the district between Toronto and Detroit, he affirmed
+that there was no finer land to be found anywhere in the United
+States.&nbsp; His first constituency was a very poor
+one&mdash;consisting of English settlers and others who had gone
+there with very little, if any, money, and they had all done
+well, and their children were now mostly wealthy men.&nbsp; He
+did not approve of the Government plan of emigration; but he did
+think there was a fine field in Canada for the British farmer and
+his men.&nbsp; As to mechanics, he thought the look-out was
+poor.&nbsp; The mechanic in that part of the world leads a very
+migratory life.&nbsp; Such was the facility offered by railways,
+which ran in all directions, that a slight rise in the rate of
+wages would send him wherever that rise was to be found.&nbsp; At
+the present time there was a depression of trade in the United
+States, and wages were low.&nbsp; In Canada the wages were a
+little higher, and he looked to <a name="page88"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 88</span>an emigration from the United States;
+and then the wages in Canada would go down.</p>
+<p>The British mechanic would thus have to face a double
+difficulty&mdash;the competition of the Canadian and the American
+mechanic alike.&nbsp; I must add, however, that this was not the
+view of an English mechanic who had been settled in Toronto some
+years, and with whom, subsequently, I had some chat.&nbsp; His
+opinion was that any first-class English mechanic who came out
+would do well, while he frankly admitted that an inferior hand
+would have no chance whatever.</p>
+<p>But to return to Mr. Blake.&nbsp; It is evident, though he and
+his party are supposed to be in favour of Free Trade&mdash;and it
+is a matter of fact that they were driven from place and power by
+a Protectionist outcry&mdash;that he does not consider the
+question of Free Trade from an English standpoint at all.&nbsp;
+It will be long ere Canada will lift up her voice in favour of
+Free Trade.&nbsp; In Canada <a name="page89"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 89</span>there is no such thing as direct
+taxation, and as money has to be raised for the support of
+Government, it is felt it is easier to do that by means of a duty
+on foreign manufactures than by taking it directly out of the
+pockets of the people.</p>
+<p>Just now there is a feeling growing up in favour of Free Trade
+with America; but that will not aid the British manufacturer one
+jot.&nbsp; The system of duties between Canada and America is an
+enormous nuisance, when one thinks of the daily personal and
+commercial intercourse between the two countries.&nbsp; For
+instance, I lost by changing English money into Canadian dollars;
+and then again, when I had to change Canadian dollars into
+American greenbacks, I had to submit to a further loss.&nbsp;
+This was not pleasant, especially when you remember that every
+time you cross the frontier&mdash;and people are doing it
+daily&mdash;you have to submit to a disagreeable examination on
+the <a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>part
+of Custom House officers.&nbsp; Surely Canada and America will
+before long have to come to a better understanding than that
+which at present exists.&nbsp; Of course, I write under
+correction.&nbsp; I am an outsider.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Can you tell me,&rsquo; I said to the Hon. E. Blake,
+&lsquo;how I am to get to a knowledge of Canadian
+politics?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>His reply, and it was delivered with a smile, was:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;By living in the country some five or six
+years.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Under such circumstances I feel, with the poet, that
+&lsquo;where ignorance is bliss &rsquo;tis folly to be
+wise.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>On one thing Mr. Blake was silent&mdash;nor did I allude to
+it: that was the question of Canadian independence.&nbsp; It is
+raised in many quarters, it is almost daily discussed in the
+Canadian newspapers.&nbsp; People are waiting to hear what Mr.
+Blake has to say on it.&nbsp; At present the oracle is
+dumb.&nbsp; When <a name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+91</span>the question is settled you may be sure sentiment will
+have little to do with it; on this side of the Atlantic, at any
+rate, that sort of thing goes a very little way when the almighty
+dollar is at stake.&nbsp; But the question to be asked is, How
+long Canadian independence will stand the cry for annexation with
+the United States that will then be raised?</p>
+<p>One of the pleasures attending my visit to Toronto was the
+finding out Mrs. Moodie&mdash;whose &lsquo;Roughing It in the
+Bush&rsquo; did so much to help English people to understand the
+hardships of Canadian life some forty years ago.&nbsp; She was
+the youngest sister of Agnes Strickland; and, like her, wrote
+books for children, and tales and poems for the annuals, then the
+rage.&nbsp; She then married a Major Moodie, and went out to
+Canada, and I had not seen her since I was a raw lad; but of her
+kindness and her talent I had a distinct impression, and it was
+with real <a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+92</span>pleasure that I found her living at an advanced
+age&mdash;but in peace and comfort&mdash;at her son&rsquo;s, a
+gentleman connected with the Inter-Colonial Railway.&nbsp; The
+sprightly lady of 1834, eager and enthusiastic, had become an
+elderly one in 1884; yet time had dealt gently with her, and her
+youth seemed to me to revive as she talked of her old Suffolk
+home, and of men and women long since gone over to the
+majority.</p>
+<p>I was glad to find that she had made her mark in Canadian
+literature.&nbsp; An intelligent Canadian critic, Mr. J. E.
+Collins, whose acquaintance I was privileged to make&mdash;as
+well as that of his friend, Mr. Charles Robins, a poet of whom
+Canada may well be proud&mdash;writes of Mrs. Moodie: &lsquo;So
+perfect a picture is Mrs. Moodie&rsquo;s book of the struggles,
+the hopes, the dark days, and the sun-spots of that obscure life
+that fell to her lot in the forest depths, that its whisperings
+form a delightful music to the <a name="page93"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 93</span>memory.&nbsp; The style is limpid as
+a running brook, picturesque, and abounding with touches that
+show a keen insight into character, and an accurate observation
+of external things.&nbsp; There is no padding or fustian in the
+book, and no word is squandered, Mrs. Moodie regarding the
+mission of language to be to convey thought, not to put on a
+useless parade.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Moodie has been living in Canada now fifty years, and
+loves to talk of the old country, especially of the people with
+whom she associated when, as Susannah Strickland, she used to
+stay in London with Pringle, the Secretary of the Anti-Slavery
+Society, whose beautiful poem, &lsquo;Afar in the desert I love
+to ride,&rsquo; is still a favourite with the English
+public.&nbsp; But she has no wish to come back to
+England&mdash;her family are all well settled in Canada.&nbsp;
+She lives with one of her sons, and her daughter, Mrs.
+Chamberlain, of Ottawa, has won <a name="page94"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 94</span>deserved fame by her beautiful
+illustrations of Canadian flowers and lichens.</p>
+<p>English readers who may remember Mrs. Moodie as one of the
+gifted Strickland sisters will be glad to learn that she is
+regarded as one of the pioneers of Canadian literature, and
+although born near the beginning of the present century,
+possesses a mental vigour and active memory rare in one so
+aged.&nbsp; She told me anecdotes of myself when a boy that I had
+quite forgotten, and retains in old age the enthusiasm for which
+she was remarkable when young.&nbsp; Some of her ghost-stories
+were capital.&nbsp; For instance, one night, when her sister
+Agnes was lying sick, in the old hall at Reydon, Suffolk, and was
+being nursed by her sister Jane, there came to them a tall,
+stately figure in white, with long garments trailing behind
+her.&nbsp; Of course, Agnes and her sister were very much
+frightened at the apparition, which stood at the door, pointed
+her finger <a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+95</span>at Agnes, hissed at her, and then disappeared.&nbsp;
+Other stories followed, equally interesting, in which Mrs.
+Moodie, it was evident, firmly believed.</p>
+<p>It was during her long and lonely residence in the woods that
+Mrs. Moodie performed most of her literary work.&nbsp; While her
+husband was away crushing the Rebellion, she wrote her
+&lsquo;Roughing It in the Bush,&rsquo; which did more to
+establish her fame in Canada and in England than any of her
+previous productions.&nbsp; It is probably the best picture we
+have of Canadian life at that time, and written in a style of
+composition charming, if only on account of its ease.&nbsp;
+Undisturbed by household cares, she wrote no less than fifteen
+books for children; a larger work, &lsquo;Life in the
+Clearings,&rsquo; and in addition contributed a mass of matter to
+the old Canadian <i>Literary Garland</i>, sufficient to fill
+several large volumes.&nbsp; &lsquo;I remember seeing Carlyle
+once,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;but he was <a
+name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>such a
+crabbed-looking man that I did not care to make his
+acquaintance.&nbsp; In fact, his appearance was quite the reverse
+of pleasing, but he was an honest, close-fisted man, I dare
+say.&rsquo;&nbsp; She had a good deal to say of Cruikshank, who
+lived next door to Pringle.&nbsp; &lsquo;I went to hear Dan
+O&rsquo;Connell,&rsquo; she continued, &lsquo;on the Anti-Slavery
+question.&nbsp; He was completely dressed in green&mdash;green
+coat, green vest, green pants&mdash;everything green but his
+boots.&nbsp; I was greatly amused at his opening remark,
+&ldquo;Ladies and gentlemen,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;England
+reminds me in this great question of a large lion that has been
+sleeping a good many years, commencing to rouse itself, stretch,
+yawn, and wag its tail.&rdquo;&nbsp; For days after, that lion,
+with its wagging tail, came visibly before me.&rsquo;&nbsp; She
+also remembered Shiel, who began his speech in Exeter Hall, then
+quite a new building, by saying that he was afraid he would not
+be able to make himself heard, <a name="page97"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 97</span>and then roared so that he might have
+been heard at Somerset House.&nbsp; She saw the man in armour
+proclaim King William in Cheapside, and it touched her to tears
+when all the people cried: &lsquo;God save the King!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;At one time,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;I helped Pringle to
+edit one of his annuals.&nbsp; Proctor sent in his poem on
+&ldquo;The Sea, the Sea,&rdquo; and after reading it I
+recommended it for publication, but Pringle rejected it.&nbsp;
+However, afterwards he found out his mistake when the poem,
+published in another channel, brought fame to its
+author.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Moodie seemed to think that it was a great privilege to
+have been in London while the Catholic Emancipation Act and the
+Reform Bills were carried, and still in her comfortable house in
+Toronto loves to talk of the bustle and excitement of the
+time.&nbsp; I was privileged twice to see her, and then we
+parted, never more to meet&mdash;in this world, at least.</p>
+<p><a name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>Near
+Peterborough, about a hundred and fifty miles from Toronto, I
+found another far-famed Canadian authoress, Mrs. Traill, whose
+&lsquo;Backwoods of Canada,&rsquo; published when I was a lad by
+the Society for the Diffusion of Useful and Entertaining
+Knowledge, and now, I believe, by Messrs. Routledge and Sons, was
+a delight to me in my young days.&nbsp; I remember her well as a
+young woman, tall and stately, with a wonderful flow of
+talk&mdash;enthusiastic as a worshipper of nature&mdash;ever
+ready to write of Suffolk lanes, with all their richness of
+floral and animal life; of Suffolk copses, where the birds sang,
+and the partridge and the pheasant and the timid hare found
+shelter; of farmers, then merry, and of peasants, then contented
+with their humble lot.</p>
+<p>In person she was attractive, the most so, to my mind, of all
+the Strickland family, and she was very stately in manner, for
+was <a name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>not
+her maiden name Katherine Parr Strickland, and had she not some
+of the blood of that family allied to royalty in her veins?&nbsp;
+The Stricklands came of an ancient and honoured line, and besides
+that, there is a great deal in names, as the reader of
+&lsquo;Tristram Shandy&rsquo; and &lsquo;Kenelm Chillingly&rsquo;
+perfectly understands.&nbsp; What could you expect of a Katherine
+Parr Strickland but queenly manner, as assuredly the young lady
+who bore that name had?</p>
+<p>When I was a lad, she married a Major Traill, and accompanied
+her sister, Mrs. Moodie, to Canada.&nbsp; I cannot think how
+ladies thus tenderly nursed could have done anything of the
+kind&mdash;or, having done it, how they could have survived the
+hardships they were called to endure.&nbsp; The lot in their case
+was by no means cast in pleasant places.&nbsp; Mrs. Moodie, in
+her delightful book, &lsquo;Roughing It in the Bush,&rsquo; says:
+&lsquo;A large number of the immigrants were officers of the army
+and navy, with their families&mdash;a class perfectly <a
+name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 100</span>unfitted by
+their previous habits and standing in society for contending with
+the stern realities of emigrant life in the backwoods.&nbsp; A
+class formed mainly from the younger scions of great families,
+naturally proud, and not only accustomed to command, but to
+receive implicit obedience from the people under them, are not
+men adapted to the hard toil of the woodman&rsquo;s
+life.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Yet it was to such a life Major Traill took his handsome and
+accomplished wife; but Mrs. Traill in her backwoods settlement
+was not forgetful of the literary vocation to which she had
+dedicated her early youth.&nbsp; I have already referred to her
+&lsquo;Backwoods of Canada&rsquo;; that was in due time followed
+by a volume equally worthy of public favour, under the title of
+&lsquo;Ramblings in a Canadian Forest.&rsquo;&nbsp; Indeed, she
+and her sister may claim to have been the pioneers of Canadian
+literature; and their brother, Lieutenant-Colonel Strickland, may
+also claim to be <a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+101</span>placed in that category by his work,
+&lsquo;Twenty-seven Years in Canada West,&rsquo; a record of his
+own experiences, abounding with numerous realistic touches.&nbsp;
+He settled his family near his sister; and at Lakefield, near
+Peterborough, the residence of Mrs. Traill, there is quite a
+colony of Stricklands, who have all done well, so people tell me,
+at the lumber trade.</p>
+<p>I am glad I paid Mrs. Traill a visit.&nbsp; It was a long and
+wearisome ride, but I was well repaid by a short interview with
+one with whom I was familiar half a century back.&nbsp; Lakefield
+is a charming spot, and Mrs. Traill&rsquo;s wooden but
+picturesque cottage overlooks a lovely scene of trees and hills,
+and water and grass.&nbsp; At any rate, in the early spring it
+has a neat little garden; in new countries neat little gardens
+are rare.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Traill has seen great changes in her time.&nbsp; When she
+came there, there were only one or two houses in Peterborough;
+all <a name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>was
+forest, and now it has a mayor and a town-hall, and is one of the
+nicest towns in that part of Canada.&nbsp; Mrs. Traill&rsquo;s
+cottage is fitted up with English comfort and taste.&nbsp; She
+has around her books and photographs of loving relatives.&nbsp;
+She showed me a book of hers recently published by Messrs. Nelson
+and Sons.&nbsp; As a Canadian authoress, she has done much to
+commemorate the beauty of Canadian forests, and writes of their
+floral charms with all the tenderness and grace with which I
+remember her sketches of East Anglian rural life were richly
+adorned.&nbsp; She is now hard at work with a new volume on
+Canadian lichens and flowers.</p>
+<p>As we stood talking at the window&mdash;the sunbeams played
+gaily on the blue waters of the lake or river beneath (in Canada
+there are so many rivers and lakes that you can scarcely tell
+which is which, or where the one ends or the other
+begins)&mdash;fairy flowers were beginning to gem her lawn; and
+the American <a name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+103</span>robin redbreast, a far larger bird than ours, and other
+birds, still more graceful, flew among the trees&mdash;I felt
+how, in such a spot, one weary of the world could lead a tranquil
+life.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Traill must be an advanced octogenarian&mdash;she is
+older than Mrs. Moodie, and Mrs. Moodie claims to be far over
+eighty.&nbsp; Yet Mrs. Traill retains her conversational power
+intact, and is full as ever of &lsquo;the lore that nature
+brings,&rsquo; and is as enthusiastic as ever in its
+pursuit.&nbsp; As much as ever her manners are queenlike.&nbsp;
+They have never left her, in spite of all the hardships she has
+had to undergo as wife and mother in the wilderness, and her face
+still retains something of the freshness and fairness of her
+youth.&nbsp; She is a wonderful old lady, and Canada must be a
+wonderful country for such.</p>
+<h2><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+104</span>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">OFF TO THE NORTH-WEST&mdash;NIAGARA&mdash;LAKE
+SUPERIOR&mdash;THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY&mdash;AT
+WINNIPEG.</p>
+<p>As in duty bound, I have reached Niagara Falls, and from
+motives equally conscientious forbear to trouble you with either
+poetry or prose on the scene that now meets my eye.&nbsp; In
+seeing them I have an advantage&mdash;that in this early season
+of the year I am alone and free from the crowd of visitors that
+sometimes infest the spot.&nbsp; As it is, there is quite enough
+of modern civilization there to disturb the poetry of the place;
+and the scream of the steam-engine sadly interferes with the
+enjoyment of that everlasting roar which rises as <a
+name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>the vast
+body of waters tumbles over the falls&mdash;raising up majestic
+mountains of mist&mdash;and then sweeps grandly to the rapids, in
+the raging whirlpools of which poor Captain Webb lost his life,
+or, in plainer words, committed suicide.&nbsp; Then there are the
+cabmen, who will not give you a moment&rsquo;s peace, and affect
+not to understand you when you intimate that you prefer to walk
+rather than to ride; and a grand walk it is, about a mile from
+the station on the Canadian side.&nbsp; Far, far below is the
+river&mdash;a chasm in a mass of old dark rock&mdash;into which
+you peer with wondering eyes till the brain is almost
+dizzy.&nbsp; Words fail to convey the impressions, as passing
+cloud and fleeting sunshine add to the marvellous beauty of the
+spot.&nbsp; I scrambled down to where the ferry-boat is, and
+drank in all the charm of the place, not caring to be ferried
+across, quite satisfied with watching the eternal fall of water
+as I sat there&mdash;a mere human speck in that mysterious
+grandeur.&nbsp; <a name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+106</span>The white man has come and made the place his
+own.&nbsp; He has now thrown three bridges across it, and on the
+American side has built a brewery, whose &lsquo;Niagara
+ales&rsquo; are famous all over the American Continent.&nbsp; I
+am glad to say that it is only on the Canadian side that you have
+a good view of the Falls; but on neither side is there what there
+ought to be, a wilderness.&nbsp; On each side there are houses
+and hotels, and churches, all the way; and I was offered
+Guinness&rsquo;s Dublin Stout and Bass&rsquo;s Pale Ale, just as
+if I were dining in a Fleet Street restaurant.&nbsp; On my return
+I met a funeral procession.&nbsp; Death had come into one of the
+wooden houses on the side, and the friends and relatives had
+ridden in their buggies and country carts to pay the last tribute
+of respect to the deceased.&nbsp; Yes; death is lord of
+life&mdash;in the New World as well as in the Old.</p>
+<p>I went then by way of Hamilton, through a district as fertile
+and as well-farmed as any <a name="page107"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 107</span>in England, looking far more
+civilized than any part I have yet seen.&nbsp; There are no
+stumps of trees in the ground, as there are elsewhere, and the
+houses look as if they had been built long enough to allow of
+home comforts; and, as Hamilton is the place to which many of our
+poor lads are sent, I was glad to feel that in such a district
+they would have few hardships to encounter, and would have every
+chance of getting on.&nbsp; Here at one time there were bears and
+wolves; but they have long since disappeared before the march of
+their master, man.&nbsp; It is not so long since there was quail
+shooting on the very site of the city of Toronto, and hawks would
+carry off the chickens the earlier emigrants were attempting
+painfully to rear, and the Indians were also unwelcome
+guests.&nbsp; I have heard of an old Scotch settler who, as his
+last resort, invoked the aid of bagpipes, wherewith to frighten
+his unwelcome guests; but even that did not frighten the Indians,
+who <a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+108</span>carried off the contents of his potato ground,
+undisturbed by a musical performance which would have struck
+terror into the stoutest English heart.&nbsp; Well, all that wild
+forest region is now the home of peace and plenty, and distant be
+the day when Professor Goldwin Smith&rsquo;s idea will be
+realized, and it has been peacefully annexed by the United
+States.&nbsp; Out in Canada that idea finds little favour.&nbsp;
+Why should it?&nbsp; It is a favourite boast with Americans that
+Canada will ultimately be theirs.&nbsp; I am sure that is not a
+favourite idea of the Canadians themselves.&nbsp; Great Britain,
+it is to be hoped, will be as loyal to Canada as Canada is to
+her.</p>
+<p>The thing is not to be settled quite so easily as Professor
+Goldwin Smith anticipates.&nbsp; In Quebec Province we have a
+million of French Canadians, who make no secret of their
+preference to a French rather than an English alliance, and who
+are quite prepared to act accordingly, as soon as British
+authority <a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+109</span>shall have become relaxed.&nbsp; Then we have the
+Acadians of Nova Scotia, who would probably follow the lead of
+French Canada; nor could the few Britishers of New Brunswick and
+Prince Edward Island escape the same fate.&nbsp; France is quite
+prepared to increase her influence in this part of the
+world.&nbsp; Indeed, at the present moment there is talk of her
+buying the island of Anticosti, which, as you may be aware,
+though almost uninhabited now&mdash;save in the summer, when the
+fishermen go there&mdash;makes a very respectable appearance in
+the river St. Lawrence.&nbsp; Then we come to Ontario, which,
+placed as she is, could not withstand an attack from the United
+States.</p>
+<p>Once upon a time the Yankees did make an attempt of the
+kind&mdash;that was in 1837&mdash;an attempt which the loyal men
+of Canada helped Sir Francis Head to put down.&nbsp; Toronto
+escaped, though she had the enemy <a name="page110"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 110</span>at her very gates.&nbsp; I must say
+that all the Canadians with whom I have spoken have no wish to
+become Americans.&nbsp; For one thing, they say they can&rsquo;t
+afford it.&nbsp; Government is more costly in America than in
+Canada.&nbsp; I admit as much as anyone the right of the people
+to decide their fate.&nbsp; If the Canadians prefer to live under
+the star-spangled banner, it is vain for us to attempt to retain
+them.&nbsp; But the danger is the indifference of the English
+public as to the value of such a colony as that of Canada, a
+country bigger than all Europe, and at present with a sparse
+population only equalling that of London.&nbsp; A few brief facts
+will show the importance of the North-West to the English, not
+merely as a field for emigration, but for other reasons as
+well.</p>
+<p>From Liverpool to Winnipeg, <i>vi&acirc;</i> Hudson&rsquo;s
+Bay, the distance is less by 1,100 miles than by way of the St.
+Lawrence, and they are now talking of making a railway along that
+<a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+111</span>route.&nbsp; From Liverpool to China and Japan,
+<i>vi&acirc;</i> the northern route, the distance is 1,000 miles
+shorter than by any other line.&nbsp; It is really 2,000 miles
+shorter than by San Francisco and New York.&nbsp; How immense,
+then, will be the power which the possession of Hudson&rsquo;s
+Bay, and of the railway route through to the Pacific, must confer
+upon Great Britain, so long as she holds it under safe
+control!&mdash;and where is the nation that can prevent her so
+holding it, as long as her fleets command the North
+Atlantic?&nbsp; It is utterly inconceivable that English
+statesmen would be found so mad or so unpatriotic as thus to
+throw away the key of the world&rsquo;s commerce, by neglecting
+or surrendering British interests in the North-West.&nbsp; Our
+great cities would not sanction such a policy for an
+instant.&nbsp; England could better afford to give up the Suez
+Canal, or be rid of her South African colonies.&nbsp; The
+interests of the two countries are inseparable.&nbsp; We require
+<a name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 112</span>the
+North-West to send us grain.&nbsp; She requires us as her best
+customer.&nbsp; Manitoba has her natural market in Great Britain,
+and in the near future Great Britain will have her best customers
+in Manitoba and the North-Western Provinces.</p>
+<p>It is to the credit of the Canadians&mdash;that is, if figures
+may be trusted&mdash;that they spend less on drink, and more on
+education, than we do in the Old Country.</p>
+<p>Party feeling runs high; but it is difficult to an outsider to
+understand what is the line of separation between the ins and the
+outs.&nbsp; An English writer tells us that she once asked a
+member of the Greek Opposition in Parliament, what was the
+difference between them and the Government.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Why,&rsquo; was his reply, &lsquo;it is this.&nbsp; If M.
+Tricoupi says we want railroads, we say, &ldquo;No; we want
+canals.&rdquo;&nbsp; If he says a thing must be done by horses,
+we say, &ldquo;No; it must be done by oxen.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It is just the same here.&nbsp; <a name="page113"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 113</span>What one party proposes the other
+opposes.&nbsp; The present rulers rode into power on the wings of
+Protection.&nbsp; They are Tories; but it is to be feared the
+Liberals would have done the same, had they had a chance.&nbsp;
+It is the fashion to use very bad language, and to imply the
+worst of motives to your opponents; and it is in this easy way
+the Canadian newspapers fill up their columns when they are
+not&mdash;and this seems their great mission&mdash;quarrelling
+with one another.</p>
+<p>The country farmers, who are much keener men of business than
+their fellow farmers in the Old Country, care little about
+politics.&nbsp; At the last election a friend of mine said to a
+farmer, &lsquo;Have you voted?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh yes!&rsquo;
+was the reply.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well, for which party?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Ah, that was a question he could not answer.&nbsp; He had voted
+as his neighbour told him; and he knew that his neighbour was a
+real good man, and that he would not give him bad advice.&nbsp;
+So long as voters <a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+114</span>are thus simple, elections will be a mockery and a
+sham.</p>
+<p>I have left Toronto behind, and here I am on Lake Superior,
+the largest body of fresh water in the world&mdash;so large is
+it, that if you immerse in it Great Britain and Ireland, and add
+the Isle of Man and the Isle of Wight, there would still be a
+respectable amount of water to spare&mdash;enough, at any rate,
+to make a river as long as the Thames, which we in England hold
+to be a very decent sort of river indeed.&nbsp; As I came up the
+St. Lawrence, some of the Canadians, who are, as they may well
+be, proud of their grand river, asked me what I thought of
+it.&nbsp; My reply was that for a colony so young, it was a very
+tidy sort of river indeed; and I may say the same of the enormous
+body of water on which I am now floating.&nbsp; It is a big thing
+indeed&mdash;as might be expected, where both Canada and the
+United States contribute to its bigness.&nbsp; We are in the
+middle of the lake, having Michigan <a name="page115"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 115</span>on one side.&nbsp; Already we have
+stopped twice&mdash;once to take a pilot, and then again at Le
+Sault, where we had to stay while we waited our turn to enter the
+canal which connects the Georgian Bay to Lake Superior.&nbsp;
+There, indeed, we were made conscious of the fact that we were
+within the United States, as the banner of the stars and stripes
+floated proudly on each side of us, and there were a few soldiers
+in blue regimentals standing on the wharf, to say nothing of
+loafers, and boys and girls and half-breeds, to welcome our
+arrival.</p>
+<p>For one thing I felt proud of my country.&nbsp; The Americans
+have nothing here equal to the <i>Algoma</i>, a crack steamer
+built on the Clyde for the Canadian Pacific Railway, and to
+which, at this present moment, are entrusted C&aelig;sar and his
+fortunes.&nbsp; It is only the second trip the <i>Algoma</i> has
+made, as for the greater season of the year this immense
+water-way, incredible as it seems to us, is a solid block of ice,
+and we have it all around us still.&nbsp; I <a
+name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>boarded the
+<i>Algoma</i> on Saturday afternoon, after a rapid run by rail
+from Toronto, which city we left in the morning at half-past
+eleven, and I assure you I was glad the journey was safely over,
+as once or twice it seemed to me, at one or two of the curves,
+the cars were very near leaving the rails; and the boy&mdash;they
+are all boys here&mdash;who had to attend to the brake, gave me a
+grin, as if he thought that we had much to be thankful for that
+we kept the track at all.&nbsp; I presume I shall get used to
+that sort of thing, but at present the sensation experienced in
+rounding some of the curves is more novel than agreeable.</p>
+<p>We are a very miscellaneous company on board, chiefly Toronto
+traders and stalwart boys from Manitoba, who have been enjoying a
+holiday in Upper Canada, and emigrants.&nbsp; Gloves are unknown,
+likewise hats and shirt-collars are the exception rather than the
+rule.&nbsp; As to having one&rsquo;s boots blackened, that is
+rather an expensive luxury, when you recollect <a
+name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>the charge
+is fivepence a pair, and no one on board apparently has had his
+boots blackened for the last week or two; and I question much
+whether I shall require any of Day and Martin till I get back to
+Toronto again&mdash;an event which will take place apparently
+about the time of the Greek kalends.&nbsp; Hitherto I have
+managed the blacking difficulty most effectively.&nbsp; As far as
+Toronto I travelled with my London friend, who, aware of the
+custom of the country, had provided himself with the needful
+materials for the fitting amount of polish, and who generously
+permitted me to reap the benefit of his superior knowledge.&nbsp;
+My first attempt, I fear, was a failure.&nbsp; In my bedroom at
+the hotel I set to work, and soon acquired the requisite amount
+of polish; but, alas! I had forgotten the effect of blacking on
+clean sheets, and to my horror I discovered the bed-linen was, at
+any rate, as plentifully covered with blacking as &lsquo;them
+precious boots.&rsquo;&nbsp; However, I <a
+name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>did not
+regret the catastrophe, as I hoped it might teach the landlord it
+would be cheaper to get the boots of his guests blackened in an
+efficient manner, than to leave such unskilful amateurs as myself
+to do it on their own account.</p>
+<p>Life on board the <i>Algoma</i> is as agreeable as can well be
+imagined.&nbsp; We have three good meals a day.&nbsp; I am
+writing in a magnificent saloon, nearly three hundred feet long,
+and if the nights are cold, as they always are on the lakes, I
+have a cabin all to myself, and by heaping the bed-clothes for
+two berths on my bed, and throwing a heavy great-coat over them,
+I manage to keep myself warm for the night.&nbsp; The scenery by
+day is magnificent, as we sail in and out among a thousand isles,
+all richly wooded to the water&rsquo;s edge, with here and there
+a little village, or small settlement, where the woodmen ply
+their calling&mdash;the results of which may be seen now in a
+raft being towed by a tug, to be shipped lower <a
+name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>down to
+Liverpool or Glasgow, or in stacks of planks along the
+shore.&nbsp; Further behind is the mainland, with rock and wood
+in endless succession.&nbsp; At Sault St. Marie, the river is
+celebrated for its fish, and as you pass through the canal, you
+have plenty of Indian canoes paddling about, with a man at the
+stern to seize the fish by a hand-net: the white fish of Lake
+Superior is held to be a great delicacy.&nbsp; After a day and
+night, we get into the open lake, out of sight of land, and then
+we land at Port Arthur, whence we take the train to Winnipeg,
+where I hope to hear a scrap of English news.</p>
+<p>I have but one complaint to make, and that is, on the Sunday
+we had no service of any kind.&nbsp; I am not, nor ever was, a
+stickler for forms; but there are times, especially as many now
+on board may be planted far away from any religious observance,
+when it seems to me a simple service might be the means of
+strengthening old impressions, and perhaps <a
+name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 120</span>planting
+new ones.&nbsp; One thinks of that fine old hymn of Andrew
+Marvel&rsquo;s:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;What can we do but sing His praise,<br />
+Who guides us through the watery maze?&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And an hour or so thus spent, surely may be quite as helpful
+to the higher life we all dream of, at any rate, as the favourite
+occupation of the majority&mdash;smoking and spitting, or the
+study of the maps of the district to which we are all rapidly
+approaching.&nbsp; I had a queer chat this morning with an old
+Canadian farmer who landed at Le Sault.&nbsp; He was pleased to
+hear that I had been at Yarmouth in Norfolk.&nbsp; His mother was
+a Clarke of Yarmouth.&nbsp; Did I know any of the Clarkes of
+Yarmouth?&nbsp; I replied that I had not that pleasure, but that
+I knew many of the Clarkes, and that they were a
+highly-respectable family indeed.</p>
+<p>Well, I have now done with Ontario, and you ask me what I
+think of it?&nbsp; I reply that it is a beautiful country, and
+that it has room <a name="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+121</span>for any amount of farm labourers and servant
+girls.&nbsp; I have been talking with a gentleman this morning,
+who tells me that he pays his groom about &pound;6 a month, and
+that he boards him as well.&nbsp; He tells me of a Scotch
+labourer who came out without &pound;1 in his pocket, and who has
+just died worth &pound;12,000.</p>
+<p>At Ottawa I saw a large lumber-yard worth many thousand
+pounds, which was the property of one who came from England as a
+working man.&nbsp; As to mechanics, I fear the case is
+different.&nbsp; In Ontario, in all the towns, the mechanics have
+strong unions, and they do all they can to keep out emigrants of
+that class, fearing that their own wages will be reduced.&nbsp;
+This dog-in-the-manger policy prevails everywhere, and many
+mechanics, directly they land, are thus frightened by them, and
+want to get back to England at once.&nbsp; There are two sides to
+every question.&nbsp; All I can say is, that while a
+mechanic&rsquo;s representative, at Montreal, was telling me that
+<a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 122</span>there
+was no room for mechanics, and was doing all he could to induce
+those who came out with me to return to England at once, I saw an
+advertisement with my own eyes in a local paper (I am sorry I
+have forgotten the name) for five hundred mechanics, who were
+immediately wanted.&nbsp; A man who has got a good situation in
+England would be a fool to give it up and come out; but I believe
+a mechanic who has a head on his shoulders&mdash;who is young and
+in good health, and knows how to take advantage of his
+situation&mdash;may find a living even in Ontario.&nbsp; This is
+my deliberate conviction, after all I have seen and heard, and
+with the full knowledge that in Montreal, and Ottawa, and
+Toronto, there is a pauper class as badly off as any of the
+denizens of our London slums.&nbsp; The people I most pity are
+the young fellows who in England have had the training of
+gentlemen, and who are sadly out of place in Canada, and whom the
+Canadian mothers dread, <a name="page123"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 123</span>fearing that they may corrupt the
+native youth.&nbsp; Many of them, however, are decent fellows;
+but nevertheless, there is no room for them, unless they go out
+to Manitoba, and get some farmer to give them board and lodging
+for their work.&nbsp; I parted with quite a pang with one such on
+Friday, at Toronto.&nbsp; He was the nephew of a well-known noble
+lord, and really seemed a very decent sort of fellow.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;What can you do?&rsquo; I said to him.&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh, I
+can row and play cricket,&rsquo; was his reply.&nbsp;
+Unfortunately, Canada is not much of a country for
+cricket&mdash;the summer season is too short; and I felt that my
+young friend, unless he could turn his hand to something more
+useful or lucrative, had better have remained at home.</p>
+<p>The pleasant steamship journey ended, I landed at Port
+Arthur&mdash;a town situated in one of the loveliest bays I have
+yet seen, almost surrounded by weird and fantastic
+rocks&mdash;with a view to run by the Canadian <a
+name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>Pacific as
+far as Winnipeg.&nbsp; As I landed a bill met my eye:
+&lsquo;Wanted, a hundred rock-men and fifty labourers;&rsquo; and
+that seemed to me an indication that emigrants need not go
+begging for work in that particular locality.&nbsp; Port Arthur,
+which stands near the ancient Hudson Bay Company&rsquo;s station
+of Fort William, was in a state of intense activity.&nbsp; Every
+one was building wooden houses and shops who could do so.&nbsp;
+According to all appearances, it is certainly a busy place; but
+architecturally I cannot say that it is of much account.&nbsp;
+The main street opens on to the railway, along which the engines,
+ringing a doleful bell in order to bid passengers keep out of the
+way, pass every few minutes.&nbsp; Then there are wooden shops
+and wooden hotels, and the usual concourse of rough, unwashed,
+half-dressed loafers in the streets.&nbsp; Behind them is the
+forest and in front the bay, with its waters almost as clear as
+those of the Baltic, and almost as blue as those of <a
+name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>Naples.&nbsp; Yet I certainly got very heartily tired
+of Port Arthur, and so, I am sure, did all my travelling
+companions, who sat on the planks or on the wooden pavement,
+which, being raised above the road, made passable seats, or on
+the bits of rock which the railway builders had been too busy to
+remove, wondering at what hour the train would start.&nbsp; I
+pitied the poor emigrants, with their children, and their beds,
+and their household furniture, as they sat there, hour after
+hour, in that hot and sandy street.&nbsp; We landed at eleven,
+having made the whole distance from Toronto&mdash;a run of about
+eight hundred miles&mdash;in exactly two days and two
+nights&mdash;not quite so long as Jonah was in the whale&rsquo;s
+belly, but we certainly got over more ground than he did.&nbsp;
+When were we to start?&nbsp; No one knew.&nbsp; It takes a long
+time to get out &pound;4,000 worth of freight and
+passengers&rsquo; luggage, and that is what the <i>Algoma</i> had
+on board.&nbsp; The worst of railway travelling in <a
+name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 126</span>Canada is
+that there is no one of whom you can ask a question.&nbsp; There
+may be a station-master, there may be a whole herd of officials,
+there may be an army of porters, but Canadians in one respect
+resemble the Americans&mdash;and that is, that they think it
+inconsistent with their manly dignity to wear any kind of garb
+which can in any possible way distinguish them from the crowd of
+lookers-on, always to be met with in a railway station, so that
+the railway traveller is always in a perplexity.&nbsp; When we
+got on shore we were told that we should start in half an
+hour.&nbsp; Then came word that we were to be off at half-past
+one, and so, as soon as the cars were made up, we joyfully
+climbed into them&mdash;and the steps are in many cases so high
+that it is hard work climbing into them; but still we were no
+further on our way, and it was not till a little before four
+that, after many false starts, we could fairly believe that we
+were off.&nbsp; Oh, it was wearisome work, but then it may be <a
+name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 127</span>asked,
+Whoever travels on a railway for pleasure?&nbsp; It is true these
+big American cars have certain advantages ours lack.&nbsp; You
+can change your position; you can talk without breaking a
+blood-vessel; and you can see more of the country, especially as
+they do not go the pace we are accustomed to at home; but there
+is such a confusion of persons in them, that to one accustomed to
+the society to be met with in an English first-class carriage,
+the result is anything but pleasing.&nbsp; In the Canadian
+first-class carriage Jack and his master ride side by side,
+unless the latter takes a berth in a sleeping car, for which he
+has to pay extra.&nbsp; As I did not feel inclined to give three
+dollars for a night&rsquo;s unquiet rest, I took my chance with
+the first-class car company, and I can assure you that by the
+time the dim grey of morning glimmered on the horizon, I had
+heartily repented of my decision.&nbsp; The night was so cold
+that everything in the way of ventilation was stopped <a
+name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>up.&nbsp;
+The car was quite full, and few of my fellow travellers seemed to
+have had much regard for soap and water.&nbsp; It is true there
+was a lavatory attached to the car, but there was neither water
+nor soap nor towels, and the neatness of the lavatory in other
+respects only seemed to me to make matters worse.&nbsp; I must
+say that the car, which was built in Canada, was a remarkably
+handsome one, with its dark wood panels beautifully carved, and
+its seats all lined with red velvet; yet when I left it in the
+morning it was in a filthy state.&nbsp; I also found in it
+agreeable society, but there were many who could not truthfully
+be included in such a category&mdash;rough men and women with
+whom in England you would not care to travel in a third-class
+carriage: but I am an Englishman, and may be pardoned for not
+knowing any better.&nbsp; It is to the same defect, perhaps, that
+I may trace the disappointment I felt at the refreshment sheds,
+in which we were permitted to snatch <a name="page129"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 129</span>a hasty meal, waited on by a man in
+shirt-sleeves.&nbsp; Certainly we do that part of our business
+better at home.&nbsp; The Canadian Pacific have a dining-room of
+their own at Winnipeg, and there, if possible, the traveller
+should endeavour to secure a meal.</p>
+<p>But oh, that ride! I shall never forget it.&nbsp; Burns tells
+us that Nature tried her &rsquo;prentice hand on man</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;And then she made the lassies,
+oh!&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I think Nature must have made that part of Canada which lies
+between Port Arthur and Winnipeg before she tried her hand on
+Great Britain and Ireland.&nbsp; It is true some part of it has
+an exquisite combination of wood and water and rock, but the
+greater part was either forest or gigantic plains or valleys of
+stone&mdash;which seemed to shut all hope from the
+spectator.&nbsp; In Canada&mdash;that is, along the railway
+lines&mdash;there is little life in the forest, few flowers
+display their loveliness, and no <a name="page130"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 130</span>song-birds warble in the
+trees.&nbsp; All is still&mdash;or would be, were it not for the
+peculiar croaking of the frogs, to be heard like so many hoarse
+whistles from afar.&nbsp; You go miles and miles without seeing a
+farm or even a log-hut.&nbsp; In one place I saw an Indian
+wigwam, much resembling a gipsy&rsquo;s tent, and a large canoe;
+but dwellings of any kind are the exception, not the rule.&nbsp;
+The train every now and then stops, but you see no station, and
+why we stop is only known to the engine-driver.&nbsp; We take no
+passengers up, and we set none down, or hardly ever.&nbsp; The
+people who get in at Port Arthur only want to be taken to
+Winnipeg.&nbsp; There is no traffic along the line, because there
+are no inhabitants along the line, and for the greater part of
+the way it is not only a solitary ride, but a rough one as
+well.&nbsp; As you get nearer Winnipeg, the road is easier, and
+the pace is more rapid.&nbsp; You leave behind you rocks and
+forests, and reach an open plain on which you see, <a
+name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>perhaps, a
+dozen cows, where millions might fatten and feed.&nbsp; A good
+deal of this land, I am told, belongs to the half-breeds.&nbsp;
+In time it is to be hoped that they may utilize it more than they
+seem to do now.</p>
+<p>A great change is impending over this part of the world.&nbsp;
+Even that stony district of which I wrote, and which seemed to me
+as the abomination of desolation, is, I hear, full of mineral
+wealth, which will be brought to light as soon as a certain
+boundary difficulty is settled&mdash;Ontario and Manitoba at
+present are each contending for the prize&mdash;and the decision
+of the question must shortly take place.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the one thing that has most struck me with admiration
+is the pluck which has given birth to the Canadian Pacific
+Railway, by means of which the emigrant is taken from his landing
+in Quebec to his destination on the slopes of the Pacific,
+without ever leaving the Canadian soil.&nbsp; It is a patriotic
+<a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+132</span>enterprise, for under the former system the emigrant
+who intended to settle in Canada, and who, in reality, was wanted
+there, was often tempted to change his mind and to settle in the
+United States.&nbsp; It was a bold enterprise, for the cost was
+enormous, and Canada is not a wealthy country.&nbsp; It was an
+enterprise which was made the subject of party conflict.&nbsp;
+Appalling difficulties have had to be surmounted by the
+engineers.&nbsp; Yet all have been vanquished, and in a few
+months this grand scheme will be an accomplished fact, and you
+will be carried direct from one side of this enormous continent
+to the other.&nbsp; I think Sir John Macdonald is to be
+congratulated for the courage and tenacity he has displayed on
+the subject, through good or bad report, and too much praise
+cannot be awarded to Mr. George Stephens, who has been the ruling
+spirit and life of the undertaking from the first, and I am sure
+that such railway officials as those I have <a
+name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 133</span>met, such
+as Mr. Van Horne, have proved loyal coadjutors, evincing a
+similar wide grasp of mind and readiness of resource for which
+Sir John himself is distinguished.</p>
+<p>In England they are well represented by Mr. Begg, who, as he
+knows the district well, can speak of it with a confidence and
+certainty possessed by no one else.&nbsp; It is to him the credit
+must be given of the Manitoba farm in the Forestry Exhibition at
+Edinburgh last autumn, which was visited with much interest by
+the Prince of Wales and Mr. Gladstone, and to which I was glad to
+see, for I was there several days, the Scotch farmers and
+agriculturists paid particular attention.&nbsp; Such men are an
+honour to Canada, and may be ranked amongst its best
+friends.&nbsp; It is to them that Canada owes her present proud
+position and ability to find happy homes for the tens of
+thousands of England and the Continent, whom she has rescued from
+starvation, and whom she has placed in <a
+name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>the way to
+insure wealth and health and happiness.&nbsp; I find even poor
+persecuted Jews driven from Russia on this fertile land, who,
+under these favouring skies, have learned to become prosperous
+farmers.&nbsp; One may well be proud of Canada, and be proud to
+think Canada belongs to us.&nbsp; When Bret Harte asks,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Is our civilization a failure,<br />
+Is the Caucasian played out?&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I answer in Canada with an emphatic No!&nbsp; Canada is
+redolent of industrial success.&nbsp; The very air of the place
+is full of hope.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p134.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Second Year on a Prairie Farm, Canadian North-West"
+title=
+"Second Year on a Prairie Farm, Canadian North-West"
+src="images/p134.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Not only has the Canadian Pacific Railway opened up the
+country, but it has established experimental farms in different
+parts, in order to test the capabilities of the soil and the
+advantages or disadvantages of the climate.&nbsp; It is said, and
+extensively believed, that the soil between Moose Jaw and Calgary
+is made up of desert and alkali lands, and entirely unfit for
+cultivation.&nbsp; With a view to correct <a
+name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 135</span>that idea,
+ten farms were established at the following stations: 1,
+Secretan; 2, Rush Lake; 3, Swift Current; 4, Gull Lake; 5, Maple
+Creek; 6, Forres; 7, Dunmore; 8, Stair (these two being the
+nearest stations east and west of Medicine Hat at the crossing of
+the Saskatchewan River); 9, Tilley, and 10, Gleichen, the last
+being within view of the Rocky Mountains.&nbsp; The breaking
+throughout was found to be easy, the soil in every case good and
+in most instances excellent, ranking with the choicest lands in
+the Company&rsquo;s more eastern belt: wherever the rating of the
+soil is lowered, according to the Company&rsquo;s standard, owing
+to its being of a lighter grade, the inferiority will be
+compensated for by the certainty of the grain maturing more
+rapidly.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p135.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Calico Island, Saskatchewan River, Canadian North-West"
+title=
+"Calico Island, Saskatchewan River, Canadian North-West"
+src="images/p135.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>In a pamphlet just issued it is stated that the average from
+all the farms was as follows:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Wheat 21&frac12; bushels; oats, 44&frac14;;
+barley, 23&frac14;; peas, 12&frac12;.</p>
+<p><a name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+136</span>&lsquo;The above yields were ascertained by accurately
+chaining the ground and weighing the grain, this work being done
+by a qualified Dominion Land Surveyor, and the results, both
+favourable and otherwise, have been fully given.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;At each farm about one acre of spring wheat and oats
+were sown and harrowed in in the fall when breaking was
+done.&nbsp; Much of this grain germinated during the mild weather
+of November and December, at which time it showed green above the
+ground, and as a consequence it was nearly all killed during the
+winter, and the ground had to be resown in spring.&nbsp; Some
+small pieces of wheat which were not entirely killed out were
+left; and, though the straw showed a rank growth, with heads and
+grain much larger than that sown in spring, the crop ripened very
+unevenly and much later.&nbsp; Fall sowing of spring wheat, which
+has proved successful in Manitoba, is not likely to be a success
+in the <a name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+137</span>western country, as the winter is much more mild and
+open, and the grain liable to germinate and be killed.&nbsp; Fall
+wheat has not, as far as we are aware, been tried, and there
+seems no reason why it should not prove successful.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The results obtained, considering the manner in which
+the land was treated, proved much more satisfactory than was
+anticipated, and show&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1st&mdash;That for grain growing, the land in this
+section of country is capable of giving as large a wheat yield
+per acre as the heavier lands of Manitoba.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2nd&mdash;That a fair crop can be obtained the first
+year of settlement on breaking.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3rd&mdash;That for fall seeding with spring grain on
+the western plains, a satisfactory result cannot be looked for
+with any degree of certainty.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4th&mdash;That cereals, roots, and garden produce <a
+name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 138</span>can be
+successfully raised at an elevation of 3,000 feet above the
+sea-level.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;5th&mdash;That seeding can be done sufficiently early
+to allow of all the crop being harvested before the first of
+September.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And I hear of many who have done well&mdash;some of whom came
+out without a rap&mdash;and who enjoy a robust health unknown to
+them at home.</p>
+<p>Perhaps nowhere has a village so suddenly sprung up into a
+city as at Winnipeg, which first obtained notoriety by the advent
+of Lord Garnet Wolseley, then a young man, who came to suppress
+the rebellion raised there by a half-breed of the name of Riel, a
+daring young French Canadian, wily as a savage, brilliant and
+energetic.&nbsp; In 1870 he appealed to the prejudices and fears
+of the half-breeds, and in a few days had 400 men at his
+back.&nbsp; Owing to the clemency&mdash;perhaps mistaken&mdash;of
+his captors, Riel escaped the punishment due to his crimes.&nbsp;
+In 1873 he was <a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+139</span>enrolled as a member of Parliament, notwithstanding
+that at one time a reward of 5,000 dollars had been offered for
+his apprehension as a murderer.</p>
+<p>The name of Winnipeg was then little known outside
+Manitoba.&nbsp; It was built by traders, who wished to rival Fort
+Garrey, then the headquarters of the Hudson&rsquo;s Bay Company,
+and to carry on a free trade on their own account.&nbsp; After
+the suppression of the rebellion, Manitoba had a local
+Parliament, which met at Winnipeg, and also sent its
+representatives to the Dominion Parliament.&nbsp; The place grew
+rapidly, though even at that time Mr. Mackenzie, Sir John
+Macdonald&rsquo;s political opponent, declared that a cart track
+was good enough for Manitoba for many years to come.&nbsp; In
+1875 the total population was 3,031 assessed and 2,000
+non-assessed, which was a pretty respectable increase,
+considering that in 1869 there were hardly a hundred settlers in
+the place.&nbsp; As <a name="page140"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 140</span>late as 1876 the sport of
+wolf-hunting was carried on by several of the inhabitants just
+outside the city.&nbsp; Now it has churches, banks, schools,
+manufactures, and mercantile men of great energy and high
+standing; and has become, especially since the Pacific Railway
+Company has made it one of their great stations, the gateway of
+the North-West.&nbsp; Settlers came crowding in from all
+quarters, and in ten months, in 1878, 600,592 acres of land were
+located.&nbsp; In 1879 Winnipeg boasted of a street extension of
+83 miles, and then came the bridge over the Red River to render
+the town easy of access to all new-comers.&nbsp; Intoxicated with
+success, what the Americans call a &lsquo;boom&rsquo; was created
+a year or two since, which seemed to have made everyone lose his
+wits.&nbsp; There was no end to speculation in town lots;
+merchants, tradesmen, professional men, could think of nothing
+else.&nbsp; The bottom, however, soon fell out, and at this time
+Winnipeg is in rather a depressed state; but <a
+name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>it is
+clear, from its peculiar position, that this depression can only
+be temporary.&nbsp; It is destined to be the great distributing
+and railway centre of the vast North-West.&nbsp; The town has now
+a population of 26,000, and three daily papers, besides weekly
+ones.&nbsp; Ten years hence, it is predicted, she will be ten
+times her present size.&nbsp; Her wharves will be lined with
+steamboats; her river-banks with elevators; industries and
+manufactures will spring up in her midst, and her streets will be
+fuller of life than they are to-day.</p>
+<p>Winnipeg stands low, and at certain seasons&mdash;that is,
+when the thaw commences&mdash;it is liable to floods; but the air
+is singularly pure and bracing&mdash;while I write the sky is an
+azure blue&mdash;and the hottest days are followed by cool
+nights.&nbsp; The inhabitants all seem to be in the possession of
+good health.&nbsp; Then the water was said to be bad, whereas I
+find it to be quite the reverse.&nbsp; The supply of gas is poor,
+and it seems rarely used.&nbsp; The one great drawback is
+Winnipeg mud.</p>
+<p><a name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 142</span>The
+streets, all of them, are as broad as Portland Place, only with
+handsomer shops.&nbsp; I fear in wet weather they must be almost
+impassable.&nbsp; As it is, the sides are now dried up, as if
+they were ploughed, and carriages seem to make their way with
+considerable difficulty; but there is a magnificent broad wooden
+side walk to all the streets, while in the middle sufficient
+smoothness has been attained for the due working of street
+railways, which seem to be in a satisfactory condition.&nbsp; I
+have also been agreeably disappointed with the hotels, which I
+was told were all bad and all tremendously dear.&nbsp; On the
+contrary, I have found in the new Douglas Hotel, in the main
+street, as good accommodation as I require, and at a very
+reasonable rate; while the proprietor&mdash;Mr. Bennett, a worthy
+Scotchman&mdash;does all he can for the comfort of his guests,
+having introduced into this far distant land all the latest
+improvements, such as heating the <a name="page143"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 143</span>place by steam and the use of
+electric bells.</p>
+<p>A walk in the city is amusing.&nbsp; Grand shops and
+well-built offices everywhere attract the eye.&nbsp; Ladies in
+the latest fashion meet you one minute, and the next you jostle a
+swarthy Indian, half civilized, and his squaw, still less
+civilized than himself.&nbsp; Odd fur-skins are exposed for sale,
+while a stuffed bear adorns the main street, up and down which
+run all day long the newsboys with the latest telegrams from
+London, or Paris, or New York.&nbsp; To-day I have seen a
+photograph of the original fireman of the &lsquo;Rocket,&rsquo;
+who lives here, and has made a large fortune by contracts.&nbsp;
+Unfortunately, at this time he is absent from home, and I fear I
+shall not have a chance of interviewing him.&nbsp; Religion
+flourishes here.&nbsp; There are about fifteen churches and
+chapels in the city, and the Young Men&rsquo;s Christian
+Association is in a very successful condition.&nbsp; Of
+Protestant <a name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+144</span>bodies, the leading ones are the Presbyterians, the
+Methodists, and the Episcopalians.&nbsp; In connection with the
+Cathedral of St. Boniface, the oldest church in the city, it is
+interesting to note that the bells came originally from
+Birmingham, by Hudson&rsquo;s Bay, and that after the destruction
+of the building the remains of the metal were gathered up and
+sent to Birmingham, whence they have again come back after an
+interval of three years.&nbsp; The city stands in the midst of a
+fertile plain, adequate to the support of any amount of
+population.&nbsp; But the land is far better further on.&nbsp; At
+Manitoba, for instance, the soil is much finer.&nbsp; Manitoba is
+an Indian name denoting the Voice of God.&nbsp; It seems that the
+rocks on the river are cavernous, and that at certain seasons of
+the year the wind strikes them with such force as to produce a
+singular reverberation, which the rude Indian, whose untutored
+mind teaches him to see God in the cloud and hear Him in the
+wind, <a name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+145</span>considered to be no less than the utterance of the
+Deity Himself.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p145.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Hunting scene on the Souris River, Manitoba"
+title=
+"Hunting scene on the Souris River, Manitoba"
+src="images/p145.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Just now people are rather exercised with the Indians, who
+have been placed in reserves where they cannot get a living, and
+who, besides, find their location an unhealthy swamp.&nbsp; One
+of the Winnipeg journals is very indignant, and says this is what
+may be expected from the Government.&nbsp; From all I can learn,
+the Indians are sturdy maintainers of their rights, and take care
+that the Government shall not easily overreach them; and perhaps,
+on the whole, the Indians are better off under Canadian than they
+would be under American government.&nbsp; Indeed, people say they
+are very good fellows when uncorrupted by Englishmen.&nbsp; The
+emigrant in these parts must not be surprised at the occasional
+appearance of an Indian; and perhaps it is well that the farmer
+takes care of his horses.&nbsp; I am sorry for the poor Indian,
+who is the original owner of the soil, and whom, perhaps, <a
+name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>one day Mr.
+Henry George may see fit to visit with a view to the recovery of
+his rights and the redress of his wrongs.&nbsp; When that is the
+case, the emigrant will have to pack up and return to his native
+land.&nbsp; Till that is the case, however, he may safely cross
+the water, and avail himself of the advantages offered him by the
+Dominion Government; but to do that he must have at least
+&pound;200, and then he can stock his farm and keep himself till
+the return for his labours comes in.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p147.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Souris Valley, Manitoba"
+title=
+"Souris Valley, Manitoba"
+src="images/p147.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>&lsquo;The worst of all our books on emigration,&rsquo; said
+the editor of one of the dailies to me, &lsquo;is that they give
+too glowing an estimate of the state of affairs.&nbsp; They say a
+farmer will do well with &pound;100.&nbsp; This is not sufficient
+capital as a rule to start with.&nbsp; It is true there have been
+instances where settlers have succeeded on this sum, but with
+such a sum as &pound;200, Manitoba offers the farmer advantages
+such as no other place offers him.&rsquo;&nbsp; Here, also, the
+regular farm-hand is sure of his living.&nbsp; I see <a
+name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 147</span>an attempt
+is being made by a gentleman, now in Winnipeg, to plant out a
+couple of hundred boys&mdash;and I hear there is room for
+them.&nbsp; But there is little building going on in Winnipeg,
+and the mechanic need not trouble himself to come here.&nbsp; All
+in this part are loud in condemnation of emigration from the
+East-end of London.&nbsp; Those poor of the East-end&mdash;alas!
+neither the Old World nor the New seems to know what to do with
+them.&nbsp; Since this was written I see the Manitoba Mortgage
+and Investment Company have declared a dividend of eight per
+cent., an indication that at any rate in their part of the world
+money is being made.</p>
+<h2><a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+148</span>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">LIFE ON THE PRAIRIE.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You will find Moose Jaw a very pretty place,&rsquo;
+said a gentleman to me as I left Winnipeg; and certainly it is a
+pretty place, though not exactly according to an
+Englishman&rsquo;s idea of prettiness.</p>
+<p>It consists of a railway-station and an assemblage of wooden
+huts and shops, which have all been called into existence within
+the last twelve months.&nbsp; It boasts a weekly organ (such as
+it is), two or three places of worship, one or two
+billiard-rooms, and a post-office&mdash;not a tent, as in some
+parts of the country in which I have been, but a real
+wooden-house.&nbsp; The shopkeepers seem to have nothing to do,
+<a name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>and the
+pigs perambulate the streets, evidently enjoying the fine freedom
+allowed them in this part of the world.&nbsp; There are at this
+time about 700 or 800 settlers, some of the farmers who came out
+last year having moved further west.</p>
+<p>I am writing in the railway-station, in the waiting-rooms of
+which are many farmers, all on their way to Calgary&mdash;for
+which place, also, I am bound, expecting to start at the very
+inconvenient hour of two p.m.</p>
+<p>The scene, as I sit, is not cheering.&nbsp; Far as the eye can
+reach there is the prairie.&nbsp; It was the same all the way
+from Winnipeg.&nbsp; It will be the same all the way to Calgary,
+some 400 or 500 miles hence.&nbsp; It is intensely hot, and men
+and women sit in the open air, under such shade as the wooden
+houses afford.&nbsp; It is intensely cold in the winter.&nbsp;
+Not a tree is to be seen, or a hill, or a farmhouse; nothing to
+relieve the monotony of the sea of grass land on every side,
+except <a name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+150</span>here and there a prairie fire&mdash;the first step to
+be taken before the farmer commences the cultivation of the soil;
+and I must own a prairie fire by night is rather a pretty
+sight.</p>
+<p>I parted last night with a General and his wife, who have come
+to settle about forty miles off.&nbsp; At present he and his
+family have no fresh meat, and he has to make an arrangement with
+a Brandon butcher, about a hundred and fifty miles off, to supply
+him with a Sunday joint.&nbsp; Tinned meats his family have
+tried, and he has got with him a fresh joint of meat, which he
+purchased in Winnipeg; but there are prairie chickens always to
+be had, and in some places, as we came along, we saw an abundance
+of wild ducks on the Assiniboine River, and in swamps, over which
+we rushed in the Pullman car.</p>
+<p>This luxury cannot be expected in Moose Jaw.&nbsp; Here there
+is no water at all.&nbsp; Last year the farmers had no rain, and
+they fear they will have none now.&nbsp; As it is, the <a
+name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 151</span>prairie
+begins to look a little scorched.&nbsp; I should be loth to spend
+the remainder of my days here; but a farmer may make a living,
+and so may a farm-labourer.&nbsp; As to any other class of people
+here, there is no opening at all.&nbsp; The town is full of
+shopkeepers, barristers, auctioneers, and dealers.&nbsp;
+Mechanics who come out will starve.&nbsp; When the land around is
+taken up they will have a chance, but not till then.</p>
+<p>As I sit, a dark figure beckons me to come to him.&nbsp; He
+has a Jim Crow hat, a blanket around his martial form, and a
+gayer one in front.&nbsp; He has rings in his ears, bracelets on
+his arms, and a string of some kind of beads around his
+neck.&nbsp; He offers me his hand, and I shake it.&nbsp; Then I
+commence a conversation.&nbsp; &lsquo;What you called?&rsquo; I
+say.&nbsp; He makes an unintelligible reply.&nbsp; &lsquo;You
+Smith, or Brown, or Jones, or Robinson?&rsquo; I ask; and again
+he gives an unintelligent grunt.&nbsp; I offer him a cigar, and
+he sits down on his <a name="page152"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 152</span>haunches in the shade.&nbsp; He is
+one of the Black Bull men, who have been chased from the States,
+in consequence of having made that part of the world too hot for
+them.&nbsp; They are not natives of this country, but have
+settled in the prairie two or three miles off.&nbsp; I tell him
+to be a good boy, and I dare say he will obey my injunction as
+literally as any other man in England or anywhere else.</p>
+<p>Again I look, and two red-coated warriors greet me.&nbsp; They
+are on the look-out for contraband, and are as fine and clean and
+well-set fellows as any I have seen anywhere.&nbsp; They belong
+to the mounted police, and live chiefly in the saddle, as there
+are but five hundred of them to all this gigantic
+North-West.&nbsp; I had already made their acquaintance.&nbsp; At
+the first station we came to after leaving Manitoba, one of them
+came into the car, gave a searching glance all round, and then
+walked out.&nbsp; &lsquo;What was that for?&rsquo; I asked the
+General.&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh! he has come to see if we <a
+name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 153</span>have any
+whisky.&nbsp; They are very particular.&nbsp; I was coming this
+way once, when a fellow traveller took out his pocket flask and
+began drinking.&nbsp; The mounted policeman who saw him do it
+immediately took his flask from him, and emptied it there and
+then.&rsquo;&nbsp; This strict prohibition is the result, not of
+the prevalence of Temperance sentiment in the North-West, but
+rather of fear of the Indians, who are better shots than the
+mounted police, although not so well provided with
+fire-arms.&nbsp; The people seem to anticipate that the law will
+be relaxed when the whites are more numerous and the Indians
+fewer.&nbsp; The law has had good results, nevertheless.&nbsp; In
+obedience to it the German gives up his lager-beer.&nbsp; And
+next to the Scotch the Germans make the best emigrants.</p>
+<p>The General tells me such is the fineness of the climate that
+he finds he can get on very well without his customary glass of
+<a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+154</span>grog.&nbsp; At Moose Jaw the inhabitants take to Hop
+Bitters instead, and one of the institutions of the place is the
+Hop Bitters Brewery.</p>
+<p>I believe you may keep whisky if you get a permit, and a
+permit is not difficult, I understand, to get.</p>
+<p>I am sorry to say the General, in spite of the mounted police,
+offered me a drop of whisky, and at a later period a friend, as
+we sat smoking, asked me if I was ready for a
+&lsquo;smile.&rsquo;&nbsp; Of course, in my ignorance, I replied
+in the affirmative.&nbsp; Diving under his seat, he brought out a
+fine bottle of real Scotch, and, mixing it with water, offered me
+a &lsquo;smile.&rsquo;&nbsp; You may be sure I indignantly
+refused.&nbsp; You cannot expect me to be a party to the
+violation of the law.</p>
+<p>These Indians just now are creating a little apprehension,
+especially the tribe under the renowned Yellow Calf, who it was
+hoped had taken to farming, and who last year had <a
+name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>a good
+crop, and bought a reaping machine; but the Indians are very
+restless, and Yellow Calf has sent a messenger to rouse the
+tribes, and a strong party of the mounted police are detached to
+watch his movements.&nbsp; They are dying off the face of the
+earth, and we may well suppose that they bear no love to the
+white man, who has taken possession of the lands which they once
+knew to be their own.&nbsp; Here the people evidently think that
+the sooner the Indians are exterminated the better.&nbsp; The men
+do not work; all that is done by the squaws&mdash;wretched women
+with long black hair, and little black eyes as round as beads,
+and who rejoice in blankets quite as unromantic, but quite as
+comfortable, as those of their lords and masters.&nbsp; Hitherto,
+I have not made way with the dusky beauties, but I may be more
+successful by-and-by.</p>
+<p>I believe the Indians have a real grievance against the
+Canadian Government.&nbsp; It was <a name="page156"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 156</span>agreed that they should be settled
+in reserves, and that they should have a certain amount of food
+supplied.&nbsp; This compact was fairly observed by the Canadian
+Government; but in an evil hour they made this part of their duty
+over to contractors, and we know what contractors are, all the
+world over.&nbsp; The Indians say faith has not been kept with
+them, and it is to be feared that they have good reason for
+saying so.&nbsp; Just now they are starving, as this is the close
+season, and they are not permitted to hunt or fish.&nbsp; They
+say that there is no close season as far as the stomach is
+concerned, and from personal experience I may say I believe they
+are right.</p>
+<p>It is now noon on the prairie, and I am dying of the
+heat.&nbsp; Oh, for the forest shade!&nbsp; Oh, for the crystal
+stream!&nbsp; Alas! the water here is not good for the stranger,
+and I fear to touch it.&nbsp; At Toronto I managed pretty well on
+Apollinaris water; but out here <a name="page157"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 157</span>nothing of the kind is to be
+had.&nbsp; What am I to do?&nbsp; The beef here is so tough that
+you can&rsquo;t cut it with a knife, and must have belonged to
+the oldest importation from my native land; and I have to pay a
+price for which I can have a luxurious repast in London.&nbsp; O
+Spiers and Pond!&nbsp; O Gordon and Co.!&nbsp; O respected Ring
+and Brymer, under whose juicy joints and sparkling wines the
+ancient Corporation of London renews its youth!&nbsp; How my soul
+longs for your flesh-pots in this dry and thirsty land, where no
+water is!&nbsp; I have been out on the prairie under the burning
+sun.&nbsp; It is cracked, and parched, and bare, and the flowers
+refuse to bloom, and only the gigantic grasshopper or the pretty
+but repulsive snake meets my eye.&nbsp; That dim line, protracted
+to the horizon east and west, is the railroad.&nbsp; That far-off
+collection of sheds is the rising town of Moose Jaw.&nbsp; That
+blue line on the horizon, which makes me pant for the sea, is a
+mirage.&nbsp; Far off are <a name="page158"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 158</span>some white tents glistening in the
+sun.&nbsp; They are the wigwams of the Indians.</p>
+<p>Like the Wandering Jew, again I urge on my wild career, and
+here I am with noble savages&mdash;so hideous that words fail to
+tell their hideousness.&nbsp; No wonder the squaws are
+bashful.&nbsp; They have little to be proud of, though they have
+necklaces and rings and ornaments around their belts, and gay
+shawls, which have come from some far away factory.&nbsp; Some of
+them have put a streak of red paint where the black hair
+divides.&nbsp; Others are painted as much as any Dowager of
+Mayfair, and have ear ornaments that reach down to the
+middle.&nbsp; Not one is fairly passable.</p>
+<p>Rousseau and the sentimentalists, who talk of the savage,
+greatly err in their estimate of that noble individual.&nbsp; He
+is lazy and filthy, gluttonous, and would be a wine-bibber had he
+the chance.&nbsp; I looked into his tent, and there he was
+sitting naked, whilst his squaw was cooking a bit of a horse with
+the hair on <a name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+159</span>for his dinner.&nbsp; He is unpleasant as a neighbour
+for many reasons, and is indifferent how he gets a dollar, or how
+his squaw earns it either.&nbsp; All along the prairie he seems
+to have nothing to do but to rush to the nearest railway station,
+and sit there all day in the hope that some passing traveller may
+give him tobacco or cash, the only two things on earth he seems
+to care for.&nbsp; Apparently, the mothers are fond of their
+young.&nbsp; The men are clever at stealing horses, and the
+traveller must look after his horses by night, or he may find
+them, as friends of my own did, gone in the morning.&nbsp; But to
+return to the prairie, it is an awful place to travel in alone;
+it is so easy to lose one&rsquo;s way.&nbsp; I heard wonderful
+stories in this respect.&nbsp; Fancy being lost on the prairie;
+nothing but the grass to eat; nothing but the sky to look at;
+nothing in the shape of human speech to listen to.&nbsp; Out here
+by myself, I felt more than once how appropriate the language of
+the poet beloved by our grandmothers:</p>
+<blockquote><p><a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+160</span>&lsquo;O Solitude, where are the charms<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That sages have seen in thy face?<br />
+Better dwell in the midst of alarms,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Than reign in this horrible place.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There is a good deal of hardship to be encountered by any who
+would penetrate to the dim and mysterious region we denominate
+the North-West.&nbsp; For instance, I left Moose Jaw at half-past
+two yesterday morning by a train timed to arrive there at a
+quarter-past one; at which unreasonable hour I had to leave my
+bed, just as I was getting into a sound sleep, and to catch the
+train, which was so crowded that I could scarcely get a seat, and
+the atmosphere of which was not redolent of the odours of Araby
+the Blest.&nbsp; There I had to sit till the time I mention, as
+the engine managed to get off the line.&nbsp; Deeply do I pity
+the poor emigrants tempted into this part of the world by the
+delusive utterances of sham emigration agents at home and local
+journals&mdash;which, when they are not abusing one another, seem
+to delight in giving representations of <a
+name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 161</span>the country
+by no means literally to be depended on; the only thing to do is
+to go to the fountain head&mdash;the Government office.&nbsp;
+People who make up their minds to come into these parts must
+learn to put up with a good deal.&nbsp; Here is a sad case, a
+very exceptional one, I admit, but I am bound to tell the whole
+truth.&nbsp; I quote from a Winnipeg paper: &lsquo;David
+Kirkpatrick, his wife, and nine children, the eldest a girl of
+twelve, arrived from Scotland on Wednesday.&nbsp; A part of the
+voyage was made on board the <i>Algoma</i>.&nbsp; The cold was
+intense, and many of the passengers suffered severely.&nbsp;
+Among these was Mrs. Kirkpatrick.&nbsp; The exposure, in her
+case, brought on a kind of low fever, and the poor woman died
+yesterday morning.&nbsp; The husband&rsquo;s case is
+deplorable.&nbsp; With nine children on his hands, what is he to
+do?&nbsp; He has a longing desire to get back to his friends in
+Scotland, but has not the means.&nbsp; Will the public come to
+his rescue?&nbsp; He and his helpless <a name="page162"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 162</span>children are to be found in the
+immigrant sheds.&rsquo;&nbsp; I fear such cases are far from
+uncommon.&nbsp; Imagine a poor woman leaving her native land,
+crossing the restless Atlantic, perhaps feeble with poor living,
+and worried with the care of nine helpless children, perhaps
+scarce recovered from sea-sickness, put on board an emigrant
+train, snatching hasty meals, or such accommodation as is
+provided at the expense of Dominion Government (I do not blame
+them or the railway authorities, they do all they can),
+travelling at uncertain hours, and arriving at her destination
+utterly overcome by fatigue.&nbsp; What wonder is it that a poor
+woman now and then sacrifices her life in the attempt to build up
+a new home in this Promised Land?&nbsp; No wonder that now and
+then death comes to such just as they reach Jordan and think that
+they are to reap the fruit of all their weary toil.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p162.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Pioneer Store at Brandon in 1882"
+title=
+"Pioneer Store at Brandon in 1882"
+src="images/p162.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>As I left Brandon on my way hither I saw by the side of one of
+the stations quite a little <a name="page163"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 163</span>village of tents.&nbsp; &lsquo;What
+is that?&rsquo; said I to one of the mounted police.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The emigrants,&rsquo; was his reply.&nbsp; &lsquo;They do
+say,&rsquo; said he slowly, &lsquo;that there is some sickness
+amongst them.&rsquo;&nbsp; Whether the rumour was founded on fact
+I had no time to inquire, but certainly, when one thinks of the
+hardships of the emigrants&rsquo; lot, and the peculiar unfitness
+of many of them to stand hardships, I should not be surprised to
+learn that such was the case.&nbsp; The further I come out, the
+less demand I find for emigrants.&nbsp; It is only ploughmen who
+are wanted here.&nbsp; The man who will succeed is the farmer
+with a small capital.&nbsp; He has a splendid chance.&nbsp; When
+the country is settled the mechanic may have his turn.</p>
+<p>But remember, after all has been said and done, this is the
+Great Lone Land.&nbsp; Emigration here is but a drop in the ocean
+as regards results.&nbsp; I am now some 850 miles to the
+north-west of Winnipeg.&nbsp; The <a name="page164"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 164</span>country is an unbroken level, and,
+with the exception of Brandon and Moose Jaw, you see hardly a
+farmhouse, hardly any ploughed land, no sheep grazing on the
+downs, no herds fattening in the prairie; not a single tree to
+hide one from the snows of winter or the suns of summer.&nbsp; By
+day you melt in the sun, by night you shiver with the cold.&nbsp;
+When we came to a swamp now and then we saw a few wild
+ducks.&nbsp; Once in the course of the weary ride we saw two or
+three deer.&nbsp; All the rest was a parched plain, with here and
+there some lovely flowers, and with buffalo bones bleaching
+wherever you turn your eye.&nbsp; In some parts the soil was
+strongly impregnated with alkali, so much so, indeed, that it
+made the ground white, and left a crust of what looked like ice
+on the lakes and ponds.&nbsp; Can that huge region ever grow
+wheat and fatten flocks?&nbsp; The experience of the experimental
+farms proves that it will.&nbsp; All I know is that ages must
+elapse before Moose <a name="page165"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 165</span>Jaw shall be a Manchester, or
+Brandon, in spite of its many advantages, the headquarters of the
+agricultural interest, with a corn market equalling that of
+Norwich or Ipswich.&nbsp; Yet there are parts of Manitoba which
+contain undoubtedly as fine corn-growing country as any in the
+world.</p>
+<p>This is especially true of the new tract of country opened up
+by the Canadian Pacific in the south-west.&nbsp; As a rule, the
+further from the railway the land is, the better it is.&nbsp; At
+the same time, it is to be remembered that a farmer who has no
+railway access is at a great disadvantage, and that in the winter
+it is no joke sending a man with a team of oxen and a waggon-load
+of produce twenty or thirty miles across the prairie, where a
+snowstorm, or &lsquo;a blorrard&rsquo; at any time, may
+occur.</p>
+<p>This is the great drawback of Manitoba: it has no trees.&nbsp;
+In Ontario the farmer has his crops protected by a belt of trees
+from <a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 166</span>the
+inclemency of the weather.&nbsp; But, then, in Manitoba the
+farmer has this advantage, that he has not to devote the greater
+part of his time and money to the cutting down of his
+trees.&nbsp; He has only to plough the soil, and there is an
+abundant harvest.&nbsp; If Manitoba lacks trees, it is expected
+to yield a plentiful supply of coal.&nbsp; As I came along last
+night we saw a station supplied with gas.&nbsp; It appears that
+in boring for water they discovered gas, which they now utilize
+to light the station and to work a steam engine.&nbsp; This was
+not, however, in Manitoba, but in Alberta, just after we had left
+Medicine Hat, that pretty oasis in the desert, with the usual
+supply of hotels, billiard-rooms, and stores, and where I came
+into contact with the Cree Indians, a race even uglier than the
+Sioux Indian, whom I found at Moose Jaw.&nbsp; They have higher
+cheekbones, and don&rsquo;t plait their hair, and some of the old
+men reminded me not a little in outline of <a
+name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>the late
+Lord Beaconsfield, whom the Canadians consider Sir John Macdonald
+strongly resembles.</p>
+<p>It is curious to note how the buffalo has vanished from the
+region which was formerly his happy hunting-ground.&nbsp; He has
+now forsaken the country; you see only his bones and his
+track.&nbsp; Some people say that the railway has done it, and
+others that the destruction is the work of the Americans, who
+say, &lsquo;Kill the buffalo and you get rid of the
+Indians.&rsquo;&nbsp; These latter are to be met with everywhere,
+clad in flannel garments radiant with all the hues of the
+rainbow.&nbsp; Chiefly they affect blankets&mdash;red, blue, or
+green.&nbsp; At Calgary I came across more of them&mdash;this
+time of the Blackfoot tribe.&nbsp; There is very little
+difference in any of them.&nbsp; In one thing they all resemble
+each other, that is, they don&rsquo;t seem to care much about
+work.&nbsp; As English does not happen to be one of their
+accomplishments, my intercourse with <a name="page168"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 168</span>them has been of a somewhat limited
+character.</p>
+<p>For the sake of intending emigrants let me dispel a couple of
+popular errors.&nbsp; One that the heat is most enjoyable;
+another, that it is a cheap country to come to.&nbsp; Neither
+assertion is exactly the truth.&nbsp; As I write the heat is
+insufferable, and yet this is early spring.&nbsp; I saw snow
+yesterday in a hollow of the hills not yet melted, and last
+night, sleeping in a stuffy Pullman car full of people, I was
+awoke with the cold.&nbsp; The other fallacy which I would expose
+is that this is a cheap country.&nbsp; On the contrary, it is
+nothing of the kind.&nbsp; Paxton Hood, if I remember aright,
+once gave a lecture on America under the title of the &lsquo;Land
+of the Big Dollar.&rsquo;&nbsp; If I were to lecture on Canada I
+should call it the &lsquo;Land of the Little Dollar.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+A dollar here is of no account.&nbsp; This morning I went into a
+shop and had a bottle of ginger-beer, and the cost was one <a
+name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 169</span>shilling;
+and this, too, after I had been administering a little
+&lsquo;soft sawder&rsquo; to the fair American damsel who waited
+on me (she was from Michigan, and was remarkably wide awake), in
+the mistaken hope that she would be a little reasonable in her
+charge.&nbsp; Everyone smokes cigars all day long, and yet
+Canadian cigars are as costly as they are atrocious.&nbsp;
+Fortunately one can&rsquo;t spend money in drink, as that is
+prohibited, and the chemists at Calgary have recently got into a
+scrape for supplying customers with essence of lemon, by means of
+which they manage to fuddle themselves.&nbsp; The price of fruit
+is prohibitory; cucumbers, such as you in London would give three
+halfpence for, are here at Calgary as much as a shilling.&nbsp;
+Eggs are four shillings a dozen; meat and bacon and ham are as
+dear as in England, and not a quarter so good.&nbsp; I am
+appalled as I see how the money goes; I fear to be stranded at
+the foot of the Rockies.&nbsp; <a name="page170"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 170</span>If I get back to the west I shall
+have to work my passage back to England as fireman or stoker, or
+in some such ignoble capacity.&nbsp; If I was younger I would
+turn gardener.&nbsp; I believe anyone who would come out here
+with sufficient capital to plant a nursery ground or to stock a
+good fruit garden would make a lot of money, as the farmers, of
+course, do not think of such things, and the supply is quite
+unequal to the demand.&nbsp; In Calgary they did not have three
+inches of frost all last winter.&nbsp; It is true they have even
+now a sharp nip of frost; but I hear of peas flourishing at a
+farmer&rsquo;s close by, and the region abounds with wild
+strawberries and raspberries and cherries.&nbsp; If they grow
+wild, surely they will equally prosper under more careful
+culture.</p>
+<p>A Special Committee of the Dominion House of Commons which was
+appointed last session to obtain evidence upon the agricultural
+industries of the country, examined <a name="page171"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 171</span>several witnesses as to the
+suitability of Canada, and especially of the Canadian North-West,
+for the growth of forest and fruit trees.&nbsp; The testimony
+given showed that there are many varieties of fruit which thrive
+in Great Britain, Germany, Russia, and other European countries,
+which would, if transplanted, be equally suited to the climate of
+the North-West, it being stated that excellent fruit is grown in
+great quantities in Europe at points where the temperature ranges
+considerably lower than it does in Canada.&nbsp; It is urged that
+the example of the Russian and German Governments should be
+followed in the establishment of plantations of fruit trees and
+experimental farms in different parts of the Dominion, to test
+the kind of trees and fruits best suited to the different
+localities.</p>
+<p>Since my return the following paper has been put into my
+hands:&mdash;&lsquo;The following is a reliable estimate of this
+season&rsquo;s wheat crop <a name="page172"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 172</span>in Manitoba and the North-West
+Territories:&mdash;Estimated wheat acreage in Manitoba, 350,000;
+yield at 23 bushels per acre, 8,000,000; estimated wheat acreage
+in North-West Territories, 65,000; yield at 23 bushels per acre,
+or 1,500,000 bushels&mdash;a total of 415,000 acres and 9,500,000
+bushels.&nbsp; Deducting 2,760,000 bushels for home consumption
+and seed, a surplus remains of 6,740,000 bushels.&nbsp;
+Everything now points to a larger yield per acre than that of
+1883.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p172.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Harvesting on the Bell Farm, Indian Head, N.W.I."
+title=
+"Harvesting on the Bell Farm, Indian Head, N.W.I."
+src="images/p172.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>&lsquo;Operations have been carried on very extensively this
+season at the Bell Farm, in the Canadian North-West, which is
+said to be the largest farm in the world.&nbsp; Though this is
+but the second year of cultivation, there are already 8,000 acres
+under crop, 5,000 to 6,000 of which are under wheat, and a
+portion of the remainder under flax.&nbsp; Last year 10,000
+bushels were exported from the farm, and the excellence of the
+grain secured for it a good price in the market.&nbsp; The crop
+<a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>of this
+year is estimated to be 40 per cent. better.&nbsp; Experts from
+Montana who have recently visited this section of the Canadian
+North-West, state that they never saw any grain in the United
+States to equal that on and around the Bell Farm.&rsquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+174</span>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">AMONGST THE COW-BOYS.</p>
+<p>I am writing from Calgary, a little but growing collection of
+huts and wooden houses planted on a lovely plain with hills all
+around, a river at my feet, on the banks of which some poplars
+flourish, and I can almost fancy I am in Derbyshire itself.&nbsp;
+It is a gay place, this rising town, at the foot, as it were, of
+the Rockies, and just now is unusually gay, as the Queen&rsquo;s
+birthday is being celebrated with athletic sports and a ball;
+and, besides, a new clergyman has made his appearance, the Rev.
+Parks Smith, from a Bermondsey parish, who is to preach in the
+new Assembly Hall, which is to be set apart as a church on <a
+name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+175</span>Sundays.&nbsp; I am going to hear him, and already I
+feel somewhat of a Pharisee&mdash;I have on a clean collar, which
+I religiously preserved for the occasion, and have had my boots
+blackened.&nbsp; The sight is so novel that I have spent half an
+hour on the prairie contemplating the effect of that
+operation.&nbsp; Already I feel six inches higher.</p>
+<p>I can&rsquo;t say that I think quite so much of Calgary as do
+the people who live in it.&nbsp; In splendour, in wealth, in
+dignity, and importance, they evidently anticipate it will be a
+second Babylon.&nbsp; Well, a good deal has to be done
+first.&nbsp; The situation is pleasant, I admit.&nbsp; You
+incline to think well of Calgary after the dreary ride across the
+prairie, and you have quite a choice of hotels, and of shops, all
+well stocked; but then these shops are little better than huts,
+and the hotels certainly don&rsquo;t throw the shops into the
+shade.</p>
+<p>For instance, I am in the leading hotel.&nbsp; It is too far
+from the railway, but that is because <a name="page176"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 176</span>the C.P.R. have moved their station
+a little further on, where the new town of Calgary is springing
+up.&nbsp; We have an open room, where I am writing&mdash;a dark
+dining-room on one side, and then, on the other, a little row of
+closets, which they dignify by the name of bedrooms.&nbsp; I am
+the proud possessor of one.&nbsp; It holds a bed, whereon, I own,
+I slept soundly; a row of pegs, on which to hang one&rsquo;s
+clothes; and a little shelf, on which is placed a tiny wash-hand
+basin; while above that is a glass, in which it is impossible to
+get a good view of yourself&mdash;a matter of very small
+consequence, as the glass certainly reflects very poorly the
+looker&rsquo;s personal charms, whatever they may be.&nbsp; I
+ought to have said there is a window; and as my bedroom is on the
+ground floor (upper rooms are rare in these wooden houses in the
+North-West), I am much exercised in my mind as to whether that
+window may not be opened in the course of the night, and the roll
+of <a name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+177</span>dollars I have hidden under my pillow carried
+off.&nbsp; Then, just as I am getting into bed, I discover
+somebody else&rsquo;s boots.&nbsp; That is
+awkward&mdash;very.&nbsp; It is with a sigh of relief I discover
+that they are not feminine.&nbsp; Suppose the owner of those
+boots comes into my bedroom and claims to be the rightful
+owner?&nbsp; Suppose he resorts to physical force?&nbsp; Suppose,
+in such a case, I got the worst of it?</p>
+<p>Fortunately, before I can answer these questions
+satisfactorily to myself, I am asleep, and yet they are not so
+irrelevant as you fancy.</p>
+<p>Last night, for instance, as I was sitting in the cool air,
+smoking one of the peculiarly bad cigars in which the brave men
+of Canada greatly rejoice, and for which they pay as heavily as
+if they were of the finest brands, a half-drunken man came up,
+abusing me in every possible way, threatening to smash every bone
+in my body, and altogether behaving himself in a way the reverse
+of polite.&nbsp; <a name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+178</span>Perhaps you say, Why did you not knock him down?&nbsp;
+In novels heroes always do, and come clear off; but I am not
+writing fiction, and in real life I have always found discretion
+to be the better part of valour.&nbsp; The fact is, the fellow
+was a strapping Hercules, and I could see in a moment, if the
+appeal were to force, what the issue might be.&nbsp; Yet I had
+not done anything intentionally to offend him.&nbsp; He had come
+galloping up to the hotel, as they all do here&mdash;the horses
+are not trained to trot&mdash;and his horse had bucked him
+off.&nbsp; I believe I did say something to a friend of a mildly
+critical nature, but I question whether the rider heard it.&nbsp;
+The fact was, he was angry at having been thrown, and seeing that
+I was a stranger, he evidently thought he could pour the vials of
+his wrath on me.&nbsp; I must admit that in a little while he
+came up and apologized, and there was an end of the matter.&nbsp;
+But the worst part of it was that his friend remarked to me that
+this drunken <a name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+179</span>insulting ruffian was one of the best fellows in the
+place.&nbsp; If so, Calgary has to be thankful for very small
+mercies indeed.</p>
+<p>You ask, How could the fellow be drunk, seeing that there is a
+prohibitory liquor-law in existence?&nbsp; I have every reason to
+believe that Calgary is a very drunken place, nevertheless.&nbsp;
+I have already referred to one case of drunkenness.&nbsp; I may
+add that, in the afternoon of the same day, I had seen another in
+the shape of an old gentleman who was going to head a revolt
+which would cut off the North-West from the Dominion, and which
+would make her a Crown colony.&nbsp; He was very drunk as he
+stood on the bar opposite me declaiming all this bunkum.&nbsp; I
+remarked his state to the landlord, who seemed to feel how unfair
+it was that men could get drunk on the sly, and that a decent
+landlord, like himself, should be deprived of the privilege of
+selling them decent liquor.&nbsp; I own it is very hard on the
+publicans.&nbsp; At Moose <a name="page180"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 180</span>Jaw one of them told me he would
+give five hundred pounds for a liquor license.&nbsp; &lsquo;They
+call this a free country,&rsquo; said an indignant English
+settler to me, &lsquo;and yet I can&rsquo;t get a drop of good
+liquor.&nbsp; Pretty freedom, ain&rsquo;t it?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Unfortunately, the Government, while it prohibits the sale of
+liquor, does not exterminate the desire for it&mdash;perhaps only
+increases it&mdash;as we always cry for what we can&rsquo;t
+get.&nbsp; Unfortunately, also, it is true that, as long as this
+demand exists, the supply will be found somehow.</p>
+<p>In Montana there are a lot of blackguards and daredevils who
+will run the thing in somehow.&nbsp; Liquor is also brought in by
+the railway as coal-oil, oatmeal, flour, varnish, and then it is
+doctored up and sold at &pound;1 the bottle to the thirsty
+souls.&nbsp; Now, what is the consequence?&nbsp; Why, that, as a
+local journal remarks, liquor is sold; the dealers are pests and
+outlaws; they sell their poison for ten times the price of what
+people who don&rsquo;t <a name="page181"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 181</span>belong to the Blue Ribbon Army call
+good liquor, and then vanish with their ill-gotten money out of
+the country, excepting such as they may leave behind them in the
+shape of fines, when found out.&nbsp; I do think the hotel-keeper
+has much reason to complain of prohibition.&nbsp; It presses
+hardly on him, and does not put drunkenness down.&nbsp; I
+mentioned these facts to a Baptist minister from England, whom I
+met in Toronto.&nbsp; He would not believe them; I gave him
+cuttings from newspapers to support my view.&nbsp; His reply was
+that they were hoaxes.&nbsp; I have now been in Calgary a day,
+and already I find that these hoaxes, as my friend calls them,
+are veritable facts.</p>
+<p>I believe that many of my travelling companions were a little
+fresh last night, from their soberness and dejection of manner
+this morning.&nbsp; They were away down town, and had not
+returned when I retired to rest; and this morning several of the
+householders complain <a name="page182"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 182</span>of having had their doors knocked at
+at most unseasonable hours.</p>
+<p>At meals I meet queer company.&nbsp; We have a Chinese
+cook.&nbsp; I have a faint idea that he has murderous designs on
+us all, his smile is so childlike and bland; yet I prefer his
+placid pleasant round face to those of his female helps, sour and
+ill-looking, who earn wages such as an English servant-girl never
+dreams of.&nbsp; His messes seem to be appreciated, and little is
+left after meal-time.&nbsp; It is enough for me to see the men
+eat.&nbsp; Every particle of food is conveyed into the mouth by
+means of the knife, which is also freely used if sugar or salt be
+required.&nbsp; Our dining-room is simply a shed, and a very dark
+one, having a canvas on one side and unpainted deal on the
+other.&nbsp; Few houses at Calgary are painted, though a painted
+house looks so much prettier than a deal one that I wonder
+painting is not more resorted to, especially when you remember
+how paint <a name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+183</span>preserves the wood.&nbsp; Many of the houses here are
+brought all the way from Ontario, and, perhaps, this accounts for
+their smallness.&nbsp; They chiefly consist of two rooms, one a
+shop, the other a sitting and night-room; and the larger number
+have been erected within the last few months.&nbsp; What we call
+in England a gentleman&rsquo;s house, I should say does not exist
+in the whole district.&nbsp; A gentleman would find existence
+intolerable here, though the air is fine, and the extent of the
+prairie is unbounded.&nbsp; There are two newspapers in the town,
+and the professions are all well represented.</p>
+<p>As to my companions, the less I say of them the better.&nbsp;
+They are young and vigorous, and use language not generally
+tolerated in polite society.&nbsp; Their talk is chiefly of
+horses and bets.&nbsp; They ride recklessly up and down the dusty
+path which forms the main street, and would not break their
+hearts if they knocked a fellow down; or they drive light <a
+name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 184</span>waggons on
+four wheels, creating the most overwhelming clouds of dust as
+they rush by.&nbsp; As to their saddles, they are as unlike
+English ones as can well be imagined, rising at each end, so as
+to give the rider a very safe seat, while their stirrups are as
+long almost as the foot itself; but the saddles have this
+advantage, that they never give the horses sore backs.&nbsp; As
+to the horses, they are all branded, and turned loose on to the
+prairie when not required.&nbsp; Most of the men are
+prospectors&mdash;people who go round the country in search of
+mines; or cow-boys&mdash;that is, men employed in the cattle
+ranches in the district.&nbsp; The cowboy is a fearful
+sight.&nbsp; His hands and face are as brown as leather, he wears
+a straw hat&mdash;or one of felt&mdash;with a very wide
+brim.&nbsp; His coat or jacket is, perhaps, decorated with Indian
+work.&nbsp; Around his waist he wears a belt, which he makes
+useful in many ways.&nbsp; Then he has brown leather leggings,
+ornamented down the sides with leather fringes, <a
+name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 185</span>and on his
+heels he puts a tremendous pair of spurs.&nbsp; The men on the
+mountains have much the same style of dress, and are fine
+specimens of muscular, rather than intellectual or moral,
+development.&nbsp; On the whole, I am not unduly enamoured of
+these pioneers of civilization; but, then, I was born in the old
+country, and learned Dr. Watts&rsquo;s hymns, and was taught
+to&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Thank the goodness and the grace<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That on my birth has smiled,<br />
+And made me in these Christian days<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A happy English child.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I see a good deal more of Calgary than I wish to.&nbsp; I feel
+that I have been made a fool of by the station-master.&nbsp; I
+am, as you may be aware, at the foot of the Rocky
+Mountains.&nbsp; They are some 60 miles off, yet; already I have
+seen their far-off peaks, glistening with snow, rising into the
+summer sky.&nbsp; As I have got so far, I must see them.&nbsp;
+There are trees up there, and the sight of a <a
+name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 186</span>tree would
+be good for sore eyes; there are cooling shades out there, and
+here, though it is but early morning, it is too hot to
+stir.&nbsp; The scenery out there is the finest to be seen in all
+the Canadian continent, and I would carry away with me, to think
+of in after years, something of their beauty.&nbsp; I travelled
+all this way for that purpose, and hoped to have been off before,
+and now find I must wait, owing to a blunder on the part of the
+station-master.&nbsp; He promised he would let me know if he sent
+a freight-train to the Rocky Mountains.&nbsp; Well, he sent off a
+train at one o&rsquo;clock this morning, and never let me know
+anything about it, and the consequence is I must stay two more
+days in this dreary spot, without conveniences such as I could
+find in the meanest cottage in England, and at a cost which would
+enable me to live in luxury and fare sumptuously at home.&nbsp;
+One lesson I have learned, which I repeat for the benefit of my
+readers.&nbsp; Never <a name="page187"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 187</span>depend upon other people; hear all
+they say, and then act for yourself.&nbsp; Had I done so, I
+should have been now in the Rocky Mountains.&nbsp; I trusted in
+others, and I am, in consequence, the victim of misplaced
+confidence.</p>
+<p>I gather a few items of interest to intending emigrants.&nbsp;
+Crops raised in the vicinity of Calgary during 1883 gave the
+following yields per acre:&mdash;Wheat, 33 bushels; barley, 40
+bushels; oats, 60 bushels.&nbsp; The Government farm a few miles
+off, which I have visited, does well.&nbsp; The country round
+offers especial advantages to sheep and dairy farmers, cheese
+manufacturers, and hog raisers.&nbsp; My own impression is, and I
+have mentioned it to several persons who all think it excellent,
+that any man would easily make his fortune who set up a poultry
+farm.&nbsp; Eggs and fowls are almost entirely unknown, and if
+the producer did not find a market here, he could easily send his
+produce by the railway to where it was wanted.&nbsp; Eggs and
+fowls <a name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+188</span>help one as well as anything to keep body and soul
+together.</p>
+<p>I am glad I went to church yesterday.&nbsp; My presence there
+gave quite a tone to the place (said the head man to me this
+morning), and so far I may presume I did good service.&nbsp; The
+congregation consisted chiefly of men, and the collection
+amounted to nearly 16 dollars&mdash;pretty good, considering
+(said the above mentioned gentleman) there are two or three
+schism shops in the place.&nbsp; In the evening I went to the
+Wesleyan Methodist schism shop, as he called it, and heard a
+sermon, which touched me more than any sermon I have heard a long
+time.&nbsp; As I came out the effect was startling.&nbsp; The sun
+was sinking in crimson glory just behind the green hills by which
+Calgary is surrounded.&nbsp; Far off a dim splendour of pink
+testified to the existence of a prairie fire, while before me
+stood a gigantic Indian, with his big black head rising out of a
+pyramid of gorgeous robes, <a name="page189"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 189</span>really dazzling to behold.&nbsp;
+There is an Indian Mission near here, but the Indians are not the
+only heathens out here.</p>
+<p>I have just had a ride in a buck-cart, which is the kind of
+vehicle the colonists use.&nbsp; It is of boards on four wheels,
+on which is placed a seat for a couple of persons, while the
+luggage is piled up behind.&nbsp; Some of them have springs, as
+fortunately was the case with the one on which I rode, or I
+should have had a very uncomfortable ride indeed.&nbsp; Perhaps I
+ought not to be so angry with the station-master as I was when I
+interviewed him this morning.&nbsp; I have just seen a man who
+got on to the freight train, but he tells me it was so
+uncomfortable that he preferred to wait, and got off after he had
+taken his passage.</p>
+<p>Money seems scarce.&nbsp; I have just been to the post-office
+to send a letter to England.&nbsp; The postmaster could give me
+no change, and I had to take post-cards instead.&nbsp; I <a
+name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>suppose all
+the money goes to the smugglers.&nbsp; In this small town 500
+dollars are sent weekly to Winnipeg for liquor; so much for
+prohibition in Calgary.</p>
+<p>As there is no bank here, people find it hard to get
+money.&nbsp; A young man waiting here to make up a mining party
+for the Rockies, tells me he had to telegraph to Toronto for 500
+dollars, which were sent in the shape of a post-office
+order.&nbsp; The postmaster charged him five dollars for cashing
+the order.&nbsp; I have just heard of a loan of 300 dollars
+effected; the borrower has agreed to pay, in the shape of
+interest, the moderate sum of four dollars a month.</p>
+<p>Calgary, according to some, can have no enduring prosperity;
+if so, the land-grabbers who have scattered themselves all over
+it will be deeply disappointed.</p>
+<p>Edmonton, where they get gold out of the river sand, and where
+they have already a kind of dredging machine employed for that <a
+name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>purpose, it
+is said, will shortly have a railway to itself, and the men from
+the mountains, who are the mainstay of Calgary, will go that
+way.</p>
+<p>I fancy I hear some one exclaim: On those wide plains over
+which sweeps the ice-laden air of the Rockies, what pleasant
+walks you must have!&nbsp; My dear sir, you are quite
+mistaken.&nbsp; Perhaps, as you set out, there comes a herd of
+wild horses&mdash;and then I remember how poor George Moore was
+knocked down by one, and avoid the boundless prairie
+accordingly.</p>
+<p>Then there are the dogs, &lsquo;their name is Legion,&rsquo;
+and they are big, and as wild as they are big, and I am not
+partial to hydrophobia.&nbsp; No; it is better to sit at the door
+of my tent and watch the flight of the horses, the fights of the
+dogs, and the stream of dust a mile long which denotes that some
+Jehu is at hand, who will pull up at the door, deeply drink
+water, smoke a cigar, use a little <a name="page192"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 192</span>strong language, and then mount
+again and ride off into boundless space.</p>
+<p>Here and there a pedestrian may be seen making his way to his
+solitary hut or shop, where at no time do you see any sign of
+life; and how the people here make a living (with the exception
+of the hotel-keepers, who are always busy) puzzles me.&nbsp; I
+meet good fellows, I own.&nbsp; They are friendly in their
+way.&nbsp; As humour is a thing unknown in Canada and the
+North-West, they generally grin when I make a remark, which I do
+at very protracted intervals, fearing to be worn out before the
+long day is done.&nbsp; Nevertheless, I begin to doubt whether I
+am not relapsing into the wild life of those around me.&nbsp;
+Fortunately, I have not yet acquired the habit of speaking
+through my nose, nor do I make that fearful sound&mdash;a hawking
+in the throat&mdash;which is a signal that your neighbour is
+preparing to expectorate, and which renders travelling, even in a
+first-class car, <a name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+193</span>almost insupportable; but my hands are tanned.&nbsp; I
+sit with my waistcoat open, and occasionally in my
+shirt-sleeves.&nbsp; I care little to make any effort to be
+polite; I am clean forgetting all my manners, and feel that in a
+little while I shall be as rough as a cow-boy, or as the wild
+wolf of the prairie.&nbsp; It is clear I must not tarry at
+Calgary too long.</p>
+<h2><a name="page194"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+194</span>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">IN THE ROCKIES&mdash;HOLT CITY&mdash;LIFE IN
+THE CAMP&mdash;A ROUGH RIDE&mdash;THE KICKING HORSE
+LAKE&mdash;BRITISH COLUMBIA.</p>
+<p>I am writing from Holt City&mdash;so named after a famous
+contractor out here&mdash;in the middle of the Rocky
+Mountains.&nbsp; Here the rail comes, but no further, as yet,
+though some 2,000 men are at work a few miles ahead, and making
+incredible speed in the construction of this gigantic
+intercolonial undertaking&mdash;an undertaking which would have
+been completed by this time had the late Sir Hugh Allan (the
+founder of the Allan line of steamers) and Sir John Macdonald had
+their way.</p>
+<p><a name="page195"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 195</span>I
+left Calgary without shedding a tear&mdash;the train was only
+three hours late&mdash;after remarking to the manager of the
+leading hotel that, much as I had enjoyed myself under his humble
+but hospitable roof, I would give him leave to charge me twenty
+dollars a day if ever he caught me within his doors again.</p>
+<p>When the train arrived, of course there was no room.&nbsp;
+This is the working season, and the C.P.R., as everyone calls it
+in Canada, is hurrying on men to the front as fast as they can be
+got.</p>
+<p>However, I was permitted to get inside the mail van, in
+company with a contractor, his wife, and a baby, which behaved
+itself as well as could be expected under the circumstances; a
+lady who was going to visit her husband, one of the contractors
+on the line; and an invalid from Pennsylvania, who did not seem
+much to enjoy that rough mode of travelling.&nbsp; We reached
+Holt City about <a name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+196</span>eleven, when it was quite dark, and the only bed I
+could find was a shelf in the van, on which I was glad to lie
+down&mdash;but not, alas! to sleep.&nbsp; Had I got out, I should
+have been lost, or run over by an engine&mdash;that is positive,
+as there is no road, only divers rails, as, for instance, the
+Continental Hotel at Newhaven.&nbsp; I am now writing in the
+post-office, which seems the great social centre of the place,
+though the mail only leaves twice a week.&nbsp; It is a
+decent-sized tent, with a desk and counter in the middle for the
+sale of stamps and cigars and the delivery of letters.&nbsp;
+Behind it are a couple of beds on which men are reposing in a way
+that I envy, and covered with buffalo skins&mdash;the possession
+of which I envy them still more.&nbsp; In front is a table,
+fitted up with old papers and a couple of uncommonly
+uncomfortable benches, whereon are sitting various loafers,
+smoking and talking, and warming themselves as best they can at
+the big stove&mdash;one of which you now <a
+name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 197</span>see in
+every Canadian house, and which but feebly keeps out the raw cold
+of the morning.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p197.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Mount Stephen in the Rocky Mountains on the Line of the Canadian
+Pacific Railway"
+title=
+"Mount Stephen in the Rocky Mountains on the Line of the Canadian
+Pacific Railway"
+src="images/p197.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Holt City is admirably located, to use an American phrase
+which I heartily detest.&nbsp; It is a clearance in the forest,
+bordered by the Bow River, which dashes foaming along.&nbsp;
+There is a shed, which does duty for a railway station; a
+collection of tents, in which the <i>employ&eacute;s</i> of the
+company dwell, or which hold the large stores it collects here; a
+large shed for meals, a railway car, in which Mr. John Ross, the
+able administrator of the C.P.R. in these parts, resides with his
+accomplished wife; and further off are other tents, which do duty
+as hotels, billiard-rooms, and shops.&nbsp; Up here, I see little
+to remind me of the Old Country, except bottles of
+Stephens&rsquo; inks, of Aldersgate Street, London, which, says
+the head accountant, are the only inks on which they can
+rely.</p>
+<p>We are in a valley&mdash;a valley high up among the
+mountains&mdash;as fair as that in <a name="page198"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 198</span>which Rasselas studied to be a
+virtuous prince, but of a character common in the length and
+breadth of the Rockies.&nbsp; I have seen scores of valleys as
+fair; and yet I own the exquisite loveliness of the spot&mdash;at
+any rate, in summer time&mdash;is marvellous.&nbsp; Around me
+rise Alps on Alps, up into the cloudless blue.&nbsp; Firs, all
+larch and pine, in all the freshness of their new-found greenery,
+clothe their base; while the snow, in wreaths like marble,
+glistens on their dark sides or crowns their rugged peaks.&nbsp;
+It would seem as if there could be no world beyond.&nbsp; It is
+really wonderful what pleasant nooks of this kind one sees
+everywhere.&nbsp; I stopped at one such last night, a station
+called Canmore, which, however, seemed to be the fairest of them
+all&mdash;and so the fish think, as the station-master tells me
+he often catches speckled trout seven or eight pounds in
+weight.&nbsp; Very near are valuable sulphur and other springs,
+and when the railway shall be completed, I look forward <a
+name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 199</span>to the time
+when Pullman cars shall come here laden with health seekers from
+all parts of the world, who are fond of fishing and fine air.</p>
+<p>I had a narrow escape from not coming here at all.&nbsp; When
+we stopped at Canmore for our evening meal, I found I was utterly
+unable to climb back into the mail van.&nbsp; I may be young in
+heart, but, alas!&nbsp; I have lost somewhat of the agility of
+early youth.&nbsp; I mentioned this to the station-master and
+guard, who both promised me repeatedly that they would have the
+train drawn up for me.&nbsp; Knowing this, I listened
+unconcernedly to the cry of &lsquo;All on board!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Judge, then, of my horror when I saw the train gradually gliding
+past.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Jump into the last car,&rsquo; cried the guard, as he
+saw me looking daggers at him.</p>
+<p>Fortunately I succeeded in doing so: it is easier to get on to
+an American car when in motion than on an English one, on account
+of <a name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 200</span>its
+peculiar construction.&nbsp; This is fortunate, as the railway
+passenger in Canada has to trust entirely to himself.&nbsp; He is
+ignored by guards and porters and station-master
+altogether.&nbsp; Unfortunately, I jumped on to the car sacred to
+the person of Sir John McNeil, and I was requested by the black
+cook to move off, which I declined doing till we reached the next
+station, when I moved into another car, and created not a little
+laughter as I told my story.&nbsp; It is to be trusted that Sir
+John enjoyed himself all the more for having got rid of my vulgar
+presence.&nbsp; I hope Sir John may enlighten his friends on his
+return; but I fear he will gain little knowledge of the people or
+the country, travelling in such a way.&nbsp; Perhaps he will
+learn as much about it as the Marquis of Lorne, or the Earl of
+Carnarvon, who recommends the poor people of the East-end to come
+to Canada, where the chances are they will be worse off than they
+are at home.&nbsp; Canada requires <a name="page201"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 201</span>hardy, muscular men&mdash;if with
+money in their pockets so much the better&mdash;not the refuse of
+our towns.</p>
+<p>Again, I repeat, people in England ought to have fuller
+information about Canada ere they go thither.&nbsp; It is a
+fortune for the strong man, but even he has to run risks.&nbsp;
+Everywhere I hear of what is called mountain fever, or Red River
+fever, or fever with some other name which stands for typhoid
+disease.&nbsp; Grand and beautiful as is the country, fertile as
+is the soil, people forget to observe sanitary laws at times and
+suffer in consequence.&nbsp; But I must own that all the men I
+met in Holt City were pictures of health and strength.&nbsp; For
+one thing, the company feeds them well.&nbsp; I have just
+breakfasted in camp with the men.&nbsp; We had good coffee and
+fried ham and other good things for breakfast, and good tins of
+preserved fruits, to which everyone did justice.&nbsp; Everyone
+here has to rough it.&nbsp; I washed this morning in the open
+air, having myself ladled <a name="page202"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 202</span>into a tin basin the water out of a
+cask in which still floated the broken ice.</p>
+<p>Holt City is, I suppose, the head-quarters of the C.P.R.&nbsp;
+Yet it is a place by itself.&nbsp; Nothing can be rougher than
+the rail from here to Calgary, or finer than the view.&nbsp; It
+is an advantage that the trains are so slow, as you have more
+time to enjoy the scenery, which has almost shaken my attachment
+to the Hebrides, though one misses the purple heather which lends
+such a charm to the grey hills of the North.&nbsp; But
+comparisons are odious, and the Rockies, in all their charms,
+must be seen to be appreciated.&nbsp; It was a wonderful view I
+had last night as I sat on the steps of the last car, drinking in
+all the strange beauties of the place.&nbsp; We were climbing
+hour by hour a wilderness of mountains.&nbsp; We were hemmed in
+by them from afternoon till night came down upon the face of the
+earth.&nbsp; Mostly they were black, with snowy variations; some
+were bare, others <a name="page203"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+203</span>clothed with verdure.&nbsp; Some raised their heads in
+the clear blue sky as fortresses, others were peaks, others
+ragged and uneven, shapeless masses of matter growing out of one
+another.&nbsp; Some seemed to like good company, others stood
+solitary and apart.</p>
+<p>In the dells and shadows there are tales yet to be told.&nbsp;
+For instance, here are some remains of the ancient road to
+British Columbia.&nbsp; Here, a man tells me, last year there was
+a terrible tragedy.&nbsp; An English gentleman and his son were
+camping near the spot.&nbsp; There came a forest fire.&nbsp;
+Awful to relate, when the son had time to look around him, his
+father was burnt to death.&nbsp; Fearful are some of the
+solitudes through which the passenger plunges.&nbsp; The bear and
+the eagle have them entirely to themselves.&nbsp; Few have
+explored them; fewer still have scaled the mountain heights by
+which they are girdled.&nbsp; But nowadays one is in search of
+silver or gold or coal, and has no time to think of <a
+name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 204</span>mountain
+grandeur.&nbsp; Cities rise and fall very quickly here.&nbsp;
+Silver City, for instance, where we stopped last night, was all
+the rage a year or two ago.&nbsp; It is now deserted.&nbsp; Yet
+people say silver is still to be found there, and at Calgary, as
+an illustration of the fact, a &lsquo;prospector&rsquo; showed me
+a fine specimen of silver, at the same time asking me to come and
+see the shaft.&nbsp; I replied I was as fond of silver as he was,
+but I sought it in another way.</p>
+<p>But to return to the Rockies.&nbsp; I wonder not that in times
+past the Indians saw in them the home of the gods, or that there
+the scientist discovers in them the source of the whirlwind or
+the storm.</p>
+<p>I am again train-bound.&nbsp; No one knows when we may have a
+train from the east, and till we have one it is impossible for me
+to get away.&nbsp; Physically, perhaps, this is a good thing for
+me, as it enables me to recuperate.&nbsp; Here I am, 5,000 or
+6,000 feet above the level of the <a name="page205"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 205</span>sea, breathing mountain air, and
+luxuriating in mountain scenery.&nbsp; Last night I slept in a
+caboose, and it was the best night&rsquo;s rest I have had for a
+long time.&nbsp; I went to bed at nine and was up again at
+five.&nbsp; Do my readers know what a caboose is?&nbsp; It is a
+railway luggage-car on wheels.&nbsp; Mine is rather a superior
+one, and has an upper and a lower chamber, and has in the upper
+chamber a row of shelves, which do service as beds.&nbsp; I had
+one of these to myself, and, as I was well provided with
+blankets, did not much grieve at the absence of linen sheets.</p>
+<p>My dear old friend, Mrs. Moodie, wrote a capital book, called
+&lsquo;Roughing It in the Bush.&rsquo;&nbsp; Assuredly I may, one
+of these days, write one on roughing it in the Rockies, though
+the keeper of the caboose, out of respect for my age and
+infirmities, does all he can to make me comfortable.&nbsp;
+Already I feel the better for the air.&nbsp; For the first time
+since I have been in Canada I have felt hungry; for the <a
+name="page206"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 206</span>first time,
+also, since I have been in Canada I have not had to physic myself
+with chlorodyne.&nbsp; A month up here in the Rockies would make
+a young man of me or of anyone else.&nbsp; I must be off before I
+become as gay as a horse fed on beans.&nbsp; This is, I take it,
+the real and sufficient reason of the peculiar spirits of the
+mountaineers, who rather alarmed me with their liveliness at
+Calgary.&nbsp; Their exuberance is due to air, and air
+alone.&nbsp; As I sit, a long row of mules files past; a man is
+riding at the head, the others follow with their burdens packed
+on their backs.&nbsp; He is a &lsquo;prospector,&rsquo; and is on
+his way to the other side.&nbsp; Already as many as a thousand
+such have gone the same road this summer.</p>
+<p>The mountains are full of wealth&mdash;in the shape of gold or
+silver, or coal or slate, or other precious commodities.&nbsp;
+Hitherto the cost of conveyance has kept people away.&nbsp; The
+opening of the C.P.R. will remove that inconvenience.&nbsp; They
+will have a chance now <a name="page207"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 207</span>of getting rid of their minerals,
+when discovered, and of fetching up their stores from the East at
+less expense.&nbsp; As it is, things are dear enough in Holt
+City.&nbsp; For instance, if I send or receive a letter, I have
+to pay the postmaster a few cents in addition to the usual
+postage-stamp.&nbsp; Calgary I thought bad enough, but up here
+prices may be quoted as much higher.&nbsp; Yesterday I had a ride
+over the mountains.&nbsp; It will be long before I take such a
+ride again.&nbsp; No English coachman would drive such a road for
+five hundred a year.&nbsp; No English carriage could stand it,
+nor English horses either.&nbsp; I expected the buggy, as it was
+called, to be shattered into atoms every minute&mdash;it looked
+so light and frail, and the horses&mdash;a handsome pair, the
+property of Mr. Ross&mdash;to be ruined for life; yet we got
+safely to the front&mdash;where the men are hard at work cutting
+down trees, removing earth, tunnelling, and pushing on the work
+with all their might; and there, I must say, there are <a
+name="page208"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 208</span>openings
+for any number of men who like to come out.&nbsp; Last year
+little was done in the winter, because the contractors believed
+the climate would be against them.&nbsp; No one before then had
+wintered in the Rockies, and everyone believed the climate to be
+much worse than it really is.</p>
+<p>But to return to the ride.&nbsp; I yet feel it in every bone
+in my body, as all the time I had to hold on to my seat like grim
+death.&nbsp; Sometimes the coachman was high above me; sometimes
+I was at the top and he at the bottom; now we were deep in the
+mud, the next moment high and dry on a formidable boulder, bigger
+than a hogshead, and came down with a bang, which sent me
+quivering all over.&nbsp; Here we were with the water up to the
+floor; and then we came on a mudbank quite as deep.&nbsp; Not an
+inch of the ground was level.&nbsp; It was all collar work or the
+reverse.&nbsp; Fortunately we were shaded by the firs which climb
+all the mountains out <a name="page209"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 209</span>here, or the heat would have been
+unbearable.&nbsp; As to conversation, that was quite out of the
+question, though the &lsquo;boy&rsquo; who drove me came when a
+child from Devonshire, and had a strong wish to see the old
+country again, of whose lanes, yellow with primroses, and
+cottages bright with roses and honeysuckles, and farmhouses green
+with ivy, he had a very vivid recollection.&nbsp; He made a lot
+of money, he said.&nbsp; Indeed, he had more than he knew what to
+do with.&nbsp; Last winter, for instance, he stopped a month in
+Winnipeg, and spent there four hundred dollars.&nbsp; &lsquo;How
+did it all go?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh! in treating the
+boys!&rsquo; was his answer.&nbsp; I rather intimated that was a
+poor way of using his money.&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh!&rsquo; said he,
+&lsquo;they all do it.&nbsp; That is the way of the boys in this
+country!&rsquo;&nbsp; I was glad to hear him say that he thought
+of taking a farm soon, and was putting by the money for that
+purpose.&nbsp; The Rocky Mountains cannot be a bad place for a
+&lsquo;boy.&rsquo;&nbsp; One of them yesterday <a
+name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 210</span>told me how
+he had vainly written to his father to come out, who was now in
+the old country breaking stones on the road.&nbsp; Here, at any
+rate, he would have been better off.&nbsp; It is a long journey,
+I know, for the British emigrant.&nbsp; We are more than 1,000
+miles from Winnipeg, and the ride is a dreary one till you reach
+the Rockies.&nbsp; The run to Winnipeg from Toronto by Port
+Arthur and Owen Sound is a real enjoyment.&nbsp; It took us two
+days and two nights to reach Port Arthur from Toronto, and the
+trip from Port Arthur to Winnipeg is accomplished easily in
+twenty hours.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Any bears about here?&rsquo; said I to the
+&lsquo;boy,&rsquo; in one of the few minutes allowed for
+conversation in the course of our rough ride yesterday.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Not many.&nbsp; I seed one near where we are
+passing.&nbsp; He was a black bear, and stood up and looked at
+me, and then I looked at him.&nbsp; I wished I&rsquo;d had a gun,
+and then I would have shot him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+211</span>Fortunately I saw no bear, black or brown, in the woods
+as we drove amongst them; scarcely a bird&mdash;only one, an owl
+I think, on the top of a tree, which never moved, though we were
+close upon it.&nbsp; &lsquo;Do you make any difference in work on
+Sunday?&rsquo; I asked of one of the men.&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh no;
+Sunday ain&rsquo;t of much account here.&rsquo;&nbsp; This is to
+be regretted, if only for physical considerations.&nbsp; Everyone
+can work all the better for a day of rest.&nbsp; Again, I think
+the C.P.R. injures itself in this way, that it may lose the
+services of useful men who like to keep the Sabbath, either from
+physical or religious considerations.&nbsp; As a matter of fact,
+I found many did take a rest on Sunday, and it was amusing to see
+how the morning was devoted to haircutting and shaving and
+mending clothes in the open air.&nbsp; A man, I know, can spend
+his Sunday at honest work better than in drinking.&nbsp; But when
+we think of the wild life of the miners and navvies in the <a
+name="page212"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 212</span>ends of the
+earth&mdash;a life so wild that the C.P.R. has got a law passed
+to forbid the sale of intoxicating drink, and people are appalled
+when they read, in spite of the law, whisky is supplied to men
+who have a large number of revolvers at their side&mdash;it seems
+that a little provision might be made for the religious wants of
+the community.&nbsp; The philosopher will laugh, I admit.&nbsp;
+My reply is: Men were lifted out of degradation by the Christian
+religion in some form or other, and as we root that out we may
+expect society to retrograde.&nbsp; These men to the front will
+pay for looking after.&nbsp; They are fine fellows mostly.&nbsp;
+At any rate, they are the pioneers of modern civilization, and
+should be reverenced as such.&nbsp; They are to be honoured for
+their work&rsquo;s sake.&nbsp; They plant, we gather the
+fruit.&nbsp; They sow the seed, we reap the harvest, and their
+work remains a monument of perseverance, of the benefits of the
+Union, of enterprise, and capital and skill.&nbsp; That <a
+name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 213</span>Canada has
+thus carried the railway and the telegraph across the Rockies
+shows that England and America will have to look to their
+industrial laurels.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p>I am alive, I am thankful to say; but it seems to me that I
+should have left my bones on the Kicking Horse Lake, which lies
+on the slope of the Rockies, situated in British Columbia, where
+the scenery becomes grander and the air balmier as it comes up
+laden with the soft breeze of the Pacific.&nbsp; You see that at
+once in the superior size of the trees which clothe the sides of
+that part of the Rockies.</p>
+<p>As far as what the navvies call the front, I had the benefit
+of the temporary railway by which Mr. Ross sends his
+labourers.&nbsp; It is then the great difficulties of the work
+commence, as the rocks are tremendous, and one of the tunnels
+making will be three-quarters of a mile long.</p>
+<p><a name="page214"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 214</span>This
+hot weather I can scarce imagine how the men and horses stand the
+work; of the former, some were digging, others cutting down the
+trees, others removing rocks, others filling up the swamps.&nbsp;
+Here the waggons were being laden with stores to be sent further
+to the front; now and then a long trail of mules sweeps by with
+miners and miners&rsquo; stores, and I plunge into the forest,
+shaded from the fierce sun by the tall firs, and as I struggle in
+the swamps caused by the melting snows, I can realize something
+of the hardships of the early travellers&mdash;hardships of which
+the tourist, when the rail is completed, will have no idea,
+though he will be a little alarmed as the mountains drop away
+beneath his feet for more than a hundred miles to the Columbia
+river, while the narrow track of rails winds along its
+sides.&nbsp; In the winter this pass, when covered with snow, is
+very dangerous, and many are the mules and horses dashed to
+pieces over the precipice.</p>
+<p><a name="page215"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 215</span>The
+lake, when I reach it, is full of ice and snow, and all round the
+mountains rear their snow-capped heads.&nbsp; One of the
+peculiarities of this region is the abundance of water in some
+shape or other, and the shadows on the lakes reflect as a mirror
+all the surrounding scene&mdash;the dark forest at the base, the
+masses of slate-like rock above, the snow in all its radiant
+white higher up, the unclouded azure that crowns and glorifies
+all.</p>
+<p>Heated and tired, I throw myself on the moss, and realize, in
+all its intensity, the appalling loneliness of forest
+life&mdash;I startle three wild ducks, that is all.&nbsp; Down on
+my left comes the rushing torrent in a series of picturesque
+waterfalls into the lake.&nbsp; I climb the mountain by the side
+of them.&nbsp; The water sends to me an ice-laden air, which
+revives me as I struggle upwards and onwards, watching the
+whirlpools and cascades as the water angrily struggles to force
+its way through the iron barriers by which it is <a
+name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 216</span>hemmed
+in.&nbsp; I secure a fine specimen of petrified moss from a
+stream close by.&nbsp; But I may not linger.&nbsp; Already I feel
+weak as I plunge into the frozen snow, or sink where the sun has
+melted it into morass, or stumble over an old moss-grown trunk,
+or climb the big trunks which the axeman has already levelled, or
+pass the streams which intersect the plain on logs off which I
+expect to slip every moment.&nbsp; Then I come to the railway
+men, and avail myself of the imperfect and unconnected track
+which they have formed; but now the sun beats fiercely on me, and
+I can scarcely put one foot before another.&nbsp; The spirit is
+willing, but the flesh is weak.&nbsp; Fortunately, I reach the
+tent of a good Samaritan.&nbsp; I refresh myself with water from
+the crystal stream.&nbsp; I lunch on bread and cheese, with tea
+kindly fetched from the company&rsquo;s hut, but I have to lie
+down three hours before I feel myself equal to urging on my wild
+career again.</p>
+<p><a name="page217"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+217</span>British Columbia seems at present to be chiefly
+occupied by miners.&nbsp; No other kind of emigrants are needed
+there.&nbsp; The country is mountainous&mdash;a regular sea of
+mountains; but, writes an occasional correspondent of <i>The
+Toronto Mail</i>, &lsquo;there are beautiful valleys, far
+surpassing anything you have in Ontario, and the mountains and
+hills furnish pasture.&nbsp; Considering the climate, the rich
+soil, and the high price paid for all farming produce, I believe
+there cannot be a more desirable place for the farmer.&nbsp; I
+have no hesitation in saying that a farm of fifty acres is worth
+more than a hundred in the East.&nbsp; All you have to do is to
+sow your land with good seed and you are sure of a bountiful
+return.&nbsp; No weevil, midge, wire-worm, potato bug, nor, in
+fact, any farmers&rsquo; pests, exist here.&nbsp; There are no
+scorching hot days and sultry nights; no heavy frost or deep snow
+to impede work; consequently you are not driven like a slave for
+six months and frozen <a name="page218"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 218</span>in for the other six, but have
+steady work all the year round.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Other writers bear a similar testimony.&nbsp; With all its
+advantages, however, the country has one drawback&mdash;the
+scarcity and high price of labour.&nbsp; It seems well looked
+after by the Episcopalians, who have a Bishop here and several
+clergymen, and, as I may suppose the other denominations are
+equally in earnest and equally active, it is clear settlers may
+enjoy the advantages of the forms of religious life with which
+they are familiar, and under which they have been reared.</p>
+<p>British Columbia, which entered the Canadian Confederation in
+1871, is the most westerly of the Canadian Provinces.&nbsp; It
+has a coast-line on the Pacific Ocean of about 600 miles, that
+is, in a straight line.&nbsp; If its almost innumerable
+indentations and bays were measured, the coast-line would extend
+to several thousands of miles.</p>
+<p>The area of the Province, according to the <a
+name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 219</span>Census
+measurement, is 341,305 square miles.&nbsp; Its position on the
+American continent is one of great commercial importance, and its
+resources are in keeping with its position.&nbsp; If it were to
+be described from the characteristics of its climate, its mineral
+wealth, and its natural commercial relations, it might be said to
+be the Great Britain and California combined of the Dominion of
+Canada.</p>
+<p>The Province is divided into two parts: the Islands, of which
+Vancouver is the principal, and the Mainland.&nbsp; Vancouver is
+about 300 miles long, with an average breadth of about sixty
+miles, containing an area of about 20,000 square miles.</p>
+<p>British Columbia has numerous harbours and rivers, some of
+which are of importance, and all are remarkable for their
+bountiful, in fact wonderful, supplies of fish.&nbsp; The scenery
+which it possesses is magnificently beautiful.</p>
+<p>The climate on the coast is more equable and much milder in
+winter than in any other <a name="page220"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 220</span>part of Canada; but as the mountains
+are ascended, greater cold prevails, with more snow, and the
+characteristics of greater dryness of atmosphere which mark the
+climate of the interior of the continent are found.</p>
+<p>The population of British Columbia, by the Census of 1881, did
+not exceed 49,459, of which 25,661 were Indians.&nbsp; This
+comparatively sparse population is due to the hitherto isolated
+position of the Province; but now that railway communication
+between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans through the Dominion of
+Canada is being rapidly pushed forward to completion by a route
+which offers the easiest gradients and the most important natural
+commercial advantages of any possible line across the continent
+of America, the inducements the Province offers to settlers are
+beginning to attract the attention, as well of the emigrating
+classes of the Old World, as of the migrating classes of this
+continent; and population is already beginning to flow <a
+name="page221"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 221</span>rapidly
+in.&nbsp; It is beyond doubt that the percentage of increase
+which will be shown at the next decennial Census will be a
+statistical fact to excite men&rsquo;s wonder.&nbsp; Its
+fisheries, its forests, its mineral resources, will provide work
+for thousands who are starving at home.&nbsp; And it will be
+easily reached when the Canadian Pacific Railway is
+completed.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p>I have now reached the end of my journey, and I sum up my
+emigration experiences.&nbsp; The emigrant, if strong and
+industrious, and ready to take advantage of opportunities, and
+not averse to roughing it, will be sure to find work; but he must
+be shy, if he has cash, of land schemers, and I would advise him,
+if he thinks of settling, not to be in a hurry about it, but to
+take time to look around.&nbsp; I have seen as fine farming
+country as anywhere in the world.&nbsp; I have seen other parts
+where no one can get a living.&nbsp; Amongst the emigrants I see
+many who must succeed anywhere, <a name="page222"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 222</span>and many who will go to the wall
+wherever they may be.</p>
+<p>Let me give you another illustration of the bursting of an
+emigration scheme.&nbsp; The London dailies often have
+advertisements offering for a certain bonus to provide young men
+with homes where farming in all its branches is taught.&nbsp; The
+London (Ont.) papers tell how a number of young fellows have been
+taken in in this way.&nbsp; They paid the advertisers sums from
+thirty pounds upwards, in addition to their passage money, the
+consideration being that on their arrival in Ontario they were to
+be placed on farms and kept there at the agent&rsquo;s
+expense.&nbsp; Of course, when they reached their journey&rsquo;s
+end, no farmers were to be found.&nbsp; If a young Englishman
+wishes to try farming in Canada, he cannot do better than hire
+himself to a farmer for a year or two and keep his money in his
+pocket for the purchase of a farm.</p>
+<p><a name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 223</span>But
+even then he must not buy a farm till he knows something about
+it, and he cannot be long out here before he will find out where
+the good land is.&nbsp; A Canadian whom I met at Calgary, told me
+that he knew a farm near Toronto which was regularly in the
+market every year.&nbsp; It is safe to be bought by an
+Englishman, who tries it for a time, gives it up in despair, and
+then it comes into the market again.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Are there any stones on the farm?&rsquo; asked an
+Englishman, after he had purchased his farm.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I only saw one,&rsquo; was the encouraging reply: and
+it was a truthful one.&nbsp; There was but one stone, but then it
+embraced the surface of the whole farm.</p>
+<p>The English purchaser must have his wits about him.&nbsp; Here
+he is by many regarded as a stranger, and they take him in.&nbsp;
+The poet tells us where ignorance is bliss &rsquo;tis folly to be
+wise.&nbsp; Ignorance is not bliss in <a name="page224"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 224</span>Canada, emigrants really must have
+their wits about them or they will suffer much.</p>
+<p>Near Moosomin there is some fine country where many English
+have settled.&nbsp; Only last week an Englishman selected a farm
+in that locality for a homestead.&nbsp; He at once proceeded
+there, having at considerable expense hired a conveyance for his
+wife and four children.&nbsp; When he got there he found the land
+already occupied.&nbsp; To add to his troubles, when he returned
+to Moosomin one of his children died; the result is that the wife
+has grown home-sick, the poor man disheartened; he wants to
+return to England, but he has already exhausted his means.&nbsp;
+This want of harmony between the land office and the guides,
+according to <i>The Manitoba Free Press</i>, is said to be of
+frequent occurrence.&nbsp; The Dominion Government ought to see
+to this.&nbsp; They are eager to promote emigration, but many
+such cases will make English farmers naturally a little reluctant
+to come out.</p>
+<h2><a name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+225</span>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">DANGERS OF THE ROCKIES.&mdash;PRAIRIE
+FIRES.&mdash;THE RETURN.&mdash;PORT ARTHUR.&mdash;MIGRANTS.</p>
+<p>There is a great deal of snow in the Rockies.&nbsp; In June
+that snow begins to melt.&nbsp; The result is, a violent body of
+water rushes down, which makes the railway people very
+uncomfortable.</p>
+<p>On Sunday I met the engine-driver of the train by which I was
+to travel east next morning.&nbsp; At Holt City it seems no one
+knows from what particular spot the train will start.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You won&rsquo;t start without me?&rsquo; I said.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No; I will look to see whether you are on
+board.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page226"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+226</span>&lsquo;But,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;you must leave at
+five, whether I am on board or not.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! as to that,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;no one can make
+me start before I am ready.&nbsp; But,&rsquo; said he,
+&lsquo;perhaps we may not get away at all.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+like the look of the bridge, and there is a deal of water
+about.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I smiled incredulously.&nbsp; Had not I seen, only an hour
+before, with my own eyes, a special train arrive from the west
+filled with labourers and freight?&nbsp; If that could cross in
+safety, surely our lighter train could do the same.</p>
+<p>Thus reasoning, I lay down with a light heart in my caboose,
+having invoked, not the saints, but every decent Christian I
+could find, to take care that I might be aroused at four p.m., in
+order that I might have a good wash before I started on my little
+run of 1,500 miles, as far as Port Arthur.</p>
+<p>Just as I was falling into the arms of Morpheus, to speak
+poetically&mdash;a habit to <a name="page227"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 227</span>which I was much given in my earlier
+days&mdash;a fellow-traveller came rushing into the caboose,
+saying timidly:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You&rsquo;d better get on board at once.&nbsp; The
+bridge has given way, and they may go across at once,&rsquo; and
+so saying, he left me in the dark.</p>
+<p>However, I managed to jump out of my bed, collect my luggage,
+and scramble down the plank, the only and somewhat perilous means
+of access to my caboose, and stumble along the confusing lines of
+railway by which Holt City is adorned, and climb up into a car,
+wondering much all the while why we should start at all, when the
+bridge had partly given way, or whether I had come all that
+distance merely to find a watery grave.&nbsp; In the car I found
+a company as grotesque and rough as any I had yet seen anywhere,
+discussing the situation with more or less earnestness.</p>
+<p>The bridge, I heard, was being repaired; <a
+name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 228</span>that was a
+comfort.&nbsp; But still no one knew when we should start.&nbsp;
+Now and then we moved a few feet forward, or a few feet backward;
+but, in reality, I believe we remained in the same position all
+night, and started at the usual hour next morning.&nbsp; But the
+horror of that night was something inexpressible.&nbsp; Sleep was
+quite out of the question.&nbsp; You can&rsquo;t sleep in an
+American railway-car unless you are a navvy or a
+contractor&mdash;who can sleep anywhere.&nbsp; In England, even
+in a third-class carriage, the chances are you can lie down at
+your full length and sleep.&nbsp; In Canada you can&rsquo;t do
+that, as the seats are too short.&nbsp; So there I sat, bolt
+upright, all through that tedious night, watching for the light
+of day, while my companions sat smoking and talking and
+expectorating.&nbsp; In a playful moment one of them suggested
+that they should all take off their boots.&nbsp; Fortunately the
+proposition did not meet with universal approval, and I was saved
+that horror.</p>
+<p><a name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 229</span>In
+the Rockies life is not all beer and &rsquo;baccy.&nbsp; One day
+there was an alarm of fire.&nbsp; It seems the woods are on fire
+all day long, and week after week.&nbsp; In this way much
+valuable timber is destroyed, and no one knows who does the
+mischief, or how it will terminate.&nbsp; Daily we saw the smoke
+of a forest fire; one day the flames came so close to Holt City
+that everyone was alarmed.&nbsp; If a spark or two reached the
+place where the explosives were stored, Holt City and all its
+inhabitants might have been blown to atoms.&nbsp; Down in the
+prairies fire does a vast amount of mischief to the settler, who
+awakes in the night to find his tent or house reduced to ashes,
+and all his worldly goods destroyed.&nbsp; Such cases are of
+frequent occurrence, especially at this season of the year, when
+the settler sets fire to the prairie before ploughing, or to
+insure a better crop of grass.&nbsp; One dark night, in
+particular, I remember the prairie fire lent quite a mournful
+grandeur to <a name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+230</span>the scene.&nbsp; Then there came a day I shall never
+forget as long as I live.&nbsp; A Canadian summer may have its
+peculiar charms, but I candidly own, not being a salamander, it
+is far too hot for me.&nbsp; On that particular day the heat was
+intense.&nbsp; It affected everyone.&nbsp; Those who dared drank
+gallons of iced water, others pulled off their coats and collars
+and lay down on the cushions with which the sleeping-car is
+plentifully provided, and went off to sleep.&nbsp; It was in vain
+one tried to pass away the time in smoking&mdash;it was too hot
+for that.&nbsp; Newspapers and cheap novels were all
+neglected&mdash;conversation was out of the question.&nbsp;
+Everyone seemed on the point of giving up the ghost.&nbsp; Even
+the blackie, who invariably acts as conductor to the
+sleeping-car&mdash;and who is about the only civil official (with
+the exception of the steamboat attendants, who are models of good
+behaviour) one meets in Canadian travel, seemed, thinly clad as
+he was, quite overcome.&nbsp; <a name="page231"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 231</span>The sun took all the colour out of
+his cheeks, and he became quite pale&mdash;almost white.</p>
+<p>In the course of our return journey we stopped at Moose Jaw
+for supper, and then I witnessed a new development of prairie
+life in the shape of a thunder-storm, which seemed to me
+unusually vivid and protracted.&nbsp; The lightning was grand as
+it swept over the wide sea of grass, making everything as bright
+as noon-day, and then all was dark again.&nbsp; It brought us a
+rain that had really healing in its wings.&nbsp; While the heat
+lasted I was a martyr to prickly heat.&nbsp; It seemed to me that
+I was going to have small-pox or measles.&nbsp; I had little
+pimples all over me, and as to my wrists, they were really
+painful, and I could not keep from scratching with a vivacity
+which a Scotchman might have envied.&nbsp; Was it that vulgar
+disease to which, it is said, the gallant Scot is peculiarly
+liable?&nbsp; I could not say.&nbsp; I had shaken hands with <a
+name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 232</span>so many
+filthy Indians, and it might be that, as I learn they are much
+afflicted in that way.&nbsp; Happily the thunder-storm cooled the
+air, and I felt all the better for it.&nbsp; When I got as far as
+Port Arthur, and inhaled the cool air of Lake Superior, I
+suffered no more from unpleasant irritation of the skin.&nbsp; It
+was with joy I embarked on the C.P.R.&rsquo;s fine steamer, the
+<i>Alberta</i>, for Owen Sound.&nbsp; But even travelling on Lake
+Superior has its disadvantages.&nbsp; The water of the Lake is
+intensely cold, and when the sun beats fiercely on it there is
+sure to be a fog.&nbsp; Such happened to be the case on my
+return, and we ploughed slowly along for a while, seeing hardly
+anything of the beauty of the scene, while every few minutes we
+were cheered by the dismal notes of the fog-horn.&nbsp;
+Fortunately the fog lifted, and then what a display we had of
+islands, green as emerald, on the tranquil sea!&nbsp; I must add,
+also, I had good company everywhere, with the exception of <a
+name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 233</span>the great
+Sir John M&rsquo;Neill, who had his meals apart from us at a
+table all to himself, and an English clergyman from
+Staffordshire, whom a Canadian gentleman described to me as
+&lsquo;a regular crank,&rsquo; whatever that may mean.&nbsp; The
+parson is going to write a book, so he tells the people; but he
+shuns me, which is a pity, as I met a friend at Calgary who told
+me they had great fun with the parson on their way up from
+Winnipeg, telling him all sorts of cock-and-bull stories, which
+he greedily entered in his note-book.</p>
+<p>I must give you one more sketch of a Canadian town as an
+illustration of the enterprise and pluck which are the main
+characteristics of the Canadian of to-day.&nbsp; If you look at
+the map, you will see Port Arthur is situated in Thunder Bay, and
+Thunder Bay, when you pass the rocky barrier by which it is
+encircled, opens out into Lake Superior.</p>
+<p>Thunder Bay is a sheet of water some 13 by 19 miles in area,
+sheltered from the wild <a name="page234"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 234</span>storms which sweep over the northern
+lakes by the Pie and Welcome Islands and the Thunder Cape on one
+side, and by the terraced bluffs of ever-green forest on the
+other; forming thus an unsurpassed harbour for extent and
+accommodation, and having claim to be what its admirers say it
+is, the prettiest of all the American Lakes.</p>
+<p>It is not an agricultural district that surrounds Port Arthur,
+though it is a fact that there are vast stretches of rich lands
+within its borders, including the Kamanistique and other valleys,
+on which at least 3,000 families could settle and get a good
+living by agriculture.</p>
+<p>The timber resources of the surrounding country, which must
+find its centre and point of collection in the quiet waters of
+the bay, comprise thousands of square miles of spruce and other
+trees; while iron, copper, zinc, and silver are to be found in
+the neighbouring <a name="page235"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+235</span>rocks.&nbsp; Gold also is said to be hidden in the
+bowels of the earth; though not yet discovered in paying
+quantities.&nbsp; However this may be, one thing is clear, that
+from Thunder Bay the whole agricultural exports of the countless
+fertile acres of the Canadian North-West must find an
+outlet.&nbsp; Truly did the Marquis of Lorne, when here, describe
+it as &lsquo;The Silver Gate.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Port Arthur&mdash;as it was termed when Sir Garnet Wolseley
+arrived here on his way to suppress the Riel revolt in the
+North-West, out of compliment to the Duke of Connaught&mdash;is
+in reality one of the few places in Canada that have a
+history.&nbsp; As early as the beginning of the sixteenth
+century, some of the French settlers had formed an idea that the
+great Lake Superior was a highway to the vast fur-producing
+countries of the North-West, although not till 1641 did any white
+man venture upon its waters.&nbsp; In 1678 a Frenchman built
+himself a house in the vicinity of <a name="page236"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 236</span>Port Arthur, and commenced trading
+with the surrounding Indians for their furs.</p>
+<p>In 1857 the attention of the Canadian Government was called to
+the spot, and they sent out commissioners to explore, who, in
+1859, published a report which created quite a sensation all over
+Canada.&nbsp; In due time the C.P.R., which is the great
+mainspring of all the North-West, took up Port Arthur, had all
+their stores and men carted there, and now Port Arthur has a
+grand future before it, of which it is impossible to predict the
+whole extent.&nbsp; I have great faith in Port Arthur.&nbsp; It
+must in time be another Montreal or Toronto.&nbsp; Moose Jaw is
+going down.&nbsp; It will be long before Calgary will be much of
+a place.&nbsp; The Silver City is half deserted; and at Winnipeg
+the boom has burst and bankruptcy prevails; but Port Arthur is
+bound to go ahead.</p>
+<p>I spent there a night on my return, and saw a marvellous
+change&mdash;even since my visit <a name="page237"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 237</span>there a fortnight previously.&nbsp;
+Then people were hard at work putting up wooden shops; now those
+shops are fitted up with glass fronts, and already filled with
+merchandise from all quarters of the earth, though in many cases
+the upper parts of the building are in an incomplete state.&nbsp;
+Every day ships arrive from the American side; thus, within a
+couple of days previous to my arrival, 20,000 tons of coal had
+been landed.&nbsp; There are steamers of all sorts and sizes in
+the harbour, constantly coming in or going out.&nbsp; On one side
+a new elevator has been erected, on the other side is a great
+store of lumber and a saw-mill.</p>
+<p>Yesterday Port Arthur was a township, now it is incorporated
+as a city, and rejoices in a mayor.&nbsp; The place is full of
+hotels, which charge high prices, give very little for the money,
+and do a roaring trade.&nbsp; A very handsome English church is
+being erected; just by, the Presbyterians are building one
+equally handsome, only a little smaller.&nbsp; The <a
+name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 238</span>Roman
+Catholics make quite a grand show with their brick church and
+convent and schools, while the Methodists have a very plain and
+ugly imitation of an English church, with its steeple all in wood
+and painted white, which attests, at any rate, if not their
+taste, their influence and wealth.&nbsp; I visited the
+school-room, which was filled with bright and well-fed boys and
+girls, where the children are taught free, as they are all over
+Canada&mdash;where they have, by-the-bye, a compulsory law, which
+is never enforced, as it is impossible to do so.&nbsp; And then I
+made my way to the best-looking building in the town&mdash;the
+emigrants&rsquo; shed&mdash;where already 3,600 emigrants have
+this season been lodged gratis by the Dominion Government
+previous to their passing onwards to the North-West.</p>
+<p>People tell me there is no room for mechanics in Canada.&nbsp;
+In Port Arthur I see them in constant demand.&nbsp; At one shop
+window I see a notice to the effect that 10 carpenters are <a
+name="page239"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 239</span>required,
+at another a demand for painters, while a third shop window seeks
+to secure good tinsmiths.&nbsp; At the chief draper&rsquo;s shop
+there is a notice stating four good assistants are
+required.&nbsp; What a pity the discontented men whom I left at
+Montreal, because work was not offered them immediately they
+landed, did not come thus far!&nbsp; As to rockmen and labourers,
+they are wanted by the hundred.&nbsp; Surely, Port Arthur must be
+a good place for the working man and the working girl.&nbsp; Even
+at Calgary they were paying the female helps at the
+hotel&mdash;as sour a set as I ever saw&mdash;and who were
+constantly quarrelling with John Smith, the Chinaman
+cook&mdash;as much as 40 dollars a month.&nbsp; But even out here
+a man must have brains.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I came out here seven years ago,&rsquo; said a
+gentleman to me as we sat on one of the rocks which line Port
+Arthur, &lsquo;and could find nothing to do.&nbsp; I was brought
+up in a foundry, and had saved 1,100 dollars.&nbsp; I went all
+round; <a name="page240"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+240</span>no one could give me a job.&nbsp; Then I began buying a
+few hides; this brought me into contact with a great fur merchant
+at Chicago&mdash;he employed me as his agent at 80 dollars a
+month.&nbsp; Then I gave that up and turned miller, and the year
+before last I traded to the extent of a quarter of a million
+dollars.&nbsp; Last year I was too eager, and lost a lot of
+money; but this year I hope to get it all back again.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Why cannot an English emigrant be equally successful?&nbsp; Is
+it because we do not send out the right sort of men?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;There is not one man in a hundred that comes out here
+from London who is of any use,&rsquo; said an old Toronto
+trader&mdash;himself an Englishman&mdash;to me.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+never call myself an Englishman,&rsquo; said he.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;When I go to London I always say I am a Canadian.&nbsp; I
+am ashamed of the name of Englishman.&nbsp; What would Sir Garnet
+Wolseley have done when he was here had it not have been for the
+Canadian Volunteers?&rsquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 241</span>I am
+glad to hear, however, that he had nothing but praise for the
+Scotch settlers Lady Cathcart was sending out.&nbsp; She advances
+them money, and they pay her back a good rate of interest.&nbsp;
+Why cannot other people do the same?&nbsp; Another question,
+also, may be asked: Why cannot certain Canadian land companies,
+who really offer purchasers a fair bargain, put up a few houses
+on their separate farms?&nbsp; The settler has to build his house
+under every disadvantage.&nbsp; I am sure they could build the
+houses by contract at half the expense; and they could have a
+mortgage on the farm, which would ensure them in every case
+against loss, and which might add materially to their profits as
+well.</p>
+<p>If the crops this year turn out well in the North-West, and,
+according to present prospects, there is every reason to suppose
+they will, the farmers will pour into the country in a way which
+they have never done before, and the prosperity of the North-West
+will be <a name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+242</span>placed on a solid basis.&nbsp; Be that as it may, there
+are bright days in store for Port Arthur.</p>
+<p>On the green forest, rising up above the town and overlooking
+Thunder Bay, it is intended to build a first-class summer hotel
+for the comfort of holiday makers and health seekers.&nbsp; There
+the visitor will enjoy fine cool air in the sultry heat of
+summer, while bathing in the lake will invigorate his enfeebled
+frame.&nbsp; The waters abound with fish.&nbsp; Islands and lakes
+and rivers tempt the yachtsman.&nbsp; If the workmen who squander
+their hard-earned wages in reckless drunkenness would but learn
+to be sober, few places on the Canadian lakes would be more
+enjoyable than Port Arthur.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p242.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Thunder Bay, Lake Superior"
+title=
+"Thunder Bay, Lake Superior"
+src="images/p242.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>I cannot leave Canada without speaking of its Grand Trunk
+Railway, which meets the emigrant at Port Levi when he lands at
+Quebec, and which he will undoubtedly often patronise if he
+tarries long in the land.&nbsp; It has built the Victoria Bridge
+at Montreal, one <a name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+243</span>of the wonders of Canada&mdash;a tubular structure of
+magnificent proportions, which spans the St. Lawrence, and gives
+uninterrupted communication to the western traffic with that of
+the United States.&nbsp; Including the abutments, the bridge is
+9,084 feet in length.&nbsp; The tubes rest on twenty-four piers,
+the main tubes being sixty feet above the level of the
+river.&nbsp; It may well be called the Grand Trunk Railway, as it
+operates under one management over six thousand miles of
+first-class railway road.&nbsp; Having close connection at Port
+Huron, Detroit and Chicago with the principal Western American
+lines, it offers great advantages to emigrants to all parts of
+the compass.&nbsp; At Montreal I had the pleasure of a long chat
+with Mr. Joseph Hickson, the general manager, who takes a deep
+interest in the subject of emigration, and Mr. W. Wainwright, the
+assistant-manager, to whom I am indebted and grateful for many
+acts of kindness, especially welcome to the <a
+name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 244</span>stranger in
+a strange land.&nbsp; It is the Grand Trunk that takes the
+traveller over Niagara Falls&mdash;on the International
+Suspension Bridge connecting the Canadian Railways with those of
+the States.&nbsp; This structure, which is 250 feet above the
+water, commands a fine view up to the Falls.&nbsp; It is to be
+feared that as long as Canada and the United States have separate
+tariffs there will be not a little smuggling along this
+bridge.&nbsp; When I was there I heard of a Canadian judge, who
+with his family had been stopping at one or other of the hotels
+on the Canadian side.&nbsp; One fine morning some of the ladies
+of the party walked off to the American side, and returned laden
+with bargains which had paid no duty.&nbsp; In their innocence
+they boasted of the little transaction to the judge.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;How can I,&rsquo; said he indignantly, &lsquo;punish
+people for smuggling, if I find my own family do it?&rsquo; and
+the ladies had to pay the duty, so the story goes, after all.</p>
+<h2><a name="page245"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+245</span>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">BACK TO ENGLAND.&mdash;CANADIAN
+HOSPITALITY.&mdash;THE ASSYRIAN MONARCH.&mdash;HOME.</p>
+<p>My time was up, and I had to be off, after we got a look at
+pleasant London in the wood, as my Canadian friends who have been
+to England call it.&nbsp; I came back from Chicago to New York,
+and had again to encounter the horrors of nights in a Pullman
+sleeping-car.&nbsp; Why cannot the railway authorities separate
+the part of the car devoted to the gentlemen from that part
+inhabited by the ladies?&nbsp; The way in which the sexes are
+mixed up at night is, to say the least, unpleasant.&nbsp; I shall
+never forget my last experience in a Pullman sleeping-car.&nbsp;
+An <a name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+246</span>ancient dame with blue spectacles, my
+<i>vis-&agrave;-vis</i>, as the shades of evening came on, gave
+me the horrors.&nbsp; In my despair I began undressing, thinking
+that the outraged female would rush away in disgust.&nbsp; Alas!
+she had stronger nerves than I calculated, and there she sat
+gazing serenely with her tinted orbs till I plunged myself behind
+my curtained berth, to encounter, early in the morning, once more
+those eyes.</p>
+<p>New York and Boston are full of fairy forms.&nbsp; Why
+don&rsquo;t they travel?&nbsp; The change would be pleasant for
+sore eyes like mine.</p>
+<p>No wonder I sat all that night thinking of the great kindness
+I had received in Canada, and regretting especially that I had
+refused an invitation to dine that evening at the home of one of
+the leading barristers of Toronto, to meet some clergymen there
+who were familiar with my name, and who wished to meet me.</p>
+<p>Surely I did wrong to leave Toronto, with <a
+name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 247</span>all its
+friendly faces and kindly hearts.&nbsp; It will be long ere I
+cease to remember how the Canadians made me at home, as I met
+them on the rail, or on the boat, or in the hotel.</p>
+<p>Said a London Evangelist to me: &lsquo;You will find the
+Canadians a cold people, who will show you no hospitality.&nbsp;
+While I was there not one of them invited me to have a cup of
+tea.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>All I can say is, I found the Canadians quite the
+reverse.&nbsp; But then my friend went on a mission, and is a man
+of very serious views, while I travelled merely to see a land of
+whose wonders I had heard much, to talk to sinners as well as
+saints, and to learn from them what I could.</p>
+<p>I was a great reformer once myself, and had glorious visions
+which never came to pass.&nbsp; In youth we have all such
+dreams.&nbsp; Now, as the days darken round me and the years, I
+seek to put up with the shortcomings of my brother-man, trusting
+that he in his <a name="page248"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+248</span>Christian charity may extend a similar forbearance to
+my own.</p>
+<p>I came back in the <i>Assyrian Monarch</i>.&nbsp; I was glad I
+did so.&nbsp; That fine ship has a distinguished record.&nbsp; It
+has carried no end of theatricals to New York; it did the same
+kind office for Jumbo: it carried troops and horses to Egypt; and
+when we English undertook to punish Arabi, it was a home for the
+refugees for a while.</p>
+<p>Perhaps we have no ship more noticeable than the <i>Assyrian
+Monarch</i>, belonging to the Monarch Line, which runs weekly, I
+fancy, between New York and London.</p>
+<p>It is a great treat in the fine weather to take that
+route.&nbsp; You are a little longer at sea&mdash;you glide along
+the south coast till you reach the Scilly Isles, and the ships of
+the company are all that can be desired.</p>
+<p>It is a great deal of trouble and expense to some to go with
+all their goods and chattels to Liverpool, then unpack them, and
+get them <a name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+249</span>down to the landing-stage, and then repack them in one
+or other of the far-famed steamers of that busy spot, and all
+this you save if you patronize the ships of the Monarch Line,
+which carry chiefly cargo, with a few saloon passengers as
+well.</p>
+<p>We had a very heavy cargo on board the <i>Assyrian Monarch</i>
+as we came back from New York.&nbsp; We carried 260 bullocks,
+besides cheese and grain, to make glad the heart and fill the
+stomach, and thus one felt that if the screw were to fail or the
+fog to hinder a rapid transit, there was corn in Egypt, and that
+there was something to fall back on.&nbsp; Happily, we were not
+driven to that alternative.&nbsp; We fared well in the saloon of
+the <i>Assyrian Monarch</i>; so well, indeed, that a poor elderly
+lady, who seemed at death&rsquo;s door when we started, became
+quite vigorous, comparatively speaking, by the time we ended our
+voyage.</p>
+<p>We had more freedom in the way of sitting <a
+name="page250"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 250</span>up late and
+having lights than is possible in a crowded passenger ship, and
+we came more into contact with the captain of the ship and his
+merry men.</p>
+<p>In the case of the <i>Assyrian Monarch</i> this was a great
+advantage, as Captain Harrison is a good companion as well as an
+able navigator, and I felt myself safe in his hands, that is, as
+far as anyone can be safe at sea.</p>
+<p>Further, I felt that the chances were in my favour.&nbsp; The
+<i>Assyrian Monarch</i> had carried over the Atlantic, in stormy
+weather, the highly-respected and ever-to-be-regretted by
+Londoners Jumbo; surely it could be trusted to perform the same
+kind office for myself in the summer season, when the air is
+still and the seas are calm; and so it did, though every now and
+then we encountered that greatest of all dangers at sea, fog,
+more or less dense, especially on the Banks of Newfoundland,
+where the ice-laden waters of the Arctic come in contact with the
+warmer waves of the Gulf <a name="page251"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 251</span>Stream.&nbsp; As our course was very
+fortunately much to the south, we had a good deal of the
+latter.</p>
+<p>That Gulf Stream was a revelation to me.&nbsp; When I took my
+morning bath it seemed as if I were in warm water, and the new
+forms of life it fostered and developed were particularly
+pleasant to a casual observer like myself.&nbsp; There one could
+see the nautilus, or the Portugeuse man-of-war, as it is
+familiarly termed, in the language of the poet,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Put out a tier of oars on either side,<br
+/>
+Spread to the wafting breeze a twofold sail,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and cruel, big-headed sharks, which, indeed, followed us
+almost all the way to England (the fact is that now, when so many
+cattle are thrown overboard, the Atlantic abounds with sharks),
+and lovely flying-fish like streaks of silver flashing along the
+deep and boundless blue ocean.&nbsp; Of these latter one flew on
+board.&nbsp; It met with a cruel fate.&nbsp; It was <a
+name="page252"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 252</span>eaten by
+the first officer of the <i>Assyrian Monarch</i> for
+breakfast.&nbsp; It ought to have choked him.&nbsp; It did
+nothing of the kind; he, hardened sinner that he was, enjoyed it
+greatly, and said that it was as good as a whiting.</p>
+<p>In the Gulf Stream we found the usual number of whales and
+porpoises.&nbsp; The latter would play around the bow or race
+along the side of the ship in considerable quantities of all
+sorts of sizes.&nbsp; There were other fish of which I know not
+the names to be seen occasionally leaping out of the water as
+high and repeatedly as possible, as if a shark were in their
+midst seeking whom he might devour.</p>
+<p>One sight I shall never forget in the Gulf Stream.&nbsp; It
+was that of a tortoise.&nbsp; I was leaning over the ship&rsquo;s
+side, when something big and round seemed to be coming to the
+surface.&nbsp; I could not make out what it was; then all at once
+the truth flashed upon me as <a name="page253"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 253</span>he wobbled along, paddling with his
+fins, his head erect, his little eyes peering at the ship as if
+he wondered what the dickens it was, and what business it had
+there.&nbsp; He seemed to be treading the water.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;I saw him but a moment,<br />
+But methinks I see him now.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The sight gave me quite an appetite, though my friend Sir
+Henry Thompson will insist upon it that turtle soup is made of
+conger-eel, but in the wide Atlantic one has time to think of
+such things; day by day passes and you see nothing but the
+ocean&mdash;not even a distant sail, or the smoke of a passing
+steamer.</p>
+<p>People complain of the uneventfulness of life on board a
+ship.&nbsp; That, however, is a matter of great
+thankfulness.&nbsp; A collision or a shipwreck are exciting, but
+they are disagreeable, nevertheless.&nbsp; It seems the homeward
+voyage is always the pleasantest as far <a
+name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 254</span>as the sea
+is concerned, the wind being more frequently in the west than in
+any other quarter.&nbsp; Perhaps that is one reason why the
+Americans are so ready to cross the Atlantic.&nbsp; When I left
+New York, Cook&rsquo;s office, in the Broadway, was full of
+tourists, including Mrs. Langtry and other distinguished
+personages.&nbsp; Mr. John Cook seems as popular in New York as
+he is elsewhere.&nbsp; Indeed, I was confidentially informed that
+he was engaged in organizing a personally-conducted tour for the
+relief of Gordon and the capture of the Mahdi, and I hear from
+Egypt that he has a chance of being made Khedive, a position
+which I am certain he would fill with credit to himself and
+advantage to the people.&nbsp; Of course, there is a little
+exaggeration in this, but the American tourist has good reason to
+revere the name of Cook, and so have we all.&nbsp; As much as
+anyone he has promoted travel between the Old World and the New,
+and has made us better friends.&nbsp; It is to <a
+name="page255"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 255</span>be hoped
+that every steamer that crosses the Atlantic does something
+similar.</p>
+<p>I must own, however, that the nearer I approached England the
+more I felt ashamed of my native land.&nbsp; The weather was
+villainous.&nbsp; It rained every day, and the worst of it was, I
+had had the audacity to assure the Americans on board that we had
+dry weather in England, that occasionally we saw the sun, and
+that we were not a web-footed race.&nbsp; Fortunately, at the
+time of writing this I have not yet encountered any of my
+American friends, or I should feel, as they say, uncommonly
+mean.&nbsp; However, the weather was fine enough to admit of a
+good look at Bishop&rsquo;s Rock, the name of the lighthouse at
+the Scilly Isles, where we got our first sight of land; you can
+imagine how we all rushed on deck to see that.&nbsp; In fine
+weather, I say, by all means return from America in one of the
+fine, steady, well-built ships of the Monarch Line.&nbsp; The
+scenery is <a name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+256</span>far finer than that offered by Queenstown and
+Liverpool.&nbsp; You have the Scilly Isles to look at, and the
+Land&rsquo;s End, and the Lizards.&nbsp; At Portland Bill we laid
+off till a pilot came on board, and we had a good look at the
+establishment where so many smart men are sent for a season, and
+Weymouth heading the distant bay; and then what a fine sweep you
+have up the Channel&mdash;crowded with craft of all kinds, from
+the eight thousand ton steamer to the frail and awkward fishing
+lugger&mdash;and round the Nore; whilst old towns and castles,
+speaking not alone of the living present, but of the dead and
+buried past, are to be seen.&nbsp; Even Americans, fond as they
+are of modern life, feel the charm of that; whilst to the
+returning traveller the landscape speaks of &lsquo;home, sweet
+home.&rsquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+257</span>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">COLONIZATION IN CANADA.</p>
+<p>I was glad to see, the other day, Mr. Morley&rsquo;s letter
+advocating the propriety of taking up land and settling on it
+some of the too numerous class who drift into our great cities,
+finding no work to do in the country, there to lead indifferent
+lives and come to an untimely end.</p>
+<p>It is a step I have repeatedly advocated.&nbsp; Land is cheap
+enough now; there is no occasion to wait for an Act of
+Parliament.&nbsp; It is as easy to buy an estate, and to split it
+up into small portions, of which each shareholder will become in
+time the proprietor, as to form a building society, and thus
+enable any man <a name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+258</span>to become his own landlord.&nbsp; But there are certain
+drawbacks.&nbsp; There is the parson to be dealt with, who will
+be sure to claim his higher tithes; there are burdens on
+property, of which the working man, who is told by Mr.
+Chamberlain that he is more heavily taxed than any other class of
+the community (is not the reverse of this the case?), has no
+idea; and last, and not least, there is the unfitness for peasant
+proprietorship of the average English workman, who has no idea of
+living on the scant fare of the peasant proprietor of Belgium or
+France, or, I fear, of working as hard.&nbsp; Granting, however,
+that he does, the great fact remains, that peasant proprietorship
+is no remedy for all the ills of life, and that France has its
+surplus population quite as badly off, and a great deal more
+difficult to deal with than our own.</p>
+<p>What is to be done to relieve the distress, the existence of
+which all must own and deplore?&nbsp; I answer, Emigrate.</p>
+<p><a name="page259"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+259</span>Emigration is the natural means of relieving the
+poverty of a nation.&nbsp; Every man is an emigrant.&nbsp; No one
+lives and dies in the village in which he was born.&nbsp; He
+finds his way to the neighbouring town in search of work; then to
+the great metropolis; then across the water to one or other of
+our colonies.</p>
+<p>Greece and Rome realized the fact that under no conditions
+could a certain tract of territory maintain more than a certain
+number of people, and had their settled plans of
+emigration.&nbsp; In England, at any rate since the days of the
+Pilgrim Fathers, we have too much left the matter to chance, and
+an ordinary emigrant, with the ordinary want of backbone, it
+seems to me, is just as likely to go to the dogs in New York, or
+Toronto, or Melbourne, as in London.&nbsp; What we want is what
+is now being attempted by the Society for Promoting Christian
+Knowledge, the leading members of which have established <a
+name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 260</span>a Church
+Colonization Land Society.&nbsp; Its object is to assist, in a
+practicable, businesslike manner, on a remunerative basis, the
+great and pressing work of emigration to the British colonies in
+connection with the Church of England.</p>
+<p>This society, I learn from a proof of a circular just placed
+in my hands, issued by Canon Prothero, the chairman, will, under
+proper safeguards, render temporary pecuniary aid in such cases
+as approve themselves to the council, take charge of the
+emigrants on the journey to the colony, provide for their
+settlement on lands selected, from those acquired by the society,
+provide temporary dwellings until the emigrants can put together
+their own (the materials for which may be bought ready to hand,
+or the society itself can erect dwellings for them), will break
+up the land if desired, and secure for the emigrant religious
+services similar to those enjoyed at home.</p>
+<p><a name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 261</span>The
+society have secured land in Manitoba, near the railway, which
+land has been selected by a practical farmer, a Yorkshireman, who
+is to act as local manager.&nbsp; The Society for Promoting
+Christian Knowledge have laid particular stress in looking after
+the spiritual welfare of emigrants in all our colonies; and in
+Liverpool, as some of my readers may be aware, the society have
+placed the Rev. J. Bridger, of St. Nicholas Church, as
+emigrants&rsquo; chaplain; chaplains have also been appointed at
+several other ports, such as Plymouth, Glasgow, Cork, and
+Londonderry; but, as is manifest, the great centre of emigration
+is Liverpool, and there Mr. Bridger finds his hands full.</p>
+<p>No pains are spared to show every attention to emigrants going
+from or arriving at Liverpool, and occasionally Mr. Bridger sails
+with the first party of emigrants to their new homes.&nbsp; It
+seems to me that the idea of the Church Colonization Society is
+the right <a name="page262"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+262</span>one; but that it might be further extended by sending
+out at the same time the schoolmaster, and the doctor, and the
+storekeeper, and the shoemaker, and tailor, and baker, and
+butcher, and thus forming a village community.</p>
+<p>It is at home impossible to realize the solitariness of the
+settler&rsquo;s life, far away from friends and the civilizing
+and elevating influences of home.&nbsp; I met men in the
+North-West who seemed to have almost lost the power of speech, so
+long had they been left on their homesteads alone.&nbsp;
+Emigration in communities would do away with this state of
+things.&nbsp; At present it is a serious sacrifice for a man with
+a family to emigrate into a new country.&nbsp; It is not good for
+man to be alone.&nbsp; As a rule, he degenerates on the prairie;
+civilization is the gift of towns to humanity.&nbsp; A man does
+not live on bread alone.&nbsp; He needs that his heart and head
+be stimulated by contact with his fellow-men; <a
+name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 263</span>not, as in
+the old country, in consequence of the extensive competition, by
+rivalry for the crust of bread, but by mutual aid and
+companionship in the great work of subduing the wilderness and
+making it to rejoice and blossom as the rose.</p>
+<p>In a month or two the emigration season will have commenced,
+and there is no time to spare.&nbsp; Why cannot other
+denominations do what the Church of England is now preparing to
+do?&nbsp; Canada can feed and fatten millions, who in England
+will have to live as a burden on the community.&nbsp; There is
+many a man who does ill here who would do well there.&nbsp; We
+are all more or less the creatures of circumstances.&nbsp; In
+England the beershop has degraded the community, and many a man
+finds it hard to get away from its foul companionship: here, he
+declines into a criminal or a sot; there, not only will he be
+neither the one nor the other, but he will develop all the better
+<a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+264</span>tendencies of his character, and become a man.&nbsp;
+Make him a peasant-proprietor at home, and the chances are the
+old Adam in him will be too strong.&nbsp; Plant him in a colony,
+he feels in a new world, with a new aim.&nbsp; Here, he is looked
+down on: there, he is hailed as a man and a brother.&nbsp; We who
+are old must stop at home; but there is no reason why our sons
+should do so.&nbsp; Why should a young man be a drudge because
+his father was a mere hewer of wood and drawer of water, when in
+a colony there are many ways of becoming well-off to a man who
+has good muscles and brains, has the sense to avail himself of
+opportunity when it occurs, and to keep his money in his
+pocket?&nbsp; I say Canada, because Canada is easy to get at, and
+is yet almost in a virgin state.&nbsp; It is only recently that
+it has been opened up by the Canadian Government and the Canadian
+Pacific Railway.&nbsp; I say Canada, because Canada is English,
+and I am an Englishman; <a name="page265"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 265</span>because the Canadian Government does
+all it can to help the emigrant; and because the Canadians are
+mostly healthy, honest men.&nbsp; Englishmen thrive there better,
+at any rate, than they do in the United States, or in South
+Africa.&nbsp; Arrangements for a colony can easily be made.&nbsp;
+In London, the Canadian Pacific Railway have a fine office in
+Cannon Street, where you can see for yourself what are the
+results of farming in the North-West, and where you will find its
+courteous and intelligent representative, Mr. Alexander Begg,
+whose only fault is that he will persist in maintaining that the
+English climate is killing him, and that he enjoys much better
+health in that frosty Canada, the cold of which is a bugbear that
+has kept too many away.&nbsp; Go to him, and he will tell you
+where to plant your colony.&nbsp; The money which is now
+squandered in keeping paupers at home surely might be better
+spent in forming village communities in the boundless <a
+name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 266</span>plains of
+the North-West.&nbsp; Let Dissenters imitate the Church.&nbsp;
+Let them have their communities as the Church of England seek to
+have theirs.&nbsp; Some people say the Salvationists are a
+nuisance in our crowded cities: let General Booth betake himself
+to Manitoba; he will find few people to complain of his
+processions there.</p>
+<p>But this is no subject to trifle about; day by day the poor
+are becoming poorer, and the middle-classes and the rich
+also.&nbsp; The leaders of the coming democracy seem unwilling to
+recognise that fact, and are angry when I tell them it is better
+to emigrate than to agitate in the old country for the ruin of
+the capitalist, the destruction of our trade, the abolition of
+the landlord, the advent of the working man&rsquo;s candidate,
+and the rights of man.&nbsp; Are they the friends of the poor who
+bid him stay where he is to cheapen the labour market, already
+overstocked; to crowd the cities with an unwholesome pauperism;
+<a name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 267</span>to see
+his sons ripen into thieves, and his daughters cast on the
+streets; and to look forward to the workhouse as the refuge of
+his old age?&nbsp; Even if we had a revolution as complete as
+that of France, what then?&nbsp; Over-population will breed
+sorrow and sickness and want and despair all the same.&nbsp; In
+Canada, the man who cares to work is sure of his reward; he has a
+future before him and his.</p>
+<p>I am glad to find, since the above was written, there has been
+formed by the Congregational Union a special emigration scheme,
+of which the Rev. Andrew Mearns, of the Memorial Hall, Farringdon
+Street, is Secretary, and that they have already sent out over a
+hundred qualified emigrants.&nbsp; The outfit and passage money
+of each man costs &pound;7, and it is proposed to give each
+&pound;2 when he arrives in Canada.&nbsp; The men to be selected
+are drawn from the ranks of the unemployed who are brought
+together at the various Mission <a name="page268"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 268</span>Halls.&nbsp; The case of each
+applicant is fully examined, and the men themselves are
+thoroughly tested as to their honest desire and ability to
+work.&nbsp; The men having been approved and their record found
+satisfactory, they are sent to the emigration agent of the
+colony, who also examines into the cases of the various
+applicants.&nbsp; This acceptance having been notified, the next
+and, perhaps, the greatest difficulty is to provide a temporary
+home for them in the colony to which they are to be sent.&nbsp;
+As the result of much labour, each man will be sent to the care
+of some gentleman in the colony, who will see that he is properly
+provided for, and started in a fair way to obtain work.&nbsp;
+They are thus going to various towns in the Dominion, such as
+Kingston, Ontario, Ottawa, Hamilton, London, Toronto, St.
+Thomas&rsquo;s, Bellville, and Guelph.&nbsp; Among those to whom
+introduction has been given are directors of railways, officers
+of Christian Associations, <a name="page269"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 269</span>gardeners, farmers, merchants, and
+various ministers of influence.&nbsp; It is almost unnecessary to
+add that the spiritual needs of the men have not been forgotten,
+and in the kit of each one have been packed a Bible, supplied by
+the kindness of the Bible Society&mdash;who have intimated their
+willingness to make a similar presentation to every man the Union
+sends out&mdash;and an assortment of suitable and practical
+religious literature.</p>
+<p>Thus far have I told the story of my Canadian
+experiences.&nbsp; Those who wish to fully pursue the subject
+will do well to get &lsquo;Picturesque Canada,&rsquo; now being
+published by Messrs. Cassell and Co.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the
+end</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapmediumline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">billing and
+sons</span>, <span class="smcap">printers</span>, <span
+class="smcap">guildford</span>, <span
+class="smcap">surrey</span>.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PICTURES OF CANADIAN LIFE***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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