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diff --git a/40143-8.txt b/40143-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..618181b --- /dev/null +++ b/40143-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,17528 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, by +Francis Parkman + +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: La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West + France and England in North America + +Author: Francis Parkman + +Release Date: July 4, 2012 [EBook #40143] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LA SALLE *** + + + + +Produced by Sharon Joiner, Christian Boissonnas, Charles +Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + + +----------------------------------------------------------------+ + | Transcriber's Note: | + | | + | * Obvious punctuation and spelling errors repaired. | + | Original spelling and its variations were not harmonized. | + | | + | * Footnotes were moved to the ends of the chapters in which | + | they belonged and numbered in one continuous sequence. | + | The pagination in index entries which referred to these | + | footnotes was not changed to match their new locations | + + and is therefore incorrect. | + +----------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + +Francis Parkman's Works. + +NEW LIBRARY EDITION. + +Vol. III. + + + + + FRANCIS PARKMAN'S WORKS. + + New Library Edition. + + Pioneers of France in the New World 1 vol. + + The Jesuits in North America 1 vol. + + La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West 1 vol. + + The Old Régime in Canada 1 vol. + + Count Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV. 1 vol. + + A Half Century of Conflict 2 vols. + + Montcalm and Wolfe 2 vols. + + The Conspiracy of Pontiac and the Indian War after + the Conquest of Canada 2 vols. + + The Oregon Trail 1 vol. + + + + +[Illustration] + +_La Salle Presenting a Petition to Louis XIV._ + +Drawn by Adrien Moreau. + +La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, _Frontispiece_ + + + + + LA SALLE + AND THE + DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST. + + FRANCE AND ENGLAND IN + NORTH AMERICA. + + Part Third. + + BY + FRANCIS PARKMAN. + + BOSTON: + LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. + 1908. + + + Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1869, by + Francis Parkman, + In the Clerk's Office + of the + District Court of the District of Massachusetts. + + Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1879, by + Francis Parkman, + In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. + + _Copyright, 1897,_ + By Little, Brown, and Company. + + _Copyright, 1897,_ + By Grace P. Coffin and Katharine S. Coolidge. + + _Copyright, 1907,_ + By Grace P. Coffin. + + Printers + S. J. Parkhill & Co., Boston, U. S. A. + + +TO + +THE CLASS OF 1844, + +Harvard College, + +THIS BOOK IS CORDIALLY DEDICATED + +BY ONE OF THEIR NUMBER. + + + + +PREFACE OF THE ELEVENTH EDITION. + + +When the earlier editions of this book were +published, I was aware of the existence of a collection +of documents relating to La Salle, and +containing important material to which I had +not succeeded in gaining access. This collection +was in possession of M. Pierre Margry, director +of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies at +Paris, and was the result of more than thirty +years of research. With rare assiduity and zeal, +M. Margry had explored not only the vast depository +with which he has been officially connected +from youth, and of which he is now the +chief, but also the other public archives of +France, and many private collections in Paris +and the provinces. The object of his search +was to throw light on the career and achievements +of French explorers, and, above all, of La +Salle. A collection of extraordinary richness +grew gradually upon his hands. In the course +of my own inquiries, I owed much to his friendly +aid; but his collections, as a whole, remained +inaccessible, since he naturally wished to be the +first to make known the results of his labors. +An attempt to induce Congress to furnish him +with the means of printing documents so interesting +to American history was made in 1870 +and 1871, by Henry Harrisse, Esq., aided by the +American minister at Paris; but it unfortunately +failed. + +In the summer and autumn of 1872, I had +numerous interviews with M. Margry, and at his +desire undertook to try to induce some American +bookseller to publish the collection. On returning +to the United States, I accordingly made +an arrangement with Messrs. Little, Brown & +Co., of Boston, by which they agreed to print +the papers if a certain number of subscriptions +should first be obtained. The condition proved +very difficult; and it became clear that the best +hope of success lay in another appeal to Congress. +This was made in the following winter, +in conjunction with Hon. E. B. Washburne; +Colonel Charles Whittlesey, of Cleveland; O. H. +Marshall, Esq., of Buffalo; and other gentlemen +interested in early American history. The attempt +succeeded. Congress made an appropriation +for the purchase of five hundred copies of +the work, to be printed at Paris, under direction +of M. Margry; and the three volumes devoted +to La Salle are at length before the public. + +Of the papers contained in them which I had +not before examined, the most interesting are +the letters of La Salle, found in the original by +M. Margry, among the immense accumulations +of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies and +the Bibliothèque Nationale. The narrative of +La Salle's companion, Joutel, far more copious +than the abstract printed in 1713, under the +title of "Journal Historique," also deserves +special mention. These, with other fresh material +in these three volumes, while they add new +facts and throw new light on the character of +La Salle, confirm nearly every statement made +in the first edition of the Discovery of the Great +West. The only exception of consequence relates +to the causes of La Salle's failure to find +the mouth of the Mississippi in 1684, and to the +conduct, on that occasion, of the naval commander, +Beaujeu. + +This edition is revised throughout, and in part +rewritten with large additions. A map of the +country traversed by the explorers is also added. +The name of La Salle is placed on the titlepage, +as seems to be demanded by his increased prominence +in the narrative of which he is the central +figure. + +Boston, 10 December, 1878. + + * * * * * + +Note.--The title of M. Margry's printed collection is "Découvertes +et Établissements des Français dans l'Ouest et dans le Sud +de l'Amérique Septentrionale (1614-1754), Mémoires et Documents +originaux." I., II., III. Besides the three volumes relating to La +Salle, there will be two others, relating to other explorers. In +accordance with the agreement with Congress, an independent edition +will appear in France, with an introduction setting forth the +circumstances of the publication. + + + + +PREFACE OF THE FIRST EDITION. + + +The discovery of the "Great West," or the +valleys of the Mississippi and the Lakes, is a +portion of our history hitherto very obscure. +Those magnificent regions were revealed to the +world through a series of daring enterprises, +of which the motives and even the incidents +have been but partially and superficially known. +The chief actor in them wrote much, but printed +nothing; and the published writings of his associates +stand wofully in need of interpretation +from the unpublished documents which exist, +but which have not heretofore been used as +material for history. + +This volume attempts to supply the defect. +Of the large amount of wholly new material +employed in it, by far the greater part is drawn +from the various public archives of France, and +the rest from private sources. The discovery of +many of these documents is due to the indefatigable +research of M. Pierre Margry, assistant +director of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies +at Paris, whose labors as an investigator of +the maritime and colonial history of France can +be appreciated only by those who have seen their +results. In the department of American colonial +history, these results have been invaluable; +for, besides several private collections made by +him, he rendered important service in the collection +of the French portion of the Brodhead documents, +selected and arranged the two great +series of colonial papers ordered by the Canadian +government, and prepared with vast labor analytical +indexes of these and of supplementary +documents in the French archives, as well as a +copious index of the mass of papers relating to +Louisiana. It is to be hoped that the valuable +publications on the maritime history of France +which have appeared from his pen are an earnest +of more extended contributions in future. + +The late President Sparks, some time after the +publication of his Life of La Salle, caused a +collection to be made of documents relating to +that explorer, with the intention of incorporating +them in a future edition. This intention +was never carried into effect, and the documents +were never used. With the liberality which +always distinguished him, he placed them at my +disposal, and this privilege has been kindly continued +by Mrs. Sparks. + +Abbé Faillon, the learned author of "La Colonie +Française en Canada," has sent me copies +of various documents found by him, including +family papers of La Salle. Among others who +in various ways have aided my inquiries are Dr. +John Paul, of Ottawa, Ill.; Count Adolphe de +Circourt, and M. Jules Marcou, of Paris; M. A. +Gérin Lajoie, Assistant Librarian of the Canadian +Parliament; M. J. M. Le Moine, of Quebec; +General Dix, Minister of the United States +at the Court of France; O. H. Marshall, of Buffalo; +J. G. Shea, of New York; Buckingham +Smith, of St. Augustine; and Colonel Thomas +Aspinwall, of Boston. + +The smaller map contained in the book is a +portion of the manuscript map of Franquelin, of +which an account will be found in the Appendix. + +The next volume of the series will be devoted +to the efforts of Monarchy and Feudalism under +Louis XIV. to establish a permanent power on +this continent, and to the stormy career of Louis +de Buade, Count of Frontenac. + +Boston, 16 September, 1869. + + + + + CONTENTS. + + + Page + + INTRODUCTION 3 + + + CHAPTER I. + + 1643-1669. + + CAVELIER DE LA SALLE. + + The Youth of La Salle: his Connection with the Jesuits; he goes to + Canada; his Character; his Schemes; his Seigniory at La Chine; his + Expedition in Search of a Western Passage to India. 7 + + + CHAPTER II. + + 1669-1671. + + LA SALLE AND THE SULPITIANS. + + The French in Western New York.--Louis Joliet.--The Sulpitians on Lake + Erie; at Detroit; at Saut Ste. Marie.--The Mystery of La Salle: he + discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he reach the 19 + Mississippi? + + + CHAPTER III. + + 1670-1672. + + THE JESUITS ON THE LAKES. + + The Old Missions and the New.--A Change of Spirit.--Lake Superior and + the Copper-mines.--Ste. Marie.--La Pointe.--Michilimackinac.--Jesuits + on Lake Michigan.--Allouez and Dablon.--The Jesuit Fur-trade. 36 + + + CHAPTER IV. + + 1667-1672. + + FRANCE TAKES POSSESSION OF THE WEST. + + Talon.--Saint-Lusson.--Perrot.--The Ceremony at Saut Ste. Marie.--The + Speech of Allouez.--Count Frontenac. 48 + + + CHAPTER V. + + 1672-1675. + + THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI. + + Joliet sent to find the Mississippi.--Jacques + Marquette.--Departure.--Green Bay.--The Wisconsin.--The + Mississippi.--Indians.--Manitous.--The Arkansas.--The + Illinois.--Joliet's Misfortune.--Marquette at Chicago: his Illness; + his Death. 57 + + + CHAPTER VI. + + 1673-1678. + + LA SALLE AND FRONTENAC. + + Objects of La Salle.--Frontenac favors him.--Projects of + Frontenac.--Cataraqui.--Frontenac on Lake Ontario.--Fort + Frontenac.--La Salle and Fénelon.--Success of La Salle: + his Enemies. 83 + + + CHAPTER VII. + + 1678. + + PARTY STRIFE. + + La Salle and his Reporter.--Jesuit Ascendency.--The Missions and the + Fur-trade.--Female Inquisitors.--Plots against La Salle: his Brother + the Priest.--Intrigues of the Jesuits.--La Salle poisoned: he + exculpates the Jesuits.--Renewed Intrigues. 106 + + + CHAPTER VIII. + + 1677, 1678. + + THE GRAND ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Fort Frontenac.--La Salle at Court: his + Memorial.--Approval of the King.--Money and Means.--Henri de + Tonty.--Return to Canada. 120 + + + CHAPTER IX. + + 1678-1679. + + LA SALLE AT NIAGARA. + + Father Louis Hennepin: his Past Life; his + Character.--Embarkation.--Niagara Falls.--Indian Jealousy.--La Motte + and the Senecas.--A Disaster.--La Salle and his Followers. 131 + + + CHAPTER X. + + 1679. + + THE LAUNCH OF THE "GRIFFIN." + + The Niagara Portage.--A Vessel on the Stocks.--Suffering and + Discontent.--La Salle's Winter Journey.--The Vessel launched.--Fresh + Disasters. 144 + + + CHAPTER XI. + + 1679. + + LA SALLE ON THE UPPER LAKES. + + The Voyage of the "Griffin."--Detroit.--A Storm.--St. Ignace of + Michilimackinac.--Rivals and Enemies.--Lake Michigan.--Hardships.--A + Threatened Fight.--Fort Miami.--Tonty's Misfortunes.--Forebodings. 151 + + + CHAPTER XII. + + 1679, 1680. + + LA SALLE ON THE ILLINOIS. + + The St. Joseph.--Adventure of La Salle.--The Prairies.--Famine.--The + Great Town of the Illinois.--Indians.--Intrigues.--Difficulties.-- + Policy of La Salle.--Desertion.--Another Attempt to poison + La Salle. 164 + + + CHAPTER XIII. + + 1680. + + FORT CRÈVECOE]UR. + + Building of the Fort.--Loss of the "Griffin."--A Bold + Resolution.--Another Vessel.--Hennepin sent to the + Mississippi.--Departure of La Salle. 180 + + + CHAPTER XIV. + + 1680. + + HARDIHOOD OF LA SALLE. + + The Winter Journey.--The Deserted Town.--Starved Rock.--Lake + Michigan.--The Wilderness.--War Parties.--La Salle's Men give + out.--Ill Tidings.--Mutiny.--Chastisement of the Mutineers. 189 + + + CHAPTER XV. + + 1680. + + INDIAN CONQUERORS. + + The Enterprise renewed.--Attempt to rescue Tonty.--Buffalo.--A + Frightful Discovery.--Iroquois Fury.--The Ruined Town.--A Night + of Horror.--Traces of the Invaders.--No News of Tonty. 202 + + + CHAPTER XVI. + + 1680. + + TONTY AND THE IROQUOIS. + + The Deserters.--The Iroquois War.--The Great Town of the + Illinois.--The Alarm.--Onset of the Iroquois.--Peril of + Tonty.--A Treacherous Truce.--Intrepidity of Tonty.--Murder + of Ribourde.--War upon the Dead. 216 + + + CHAPTER XVII. + + 1680. + + THE ADVENTURES OF HENNEPIN. + + Hennepin an Impostor: his Pretended Discovery; his Actual Discovery; + captured by the Sioux.--The Upper Mississippi. 242 + + + CHAPTER XVIII. + + 1680, 1681. + + HENNEPIN AMONG THE SIOUX. + + Signs of Danger.--Adoption.--Hennepin and his Indian Relatives.--The + Hunting Party.--The Sioux Camp.--Falls of St. Anthony.--A Vagabond + Friar: his Adventures on the Mississippi.--Greysolon Du Lhut.--Return + to Civilization. 259 + + + CHAPTER XIX. + + 1681. + + LA SALLE BEGINS ANEW. + + His Constancy; his Plans; his Savage Allies; he becomes + Snow-blind.--Negotiations.--Grand Council.--La Salle's + Oratory.--Meeting with Tonty.--Preparation.--Departure. 283 + + + CHAPTER XX. + + 1681-1682. + + SUCCESS OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--The Chicago Portage.--Descent of the Mississippi.--The + Lost Hunter.--The Arkansas.--The Taensas.--The Natchez.--Hostility.--The + Mouth of the Mississippi.--Louis XIV. proclaimed Sovereign of the Great + West. 295 + + + CHAPTER XXI. + + 1682, 1683. + + ST. LOUIS OF THE ILLINOIS. + + Louisiana.--Illness of La Salle: his Colony on the Illinois.--Fort + St. Louis.--Recall of Frontenac.--Le Febvre de la Barre.--Critical + Position of La Salle.--Hostility of the New Governor.--Triumph of + the Adverse Faction.--La Salle sails for France. 309 + + + CHAPTER XXII. + + 1680-1683. + + LA SALLE PAINTED BY HIMSELF. + + Difficulty of knowing him; his Detractors; his Letters; vexations of + his Position; his Unfitness for Trade; risks of Correspondence; his + Reported Marriage; alleged Ostentation; motives of Action; charges + of Harshness; intrigues against him; unpopular Manners; a Strange + Confession; his Strength and his Weakness; contrasts of his + Character. 328 + + + CHAPTER XXIII. + + 1684. + + A NEW ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Court: his Proposals.--Occupation of Louisiana.--Invasion + of Mexico.--Royal Favor.--Preparation.--A Divided Command.--Beaujeu + and La Salle.--Mental Condition of La Salle: his Farewell to his + Mother. 343 + + + CHAPTER XXIV. + + 1684, 1685. + + THE VOYAGE. + + Disputes with Beaujeu.--St. Domingo.--La Salle attacked with + Fever: his Desperate Condition.--The Gulf of Mexico.--A Vain Search + and a Fatal Error. 366 + + + CHAPTER XXV. + + 1685. + + LA SALLE IN TEXAS. + + A Party of Exploration.--Wreck of the "Aimable."--Landing of the + Colonists.--A Forlorn Position.--Indian Neighbors.--Friendly Advances + of Beaujeu: his Departure.--A Fatal Discovery. 378 + + + CHAPTER XXVI. + + 1685-1687. + + ST. LOUIS OF TEXAS. + + The Fort.--Misery and Dejection.--Energy of La Salle: his Journey of + Exploration.--Adventures and Accidents.--The Buffalo.--Duhaut.--Indian + Massacre.--Return of La Salle.--A New Calamity.--A Desperate + Resolution.--Departure for Canada.--Wreck of the + "Belle."--Marriage.--Sedition.--Adventures of La Salle's Party.--The + Cenis.--The Camanches.--The Only Hope.--The Last Farewell. 391 + + + CHAPTER XXVII. + + 1687. + + ASSASSINATION OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--Prairie Travelling.--A Hunters' Quarrel.--The Murder + of Moranget.--The Conspiracy.--Death of La Salle: his Character. 420 + + + CHAPTER XXVIII. + + 1687, 1688. + + THE INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY. + + Triumph of the Murderers.--Danger of Joutel.--Joutel among the + Cenis.--White Savages.--Insolence of Duhaut and his + Accomplices.--Murder of Duhaut and Liotot.--Hiens, the + Buccaneer.--Joutel and his Party: their Escape; they reach the + Arkansas.--Bravery and Devotion of Tonty.--The Fugitives reach + the Illinois.--Unworthy Conduct of Cavelier.--He and his Companions + return to France. 435 + + + CHAPTER XXIX. + + 1688-1689. + + FATE OF THE TEXAN COLONY. + + Tonty attempts to rescue the Colonists: his Difficulties and + Hardships.--Spanish Hostility.--Expedition of Alonzo de Leon: he + reaches Fort St. Louis.--A Scene of Havoc.--Destruction of the + French.--The End. 464 + + + + + APPENDIX. + + I. Early Unpublished Maps of the Mississippi and the Great + Lakes 475 + + + II. The Eldorado of Mathieu Sâgean 485 + + + + + INDEX 491 + +[Illustration: + +COUNTRIES +traversed by +MARQUETTE, HENNEPIN +AND +LA SALLE. + +G.W. Boynton, Sc.] + + + + +LA SALLE +AND THE +DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST. + + + + +INTRODUCTION. + + +The Spaniards discovered the Mississippi. De +Soto was buried beneath its waters; and it was down +its muddy current that his followers fled from the +Eldorado of their dreams, transformed to a wilderness +of misery and death. The discovery was never used, +and was well-nigh forgotten. On early Spanish +maps, the Mississippi is often indistinguishable from +other affluents of the Gulf. A century passed after +De Soto's journeyings in the South, before a French +explorer reached a northern tributary of the great +river. + +This was Jean Nicollet, interpreter at Three Rivers on the St. Lawrence. +He had been some twenty years in Canada, had lived among the savage +Algonquins of Allumette Island, and spent eight or nine years among the +Nipissings, on the lake which bears their name. Here he became an Indian +in all his habits, but remained, nevertheless, a zealous Catholic, and +returned to civilization at last because he could not live without the +sacraments. Strange stories were current among the Nipissings of a +people without hair or beard, who came from the West to trade with a +tribe beyond the Great Lakes. Who could doubt that these strangers were +Chinese or Japanese? Such tales may well have excited Nicollet's +curiosity; and when, in 1635, or possibly in 1638, he was sent as an +ambassador to the tribe in question, he would not have been surprised if +on arriving he had found a party of mandarins among them. Perhaps it was +with a view to such a contingency that he provided himself, as a dress +of ceremony, with a robe of Chinese damask embroidered with birds and +flowers. The tribe to which he was sent was that of the Winnebagoes, +living near the head of the Green Bay of Lake Michigan. They had come to +blows with the Hurons, allies of the French; and Nicollet was charged to +negotiate a peace. When he approached the Winnebago town, he sent one of +his Indian attendants to announce his coming, put on his robe of damask, +and advanced to meet the expectant crowd with a pistol in each hand. The +squaws and children fled, screaming that it was a manito, or spirit, +armed with thunder and lightning; but the chiefs and warriors regaled +him with so bountiful a hospitality that a hundred and twenty beavers +were devoured at a single feast. From the Winnebagoes, he passed +westward, ascended Fox River, crossed to the Wisconsin, and descended +it so far that, as he reported on his return, in three days more he +would have reached the sea. The truth seems to be that he mistook the +meaning of his Indian guides, and that the "great water" to which he was +so near was not the sea, but the Mississippi. + +It has been affirmed that one Colonel Wood, of Virginia, reached a +branch of the Mississippi as early as the year 1654, and that about 1670 +a certain Captain Bolton penetrated to the river itself. Neither +statement is sustained by sufficient evidence. It is further affirmed +that, in 1678, a party from New England crossed the Mississippi, reached +New Mexico, and, returning, reported their discoveries to the +authorities of Boston,--a story without proof or probability. Meanwhile, +French Jesuits and fur-traders pushed deeper and deeper into the +wilderness of the northern lakes. In 1641, Jogues and Raymbault preached +the Faith to a concourse of Indians at the outlet of Lake Superior. Then +came the havoc and desolation of the Iroquois war, and for years farther +exploration was arrested. In 1658-59 Pierre Esprit Radisson, a Frenchman +of St. Malo, and his brother-in-law, Médard Chouart des Groseilliers, +penetrated the regions beyond Lake Superior, and roamed westward till, +as Radisson declares, they reached what was called the Forked River, +"because it has two branches, the one towards the west, the other +towards the south, which, we believe, runs towards Mexico,"--which seems +to point to the Mississippi and its great confluent the Missouri. Two +years later, the aged Jesuit Ménard attempted to plant a mission on the +southern shore of Lake Superior, but perished in the forest by famine or +the tomahawk. Allouez succeeded him, explored a part of Lake Superior, +and heard, in his turn, of the Sioux and their great river the +"Messipi." More and more, the thoughts of the Jesuits--and not of the +Jesuits alone--dwelt on this mysterious stream. Through what regions did +it flow; and whither would it lead them,--to the South Sea or the "Sea +of Virginia;" to Mexico, Japan, or China? The problem was soon to be +solved, and the mystery revealed. + + + + +CHAPTER I + +1643-1669. + +CAVELIER DE LA SALLE. + + The Youth of La Salle: his Connection with the Jesuits; he goes to + Canada; his Character; his Schemes; his Seigniory at La Chine; his + Expedition in Search of a Western Passage to India. + + +Among the burghers of Rouen was the old and rich family of the +Caveliers. Though citizens and not nobles, some of their connections +held high diplomatic posts and honorable employments at Court. They were +destined to find a better claim to distinction. In 1643 was born at +Rouen Robert Cavelier, better known by the designation of La Salle.[1] +His father Jean and his uncle Henri were wealthy merchants, living more +like nobles than like burghers; and the boy received an education +answering to the marked traits of intellect and character which he soon +began to display. He showed an inclination for the exact sciences, and +especially for the mathematics, in which he made great proficiency. At +an early age, it is said, he became connected with the Jesuits; and, +though doubt has been expressed of the statement, it is probably +true.[2] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND THE JESUITS.] + +La Salle was always an earnest Catholic; and yet, judging by the +qualities which his after-life evinced, he was not very liable to +religious enthusiasm. It is nevertheless clear that the Society of Jesus +may have had a powerful attraction for his youthful imagination. This +great organization, so complicated yet so harmonious, a mighty machine +moved from the centre by a single hand, was an image of regulated power, +full of fascination for a mind like his. But if it was likely that he +would be drawn into it, it was no less likely that he would soon wish to +escape. To find himself not at the centre of power, but at the +circumference; not the mover, but the moved; the passive instrument of +another's will, taught to walk in prescribed paths, to renounce his +individuality and become a component atom of a vast whole,--would have +been intolerable to him. Nature had shaped him for other uses than to +teach a class of boys on the benches of a Jesuit school. Nor, on his +part, was he likely to please his directors; for, self-controlled and +self-contained as he was, he was far too intractable a subject to serve +their turn. A youth whose calm exterior hid an inexhaustible fund of +pride; whose inflexible purposes, nursed in secret, the confessional and +the "manifestation of conscience" could hardly drag to the light; whose +strong personality would not yield to the shaping hand; and who, by a +necessity of his nature, could obey no initiative but his own,--was not +after the model that Loyola had commended to his followers. + +La Salle left the Jesuits, parting with them, it is said, on good terms, +and with a reputation of excellent acquirements and unimpeachable +morals. This last is very credible. The cravings of a deep ambition, the +hunger of an insatiable intellect, the intense longing for action and +achievement, subdued in him all other passions; and in his faults the +love of pleasure had no part. He had an elder brother in Canada, the +Abbé Jean Cavelier, a priest of St. Sulpice. Apparently, it was this +that shaped his destinies. His connection with the Jesuits had deprived +him, under the French law, of the inheritance of his father, who had +died not long before. An allowance was made to him of three or (as is +elsewhere stated) four hundred livres a year, the capital of which was +paid over to him; and with this pittance he sailed for Canada, to seek +his fortune, in the spring of 1666.[3] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AT MONTREAL.] + +Next, we find him at Montreal. In another volume, we have seen how an +association of enthusiastic devotees had made a settlement at this +place.[4] Having in some measure accomplished its work, it was now +dissolved; and the corporation of priests, styled the Seminary of St. +Sulpice, which had taken a prominent part in the enterprise, and, +indeed, had been created with a view to it, was now the proprietor and +the feudal lord of Montreal. It was destined to retain its seignorial +rights until the abolition of the feudal tenures of Canada in our own +day, and it still holds vast possessions in the city and island. These +worthy ecclesiastics, models of a discreet and sober conservatism, were +holding a post with which a band of veteran soldiers or warlike +frontiersmen would have been better matched. Montreal was perhaps the +most dangerous place in Canada. In time of war, which might have been +called the normal condition of the colony, it was exposed by its +position to incessant inroads of the Iroquois, or Five Nations, of New +York; and no man could venture into the forests or the fields without +bearing his life in his hand. The savage confederates had just received +a sharp chastisement at the hands of Courcelle, the governor; and the +result was a treaty of peace which might at any moment be broken, but +which was an inexpressible relief while it lasted. + +The priests of St. Sulpice were granting out their lands, on very easy +terms, to settlers. They wished to extend a thin line of settlements +along the front of their island, to form a sort of outpost, from which +an alarm could be given on any descent of the Iroquois. La Salle was the +man for such a purpose. Had the priests understood him,--which they +evidently did not, for some of them suspected him of levity, the last +foible with which he could be charged,--had they understood him, they +would have seen in him a young man in whom the fire of youth glowed not +the less ardently for the veil of reserve that covered it; who would +shrink from no danger, but would not court it in bravado; and who would +cling with an invincible tenacity of gripe to any purpose which he might +espouse. There is good reason to think that he had come to Canada with +purposes already conceived, and that he was ready to avail himself of +any stepping-stone which might help to realize them. Queylus, Superior +of the Seminary, made him a generous offer; and he accepted it. This +was the gratuitous grant of a large tract of land at the place now +called La Chine, above the great rapids of the same name, and eight or +nine miles from Montreal. On one hand, the place was greatly exposed to +attack; and, on the other, it was favorably situated for the fur-trade. +La Salle and his successors became its feudal proprietors, on the sole +condition of delivering to the Seminary, on every change of ownership, a +medal of fine silver, weighing one mark.[5] He entered on the +improvement of his new domain with what means he could command, and +began to grant out his land to such settlers as would join him. + +Approaching the shore where the city of Montreal now stands, one would +have seen a row of small compact dwellings, extending along a narrow +street, parallel to the river, and then, as now, called St. Paul Street. +On a hill at the right stood the windmill of the seigniors, built of +stone, and pierced with loopholes to serve, in time of need, as a place +of defence. On the left, in an angle formed by the junction of a rivulet +with the St. Lawrence, was a square bastioned fort of stone. Here lived +the military governor, appointed by the Seminary, and commanding a few +soldiers of the regiment of Carignan. In front, on the line of the +street, were the enclosure and buildings of the Seminary, and, nearly +adjoining them, those of the Hôtel-Dieu, or Hospital, both provided for +defence in case of an Indian attack. In the hospital enclosure was a +small church, opening on the street, and, in the absence of any other, +serving for the whole settlement.[6] + +Landing, passing the fort, and walking southward along the shore, one +would soon have left the rough clearings, and entered the primeval +forest. Here, mile after mile, he would have journeyed on in solitude, +when the hoarse roar of the rapids, foaming in fury on his left, would +have reached his listening ear; and at length, after a walk of some +three hours, he would have found the rude beginnings of a settlement. It +was where the St. Lawrence widens into the broad expanse called the Lake +of St. Louis. Here, La Salle had traced out the circuit of a palisaded +village, and assigned to each settler half an arpent, or about the third +of an acre, within the enclosure, for which he was to render to the +young seignior a yearly acknowledgment of three capons, besides six +deniers--that is, half a sou--in money. To each was assigned, moreover, +sixty arpents of land beyond the limits of the village, with the +perpetual rent of half a sou for each arpent. He also set apart a +common, two hundred arpents in extent, for the use of the settlers, on +condition of the payment by each of five sous a year. He reserved four +hundred and twenty arpents for his own personal domain, and on this he +began to clear the ground and erect buildings. Similar to this were the +beginnings of all the Canadian seigniories formed at this troubled +period.[7] + +[Sidenote: LA CHINE.] + +That La Salle came to Canada with objects distinctly in view, is +probable from the fact that he at once began to study the Indian +languages,--and with such success that he is said, within two or three +years, to have mastered the Iroquois and seven or eight other languages +and dialects.[8] From the shore of his seigniory, he could gaze westward +over the broad breast of the Lake of St. Louis, bounded by the dim +forests of Chateauguay and Beauharnois; but his thoughts flew far +beyond, across the wild and lonely world that stretched towards the +sunset. Like Champlain, and all the early explorers, he dreamed of a +passage to the South Sea, and a new road for commerce to the riches of +China and Japan. Indians often came to his secluded settlement; and, on +one occasion, he was visited by a band of the Seneca Iroquois, not long +before the scourge of the colony, but now, in virtue of the treaty, +wearing the semblance of friendship. The visitors spent the winter with +him, and told him of a river called the Ohio, rising in their country, +and flowing into the sea, but at such a distance that its mouth could +only be reached after a journey of eight or nine months. Evidently, the +Ohio and the Mississippi are here merged into one.[9] In accordance with +geographical views then prevalent, he conceived that this great river +must needs flow into the "Vermilion Sea;" that is, the Gulf of +California. If so, it would give him what he sought, a western passage +to China; while, in any case, the populous Indian tribes said to inhabit +its banks might be made a source of great commercial profit. + +[Sidenote: SCHEMES OF DISCOVERY.] + +La Salle's imagination took fire. His resolution was soon formed; and he +descended the St. Lawrence to Quebec, to gain the countenance of the +governor for his intended exploration. Few men were more skilled than he +in the art of clear and plausible statement. Both the governor Courcelle +and the intendant Talon were readily won over to his plan; for which, +however, they seem to have given him no more substantial aid than that +of the governor's letters patent authorizing the enterprise.[10] The +cost was to be his own; and he had no money, having spent it all on his +seigniory. He therefore proposed that the Seminary, which had given it +to him, should buy it back again, with such improvements as he had made. +Queylus, the Superior, being favorably disposed towards him, consented, +and bought of him the greater part; while La Salle sold the remainder, +including the clearings, to one Jean Milot, an iron-monger, for +twenty-eight hundred livres.[11] With this he bought four canoes, with +the necessary supplies, and hired fourteen men. + +Meanwhile, the Seminary itself was preparing a similar enterprise. The +Jesuits at this time not only held an ascendency over the other +ecclesiastics in Canada, but exercised an inordinate influence on the +civil government. The Seminary priests of Montreal were jealous of these +powerful rivals, and eager to emulate their zeal in the saving of souls +and the conquering of new domains for the Faith. Under this impulse, +they had, three years before, established a mission at Quinté, on the +north shore of Lake Ontario, in charge of two of their number, one of +whom was the Abbé Fénelon, elder brother of the celebrated Archbishop of +Cambray. Another of them, Dollier de Casson, had spent the winter in a +hunting-camp of the Nipissings, where an Indian prisoner, captured in +the Northwest, told him of populous tribes of that quarter living in +heathenish darkness. On this, the Seminary priests resolved to essay +their conversion; and an expedition, to be directed by Dollier, was +fitted out to this end. + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE.] + +He was not ill suited to the purpose. He had been a soldier in his +youth, and had fought valiantly as an officer of cavalry under Turenne. +He was a man of great courage; of a tall, commanding person; and of +uncommon bodily strength, which he had notably proved in the campaign of +Courcelle against the Iroquois, three years before.[12] On going to +Quebec to procure the necessary outfit, he was urged by Courcelle to +modify his plans so far as to act in concert with La Salle in exploring +the mystery of the great unknown river of the West. Dollier and his +brother priests consented. One of them, Galinée, was joined with him as +a colleague, because he was skilled in surveying, and could make a map +of their route. Three canoes were procured, and seven hired men +completed the party. It was determined that La Salle's expedition and +that of the Seminary should be combined in one,--an arrangement ill +suited to the character of the young explorer, who was unfit for any +enterprise of which he was not the undisputed chief. + +Midsummer was near, and there was no time to lose. Yet the moment was +most unpropitious, for a Seneca chief had lately been murdered by three +scoundrel soldiers of the fort of Montreal; and, while they were +undergoing their trial, it became known that three other Frenchmen had +treacherously put to death several Iroquois of the Oneida tribe, in +order to get possession of their furs. The whole colony trembled in +expectation of a new outbreak of the war. Happily, the event proved +otherwise. The authors of the last murder escaped; but the three +soldiers were shot at Montreal, in presence of a considerable number of +the Iroquois, who declared themselves satisfied with the atonement; and +on this same day, the sixth of July, the adventurers began their voyage. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] The following is the _acte de naissance_, discovered by Margry in +the _registres de l'état civil_, Paroisse St. Herbland, Rouen: "Le +vingt-deuxième jour de novembre, 1643, a été baptisé Robert Cavelier, +fils de honorable homme Jean Cavelier et de Catherine Geest; ses parrain +et marraine honorables personnes Nicolas Geest et Marguerite Morice." + +La Salle's name in full was René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle. La +Salle was the name of an estate near Rouen, belonging to the Caveliers. +The wealthy French burghers often distinguished the various members of +their families by designations borrowed from landed estates. Thus, +François Marie Arouet, son of an ex-notary, received the name of +Voltaire, which he made famous. + +[2] Margry, after investigations at Rouen, is satisfied of its truth +(_Journal Général de l'Instruction Publique_, xxxi. 571.) Family papers +of the Caveliers, examined by the Abbé Faillon, and copies of some of +which he has sent to me, lead to the same conclusion. We shall find +several allusions hereafter to La Salle's having in his youth taught in +a school, which, in his position, could only have been in connection +with some religious community. The doubts alluded to have proceeded from +the failure of Father Felix Martin, S. J., to find the name of La Salle +on the list of novices. If he had looked for the name of Robert +Cavelier, he would probably have found it. The companion of La Salle, +Hennepin, is very explicit with regard to this connection with the +Jesuits, a point on which he had no motive for falsehood. + +[3] It does not appear what vows La Salle had taken. By a recent +ordinance (1666), persons entering religious orders could not take the +final vows before the age of twenty-five. By the family papers above +mentioned, it appears, however, that he had brought himself under the +operation of the law, which debarred those who, having entered religious +orders, afterwards withdrew, from claiming the inheritance of relatives +who had died after their entrance. + +[4] The Jesuits in North America, chap. xv. + +[5] _Transport de la Seigneurie de St. Sulpice_, cited by Faillon. La +Salle called his new domain as above. Two or three years later, it +received the name of La Chine, for a reason which will appear. + +[6] A detailed plan of Montreal at this time is preserved in the +Archives de l'Empire, and has been reproduced by Faillon. There is +another, a few years later, and still more minute, of which a fac-simile +will be found in the Library of the Canadian Parliament. + +[7] The above particulars have been unearthed by the indefatigable Abbé +Faillon. Some of La Salle's grants are still preserved in the ancient +records of Montreal. + +[8] _Papiers de Famille._ He is said to have made several journeys into +the forests, towards the North, in the years 1667 and 1668, and to have +satisfied himself that little could be hoped from explorations in that +direction. + +[9] According to Dollier de Casson, who had good opportunities of +knowing, the Iroquois always called the Mississippi the Ohio, while the +Algonquins gave it its present name. + +[10] _Patoulet à Colbert, 11 Nov., 1669._ + +[11] _Cession de la Seigneurie; Contrat de Vente_ (Margry, i. 103, 104). + +[12] He was the author of the very curious and valuable _Histoire de +Montréal_, preserved in the Bibliothèque Mazarine, of which a copy is in +my possession. The Historical Society of Montreal has recently resolved +to print it. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +1669-1671. + +LA SALLE AND THE SULPITIANS. + + The French in Western New York.--Louis Joliet.--The Sulpitians on + Lake Erie; at Detroit; at Saut Ste. Marie.--The Mystery of La + Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he + reach the Mississippi? + + +La Chine was the starting-point; and the combined parties, in all +twenty-four men with seven canoes, embarked on the Lake of St. Louis. +With them were two other canoes, bearing the party of Senecas who had +wintered at La Salle's settlement, and who were now to act as guides. +Father Galinée recounts the journey. He was no woodsman: the river, the +forests, the rapids, were all new to him, and he dilates on them with +the minuteness of a novice. Above all, he admired the Indian birch +canoes. "If God," he says, "grants me the grace of returning to France, +I shall try to carry one with me." Then he describes the bivouac: "Your +lodging is as extraordinary as your vessels; for, after paddling or +carrying the canoes all day, you find mother earth ready to receive your +wearied body. If the weather is fair, you make a fire and lie down to +sleep without further trouble; but if it rains, you must peel bark from +the trees, and make a shed by laying it on a frame of sticks. As for +your food, it is enough to make you burn all the cookery books that ever +were written; for in the woods of Canada one finds means to live well +without bread, wine, salt, pepper, or spice. The ordinary food is Indian +corn, or Turkey wheat as they call it in France, which is crushed +between two stones and boiled, seasoning it with meat or fish, when you +can get them. This sort of life seemed so strange to us that we all felt +the effects of it; and before we were a hundred leagues from Montreal, +not one of us was free from some malady or other. At last, after all our +misery, on the second of August, we discovered Lake Ontario, like a +great sea with no land beyond it." + +[Sidenote: THE SENECA VILLAGES.] + +Thirty-five days after leaving La Chine, they reached Irondequoit Bay, +on the south side of the lake. Here they were met by a number of Seneca +Indians, who professed friendship and invited them to their villages, +fifteen or twenty miles distant. As this was on their way to the upper +waters of the Ohio, and as they hoped to find guides at the villages to +conduct them, they accepted the invitation. Dollier, with most of the +men, remained to guard the canoes; while La Salle, with Galinée and +eight other Frenchmen, accompanied by a troop of Indians, set out on the +morning of the twelfth, and reached the principal village before +evening. It stood on a hill, in the midst of a clearing nearly two +leagues in compass.[13] A rude stockade surrounded it; and as the +visitors drew near they saw a band of old men seated on the grass, +waiting to receive them. One of these veterans, so feeble with age that +he could hardly stand, made them an harangue, in which he declared that +the Senecas were their brothers, and invited them to enter the village. +They did so, surrounded by a crowd of savages, and presently found +themselves in the midst of a disorderly cluster of large but filthy +abodes of bark, about a hundred and fifty in number, the most capacious +of which was assigned to their use. Here they made their quarters, and +were soon overwhelmed by Seneca hospitality. Children brought them +pumpkins and berries from the woods; and boy messengers came to summon +them to endless feasts, where they were regaled with the flesh of dogs +and with boiled maize seasoned with oil pressed from nuts and the seed +of sunflowers. + +La Salle had flattered himself that he knew enough Iroquois to hold +communication with the Senecas; but he failed completely in the attempt. +The priests had a Dutch interpreter, who spoke Iroquois fluently, but +knew so little French, and was withal so obstinate, that he proved +useless; so that it was necessary to employ a man in the service of the +Jesuit Fremin, whose mission was at this village. What the party needed +was a guide to conduct them to the Ohio; and soon after their arrival a +party of warriors appeared, with a young prisoner belonging to one of +the tribes of that region. Galinée wanted to beg or buy him from his +captors; but the Senecas had other intentions. "I saw," writes the +priest, "the most miserable spectacle I ever beheld in my life." It was +the prisoner tied to a stake and tortured for six hours with diabolical +ingenuity, while the crowd danced and yelled with delight, and the +chiefs and elders sat in a row smoking their pipes and watching the +contortions of the victim with an air of serene enjoyment. The body was +at last cut up and eaten, and in the evening the whole population +occupied themselves in scaring away the angry ghost by beating with +sticks against the bark sides of the lodges. + +La Salle and his companions began to fear for their own safety. Some of +their hosts wished to kill them in revenge for the chief murdered near +Montreal; and as these and others were at times in a frenzy of +drunkenness, the position of the French became critical. They suspected +that means had been used to prejudice the Senecas against them. Not only +could they get no guides, but they were told that if they went to the +Ohio the tribes of those parts would infallibly kill them. Their Dutch +interpreter became disheartened and unmanageable, and, after staying a +month at the village, the hope of getting farther on their way seemed +less than ever. Their plan, it was clear, must be changed; and an Indian +from Otinawatawa, a kind of Iroquois colony at the head of Lake +Ontario, offered to guide them to his village and show them a better way +to the Ohio. They left the Senecas, coasted the south shore of the lake, +passed the mouth of the Niagara, where they heard the distant roar of +the cataract, and on the twenty-fourth of September reached Otinawatawa, +which was a few miles north of the present town of Hamilton. The +inhabitants proved friendly, and La Salle received the welcome present +of a Shawanoe prisoner, who told them that the Ohio could be reached in +six weeks, and that he would guide them to it. Delighted at this good +fortune, they were about to set out; when they heard, to their +astonishment, of the arrival of two other Frenchmen at a neighboring +village. + +[Sidenote: LOUIS JOLIET.] + +One of the strangers was destined to hold a conspicuous place in the +history of western discovery. This was Louis Joliet, a young man of +about the age of La Salle. Like him, he had studied for the priesthood; +but the world and the wilderness had conquered his early inclinations, +and changed him to an active and adventurous fur-trader. Talon had sent +him to discover and explore the copper-mines of Lake Superior. He had +failed in the attempt, and was now returning. His Indian guide, afraid +of passing the Niagara portage lest he should meet enemies, had led him +from Lake Erie, by way of Grand River, towards the head of Lake Ontario; +and thus it was that he met La Salle and the Sulpitians. + +This meeting caused a change of plan. Joliet showed the priests a map +which he had made of such parts of the Upper Lakes as he had visited, +and gave them a copy of it; telling them, at the same time, of the +Pottawattamies and other tribes of that region in grievous need of +spiritual succor. The result was a determination on their part to follow +the route which he suggested, notwithstanding the remonstrances of La +Salle, who in vain reminded them that the Jesuits had preoccupied the +field, and would regard them as intruders. They resolved that the +Pottawattamies should no longer sit in darkness; while, as for the +Mississippi, it could be reached, as they conceived, with less risk by +this northern route than by that of the south. + +La Salle was of a different mind. His goal was the Ohio, and not the +northern lakes. A few days before, while hunting, he had been attacked +by a fever, sarcastically ascribed by Galinée to his having seen three +large rattle-snakes crawling up a rock. He now told his two colleagues +that he was in no condition to go forward, and should be forced to part +with them. The staple of La Salle's character, as his life will attest, +was an invincible determination of purpose, which set at naught all +risks and all sufferings. He had cast himself with all his resources +into this enterprise; and, while his faculties remained, he was not a +man to recoil from it. On the other hand, the masculine fibre of which +he was made did not always withhold him from the practice of the arts of +address, and the use of what Dollier de Casson styles _belles paroles_. +He respected the priesthood, with the exception, it seems, of the +Jesuits; and he was under obligations to the Sulpitians of Montreal. +Hence there can be no doubt that he used his illness as a pretext for +escaping from their company without ungraciousness, and following his +own path in his own way. + +[Sidenote: SEPARATION.] + +On the last day of September, the priests made an altar, supported by +the paddles of the canoes laid on forked sticks. Dollier said mass; La +Salle and his followers received the sacrament, as did also those of his +late colleagues; and thus they parted, the Sulpitians and their party +descending the Grand River towards Lake Erie, while La Salle, as they +supposed, began his return to Montreal. What course he actually took we +shall soon inquire; and meanwhile, for a few moments, we will follow the +priests. When they reached Lake Erie, they saw it tossing like an angry +ocean. They had no mind to tempt the dangerous and unknown navigation, +and encamped for the winter in the forest near the peninsula called the +Long Point. Here they gathered a good store of chestnuts, hickory-nuts, +plums, and grapes, and built themselves a log cabin, with a recess at +the end for an altar. They passed the winter unmolested, shooting game +in abundance, and saying mass three times a week. Early in spring, they +planted a large cross, attached to it the arms of France, and took +formal possession of the country in the name of Louis XIV. This done, +they resumed their voyage, and, after many troubles, landed one evening +in a state of exhaustion on or near Point Pelée, towards the western +extremity of Lake Erie. A storm rose as they lay asleep, and swept off a +great part of their baggage, which, in their fatigue, they had left at +the edge of the water. Their altar-service was lost with the rest,--a +misfortune which they ascribed to the jealousy and malice of the Devil. +Debarred henceforth from saying mass, they resolved to return to +Montreal and leave the Pottawattamies uninstructed. They presently +entered the strait by which Lake Huron joins Lake Erie, and landing near +where Detroit now stands, found a large stone, somewhat suggestive of +the human figure, which the Indians had bedaubed with paint, and which +they worshipped as a manito. In view of their late misfortune, this +device of the arch-enemy excited their utmost resentment. "After the +loss of our altar-service," writes Galinée, "and the hunger we had +suffered, there was not a man of us who was not filled with hatred +against this false deity. I devoted one of my axes to breaking him in +pieces; and then, having fastened our canoes side by side, we carried +the largest piece to the middle of the river, and threw it, with all the +rest, into the water, that he might never be heard of again. God +rewarded us immediately for this good action, for we killed a deer and a +bear that same day." + +[Sidenote: AT STE. MARIE DU SAUT.] + +This is the first recorded passage of white men through the Strait of +Detroit; though Joliet had, no doubt, passed this way on his return from +the Upper Lakes.[14] The two missionaries took this course, with the +intention of proceeding to the Saut Ste. Marie, and there joining the +Ottawas, and other tribes of that region, in their yearly descent to +Montreal. They issued upon Lake Huron; followed its eastern shores till +they reached the Georgian Bay, near the head of which the Jesuits had +established their great mission of the Hurons, destroyed, twenty years +before, by the Iroquois;[15] and, ignoring or slighting the labors of +the rival missionaries, held their way northward along the rocky +archipelago that edged those lonely coasts. They passed the Manitoulins, +and, ascending the strait by which Lake Superior discharges its waters, +arrived on the twenty-fifth of May at Ste. Marie du Saut. Here they +found the two Jesuits, Dablon and Marquette, in a square fort of cedar +pickets, built by their men within the past year, and enclosing a chapel +and a house. Near by, they had cleared a large tract of land, and sown +it with wheat, Indian corn, peas, and other crops. The new-comers were +graciously received, and invited to vespers in the chapel; but they very +soon found La Salle's prediction made good, and saw that the Jesuit +fathers wanted no help from St. Sulpice. Galinée, on his part, takes +occasion to remark, that, though the Jesuits had baptized a few Indians +at the Saut, not one of them was a good enough Christian to receive the +Eucharist; and he intimates that the case, by their own showing, was +still worse at their mission of St. Esprit. The two Sulpitians did not +care to prolong their stay; and, three days after their arrival, they +left the Saut,--not, as they expected, with the Indians, but with a +French guide, furnished by the Jesuits. Ascending French River to Lake +Nipissing, they crossed to the waters of the Ottawa, and descended to +Montreal, which they reached on the eighteenth of June. They had made no +discoveries and no converts; but Galinée, after his arrival, made the +earliest map of the Upper Lakes known to exist.[16] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S DISCOVERIES.] + +We return now to La Salle, only to find ourselves involved in mist and +obscurity. What did he do after he left the two priests? Unfortunately, +a definite answer is not possible; and the next two years of his life +remain in some measure an enigma. That he was busied in active +exploration, and that he made important discoveries, is certain; but the +extent and character of these discoveries remain wrapped in doubt. He is +known to have kept journals and made maps; and these were in existence, +and in possession of his niece, Madeleine Cavelier, then in advanced +age, as late as the year 1756; beyond which time the most diligent +inquiry has failed to trace them. Abbé Faillon affirms that some of La +Salle's men, refusing to follow him, returned to La Chine, and that the +place then received its name, in derision of the young adventurer's +dream of a westward passage to China.[17] As for himself, the only +distinct record of his movements is that contained in a paper, entitled +"Histoire de Monsieur de la Salle." It is an account of his +explorations, and of the state of parties in Canada previous to the year +1678,--taken from the lips of La Salle himself, by a person whose name +does not appear, but who declares that he had ten or twelve +conversations with him at Paris, whither he had come with a petition to +the Court. The writer himself had never been in America, and was +ignorant of its geography; hence blunders on his part might reasonably +be expected. His statements, however, are in some measure intelligible; +and the following is the substance of them. + +After leaving the priests, La Salle went to Onondaga, where we are left +to infer that he succeeded better in getting a guide than he had before +done among the Senecas. Thence he made his way to a point six or seven +leagues distant from Lake Erie, where he reached a branch of the Ohio, +and, descending it, followed the river as far as the rapids at +Louisville,--or, as has been maintained, beyond its confluence with the +Mississippi. His men now refused to go farther, and abandoned him, +escaping to the English and the Dutch; whereupon he retraced his steps +alone.[18] This must have been in the winter of 1669-70, or in the +following spring; unless there is an error of date in the statement of +Nicolas Perrot, the famous _voyageur_, who says that he met him in the +summer of 1670, hunting on the Ottawa with a party of Iroquois.[19] + +[Sidenote: THE RIVER ILLINOIS.] + +But how was La Salle employed in the following year? The same memoir has +its solution to the problem. By this it appears that the indefatigable +explorer embarked on Lake Erie, ascended the Detroit to Lake Huron, +coasted the unknown shores of Michigan, passed the Straits of +Michilimackinac, and, leaving Green Bay behind him, entered what is +described as an incomparably larger bay, but which was evidently the +southern portion of Lake Michigan. Thence he crossed to a river flowing +westward,--evidently the Illinois,--and followed it until it was joined +by another river flowing from the northwest to the southeast. By this, +the Mississippi only can be meant; and he is reported to have said that +he descended it to the thirty-sixth degree of latitude; where he +stopped, assured that it discharged itself not into the Gulf of +California, but into the Gulf of Mexico, and resolved to follow it +thither at a future day, when better provided with men and supplies.[20] + +[Sidenote: THE MISSISSIPPI.] + +The first of these statements,--that relating to the Ohio,--confused, +vague, and in great part incorrect, as it certainly is, is nevertheless +well sustained as regards one essential point. La Salle himself, in a +memorial addressed to Count Frontenac in 1677, affirms that he +discovered the Ohio, and descended it as far as to a fall which +obstructed it.[21] Again, his rival, Louis Joliet, whose testimony on +this point cannot be suspected, made two maps of the region of the +Mississippi and the Great Lakes. The Ohio is laid down on both of them, +with an inscription to the effect that it had been explored by La +Salle.[22] That he discovered the Ohio may then be regarded as +established. That he descended it to the Mississippi, he himself does +not pretend; nor is there reason to believe that he did so. + +With regard to his alleged voyage down the Illinois, the case is +different. Here, he is reported to have made a statement which admits +but one interpretation,--that of the discovery by him of the Mississippi +prior to its discovery by Joliet and Marquette. This statement is +attributed to a man not prone to vaunt his own exploits, who never +proclaimed them in print, and whose testimony, even in his own case, +must therefore have weight. But it comes to us through the medium of a +person strongly biassed in favor of La Salle, and against Marquette and +the Jesuits. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S DISCOVERIES.] + +Seven years had passed since the alleged discovery, and La Salle had not +before laid claim to it; although it was matter of notoriety that during +five years it had been claimed by Joliet, and that his claim was +generally admitted. The correspondence of the governor and the intendant +is silent as to La Salle's having penetrated to the Mississippi, though +the attempt was made under the auspices of the latter, as his own +letters declare; while both had the discovery of the great river +earnestly at heart. The governor, Frontenac, La Salle's ardent supporter +and ally, believed in 1672, as his letters show, that the Mississippi +flowed into the Gulf of California; and, two years later, he announces +to the minister Colbert its discovery by Joliet.[23] After La Salle's +death, his brother, his nephew, and his niece addressed a memorial to +the king, petitioning for certain grants in consideration of the +discoveries of their relative, which they specify at some length; but +they do not pretend that he reached the Mississippi before his +expeditions of 1679 to 1682.[24] This silence is the more significant, +as it is this very niece who had possession of the papers in which La +Salle recounts the journeys of which the issues are in question.[25] +Had they led him to the Mississippi, it is reasonably certain that she +would have made it known in her memorial. La Salle discovered the Ohio, +and in all probability the Illinois also; but that he discovered the +Mississippi has not been proved, nor, in the light of the evidence we +have, is it likely. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[13] This village seems to have been that attacked by Denonville in +1687. It stood on Boughton Hill, near the present town of Victor. + +[14] The Jesuits and fur-traders, on their way to the Upper Lakes, had +followed the route of the Ottawa, or, more recently, that of Toronto and +the Georgian Bay. Iroquois hostility had long closed the Niagara portage +and Lake Erie against them. + +[15] The Jesuits in North America. + +[16] See Appendix. The above narrative is from _Récit de ce qui s'est +passé de plus remarquable dans le Voyage de MM. Dollier et Galinée_. +(Bibliothèque Nationale.) + +[17] Dollier de Casson alludes to this as "cette transmigration célèbre +qui se fit de la Chine dans ces quartiers." + +[18] The following is the passage relating to this journey in the +remarkable paper above mentioned. After recounting La Salle's visit with +the Sulpitians to the Seneca village, and stating that the intrigues of +the Jesuit missionary prevented them from obtaining a guide, it speaks +of the separation of the travellers and the journey of Galinée and his +party to the Saut Ste. Marie, where "les Jésuites les congédièrent." It +then proceeds as follows: "Cependant Mr. de la Salle continua son +chemin par une rivière qui va de l'est à l'ouest; et passe à Onontaqué +[_Onondaga_], puis à six ou sept lieues au-dessous du Lac Erié; et +estant parvenu jusqu'au 280me ou 83me degré de longitude, et +jusqu'au 41me degré de latitude, trouva un sault qui tombe vers +l'ouest dans un pays bas, marescageux, tout couvert de vielles souches, +dont il y en a quelques-unes qui sont encore sur pied. Il fut donc +contraint de prendre terre, et suivant une hauteur qui le pouvoit mener +loin, il trouva quelques sauvages qui luy dirent que fort loin de là le +mesme fleuve qui se perdoit dans cette terre basse et vaste se +réunnissoit en un lit. Il continua donc son chemin, mais comme la +fatigue estoit grande, 23 ou 24 hommes qu'il avoit menez jusques là le +quittèrent tous en une nuit, regagnèrent le fleuve, et se sauvèrent, les +uns à la Nouvelle Hollande et les autres à la Nouvelle Angleterre. Il se +vit donc seul à 400 lieues de chez luy, où il ne laisse pas de revenir, +remontant la rivière et vivant de chasse, d'herbes, et de ce que luy +donnèrent les sauvages qu'il rencontra en son chemin." + +[19] Perrot, _Mémoires_, 119, 120. + +[20] The memoir--after stating, as above, that he entered Lake Huron, +doubled the peninsula of Michigan, and passed La Baye des Puants (_Green +Bay_)--says: "Il reconnut une baye incomparablement plus large; au fond +de laquelle vers l'ouest il trouva un très-beau havre et au fond de ce +havre un fleuve qui va de l'est à l'ouest. Il suivit ce fleuve, et +estant parvenu jusqu'environ le 280me degré de longitude et le +39me de latitude, il trouva un autre fleuve qui se joignant au +premier coulait du nordouest au sudest, et il suivit ce fleuve jusqu'au +36me degré de latitude." + +The "très-beau havre" may have been the entrance of the river Chicago, +whence, by an easy portage, he might have reached the Des Plaines branch +of the Illinois. We shall see that he took this course in his famous +exploration of 1682. + +The intendant Talon announces, in his despatches of this year that he +had sent La Salle southward and westward to explore. + +[21] The following are his words (he speaks of himself in the third +person): "L'année 1667, et les suivantes, il fit divers voyages avec +beaucoup de dépenses, dans lesquels il découvrit le premier beaucoup de +pays au sud des grands lacs, et _entre autres la grande rivière d'Ohio_; +il la suivit jusqu'à un endroit où elle tombe de fort haut dans de +vastes marais, à la hauteur de 37 degrés, après avoir été grossie par +une autre rivière fort large qui vient du nord; et toutes ces eaux se +dêchargent selon toutes les apparences dans le Golfe du Mexique." + +This "autre rivière," which, it seems, was above the fall, may have been +the Miami or the Scioto. There is but one fall on the river, that of +Louisville, which is not so high as to deserve to be described as "fort +haut," being only a strong rapid. The latitude, as will be seen, is +different in the two accounts, and incorrect in both. + +[22] One of these maps is entitled _Carte de la découverte du Sieur +Joliet_, 1674. Over the lines representing the Ohio are the words, +"Route du sieur de la Salle pour aller dans le Mexique." The other map +of Joliet bears, also written over the Ohio, the words, "Rivière par où +descendit le sieur de la Salle au sortir du lac Erié pour aller dans le +Mexique." I have also another manuscript map, made before the voyage of +Joliet and Marquette, and apparently in the year 1673, on which the Ohio +is represented as far as to a point a little below Louisville, and over +it is written, "Rivière Ohio, ainsy appellée par les Iroquois à cause de +sa beauté, par où le sieur de la Salle est descendu." The Mississippi is +not represented on this map; but--and this is very significant, as +indicating the extent of La Salle's exploration of the following year--a +small part of the upper Illinois is laid down. + +[23] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 14 Nov., 1674._ He here speaks of +"la grande rivière qu'il [_Joliet_] a trouvée, qui va du nord au sud, et +qui est aussi large que celle du Saint-Laurent vis-à-vis de Québec." +Four years later, Frontenac speaks slightingly of Joliet, but neither +denies his discovery of the Mississippi, nor claims it for La Salle, in +whose interest he writes. + +[24] _Papiers de Famille; Mémoire présenté au Roi._ The following is an +extract: "Il parvient ... jusqu'à la rivière des Illinois. Il y +construisit un fort situé à 350 lieues au-delà du fort de Frontenac, et +suivant ensuite le cours de cette rivière, il trouva qu'elle se jettoit +dans un grand fleuve appellé par ceux du pays Mississippi, c'est à dire +_grande eau_, environ cent lieues au-dessous du fort qu'il venoit de +construire." This fort was Fort Crèvecoeur, built in 1680, near the +site of Peoria. The memoir goes on to relate the descent of La Salle to +the Gulf, which concluded this expedition of 1679-82. + +[25] The following is an extract, given by Margry, from a letter of the +aged Madeleine Cavelier, dated 21 Février, 1756, and addressed to her +nephew, M. Le Baillif, who had applied for the papers in behalf of the +minister, Silhouette: "J'ay cherché une occasion sûre pour vous anvoyé +les papiers de M. de la Salle. Il y a des cartes que j'ay jointe à ces +papiers, qui doivent prouver que, en 1675, M. de Lasalle avet déja fet +deux voyages en ces decouverte, puisqu'il y avet une carte, que je vous +envoye, par laquelle il est fait mention de l'androit auquel M. de +Lasalle aborda près le fleuve de Mississipi; un autre androit qu'il +nomme le fleuve Colbert; en un autre il prans possession de ce pais au +nom du roy et fait planter une crois." + +The words of the aged and illiterate writer are obscure, but her +expression "aborda près" seems to indicate that La Salle had not reached +the Mississippi prior to 1675, but only approached it. Finally, a +memorial presented to Seignelay, along with the official narrative of +1679-81, by a friend of La Salle, whose object was to place the +discoverer and his achievements in the most favorable light, contains +the following: "Il [_La Salle_] a esté le premier à former le dessein de +ces descouvertes, qu'il communiqua, il y a plus de quinze ans, à M. de +Courcelles, gouverneur, et à M. Talon, intendant du Canada, qui +l'approuvèrent. Il a fait ensuite plusieurs voyages de ce costé-là, et +un entr'autres en 1669 avec MM. Dolier et Galinée, prestres du Séminaire +de St. Sulpice. _Il est vray que le sieur Jolliet, pour le prévenir, fit +un voyage in 1673, à la rivière Colbert_; mais ce fut uniquement pour y +faire commerce." See Margry, ii. 285. This passage is a virtual +admission that Joliet reached the Mississippi (_Colbert_) before La +Salle. + +Margry, in a series of papers in the _Journal Général de l'Instruction +Publique_ for 1862, first took the position that La Salle reached the +Mississippi in 1670 and 1671, and has brought forward in defence of it +all the documents which his unwearied research enabled him to discover. +Father Tailhan, S.J., has replied at length, in the copious notes to his +edition of Nicolas Perrot, but without having seen the principal +document cited by Margry, and of which extracts have been given in the +notes to this chapter. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +1670-1672. + +THE JESUITS ON THE LAKES. + + The Old Missions and the New.--A Change of Spirit.--Lake Superior + and the Copper-mines.--Ste. Marie.--La + Pointe.--Michilimackinac.--Jesuits on Lake Michigan.--Allouez and + Dablon.--The Jesuit Fur-trade. + + +What were the Jesuits doing? Since the ruin of their great mission of +the Hurons, a perceptible change had taken place in them. They had put +forth exertions almost superhuman, set at naught famine, disease, and +death, lived with the self-abnegation of saints and died with the +devotion of martyrs; and the result of all had been a disastrous +failure. From no short-coming on their part, but from the force of +events beyond the sphere of their influence, a very demon of havoc had +crushed their incipient churches, slaughtered their converts, uprooted +the populous communities on which their hopes had rested, and scattered +them in bands of wretched fugitives far and wide through the +wilderness.[26] They had devoted themselves in the fulness of faith to +the building up of a Christian and Jesuit empire on the conversion of +the great stationary tribes of the lakes; and of these none remained but +the Iroquois, the destroyers of the rest,--among whom, indeed, was a +field which might stimulate their zeal by an abundant promise of +sufferings and martyrdoms, but which, from its geographical position, +was too much exposed to Dutch and English influence to promise great and +decisive results. Their best hopes were now in the North and the West; +and thither, in great part, they had turned their energies. + +[Sidenote: REPORTS OF THE JESUITS.] + +We find them on Lake Huron, Lake Superior, and Lake Michigan, laboring +vigorously as of old, but in a spirit not quite the same. Now, as +before, two objects inspired their zeal,--the "greater glory of God," +and the influence and credit of the Order of Jesus. If the one motive +had somewhat lost in power, the other had gained. The epoch of the +saints and martyrs was passing away; and henceforth we find the Canadian +Jesuit less and less an apostle, more and more an explorer, a man of +science, and a politician. The yearly reports of the missions are still, +for the edification of the pious reader, filled with intolerably tedious +stories of baptisms, conversions, and the exemplary deportment of +neophytes,--for these have become a part of the formula; but they are +relieved abundantly by more mundane topics. One finds observations on +the winds, currents, and tides of the Great Lakes; speculations on a +subterranean outlet of Lake Superior; accounts of its copper-mines, and +how we, the Jesuit fathers, are laboring to explore them for the profit +of the colony; surmises touching the North Sea, the South Sea, the Sea +of China, which we hope ere long to discover; and reports of that great +mysterious river of which the Indians tell us,--flowing southward, +perhaps to the Gulf of Mexico, perhaps to the Vermilion Sea,--and the +secrets whereof, with the help of the Virgin, we will soon reveal to the +world. + +The Jesuit was as often a fanatic for his Order as for his faith; and +oftener yet the two fanaticisms mingled in him inextricably. Ardently as +he burned for the saving of souls, he would have none saved on the Upper +Lakes except by his brethren and himself. He claimed a monopoly of +conversion, with its attendant monopoly of toil, hardship, and +martyrdom. Often disinterested for himself, he was inordinately +ambitious for the great corporate power in which he had merged his own +personality; and here lies one cause, among many, of the seeming +contradictions which abound in the annals of the Order. + +Prefixed to the _Relation_ of 1671 is that monument of Jesuit hardihood +and enterprise, the map of Lake Superior,--a work of which, however, the +exactness has been exaggerated, as compared with other Canadian maps of +the day. While making surveys, the priests were diligently looking for +copper. Father Dablon reports that they had found it in greatest +abundance on Isle Minong, now Isle Royale. "A day's journey from the +head of the lake, on the south side, there is," he says, "a rock of +copper weighing from six hundred to eight hundred pounds, lying on the +shore where any who pass may see it;" and he further speaks of great +copper boulders in the bed of the river Ontonagan.[27] + +[Sidenote: STE. MARIE DU SAUT.] + +There were two principal missions on the Upper Lakes, which were, in a +certain sense, the parents of the rest. One of these was Ste. Marie du +Saut,--the same visited by Dollier and Galinée,--at the outlet of Lake +Superior. This was a noted fishing-place; for the rapids were full of +white-fish, and Indians came thither in crowds. The permanent residents +were an Ojibwa band, whom the French called Sauteurs, and whose bark +lodges were clustered at the foot of the rapids, near the fort of the +Jesuits. Besides these, a host of Algonquins, of various tribes, +resorted thither in the spring and summer,--living in abundance on the +fishery, and dispersing in winter to wander and starve in scattered +hunting-parties far and wide through the forests. + +The other chief mission was that of St. Esprit, at La Pointe, near the +western extremity of Lake Superior. Here were the Hurons, fugitives +twenty years before from the slaughter of their countrymen; and the +Ottawas, who, like them, had sought an asylum from the rage of the +Iroquois. Many other tribes--Illinois, Pottawattamies, Foxes, +Menomonies, Sioux, Assiniboins, Knisteneaux, and a multitude +besides--came hither yearly to trade with the French. Here was a young +Jesuit, Jacques Marquette, lately arrived from the Saut Ste. Marie. His +savage flock disheartened him by its backslidings; and the best that he +could report of the Hurons, after all the toil and all the blood +lavished in their conversion, was, that they "still retain a little +Christianity;" while the Ottawas are "far removed from the kingdom of +God, and addicted beyond all other tribes to foulness, incantations, and +sacrifices to evil spirits."[28] + +[Sidenote: MARQUETTE AND ANDRÉ.] + +Marquette heard from the Illinois--yearly visitors at La Pointe--of the +great river which they had crossed on their way,[29] and which, as he +conjectured, flowed into the Gulf of California. He heard marvels of it +also from the Sioux, who lived on its banks; and a strong desire +possessed him to explore the mystery of its course. A sudden calamity +dashed his hopes. The Sioux--the Iroquois of the West, as the Jesuits +call them--had hitherto kept the peace with the expatriated tribes of La +Pointe; but now, from some cause not worth inquiry, they broke into open +war, and so terrified the Hurons and Ottawas that they abandoned their +settlements and fled. Marquette followed his panic-stricken flock, who, +passing the Saut Ste. Marie, and descending to Lake Huron, stopped at +length,--the Hurons at Michilimackinac, and the Ottawas at the Great +Manitoulin Island. Two missions were now necessary to minister to the +divided bands. That of Michilimackinac was assigned to Marquette, and +that of the Manitoulin Island to Louis André. The former took post at +Point St. Ignace, on the north shore of the Straits of Michilimackinac, +while the latter began the mission of St. Simon at the new abode of the +Ottawas. When winter came, scattering his flock to their +hunting-grounds, André made a missionary tour among the Nipissings and +other neighboring tribes. The shores of Lake Huron had long been an +utter solitude, swept of their denizens by the terror of the +all-conquering Iroquois; but now that these tigers had felt the power of +the French, and learned for a time to leave their Indian allies in +peace, the fugitive hordes were returning to their ancient abodes. +André's experience among them was of the roughest. The staple of his +diet was acorns and _tripe de roche_,--a species of lichen, which, being +boiled, resolved itself into a black glue, nauseous, but not void of +nourishment. At times, he was reduced to moss, the bark of trees, or +moccasins and old moose-skins cut into strips and boiled. His hosts +treated him very ill, and the worst of their fare was always his +portion. When spring came to his relief, he returned to his post of St. +Simon, with impaired digestion and unabated zeal. + +[Sidenote: THE GREEN BAY MISSION.] + +Besides the Saut Ste. Marie and Michilimackinac, both noted +fishing-places, there was another spot, no less famous for game and +fish, and therefore a favorite resort of Indians. This was the head of +the Green Bay of Lake Michigan.[30] Here and in adjacent districts +several distinct tribes had made their abode. The Menomonies were on the +river which bears their name; the Pottawattamies and Winnebagoes were +near the borders of the bay; the Sacs, on Fox River; the Mascoutins, +Miamis, and Kickapoos, on the same river, above Lake Winnebago; and the +Outagamies, or Foxes, on a tributary of it flowing from the north. Green +Bay was manifestly suited for a mission; and, as early as the autumn of +1669, Father Claude Allouez was sent thither to found one. After nearly +perishing by the way, he set out to explore the destined field of his +labors, and went as far as the town of the Mascoutins. Early in the +autumn of 1670, having been joined by Dablon, Superior of the missions +on the Upper Lakes, he made another journey, but not until the two +fathers had held a council with the congregated tribes at St. François +Xavier; for so they named their mission of Green Bay. Here, as they +harangued their naked audience, their gravity was put to the proof; for +a band of warriors, anxious to do them honor, walked incessantly up and +down, aping the movements of the soldiers on guard before the governor's +tent at Montreal. "We could hardly keep from laughing," writes Dablon, +"though, we were discoursing on very important subjects; namely, the +mysteries of our religion, and the things necessary to escaping from +eternal fire."[31] + +The fathers were delighted with the country, which Dablon calls an +earthly paradise; but he adds that the way to it is as hard as the path +to heaven. He alludes especially to the rapids of Fox River, which gave +the two travellers great trouble. Having safely passed them, they saw +an Indian idol on the bank, similar to that which Dollier and Galinée +found at Detroit,--being merely a rock, bearing some resemblance to a +man, and hideously painted. With the help of their attendants, they +threw it into the river. Dablon expatiates on the buffalo, which he +describes apparently on the report of others, as his description is not +very accurate. Crossing Winnebago Lake, the two priests followed the +river leading to the town of the Mascoutins and Miamis, which they +reached on the fifteenth of September.[32] These two tribes lived +together within the compass of the same enclosure of palisades,--to the +number, it is said, of more than three thousand souls. The missionaries, +who had brought a highly colored picture of the Last Judgment, called +the Indians to council and displayed it before them; while Allouez, who +spoke Algonquin, harangued them on hell, demons, and eternal flames. +They listened with open ears, beset him night and day with questions, +and invited him and his companion to unceasing feasts. They were +welcomed in every lodge, and followed everywhere with eyes of curiosity, +wonder, and awe. Dablon overflows with praises of the Miami chief, who +was honored by his subjects like a king, and whose demeanor towards his +guests had no savor of the savage. + +Their hosts told them of the great river Mississippi, rising far in the +north and flowing southward,--they knew not whither,--and of many tribes +that dwelt along its banks. When at length they took their departure, +they left behind them a reputation as medicine-men of transcendent +power. + +[Sidenote: THE CROSS AMONG THE FOXES.] + +In the winter following, Allouez visited the Foxes, whom he found in +extreme ill-humor. They were incensed against the French by the +ill-usage which some of their tribe had lately met when on a trading +visit to Montreal; and they received the Faith with shouts of derision. +The priest was horror-stricken at what he saw. Their lodges, each +containing from five to ten families, seemed in his eyes like seraglios; +for some of the chiefs had eight wives. He armed himself with patience, +and at length gained a hearing. Nay, he succeeded so well, that when he +showed them his crucifix they would throw tobacco on it as an offering; +and, on another visit which he made them soon after, he taught the whole +village to make the sign of the cross. A war-party was going out against +their enemies, and he bethought him of telling them the story of the +Cross and the Emperor Constantine. This so wrought upon them that they +all daubed the figure of a cross on their shields of bull-hide, set out +for the war, and came back victorious, extolling the sacred symbol as a +great war-medicine. + +"Thus it is," writes Dablon, who chronicles the incident, "that our holy +faith is established among these people; and we have good hope that we +shall soon carry it to the famous river called the Mississippi, and +perhaps even to the South Sea."[33] Most things human have their phases +of the ludicrous; and the heroism of these untiring priests is no +exception to the rule. + +[Sidenote: TRADING WITH INDIANS.] + +The various missionary stations were much alike. They consisted of a +chapel (commonly of logs) and one or more houses, with perhaps a +store-house and a workshop; the whole fenced with palisades, and +forming, in fact, a stockade fort, surrounded with clearings and +cultivated fields. It is evident that the priests had need of other +hands than their own and those of the few lay brothers attached to the +mission. They required men inured to labor, accustomed to the forest +life, able to guide canoes and handle tools and weapons. In the earlier +epoch of the missions, when enthusiasm was at its height, they were +served in great measure by volunteers, who joined them through devotion +or penitence, and who were known as _donnés_ or "given men." Of late, +the number of these had much diminished; and they now relied chiefly on +hired men, or _engagés_. These were employed in building, hunting, +fishing, clearing, and tilling the ground, guiding canoes, and (if faith +is to be placed in reports current throughout the colony) in trading +with the Indians for the profit of the missions. This charge of +trading--which, if the results were applied exclusively to the support +of the missions, does not of necessity involve much censure--is +vehemently reiterated in many quarters, including the official +despatches of the governor of Canada; while, so far as I can discover, +the Jesuits never distinctly denied it, and on several occasions they +partially admitted its truth.[34] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[26] See "The Jesuits in North America." + +[27] He complains that the Indians were very averse to giving +information on the subject, so that the Jesuits had not as yet +discovered the metal _in situ_, though they hoped soon to do so. The +Indians told him that the copper had first been found by four hunters, +who had landed on a certain island, near the north shore of the lake. +Wishing to boil their food in a vessel of bark, they gathered stones on +the shore, heated them red hot, and threw them in, but presently +discovered them to be pure copper. Their repast over, they hastened to +re-embark, being afraid of the lynxes and the hares, which, on this +island, were as large as dogs, and which would have devoured their +provisions, and perhaps their canoe. They took with them some of the +wonderful stones; but scarcely had they left the island, when a deep +voice, like thunder, sounded in their ears, "Who are these thieves who +steal the toys of my children?" It was the God of the Waters, or some +other powerful manito. The four adventurers retreated in great terror; +but three of them soon died, and the fourth survived only long enough to +reach his village, and tell the story. The island has no foundation, but +floats with the movement of the wind; and no Indian dares land on its +shores, dreading the wrath of the manito. Dablon, _Relation_, 1670, 84. + +[28] _Lettre du Père Jacques Marquette au R. P. Supérieur des Missions;_ +in _Relation_, 1670, 87. + +[29] The Illinois lived at this time beyond the Mississippi, thirty +days' journey from La Pointe; whither they had been driven by the +Iroquois, from their former abode near Lake Michigan. Dablon +(_Relation_, 1671, 24, 25) says that they lived seven days' journey +beyond the Mississippi, in eight villages. A few years later, most of +them returned to the east side, and made their abode on the river +Illinois. + +[30] The Baye des Puants of the early writers; or, more correctly, La +Baye des Eaux Puantes. The Winnebago Indians, living near it, were +called Les Puans, apparently for no other reason than because some +portion of the bay was said to have an odor like the sea. + +Lake Michigan, the "Lac des Illinois" of the French, was, according to a +letter of Father Allouez, called "Machihiganing" by the Indians. Dablon +writes the name "Mitchiganon." + +[31] _Relation_, 1671, 43. + +[32] This town was on the Neenah or Fox River, above Lake Winnebago. The +Mascoutins, Fire Nation, or Nation of the Prairie, are extinct or merged +in other tribes. See "The Jesuits in North America." The Miamis soon +removed to the banks of the river St. Joseph, near Lake Michigan. + +[33] _Relation_, 1672, 42. + +[34] This charge was made from the first establishment of the missions. +For remarks on it, see "The Jesuits in North America" and "The Old +Régime in Canada." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +1667-1672. + +FRANCE TAKES POSSESSION OF THE WEST. + + Talon.--Saint-Lusson.--Perrot.--The Ceremony at Saut Ste. + Marie.--The Speech of Allouez.--Count Frontenac. + + +Jean Talon, intendant of Canada, was full of projects for the good of +the colony. On the one hand, he set himself to the development of its +industries, and, on the other, to the extension of its domain. He meant +to occupy the interior of the continent, control the rivers, which were +its only highways, and hold it for France against every other nation. On +the east, England was to be hemmed within a narrow strip of seaboard; +while, on the south, Talon aimed at securing a port on the Gulf of +Mexico, to keep the Spaniards in check, and dispute with them the +possession of the vast regions which they claimed as their own. But the +interior of the continent was still an unknown world. It behooved him to +explore it; and to that end he availed himself of Jesuits, officers, +fur-traders, and enterprising schemers like La Salle. His efforts at +discovery seem to have been conducted with a singular economy of the +King's purse. La Salle paid all the expenses of his first expedition +made under Talon's auspices; and apparently of the second also, though +the intendant announces it in his despatches as an expedition sent out +by himself.[35] When, in 1670, he ordered Daumont de Saint-Lusson to +search for copper mines on Lake Superior, and at the same time to take +formal possession of the whole interior for the King, it was arranged +that he should pay the costs of the journey by trading with the +Indians.[36] + +[Sidenote: SAINT-LUSSON AND PERROT.] + +Saint-Lusson set out with a small party of men, and Nicolas Perrot as +his interpreter. Among Canadian _voyageurs_, few names are so +conspicuous as that of Perrot; not because there were not others who +matched him in achievement, but because he could write, and left behind +him a tolerable account of what he had seen.[37] He was at this time +twenty-six years old, and had formerly been an _engagé_ of the Jesuits. +He was a man of enterprise, courage, and address,--the last being +especially shown in his dealings with Indians, over whom he had great +influence. He spoke Algonquin fluently, and was favorably known to many +tribes of that family. + +Saint-Lusson wintered at the Manitoulin Islands; while Perrot, having +first sent messages to the tribes of the north, inviting them to meet +the deputy of the governor at the Saut Ste. Marie in the following +spring, proceeded to Green Bay, to urge the same invitation upon the +tribes of that quarter. They knew him well, and greeted him with clamors +of welcome. The Miamis, it is said, received him with a sham battle, +which was designed to do him honor, but by which nerves more susceptible +would have been severely shaken.[38] They entertained him also with a +grand game of _la crosse_, the Indian ball-play. Perrot gives a +marvellous account of the authority and state of the Miami chief, who, +he says, was attended day and night by a guard of warriors,--an +assertion which would be incredible, were it not sustained by the +account of the same chief given by the Jesuit Dablon. Of the tribes of +the Bay, the greater part promised to send delegates to the Saut; but +the Pottawattamies dissuaded the Miami potentate from attempting so long +a journey, lest the fatigue incident to it might injure his health; and +he therefore deputed them to represent him and his tribesmen at the +great meeting. Their principal chiefs, with those of the Sacs, +Winnebagoes, and Menomonies, embarked, and paddled for the place of +rendezvous, where they and Perrot arrived on the fifth of May.[39] + +Saint-Lusson was here with his men, fifteen in number, among whom was +Louis Joliet;[40] and Indians were fast thronging in from their +wintering grounds, attracted, as usual, by the fishery of the rapids or +moved by the messages sent by Perrot,--Crees, Monsonis, Amikoués, +Nipissings, and many more. When fourteen tribes, or their +representatives, had arrived, Saint-Lusson prepared to execute the +commission with which he was charged. + +[Sidenote: CEREMONY AT THE SAUT.] + +At the foot of the rapids was the village of the Sauteurs, above the +village was a hill, and hard by stood the fort of the Jesuits. On the +morning of the fourteenth of June, Saint-Lusson led his followers to the +top of the hill, all fully equipped and under arms. Here, too, in the +vestments of their priestly office, were four Jesuits,--Claude Dablon, +Superior of the Missions of the lakes, Gabriel Druilletes, Claude +Allouez, and Louis André.[41] All around the great throng of Indians +stood, or crouched, or reclined at length, with eyes and ears intent. A +large cross of wood had been made ready. Dablon, in solemn form, +pronounced his blessing on it; and then it was reared and planted in the +ground, while the Frenchmen, uncovered, sang the _Vexilla Regis_. Then a +post of cedar was planted beside it, with a metal plate attached, +engraven with the royal arms; while Saint-Lusson's followers sang the +_Exaudiat_, and one of the Jesuits uttered a prayer for the King. +Saint-Lusson now advanced, and, holding his sword in one hand, and +raising with the other a sod of earth, proclaimed in a loud voice,-- + +"In the name of the Most High, Mighty, and Redoubted Monarch, Louis, +Fourteenth of that name, Most Christian King of France and of Navarre, I +take possession of this place, Sainte Marie du Saut, as also of Lakes +Huron and Superior, the Island of Manitoulin, and all countries, rivers, +lakes, and streams contiguous and adjacent thereunto,--both those which +have been discovered and those which may be discovered hereafter, in all +their length and breadth, bounded on the one side by the seas of the +North and of the West, and on the other by the South Sea: declaring to +the nations thereof that from this time forth they are vassals of his +Majesty, bound to obey his laws and follow his customs; promising them +on his part all succor and protection against the incursions and +invasions of their enemies: declaring to all other potentates, princes, +sovereigns, states, and republics,--to them and to their subjects,--that +they cannot and are not to seize or settle upon any parts of the +aforesaid countries, save only under the good pleasure of His Most +Christian Majesty, and of him who will govern in his behalf; and this on +pain of incurring his resentment and the efforts of his arms. _Vive le +Roi_."[42] + +The Frenchmen fired their guns and shouted "Vive le Roi," and the yelps +of the astonished Indians mingled with the din. + +What now remains of the sovereignty thus pompously proclaimed? Now and +then the accents of France on the lips of some straggling boatman or +vagabond half-breed,--this, and nothing more. + +[Sidenote: ALLOUEZ'S HARANGUE.] + +When the uproar was over, Father Allouez addressed the Indians in a +solemn harangue; and these were his words: "It is a good work, my +brothers, an important work, a great work, that brings us together in +council to-day. Look up at the cross which rises so high above your +heads. It was there that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, after making +himself a man for the love of men, was nailed and died, to satisfy his +Eternal Father for our sins. He is the master of our lives; the ruler of +Heaven, Earth, and Hell. It is he of whom I am continually speaking to +you, and whose name and word I have borne through all your country. But +look at this post to which are fixed the arms of the great chief of +France, whom we call King. He lives across the sea. He is the chief of +the greatest chiefs, and has no equal on earth. All the chiefs whom you +have ever seen are but children beside him. He is like a great tree, +and they are but the little herbs that one walks over and tramples under +foot. You know Onontio,[43] that famous chief at Quebec; you know and +you have seen that he is the terror of the Iroquois, and that his very +name makes them tremble, since he has laid their country waste and +burned their towns with fire. Across the sea there are ten thousand +Onontios like him, who are but the warriors of our great King, of whom I +have told you. When he says, 'I am going to war,' everybody obeys his +orders; and each of these ten thousand chiefs raises a troop of a +hundred warriors, some on sea and some on land. Some embark in great +ships, such as you have seen at Quebec. Your canoes carry only four or +five men, or, at the most, ten or twelve; but our ships carry four or +five hundred, and sometimes a thousand. Others go to war by land, and in +such numbers that if they stood in a double file they would reach from +here to Mississaquenk, which is more than twenty leagues off. When our +King attacks his enemies, he is more terrible than the thunder: the +earth trembles; the air and the sea are all on fire with the blaze of +his cannon: he is seen in the midst of his warriors, covered over with +the blood of his enemies, whom he kills in such numbers that he does not +reckon them by the scalps, but by the streams of blood which he causes +to flow. He takes so many prisoners that he holds them in no account, +but lets them go where they will, to show that he is not afraid of +them. But now nobody dares make war on him. All the nations beyond the +sea have submitted to him and begged humbly for peace. Men come from +every quarter of the earth to listen to him and admire him. All that is +done in the world is decided by him alone. + +"But what shall I say of his riches? You think yourselves rich when you +have ten or twelve sacks of corn, a few hatchets, beads, kettles, and +other things of that sort. He has cities of his own, more than there are +of men in all this country for five hundred leagues around. In each city +there are store-houses where there are hatchets enough to cut down all +your forests, kettles enough to cook all your moose, and beads enough to +fill all your lodges. His house is longer than from here to the top of +the Saut,--that is to say, more than half a league,--and higher than +your tallest trees; and it holds more families than the largest of your +towns."[44] The father added more in a similar strain; but the +peroration of his harangue is not on record. + +Whatever impression this curious effort of Jesuit rhetoric may have +produced upon the hearers, it did not prevent them from stripping the +royal arms from the post to which they were nailed, as soon as +Saint-Lusson and his men had left the Saut; probably, not because they +understood the import of the symbol, but because they feared it as a +charm. Saint-Lusson proceeded to Lake Superior, where, however, he +accomplished nothing, except, perhaps, a traffic with the Indians on his +own account; and he soon after returned to Quebec. Talon was resolved to +find the Mississippi, the most interesting object of search, and +seemingly the most attainable, in the wild and vague domain which he had +just claimed for the King. The Indians had described it; the Jesuits +were eager to discover it; and La Salle, if he had not reached it, had +explored two several avenues by which it might be approached. Talon +looked about him for a fit agent of the enterprise, and made choice of +Louis Joliet, who had returned from Lake Superior.[45] But the intendant +was not to see the fulfilment of his design. His busy and useful career +in Canada was drawing to an end. A misunderstanding had arisen between +him and the governor, Courcelle. Both were faithful servants of the +King; but the relations between the two chiefs of the colony were of a +nature necessarily so critical, that a conflict of authority was +scarcely to be avoided. Each thought his functions encroached upon, and +both asked for recall. Another governor succeeded; one who was to stamp +his mark, broad, bold, and ineffaceable, on the most memorable page of +French-American History,--Louis de Buade, Count of Palluau and +Frontenac. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[35] At least, La Salle was in great need of money, about the time of +his second journey. On the sixth of August, 1671, he had received on +credit, "dans son grand besoin et nécessité," from Branssac, fiscal +attorney of the Seminary, merchandise to the amount of four hundred and +fifty livres; and on the eighteenth of December of the following year he +gave his promise to pay the same sum, in money or furs, in the August +following. Faillon found the papers in the ancient records of Montreal. + +[36] In his despatch of 2d Nov., 1671, Talon writes to the King that +"Saint-Lusson's expedition will cost nothing, as he has received beaver +enough from the Indians to pay him." + +[37] _Moeurs, Coustumes, et Relligion des Sauvages de l'Amérique +Septentrionale._ This work of Perrot, hitherto unpublished, appeared in +1864, under the editorship of Father Tailhan, S.J. A great part of it is +incorporated in La Potherie. + +[38] See La Potherie, ii. 125. Perrot himself does not mention it. +Charlevoix erroneously places this interview at Chicago. Perrot's +narrative shows that he did not go farther than the tribes of Green Bay; +and the Miamis were then, as we have seen, on the upper part of Fox +River. + +[39] Perrot, _Mémoires_, 127. + +[40] _Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession, etc., 14 Juin, 1671._ The +names are attached to this instrument. + +[41] Marquette is said to have been present; but the official act just +cited, proves the contrary. He was still at St. Esprit. + +[42] _Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession._ + +[43] The Indian name of the governor of Canada. + +[44] A close translation of Dablon's report of the speech. See +_Relation_, 1671, 27. + +[45] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 2 Nov., 1672._ In the Brodhead +Collection, by a copyist's error, the name of the Chevalier de +Grandfontaine is substituted for that of Talon. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +1672-1675. + +THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI. + + Joliet sent to find the Mississippi.--Jacques + Marquette.--Departure.--Green Bay.--The Wisconsin.--The + Mississippi.--Indians.--Manitous.--The Arkansas.--The + Illinois.--Joliet's Misfortune.--Marquette at Chicago: his Illness; + his Death. + + +If Talon had remained in the colony, Frontenac would infallibly have +quarrelled with him; but he was too clear-sighted not to approve his +plans for the discovery and occupation of the interior. Before sailing +for France, Talon recommended Joliet as a suitable agent for the +discovery of the Mississippi, and the governor accepted his counsel.[46] + +Louis Joliet was the son of a wagon-maker in the service of the Company +of the Hundred Associates,[47] then owners of Canada. He was born at +Quebec in 1645, and was educated by the Jesuits. When still very young, +he resolved to be a priest. He received the tonsure and the minor orders +at the age of seventeen. Four years after, he is mentioned with +especial honor for the part he bore in the disputes in philosophy, at +which the dignitaries of the colony were present, and in which the +intendant himself took part.[48] Not long after, he renounced his +clerical vocation, and turned fur-trader. Talon sent him, with one Péré, +to explore the copper-mines of Lake Superior; and it was on his return +from this expedition that he met La Salle and the Sulpitians near the +head of Lake Ontario.[49] + +In what we know of Joliet, there is nothing that reveals any salient or +distinctive trait of character, any especial breadth of view or boldness +of design. He appears to have been simply a merchant, intelligent, well +educated, courageous, hardy, and enterprising. Though he had renounced +the priesthood, he retained his partiality for the Jesuits; and it is +more than probable that their influence had aided not a little to +determine Talon's choice. One of their number, Jacques Marquette, was +chosen to accompany him. + +[Sidenote: MARQUETTE.] + +He passed up the lakes to Michilimackinac, and found his destined +companion at Point St. Ignace, on the north side of the strait, where, +in his palisaded mission-house and chapel, he had labored for two years +past to instruct the Huron refugees from St. Esprit, and a band of +Ottawas who had joined them. Marquette was born in 1637, of an old and +honorable family at Laon, in the north of France, and was now +thirty-five years of age. When about seventeen, he had joined the +Jesuits, evidently from motives purely religious; and in 1666 he was +sent to the missions of Canada. At first, he was destined to the station +of Tadoussac; and to prepare himself for it, he studied the Montagnais +language under Gabriel Druilletes. But his destination was changed, and +he was sent to the Upper Lakes in 1668, where he had since remained. His +talents as a linguist must have been great; for within a few years he +learned to speak with ease six Indian languages. The traits of his +character are unmistakable. He was of the brotherhood of the early +Canadian missionaries, and the true counterpart of Garnier or Jogues. He +was a devout votary of the Virgin Mary, who, imaged to his mind in +shapes of the most transcendent loveliness with which the pencil of +human genius has ever informed the canvas, was to him the object of an +adoration not unmingled with a sentiment of chivalrous devotion. The +longings of a sensitive heart, divorced from earth, sought solace in +the skies. A subtile element of romance was blended with the fervor of +his worship, and hung like an illumined cloud over the harsh and hard +realities of his daily lot. Kindled by the smile of his celestial +mistress, his gentle and noble nature knew no fear. For her he burned to +dare and to suffer, discover new lands and conquer new realms to her +sway. + +He begins the journal of his voyage thus: "The day of the Immaculate +Conception of the Holy Virgin; whom I had continually invoked since I +came to this country of the Ottawas to obtain from God the favor of +being enabled to visit the nations on the river Mississippi,--this very +day was precisely that on which M. Joliet arrived with orders from Count +Frontenac, our governor, and from M. Talon, our intendant, to go with me +on this discovery. I was all the more delighted at this good news, +because I saw my plans about to be accomplished, and found myself in the +happy necessity of exposing my life for the salvation of all these +tribes,--and especially of the Illinois, who, when I was at Point St. +Esprit, had begged me very earnestly to bring the word of God among +them." + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE.] + +The outfit of the travellers was very simple. They provided themselves +with two birch canoes, and a supply of smoked meat and Indian corn; +embarked with five men, and began their voyage on the seventeenth of +May. They had obtained all possible information from the Indians, and +had made, by means of it, a species of map of their intended route. +"Above all," writes Marquette, "I placed our voyage under the protection +of the Holy Virgin Immaculate, promising that if she granted us the +favor of discovering the great river, I would give it the name of the +Conception."[50] Their course was westward; and, plying their paddles, +they passed the Straits of Michilimackinac, and coasted the northern +shores of Lake Michigan, landing at evening to build their camp-fire at +the edge of the forest, and draw up their canoes on the strand. They +soon reached the river Menomonie, and ascended it to the village of the +Menomonies, or Wild-rice Indians.[51] When they told them the object of +their voyage, they were filled with astonishment, and used their best +ingenuity to dissuade them. The banks of the Mississippi, they said, +were inhabited by ferocious tribes, who put every stranger to death, +tomahawking all new-comers without cause or provocation. They added that +there was a demon in a certain part of the river, whose roar could be +heard at a great distance, and who would engulf them in the abyss where +he dwelt; that its waters were full of frightful monsters, who would +devour them and their canoe; and, finally, that the heat was so great +that they would perish inevitably. Marquette set their counsel at +naught, gave them a few words of instruction in the mysteries of the +Faith, taught them a prayer, and bade them farewell. + +The travellers next reached the mission at the head of Green Bay; +entered Fox River; with difficulty and labor dragged their canoes up the +long and tumultuous rapids; crossed Lake Winnebago; and followed the +quiet windings of the river beyond, where they glided through an endless +growth of wild rice, and scared the innumerable birds that fed upon it. +On either hand rolled the prairie, dotted with groves and trees, +browsing elk and deer.[52] On the seventh of June, they reached the +Mascoutins and Miamis, who, since the visit of Dablon and Allouez, had +been joined by the Kickapoos. Marquette, who had an eye for natural +beauty, was delighted with the situation of the town, which he describes +as standing on the crown of a hill; while, all around, the prairie +stretched beyond the sight, interspersed with groves and belts of tall +forest. But he was still more delighted when he saw a cross planted in +the midst of the place. The Indians had decorated it with a number of +dressed deer-skins, red girdles, and bows and arrows, which they had +hung upon it as an offering to the Great Manitou of the French; a sight +by which Marquette says he was "extremely consoled." + +[Sidenote: THE WISCONSIN RIVER.] + +The travellers had no sooner reached the town than they called the +chiefs and elders to a council. Joliet told them that the governor of +Canada had sent him to discover new countries, and that God had sent his +companion to teach the true faith to the inhabitants; and he prayed for +guides to show them the way to the waters of the Wisconsin. The council +readily consented; and on the tenth of June the Frenchmen embarked +again, with two Indians to conduct them. All the town came down to the +shore to see their departure. Here were the Miamis, with long locks of +hair dangling over each ear, after a fashion which Marquette thought +very becoming; and here, too, the Mascoutins and the Kickapoos, whom he +describes as mere boors in comparison with their Miami townsmen. All +stared alike at the seven adventurers, marvelling that men could be +found to risk an enterprise so hazardous. + +The river twisted among lakes and marshes choked with wild rice; and, +but for their guides, they could scarcely have followed the perplexed +and narrow channel. It brought them at last to the portage, where, after +carrying their canoes a mile and a half over the prairie and through the +marsh, they launched them on the Wisconsin, bade farewell to the waters +that flowed to the St. Lawrence, and committed themselves to the current +that was to bear them they knew not whither,--perhaps to the Gulf of +Mexico, perhaps to the South Sea or the Gulf of California. They glided +calmly down the tranquil stream, by islands choked with trees and +matted with entangling grape-vines; by forests, groves, and prairies, +the parks and pleasure-grounds of a prodigal Nature; by thickets and +marshes and broad bare sand-bars; under the shadowing trees, between +whose tops looked down from afar the bold brow of some woody bluff. At +night, the bivouac,--the canoes inverted on the bank, the flickering +fire, the meal of bison-flesh or venison, the evening pipes, and slumber +beneath the stars; and when in the morning they embarked again, the mist +hung on the river like a bridal veil, then melted before the sun, till +the glassy water and the languid woods basked breathless in the sultry +glare.[53] + +[Sidenote: THE MISSISSIPPI.] + +On the seventeenth of June they saw on their right the broad meadows, +bounded in the distance by rugged hills, where now stand the town and +fort of Prairie du Chien. Before them a wide and rapid current coursed +athwart their way, by the foot of lofty heights wrapped thick in +forests. They had found what they sought, and "with a joy," writes +Marquette, "which I cannot express," they steered forth their canoes on +the eddies of the Mississippi. + +Turning southward, they paddled down the stream, through a solitude +unrelieved by the faintest trace of man. A large fish, apparently one of +the huge cat-fish of the Mississippi, blundered against Marquette's +canoe, with a force which seems to have startled him; and once, as they +drew in their net, they caught a "spade-fish," whose eccentric +appearance greatly astonished them. At length the buffalo began to +appear, grazing in herds on the great prairies which then bordered the +river; and Marquette describes the fierce and stupid look of the old +bulls, as they stared at the intruders through the tangled mane which +nearly blinded them. + +[Sidenote: THE ILLINOIS INDIANS.] + +They advanced with extreme caution, landed at night, and made a fire to +cook their evening meal; then extinguished it, embarked again, paddled +some way farther, and anchored in the stream, keeping a man on the watch +till morning. They had journeyed more than a fortnight without meeting a +human being, when, on the twenty-fifth, they discovered footprints of +men in the mud of the western bank, and a well-trodden path that led to +the adjacent prairie. Joliet and Marquette resolved to follow it; and +leaving the canoes in charge of their men, they set out on their +hazardous adventure. The day was fair, and they walked two leagues in +silence, following the path through the forest and across the sunny +prairie, till they discovered an Indian village on the banks of a river, +and two others on a hill half a league distant.[54] Now, with beating +hearts, they invoked the aid of Heaven, and, again advancing, came so +near, without being seen, that they could hear the voices of the +Indians among the wigwams. Then they stood forth in full view, and +shouted to attract attention. There was great commotion in the village. +The inmates swarmed out of their huts, and four of their chief men +presently came forward to meet the strangers, advancing very +deliberately, and holding up toward the sun two calumets, or +peace-pipes, decorated with feathers. They stopped abruptly before the +two Frenchmen, and stood gazing at them without speaking a word. +Marquette was much relieved on seeing that they wore French cloth, +whence he judged that they must be friends and allies. He broke the +silence, and asked them who they were; whereupon they answered that they +were Illinois, and offered the pipe; which having been duly smoked, they +all went together to the village. Here the chief received the travellers +after a singular fashion, meant to do them honor. He stood stark naked +at the door of a large wigwam, holding up both hands as if to shield his +eyes. "Frenchmen, how bright the sun shines when you come to visit us! +All our village awaits you; and you shall enter our wigwams in peace." +So saying, he led them into his own, which was crowded to suffocation +with savages, staring at their guests in silence. Having smoked with the +chiefs and old men, they were invited to visit the great chief of all +the Illinois, at one of the villages they had seen in the distance; and +thither they proceeded, followed by a throng of warriors, squaws, and +children. On arriving, they were forced to smoke again, and listen to a +speech of welcome from the great chief, who delivered it standing +between two old men, naked like himself. His lodge was crowded with the +dignitaries of the tribe, whom Marquette addressed in Algonquin, +announcing himself as a messenger sent by the God who had made them, and +whom it behooves them to recognize and obey. He added a few words +touching the power and glory of Count Frontenac, and concluded by asking +information concerning the Mississippi, and the tribes along its banks, +whom he was on his way to visit. The chief replied with a speech of +compliment; assuring his guests that their presence added flavor to his +tobacco, made the river more calm, the sky more serene, and the earth +more beautiful. In conclusion, he gave them a young slave and a calumet, +begging them at the same time to abandon their purpose of descending the +Mississippi. + +A feast of four courses now followed. First, a wooden bowl full of a +porridge of Indian meal boiled with grease was set before the guests; +and the master of ceremonies fed them in turn, like infants, with a +large spoon. Then appeared a platter of fish; and the same functionary, +carefully removing the bones with his fingers, and blowing on the +morsels to cool them, placed them in the mouths of the two Frenchmen. A +large dog, killed and cooked for the occasion, was next placed before +them; but, failing to tempt their fastidious appetites, was supplanted +by a dish of fat buffalo-meat, which concluded the entertainment. The +crowd having dispersed, buffalo-robes were spread on the ground, and +Marquette and Joliet spent the night on the scene of the late festivity. +In the morning, the chief, with some six hundred of his tribesmen, +escorted them to their canoes, and bade them, after their stolid +fashion, a friendly farewell. + +[Sidenote: A REAL DANGER.] + +Again they were on their way, slowly drifting down the great river. They +passed the mouth of the Illinois, and glided beneath that line of rocks +on the eastern side, cut into fantastic forms by the elements, and +marked as "The Ruined Castles" on some of the early French maps. +Presently they beheld a sight which reminded them that the Devil was +still lord paramount of this wilderness. On the flat face of a high rock +were painted, in red, black, and green, a pair of monsters, each "as +large as a calf, with horns like a deer, red eyes, a beard like a tiger, +and a frightful expression of countenance. The face is something like +that of a man, the body covered with scales; and the tail so long that +it passes entirely round the body, over the head and between the legs, +ending like that of a fish." Such is the account which the worthy Jesuit +gives of these manitous, or Indian gods.[55] He confesses that at first +they frightened him; and his imagination and that of his credulous +companions was so wrought upon by these unhallowed efforts of Indian +art, that they continued for a long time to talk of them as they plied +their paddles. They were thus engaged, when they were suddenly aroused +by a real danger. A torrent of yellow mud rushed furiously athwart the +calm blue current of the Mississippi, boiling and surging, and sweeping +in its course logs, branches, and uprooted trees. They had reached the +mouth of the Missouri, where that savage river, descending from its mad +career through a vast unknown of barbarism, poured its turbid floods +into the bosom of its gentler sister. Their light canoes whirled on the +miry vortex like dry leaves on an angry brook. "I never," writes +Marquette, "saw anything more terrific;" but they escaped with their +fright, and held their way down the turbulent and swollen current of the +now united rivers.[56] They passed the lonely forest that covered the +site of the destined city of St. Louis, and, a few days later, saw on +their left the mouth of the stream to which the Iroquois had given the +well-merited name of Ohio, or the "Beautiful River."[57] Soon they began +to see the marshy shores buried in a dense growth of the cane, with its +tall straight stems and feathery light-green foliage. The sun glowed +through the hazy air with a languid stifling heat, and by day and night +mosquitoes in myriads left them no peace. They floated slowly down the +current, crouched in the shade of the sails which they had spread as +awnings, when suddenly they saw Indians on the east bank. The surprise +was mutual, and each party was as much frightened as the other. +Marquette hastened to display the calumet which the Illinois had given +him by way of passport; and the Indians, recognizing the pacific symbol, +replied with an invitation to land. Evidently, they were in +communication with Europeans, for they were armed with guns, knives, and +hatchets, wore garments of cloth, and carried their gunpowder in small +bottles of thick glass. They feasted the Frenchmen with buffalo-meat, +bear's oil, and white plums; and gave them a variety of doubtful +information, including the agreeable but delusive assurance that they +would reach the mouth of the river in ten days. It was, in fact, more +than a thousand miles distant. + +[Sidenote: THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI.] + +They resumed their course, and again floated down the interminable +monotony of river, marsh, and forest. Day after day passed on in +solitude, and they had paddled some three hundred miles since their +meeting with the Indians, when, as they neared the mouth of the +Arkansas, they saw a cluster of wigwams on the west bank. Their inmates +were all astir, yelling the war-whoop, snatching their weapons, and +running to the shore to meet the strangers, who, on their part, called +for succor to the Virgin. In truth, they had need of her aid; for +several large wooden canoes, filled with savages, were putting out from +the shore, above and below them, to cut off their retreat, while a swarm +of headlong young warriors waded into the water to attack them. The +current proved too strong; and, failing to reach the canoes of the +Frenchmen, one of them threw his war-club, which flew over the heads of +the startled travellers. Meanwhile, Marquette had not ceased to hold up +his calumet, to which the excited crowd gave no heed, but strung their +bows and notched their arrows for immediate action; when at length the +elders of the village arrived, saw the peace-pipe, restrained the ardor +of the youth, and urged the Frenchmen to come ashore. Marquette and his +companions complied, trembling, and found a better reception than they +had reason to expect. One of the Indians spoke a little Illinois, and +served as interpreter; a friendly conference was followed by a feast of +sagamite and fish; and the travellers, not without sore misgivings, +spent the night in the lodges of their entertainers.[58] + +[Sidenote: THE ARKANSAS.] + +Early in the morning, they embarked again, and proceeded to a village of +the Arkansas tribe, about eight leagues below. Notice of their coming +was sent before them by their late hosts; and as they drew near they +were met by a canoe, in the prow of which stood a naked personage, +holding a calumet, singing, and making gestures of friendship. On +reaching the village, which was on the east side,[59] opposite the mouth +of the river Arkansas, they were conducted to a sort of scaffold, before +the lodge of the war-chief. The space beneath had been prepared for +their reception, the ground being neatly covered with rush mats. On +these they were seated; the warriors sat around them in a semi-circle; +then the elders of the tribe; and then the promiscuous crowd of +villagers, standing, and staring over the heads of the more dignified +members of the assembly. All the men were naked; but, to compensate for +the lack of clothing, they wore strings of beads in their noses and +ears. The women were clothed in shabby skins, and wore their hair +clumped in a mass behind each ear. By good luck, there was a young +Indian in the village, who had an excellent knowledge of Illinois; and +through him Marquette endeavored to explain the mysteries of +Christianity, and to gain information concerning the river below. To +this end he gave his auditors the presents indispensable on such +occasions, but received very little in return. They told him that the +Mississippi was infested by hostile Indians, armed with guns procured +from white men; and that they, the Arkansas, stood in such fear of them +that they dared not hunt the buffalo, but were forced to live on Indian +corn, of which they raised three crops a year. + +During the speeches on either side, food was brought in without +ceasing,--sometimes a platter of sagamite or mush; sometimes of corn +boiled whole; sometimes a roasted dog. The villagers had large earthen +pots and platters, made by themselves with tolerable skill, as well as +hatchets, knives, and beads, gained by traffic with the Illinois and +other tribes in contact with the French or Spaniards. All day there was +feasting without respite, after the merciless practice of Indian +hospitality; but at night some of their entertainers proposed to kill +and plunder them,--a scheme which was defeated by the vigilance of the +chief, who visited their quarters, and danced the calumet dance to +reassure his guests. + +The travellers now held counsel as to what course they should take. They +had gone far enough, as they thought, to establish one important +point,--that the Mississippi discharged its waters, not into the +Atlantic or sea of Virginia, nor into the Gulf of California or +Vermilion Sea, but into the Gulf of Mexico. They thought themselves +nearer to its mouth than they actually were, the distance being still +about seven hundred miles; and they feared that if they went farther +they might be killed by Indians or captured by Spaniards, whereby the +results of their discovery would be lost. Therefore they resolved to +return to Canada, and report what they had seen. + +They left the Arkansas village, and began their homeward voyage on the +seventeenth of July. It was no easy task to urge their way upward, in +the heat of midsummer, against the current of the dark and gloomy +stream, toiling all day under the parching sun, and sleeping at night in +the exhalations of the unwholesome shore, or in the narrow confines of +their birchen vessels, anchored on the river. Marquette was attacked +with dysentery. Languid and well-nigh spent, he invoked his celestial +mistress, as day after day, and week after week, they won their slow way +northward. At length, they reached the Illinois, and, entering its +mouth, followed its course, charmed, as they went, with its placid +waters, its shady forests, and its rich plains, grazed by the bison and +the deer. They stopped at a spot soon to be made famous in the annals of +western discovery. This was a village of the Illinois, then called +"Kaskaskia;" a name afterwards transferred to another locality.[60] A +chief, with a band of young warriors, offered to guide them to the Lake +of the Illinois; that is to say, Lake Michigan. Thither they repaired; +and, coasting its shores, reached Green Bay at the end of September, +after an absence of about four months, during which they had paddled +their canoes somewhat more than two thousand five hundred miles.[61] + +[Sidenote: RETURN TO CANADA.] + +Marquette remained to recruit his exhausted strength; but Joliet +descended to Quebec, to bear the report of his discovery to Count +Frontenac. Fortune had wonderfully favored him on his long and perilous +journey; but now she abandoned him on the very threshold of home. At the +foot of the rapids of La Chine, and immediately above Montreal, his +canoe was overset, two of his men and an Indian boy were drowned, all +his papers were lost, and he himself narrowly escaped.[62] In a letter +to Frontenac, he speaks of the accident as follows: "I had escaped every +peril from the Indians; I had passed forty-two rapids; and was on the +point of disembarking, full of joy at the success of so long and +difficult an enterprise, when my canoe capsized, after all the danger +seemed over. I lost two men and my box of papers, within sight of the +first French settlements, which I had left almost two years before. +Nothing remains to me but my life, and the ardent desire to employ it on +any service which you may please to direct."[63] + +[Sidenote: MARQUETTE'S MISSION.] + +Marquette spent the winter and the following summer at the mission of +Green Bay, still suffering from his malady. In the autumn, however, it +abated; and he was permitted by his Superior to attempt the execution of +a plan to which he was devotedly attached,--the founding, at the +principal town of the Illinois, of a mission to be called the +"Immaculate Conception," a name which he had already given to the river +Mississippi. He set out on this errand on the twenty-fifth of October, +accompanied by two men, named Pierre and Jacques, one of whom had been +with him on his great journey of discovery. A band of Pottawattamies and +another band of Illinois also joined him. The united parties--ten canoes +in all--followed the east shore of Green Bay as far as the inlet then +called "Sturgeon Cove," from the head of which they crossed by a +difficult portage through the forest to the shore of Lake Michigan. +November had come. The bright hues of the autumn foliage were changed to +rusty brown. The shore was desolate, and the lake was stormy. They were +more than a month in coasting its western border, when at length they +reached the river Chicago, entered it, and ascended about two leagues. +Marquette's disease had lately returned, and hemorrhage now ensued. He +told his two companions that this journey would be his last. In the +condition in which he was, it was impossible to go farther. The two men +built a log hut by the river, and here they prepared to spend the +winter; while Marquette, feeble as he was, began the spiritual exercises +of Saint Ignatius, and confessed his two companions twice a week. + +Meadow, marsh, and forest were sheeted with snow, but game was abundant. +Pierre and Jacques killed buffalo and deer, and shot wild turkeys close +to their hut. There was an encampment of Illinois within two days' +journey; and other Indians, passing by this well-known thoroughfare, +occasionally visited them, treating the exiles kindly, and sometimes +bringing them game and Indian corn. Eighteen leagues distant was the +camp of two adventurous French traders,--one of them, a noted _coureur +de bois_, nicknamed La Taupine;[64] and the other, a self-styled +surgeon. They also visited Marquette, and befriended him to the best of +their power. + +[Sidenote: THE MISSION AT KASKASKIA.] + +Urged by a burning desire to lay, before he died, the foundation of his +new mission of the Immaculate Conception, Marquette begged his two +followers to join him in a _novena_, or nine days' devotion to the +Virgin. In consequence of this, as he believed, his disease relented; he +began to regain strength, and in March was able to resume the journey. +On the thirtieth of the month, they left their hut, which had been +inundated by a sudden rise of the river, and carried their canoe through +mud and water over the portage which led to the Des Plaines. Marquette +knew the way, for he had passed by this route on his return from the +Mississippi. Amid the rains of opening spring, they floated down the +swollen current of the Des Plaines, by naked woods and spongy, saturated +prairies, till they reached its junction with the main stream of the +Illinois, which they descended to their destination, the Indian town +which Marquette calls "Kaskaskia." Here, as we are told, he was received +"like an angel from Heaven." He passed from wigwam to wigwam, telling +the listening crowds of God and the Virgin, Paradise and Hell, angels +and demons; and, when he thought their minds prepared, he summoned them +all to a grand council. + +It took place near the town, on the great meadow which lies between the +river and the modern village of Utica. Here five hundred chiefs and old +men were seated in a ring; behind stood fifteen hundred youths and +warriors, and behind these again all the women and children of the +village. Marquette, standing in the midst, displayed four large pictures +of the Virgin; harangued the assembly on the mysteries of the Faith, and +exhorted them to adopt it. The temper of his auditory met his utmost +wishes. They begged him to stay among them and continue his +instructions; but his life was fast ebbing away, and it behooved him to +depart. + +[Sidenote: BURIAL OF MARQUETTE.] + +A few days after Easter he left the village, escorted by a crowd of +Indians, who followed him as far as Lake Michigan. Here he embarked with +his two companions. Their destination was Michilimackinac, and their +course lay along the eastern borders of the lake. As, in the freshness +of advancing spring, Pierre and Jacques urged their canoe along that +lonely and savage shore, the priest lay with dimmed sight and prostrated +strength, communing with the Virgin and the angels. On the nineteenth of +May, he felt that his hour was near; and, as they passed the mouth of a +small river, he requested his companions to land. They complied, built a +shed of bark on a rising ground near the bank, and carried thither the +dying Jesuit. With perfect cheerfulness and composure, he gave +directions for his burial, asked their forgiveness for the trouble he +had caused them, administered to them the sacrament of penitence, and +thanked God that he was permitted to die in the wilderness, a missionary +of the Faith and a member of the Jesuit brotherhood. At night, seeing +that they were fatigued, he told them to take rest, saying that he would +call them when he felt his time approaching. Two or three hours after, +they heard a feeble voice, and, hastening to his side, found him at the +point of death. He expired calmly, murmuring the names of Jesus and +Mary, with his eyes fixed on the crucifix which one of his followers +held before him. They dug a grave beside the hut, and here they buried +him according to the directions which he had given them; then, +re-embarking, they made their way to Michilimackinac, to bear the +tidings to the priests at the mission of St. Ignace.[65] + +In the winter of 1676, a party of Kiskakon Ottawas were hunting on Lake +Michigan; and when, in the following spring, they prepared to return +home, they bethought them, in accordance with an Indian custom, of +taking with them the bones of Marquette, who had been their instructor +at the mission of St. Esprit. They repaired to the spot, found the +grave, opened it, washed and dried the bones and placed them carefully +in a box of birch-bark. Then, in a procession of thirty canoes, they +bore it, singing their funeral songs, to St. Ignace of Michilimackinac. +As they approached, priests, Indians, and traders all thronged to the +shore. The relics of Marquette were received with solemn ceremony, and +buried beneath the floor of the little chapel of the mission.[66] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[46] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 2 Nov., 1672; Ibid., 14 Nov., +1674_. + +[47] See "The Jesuits in North America." + +[48] "Le 2 Juillet (1666) les premières disputes de philosophie se font +dans la congrégation avec succès. Toutes les puissances s'y trouvent; M. +l'Intendant entr'autres y a argumenté très-bien. M. Jolliet et Pierre +Francheville y ont très-bien répondu de toute la logique."--_Journal des +Jésuites._ + +[49] Nothing was known of Joliet till Shea investigated his history. +Ferland, in his _Notes sur les Registres de Notre-Dame de Québec_; +Faillon, in his _Colonie Française en Canada_; and Margry, in a series +of papers in the _Journal Général de l'Instruction Publique_,--have +thrown much new light on his life. From journals of a voyage made by him +at a later period to the coast of Labrador, given in substance by +Margry, he seems to have been a man of close and intelligent +observation. His mathematical acquirements appear to have been very +considerable. + +[50] The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, sanctioned in our own +time by the Pope, was always a favorite tenet of the Jesuits; and +Marquette was especially devoted to it. + +[51] The Malhoumines, Malouminek, Oumalouminek, or Nation des +Folles-Avoines, of early French writers. The _folle-avoine_, wild oats +or "wild rice" (_Zizania aquatica_), was their ordinary food, as also of +other tribes of this region. + +[52] Dablon, on his journey with Allouez in 1670, was delighted with the +aspect of the country and the abundance of game along this river. +Carver, a century later, speaks to the same effect, saying that the +birds rose up in clouds from the wild-rice marshes. + +[53] The above traits of the scenery of the Wisconsin are taken from +personal observation of the river during midsummer. + +[54] The Indian villages, under the names of Peouaria (_Peoria_) and +Moingouena, are represented in Marquette's map upon a river +corresponding in position with the Des Moines; though the distance from +the Wisconsin, as given by him, would indicate a river farther north. + +[55] The rock where these figures were painted is immediately above the +city of Alton. The tradition of their existence remains, though they are +entirely effaced by time. In 1867, when I passed the place, a part of +the rock had been quarried away, and, instead of Marquette's monsters, +it bore a huge advertisement of "Plantation Bitters." Some years ago, +certain persons, with more zeal than knowledge, proposed to restore the +figures, after conceptions of their own; but the idea was abandoned. + +Marquette made a drawing of the two monsters, but it is lost. I have, +however, a fac-simile of a map made a few years later, by order of the +Intendant Duchesneau, which is decorated with the portrait of one of +them, answering to Marquette's description, and probably copied from his +drawing. St. Cosme, who saw them in 1699, says that they were even then +almost effaced. Douay and Joutel also speak of them,--the former, +bitterly hostile to his Jesuit contemporaries, charging Marquette with +exaggeration in his account of them. Joutel could see nothing terrifying +in their appearance; but he says that his Indians made sacrifices to +them as they passed. + +[56] The Missouri is called "Pekitanouï" by Marquette. It also bears, on +early French maps, the names of "Rivière des Osages," and "Rivière des +Emissourites," or "Oumessourits." On Marquette's map, a tribe of this +name is placed near its banks, just above the Osages. Judging by the +course of the Mississippi that it discharged into the Gulf of Mexico, he +conceived the hope of one day reaching the South Sea by way of the +Missouri. + +[57] Called, on Marquette's map, "Ouabouskiaou." On some of the earliest +maps, it is called "Ouabache" (Wabash). + +[58] This village, called "Mitchigamea," is represented on several +contemporary maps. + +[59] A few years later, the Arkansas were all on the west side. + +[60] Marquette says that it consisted at this time of seventy-four +lodges. These, like the Huron and Iroquois lodges, contained each +several fires and several families. This village was about seven miles +below the site of the present town of Ottawa. + +[61] The journal of Marquette, first published in an imperfect form by +Thevenot, in 1681, has been reprinted by Mr. Lenox, under the direction +of Mr. Shea, from the manuscript preserved in the archives of the +Canadian Jesuits. It will also be found in Shea's _Discovery and +Exploration of the Mississippi Valley_, and the _Relations Inédites_ of +Martin. The true map of Marquette accompanies all these publications. +The map published by Thevenot and reproduced by Bancroft is not +Marquette's. The original of this, of which I have a fac-simile, bears +the title _Carte de la Nouvelle Découverte que les Pères Jésuites ont +faite en l'année 1672, et continuée par le Père Jacques Marquette, etc._ +The return route of the expedition is incorrectly laid down on it. A +manuscript map of the Jesuit Raffeix, preserved in the Bibliothèque +Impériale, is more accurate in this particular. I have also another +contemporary manuscript map, indicating the various Jesuit stations in +the West at this time, and representing the Mississippi, as discovered +by Marquette. For these and other maps, see Appendix. + +[62] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, Québec, 14 Nov., 1674._ + +[63] This letter is appended to Joliet's smaller map of his discoveries. +See Appendix. Compare _Détails sur le Voyage de Louis Joliet_ and +_Relation de la Descouverte de plusieurs Pays situez au midi de la +Nouvelle France, faite en 1673_ (Margry, i. 259). These are oral +accounts given by Joliet after the loss of his papers. Also, _Lettre de +Joliet, Oct. 10, 1674_ (Harrisse). On the seventh of October, 1675, +Joliet married Claire Bissot, daughter of a wealthy Canadian merchant, +engaged in trade with the northern Indians. This drew Joliet's attention +to Hudson's Bay; and he made a journey thither in 1679, by way of the +Saguenay. He found three English forts on the bay, occupied by about +sixty men, who had also an armed vessel of twelve guns and several small +trading-craft. The English held out great inducements to Joliet to join +them; but he declined, and returned to Quebec, where he reported that +unless these formidable rivals were dispossessed, the trade of Canada +would be ruined. In consequence of this report, some of the principal +merchants of the colony formed a company to compete with the English in +the trade of Hudson's Bay. In the year of this journey, Joliet received +a grant of the islands of Mignan; and in the following year, 1680, he +received another grant, of the great island of Anticosti in the lower +St. Lawrence. In 1681 he was established here, with his wife and six +servants. He was engaged in fisheries; and, being a skilful navigator +and surveyor, he made about this time a chart of the St. Lawrence. In +1690, Sir William Phips, on his way with an English fleet to attack +Quebec, made a descent on Joliet's establishment, burnt his buildings, +and took prisoners his wife and his mother-in-law. In 1694 Joliet +explored the coasts of Labrador, under the auspices of a company formed +for the whale and seal fishery. On his return, Frontenac made him royal +pilot for the St. Lawrence; and at about the same time he received the +appointment of hydrographer at Quebec. He died, apparently poor, in 1699 +or 1700, and was buried on one of the islands of Mignan. The discovery +of the above facts is due in great part to the researches of Margry. + +[64] Pierre Moreau, _alias_ La Taupine, was afterwards bitterly +complained of by the Intendant Duchesneau, for acting as the governor's +agent in illicit trade with the Indians. + +[65] The contemporary _Relation_ tells us that a miracle took place at +the burial of Marquette. One of the two Frenchmen, overcome with grief +and colic, bethought him of applying a little earth from the grave to +the seat of pain. This at once restored him to health and cheerfulness. + +[66] For Marquette's death, see the contemporary _Relation_, published +by Shea, Lenox, and Martin, with the accompanying _Lettre et Journal_. +The river where he died is a small stream in the west of Michigan, some +distance south of the promontory called the "Sleeping Bear." It long +bore his name, which is now borne by a larger neighboring stream, +Charlevoix's account of Marquette's death is derived from tradition, and +is not supported by the contemporary narrative. In 1877, human bones, +with fragments of birch-bark, were found buried on the supposed site of +the Jesuit chapel at Point St. Ignace. + +In 1847, the missionary of the Algonquins at the Lake of Two Mountains, +above Montreal, wrote down a tradition of the death of Marquette, from +the lips of an old Indian woman, born in 1777, at Michilimackinac. Her +ancestress had been baptized by the subject of the story. The tradition +has a resemblance to that related as fact by Charlevoix. The old squaw +said that the Jesuit was returning, very ill, to Michilimackinac, when a +storm forced him and his two men to land near a little river. Here he +told them that he should die, and directed them to ring a bell over his +grave and plant a cross. They all remained four days at the spot; and, +though without food, the men felt no hunger. On the night of the fourth +day he died, and the men buried him as he had directed. On waking in the +morning, they saw a sack of Indian corn, a quantity of bacon, and some +biscuit, miraculously sent to them, in accordance with the promise of +Marquette, who had told them that they should have food enough for their +journey to Michilimackinac. At the same instant, the stream began to +rise, and in a few moments encircled the grave of the Jesuit, which +formed, thenceforth, an islet in the waters. The tradition adds, that an +Indian battle afterwards took place on the banks of this stream, between +Christians and infidels; and that the former gained the victory, in +consequence of invoking the name of Marquette. This story bears the +attestation of the priest of the Two Mountains that it is a literal +translation of the tradition, as recounted by the old woman. + +It has been asserted that the Illinois country was visited by two +priests, some time before the visit of Marquette. This assertion was +first made by M. Noiseux, late Grand Vicar of Quebec, who gives no +authority for it. Not the slightest indication of any such visit appears +in any contemporary document or map, thus far discovered. The +contemporary writers, down to the time of Marquette and La Salle, all +speak of the Illinois as an unknown country. The entire groundlessness +of Noiseux's assertion is shown by Shea, in a paper in the "Weekly +Herald," of New York, April 21,1855. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +1673-1678. + +LA SALLE AND FRONTENAC. + + Objects of La Salle.--Frontenac favors him.--Projects of + Frontenac.--Cataraqui.--Frontenac on Lake Ontario.--Fort + Frontenac.--La Salle and Fénelon.--Success of La Salle: his + Enemies. + + +We turn from the humble Marquette, thanking God with his last breath +that he died for his Order and his Faith; and by our side stands the +masculine form of Cavelier de la Salle. Prodigious was the contrast +between the two discoverers: the one, with clasped hands and upturned +eyes, seems a figure evoked from some dim legend of mediæval saintship; +the other, with feet firm planted on the hard earth, breathes the +self-relying energies of modern practical enterprise. Nevertheless, La +Salle's enemies called him a visionary. His projects perplexed and +startled them. At first, they ridiculed him; and then, as step by step +he advanced towards his purpose, they denounced and maligned him. What +was this purpose? It was not of sudden growth, but developed as years +went on. La Salle at La Chine dreamed of a western passage to China, and +nursed vague schemes of western discovery. Then, when his earlier +journeyings revealed to him the valley of the Ohio and the fertile +plains of Illinois, his imagination took wing over the boundless +prairies and forests drained by the great river of the West. His +ambition had found its field. He would leave barren and frozen Canada +behind, and lead France and civilization into the valley of the +Mississippi. Neither the English nor the Jesuits should conquer that +rich domain: the one must rest content with the country east of the +Alleghanies, and the other with the forests, savages, and beaver-skins +of the northern lakes. It was for him to call into light the latent +riches of the great West. But the way to his land of promise was rough +and long: it lay through Canada, filled with hostile traders and hostile +priests, and barred by ice for half the year. The difficulty was soon +solved. La Salle became convinced that the Mississippi flowed, not into +the Pacific or the Gulf of California, but into the Gulf of Mexico. By a +fortified post at its mouth, he could guard it against both English and +Spaniards, and secure for the trade of the interior an access and an +outlet under his own control, and open at every season. Of this trade, +the hides of the buffalo would at first form the staple, and along with +furs would reward the enterprise till other resources should be +developed. + +Such were the vast projects that unfolded themselves in the mind of La +Salle. Canada must needs be, at the outset, his base of action, and +without the support of its authorities he could do nothing. This +support he found. From the moment when Count Frontenac assumed the +government of the colony, he seems to have looked with favor on the +young discoverer. There were points of likeness between the two men. +Both were ardent, bold, and enterprising. The irascible and fiery pride +of the noble found its match in the reserved and seemingly cold pride of +the ambitious burgher. Each could comprehend the other; and they had, +moreover, strong prejudices and dislikes in common. An understanding, +not to say an alliance, soon grew up between them. + +[Sidenote: PROJECTS OF FRONTENAC.] + +Frontenac had come to Canada a ruined man. He was ostentatious, lavish, +and in no way disposed to let slip an opportunity of mending his +fortune. He presently thought that he had found a plan by which he could +serve both the colony and himself. His predecessor, Courcelle, had urged +upon the King the expediency of building a fort on Lake Ontario, in +order to hold the Iroquois in check and intercept the trade which the +tribes of the Upper Lakes had begun to carry on with the Dutch and +English of New York. Thus a stream of wealth would be turned into +Canada, which would otherwise enrich her enemies. Here, to all +appearance, was a great public good, and from the military point of view +it was so in fact; but it was clear that the trade thus secured might be +made to profit, not the colony at large, but those alone who had control +of the fort, which would then become the instrument of a monopoly. This +the governor understood; and, without doubt, he meant that the projected +establishment should pay him tribute. How far he and La Salle were +acting in concurrence at this time, it is not easy to say; but Frontenac +often took counsel of the explorer, who, on his part, saw in the design +a possible first step towards the accomplishment of his own far-reaching +schemes. + +[Sidenote: EXPEDITION OF FRONTENAC.] + +Such of the Canadian merchants as were not in the governor's confidence +looked on his plan with extreme distrust. Frontenac, therefore, thought +it expedient "to make use," as he expresses it, "of address." He gave +out merely that he intended to make a tour through the upper parts of +the colony with an armed force, in order to inspire the Indians with +respect, and secure a solid peace. He had neither troops, money, +munitions, nor means of transportation; yet there was no time to lose, +for, should he delay the execution of his plan, it might be +countermanded by the King. His only resource, therefore, was in a prompt +and hardy exertion of the royal authority; and he issued an order +requiring the inhabitants of Quebec, Montreal, Three Rivers, and other +settlements to furnish him, at their own cost, as soon as the spring +sowing should be over, with a certain number of armed men, besides the +requisite canoes. At the same time, he invited the officers settled in +the country to join the expedition,--an invitation which, anxious as +they were to gain his good graces, few of them cared to decline. +Regardless of murmurs and discontent, he pushed his preparation +vigorously, and on the third of June left Quebec with his guard, his +staff, a part of the garrison of the Castle of St. Louis, and a number +of volunteers. He had already sent to La Salle, who was then at +Montreal, directing him to repair to Onondaga, the political centre of +the Iroquois, and invite their sachems to meet the governor in council +at the Bay of Quinté on the north of Lake Ontario. La Salle had set out +on his mission, but first sent Frontenac a map, which convinced him that +the best site for his proposed fort was the mouth of the Cataraqui, +where Kingston now stands. Another messenger was accordingly despatched, +to change the rendezvous to this point. + +Meanwhile, the governor proceeded at his leisure towards Montreal, +stopping by the way to visit the officers settled along the bank, who, +eager to pay their homage to the newly risen sun, received him with a +hospitality which under the roof of a log hut was sometimes graced by +the polished courtesies of the salon and the boudoir. Reaching Montreal, +which he had never before seen, he gazed, we may suppose, with some +interest at the long row of humble dwellings which lined the bank, the +massive buildings of the Seminary, and the spire of the church +predominant over all. It was a rude scene, but the greeting that awaited +him savored nothing of the rough simplicity of the wilderness. Perrot, +the local governor, was on the shore with his soldiers and the +inhabitants, drawn up under arms and firing a salute to welcome the +representative of the King. Frontenac was compelled to listen to a long +harangue from the judge of the place, followed by another from the +syndic. Then there was a solemn procession to the church, where he was +forced to undergo a third effort of oratory from one of the priests. _Te +Deum_ followed, in thanks for his arrival; and then he took refuge in +the fort. Here he remained thirteen days, busied with his preparations, +organizing the militia, soothing their mutual jealousies, and settling +knotty questions of rank and precedence. During this time, every means, +as he declares, was used to prevent him from proceeding; and among other +devices a rumor was set on foot that a Dutch fleet, having just captured +Boston, was on its way to attack Quebec.[67] + +[Sidenote: FRONTENAC'S JOURNEY.] + +Having sent men, canoes, and baggage, by land, to La Salle's old +settlement of La Chine, Frontenac himself followed on the twenty-eighth +of June. Including Indians from the missions, he now had with him about +four hundred men and a hundred and twenty canoes, besides two large +flat-boats, which he caused to be painted in red and blue, with strange +devices, intended to dazzle the Iroquois by a display of unwonted +splendor. Now their hard task began. Shouldering canoes through the +forest, dragging the flat-boats along the shore, working like +beavers,--sometimes in water to the knees, sometimes to the armpits, +their feet cut by the sharp stones, and they themselves well-nigh swept +down by the furious current,--they fought their way upward against the +chain of mighty rapids that break the navigation of the St. Lawrence. +The Indians were of the greatest service. Frontenac, like La Salle, +showed from the first a special faculty of managing them; for his keen, +incisive spirit was exactly to their liking, and they worked for him as +they would have worked for no man else. As they approached the Long +Saut, rain fell in torrents; and the governor, without his cloak, and +drenched to the skin, directed in person the amphibious toil of his +followers. Once, it is said, he lay awake all night, in his anxiety lest +the biscuit should be wet, which would have ruined the expedition. No +such mischance took place, and at length the last rapid was passed, and +smooth water awaited them to their journey's end. Soon they reached the +Thousand Islands, and their light flotilla glided in long file among +those watery labyrinths, by rocky islets, where some lonely pine towered +like a mast against the sky; by sun-scorched crags, where the brown +lichens crisped in the parching glare; by deep dells, shady and cool, +rich in rank ferns, and spongy, dark-green mosses; by still coves, where +the water-lilies lay like snow-flakes on their broad, flat leaves,--till +at length they neared their goal, and the glistening bosom of Lake +Ontario opened on their sight. + +Frontenac, to impose respect on the Iroquois, now set his canoes in +order of battle. Four divisions formed the first line, then came the two +flat-boats; he himself, with his guards, his staff, and the gentlemen +volunteers, followed, with the canoes of Three Rivers on his right, and +those of the Indians on his left, while two remaining divisions formed a +rear line. Thus, with measured paddles, they advanced over the still +lake, till they saw a canoe approaching to meet them. It bore several +Iroquois chiefs, who told them that the dignitaries of their nation +awaited them at Cataraqui, and offered to guide them to the spot. They +entered the wide mouth of the river, and passed along the shore, now +covered by the quiet little city of Kingston, till they reached the +point at present occupied by the barracks, at the western end of +Cataraqui bridge. Here they stranded their canoes and disembarked. +Baggage was landed, fires lighted, tents pitched, and guards set. Close +at hand, under the lee of the forest, were the camping sheds of the +Iroquois, who had come to the rendezvous in considerable numbers. + +[Sidenote: FRONTENAC AT CATARAQUI.] + +At daybreak of the next morning, the thirteenth of July, the drums beat, +and the whole party were drawn up under arms. A double line of men +extended from the front of Frontenac's tent to the Indian camp; and, +through the lane thus formed, the savage deputies, sixty in number, +advanced to the place of council. They could not hide their admiration +at the martial array of the French, many of whom were old soldiers of +the regiment of Carignan; and when they reached the tent they ejaculated +their astonishment at the uniforms of the governor's guard who +surrounded it. Here the ground had been carpeted with the sails of the +flat-boats, on which the deputies squatted themselves in a ring and +smoked their pipes for a time with their usual air of deliberate +gravity; while Frontenac, who sat surrounded by his officers, had full +leisure to contemplate the formidable adversaries whose mettle was +hereafter to put his own to so severe a test. A chief named Garakontié, +a noted friend of the French, at length opened the council, in behalf of +all the five Iroquois nations, with expressions of great respect and +deference towards "Onontio;" that is to say, the governor of Canada. +Whereupon Frontenac, whose native arrogance where Indians were concerned +always took a form which imposed respect without exciting anger, replied +in the following strain:-- + +"Children! Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas. I am glad +to see you here, where I have had a fire lighted for you to smoke by, +and for me to talk to you. You have done well, my children, to obey the +command of your Father. Take courage: you will hear his word, which is +full of peace and tenderness. For do not think that I have come for war. +My mind is full of peace, and she walks by my side. Courage, then, +children, and take rest." + +With that, he gave them six fathoms of tobacco, reiterated his +assurances of friendship, promised that he would be a kind father so +long as they should be obedient children, regretted that he was forced +to speak through an interpreter, and ended with a gift of guns to the +men, and prunes and raisins to their wives and children. Here closed +this preliminary meeting, the great council being postponed to another +day. + +During the meeting, Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, was tracing out the +lines of a fort, after a predetermined plan; and the whole party, under +the direction of their officers, now set themselves to construct it. +Some cut down trees, some dug the trenches, some hewed the palisades; +and with such order and alacrity was the work urged on, that the Indians +were lost in astonishment. Meanwhile, Frontenac spared no pains to make +friends of the chiefs, some of whom he had constantly at his table. He +fondled the Iroquois children, and gave them bread and sweetmeats, and +in the evening feasted the squaws to make them dance. The Indians were +delighted with these attentions, and conceived a high opinion of the new +Onontio. + +[Sidenote: FRONTENAC AND THE INDIANS.] + +On the seventeenth, when the construction of the fort was well advanced, +Frontenac called the chiefs to a grand council, which was held with all +possible state and ceremony. His dealing with the Indians on this and +other occasions was truly admirable. Unacquainted as he was with them, +he seems to have had an instinctive perception of the treatment they +required. His predecessors had never ventured to address the Iroquois +as "Children," but had always styled them "Brothers;" and yet the +assumption of paternal authority on the part of Frontenac was not only +taken in good part, but was received with apparent gratitude. The +martial nature of the man, his clear, decisive speech, and his frank and +downright manner, backed as they were by a display of force which in +their eyes was formidable, struck them with admiration, and gave tenfold +effect to his words of kindness. They thanked him for that which from +another they would not have endured. + +Frontenac began by again expressing his satisfaction that they had +obeyed the commands of their Father, and come to Cataraqui to hear what +he had to say. Then he exhorted them to embrace Christianity; and on +this theme he dwelt at length, in words excellently adapted to produce +the desired effect,--words which it would be most superfluous to tax as +insincere, though doubtless they lost nothing in emphasis because in +this instance conscience and policy aimed alike. Then, changing his +tone, he pointed to his officers, his guard, the long files of the +militia, and the two flat-boats, mounted with cannon, which lay in the +river near by. "If," he said, "your Father can come so far, with so +great a force, through such dangerous rapids, merely to make you a visit +of pleasure and friendship, what would he do, if you should awaken his +anger, and make it necessary for him to punish his disobedient children? +He is the arbiter of peace and war. Beware how you offend him!" And he +warned them not to molest the Indian allies of the French, telling them, +sharply, that he would chastise them for the least infraction of the +peace. + +From threats he passed to blandishments, and urged them to confide in +his paternal kindness, saying that, in proof of his affection, he was +building a store-house at Cataraqui, where they could be supplied with +all the goods they needed, without the necessity of a long and dangerous +journey. He warned them against listening to bad men, who might seek to +delude them by misrepresentations and falsehoods; and he urged them to +give heed to none but "men of character, like the Sieur de la Salle." He +expressed a hope that they would suffer their children to learn French +from the missionaries, in order that they and his nephews--meaning the +French colonists--might become one people; and he concluded by +requesting them to give him a number of their children to be educated in +the French manner, at Quebec. + +[Sidenote: TREATY WITH THE INDIANS.] + +This speech, every clause of which was reinforced by abundant presents, +was extremely well received; though one speaker reminded him that he had +forgotten one important point, inasmuch as he had not told them at what +prices they could obtain goods at Cataraqui. Frontenac evaded a precise +answer, but promised them that the goods should be as cheap as possible, +in view of the great difficulty of transportation. As to the request +concerning their children, they said that they could not accede to it +till they had talked the matter over in their villages; but it is a +striking proof of the influence which Frontenac had gained over them, +that, in the following year, they actually sent several of their +children to Quebec to be educated,--the girls among the Ursulines, and +the boys in the household of the governor. + +Three days after the council, the Iroquois set out on their return; and +as the palisades of the fort were now finished, and the barracks nearly +so, Frontenac began to send his party homeward by detachments. He +himself was detained for a time by the arrival of another band of +Iroquois, from the villages on the north side of Lake Ontario. He +repeated to them the speech he had made to the others; and, this final +meeting over, he embarked with his guard, leaving a sufficient number to +hold the fort, which was to be provisioned for a year by means of a +convoy then on its way up the river. Passing the rapids safely, he +reached Montreal on the first of August. + +His enterprise had been a complete success. He had gained every point, +and, in spite of the dangerous navigation, had not lost a single canoe. +Thanks to the enforced and gratuitous assistance of the inhabitants, the +whole had cost the King only about ten thousand francs, which Frontenac +had advanced on his own credit. Though in a commercial point of view the +new establishment was of very questionable benefit to the colony at +large, the governor had, nevertheless, conferred an inestimable blessing +on all Canada by the assurance he had gained of a long respite from the +fearful scourge of Iroquois hostility. "Assuredly," he writes, "I may +boast of having impressed them at once with respect, fear, and +good-will."[68] He adds that the fort at Cataraqui, with the aid of a +vessel now building, will command Lake Ontario, keep the peace with the +Iroquois, and cut off the trade with the English; and he proceeds to say +that by another fort at the mouth of the Niagara, and another vessel on +Lake Erie, we, the French, can command all the Upper Lakes. This plan +was an essential link in the schemes of La Salle; and we shall soon find +him employed in executing it. + +A curious incident occurred soon after the building of the fort on Lake +Ontario. Frontenac, on his way back, quarrelled with Perrot, the +governor of Montreal, whom, in view of his speculations in the +fur-trade, he seems to have regarded as a rival in business; but who, by +his folly and arrogance, would have justified any reasonable measure of +severity. Frontenac, however, was not reasonable. He arrested Perrot, +threw him into prison, and set up a man of his own as governor in his +place; and as the judge of Montreal was not in his interest, he removed +him, and substituted another on whom he could rely. Thus for a time he +had Montreal well in hand. + +The priests of the Seminary, seigniors of the island, regarded these +arbitrary proceedings with extreme uneasiness. They claimed the right of +nominating their own governor; and Perrot, though he held a commission +from the King, owed his place to their appointment. True, he had set +them at nought, and proved a veritable King Stork; yet nevertheless they +regarded his removal as an infringement of their rights. + +During the quarrel with Perrot, La Salle chanced to be at Montreal, +lodged in the house of Jacques Le Ber, who, though one of the principal +merchants and most influential inhabitants of the settlement, was +accustomed to sell goods across his counter in person to white men and +Indians, his wife taking his place when he was absent. Such were the +primitive manners of the secluded little colony. Le Ber, at this time, +was in the interest of Frontenac and La Salle; though he afterwards +became one of their most determined opponents. Amid the excitement and +discussion occasioned by Perrot's arrest, La Salle declared himself an +adherent of the governor, and warned all persons against speaking ill of +him in his hearing. + +[Sidenote: ABBÉ FÉNELON.] + +The Abbé Fénelon, already mentioned as half-brother to the famous +Archbishop, had attempted to mediate between Frontenac and Perrot, and +to this end had made a journey to Quebec on the ice, in midwinter. Being +of an ardent temperament, and more courageous than prudent, he had +spoken somewhat indiscreetly, and had been very roughly treated by the +stormy and imperious Count. He returned to Montreal greatly excited, and +not without cause. It fell to his lot to preach the Easter sermon. The +service was held in the little church of the Hôtel-Dieu, which was +crowded to the porch, all the chief persons of the settlement being +present. The curé of the parish, whose name also was Perrot, said High +Mass, assisted by La Salle's brother, Cavelier, and two other priests. +Then Fénelon mounted the pulpit. Certain passages of his sermon were +obviously levelled against Frontenac. Speaking of the duties of those +clothed with temporal authority, he said that the magistrate, inspired +with the spirit of Christ, was as ready to pardon offences against +himself as to punish those against his prince; that he was full of +respect for the ministers of the altar, and never maltreated them when +they attempted to reconcile enemies and restore peace; that he never +made favorites of those who flattered him, nor under specious pretexts +oppressed other persons in authority who opposed his enterprises; that +he used his power to serve his king, and not to his own advantage; that +he remained content with his salary, without disturbing the commerce of +the country, or abusing those who refused him a share in their profits; +and that he never troubled the people by inordinate and unjust levies of +men and material, using the name of his prince as a cover to his own +designs.[69] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND FÉNELON.] + +La Salle sat near the door; but as the preacher proceeded he suddenly +rose to his feet in such a manner as to attract the notice of the +congregation. As they turned their heads, he signed to the principal +persons among them, and by his angry looks and gesticulation called +their attention to the words of Fénelon. Then meeting the eye of the +curé, who sat beside the altar, he made the same signs to him, to which +the curé replied by a deprecating shrug of the shoulders. Fénelon +changed color, but continued his sermon.[70] + +This indecent proceeding of La Salle, and the zeal with which throughout +the quarrel he took the part of the governor, did not go unrewarded. +Henceforth, Frontenac was more than ever his friend; and this plainly +appeared in the disposition made, through his influence, of the new fort +on Lake Ontario. Attempts had been made to induce the king to have it +demolished; but it was resolved at last that, being built, it should be +allowed to stand; and, after long delay, a final arrangement was made +for its maintenance, in the manner following: In the autumn of 1674, La +Salle went to France, with letters of strong recommendation from +Frontenac.[71] He was well received at Court; and he made two petitions +to the King,--the one for a patent of nobility, in consideration of his +services as an explorer; and the other for a grant in seigniory of Fort +Frontenac, for so he called the new post, in honor of his patron. On his +part, he offered to pay back the ten thousand francs which the fort had +cost the King; to maintain it at his own charge, with a garrison equal +to that of Montreal, besides fifteen or twenty laborers; to form a +French colony around it; to build a church, whenever the number of +inhabitants should reach one hundred; and, meanwhile, to support one or +more Récollet friars; and, finally, to form a settlement of domesticated +Indians in the neighborhood. His offers were accepted. He was raised to +the rank of the untitled nobles; received a grant of the fort and lands +adjacent, to the extent of four leagues in front and half a league in +depth, besides the neighboring islands; and was invested with the +government of the fort and settlement, subject to the orders of the +governor-general.[72] + +La Salle returned to Canada, proprietor of a seigniory which, all things +considered, was one of the most valuable in the colony. His friends and +his family, rejoicing in his good fortune and not unwilling to share it, +made him large advances of money, enabling him to pay the stipulated sum +to the King, to rebuild the fort in stone, maintain soldiers and +laborers, and procure in part, at least, the necessary outfit. Had La +Salle been a mere merchant, he was in a fair way to make a fortune, for +he was in a position to control the better part of the Canadian +fur-trade. But he was not a mere merchant; and no commercial profit +could content his ambition. + +Those may believe, who will, that Frontenac did not expect a share in +the profits of the new post. That he did expect it, there is positive +evidence; for a deposition is extant, taken at the instance of his enemy +the Intendant Duchesneau, in which three witnesses attest that the +governor, La Salle, his lieutenant La Forest, and one Boisseau, had +formed a partnership to carry on the trade of Fort Frontenac. + +[Sidenote: ENEMIES OF LA SALLE.] + +No sooner was La Salle installed in his new post than the merchants of +Canada joined hands to oppose him. Le Ber, once his friend, became his +bitter enemy; for he himself had hoped to share the monopoly of Fort +Frontenac, of which he and one Bazire had at first been placed +provisionally in control, and from which he now saw himself ejected. La +Chesnaye, Le Moyne, and others of more or less influence took part in +the league, which, in fact, embraced all the traders in the colony +except the few joined with Frontenac and La Salle. Duchesneau, intendant +of the colony, aided the malcontents. As time went on, their bitterness +grew more bitter; and when at last it was seen that, not satisfied with +the monopoly of Fort Frontenac, La Salle aimed at the control of the +valleys of the Ohio and the Mississippi, and the usufruct of half a +continent, the ire of his opponents redoubled, and Canada became for him +a nest of hornets, buzzing in wrath and watching the moment to sting. +But there was another element of opposition, less noisy, but not less +formidable; and this arose from the Jesuits. Frontenac hated them; and +they, under befitting forms of duty and courtesy, paid him back in the +same coin. Having no love for the governor, they would naturally have +little for his partisan and _protégé_; but their opposition had another +and a deeper root, for the plans of the daring young schemer jarred with +their own. + +[Sidenote: PURPOSES OF THE JESUITS.] + +We have seen the Canadian Jesuits in the early apostolic days of their +mission, when the flame of their zeal, fed by an ardent hope, burned +bright and high. This hope was doomed to disappointment. Their avowed +purpose of building another Paraguay on the borders of the Great +Lakes[73] was never accomplished, and their missions and their converts +were swept away in an avalanche of ruin. Still, they would not despair. +From the lakes they turned their eyes to the Valley of the Mississippi, +in the hope to see it one day the seat of their new empire of the Faith. +But what did this new Paraguay mean? It meant a little nation of +converted and domesticated savages, docile as children, under the +paternal and absolute rule of Jesuit fathers, and trained by them in +industrial pursuits, the results of which were to inure, not to the +profit of the producers, but to the building of churches, the founding +of colleges, the establishment of warehouses and magazines, and the +construction of works of defence,--all controlled by Jesuits, and +forming a part of the vast possessions of the Order. Such was the old +Paraguay;[74] and such, we may suppose, would have been the new, had the +plans of those who designed it been realized. + +I have said that since the middle of the century the religious +exaltation of the early missions had sensibly declined. In the nature of +things, that grand enthusiasm was too intense and fervent to be long +sustained. But the vital force of Jesuitism had suffered no diminution. +That marvellous _esprit de corps_, that extinction of self and +absorption of the individual in the Order which has marked the Jesuits +from their first existence as a body, was no whit changed or +lessened,--a principle, which, though different, was no less strong +than the self-devoted patriotism of Sparta or the early Roman Republic. + +The Jesuits were no longer supreme in Canada; or, in other words, Canada +was no longer simply a mission. It had become a colony. Temporal +interests and the civil power were constantly gaining ground; and the +disciples of Loyola felt that relatively, if not absolutely, they were +losing it. They struggled vigorously to maintain the ascendency of their +Order, or, as they would have expressed it, the ascendency of religion; +but in the older and more settled parts of the colony it was clear that +the day of their undivided rule was past. Therefore, they looked with +redoubled solicitude to their missions in the West. They had been among +its first explorers; and they hoped that here the Catholic Faith, as +represented by Jesuits, might reign with undisputed sway. In Paraguay, +it was their constant aim to exclude white men from their missions. It +was the same in North America. They dreaded fur-traders, partly because +they interfered with their teachings and perverted their converts, and +partly for other reasons. But La Salle was a fur-trader, and far worse +than a fur-trader: he aimed at occupation, fortification, and +settlement. The scope and vigor of his enterprises, and the powerful +influence that aided them, made him a stumbling-block in their path. He +was their most dangerous rival for the control of the West, and from +first to last they set themselves against him. + +[Sidenote: SPIRIT OF LA SALLE.] + +What manner of man was he who could conceive designs so vast and defy +enmities so many and so powerful? And in what spirit did he embrace +these designs? We will look hereafter for an answer. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[67] _Lettre de Frontenac à Colbert, 13 Nov., 1673._ This rumor, it +appears, originated with the Jesuit Dablon. _Journal du Voyage du Comte +de Frontenac au lac Ontario_. The Jesuits were greatly opposed to the +establishment of forts and trading-posts in the upper country, for +reasons that will appear hereafter. + +[68] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 13 Nov., 1673._ + +[69] Faillon, _Colonie Française_, iii. 497, and manuscript authorities +there cited. I have examined the principal of these. Faillon himself is +a priest of St. Sulpice. Compare H. Verreau, _Les Deux Abbés de +Fénelon_, chap. vii. + +[70] _Information faicte par nous, Charles le Tardieu, Sieur de Tilly, +et Nicolas Dupont, etc., etc., contre le Sr. Abbé de Fénelon._ Tilly +and Dupont were sent by Frontenac to inquire into the affair. Among the +deponents is La Salle himself. + +[71] In his despatch to the minister Colbert, of the fourteenth of +November, 1674, Frontenac speaks of La Salle as follows: "I cannot help, +Monseigneur, recommending to you the Sieur de la Salle, who is about to +go to France, and who is a man of intelligence and ability, more capable +than anybody else I know here to accomplish every kind of enterprise and +discovery which may be intrusted to him, as he has the most perfect +knowledge of the state of the country, as you will see, if you are +disposed to give him a few moments of audience." + +[72] _Mémoire pour l'entretien du Fort Frontenac, par le Sr. de la +Salle, 1674. Petition du Sr. de la Salle au Roi. Lettres patentes de +concession, du Fort de Frontenac et terres adjacentes au profit du +Sr. de la Salle; données à Compiègne le 13 Mai, 1675. Arrêt qui +accepte les offres faites par Robert Cavelier Sr. de la Salle; à +Compiègne le 13 Mai, 1675. Lettres de noblesse pour le Sr. Cavelier +de la Salle; données à Compiègne le 13 Mai, 1675. Papiers de Famille. +Mémoire au Roi._ + +[73] This purpose is several times indicated in the _Relations_. For an +instance, see "The Jesuits in North America," 245. + +[74] Compare Charlevoix, _Histoire de Paraguay_, with Robertson, +_Letters on Paraguay_. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +1678. + +PARTY STRIFE. + + La Salle and his Reporter.--Jesuit Ascendency.--The Missions and + the Fur-trade.--Female Inquisitors.--Plots against La Salle: his + Brother the Priest.--Intrigues Of the Jesuits.--La Salle poisoned: + he exculpates the Jesuits.--Renewed Intrigues. + + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S MEMOIR.] + +One of the most curious monuments of La Salle's time is a long memoir, +written by a person who made his acquaintance at Paris in the summer of +1678, when, as we shall soon see, he had returned to France in +prosecution of his plans. The writer knew the Sulpitian Galinée,[75] +who, as he says, had a very high opinion of La Salle; and he was also in +close relations with the discoverer's patron, the Prince de Conti.[76] +He says that he had ten or twelve interviews with La Salle; and, +becoming interested in him and in that which he communicated, he wrote +down the substance of his conversation. The paper is divided into two +parts: the first, called "Mémoire sur Mr. de la Salle," is devoted to +the state of affairs in Canada, and chiefly to the Jesuits; the second, +entitled "Histoire de Mr. de la Salle," is an account of the +discoverer's life, or as much of it as the writer had learned from +him.[77] Both parts bear throughout the internal evidence of being what +they profess to be; but they embody the statements of a man of intense +partisan feeling, transmitted through the mind of another person in +sympathy with him, and evidently sharing his prepossessions. In one +respect, however, the paper is of unquestionable historical value; for +it gives us a vivid and not an exaggerated picture of the bitter strife +of parties which then raged in Canada, and which was destined to tax to +the utmost the vast energy and fortitude of La Salle. At times, the +memoir is fully sustained by contemporary evidence; but often, again, it +rests on its own unsupported authority. I give an abstract of its +statements as I find them. + +The following is the writer's account of La Salle: "All those among my +friends who have seen him find him a man of great intelligence and +sense. He rarely speaks of any subject except when questioned about it, +and his words are very few and very precise. He distinguishes perfectly +between that which he knows with certainly and that which he knows with +some mingling of doubt. When he does not know, he does not hesitate to +avow it; and though I have heard him say the same thing more than five +or six times, when persons were present who had not heard it before, he +always said it in the same manner. In short, I never heard anybody speak +whose words carried with them more marks of truth."[78] + +[Sidenote: JESUIT ASCENDENCY.] + +After mentioning that he is thirty-three or thirty-four years old, and +that he has been twelve years in America, the memoir declares that he +made the following statements: that the Jesuits are masters at Quebec; +that the bishop is their creature, and does nothing but in concert with +them;[79] that he is not well inclined towards the Récollets,[80] who +have little credit, but who are protected by Frontenac; that in Canada +the Jesuits think everybody an enemy to religion who is an enemy to +them; that, though they refused absolution to all who sold brandy to the +Indians, they sold it themselves, and that he, La Salle, had himself +detected them in it;[81] that the bishop laughs at the orders of the +King when they do not agree with the wishes of the Jesuits; that the +Jesuits dismissed one of their servants named Robert, because he told of +their trade in brandy; that Albanel,[82] in particular, carried on a +great fur-trade, and that the Jesuits have built their college in part +from the profits of this kind of traffic; that they admitted that they +carried on a trade, but denied that they gained so much by it as was +commonly supposed.[83] + +[Sidenote: FEMALE INQUISITORS.] + +The memoir proceeds to affirm that they trade largely with the Sioux at +Ste. Marie, and with other tribes at Michilimackinac, and that they are +masters of the trade of that region, where the forts are in their +possession.[84] An Indian said, in full council, at Quebec, that he had +prayed and been a Christian as long as the Jesuits would stay and teach +him, but since no more beaver were left in his country, the missionaries +were gone also. The Jesuits, pursues the memoir, will have no priests +but themselves in their missions, and call them all Jansenists, not +excepting the priests of St. Sulpice. + +The bishop is next accused of harshness and intolerance, as well as of +growing rich by tithes, and even by trade, in which it is affirmed he +has a covert interest.[85] It is added that there exists in Quebec, +under the auspices of the Jesuits, an association called the Sainte +Famille, of which Madame Bourdon[86] is superior. They meet in the +cathedral every Thursday, with closed doors, where they relate to each +other--as they are bound by a vow to do--all they have learned, whether +good or evil, concerning other people, during the week. It is a sort of +female inquisition, for the benefit of the Jesuits, the secrets of whose +friends, it is said, are kept, while no such discretion is observed with +regard to persons not of their party.[87] + +Here follow a series of statements which it is needless to repeat, as +they do not concern La Salle. They relate to abuse of the confessional, +hostility to other priests, hostility to civil authorities, and +over-hasty baptisms, in regard to which La Salle is reported to have +made a comparison, unfavorable to the Jesuits, between them and the +Récollets and Sulpitians. + +[Sidenote: PLOTS AGAINST LA SALLE.] + +We now come to the second part of the memoir, entitled "History of +Monsieur de la Salle." After stating that he left France at the age of +twenty-one or twenty-two, with the purpose of attempting some new +discovery, it makes the statements repeated in a former chapter, +concerning his discovery of the Ohio, the Illinois, and possibly the +Mississippi. It then mentions the building of Fort Frontenac, and says +that one object of it was to prevent the Jesuits from becoming +undisputed masters of the fur-trade.[88] Three years ago, it pursues, La +Salle came to France, and obtained a grant of the fort; and it proceeds +to give examples of the means used by the party opposed to him to injure +his good name and bring him within reach of the law. Once, when he was +at Quebec, the farmer of the King's revenue, one of the richest men in +the place, was extremely urgent in his proffers of hospitality, and at +length, though he knew La Salle but slightly, persuaded him to lodge in +his house. He had been here but a few days when his host's wife began to +enact the part of the wife of Potiphar, and this with so much vivacity +that on one occasion La Salle was forced to take an abrupt leave, in +order to avoid an infringement of the laws of hospitality. As he opened +the door, he found the husband on the watch, and saw that it was a plot +to entrap him.[89] + +Another attack, of a different character, though in the same direction, +was soon after made. The remittances which La Salle received from the +various members and connections of his family were sent through the +hands of his brother, Abbé Cavelier, from whom his enemies were, +therefore, very eager to alienate him. To this end, a report was made to +reach the priest's ears that La Salle had seduced a young woman, with +whom he was living in an open and scandalous manner at Fort Frontenac. +The effect of this device exceeded the wishes of its contrivers; for the +priest, aghast at what he had heard, set out for the fort, to administer +his fraternal rebuke, but on arriving, in place of the expected +abomination, found his brother, assisted by two Récollet friars, ruling +with edifying propriety over a most exemplary household. + +Thus far the memoir. From passages in some of La Salle's letters, it may +be gathered that Abbé Cavelier gave him at times no little annoyance. In +his double character of priest and elder brother, he seems to have +constituted himself the counsellor, monitor, and guide of a man who, +though many years his junior, was in all respects incomparably superior +to him, as the sequel will show. This must have been almost insufferable +to a nature like that of La Salle, who, nevertheless, was forced to arm +himself with patience, since his brother held the purse-strings. On one +occasion his forbearance was put to a severe proof, when, wishing to +marry a damsel of good connections in the colony, Abbé Cavelier saw fit +for some reason to interfere, and prevented the alliance.[90] + +[Sidenote: INTRIGUES OF THE JESUITS.] + +To resume the memoir. It declares that the Jesuits procured an ordinance +from the Supreme Council prohibiting traders from going into the Indian +country, in order that they, the Jesuits, being already established +there in their missions, might carry on trade without competition. But +La Salle induced a good number of the Iroquois to settle around his +fort; thus bringing the trade to his own door, without breaking the +ordinance. These Iroquois, he is further reported to have said, were +very fond of him, and aided him in rebuilding the fort with cut stone. +The Jesuits told the Iroquois on the south side of the lake, where they +were established as missionaries, that La Salle was strengthening his +defences with the view of making war on them. They and the intendant, +who was their creature, endeavored to embroil the Iroquois with the +French in order to ruin La Salle; writing to him at the same time that +he was the bulwark of the country, and that he ought to be always on his +guard. They also tried to persuade Frontenac that it was necessary to +raise men and prepare for war. La Salle suspected them; and seeing that +the Iroquois, in consequence of their intrigues, were in an excited +state, he induced the governor to come to Fort Frontenac to pacify them. +He accordingly did so; and a council was held, which ended in a complete +restoration of confidence on the part of the Iroquois.[91] At this +council they accused the two Jesuits, Bruyas and Pierron,[92] of +spreading reports that the French were preparing to attack them. La +Salle thought that the object of the intrigue was to make the Iroquois +jealous of him, and engage Frontenac in expenses which would offend the +King. After La Salle and the governor had lost credit by the rupture, +the Jesuits would come forward as pacificators, in the full assurance +that they could restore quiet, and appear in the attitude of saviors of +the colony. + +La Salle, pursues his reporter, went on to say that about this time a +quantity of hemlock and verdigris was given him in a salad; and that the +guilty person was a man in his employ named Nicolas Perrot, otherwise +called Jolycoeur, who confessed the crime.[93] The memoir adds that La +Salle, who recovered from the effects of the poison, wholly exculpates +the Jesuits. + +This attempt, which was not, as we shall see, the only one of the kind +made against La Salle, is alluded to by him in a letter to a friend at +Paris, written in Canada when he was on the point of departure on his +great expedition to descend the Mississippi. The following is an extract +from it: + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE EXCULPATES THE JESUITS.] + +"I hope to give myself the honor of sending you a more particular +account of this enterprise when it shall have had the success which I +hope for it; but I have need of a strong protection for its support. It +traverses the commercial operations of certain persons, who will find it +hard to endure it. They intended to make a new Paraguay in these parts, +and the route which I close against them gave them facilities for an +advantageous correspondence with Mexico. This check will infallibly be a +mortification to them; and you know how they deal with whatever opposes +them. _Nevertheless, I am bound to render them the justice to say that +the poison which was given me was not at all of their instigation._ The +person who was conscious of the guilt, believing that I was their enemy +because he saw that our sentiments were opposed, thought to exculpate +himself by accusing them, and I confess that at the time I was not sorry +to have this indication of their ill-will; but having afterwards +carefully examined the affair, I clearly discovered the falsity of the +accusation which this rascal had made against them. I nevertheless +pardoned him, in order not to give notoriety to the affair; as the mere +suspicion might sully their reputation, to which I should scrupulously +avoid doing the slightest injury unless I thought it necessary to the +good of the public, and unless the fact were fully proved. Therefore, +Monsieur, if anybody shared the suspicion which I felt, oblige me by +undeceiving him."[94] + +This letter, so honorable to La Salle, explains the statement made in +the memoir, that, notwithstanding his grounds of complaint against the +Jesuits, he continued to live on terms of courtesy with them, +entertained them at his fort, and occasionally corresponded with them. +The writer asserts, however, that they intrigued with his men to induce +them to desert,--employing for this purpose a young man named +Deslauriers, whom they sent to him with letters of recommendation. La +Salle took him into his service; but he soon after escaped, with several +other men, and took refuge in the Jesuit missions.[95] The object of the +intrigue is said to have been the reduction of La Salle's garrison to a +number less than that which he was bound to maintain, thus exposing him +to a forfeiture of his title of possession. + +[Sidenote: RENEWED INTRIGUES.] + +He is also stated to have declared that Louis Joliet was an +impostor,[96] and a _donné_ of the Jesuits,--that is, a man who worked +for them without pay; and, further, that when he, La Salle, came to +court to ask for privileges enabling him to pursue his discoveries, the +Jesuits represented in advance to the minister Colbert that his head was +turned, and that he was fit for nothing but a mad-house. It was only by +the aid of influential friends that he was at length enabled to gain an +audience. + +Here ends this remarkable memoir, which, criticise it as we may, does +not exaggerate the jealousies and enmities that beset the path of the +discoverer. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[75] _Ante_, p. 17. + +[76] Louis-Armand de Bourbon, second Prince de Conti. The author of the +memoir seems to have been Abbé Renaudot, a learned churchman. + +[77] Extracts from this have already been given in connection with La +Salle's supposed discovery of the Mississippi. _Ante_, p. 29. + +[78] "Tous ceux de mes amis qui l'ont vu luy trouve beaucoup d'esprit et +un très-grand sens; il ne parle guère que des choses sur lesquelles on +l'interroge; il les dit en très-peu de mots et très-bien +circonstanciées; il distingue parfaitement ce qu'il scait avec +certitude, de ce qu'il scait avec quelque mélange de doute. Il avoue +sans aucune façon ne pas savoir ce qu'il ne scait pas, et quoyque je luy +aye ouy dire plus de cinq ou six fois les mesme choses à l'occasion de +quelques personnes qui ne les avaient point encore entendues, je les luy +ay toujours ouy dire de la mesme manière. En un mot je n'ay jamais ouy +parler personne dont les paroles portassent plus de marques de vérité." + +[79] "Il y a une autre chose qui me déplait, qui est l'entière +dépendence dans laquelle les Prêtres du Séminaire de Québec et le Grand +Vicaire de l'Evêque sont pour les Pères Jésuites, car il ne fait pas la +moindre chose sans leur ordre; ce qui fait qu'indirectement ils sont les +maîtres de ce qui regarde le spirituel, qui, comme vous savez, est une +grande machine pour remuer tout le reste."--_Lettre de Frontenac à +Colbert, 2 Nov., 1672._ + +[80] "Ces réligieux [_les Récollets_] sont fort protégés partout par le +comte de Frontenac, gouverneur du pays, et à cause de cela assez +maltraités par l'évesque, parceque la doctrine de l'évesque et des +Jésuites est que les affaires de la Réligion chrestienne n'iront point +bien dans ce pays-là que quand le gouverneur sera créature des Jésuites, +ou que l'évesque sera gouverneur."--_Mémoire sur Mr. de la Salle_. + +[81] "Ils [_les Jésuites_] refusent l'absolution à ceux qui ne veulent +pas promettre de n'en plus vendre [_de l'eau-de-vie_], et s'ils meurent +en cet étât, ils les privent de la sépulture ecclésiastique; au +contraire ils se permettent à eux-mêmes sans aucune difficulté ce mesme +trafic quoique toute sorte de trafic soit interdite à tous les +ecclésiastiques par les ordonnances du Roy, et par une bulle expresse du +Pape. La Bulle et les ordonnances sont notoires, et quoyqu'ils cachent +le trafic qu'ils font d'eau-de-vie, M. de la Salle prétend qu'il ne +l'est pas moins; qu'outre la notoriété il en a des preuves certaines, et +qu'il les a surpris dans ce trafic, et qu'ils luy ont tendu des pièges +pour l'y surprendre.... Ils ont chassé leur valet Robert à cause qu'il +révéla qu'ils en traitaient jour et nuit."--_Ibid._ The writer says that +he makes this last statement, not on the authority of La Salle, but on +that of a memoir made at the time when the intendant, Talon, with whom +he elsewhere says that he was well acquainted, returned to France. A +great number of particulars are added respecting the Jesuit trade in +furs. + +[82] Albanel was prominent among the Jesuit explorers at this time. He +is best known by his journey up the Saguenay to Hudson's Bay in 1672. + +[83] "Pour vous parler franchement, ils [_les Jésuites_] songent autant +à la conversion du Castor qu'à celle des âmes."--_Lettre de Frontenac à +Colbert, 2 Nov., 1672_. + +In his despatch of the next year, he says that the Jesuits ought to +content themselves with instructing the Indians in their old missions, +instead of neglecting them to make new ones in countries where there are +"more beaver-skins to gain than souls to save." + +[84] These forts were built by them, and were necessary to the security +of their missions. + +[85] François Xavier de Laval-Montmorency, first bishop of Quebec, was a +prelate of austere character. His memory is cherished in Canada by +adherents of the Jesuits and all ultramontane Catholics. + +[86] This Madame Bourdon was the widow of Bourdon, the engineer (see +"The Jesuits in North America," 297). If we may credit the letters of +Marie de l'Incarnation, she had married him from a religious motive, in +order to charge herself with the care of his motherless children; +stipulating in advance that he should live with her, not as a husband, +but as a brother. As may be imagined, she was regarded as a most devout +and saint-like person. + +[87] "Il y a dans Québec une congrégation de femmes et de filles qu'ils +[_les Jésuites_] appellent la sainte famille, dans laquelle on fait +voeu sur les Saints Evangiles de dire tout ce qu'on sait de bien et de +mal des personnes qu'on connoist. La Supérieure de cette compagnie +s'appelle Madame Bourdon; une Mde. d'Ailleboust est, je crois, +l'assistante et une Mde. Charron, la Trésorière. La Compagnie +s'assemble tous les Jeudis dans la Cathédrale, à porte fermée, et là +elles se disent les unes aux autres tout ce qu'elles ont appris. C'est +une espèce d'Inquisition contre toutes les personnes qui ne sont pas +unies avec les Jésuites. Ces personnes sont accusées de tenir secret ce +qu'elles apprennent de mal des personnes de leur party et de n'avoir pas +la mesme discretion pour les autres."--_Mémoire sur M^r. de la Salle_. + +The Madame d'Ailleboust mentioned above was a devotee like Madame +Bourdon, and, in one respect, her history was similar. See "The Jesuits +in North America," 360. + +The association of the Sainte Famille was founded by the Jesuit +Chaumonot at Montreal in 1663. Laval, Bishop of Quebec, afterwards +encouraged its establishment at that place; and, as Chaumonot himself +writes, caused it to be attached to the cathedral. _Vie de Chaumonot_, +83. For its establishment at Montreal, see Faillon, _Vie de Mlle. +Mance_, i. 233. + +"Ils [_les Jésuites_] ont tous une si grande envie de savoir tout ce qui +se fait dans les familles qu'ils ont des Inspecteurs à gages dans la +Ville, qui leur rapportent tout ce qui se fait dans les maisons," etc., +etc.--_Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 13 Nov., 1673._ + +[88] Mention has been made (p. 88, _note_) of the report set on foot by +the Jesuit Dablon, to prevent the building of the fort. + +[89] This story is told at considerable length, and the advances of the +lady particularly described. + +[90] Letter of La Salle, in possession of M. Margry. + +[91] Louis XIV. alludes to this visit, in a letter to Frontenac, dated +28 April, 1677. "I cannot but approve," he writes, "of what you have +done, in your voyage to Fort Frontenac, to reconcile the minds of the +Five Iroquois Nations, and to clear yourself from the suspicions they +had entertained, and from the motives that might induce them to make +war." Frontenac's despatches of this year, as well as of the preceding +and following years, are missing from the archives. + +In a memoir written in November, 1680, La Salle alludes to "le désir que +l'on avoit que Monseigneur le Comte de Frontenac fit la guerre aux +Iroquois." See Thomassy, _Géologie Pratique de la Louisiane_, 203. + +[92] Bruyas was about this time stationed among the Onondagas. Pierron +was among the Senecas. He had lately removed to them from the Mohawk +country. _Relation des Jésuites, 1673-79_, 140 (Shea). Bruyas was also +for a long time among the Mohawks. + +[93] This puts the character of Perrot in a new light; for it is not +likely that any other can be meant than the famous _voyageur_. I have +found no mention elsewhere of the synonyme of Jolycoeur. Poisoning was +the current crime of the day, and persons of the highest rank had +repeatedly been charged with it. The following is the passage:-- + +"Quoiqu'il en soit, Mr. de la Salle se sentit quelque temps après +empoisonné d'une salade dans laquelle on avoit meslé du ciguë, qui est +poison en ce pays là, et du verd de gris. Il en fut malade à +l'extrémité, vomissant presque continuellement 40 ou 50 jours après, et +il ne réchappa que par la force extrême de sa constitution. Celuy qui +luy donna le poison fut un nommé Nicolas Perrot, autrement Jolycoeur, +l'un de ses domestiques.... Il pouvait faire mourir cet homme, qui a +confessé son crime, mais il s'est contenté de l'enfermer les fers aux +pieds."--_Histoire de Mr. de la Salle._ + +[94] The following words are underlined in the original: "_Je suis +pourtant obligé de leur rendre une justice, que le poison qu'on m'avoit +donné n'éstoit point de leur instigation."--Lettre de La Salle au Prince +de Conti, 31 Oct., 1678._ + +[95] In a letter to the King, Frontenac mentions that several men who +had been induced to desert from La Salle had gone to Albany, where the +English had received them well. _Lettre de Frontenac au Roy, 6 Nov., +1679._ The Jesuits had a mission in the neighboring tribe of the Mohawks +and elsewhere in New York. + +[96] This agrees with expressions used by La Salle in a memoir addressed +by him to Frontenac in November, 1680. In this, he intimates his belief +that Joliet went but little below the mouth of the Illinois, thus doing +flagrant injustice to that brave explorer. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +1677, 1678. + +THE GRAND ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Fort Frontenac.--La Salle at Court: his + Memorial.--Approval of the King.--Money and Means.--Henri de + Tonty.--Return to Canada. + + +"If," writes a friend of La Salle," he had preferred gain to glory, he +had only to stay at his fort, where he was making more than twenty-five +thousand livres a year."[97] He loved solitude and he loved power; and +at Fort Frontenac he had both, so far as each consisted with the other. +The nearest settlement was a week's journey distant, and he was master +of all around him. He had spared no pains to fulfil the conditions on +which his wilderness seigniory had been granted, and within two years he +had demolished the original wooden fort, replacing it by another much +larger, enclosed on the land side by ramparts and bastions of stone, and +on the water side by palisades. It contained a range of barracks of +squared timber, a guard-house, a lodging for officers, a forge, a well, +a mill, and a bakery. Nine small cannon were mounted on the walls. Two +officers and a surgeon, with ten or twelve soldiers, made up the +garrison; and three or four times that number of masons, laborers, and +canoe-men were at one time maintained at the place. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AT FORT FRONTENAC.] + +Along the shore south of the fort was a small village of French +families, to whom La Salle had granted farms, and, farther on, a village +of Iroquois, whom he had persuaded to settle here. Near these villages +were the house and chapel of two Récollet friars, Luc Buisset and Louis +Hennepin. More than a hundred French acres of land had been cleared of +wood, and planted in part with crops; while cattle, fowls, and swine had +been brought up from Montreal. Four vessels, of from twenty-five to +forty tons, had been built for the lake and the river; but canoes served +best for ordinary uses, and La Salle's followers became so skilled in +managing them that they were reputed the best canoe-men in America. +Feudal lord of the forests around him, commander of a garrison raised +and paid by himself, founder of the mission, and patron of the church, +he reigned the autocrat of his lonely little empire.[98] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S MEMORIAL.] + +It was not solely or chiefly for commercial gain that La Salle had +established Fort Frontenac. He regarded it as a first step towards +greater things; and now, at length, his plans were ripe and his time was +come. In the autumn of 1677 he left the fort in charge of his +lieutenant, descended the St. Lawrence to Quebec, and sailed for France. +He had the patronage of Frontenac and the help of strong friends in +Paris. It is said, as we have seen already, that his enemies denounced +him, in advance, as a madman; but a memorial of his, which his friends +laid before the minister Colbert, found a favorable hearing. In it he +set forth his plans, or a portion of them. He first recounted briefly +the discoveries he had made, and then described the country he had seen +south and west of the great lakes. "It is nearly all so beautiful and so +fertile; so free from forests, and so full of meadows, brooks, and +rivers; so abounding in fish, game, and venison, that one can find there +in plenty, and with little trouble, all that is needful for the support +of flourishing colonies. The soil will produce everything that is raised +in France. Flocks and herds can be left out at pasture all winter; and +there are even native wild cattle, which, instead of hair, have a fine +wool that may answer for making cloth and hats. Their hides are better +than those of France, as appears by the sample which the Sieur de la +Salle has brought with him. Hemp and cotton grow here naturally, and may +be manufactured with good results; so there can be no doubt that +colonies planted here would become very prosperous. They would be +increased by a great number of western Indians, who are in the main of a +tractable and social disposition; and as they have the use neither of +our weapons nor of our goods, and are not in intercourse with other +Europeans, they will readily adapt themselves to us and imitate our way +of life as soon as they taste the advantages of our friendship and of +the commodities we bring them, insomuch that these countries will +infallibly furnish, within a few years, a great many new subjects to the +Church and the King. + +"It was the knowledge of these things, joined to the poverty of Canada, +its dense forests, its barren soil, its harsh climate, and the snow that +covers the ground for half the year, that led the Sieur de la Salle to +undertake the planting of colonies in these beautiful countries of the +West." + +Then he recounts the difficulties of the attempt,--the vast distances, +the rapids and cataracts that obstruct the way; the cost of men, +provisions, and munitions; the danger from the Iroquois, and the rivalry +of the English, who covet the western country, and would gladly seize it +for themselves. "But this last reason," says the memorial, "only +animates the Sieur de la Salle the more, and impels him to anticipate +them by the promptness of his action." + +He declares that it was for this that he had asked for the grant of Fort +Frontenac; and he describes what he had done at that post, in order to +make it a secure basis for his enterprise. He says that he has now +overcome the chief difficulties in his way, and that he is ready to +plant a new colony at the outlet of Lake Erie, of which the English, if +not prevented, might easily take possession. Towards the accomplishment +of his plans, he asks the confirmation of his title to Fort Frontenac, +and the permission to establish at his own cost two other posts, with +seigniorial rights over all lands which he may discover and colonize +within twenty years, and the government of all the country in question. +On his part, he proposes to renounce all share in the trade carried on +between the tribes of the Upper Lakes and the people of Canada. + +La Salle seems to have had an interview with the minister, in which the +proposals of his memorial were somewhat modified. He soon received in +reply the following patent from the King:-- + +[Sidenote: THE KING'S APPROVAL.] + +"Louis, by the grace of God King of France and Navarre, to our dear and +well-beloved Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, greeting. We have +received with favor the very humble petition made us in your name, to +permit you to labor at the discovery of the western parts of New France; +and we have the more willingly entertained this proposal, since we have +nothing more at heart than the exploration of this country, through +which, to all appearance, a way may be found to Mexico.... For this and +other causes thereunto moving us, we permit you by these presents, +signed with our hand, to labor at the discovery of the western parts of +our aforesaid country of New France; and, for the execution of this +enterprise, to build forts at such places as you may think necessary, +and enjoy possession thereof under the same clauses and conditions as of +Fort Frontenac, conformably to our letters patent of May thirteenth, +1675, which, so far as needful, we confirm by these presents. And it is +our will that they be executed according to their form and tenor: on +condition, nevertheless, that you finish this enterprise within five +years, failing which, these presents shall be void, and of no effect; +that you carry on no trade with the savages called Ottawas, or with +other tribes who bring their peltries to Montreal; and that you do the +whole at your own cost and that of your associates, to whom we have +granted the sole right of trade in buffalo-hides. And we direct the +Sieur Count Frontenac, our governor and lieutenant-general, and also +Duchesneau, intendant of justice, police, and finance, and the officers +of the supreme council of the aforesaid country, to see to the execution +of these presents; for such is our pleasure. + +"Given at St. Germain en Laye, this 12th day of May, 1678, and of our +reign the 35th year." + +This patent grants both more and less than the memorial had asked. It +authorizes La Salle to build and own, not two forts only, but as many as +he may see fit, provided that he do so within five years; and it gives +him, besides, the monopoly of buffalo-hides, for which at first he had +not petitioned. Nothing is said of colonies. To discover the country, +secure it by forts, and find, if possible, a way to Mexico, are the only +object set forth; for Louis XIV. always discountenanced settlement in +the West, partly as tending to deplete Canada, and partly as removing +his subjects too far from his paternal control. It was but the year +before that he refused to Louis Joliet the permission to plant a trading +station in the Valley of the Mississippi.[99] La Salle, however, still +held to his plan of a commercial and industrial colony, and in +connection with it to another purpose, of which his memorial had made no +mention. This was the building of a vessel on some branch of the +Mississippi, in order to sail down that river to its mouth, and open a +route to commerce through the Gulf of Mexico. It is evident that this +design was already formed; for he had no sooner received his patent, +than he engaged ship-carpenters, and procured iron, cordage, and +anchors, not for one vessel, but for two. + +[Sidenote: MONEY AND MEANS.] + +What he now most needed was money; and having none of his own, he set +himself to raising it from others. A notary named Simonnet lent him four +thousand livres; an advocate named Raoul, twenty-four thousand; and one +Dumont, six thousand. His cousin François Plet, a merchant of Rue St. +Martin, lent him about eleven thousand, at the interest of forty per +cent; and when he returned to Canada, Frontenac found means to procure +him another loan of about fourteen thousand, secured by the mortgage of +Fort Frontenac. But his chief helpers were his family, who became +sharers in his undertaking. "His brothers and relations," says a +memorial afterwards addressed by them to the King, "spared nothing to +enable him to respond worthily to the royal goodness;" and the document +adds, that, before his allotted five years were ended, his discoveries +had cost them more than five hundred thousand livres (francs).[100] La +Salle himself believed, and made others believe, that there was more +profit than risk in his schemes. + +Lodged rather obscurely in Rue de la Truanderie, and of a nature +reserved and shy, he nevertheless found countenance and support from +personages no less exalted than Colbert, Seignelay, and the Prince de +Conti. Others, too, in stations less conspicuous, warmly espoused his +cause, and none more so than the learned Abbé Renaudot, who helped him +with tongue and pen, and seems to have been instrumental in introducing +to him a man who afterwards proved invaluable. This was Henri de Tonty, +an Italian officer, a _protégé_ of the Prince de Conti, who sent him to +La Salle as a person suited to his purposes, Tonty had but one hand, the +other having been blown off by a grenade in the Sicilian wars.[101] His +father, who had been governor of Gaeta, but who had come to France in +consequence of political disturbances in Naples, had earned no small +reputation as a financier, and had invented the form of life insurance +still called the Tontine. La Salle learned to know his new lieutenant on +the voyage across the Atlantic; and, soon after reaching Canada, he +wrote of him to his patron in the following terms: "His honorable +character and his amiable disposition were well known to you; but +perhaps you would not have thought him capable of doing things for which +a strong constitution, an acquaintance with the country, and the use of +both hands seemed absolutely necessary. Nevertheless, his energy and +address make him equal to anything; and now, at a season when everybody +is in fear of the ice, he is setting out to begin a new fort, two +hundred leagues from this place, and to which I have taken the liberty +to give the name of Fort Conti. It is situated near that great cataract, +more than a hundred and twenty _toises_ in height, by which the lakes of +higher elevation precipitate themselves into Lake Frontenac [Ontario]. +From there one goes by water, five hundred leagues, to the place where +Fort Dauphin is to be begun; from which it only remains to descend the +great river of the Bay of St. Esprit, to reach the Gulf of +Mexico."[102] + +[Sidenote: RETURN TO CANADA.] + +Besides Tonty, La Salle found in France another ally, La Motte de +Lussière, to whom he offered a share in the enterprise, and who joined +him at Rochelle, the place of embarkation. Here vexatious delays +occurred. Bellinzani, director of trade, who had formerly taken lessons +in rascality in the service of Cardinal Mazarin, abused his official +position to throw obstacles in the way of La Salle, in order to extort +money from him; and he extorted, in fact, a considerable sum, which his +victim afterwards reclaimed. It was not till the fourteenth of July that +La Salle, with Tonty, La Motte, and thirty men, set sail for Canada, and +two months more elapsed before he reached Quebec. Here, to increase his +resources and strengthen his position, he seems to have made a league +with several Canadian merchants, some of whom had before been his +enemies, and were to be so again. Here, too, he found Father Louis +Hennepin, who had come down from Fort Frontenac to meet him.[103] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[97] _Mémoire pour Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay sur les +Descouvertes du Sieur de la Salle_, 1682. + +[98] _État de la dépense faite par Mr. de la Salle, Gouverneur du +Fort Frontenac. Récit de Nicolas de la Salle. Revue faite au Fort de +Frontenac, 1677; Mémoire sur le Projet du Sieur de la Salle_ (Margry, i. +329). Plan of Fort Frontenac, published by Faillon, from the original +sent to France by Denonville in 1685. _Relation des Découvertes du Sieur +de la Salle._ When Frontenac was at the fort in September, 1677, he +found only four _habitants_. It appears, by the _Relation des +Découvertes du Sieur de la Salle_, that, three or four years later, +there were thirteen or fourteen families. La Salle spent 34,426 francs +on the fort. _Mémoire au Roy, Papiers de Famille._ + +[99] _Colbert à Duchesneau, 28 Avril, 1677._ + +[100] _Mémoire au Roy, présenté sous la Régence; Obligation du Sieur de +la Salle envers le Sieur Plet; Autres Emprunts de Cavelier de la Salle_ +(Margry, i. 423-432). + +[101] Tonty, _Mémoire_, in Margry, _Relations et Mémoires inédits_, 5. + +[102] _Lettre de La Salle, 31 Oct., 1678._ Fort Conti was to have been +built on the site of the present Fort Niagara. The name of Lac de Conti +was given by La Salle to Lake Erie. The fort mentioned as Fort Dauphin +was built, as we shall see, on the Illinois, though under another name. +La Salle, deceived by Spanish maps, thought that the Mississippi +discharged itself into the Bay of St. Esprit (Mobile Bay). + +Henri de Tonty signed his name in the Gallicized, and not in the +original Italian form _Tonti_. He wore a hand of iron or some other +metal, which was usually covered with a glove. La Potherie says that he +once or twice used it to good purpose when the Indians became +disorderly, in breaking the heads of the most contumacious or knocking +out their teeth. Not knowing at the time the secret of the unusual +efficacy of his blows, they regarded him as a "medicine" of the first +order. La Potherie erroneously ascribes the loss of his hand to a +sabre-cut received in a _sortie_ at Messina. + +[103] _La Motte de Lussière à----, sans date; Mémoíre de la Salle sur +les Extorsions commises par Bellinzani; Société formée par La Salle; +Relation de Henri de Tonty_, 1684 (Margry, i. 338, 573; ii. 2, 25). + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +1678-1679. + +LA SALLE AT NIAGARA. + + Father Louis Hennepin: his Past Life; his + Character.--Embarkation.--Niagara Falls.--Indian Jealousy.--La + Motte and the Senecas.--A Disaster.--La Salle and his Followers. + + +Hennepin was all eagerness to join in the adventure; and, to his great +satisfaction, La Salle gave him a letter from his Provincial, Father Le +Fèvre, containing the coveted permission. Whereupon, to prepare himself, +he went into retreat at the Récollet convent of Quebec, where he +remained for a time in such prayer and meditation as his nature, the +reverse of spiritual, would permit. Frontenac, always partial to his +Order, then invited him to dine at the château; and having visited the +bishop and asked his blessing, he went down to the Lower Town and +embarked. His vessel was a small birch canoe, paddled by two men. With +sandalled feet, a coarse gray capote, and peaked hood, the cord of St. +Francis about his waist, and a rosary and crucifix hanging at his side, +the father set forth on his memorable journey. He carried with him the +furniture of a portable altar, which in time of need he could strap on +his back like a knapsack. + +He slowly made his way up the St. Lawrence, stopping here and there, +where a clearing and a few log houses marked the feeble beginning of a +parish and a seigniory. The settlers, though good Catholics, were too +few and too poor to support a priest, and hailed the arrival of the +friar with delight. He said mass, exhorted a little, as was his custom, +and on one occasion baptized a child. At length he reached Montreal, +where the enemies of the enterprise enticed away his two canoe-men. He +succeeded in finding two others, with whom he continued his voyage, +passed the rapids of the upper St. Lawrence, and reached Fort Frontenac +at eleven o'clock at night of the second of November, where his brethren +of the mission, Ribourde and Buisset, received him with open arms.[104] +La Motte, with most of the men, appeared on the eighth; but La Salle and +Tonty did not arrive till more than a month later. Meanwhile, in +pursuance of his orders, fifteen men set out in canoes for Lake Michigan +and the Illinois, to trade with the Indians and collect provisions, +while La Motte embarked in a small vessel for Niagara, accompanied by +Hennepin.[105] + +[Illustration] + +_Father Hennepin Celebrating Mass._ + +Drawn by Howard Pyle. + +La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, 132. + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN.] + +This bold, hardy, and adventurous friar, the historian of the +expedition, and a conspicuous actor in it, has unwittingly painted his +own portrait with tolerable distinctness. "I always," he says, "felt a +strong inclination to fly from the world and live according to the rules +of a pure and severe virtue; and it was with this view that I entered +the Order of St. Francis."[106] He then speaks of his zeal for the +saving of souls, but admits that a passion for travel and a burning +desire to visit strange lands had no small part in his inclination for +the missions.[107] Being in a convent in Artois, his Superior sent him +to Calais, at the season of the herring-fishery, to beg alms, after the +practice of the Franciscans. Here and at Dunkirk he made friends of the +sailors, and was never tired of their stories. So insatiable, indeed, +was his appetite for them, that "often," he says, "I hid myself behind +tavern doors while the sailors were telling of their voyages. The +tobacco smoke made me very sick at the stomach; but, notwithstanding, I +listened attentively to all they said about their adventures at sea and +their travels in distant countries. I could have passed whole days and +nights in this way without eating."[108] + +He presently set out on a roving mission through Holland; and he +recounts various mishaps which befell him, "in consequence of my zeal in +laboring for the saving of souls," "I was at the bloody fight of +Seneff," he pursues, "where so many perished by fire and sword, and +where I had abundance of work in comforting and consoling the poor +wounded soldiers. After undergoing great fatigues, and running extreme +danger in the sieges of towns, in the trenches, and in battles, where I +exposed myself freely for the salvation of others while the soldiers +were breathing nothing but blood and carnage, I found myself at last in +a way of satisfying my old inclination for travel."[109] + +He got leave from his superiors to go to Canada, the most adventurous of +all the missions, and accordingly sailed in 1675, in the ship which +carried La Salle, who had just obtained the grant of Fort Frontenac. In +the course of the voyage, he took it upon him to reprove a party of +girls who were amusing themselves and a circle of officers and other +passengers by dancing on deck. La Salle, who was among the spectators, +was annoyed at Hennepin's interference, and told him that +he was behaving like a pedagogue. The friar retorted, by +alluding--unconsciously, as he says--to the circumstance that La Salle +was once a pedagogue himself, having, according to Hennepin, been for +ten or twelve years teacher of a class in a Jesuit school. La Salle, he +adds, turned pale with rage, and never forgave him to his dying day, +but always maligned and persecuted him.[110] + +On arriving in Canada, he was sent up to Fort Frontenac, as a +missionary. That wild and remote post was greatly to his liking. He +planted a gigantic cross, superintended the building of a chapel for +himself and his colleague Buisset, and instructed the Iroquois +colonists of the place. He visited, too, the neighboring Indian +settlements,--paddling his canoe in summer, when the lake was open, and +journeying in winter on snow-shoes, with a blanket slung at his back. +His most noteworthy journey was one which he made in the +winter,--apparently of 1677,--with a soldier of the fort. They crossed +the eastern extremity of Lake Ontario on snow-shoes, and pushed +southward through the forests, towards Onondaga,--stopping at evening to +dig away the snow, which was several feet deep, and collect wood for +their fire, which they were forced to replenish repeatedly during the +night, to keep themselves from freezing. At length, they reached the +great Onondaga town, where the Indians were much amazed at their +hardihood. Thence they proceeded eastward to the Oneidas, and afterwards +to the Mohawks, who regaled them with small frogs, pounded up with a +porridge of Indian corn. Here Hennepin found the Jesuit Bruyas, who +permitted him to copy a dictionary of the Mohawk language[111] which he +had compiled; and here he presently met three Dutchmen, who urged him to +visit the neighboring settlement of Orange, or Albany,--an invitation +which he seems to have declined.[112] + +They were pleased with him, he says, because he spoke Dutch. Bidding +them farewell, he tied on his snow-shoes again, and returned with his +companion to Fort Frontenac. Thus he inured himself to the hardships of +the woods, and prepared for the execution of the grand plan of discovery +which he calls his own,--"an enterprise," to borrow his own words, +"capable of terrifying anybody but me."[113] When the later editions of +his book appeared, doubts had been expressed of his veracity. "I here +protest to you, before God," he writes, addressing the reader, "that my +narrative is faithful and sincere, and that you may believe everything +related in it."[114] And yet, as we shall see, this reverend father was +the most impudent of liars; and the narrative of which he speaks is a +rare monument of brazen mendacity. Hennepin, however, had seen and dared +much; for among his many failings fear had no part, and where his +vanity or his spite was not involved, he often told the truth. His books +have their value, with all their enormous fabrications.[115] + +La Motte and Hennepin, with sixteen men, went on board the little vessel +of ten tons, which lay at Fort Frontenac. The friar's two brethren, +Buisset and Ribourde, threw their arms about his neck as they bade him +farewell; while his Indian proselytes, learning whither he was bound, +stood with their hands pressed upon their mouths, in amazement at the +perils which awaited their ghostly instructor. La Salle, with the rest +of the party, was to follow as soon as he could finish his preparations. +It was a boisterous and gusty day, the eighteenth of November. The sails +were spread; the shore receded,--the stone walls of the fort, the huge +cross that the friar had reared, the wigwams, the settlers' cabins, the +group of staring Indians on the strand. The lake was rough; and the men, +crowded in so small a craft, grew nervous and uneasy. They hugged the +northern shore, to escape the fury of the wind, which blew savagely from +the northeast; while the long gray sweep of naked forests on their right +betokened that winter was fast closing in. On the twenty-sixth, they +reached the neighborhood of the Indian town of Taiaiagon,[116] not far +from Toronto, and ran their vessel, for safety, into the mouth of a +river,--probably the Humber,--where the ice closed about her, and they +were forced to cut her out with axes. On the fifth of December, they +attempted to cross to the mouth of the Niagara; but darkness overtook +them, and they spent a comfortless night, tossing on the troubled lake, +five or six miles from shore. In the morning, they entered the mouth of +the Niagara, and landed on the point at its eastern side, where now +stand the historic ramparts of Fort Niagara. Here they found a small +village of Senecas, attracted hither by the fisheries, who gazed with +curious eyes at the vessel, and listened in wonder as the voyagers sang +_Te Deum_ in gratitude for their safe arrival. + +[Sidenote: NIAGARA FALLS.] + +Hennepin, with several others, now ascended the river in a canoe to the +foot of the mountain ridge of Lewiston, which, stretching on the right +hand and on the left, forms the acclivity of a vast plateau, rent with +the mighty chasm, along which, from this point to the cataract, seven +miles above, rush, with the fury of an Alpine torrent, the gathered +waters of four inland oceans. To urge the canoe farther was impossible. +He landed, with his companions, on the west bank, near the foot of that +part of the ridge now called Queenstown Heights, climbed the steep +ascent, and pushed through the wintry forest on a tour of exploration. +On his left sank the cliffs, the furious river raging below; till at +length, in primeval solitudes unprofaned as yet by the pettiness of man, +the imperial cataract burst upon his sight.[117] + +The explorers passed three miles beyond it, and encamped for the night +on the banks of Chippewa Creek, scraping away the snow, which was a foot +deep, in order to kindle a fire. In the morning they retraced their +steps, startling a number of deer and wild turkeys on their way, and +rejoined their companions at the mouth of the river. + +[Sidenote: LA MOTTE AND THE SENECAS.] + +La Motte now began the building of a fortified house, some two leagues +above the mouth of the Niagara.[118] Hot water was used to soften the +frozen ground; but frost was not the only obstacle. The Senecas of the +neighboring village betrayed a sullen jealousy at a design which, +indeed, boded them no good. Niagara was the key to the four great lakes +above; and whoever held possession of it could, in no small measure, +control the fur-trade of the interior. Occupied by the French, it would +in time of peace intercept the trade which the Iroquois carried on +between the western Indians and the Dutch and English at Albany, and in +time of war threaten them with serious danger. La Motte saw the +necessity of conciliating these formidable neighbors, and, if possible, +cajoling them to give their consent to the plan. La Salle, indeed, had +instructed him to that effect. He resolved on a journey to the great +village of the Senecas, and called on Hennepin, who was busied in +building a bark chapel for himself, to accompany him. They accordingly +set out with several men well armed and equipped, and bearing at their +backs presents of very considerable value. The village was beyond the +Genesee, southeast of the site of Rochester.[119] After a march of five +days, they reached it on the last day of December. They were conducted +to the lodge of the great chief, where they were beset by a staring +crowd of women and children. Two Jesuits, Raffeix and Julien Garnier, +were in the village; and their presence boded no good for the embassy. +La Motte, who seems to have had little love for priests of any kind, was +greatly annoyed at seeing them; and when the chiefs assembled to hear +what he had to say, he insisted that the two fathers should leave the +council-house. At this, Hennepin, out of respect for his cloth, thought +it befitting that he should retire also. The chiefs, forty-two in +number, squatted on the ground, arrayed in ceremonial robes of beaver, +wolf, or black-squirrel skin. "The senators of Venice," writes Hennepin, +"do not look more grave or speak more deliberately than the counsellors +of the Iroquois." La Motte's interpreter harangued the attentive +conclave, placed gift after gift at their feet,--coats, scarlet cloth, +hatchets, knives, and beads,--and used all his eloquence to persuade +them that the building of a fort on the banks of the Niagara, and a +vessel on Lake Erie, were measures vital to their interest. They gladly +took the gifts, but answered the interpreter's speech with evasive +generalities; and having been entertained with the burning of an Indian +prisoner, the discomfited embassy returned, half-famished, to Niagara. + +Meanwhile, La Salle and Tonty were on their way from Fort Frontenac, +with men and supplies, to join La Motte and his advance party. They +were in a small vessel, with a pilot either unskilful or treacherous. +On Christmas eve, he was near wrecking them off the Bay of Quinté. On +the next day they crossed to the mouth of the Genesee; and La Salle, +after some delay, proceeded to the neighboring town of the Senecas, +where he appears to have arrived just after the departure of La Motte +and Hennepin. He, too, called them to a council, and tried to soothe the +extreme jealousy with which they regarded his proceedings. "I told them +my plan," he says, "and gave the best pretexts I could, and I succeeded +in my attempt."[120] More fortunate than La Motte, he persuaded them to +consent to his carrying arms and ammunition by the Niagara portage, +building a vessel above the cataract, and establishing a fortified +warehouse at the mouth of the river. + +[Sidenote: JEALOUSIES.] + +This success was followed by a calamity. La Salle had gone up the +Niagara to find a suitable place for a ship-yard, when he learned that +the pilot in charge of the vessel he had left had disobeyed his orders, +and ended by wrecking it on the coast. Little was saved except the +anchors and cables destined for the new vessel to be built above the +cataract. This loss threw him into extreme perplexity, and, as Hennepin +says, "would have made anybody but him give up the enterprise."[121] The +whole party were now gathered at the palisaded house which La Motte had +built, a little below the mountain ridge of Lewiston. They were a motley +crew of French, Flemings, and Italians, all mutually jealous. La Salle's +enemies had tampered with some of the men; and none of them seemed to +have had much heart for the enterprise. The fidelity even of La Motte +was doubtful. "He served me very ill," says La Salle; "and Messieurs de +Tonty and de la Forest knew that he did his best to debauch all my +men."[122] His health soon failed under the hardships of these winter +journeyings, and he returned to Fort Frontenac, half-blinded by an +inflammation of the eyes.[123] La Salle, seldom happy in the choice of +subordinates, had, perhaps, in all his company but one man whom he could +fully trust; and this was Tonty. He and Hennepin were on indifferent +terms. Men thrown together in a rugged enterprise like this quickly +learn to know each other; and the vain and assuming friar was not likely +to commend himself to La Salle's brave and loyal lieutenant. Hennepin +says that it was La Salle's policy to govern through the dissensions of +his followers; and, from whatever cause, it is certain that those +beneath him were rarely in perfect harmony. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[104] Hennepin, _Description de la Louisiane_ (1683), 19; Ibid., _Voyage +Curieux_ (1704), 66. Ribourde had lately arrived. + +[105] _Lettre de La Motte de la Lussière, sans date; Relation de Henri +de Tonty écrite de Québec, le 14 Novembre, 1684_ (Margry, i. 573). This +paper, apparently addressed to Abbé Renaudot, is entirely distinct from +Tonty's memoir of 1693, addressed to the minister Ponchartrain. + +[106] Hennepin, _Nouvelle Découverte_ (1697), 8. + +[107] Ibid., _Avant Propos_, 5. + +[108] Ibid., _Voyage Curieux_ (1704), 12. + +[109] Hennepin, _Voyage Curieux_ (1704), 18. + +[110] Ibid. _Avis au Lecteur._ He elsewhere represents himself as on +excellent terms with La Salle; with whom, he says, he used to read +histories of travels at Fort Frontenac, after which they discussed +together their plans of discovery. + +[111] This was the _Racines Agnières_ of Bruyas. It was published by Mr. +Shea in 1862. Hennepin seems to have studied it carefully; for on +several occasions he makes use of words evidently borrowed from it, +putting them into the mouths of Indians speaking a dialect different +from that of the Agniers, or Mohawks. + +[112] Compare Brodhead in _Hist. Mag._, x. 268. + +[113] "Une enterprise capable d'épouvanter tout autre que +moi."--Hennepin, _Voyage Curieux, Avant Propos_ (1704). + +[114] "Je vous proteste ici devant Dieu, que ma Relation est fidèle et +sincère," etc.--Ibid., _Avis au Lecteur_. + +[115] The nature of these fabrications will be shown hereafter. They +occur, not in the early editions of Hennepin's narrative, which are +comparatively truthful, but in the edition of 1697 and those which +followed. La Salle was dead at the time of their publication. + +[116] This place is laid down on a manuscript map sent to France by the +Intendant Duchesneau, and now preserved in the Archives de la Marine, +and also on several other contemporary maps. + +[117] Hennepin's account of the falls and river of Niagara--especially +his second account, on his return from the West--is very minute, and on +the whole very accurate. He indulges in gross exaggeration as to the +height of the cataract, which, in the edition of 1683, he states at five +hundred feet, and raises to six hundred in that of 1697. He also says +that there was room for four carriages to pass abreast under the +American Fall without being wet. This is, of course, an exaggeration at +the best; but it is extremely probable that a great change has taken +place since his time. He speaks of a small lateral fall at the west side +of the Horse Shoe Fall which does not now exist. Table Rock, now +destroyed, is distinctly figured in his picture. He says that he +descended the cliffs on the west side to the foot of the cataract, but +that no human being can get down on the east side. + +The name of Niagara, written _Onguiaahra_ by Lalemant in 1641, and +_Ongiara_ by Sanson, on his map of 1657, is used by Hennepin in its +present form. His description of the falls is the earliest known to +exist. They are clearly indicated on the map of Champlain, 1632. For +early references to them, see "The Jesuits in North America," 235, +_note_. A brief but curious notice of them is given by Gendron, +_Quelques Particularitez du Pays des Hurons_, 1659. The indefatigable +Dr. O'Callaghan has discovered thirty-nine distinct forms of the name +Niagara. _Index to Colonial Documents of New York_, 465. It is of +Iroquois origin, and in the Mohawk dialect is pronounced Nyàgarah. + +[118] Tonty, _Relation_, 1684 (Margry, i. 573). + +[119] Near the town of Victor. It is laid down on the map of Galinée, +and other unpublished maps. Compare Marshall, _Historical Sketches of +the Niagara Frontier_, 14. + +[120] _Lettre de La Salle à un de ses associés_ (Margry, ii. 32). + +[121] _Description de la Louisiane_ (1683), 41. It is characteristic of +Hennepin that, in the editions of his book published after La Salle's +death, he substitutes, for "anybody but him," "anybody but those who had +formed so generous a design,"--meaning to include himself, though he +lost nothing by the disaster, and had not formed the design. + +On these incidents, compare the two narratives of Tonty, of 1684 and +1693. The book bearing Tonty's name is a compilation full of errors. He +disowned its authorship. + +[122] _Lettre de La Salle, 22 Août, 1682_ (Margry, ii. 212). + +[123] _Lettre de La Motte, sans date._ + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +1679. + +THE LAUNCH OF THE "GRIFFIN." + + The Niagara Portage.--A Vessel on the Stocks.--Suffering and + Discontent.--La Salle's Winter Journey.--The Vessel + launched.--Fresh Disasters. + + +[Sidenote: THE NIAGARA PORTAGE.] + +A more important work than that of the warehouse at the mouth of the +river was now to be begun. This was the building of a vessel above the +cataract. The small craft which had brought La Motte and Hennepin with +their advance party had been hauled to the foot of the rapids at +Lewiston, and drawn ashore with a capstan, to save her from the drifting +ice. Her lading was taken out, and must now be carried beyond the +cataract to the calm water above. The distance to the destined point was +at least twelve miles, and the steep heights above Lewiston must first +be climbed. This heavy task was accomplished on the twenty-second of +January. The level of the plateau was reached, and the file of burdened +men, some thirty in number, toiled slowly on its way over the snowy +plains and through the gloomy forests of spruce and naked oak-trees; +while Hennepin plodded through the drifts with his portable altar +lashed fast to his back. They came at last to the mouth of a stream +which entered the Niagara two leagues above the cataract, and which was +undoubtedly that now called Cayuga Creek.[124] + +Trees were felled, the place cleared, and the master-carpenter set his +ship-builders at work. Meanwhile, two Mohegan hunters, attached to the +party, made bark wigwams to lodge the men. Hennepin had his chapel, +apparently of the same material, where he placed his altar, and on +Sundays and saints' days said mass, preached, and exhorted; while some +of the men, who knew the Gregorian chant, lent their aid at the service. +When the carpenters were ready to lay the keel of the vessel, La Salle +asked the friar to drive the first bolt; "but the modesty of my +religious profession," he says, "compelled me to decline this honor." + +Fortunately, it was the hunting-season of the Iroquois, and most of the +Seneca warriors were in the forests south of Lake Erie; yet enough +remained to cause serious uneasiness. They loitered sullenly about the +place, expressing their displeasure at the proceedings of the French. +One of them, pretending to be drunk, attacked the blacksmith and tried +to kill him; but the Frenchman, brandishing a red-hot bar of iron, held +him at bay till Hennepin ran to the rescue, when, as he declares, the +severity of his rebuke caused the savage to desist.[125] The work of the +ship-builders advanced rapidly; and when the Indian visitors beheld the +vast ribs of the wooden monster, their jealousy was redoubled. A squaw +told the French that they meant to burn the vessel on the stocks. All +now stood anxiously on the watch. Cold, hunger, and discontent found +imperfect antidotes in Tonty's energy and Hennepin's sermons. + +[Sidenote: SUFFERING AND DISCONTENT.] + +La Salle was absent, and his lieutenant commanded in his place. Hennepin +says that Tonty was jealous because he, the friar, kept a journal, and +that he was forced to use all manner of just precautions to prevent the +Italian from seizing it. The men, being half-starved, in consequence of +the loss of their provisions on Lake Ontario, were restless and moody; +and their discontent was fomented by one of their number, who had very +probably been tampered with by La Salle's enemies.[126] The Senecas +refused to supply them with corn, and the frequent exhortations of the +Récollet father proved an insufficient substitute. In this extremity, +the two Mohegans did excellent service,--bringing deer and other game, +which relieved the most pressing wants of the party, and went far to +restore their cheerfulness. + +La Salle, meanwhile, had gone down to the mouth of the river, with a +sergeant and a number of men; and here, on the high point of land where +Fort Niagara now stands, he marked out the foundations of two +blockhouses.[127] Then, leaving his men to build them, he set out on +foot for Fort Frontenac, where the condition of his affairs demanded his +presence, and where he hoped to procure supplies to replace those lost +in the wreck of his vessel. It was February, and the distance was some +two hundred and fifty miles, through the snow-encumbered forests of the +Iroquois and over the ice of Lake Ontario. Two men attended him, and a +dog dragged his baggage on a sledge. For food, they had only a bag of +parched corn, which failed them two days before they reached the fort; +and they made the rest of the journey fasting. + +[Sidenote: THE SHIP FINISHED.] + +During his absence, Tonty finished the vessel, which was of about +forty-five tons' burden.[128] As spring opened, she was ready for +launching. The friar pronounced his blessing on her; the assembled +company sang _Te Deum_; cannon were fired; and French and Indians, +warmed alike by a generous gift of brandy, shouted and yelped in chorus +as she glided into the Niagara. Her builders towed her out and anchored +her in the stream, safe at last from incendiary hands; and then, +swinging their hammocks under her deck, slept in peace, beyond reach of +the tomahawk. The Indians gazed on her with amazement. Five small cannon +looked out from her portholes; and on her prow was carved a portentous +monster, the Griffin, whose name she bore, in honor of the armorial +bearings of Frontenac. La Salle had often been heard to say that he +would make the griffin fly above the crows, or, in other words, make +Frontenac triumph over the Jesuits. + +They now took her up the river, and made her fast below the swift +current at Black Rock. Here they finished her equipment, and waited for +La Salle's return; but the absent commander did not appear. The spring +and more than half of the summer had passed before they saw him again. +At length, early in August, he arrived at the mouth of the Niagara, +bringing three more friars; for, though no friend of the Jesuits, he was +zealous for the Faith, and was rarely without a missionary in his +journeyings. Like Hennepin, the three friars were all Flemings. One of +them, Melithon Watteau, was to remain at Niagara; the others, Zenobe +Membré and Gabriel Ribourde, were to preach the Faith among the tribes +of the West. Ribourde was a hale and cheerful old man of sixty-four. He +went four times up and down the Lewiston heights, while the men were +climbing the steep pathway with their loads. It required four of them, +well stimulated with brandy, to carry up the principal anchor destined +for the "Griffin." + +La Salle brought a tale of disaster. His enemies, bent on ruining the +enterprise, had given out that he was embarked on a harebrained venture, +from which he would never return. His creditors, excited by rumors set +afloat to that end, had seized on all his property in the settled parts +of Canada, though his seigniory of Fort Frontenac alone would have more +than sufficed to pay all his debts. There was no remedy. To defer the +enterprise would have been to give his adversaries the triumph that they +sought; and he hardened himself against the blow with his usual +stoicism.[129] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[124] It has been a matter of debate on which side of the Niagara the +first vessel on the Upper Lakes was built. A close study of Hennepin, +and a careful examination of the localities, have convinced me that the +spot was that indicated above. Hennepin repeatedly alludes to a large +detached rock, rising out of the water at the foot of the rapids above +Lewiston, on the west side of the river. This rock may still be seen +immediately under the western end of the Lewiston suspension-bridge. +Persons living in the neighborhood remember that a ferry-boat used to +pass between it and the cliffs of the western shore; but it has since +been undermined by the current and has inclined in that direction, so +that a considerable part of it is submerged, while the gravel and earth +thrown down from the cliff during the building of the bridge has filled +the intervening channel. Opposite to this rock, and on the east side of +the river, says Hennepin, are three mountains, about two leagues below +the cataract. (_Nouveau Voyage_ (1704), 462, 466.) To these "three +mountains," as well as to the rock, he frequently alludes. They are also +spoken of by La Hontan, who clearly indicates their position. They +consist in the three successive grades of the acclivity: first, that +which rises from the level of the water, forming the steep and lofty +river-bank; next, an intermediate ascent, crowned by a sort of terrace, +where the tired men could find a second resting-place and lay down their +burdens, whence a third effort carried them with difficulty to the level +top of the plateau. That this was the actual "portage," or carrying +place of the travellers, is shown by Hennepin (1704), 114, who describes +the carrying of anchors and other heavy articles up these heights in +August, 1679. La Hontan also passed the Falls by way of the "three +mountains" eight years later. La Hontan (1703), 106. It is clear, then, +that the portage was on the east side, whence it would be safe to +conclude that the vessel was built on the same side. Hennepin says that +she was built at the mouth of a stream (_rivière_) entering the Niagara +two leagues above the Falls. Excepting one or two small brooks, there is +no stream on the west side but Chippewa Creek, which Hennepin had +visited and correctly placed at about a league from the cataract. His +distances on the Niagara are usually correct. On the east side there is +a stream which perfectly answers the conditions. This is Cayuga Creek, +two leagues above the Falls. Immediately in front of it is an island +about a mile long, separated from the shore by a narrow and deep arm of +the Niagara, into which Cayuga Creek discharges itself. The place is so +obviously suited to building and launching a vessel, that, in the early +part of this century, the government of the United States chose it for +the construction of a schooner to carry supplies to the garrisons of the +Upper Lakes. The neighboring village now bears the name of La Salle. + +In examining this and other localities on the Niagara, I have been +greatly aided by my friend O. H. Marshall, Esq., of Buffalo, who is +unrivalled in his knowledge of the history and traditions of the Niagara +frontier. + +[125] Hennepin (1704), 97. On a paper drawn up at the instance of the +Intendant Duchesneau, the names of the greater number of La Salle's men +are preserved. These agree with those given by Hennepin: thus, the +master-carpenter, whom he calls Maître Moyse, appears as Moïse Hillaret; +and the blacksmith, whom he calls La Forge, is mentioned as--(illegible) +dit la Forge. + +[126] "This bad man," says Hennepin, "would infallibly have debauched +our workmen, if I had not reassured them by the exhortations which I +made them on fête-days and Sundays, after divine service." (1704), 98. + +[127] _Lettre de La Salle, 22 Août, 1682_ (Margry, ii. 229); _Relation +de Tonty_, 1684 (Ibid., i. 577). He called this new post Fort Conti. It +was burned some months after, by the carelessness of the sergeant in +command, and was the first of a succession of forts on this historic +spot. + +[128] Hennepin (1683), 46. In the edition of 1697, he says that it was +of sixty tons. I prefer to follow the earlier and more trustworthy +narrative. + +[129] La Salle's embarrassment at this time was so great that he +purposed to send Tonty up the lakes in the "Griffin," while he went back +to the colony to look after his affairs; but suspecting that the pilot, +who had already wrecked one of his vessels, was in the pay of his +enemies, he resolved at last to take charge of the expedition himself, +to prevent a second disaster. (_Lettre de La Salle, 22 Août, 1682_; +Margry, ii. 214.) Among the creditors who bore hard upon him were +Migeon, Charon, Giton, and Peloquin, of Montreal, in whose name his furs +at Fort Frontenac had been seized. The intendant also placed under seal +all his furs at Quebec, among which is set down the not very precious +item of two hundred and eighty-four skins of _enfants du diable_, or +skunks. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +1679. + +LA SALLE ON THE UPPER LAKES. + + The Voyage of the "Griffin."--Detroit.--A Storm.--St. Ignace of + Michilimackinac.--Rivals and Enemies.--Lake + Michigan.--Hardships.--A Threatened Fight.--Fort Miami.--Tonty's + Misfortunes.--Forebodings. + + +The "Griffin" had lain moored by the shore, so near that Hennepin could +preach on Sundays from the deck to the men encamped along the bank. She +was now forced up against the current with tow-ropes and sails, till she +reached the calm entrance of Lake Erie. On the seventh of August, La +Salle and his followers embarked, sang _Te Deum_, and fired their +cannon. A fresh breeze sprang up; and with swelling canvas the "Griffin" +ploughed the virgin waves of Lake Erie, where sail was never seen +before. For three days they held their course over these unknown waters, +and on the fourth turned northward into the Strait of Detroit. Here, on +the right hand and on the left, lay verdant prairies, dotted with groves +and bordered with lofty forests. They saw walnut, chestnut, and wild +plum trees, and oaks festooned with grape-vines; herds of deer, and +flocks of swans and wild turkeys. The bulwarks of the "Griffin" were +plentifully hung with game which the men killed on shore, and among the +rest with a number of bears, much commended by Hennepin for their want +of ferocity and the excellence of their flesh. "Those," he says, "who +will one day have the happiness to possess this fertile and pleasant +strait, will be very much obliged to those who have shown them the way." +They crossed Lake St. Clair,[130] and still sailed northward against the +current, till now, sparkling in the sun, Lake Huron spread before them +like a sea. + +[Sidenote: ST. IGNACE.] + +For a time they bore on prosperously. Then the wind died to a calm, then +freshened to a gale, then rose to a furious tempest; and the vessel +tossed wildly among the short, steep, perilous waves of the raging lake. +Even La Salle called on his followers to commend themselves to Heaven. +All fell to their prayers but the godless pilot, who was loud in +complaint against his commander for having brought him, after the honor +he had won on the ocean, to drown at last ignominiously in fresh water. +The rest clamored to the saints. St. Anthony of Padua was promised a +chapel to be built in his honor, if he would but save them from their +jeopardy; while in the same breath La Salle and the friars declared him +patron of their great enterprise.[131] The saint heard their prayers. +The obedient winds were tamed; and the "Griffin" plunged on her way +through foaming surges that still grew calmer as she advanced. Now the +sun shone forth on woody islands, Bois Blanc and Mackinaw and the +distant Manitoulins,--on the forest wastes of Michigan and the vast blue +bosom of the angry lake; and now her port was won, and she found her +rest behind the point of St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, floating in that +tranquil cove where crystal waters cover but cannot hide the pebbly +depths beneath. Before her rose the house and chapel of the Jesuits, +enclosed with palisades; on the right, the Huron village, with its bark +cabins and its fence of tall pickets; on the left, the square compact +houses of the French traders; and, not far off, the clustered wigwams of +an Ottawa village.[132] Here was a centre of the Jesuit missions, and a +centre of the Indian trade; and here, under the shadow of the cross, was +much sharp practice in the service of Mammon. Keen traders, with or +without a license, and lawless _coureurs de bois_, whom a few years of +forest life had weaned from civilization, made St. Ignace their resort; +and here there were many of them when the "Griffin" came. They and their +employers hated and feared La Salle, who, sustained as he was by the +governor, might set at nought the prohibition of the King, debarring him +from traffic with these tribes. Yet, while plotting against him, they +took pains to allay his distrust by a show of welcome. + +The "Griffin" fired her cannon, and the Indians yelped in wonder and +amazement. The adventurers landed in state, and marched under arms to +the bark chapel of the Ottawa village, where they heard mass. La Salle +knelt before the altar, in a mantle of scarlet bordered with gold. +Soldiers, sailors, and artisans knelt around him,--black Jesuits, gray +Récollets, swarthy _voyageurs_, and painted savages; a devout but motley +concourse. + +As they left the chapel, the Ottawa chiefs came to bid them welcome, and +the Hurons saluted them with a volley of musketry. They saw the +"Griffin" at her anchorage, surrounded by more than a hundred bark +canoes, like a Triton among minnows. Yet it was with more wonder than +good-will that the Indians of the mission gazed on the "floating fort," +for so they called the vessel. A deep jealousy of La Salle's designs had +been infused into them. His own followers, too, had been tampered with. +In the autumn before, it may be remembered, he had sent fifteen men up +the lakes to trade for him, with orders to go thence to the Illinois and +make preparation against his coming. Early in the summer, Tonty had been +despatched in a canoe from Niagara to look after them.[133] It was high +time. Most of the men had been seduced from their duty, and had +disobeyed their orders, squandered the goods intrusted to them, or used +them in trading on their own account. La Salle found four of them at +Michilimackinac. These he arrested, and sent Tonty to the Falls of Ste. +Marie, where two others were captured, with their plunder. The rest were +in the woods, and it was useless to pursue them. + +[Sidenote: RIVALS AND ENEMIES.] + +Anxious and troubled as to the condition of his affairs in Canada. La +Salle had meant, after seeing his party safe at Michilimackinac, to +leave Tonty to conduct it to the Illinois, while he himself returned to +the colony. But Tonty was still at Ste. Marie, and he had none to trust +but himself. Therefore, he resolved at all risks to remain with his men; +"for," he says, "I judged my presence absolutely necessary to retain +such of them as were left me, and prevent them from being enticed away +during the winter." Moreover, he thought that he had detected an +intrigue of his enemies to hound on the Iroquois against the Illinois, +in order to defeat his plan by involving him in the war. + +Early in September he set sail again, and passing westward into Lake +Michigan,[134] cast anchor near one of the islands at the entrance of +Green Bay. Here, for once, he found a friend in the person of a +Pottawattamie chief, who had been so wrought upon by the politic +kindness of Frontenac that he declared himself ready to die for the +children of Onontio.[135] Here, too, he found several of his advance +party, who had remained faithful and collected a large store of furs. It +would have been better had they proved false, like the rest. La Salle, +who asked counsel of no man, resolved, in spite of his followers, to +send back the "Griffin" laden with these furs, and others collected on +the way, to satisfy his creditors.[136] It was a rash resolution, for it +involved trusting her to the pilot, who had already proved either +incompetent or treacherous. She fired a parting shot, and on the +eighteenth of September set sail for Niagara, with orders to return to +the head of Lake Michigan as soon as she had discharged her cargo. La +Salle, with the fourteen men who remained, in four canoes deeply laden +with a forge, tools, merchandise, and arms, put out from the island and +resumed his voyage. + +[Sidenote: POTTAWATTAMIES.] + +The parting was not auspicious. The lake, glassy and calm in the +afternoon, was convulsed at night with a sudden storm, when the canoes +were midway between the island and the main shore. It was with +difficulty that they could keep together, the men shouting to each +other through the darkness. Hennepin, who was in the smallest canoe with +a heavy load, and a carpenter for a companion who was awkward at the +paddle, found himself in jeopardy which demanded all his nerve. The +voyagers thought themselves happy when they gained at last the shelter +of a little sandy cove, where they dragged up their canoes, and made +their cheerless bivouac in the drenched and dripping forest. Here they +spent five days, living on pumpkins and Indian corn, the gift of their +Pottawattamie friends, and on a Canada porcupine brought in by La +Salle's Mohegan hunter. The gale raged meanwhile with relentless fury. +They trembled when they thought of the "Griffin." When at length the +tempest lulled, they re-embarked, and steered southward along the shore +of Wisconsin; but again the storm fell upon them, and drove them for +safety to a bare, rocky islet. Here they made a fire of drift-wood, +crouched around it, drew their blankets over their heads, and in this +miserable plight, pelted with sleet and rain, remained for two days. + +At length they were afloat again; but their prosperity was brief. On the +twenty-eighth, a fierce squall drove them to a point of rocks covered +with bushes, where they consumed the little that remained of their +provisions. On the first of October they paddled about thirty miles, +without food, when they came to a village of Pottawattamies, who ran +down to the shore to help them to land; but La Salle, fearing that some +of his men would steal the merchandise and desert to the Indians, +insisted on going three leagues farther, to the great indignation of his +followers. The lake, swept by an easterly gale, was rolling its waves +against the beach, like the ocean in a storm. In the attempt to land, La +Salle's canoe was nearly swamped. He and his three canoe-men leaped into +the water, and in spite of the surf, which nearly drowned them, dragged +their vessel ashore with all its load. He then went to the rescue of +Hennepin, who with his awkward companion was in woful need of succor. +Father Gabriel, with his sixty-four years, was no match for the surf and +the violent undertow. Hennepin, finding himself safe, waded to his +relief, and carried him ashore on his sturdy shoulders; while the old +friar, though drenched to the skin, laughed gayly under his cowl as his +brother missionary staggered with him up the beach.[137] + +When all were safe ashore, La Salle, who distrusted the Indians they had +passed, took post on a hill, and ordered his followers to prepare their +guns for action. Nevertheless, as they were starving, an effort must be +risked to gain a supply of food; and he sent three men back to the +village to purchase it. Well armed, but faint with toil and famine, they +made their way through the stormy forest bearing a pipe of peace, but on +arriving saw that the scared inhabitants had fled. They found, however, +a stock of corn, of which they took a portion, leaving goods in +exchange, and then set out on their return. + +Meanwhile, about twenty of the warriors, armed with bows and arrows, +approached the camp of the French to reconnoitre. La Salle went to meet +them with some of his men, opened a parley with them, and kept them +seated at the foot of the hill till his three messengers returned, when +on seeing the peace-pipe the warriors set up a cry of joy. In the +morning they brought more corn to the camp, with a supply of fresh +venison, not a little cheering to the exhausted Frenchmen, who, in dread +of treachery, had stood under arms all night. + +[Sidenote: HARDSHIPS.] + +This was no journey of pleasure. The lake was ruffled with almost +ceaseless storms; clouds big with rain above, a turmoil of gray and +gloomy waves beneath. Every night the canoes must be shouldered through +the breakers and dragged up the steep banks, which, as they neared the +site of Milwaukee, became almost insurmountable. The men paddled all +day, with no other food than a handful of Indian corn. They were spent +with toil, sick with the haws and wild berries which they ravenously +devoured, and dejected at the prospect before them. Father Gabriel's +good spirits began to fail. He fainted several times from famine and +fatigue, but was revived by a certain "confection of Hyacinth" +administered by Hennepin, who had a small box of this precious specific. + +At length they descried at a distance, on the stormy shore, two or three +eagles among a busy congregation of crows or turkey buzzards. They +paddled in all haste to the spot. The feasters took flight; and the +starved travellers found the mangled body of a deer, lately killed by +the wolves. This good luck proved the inauguration of plenty. As they +approached the head of the lake, game grew abundant; and, with the aid +of the Mohegan, there was no lack of bear's meat and venison. They found +wild grapes, too, in the woods, and gathered them by cutting down the +trees to which the vines clung. + +[Sidenote: ENCOUNTER WITH INDIANS.] + +While thus employed, they were startled by a sight often so fearful in +the waste and the wilderness,--the print of a human foot. It was clear +that Indians were not far off. A strict watch was kept, not, as it +proved, without cause; for that night, while the sentry thought of +little but screening himself and his gun from the floods of rain, a +party of Outagamies crept under the bank, where they lurked for some +time before he discovered them. Being challenged, they came forward, +professing great friendship, and pretending to have mistaken the French +for Iroquois. In the morning, however, there was an outcry from La +Salle's servant, who declared that the visitors had stolen his coat from +under the inverted canoe where he had placed it; while some of the +carpenters also complained of being robbed. La Salle well knew that if +the theft were left unpunished, worse would come of it. First, he posted +his men at the woody point of a peninsula, whose sandy neck was +interposed between them and the main forest. Then he went forth, pistol +in hand, met a young Outagami, seized him, and led him prisoner to his +camp. This done, he again set out, and soon found an Outagami +chief,--for the wigwams were not far distant,--to whom he told what he +had done, adding that unless the stolen goods were restored, the +prisoner should be killed. The Indians were in perplexity, for they had +cut the coat to pieces and divided it. In this dilemma they resolved, +being strong in numbers, to rescue their comrade by force. Accordingly, +they came down to the edge of the forest, or posted themselves behind +fallen trees on the banks, while La Salle's men in their stronghold +braced their nerves for the fight. Here three Flemish friars with their +rosaries, and eleven Frenchmen with their guns, confronted a hundred and +twenty screeching Outagamies. Hennepin, who had seen service, and who +had always an exhortation at his tongue's end, busied himself to inspire +the rest with a courage equal to his own. Neither party, however, had an +appetite for the fray. A parley ensued: full compensation was made for +the stolen goods, and the aggrieved Frenchmen were farther propitiated +with a gift of beaver-skins. + +Their late enemies, now become friends, spent the next day in dances, +feasts, and speeches. They entreated La Salle not to advance farther, +since the Illinois, through whose country he must pass, would be sure to +kill him; for, added these friendly counsellors, they hated the French +because they had been instigating the Iroquois to invade their country, +Here was another subject of anxiety. La Salle was confirmed in his +belief that his busy and unscrupulous enemies were intriguing for his +destruction. + +He pushed on, however, circling around the southern shore of Lake +Michigan, till he reached the mouth of the St. Joseph, called by him the +Miamis. Here Tonty was to have rejoined him with twenty men, making his +way from Michilimackinac along the eastern shore of the lake; but the +rendezvous was a solitude,--Tonty was nowhere to be seen. It was the +first of November; winter was at hand, and the streams would soon be +frozen. The men clamored to go forward, urging that they should starve +if they could not reach the villages of the Illinois before the tribe +scattered for the winter hunt. La Salle was inexorable. If they should +all desert, he said, he, with his Mohegan hunter and the three friars, +would still remain and wait for Tonty. The men grumbled, but obeyed; +and, to divert their thoughts, he set them at building a fort of timber +on a rising ground at the mouth of the river. + +They had spent twenty days at this task, and their work was well +advanced, when at length Tonty appeared. He brought with him only half +of his men. Provisions had failed; and the rest of his party had been +left thirty leagues behind, to sustain themselves by hunting. La Salle +told him to return and hasten them forward. He set out with two men. A +violent north wind arose. He tried to run his canoe ashore through the +breakers. The two men could not manage their vessel, and he with his one +hand could not help them. She swamped, rolling over in the surf. Guns, +baggage, and provisions were lost; and the three voyagers returned to +the Miamis, subsisting on acorns by the way. Happily, the men left +behind, excepting two deserters, succeeded, a few days after, in +rejoining the party.[138] + +[Sidenote: FOREBODINGS.] + +Thus was one heavy load lifted from the heart of La Salle. But where was +the "Griffin"? Time enough, and more than enough, had passed for her +voyage to Niagara and back again. He scanned the dreary horizon with an +anxious eye. No returning sail gladdened the watery solitude, and a dark +foreboding gathered on his heart. Yet further delay was impossible. He +sent back two men to Michilimackinac to meet her, if she still existed, +and pilot her to his new fort of the Miamis, and then prepared to ascend +the river, whose weedy edges were already glassed with thin flakes of +ice.[139] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[130] They named it Sainte Claire, of which the present name is a +perversion. + +[131] Hennepin (1683), 58. + +[132] There is a rude plan of the establishment in La Hontan, though in +several editions its value is destroyed by the reversal of the plate. + +[133] _Relation de Tonty, 1684; Ibid., 1693_. He was overtaken at the +Detroit by the "Griffin." + +[134] Then usually known as Lac des Illinois, because it gave access to +the country of the tribes so called. Three years before, Allouez gave it +the name of Lac St. Joseph, by which it is often designated by the early +writers. Membré, Douay, and others, call it Lac Dauphin. + +[135] "The Great Mountain," the Iroquois name for the governor of +Canada. It was borrowed by other tribes also. + +[136] In the license of discovery granted to La Salle, he is expressly +prohibited from trading with the Ottawas and others who brought furs to +Montreal. This traffic on the lakes was, therefore, illicit. His enemy, +the Intendant Duchesneau, afterwards used this against him. _Lettre de +Duchesneau au Ministre, 10 Nov., 1680._ + +[137] Hennepin (1683), 79. + +[138] Hennepin (1683), 112; _Relation de Tonty_, 1693. + +[139] The official account of this journey is given at length in the +_Relation des Découvertes et des Voyages du Sieur de la Salle_, +1679-1681. This valuable document, compiled from letters and diaries of +La Salle, early in the year 1682, was known to Hennepin, who evidently +had a copy of it before him when he wrote his book, in which he +incorporated many passages from it. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +1679, 1680. + +LA SALLE ON THE ILLINOIS. + + The St. Joseph.--Adventure of La Salle.--The + Prairies.--Famine.--The Great Town of the + Illinois.--Indians.--Intrigues.--Difficulties.--Policy of la + Salle.--Desertion.--Another Attempt to poison La Salle. + + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S ADVENTURE.] + +On the third of December the party re-embarked, thirty-three in all, in +eight canoes,[140] and ascended the chill current of the St. Joseph, +bordered with dreary meadows and bare gray forests. When they approached +the site of the present village of South Bend, they looked anxiously +along the shore on their right to find the portage or path leading to +the headquarters of the Illinois. The Mohegan was absent, hunting; and, +unaided by his practised eye, they passed the path without seeing it. La +Salle landed to search the woods. Hours passed, and he did not return. +Hennepin and Tonty grew uneasy, disembarked, bivouacked, ordered guns to +be fired, and sent out men to scour the country. Night came, but not +their lost leader. Muffled in their blankets and powdered by the +thick-falling snow-flakes, they sat ruefully speculating as to what had +befallen him; nor was it till four o'clock of the next afternoon that +they saw him approaching along the margin of the river. His face and +hands were besmirched with charcoal; and he was further decorated with +two opossums which hung from his belt, and which he had killed with a +stick as they were swinging head downwards from the bough of a tree, +after the fashion of that singular beast. He had missed his way in the +forest, and had been forced to make a wide circuit around the edge of a +swamp; while the snow, of which the air was full, added to his +perplexities. Thus he pushed on through the rest of the day and the +greater part of the night, till, about two o'clock in the morning, he +reached the river again, and fired his gun as a signal to his party. +Hearing no answering shot, he pursued his way along the bank, when he +presently saw the gleam of a fire among the dense thickets close at +hand. Not doubting that he had found the bivouac of his party, he +hastened to the spot. To his surprise, no human being was to be seen. +Under a tree beside the fire was a heap of dry grass impressed with the +form of a man who must have fled but a moment before, for his couch was +still warm. It was no doubt an Indian, ambushed on the bank, watching to +kill some passing enemy. La Salle called out in several Indian +languages; but there was dead silence all around. He then, with +admirable coolness, took possession of the quarters he had found, +shouting to their invisible proprietor that he was about to sleep in +his bed; piled a barricade of bushes around the spot, rekindled the +dying fire, warmed his benumbed hands, stretched himself on the dried +grass, and slept undisturbed till morning. + +The Mohegan had rejoined the party before La Salle's return, and with +his aid the portage was soon found. Here the party encamped. La Salle, +who was excessively fatigued, occupied, together with Hennepin, a wigwam +covered in the Indian manner with mats of reeds. The cold forced them to +kindle a fire, which before daybreak set the mats in a blaze; and the +two sleepers narrowly escaped being burned along with their hut. + +[Sidenote: THE KANKAKEE.] + +In the morning, the party shouldered their canoes and baggage and began +their march for the sources of the river Illinois, some five miles +distant. Around them stretched a desolate plain, half-covered with snow +and strewn with the skulls and bones of buffalo; while, on its farthest +verge, they could see the lodges of the Miami Indians, who had made this +place their abode. As they filed on their way, a man named Duplessis, +bearing a grudge against La Salle, who walked just before him, raised +his gun to shoot him through the back, but was prevented by one of his +comrades. They soon reached a spot where the oozy, saturated soil quaked +beneath their tread. All around were clumps of alder-bushes, tufts of +rank grass, and pools of glistening water. In the midst a dark and lazy +current, which a tall man might bestride, crept twisting like a snake +among the weeds and rushes. Here were the sources of the Kankakee, one +of the heads of the Illinois.[141] They set their canoes on this thread +of water, embarked their baggage and themselves, and pushed down the +sluggish streamlet, looking, at a little distance, like men who sailed +on land. Fed by an unceasing tribute of the spongy soil, it quickly +widened to a river; and they floated on their way through a voiceless, +lifeless solitude of dreary oak barrens, or boundless marshes overgrown +with reeds. At night, they built their fire on ground made firm by +frost, and bivouacked among the rushes. A few days brought them to a +more favored region. On the right hand and on the left stretched the +boundless prairie, dotted with leafless groves and bordered by gray +wintry forests, scorched by the fires kindled in the dried grass by +Indian hunters, and strewn with the carcasses and the bleached skulls of +innumerable buffalo. The plains were scored with their pathways, and the +muddy edges of the river were full of their hoof-prints. Yet not one was +to be seen. At night, the horizon glowed with distant fires; and by day +the savage hunters could be descried at times roaming on the verge of +the prairie. The men, discontented and half-starved, would have deserted +to them had they dared. La Salle's Mohegan could kill no game except two +lean deer, with a few wild geese and swans. At length, in their straits, +they made a happy discovery. It was a buffalo bull, fast mired in a +slough. They killed him, lashed a cable about him, and then twelve men +dragged out the shaggy monster, whose ponderous carcass demanded their +utmost efforts. + +The scene changed again as they descended. On either hand ran ranges of +woody hills, following the course of the river; and when they mounted to +their tops, they saw beyond them a rolling sea of dull green prairie, a +boundless pasture of the buffalo and the deer, in our own day strangely +transformed,--yellow in harvest-time with ripened wheat, and dotted with +the roofs of a hardy and valiant yeomanry.[142] + +[Sidenote: THE ILLINOIS TOWN.] + +They passed the site of the future town of Ottawa, and saw on their +right the high plateau of Buffalo Rock, long a favorite dwelling-place +of Indians. A league below, the river glided among islands bordered with +stately woods. Close on their left towered a lofty cliff,[143] crested +with trees that overhung the rippling current; while before them spread +the valley of the Illinois, in broad low meadows, bordered on the right +by the graceful hills at whose foot now lies the village of Utica. A +population far more numerous then tenanted the valley. Along the right +bank of the river were clustered the lodges of a great Indian town. +Hennepin counted four hundred and sixty of them.[144] In shape, they +were somewhat like the arched top of a baggage-wagon. They were built +of a framework of poles, covered with mats of rushes closely interwoven; +and each contained three or four fires, of which the greater part served +for two families. + +[Sidenote: HUNGER RELIEVED.] + +Here, then, was the town; but where were the inhabitants? All was silent +as the desert. The lodges were empty, the fires dead, and the ashes +cold. La Salle had expected this; for he knew that in the autumn the +Illinois always left their towns for their winter hunting, and that the +time of their return had not yet come. Yet he was not the less +embarrassed, for he would fain have bought a supply of food to relieve +his famished followers. Some of them, searching the deserted town, +presently found the _caches_, or covered pits, in which the Indians hid +their stock of corn. This was precious beyond measure in their eyes, and +to touch it would be a deep offence. La Salle shrank from provoking +their anger, which might prove the ruin of his plans; but his necessity +overcame his prudence, and he took thirty _minots_ of corn, hoping to +appease the owners by presents. Thus provided, the party embarked again, +and resumed their downward voyage. + +On New Year's Day, 1680, they landed and heard mass. Then Hennepin +wished a happy new year to La Salle first, and afterwards to all the +men, making them a speech, which, as he tells us, was "most +touching."[145] He and his two brethren next embraced the whole company +in turn, "in a manner," writes the father, "most tender and +affectionate," exhorting them, at the same time, to patience, faith, and +constancy. Four days after these solemnities, they reached the long +expansion of the river then called Pimitoui, and now known as Peoria +Lake, and leisurely made their way downward to the site of the city of +Peoria.[146] Here, as evening drew near, they saw a faint spire of +smoke curling above the gray forest, betokening that Indians were at +hand. La Salle, as we have seen, had been warned that these tribes had +been taught to regard him as their enemy; and when, in the morning, he +resumed his course, he was prepared alike for peace or war. + +The shores now approached each other; and the Illinois was once more a +river, bordered on either hand with overhanging woods.[147] + +At nine o'clock, doubling a point, he saw about eighty Illinois wigwams, +on both sides of the river. He instantly ordered the eight canoes to be +ranged in line, abreast, across the stream,--Tonty on the right, and he +himself on the left. The men laid down their paddles and seized their +weapons; while, in this warlike guise, the current bore them swiftly +into the midst of the surprised and astounded savages. The camps were in +a panic. Warriors whooped and howled; squaws and children screeched in +chorus. Some snatched their bows and war-clubs; some ran in terror; and, +in the midst of the hubbub, La Salle leaped ashore, followed by his men. +None knew better how to deal with Indians; and he made no sign of +friendship, knowing that it might be construed as a token of fear. His +little knot of Frenchmen stood, gun in hand, passive, yet prepared for +battle. The Indians, on their part, rallying a little from their +fright, made all haste to proffer peace. Two of their chiefs came +forward, holding out the calumet; while another began a loud harangue, +to check the young warriors who were aiming their arrows from the +farther bank. La Salle, responding to these friendly overtures, +displayed another calumet; while Hennepin caught several scared children +and soothed them with winning blandishments.[148] The uproar was +quelled; and the strangers were presently seated in the midst of the +camp, beset by a throng of wild and swarthy figures. + +[Sidenote: ILLINOIS HOSPITALITY.] + +Food was placed before them; and, as the Illinois code of courtesy +enjoined, their entertainers conveyed the morsels with their own hands +to the lips of these unenviable victims of their hospitality, while +others rubbed their feet with bear's grease. La Salle, on his part, made +them a gift of tobacco and hatchets; and when he had escaped from their +caresses, rose and harangued them. He told them that he had been forced +to take corn from their granaries, lest his men should die of hunger; +but he prayed them not to be offended, promising full restitution or +ample payment. He had come, he said, to protect them against their +enemies, and teach them to pray to the true God. As for the Iroquois, +they were subjects of the Great King, and therefore brethren of the +French; yet, nevertheless, should they begin a war and invade the +country of the Illinois, he would stand by them, give them guns, and +fight in their defence, if they would permit him to build a fort among +them for the security of his men. It was also, he added, his purpose to +build a great wooden canoe, in which to descend the Mississippi to the +sea, and then return, bringing them the goods of which they stood in +need; but if they would not consent to his plans and sell provisions to +his men, he would pass on to the Osages, who would then reap all the +benefits of intercourse with the French, while they were left destitute, +at the mercy of the Iroquois.[149] + +This threat had its effect, for it touched their deep-rooted jealousy of +the Osages. They were lavish of promises, and feasts and dances consumed +the day. Yet La Salle soon learned that the intrigues of his enemies +were still pursuing him. That evening, unknown to him, a stranger +appeared in the Illinois camp. He was a Mascoutin chief, named Monso, +attended by five or six Miamis, and bringing a gift of knives, hatchets, +and kettles to the Illinois.[150] The chiefs assembled in a secret +nocturnal session, where, smoking their pipes, they listened with open +ears to the harangue of the envoys. Monso told them that he had come in +behalf of certain Frenchmen, whom he named, to warn his hearers against +the designs of La Salle, whom he denounced as a partisan and spy of the +Iroquois, affirming that he was now on his way to stir up the tribes +beyond the Mississippi to join in a war against the Illinois, who, thus +assailed from the east and from the west, would be utterly destroyed. +There was no hope for them, he added, but in checking the farther +progress of La Salle, or, at least, retarding it, thus causing his men +to desert him. Having thrown his fire-brand, Monso and his party left +the camp in haste, dreading to be confronted with the object of their +aspersions.[151] + +[Sidenote: FRESH INTRIGUES.] + +In the morning, La Salle saw a change in the behavior of his hosts. They +looked on him askance, cold, sullen, and suspicious. There was one +Omawha, a chief, whose favor he had won the day before by the politic +gift of two hatchets and three knives, and who now came to him in secret +to tell him what had taken place at the nocturnal council. La Salle at +once saw in it a device of his enemies; and this belief was confirmed, +when, in the afternoon, Nicanopé, brother of the head chief, sent to +invite the Frenchmen to a feast. They repaired to his lodge; but before +dinner was served,--that is to say, while the guests, white and red, +were seated on mats, each with his hunting-knife in his hand, and the +wooden bowl before him which was to receive his share of the bear's or +buffalo's meat, or the corn boiled in fat, with which he was to be +regaled,--while such was the posture of the company, their host arose +and began a long speech. He told the Frenchmen that he had invited them +to his lodge less to refresh their bodies with good cheer than to cure +their minds of the dangerous purpose which possessed them, of descending +the Mississippi. Its shores, he said, were beset by savage tribes, +against whose numbers and ferocity their valor would avail nothing; its +waters were infested by serpents, alligators, and unnatural monsters; +while the river itself, after raging among rocks and whirlpools, plunged +headlong at last into a fathomless gulf, which would swallow them and +their vessel forever. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND THE INDIANS.] + +La Salle's men were for the most part raw hands, knowing nothing of the +wilderness, and easily alarmed at its dangers; but there were two among +them, old _coureurs de bois_, who unfortunately knew too much; for they +understood the Indian orator, and explained his speech to the rest. As +La Salle looked around on the circle of his followers, he read an augury +of fresh trouble in their disturbed and rueful visages. He waited +patiently, however, till the speaker had ended, and then answered him, +through his interpreter, with great composure. First, he thanked him for +the friendly warning which his affection had impelled him to utter; but, +he continued, the greater the danger, the greater the honor; and even +if the danger were real, Frenchmen would never flinch from it. But were +not the Illinois jealous? Had they not been deluded by lies? "We were +not asleep, my brother, when Monso came to tell you, under cover of +night, that we were spies of the Iroquois. The presents he gave you, +that you might believe his falsehoods, are at this moment buried in the +earth under this lodge. If he told the truth, why did he skulk away in +the dark? Why did he not show himself by day? Do you not see that when +we first came among you, and your camp was all in confusion, we could +have killed you without needing help from the Iroquois? And now, while I +am speaking, could we not put your old men to death, while your young +warriors are all gone away to hunt? If we meant to make war on you, we +should need no help from the Iroquois, who have so often felt the force +of our arms. Look at what we have brought you. It is not weapons to +destroy you, but merchandise and tools for your good. If you still +harbor evil thoughts of us, be frank as we are, and speak them boldly. +Go after this impostor Monso, and bring him back, that we may answer him +face to face; for he never saw either us or the Iroquois, and what can +he know of the plots that he pretends to reveal?"[152] Nicanopé had +nothing to reply, and, grunting assent in the depths of his throat, +made a sign that the feast should proceed. + +The French were lodged in huts, near the Indian camp; and, fearing +treachery, La Salle placed a guard at night. On the morning after the +feast, he came out into the frosty air and looked about him for the +sentinels. Not one of them was to be seen. Vexed and alarmed, he entered +hut after hut and roused his drowsy followers. Six of the number, +including two of the best carpenters, were nowhere to be found. +Discontented and mutinous from the first, and now terrified by the +fictions of Nicanopé, they had deserted, preferring the hardships of the +midwinter forest to the mysterious terrors of the Mississippi. La Salle +mustered the rest before him, and inveighed sternly against the +cowardice and baseness of those who had thus abandoned him, regardless +of his many favors. If any here, he added, are afraid, let them but wait +till the spring, and they shall have free leave to return to Canada, +safely and without dishonor.[153] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AGAIN POISONED.] + +This desertion cut him to the heart. It showed him that he was leaning +on a broken reed; and he felt that, on an enterprise full of doubt and +peril, there were scarcely four men in his party whom he could trust. +Nor was desertion the worst he had to fear; for here, as at Fort +Frontenac, an attempt was made to kill him. Tonty tells us that poison +was placed in the pot in which their food was cooked, and that La Salle +was saved by an antidote which some of his friends had given him before +he left France. This, it will be remembered, was an epoch of poisoners. +It was in the following month that the notorious La Voisin was burned +alive, at Paris, for practices to which many of the highest nobility +were charged with being privy, not excepting some in whose veins ran the +blood of the gorgeous spendthrift who ruled the destinies of +France.[154] + +In these early French enterprises in the West, it was to the last degree +difficult to hold men to their duty. Once fairly in the wilderness, +completely freed from the sharp restraints of authority in which they +had passed their lives, a spirit of lawlessness broke out among them +with a violence proportioned to the pressure which had hitherto +controlled it. Discipline had no resources and no guarantee; while those +outlaws of the forest, the _coureurs de bois_, were always before their +eyes, a standing example of unbridled license. La Salle, eminently +skilful in his dealings with Indians, was rarely so happy with his own +countrymen; and yet the desertions from which he was continually +suffering were due far more to the inevitable difficulty of his position +than to any want of conduct on his part. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[140] _Lettre de Duchesneau à----, 10 Nov., 1680._ + +[141] The Kankakee was called at this time the Theakiki, or Haukiki +(Marest); a name which, as Charlevoix says, was afterwards corrupted by +the French to Kiakiki whence, probably, its present form. In La Salle's +time, the name "Theakiki" was given to the river Illinois through all +its course. It was also called the Rivière Seignelay, the Rivière des +Macopins, and the Rivière Divine, or Rivière de la Divine. The latter +name, when Charlevoix visited the country in 1721, was confined to the +northern branch. He gives an interesting and somewhat graphic account of +the portage and the sources of the Kankakee, in his letter dated _De la +Source du Theakiki, ce dix-sept Septembre_, 1721. + +Why the Illinois should ever have been called the "Divine," it is not +easy to see. The Memoirs of St. Simon suggest an explanation. Madame de +Frontenac and her friend Mademoiselle d'Outrelaise, he tells us, lived +together in apartments at the Arsenal, where they held their _salon_ and +exercised a great power in society. They were called at court _les +Divines_. (St. Simon, v. 335: Cheruel.) In compliment to Frontenac, the +river may have been named after his wife or her friend. The suggestion +is due to M. Margry. I have seen a map by Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, +on which the river is called "Rivière de la Divine ou l'Outrelaise." + +[142] The change is very recent. Within the memory of men not yet old, +wolves and deer, besides wild swans, wild turkeys, cranes, and pelicans, +abounded in this region. In 1840, a friend of mine shot a deer from the +window of a farmhouse, near the present town of La Salle. Running wolves +on horseback was his favorite amusement in this part of the country. The +buffalo long ago disappeared; but the early settlers found frequent +remains of them. Mr. James Clark, of Utica, Ill., told me that he once +found a large quantity of their bones and skulls in one place, as if a +herd had perished in the snowdrifts. + +[143] "Starved Rock." It will hold, hereafter, a conspicuous place in +the narrative. + +[144] _La Louisiane_, 137. Allouez (_Relation_, 1673-79) found three +hundred and fifty-one lodges. This was in 1677. The population of this +town, which embraced five or six distinct tribes of the Illinois, was +continually changing. In 1675, Marquette addressed here an auditory +composed of five hundred chiefs and old men, and fifteen hundred young +men, besides women and children. He estimates the number of fires at +five or six hundred. (_Voyages du Père Marquette_, 98: Lenox.) Membré, +who was here in 1680, says that it then contained seven or eight +thousand souls. (Membré in Le Clerc, _Premier Établissement de la Foy_, +ii. 173.) On the remarkable manuscript map of Franquelin, 1684, it is +set down at twelve hundred warriors, or about six thousand souls. This +was after the destructive inroad of the Iroquois. Some years later, +Rasle reported upwards of twenty-four hundred families. (_Lettre à son +Frère, in Lettres Édifiantes._) + +At times, nearly the whole Illinois population was gathered here. At +other times, the several tribes that composed it separated, some +dwelling apart from the rest; so that at one period the Illinois formed +eleven villages, while at others they were gathered into two, of which +this was much the larger. The meadows around it were extensively +cultivated, yielding large crops, chiefly of Indian corn. The lodges +were built along the river-bank for a distance of a mile, and sometimes +far more. In their shape, though not in their material, they resembled +those of the Hurons. There were no palisades or embankments. + +This neighborhood abounds in Indian relics. The village graveyard +appears to have been on a rising ground, near the river immediately in +front of the town of Utica. This is the only part of the river bottom, +from this point to the Mississippi, not liable to inundation in the +spring floods. It now forms part of a farm occupied by a tenant of Mr. +James Clark. Both Mr. Clark and his tenant informed me that every year +great quantities of human bones and teeth were turned up here by the +plough. Many implements of stone are also found, together with beads and +other ornaments of Indian and European fabric. + +[145] "Les paroles les plus touchantes."--_Hennepin_ (1683), 139. The +later editions add the modest qualification, "que je pus." + +[146] Peoria was the name of one of the tribes of the Illinois. +Hennepin's dates here do not exactly agree with those of La Salle +(_Lettre du 29 Sept., 1680_), who says that they were at the Illinois +village on the first of January, and at Peoria Lake on the fifth. + +[147] At least, it is so now at this place. Perhaps, in La Salle's time, +it was not wholly so; for there is evidence, in various parts of the +West, that the forest has made considerable encroachments on the open +country. + +[148] Hennepin (1683), 142. + +[149] Hennepin (1683), 144-149. The later editions omit a part of the +above. + +[150] "Un sauvage, nommé Monso, qui veut dire Chevreuil_."--La Salle._ +Probably Monso is a misprint for Mouso, as _mousoa_ is Illinois for +_chevreuil_, or deer. + +[151] Hennepin (1683), 151, (1704), 205; Le Clerc, ii. 157; _Mémoire du +Voyage de M. de la Salle_. This is a paper appended to Frontenac's +Letter to the Minister, 9 Nov., 1680. Hennepin prints a translation of +it in the English edition of his later work. It charges the Jesuit +Allouez with being at the bottom of the intrigue. Compare _Lettre de La +Salle, 29 Sept., 1680_ (Margry, ii. 41), and _Mémoire de La Salle_, in +Thomassy, _Géologie Pratique de la Louisiane_, 203. + +The account of the affair of Monso, in the spurious work bearing Tonty's +name, is mere romance. + +[152] The above is a paraphrase, with some condensation, from Hennepin, +whose account is substantially identical with that of La Salle. + +[153] Hennepin (1683), 162. _Déclaration faite par Moyse Hillaret, +charpentier de barque, cy devant au service du Sr. de la Salle._ + +[154] The equally noted Brinvilliers was burned four years before. An +account of both will be found in the Letters of Madame de Sévigné. The +memoirs of the time abound in evidence of the frightful prevalence of +these practices, and the commotion which they excited in all ranks of +society. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +1680. + +FORT CRÈVEC[OE]UR. + + Building of the Fort.--Loss of the "Griffin."--A Bold + Resolution.--Another Vessel.--Hennepin sent to the + Mississippi.--Departure of La Salle. + + +[Sidenote: BUILDING OF THE FORT.] + +La Salle now resolved to leave the Indian camp, and fortify himself for +the winter in a strong position, where his men would be less exposed to +dangerous influence, and where he could hold his ground against an +outbreak of the Illinois or an Iroquois invasion. At the middle of +January, a thaw broke up the ice which had closed the river; and he set +out in a canoe, with Hennepin, to visit the site he had chosen for his +projected fort. It was half a league below the camp, on a low hill or +knoll, two hundred yards from the southern bank. On either side was a +deep ravine, and in front a marshy tract, overflowed at high water. +Thither, then, the party was removed. They dug a ditch behind the hill, +connecting the two ravines, and thus completely isolating it. The hill +was nearly square in form. An embankment of earth was thrown up on every +side: its declivities were sloped steeply down to the bottom of the +ravines and the ditch, and further guarded by _chevaux-de-frise_; while +a palisade, twenty-five feet high, was planted around the whole. The +lodgings of the men, built of musket-proof timber, were at two of the +angles; the house of the friars at the third; the forge and magazine at +the fourth; and the tents of La Salle and Tonty in the area within. + +Hennepin laments the failure of wine, which prevented him from saying +mass; but every morning and evening he summoned the men to his cabin to +listen to prayers and preaching, and on Sundays and fête-days they +chanted vespers. Father Zenobe usually spent the day in the Indian camp, +striving, with very indifferent success, to win them to the Faith, and +to overcome the disgust with which their manners and habits inspired +him. + +Such was the first civilized occupation of the region which now forms +the State of Illinois. La Salle christened his new fort Fort +Crèvecoeur. The name tells of disaster and suffering, but does no +justice to the iron-hearted constancy of the sufferer. Up to this time +he had clung to the hope that his vessel, the "Griffin," might still be +safe. Her safety was vital to his enterprise. She had on board articles +of the last necessity to him, including the rigging and anchors of +another vessel which he was to build at Fort Crèvecoeur, in order to +descend the Mississippi and sail thence to the West Indies. But now his +last hope had well-nigh vanished. Past all reasonable doubt, the +"Griffin" was lost; and in her loss he and all his plans seemed ruined +alike. + +Nothing, indeed, was ever heard of her. Indians, fur-traders, and even +Jesuits, have been charged with contriving her destruction. Some say +that the Ottawas boarded and burned her, after murdering those on board; +others accuse the Pottawattamies; others affirm that her own crew +scuttled and sunk her; others, again, that she foundered in a +storm.[155] As for La Salle, the belief grew in him to a settled +conviction that she had been treacherously sunk by the pilot and the +sailors to whom he had intrusted her; and he thought he had found +evidence that the authors of the crime, laden with the merchandise they +had taken from her, had reached the Mississippi and ascended it, hoping +to join Du Lhut, a famous chief of _coureurs de bois_, and enrich +themselves by traffic with the northern tribes.[156] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S ANXIETIES.] + +But whether her lading was swallowed in the depths of the lake, or lost +in the clutches of traitors, the evil was alike past remedy. She was +gone, it mattered little how. The main-stay of the enterprise was +broken; yet its inflexible chief lost neither heart nor hope. One path, +beset with hardships and terrors, still lay open to him. He might return +on foot to Fort Frontenac, and bring thence the needful succors. + +La Salle felt deeply the dangers of such a step. His men were uneasy, +discontented, and terrified by the stories with which the jealous +Illinois still constantly filled their ears, of the whirlpools and the +monsters of the Mississippi. He dreaded lest, in his absence, they +should follow the example of their comrades, and desert. In the midst of +his anxieties, a lucky accident gave him the means of disabusing them. +He was hunting, one day, near the fort, when he met a young Illinois on +his way home, half-starved, from a distant war excursion. He had been +absent so long that he knew nothing of what had passed between his +countrymen and the French. La Salle gave him a turkey he had shot, +invited him to the fort, fed him, and made him presents. Having thus +warmed his heart, he questioned him, with apparent carelessness, as to +the countries he had visited, and especially as to the Mississippi,--on +which the young warrior, seeing no reason to disguise the truth, gave +him all the information he required. La Salle now made him the present +of a hatchet, to engage him to say nothing of what had passed, and, +leaving him in excellent humor, repaired, with some of his followers, to +the Illinois camp. Here he found the chiefs seated at a feast of bear's +meat, and he took his place among them on a mat of rushes. After a +pause, he charged them with having deceived him in regard to the +Mississippi; adding that he knew the river perfectly, having been +instructed concerning it by the Master of Life. He then described it to +them with so much accuracy that his astonished hearers, conceiving that +he owed his knowledge to "medicine," or sorcery, clapped their hands to +their mouths in sign of wonder, and confessed that all they had said was +but an artifice, inspired by their earnest desire that he should remain +among them.[157] On this, La Salle's men took heart again; and their +courage rose still more when, soon after, a band of Chickasa, Arkansas, +and Osage warriors, from the Mississippi, came to the camp on a friendly +visit, and assured the French not only that the river was navigable to +the sea, but that the tribes along its banks would give them a warm +welcome. + +[Sidenote: ANOTHER VESSEL.] + +La Salle had now good reason to hope that his followers would neither +mutiny nor desert in his absence. One chief purpose of his intended +journey was to procure the anchors, cables, and rigging of the vessel +which he meant to build at Fort Crèvecoeur, and he resolved to see her +on the stocks before he set out. This was no easy matter, for the +pit-sawyers had deserted. "Seeing," he writes, "that I should lose a +year if I waited to get others from Montreal, I said one day, before my +people, that I was so vexed to find that the absence of two sawyers +would defeat my plans and make all my trouble useless, that I was +resolved to try to saw the planks myself, if I could find a single man +who would help me with a will." Hereupon, two men stepped forward and +promised to do their best. They were tolerably successful, and, the rest +being roused to emulation, the work went on with such vigor that within +six weeks the hull of the vessel was half finished. She was of forty +tons' burden, and was built with high bulwarks, to protect those on +board from Indian arrows. + +La Salle now bethought him that, in his absence, he might get from +Hennepin service of more value than his sermons; and he requested him to +descend the Illinois, and explore it to its mouth. The friar, though +hardy and daring, would fain have excused himself, alleging a +troublesome bodily infirmity; but his venerable colleague Ribourde, +himself too old for the journey, urged him to go, telling him that if he +died by the way, his apostolic labors would redound to the glory of God. +Membré had been living for some time in the Indian camp, and was +thoroughly out of humor with the objects of his missionary efforts, of +whose obduracy and filth he bitterly complained. Hennepin proposed to +take his place, while he should assume the Mississippi adventure; but +this Membré declined, preferring to remain where he was. Hennepin now +reluctantly accepted the proposed task. "Anybody but me," he says, with +his usual modesty, "would have been very much frightened at the dangers +of such a journey; and, in fact, if I had not placed all my trust in +God, I should not have been the dupe of the Sieur de la Salle, who +exposed my life rashly."[158] + +On the last day of February, Hennepin's canoe lay at the water's edge; +and the party gathered on the bank to bid him farewell. He had two +companions,--Michel Accau, and a man known as the Picard du Gay,[159] +though his real name was Antoine Auguel. The canoe was well laden with +gifts for the Indians,--tobacco, knives, beads, awls, and other goods, +to a very considerable value, supplied at La Salle's cost; "and, in +fact," observes Hennepin, "he is liberal enough towards his +friends."[160] + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE OF HENNEPIN.] + +The friar bade farewell to La Salle, and embraced all the rest in turn. +Father Ribourde gave him his benediction. "Be of good courage and let +your heart be comforted," said the excellent old missionary, as he +spread his hands in benediction over the shaven crown of the reverend +traveller. Du Gay and Accau plied their paddles; the canoe receded, and +vanished at length behind the forest. We will follow Hennepin hereafter +on his adventures, imaginary and real. Meanwhile, we will trace the +footsteps of his chief, urging his way, in the storms of winter, through +those vast and gloomy wilds,--those realms of famine, treachery, and +death,--that lay betwixt him and his far-distant goal of Fort Frontenac. + +On the first of March,[161] before the frost was yet out of the ground, +when the forest was still leafless, and the oozy prairies still patched +with snow, a band of discontented men were again gathered on the shore +for another leave-taking. Hard by, the unfinished ship lay on the +stocks, white and fresh from the saw and axe, ceaselessly reminding them +of the hardship and peril that was in store. Here you would have seen +the calm, impenetrable face of La Salle, and with him the Mohegan +hunter, who seems to have felt towards him that admiring attachment +which he could always inspire in his Indian retainers. Besides the +Mohegan, four Frenchmen were to accompany him,--Hunaut, La Violette, +Collin, and Dautray.[162] His parting with Tonty was an anxious one, +for each well knew the risks that environed both. Embarking with his +followers in two canoes, he made his way upward amid the drifting ice; +while the faithful Italian, with two or three honest men and twelve or +thirteen knaves, remained to hold Fort Crèvecoeur in his absence. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[155] Charlevoix, i. 459; La Potherie, ii. 140; La Hontan, _Memoir on +the Fur-Trade of Canada_. I am indebted for a copy of this paper to +Winthrop Sargent, Esq., who purchased the original at the sale of the +library of the poet Southey. Like Hennepin, La Hontan went over to the +English; and this memoir is written in their interest. + +[156] _Lettre de La Salle à La Barre, Chicagou, 4 Juin, 1683._ This is a +long letter, addressed to the successor of Frontenac in the government +of Canada. La Salle says that a young Indian belonging to him told him +that three years before he saw a white man, answering the description of +the pilot, a prisoner among a tribe beyond the Mississippi. He had been +captured with four others on that river, while making his way with +canoes, laden with goods, towards the Sioux. His companions had been +killed. Other circumstances, which La Salle details at great length, +convinced him that the white prisoner was no other than the pilot of the +"Griffin." The evidence, however, is not conclusive. + +[157] _Relation des Découvertes et des Voyages du Sr. de la Salle, +Seigneur et Gouverneur du Fort de Frontenac, au delà des grands Lacs de +la Nouvelle France, faits par ordre de Monseigneur Colbert_, 1679, 80 et +81. Hennepin gives a story which is not essentially different, except +that he makes himself a conspicuous actor in it. + +[158] All the above is from Hennepin; and it seems to be marked by his +characteristic egotism. It appears, from La Salle's letters, that Accau +was the real chief of the party; that their orders were to explore not +only the Illinois, but also a part of the Mississippi; and that Hennepin +volunteered to go with the others. Accau was chosen because he spoke +several Indian languages. + +[159] An eminent writer has mistaken "Picard" for a personal name. Du +Gay was called "Le Picard," because he came from the province of +Picardy. + +[160] (1683), 188. This commendation is suppressed in the later +editions. + +[161] Tonty erroneously places their departure on the twenty-second. + +[162] _Déclaration faite par Moyse Hillaret, charpentier de barque._ + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +1680. + +HARDIHOOD OF LA SALLE. + + The Winter Journey.--The Deserted Town.--Starved Rock.--Lake + Michigan.--The Wilderness.--War Parties.--La Salle's Men give + out.--Ill Tidings.--Mutiny.--Chastisement of the Mutineers. + + +La Salle well knew what was before him, and nothing but necessity +spurred him to this desperate journey. He says that he could trust +nobody else to go in his stead, and that unless the articles lost in the +"Griffin" were replaced without delay, the expedition would be retarded +a full year, and he and his associates consumed by its expenses. +"Therefore," he writes to one of them, "though the thaws of approaching +spring greatly increased the difficulty of the way, interrupted as it +was everywhere by marshes and rivers, to say nothing of the length of +the journey, which is about five hundred leagues in a direct line, and +the danger of meeting Indians of four or five different nations through +whose country we were to pass, as well as an Iroquois army which we knew +was coming that way; though we must suffer all the time from hunger; +sleep on the open ground, and often without food; watch by night and +march by day, loaded with baggage, such as blanket, clothing, kettle, +hatchet, gun, powder, lead, and skins to make moccasins; sometimes +pushing through thickets, sometimes climbing rocks covered with ice and +snow, sometimes wading whole days through marshes where the water was +waist-deep or even more, at a season when the snow was not entirely +melted,--though I knew all this, it did not prevent me from resolving to +go on foot to Fort Frontenac, to learn for myself what had become of my +vessel, and bring back the things we needed."[163] + +The winter had been a severe one; and when, an hour after leaving the +fort, he and his companions reached the still water of Peoria Lake, they +found it sheeted with ice from shore to shore. They carried their canoes +up the bank, made two rude sledges, placed the light vessels upon them, +and dragged them to the upper end of the lake, where they encamped. In +the morning they found the river still covered with ice, too weak to +bear them and too strong to permit them to break a way for the canoes. +They spent the whole day in carrying them through the woods, toiling +knee-deep in saturated snow. Rain fell in floods, and they took shelter +at night in a deserted Indian hut. + +In the morning, the third of March, they dragged their canoes half a +league farther; then launched them, and, breaking the ice with clubs and +hatchets, forced their way slowly up the stream. Again their progress +was barred, and again they took to the woods, toiling onward till a +tempest of moist, half-liquid snow forced them to bivouac for the night. +A sharp frost followed, and in the morning the white waste around them +was glazed with a dazzling crust. Now, for the first time, they could +use their snow-shoes. Bending to their work, dragging their canoes, +which glided smoothly over the polished surface, they journeyed on hour +after hour and league after league, till they reached at length the +great town of the Illinois, still void of its inhabitants.[164] + +[Sidenote: THE DESERTED TOWN.] + +It was a desolate and lonely scene,--the river gliding dark and cold +between its banks of rushes; the empty lodges, covered with crusted +snow; the vast white meadows; the distant cliffs, bearded with shining +icicles; and the hills wrapped in forests, which glittered from afar +with the icy incrustations that cased each frozen twig. Yet there was +life in the savage landscape. The men saw buffalo wading in the snow, +and they killed one of them. More than this: they discovered the tracks +of moccasins. They cut rushes by the edge of the river, piled them on +the bank, and set them on fire, that the smoke might attract the eyes of +savages roaming near. + +On the following day, while the hunters were smoking the meat of the +buffalo, La Salle went out to reconnoitre, and presently met three +Indians, one of whom proved to be Chassagoac, the principal chief of the +Illinois.[165] La Salle brought them to his bivouac, feasted them, gave +them a red blanket, a kettle, and some knives and hatchets, made friends +with them, promised to restrain the Iroquois from attacking them, told +them that he was on his way to the settlements to bring arms and +ammunition to defend them against their enemies, and, as the result of +these advances, gained from the chief a promise that he would send +provisions to Tonty's party at Fort Crèvecoeur. + +After several days spent at the deserted town, La Salle prepared to +resume his journey. Before his departure, his attention was attracted to +the remarkable cliff of yellow sandstone, now called Starved Rock, a +mile or more above the village,--a natural fortress, which a score of +resolute white men might make good against a host of savages; and he +soon afterwards sent Tonty an order to examine it, and make it his +stronghold in case of need.[166] + +On the fifteenth the party set out again, carried their canoes along +the bank of the river as far as the rapids above Ottawa, then launched +them and pushed their way upward, battling with the floating ice, which, +loosened by a warm rain, drove down the swollen current in sheets. On +the eighteenth they reached a point some miles below the site of Joliet, +and here found the river once more completely closed. Despairing of +farther progress by water, they hid their canoes on an island, and +struck across the country for Lake Michigan. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S JOURNEY.] + +It was the worst of all seasons for such a journey. The nights were +cold, but the sun was warm at noon, and the half-thawed prairie was one +vast tract of mud, water, and discolored, half-liquid snow. On the +twenty-second they crossed marshes and inundated meadows, wading to the +knee, till at noon they were stopped by a river, perhaps the Calumet. +They made a raft of hard-wood timber, for there was no other, and shoved +themselves across. On the next day they could see Lake Michigan dimly +glimmering beyond the waste of woods; and, after crossing three swollen +streams, they reached it at evening. On the twenty-fourth they followed +its shore, till, at nightfall, they arrived at the fort which they had +built in the autumn at the mouth of the St. Joseph. Here La Salle found +Chapelle and Leblanc, the two men whom he had sent from hence to +Michilimackinac, in search of the "Griffin."[167] They reported that +they had made the circuit of the lake, and had neither seen her nor +heard tidings of her. Assured of her fate, he ordered them to rejoin +Tonty at Fort Crèvecoeur; while he pushed onward with his party +through the unknown wild of Southern Michigan. + +"The rain," says La Salle, "which lasted all day, and the raft we were +obliged to make to cross the river, stopped us till noon of the +twenty-fifth, when we continued our march through the woods, which was +so interlaced with thorns and brambles that in two days and a half our +clothes were all torn, and our faces so covered with blood that we +hardly knew each other. On the twenty-eighth we found the woods more +open, and began to fare better, meeting a good deal of game, which after +this rarely failed us; so that we no longer carried provisions with us, +but made a meal of roast meat wherever we happened to kill a deer, bear, +or turkey. These are the choicest feasts on a journey like this; and +till now we had generally gone without them, so that we had often walked +all day without breakfast. + +[Sidenote: INDIAN ALARMS.] + +"The Indians do not hunt in this region, which is debatable ground +between five or six nations who are at war, and, being afraid of each +other, do not venture into these parts except to surprise each other, +and always with the greatest precaution and all possible secrecy. The +reports of our guns and the carcasses of the animals we killed soon led +some of them to find our trail. In fact, on the evening of the +twenty-eighth, having made our fire by the edge of a prairie, we were +surrounded by them; but as the man on guard waked us, and we posted +ourselves behind trees with our guns, these savages, who are called +Wapoos, took us for Iroquois, and thinking that there must be a great +many of us because we did not travel secretly, as they do when in small +bands, they ran off without shooting their arrows, and gave the alarm to +their comrades, so that we were two days without meeting anybody." + +La Salle guessed the cause of their fright; and, in order to confirm +their delusion, he drew with charcoal, on the trunks of trees from which +he had stripped the bark, the usual marks of an Iroquois war-party, with +signs for prisoners and for scalps, after the custom of those dreaded +warriors. This ingenious artifice, as will soon appear, was near proving +the destruction of the whole party. He also set fire to the dry grass of +the prairies over which he and his men had just passed, thus destroying +the traces of their passage. "We practised this device every night, and +it answered very well so long as we were passing over an open country; +but on the thirtieth we got into great marshes, flooded by the thaws, +and were obliged to cross them in mud or water up to the waist; so that +our tracks betrayed us to a band of Mascoutins who were out after +Iroquois. They followed us through these marshes during the three days +we were crossing them; but we made no fire at night, contenting +ourselves with taking off our wet clothes and wrapping ourselves in our +blankets on some dry knoll, where we slept till morning. At last, on +the night of the second of April, there came a hard frost, and our +clothes, which were drenched when we took them off, froze stiff as +sticks, so that we could not put them on in the morning without making a +fire to thaw them. The fire betrayed us to the Indians, who were +encamped across the marsh; and they ran towards us with loud cries, till +they were stopped halfway by a stream so deep that they could not get +over, the ice which had formed in the night not being strong enough to +bear them. We went to meet them, within gun-shot; and whether our +fire-arms frightened them, or whether they thought us more numerous than +we were, or whether they really meant us no harm, they called out, in +the Illinois language, that they had taken us for Iroquois, but now saw +that we were friends and brothers; whereupon, they went off as they +came, and we kept on our way till the fourth, when two of my men fell +ill and could not walk." + +In this emergency, La Salle went in search of some watercourse by which +they might reach Lake Erie, and soon came upon a small river, which was +probably the Huron. Here, while the sick men rested, their companions +made a canoe. There were no birch-trees; and they were forced to use +elm-bark, which at that early season would not slip freely from the wood +until they loosened it with hot water. Their canoe being made, they +embarked in it, and for a time floated prosperously down the stream, +when at length the way was barred by a matted barricade of trees fallen +across the water. The sick men could now walk again, and, pushing +eastward through the forest, the party soon reached the banks of the +Detroit. + +[Sidenote: THE JOURNEY'S END.] + +La Salle directed two of the men to make a canoe, and go to +Michilimackinac, the nearest harborage. With the remaining two, he +crossed the Detroit on a raft, and, striking a direct line across the +country, reached Lake Erie not far from Point Pelée. Snow, sleet, and +rain pelted them with little intermission: and when, after a walk of +about thirty miles, they gained the lake, the Mohegan and one of the +Frenchmen were attacked with fever and spitting of blood. Only one man +now remained in health. With his aid, La Salle made another canoe, and, +embarking the invalids, pushed for Niagara. It was Easter Monday when +they landed at a cabin of logs above the cataract, probably on the spot +where the "Griffin" was built. Here several of La Salle's men had been +left the year before, and here they still remained. They told him woful +news. Not only had he lost the "Griffin," and her lading of ten thousand +crowns in value, but a ship from France, freighted with his goods, +valued at more than twenty-two thousand livres, had been totally wrecked +at the mouth of the St. Lawrence; and of twenty hired men on their way +from Europe to join him, some had been detained by his enemy, the +Intendant Duchesneau, while all but four of the remainder, being told +that he was dead, had found means to return home. + +His three followers were all unfit for travel: he alone retained his +strength and spirit. Taking with him three fresh men at Niagara, he +resumed his journey, and on the sixth of May descried, looming through +floods of rain, the familiar shores of his seigniory and the bastioned +walls of Fort Frontenac. During sixty-five days he had toiled almost +incessantly, travelling, by the course he took, about a thousand miles +through a country beset with every form of peril and obstruction,--"the +most arduous journey," says the chronicler, "ever made by Frenchmen in +America." + +Such was Cavelier de la Salle. In him, an unconquerable mind held at its +service a frame of iron, and tasked it to the utmost of its endurance. +The pioneer of western pioneers was no rude son of toil, but a man of +thought, trained amid arts and letters.[168] He had reached his goal; +but for him there was neither rest nor peace. Man and Nature seemed in +arms against him. His agents had plundered him; his creditors had seized +his property; and several of his canoes, richly laden, had been lost in +the rapids of the St. Lawrence.[169] He hastened to Montreal, where his +sudden advent caused great astonishment; and where, despite his crippled +resources and damaged credit, he succeeded, within a week, in gaining +the supplies which he required and the needful succors for the forlorn +band on the Illinois. He had returned to Fort Frontenac, and was on the +point of embarking for their relief, when a blow fell upon him more +disheartening than any that had preceded. + +[Sidenote: THE MUTINEERS.] + +On the twenty-second of July, two _voyageurs_, Messier and Laurent, came +to him with a letter from Tonty, who wrote that soon after La Salle's +departure nearly all the men had deserted, after destroying Fort +Crèvecoeur, plundering the magazine, and throwing into the river all +the arms, goods, and stores which they could not carry off. The +messengers who brought this letter were speedily followed by two of the +_habitants_ of Fort Frontenac, who had been trading on the lakes, and +who, with a fidelity which the unhappy La Salle rarely knew how to +inspire, had travelled day and night to bring him their tidings. They +reported that they had met the deserters, and that, having been +reinforced by recruits gained at Michilimackinac and Niagara, they now +numbered twenty men.[170] They had destroyed the fort on the St. +Joseph, seized a quantity of furs belonging to La Salle at +Michilimackinac, and plundered the magazine at Niagara. Here they had +separated, eight of them coasting the south side of Lake Ontario to find +harborage at Albany, a common refuge at that time of this class of +scoundrels; while the remaining twelve, in three canoes, made for Fort +Frontenac along the north shore, intending to kill La Salle as the +surest means of escaping punishment. + +[Sidenote: CHASTISEMENT.] + +He lost no time in lamentation. Of the few men at his command he chose +nine of the trustiest, embarked with them in canoes, and went to meet +the marauders. After passing the Bay of Quinté, he took his station with +five of his party at a point of land suited to his purpose, and detached +the remaining four to keep watch. In the morning, two canoes were +discovered approaching without suspicion, one of them far in advance of +the other. As the foremost drew near, La Salle's canoe darted out from +under the leafy shore,--two of the men handling the paddles, while he, +with the remaining two, levelled their guns at the deserters, and called +on them to surrender. Astonished and dismayed, they yielded at once; +while two more, who were in the second canoe, hastened to follow their +example. La Salle now returned to the fort with his prisoners, placed +them in custody, and again set forth. He met the third canoe upon the +lake at about six o'clock in the evening. His men vainly plied their +paddles in pursuit. The mutineers reached the shore, took post among +rocks and trees, levelled their guns, and showed fight. Four of La +Salle's men made a circuit to gain their rear and dislodge them, on +which they stole back to their canoe and tried to escape in the +darkness. They were pursued, and summoned to yield; but they replied by +aiming their guns at their pursuers, who instantly gave them a volley, +killed two of them, and captured the remaining three. Like their +companions, they were placed in custody at the fort, to await the +arrival of Count Frontenac.[171] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[163] _Lettre de La Salle à un de ses associés_ (Thouret?), _29 Sept., +1680_ (Margry, ii. 50). + +[164] Membré says that he was in the town at the time; but this could +hardly have been the case. He was, in all probability, among the +Illinois, in their camp near Fort Crèvecoeur. + +[165] The same whom Hennepin calls Chassagouasse. He was brother of the +chief, Nicanopé, who, in his absence, had feasted the French on the day +after the nocturnal council with Monso. Chassagoac was afterwards +baptized by Membré or Ribourde, but soon relapsed into the superstitions +of his people, and died, as the former tells us, "doubly a child of +perdition." See Le Clerc, ii. 181. + +[166] Tonty, _Mémoire_. The order was sent by two Frenchmen, whom La +Salle met on Lake Michigan. + +[167] _Déclaration de Moyse Hillaret; Relation des Découvertes._ + +[168] A Rocky Mountain trapper, being complimented on the hardihood of +himself and his companions, once said to the writer, "That's so; but a +gentleman of the right sort will stand hardship better than anybody +else." The history of Arctic and African travel and the military records +of all time are a standing evidence that a trained and developed mind is +not the enemy, but the active and powerful ally, of constitutional +hardihood. The culture that enervates instead of strengthening is always +a false or a partial one. + +[169] Zenobe Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 202. + +[170] When La Salle was at Niagara, in April, he had ordered Dautray, +the best of the men who had accompanied him from the Illinois, to return +thither as soon as he was able. Four men from Niagara were to go with +him and he was to rejoin Tonty with such supplies as that post could +furnish. Dautray set out accordingly, but was met on the lakes by the +deserters, who told him that Tonty was dead, and seduced his men. +(_Relation des Découvertes._) Dautray himself seems to have remained +true; at least, he was in La Salle's service immediately after, and was +one of his most trusted followers. He was of good birth, being the son +of Jean Bourdon, a conspicuous personage in the early period of the +colony; and his name appears on official records as Jean Bourdon, Sieur +d'Autray. + +[171] La Salle's long letter, written apparently to his associate +Thouret, and dated 29 Sept., 1680, is the chief authority for the above. +The greater part of this letter is incorporated, almost verbatim, in the +official narrative called _Relation des Découvertes_. Hennepin, Membré, +and Tonty also speak of the journey from Fort Crèvecoeur. The death of +the two mutineers was used by La Salle's enemies as the basis of a +charge of murder. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +1680. + +INDIAN CONQUERORS. + + The Enterprise renewed.--Attempt to rescue Tonty.--Buffalo.--A + Frightful Discovery.--Iroquois Fury.--The Ruined Town.--A Night of + Horror.--Traces of the Invaders.--No News of Tonty. + + +[Sidenote: ANOTHER EFFORT.] + +And now La Salle's work must be begun afresh. He had staked all, and all +had seemingly been lost. In stern, relentless effort he had touched the +limits of human endurance; and the harvest of his toil was +disappointment, disaster, and impending ruin. The shattered fabric of +his enterprise was prostrate in the dust. His friends desponded; his +foes were blatant and exultant. Did he bend before the storm? No human +eye could pierce the depths of his reserved and haughty nature; but the +surface was calm, and no sign betrayed a shaken resolve or an altered +purpose. Where weaker men would have abandoned all in despairing apathy, +he turned anew to his work with the same vigor and the same apparent +confidence as if borne on the full tide of success. + +His best hope was in Tonty. Could that brave and true-hearted officer +and the three or four faithful men who had remained with him make good +their foothold on the Illinois, and save from destruction the vessel on +the stocks and the forge and tools so laboriously carried thither, then +a basis was left on which the ruined enterprise might be built up once +more. There was no time to lose. Tonty must be succored soon, or succor +would come too late. La Salle had already provided the necessary +material, and a few days sufficed to complete his preparations. On the +tenth of August he embarked again for the Illinois. With him went his +lieutenant La Forest, who held of him in fief an island, then called +Belle Isle, opposite Fort Frontenac.[172] A surgeon, ship-carpenters, +joiners, masons, soldiers, _voyageurs_ and laborers completed his +company, twenty-five men in all, with everything needful for the outfit +of the vessel. + +His route, though difficult, was not so long as that which he had +followed the year before. He ascended the river Humber; crossed to Lake +Simcoe, and thence descended the Severn to the Georgian Bay of Lake +Huron; followed its eastern shore, coasted the Manitoulin Islands, and +at length reached Michilimackinac. Here, as usual, all was hostile; and +he had great difficulty in inducing the Indians, who had been excited +against him, to sell him provisions. Anxious to reach his destination, +he pushed forward with twelve men, leaving La Forest to bring on the +rest. On the fourth of November[173] he reached the ruined fort at the +mouth of the St. Joseph, and left five of his party, with the heavy +stores, to wait till La Forest should come up, while he himself hastened +forward with six Frenchmen and an Indian. A deep anxiety possessed him. +The rumor, current for months past, that the Iroquois, bent on +destroying the Illinois, were on the point of invading their country had +constantly gained strength. Here was a new disaster, which, if realized, +might involve him and his enterprise in irretrievable wreck. + +He ascended the St. Joseph, crossed the portage to the Kankakee, and +followed its course downward till it joined the northern branch of the +Illinois. He had heard nothing of Tonty on the way, and neither here nor +elsewhere could he discover the smallest sign of the passage of white +men. His friend, therefore, if alive, was probably still at his post; +and he pursued his course with a mind lightened, in some small measure, +of its load of anxiety. + +[Sidenote: BUFFALO.] + +When last he had passed here, all was solitude; but now the scene was +changed. The boundless waste was thronged with life. He beheld that +wondrous spectacle, still to be seen at times on the plains of the +remotest West, and the memory of which can quicken the pulse and stir +the blood after the lapse of years: far and near, the prairie was alive +with buffalo; now like black specks dotting the distant swells; now +trampling by in ponderous columns, or filing in long lines, morning, +noon, and night, to drink at the river,--wading, plunging, and snorting +in the water; climbing the muddy shores, and staring with wild eyes at +the passing canoes. It was an opportunity not to be lost. The party +landed, and encamped for a hunt. Sometimes they hid under the shelving +bank, and shot them as they came to drink; sometimes, flat on their +faces, they dragged themselves through the long dead grass, till the +savage bulls, guardians of the herd, ceased their grazing, raised their +huge heads, and glared through tangled hair at the dangerous intruders. +The hunt was successful. In three days the hunters killed twelve +buffalo, besides deer, geese, and swans. They cut the meat into thin +flakes, and dried it in the sun or in the smoke of their fires. The men +were in high spirits,--delighting in the sport, and rejoicing in the +prospect of relieving Tonty and his hungry followers with a plentiful +supply. + +They embarked again, and soon approached the great town of the Illinois. +The buffalo were far behind; and once more the canoes glided on their +way through a voiceless solitude. No hunters were seen; no saluting +whoop greeted their ears. They passed the cliff afterwards called the +Rock of St. Louis, where La Salle had ordered Tonty to build his +stronghold; but as he scanned its lofty top he saw no palisades, no +cabins, no sign of human hand, and still its primeval crest of forests +overhung the gliding river. Now the meadow opened before them where the +great town had stood. They gazed, astonished and confounded: all was +desolation. The town had vanished, and the meadow was black with fire. +They plied their paddles, hastened to the spot, landed; and as they +looked around their cheeks grew white, and the blood was frozen in their +veins. + +[Sidenote: A NIGHT OF HORROR.] + +Before them lay a plain once swarming with wild human life and covered +with Indian dwellings, now a waste of devastation and death, strewn with +heaps of ashes, and bristling with the charred poles and stakes which +had formed the framework of the lodges. At the points of most of them +were stuck human skulls, half picked by birds of prey.[174] Near at hand +was the burial-ground of the village. The travellers sickened with +horror as they entered its revolting precincts. Wolves in multitudes +fled at their approach; while clouds of crows or buzzards, rising from +the hideous repast, wheeled above their heads, or settled on the naked +branches of the neighboring forest. Every grave had been rifled, and the +bodies flung down from the scaffolds where, after the Illinois custom, +many of them had been placed. The field was strewn with broken bones and +torn and mangled corpses. A hyena warfare had been waged against the +dead. La Salle knew the handiwork of the Iroquois. The threatened blow +had fallen, and the wolfish hordes of the five cantons had fleshed their +rabid fangs in a new victim.[175] + +Not far distant, the conquerors had made a rude fort of trunks, boughs, +and roots of trees laid together to form a circular enclosure; and this, +too, was garnished with skulls, stuck on the broken branches and +protruding sticks. The _caches_, or subterranean store-houses of the +villagers, had been broken open and the contents scattered. The +cornfields were laid waste, and much of the corn thrown into heaps and +half burned. As La Salle surveyed this scene of havoc, one thought +engrossed him: where were Tonty and his men? He searched the Iroquois +fort: there were abundant traces of its savage occupants, and, among +them, a few fragments of French clothing. He examined the skulls; but +the hair, portions of which clung to nearly all of them, was in every +case that of an Indian. Evening came on before he had finished the +search. The sun set, and the wilderness sank to its savage rest. Night +and silence brooded over the waste, where, far as the raven could wing +his flight, stretched the dark domain of solitude and horror. + +Yet there was no silence at the spot where La Salle and his companions +made their bivouac. The howling of the wolves filled the air with fierce +and dreary dissonance. More dangerous foes were not far off, for before +nightfall they had seen fresh Indian tracks; "but, as it was very cold," +says La Salle, "this did not prevent us from making a fire and lying +down by it, each of us keeping watch in turn. I spent the night in a +distress which you can imagine better than I can write it; and I did not +sleep a moment with trying to make up my mind as to what I ought to do. +My ignorance as to the position of those I was looking after, and my +uncertainty as to what would become of the men who were to follow me +with La Forest if they arrived at the ruined village and did not find me +there, made me apprehend every sort of trouble and disaster. At last, I +decided to keep on my way down the river, leaving some of my men behind +in charge of the goods, which it was not only useless but dangerous to +carry with me, because we should be forced to abandon them when the +winter fairly set in, which would be very soon." + +[Sidenote: FEARS FOR TONTY.] + +This resolution was due to a discovery he had made the evening before, +which offered, as he thought, a possible clew to the fate of Tonty and +the men with him. He thus describes it: "Near the garden of the Indians, +which was on the meadows, a league from the village and not far from the +river, I found six pointed stakes set in the ground and painted red. On +each of them was the figure of a man with bandaged eyes, drawn in black. +As the savages often set stakes of this sort where they have killed +people, I thought, by their number and position, that when the Iroquois +came, the Illinois, finding our men alone in the hut near their garden, +had either killed them or made them prisoners. And I was confirmed in +this, because, seeing no signs of a battle, I supposed that on hearing +of the approach of the Iroquois, the old men and other non-combatants +had fled, and that the young warriors had remained behind to cover their +flight, and afterwards followed, taking the French with them; while the +Iroquois, finding nobody to kill, had vented their fury on the corpses +in the graveyard." + +Uncertain as was the basis of this conjecture, and feeble as was the +hope it afforded, it determined him to push forward, in order to learn +more. When daylight returned, he told his purpose to his followers, and +directed three of them to await his return near the ruined village. They +were to hide themselves on an island, conceal their fire at night, make +no smoke by day, fire no guns, and keep a close watch. Should the rest +of the party arrive, they, too, were to wait with similar precautions. +The baggage was placed in a hollow of the rocks, at a place difficult of +access; and, these arrangements made, La Salle set out on his perilous +journey with the four remaining men, Dautray, Hunaut, You, and the +Indian. Each was armed with two guns, a pistol, and a sword; and a +number of hatchets and other goods were placed in the canoe, as presents +for Indians whom they might meet. + +Several leagues below the village they found, on their right hand close +to the river, a sort of island, made inaccessible by the marshes and +water which surrounded it. Here the flying Illinois had sought refuge +with their women and children, and the place was full of their deserted +huts. On the left bank, exactly opposite, was an abandoned camp of the +Iroquois. On the level meadow stood a hundred and thirteen huts, and on +the forest trees which covered the hills behind were carved the totems, +or insignia, of the chiefs, together with marks to show the number of +followers which each had led to the war. La Salle counted five hundred +and eighty-two warriors. He found marks, too, for the Illinois killed or +captured, but none to indicate that any of the Frenchmen had shared +their fate. + +[Sidenote: SEARCH FOR TONTY.] + +As they descended the river, they passed, on the same day, six abandoned +camps of the Illinois; and opposite to each was a camp of the invaders. +The former, it was clear, had retreated in a body; while the Iroquois +had followed their march, day by day, along the other bank. La Salle and +his men pushed rapidly onward, passed Peoria Lake, and soon reached Fort +Crèvecoeur, which they found, as they expected, demolished by the +deserters. The vessel on the stocks was still left entire, though the +Iroquois had found means to draw out the iron nails and spikes. On one +of the planks were written the words: "_Nous sommes tous sauvages: ce +15, 1680_,"--the work, no doubt, of the knaves who had pillaged and +destroyed the fort. + +La Salle and his companions hastened on, and during the following day +passed four opposing camps of the savage armies. The silence of death +now reigned along the deserted river, whose lonely borders, wrapped deep +in forests, seemed lifeless as the grave. As they drew near the mouth of +the stream they saw a meadow on their right, and on its farthest verge +several human figures, erect, yet motionless. They landed, and +cautiously examined the place. The long grass was trampled down, and all +around were strewn the relics of the hideous orgies which formed the +ordinary sequel of an Iroquois victory. The figures they had seen were +the half-consumed bodies of women, still bound to the stakes where they +had been tortured. Other sights there were, too revolting for +record.[176] All the remains were those of women and children. The men, +it seemed, had fled, and left them to their fate. + +Here, again, La Salle sought long and anxiously, without finding the +smallest sign that could indicate the presence of Frenchmen. Once more +descending the river, they soon reached its mouth. Before them, a broad +eddying current rolled swiftly on its way; and La Salle beheld the +Mississippi,--the object of his day-dreams, the destined avenue of his +ambition and his hopes. It was no time for reflections. The moment was +too engrossing, too heavily charged with anxieties and cares. From a +rock on the shore, he saw a tree stretched forward above the stream; and +stripping off its bark to make it more conspicuous, he hung upon it a +board on which he had drawn the figures of himself and his men, seated +in their canoe, and bearing a pipe of peace. To this he tied a letter +for Tonty, informing him that he had returned up the river to the ruined +village. + +His four men had behaved admirably throughout, and they now offered to +continue the journey if he saw fit, and follow him to the sea; but he +thought it useless to go farther, and was unwilling to abandon the three +men whom he had ordered to await his return. Accordingly, they retraced +their course, and, paddling at times both day and night, urged their +canoe so swiftly that they reached the village in the incredibly short +space of four days.[177] + +[Sidenote: THE COMET.] + +The sky was clear, and as night came on the travellers saw a prodigious +comet blazing above this scene of desolation. On that night, it was +chilling with a superstitious awe the hamlets of New England and the +gilded chambers of Versailles; but it is characteristic of La Salle, +that, beset as he was with perils and surrounded with ghastly images of +death, he coolly notes down the phenomenon, not as a portentous +messenger of war and woe, but rather as an object of scientific +curiosity.[178] + +He found his three men safely ensconced upon their island, where they +were anxiously looking for his return. After collecting a store of +half-burnt corn from the ravaged granaries of the Illinois, the whole +party began to ascend the river, and on the sixth of January reached the +junction of the Kankakee with the northern branch. On their way downward +they had descended the former stream; they now chose the latter, and +soon discovered, by the margin of the water, a rude cabin of bark. La +Salle landed and examined the spot, when an object met his eye which +cheered him with a bright gleam of hope. It was but a piece of wood; but +the wood had been cut with a saw. Tonty and his party, then, had passed +this way, escaping from the carnage behind them. Unhappily, they had +left no token of their passage at the fork of the two streams; and thus +La Salle, on his voyage downward, had believed them to be still on the +river below. + +With rekindled hope, the travellers pursued their journey, leaving their +canoes, and making their way overland towards the fort on the St. +Joseph. + +"Snow fell in extraordinary quantities all day," writes La Salle, "and +it kept on falling for nineteen days in succession, with cold so severe +that I never knew so hard a winter, even in Canada. We were obliged to +cross forty leagues of open country, where we could hardly find wood to +warm ourselves at evening, and could get no bark whatever to make a hut, +so that we had to spend the night exposed to the furious winds which +blow over these plains. I never suffered so much from cold, or had more +trouble in getting forward; for the snow was so light, resting suspended +as it were among the tall grass, that we could not use snow-shoes. +Sometimes it was waist deep; and as I walked before my men, as usual, to +encourage them by breaking the path, I often had much ado, though I am +rather tall, to lift my legs above the drifts, through which I pushed +by the weight of my body." + +[Sidenote: FORT MIAMI.] + +At length they reached their goal, and found shelter and safety within +the walls of Fort Miami. Here was the party left in charge of La Forest; +but, to his surprise and grief, La Salle heard no tidings of Tonty. He +found some amends for the disappointment in the fidelity and zeal of La +Forest's men, who had restored the fort, cleared ground for planting, +and even sawed the planks and timber for a new vessel on the lake. + +And now, while La Salle rests at Fort Miami, let us trace the adventures +which befell Tonty and his followers, after their chief's departure from +Fort Crèvecoeur. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[172] _Robert Cavelier, Sr. de la Salle, à François Daupin, Sr. de +la Forest, 10 Juin, 1679._ + +[173] This date is from the _Relation_. Membré says the twenty-eighth; +but he is wrong, by his own showing, as he says that the party reached +the Illinois village on the first of December, which would be an +impossibility. + +[174] "Il ne restoit que quelques bouts de perches brulées qui +montroient quelle avoit été l'étendue du village, et sur la plupart +desquelles il y avoit des têtes de morts plantées et mangées des +corbeaux."--_Relation des Découvertes du Sr. de la Salle._ + +[175] "Beaucoup de carcasses à demi rongées par les loups, les +sépulchres démolis, les os tirés de leurs fosses et épars par la +campagne; ... enfin les loups et les corbeaux augmentoient encore par +leurs hurlemens et par leurs cris l'horreur de ce spectacle."--_Relation +des Découvertes du Sr. de la Salle._ + +The above may seem exaggerated; but it accords perfectly with what is +well established concerning the ferocious character of the Iroquois and +the nature of their warfare. Many other tribes have frequently made war +upon the dead. I have myself known an instance in which five corpses of +Sioux Indians placed in trees, after the practice of the Western bands +of that people, were thrown down and kicked into fragments by a war +party of the Crows, who then held the muzzles of their guns against the +skulls, and blew them to pieces. This happened near the head of the +Platte, in the summer of 1846. Yet the Crows are much less ferocious +than were the Iroquois in La Salle's time. + +[176] "On ne sçauroit exprimer la rage de ces furieux ni les tourmens +qu'ils avoient fait souffrir aux misérables Tamaroa [_a tribe of the +Illinois_]. Il y en avoit encore dans des chaudières qu'ils avoient +laissées pleines sur les feux, qui depuis s'étoient éteints," etc., +etc.--_Relation des Découvertes._ + +[177] The distance is about two hundred and fifty miles. The letters of +La Salle, as well as the official narrative compiled from them, say that +they left the village on the second of December, and returned to it on +the eleventh, having left the mouth of the river on the seventh. + +[178] This was the "Great Comet of 1680." Dr. B. A. Gould writes me: "It +appeared in December, 1680, and was visible until the latter part of +February, 1681, being especially brilliant in January." It was said to +be the largest ever seen. By observations upon it, Newton demonstrated +the regular revolutions of comets around the sun. "No comet," it is +said, "has threatened the earth with a nearer approach than that of +1680." (_Winthrop on Comets, Lecture II_. p. 44.) Increase Mather, in +his _Discourse concerning Comets_, printed at Boston in 1683, says of +this one: "Its appearance was very terrible; the Blaze ascended above 60 +Degrees almost to its Zenith." Mather thought it fraught with terrific +portent to the nations of the earth. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +1680. + +TONTY AND THE IROQUOIS. + + The Deserters.--The Iroquois War.--The Great Town of the + Illinois.--The Alarm.--Onset of the Iroquois.--Peril of Tonty.--A + Treacherous Truce.--Intrepidity of Tonty.--Murder of Ribourde.--War + upon the Dead. + + +When La Salle set out on his rugged journey to Fort Frontenac, he left, +as we have seen, fifteen men at Fort Crèvecoeur,--smiths, +ship-carpenters, house-wrights, and soldiers, besides his servant +L'Espérance and the two friars Membré and Ribourde. Most of the men were +ripe for mutiny. They had no interest in the enterprise, and no love for +its chief. They were disgusted with the present, and terrified at the +future. La Salle, too, was for the most part a stern commander, +impenetrable and cold; and when he tried to soothe, conciliate, and +encourage, his success rarely answered to the excellence of his +rhetoric. He could always, however, inspire respect, if not love; but +now the restraint of his presence was removed. He had not been long +absent, when a fire-brand was thrown into the midst of the discontented +and restless crew. + +It may be remembered that La Salle had met two of his men, La Chapelle +and Leblanc, at his fort on the St. Joseph, and ordered them to rejoin +Tonty. Unfortunately, they obeyed. On arriving, they told their comrades +that the "Griffin" was lost, that Fort Frontenac was seized by the +creditors of La Salle, that he was ruined past recovery, and that they, +the men, would never receive their pay. Their wages were in arrears for +more than two years; and, indeed, it would have been folly to pay them +before their return to the settlements, as to do so would have been a +temptation to desert. Now, however, the effect on their minds was still +worse, believing, as many of them did, that they would never be paid at +all. + +[Sidenote: THE DESERTERS.] + +La Chapelle and his companion had brought a letter from La Salle to +Tonty, directing him to examine and fortify the cliff so often +mentioned, which overhung the river above the great Illinois village. +Tonty, accordingly, set out on his errand with some of the men. In his +absence, the malcontents destroyed the fort, stole powder, lead, furs, +and provisions, and deserted, after writing on the side of the +unfinished vessel the words seen by La Salle, "_Nous sommes tous +sauvages_."[179] The brave young Sieur de Boisrondet and the servant +L'Espérance hastened to carry the news to Tonty, who at once despatched +four of those with him, by two different routes, to inform La Salle of +the disaster.[180] Besides the two just named, there now remained with +him only one hired man and the Récollet friars. With this feeble band, +he was left among a horde of treacherous savages, who had been taught to +regard him as a secret enemy. Resolved, apparently, to disarm their +jealousy by a show of confidence, he took up his abode in the midst of +them, making his quarters in the great village, whither, as spring +opened, its inhabitants returned, to the number, according to Membré, of +seven or eight thousand. Hither he conveyed the forge and such tools as +he could recover, and here he hoped to maintain himself till La Salle +should reappear. The spring and the summer were past, and he looked +anxiously for his coming, unconscious that a storm was gathering in the +east, soon to burst with devastation over the fertile wilderness of the +Illinois. + +[Sidenote: THE IROQUOIS WAR.] + +I have recounted the ferocious triumphs of the Iroquois in another +volume.[181] Throughout a wide semi-circle around their cantons, they +had made the forest a solitude; destroyed the Hurons, exterminated the +Neutrals and the Eries, reduced the formidable Andastes to helpless +insignificance, swept the borders of the St. Lawrence with fire, spread +terror and desolation among the Algonquins of Canada; and now, tired of +peace, they were seeking, to borrow their own savage metaphor, new +nations to devour. Yet it was not alone their homicidal fury that now +impelled them to another war. Strange as it may seem, this war was in no +small measure one of commercial advantage. They had long traded with the +Dutch and English of New York, who gave them, in exchange for their +furs, the guns, ammunition, knives, hatchets, kettles, beads, and brandy +which had become indispensable to them. Game was scarce in their +country. They must seek their beaver and other skins in the vacant +territories of the tribes they had destroyed; but this did not content +them. The French of Canada were seeking to secure a monopoly of the furs +of the north and west; and, of late, the enterprises of La Salle on the +tributaries of the Mississippi had especially roused the jealousy of the +Iroquois, fomented, moreover, by Dutch and English traders.[182] These +crafty savages would fain reduce all these regions to subjection, and +draw thence an exhaustless supply of furs, to be bartered for English +goods with the traders of Albany. They turned their eyes first towards +the Illinois, the most important, as well as one of the most accessible, +of the western Algonquin tribes; and among La Salle's enemies were some +in whom jealousy of a hated rival could so far override all the best +interests of the colony that they did not scruple to urge on the +Iroquois to an invasion which they hoped would prove his ruin. The +chiefs convened, war was decreed, the war-dance was danced, the war-song +sung, and five hundred warriors began their march. In their path lay the +town of the Miamis, neighbors and kindred of the Illinois. It was always +their policy to divide and conquer; and these forest Machiavels had +intrigued so well among the Miamis, working craftily on their jealousy, +that they induced them to join in the invasion, though there is every +reason to believe that they had marked these infatuated allies as their +next victims.[183] + +[Sidenote: THE ILLINOIS TOWN.] + +Go to the banks of the Illinois where it flows by the village of Utica, +and stand on the meadow that borders it on the north. In front glides +the river, a musket-shot in width; and from the farther bank rises, with +gradual slope, a range of wooded hills that hide from sight the vast +prairie behind them. A mile or more on your left these gentle +acclivities end abruptly in the lofty front of the great cliff, called +by the French the Rock of St. Louis, looking boldly out from the forests +that environ it; and, three miles distant on your right, you discern a +gap in the steep bluffs that here bound the valley, marking the mouth of +the river Vermilion, called Aramoni by the French.[184] Now stand in +fancy on this same spot in the early autumn of the year 1680. You are in +the midst of the great town of the Illinois,--hundreds of mat-covered +lodges, and thousands of congregated savages. Enter one of their +dwellings: they will not think you an intruder. Some friendly squaw will +lay a mat for you by the fire; you may seat yourself upon it, smoke your +pipe, and study the lodge and its inmates by the light that streams +through the holes at the top. Three or four fires smoke and smoulder on +the ground down the middle of the long arched structure; and, as to +each fire there are two families, the place is somewhat crowded when all +are present. But now there is breathing room, for many are in the +fields. A squaw sits weaving a mat of rushes; a warrior, naked except +his moccasins, and tattooed with fantastic devices, binds a stone +arrow-head to its shaft, with the fresh sinews of a buffalo. Some lie +asleep, some sit staring in vacancy, some are eating, some are squatted +in lazy chat around a fire. The smoke brings water to your eyes; the +fleas annoy you; small unkempt children, naked as young puppies, crawl +about your knees and will not be repelled. You have seen enough; you +rise and go out again into the sunlight. It is, if not a peaceful, at +least a languid scene. A few voices break the stillness, mingled with +the joyous chirping of crickets from the grass. Young men lie flat on +their faces, basking in the sun; a group of their elders are smoking +around a buffalo-skin on which they have just been playing a game of +chance with cherry-stones. A lover and his mistress, perhaps, sit +together under a shed of bark, without uttering a word. Not far off is +the graveyard, where lie the dead of the village, some buried in the +earth, some wrapped in skins and laid aloft on scaffolds, above the +reach of wolves. In the cornfields around, you see squaws at their +labor, and children driving off intruding birds; and your eye ranges +over the meadows beyond, spangled with the yellow blossoms of the +resin-weed and the Rudbeckia, or over the bordering hills still green +with the foliage of summer.[185] + +This, or something like it, one may safely affirm, was the aspect of the +Illinois village at noon of the tenth of September.[186] In a hut apart +from the rest, you would probably have found the Frenchmen. Among them +was a man, not strong in person, and disabled, moreover, by the loss of +a hand, yet in this den of barbarism betraying the language and bearing +of one formed in the most polished civilization of Europe. This was +Henri de Tonty. The others were young Boisrondet, the servant +L'Espérance, and a Parisian youth named Étienne Renault. The friars, +Membré and Ribourde, were not in the village, but at a hut a league +distant, whither they had gone to make a "retreat" for prayer and +meditation. Their missionary labors had not been fruitful; they had made +no converts, and were in despair at the intractable character of the +objects of their zeal. As for the other Frenchmen, time, doubtless, hung +heavy on their hands; for nothing can surpass the vacant monotony of an +Indian town when there is neither hunting, nor war, nor feasts, nor +dances, nor gambling, to beguile the lagging hours. + +[Sidenote: THE ALARM.] + +Suddenly the village was wakened from its lethargy as by the crash of a +thunderbolt. A Shawanoe, lately here on a visit, had left his Illinois +friends to return home. He now reappeared, crossing the river in hot +haste, with the announcement that he had met, on his way, an army of +Iroquois approaching to attack them. All was panic and confusion. The +lodges disgorged their frightened inmates; women and children screamed, +startled warriors snatched their weapons. There were less than five +hundred of them, for the greater part of the young men had gone to war. +A crowd of excited savages thronged about Tonty and his Frenchmen, +already objects of their suspicion, charging them, with furious +gesticulation, with having stirred up their enemies to invade them. +Tonty defended himself in broken Illinois, but the naked mob were but +half convinced. They seized the forge and tools and flung them into the +river, with all the goods that had been saved from the deserters; then, +distrusting their power to defend themselves, they manned the wooden +canoes which lay in multitudes by the bank, embarked their women and +children, and paddled down the stream to that island of dry land in the +midst of marshes which La Salle afterwards found filled with their +deserted huts. Sixty warriors remained here to guard them, and the rest +returned to the village. All night long fires blazed along the shore. +The excited warriors greased their bodies, painted their faces, +befeathered their heads, sang their war-songs, danced, stamped, yelled, +and brandished their hatchets, to work up their courage to face the +crisis. The morning came, and with it came the Iroquois. + +Young warriors had gone out as scouts, and now they returned. They had +seen the enemy in the line of forest that bordered the river Aramoni, or +Vermilion, and had stealthily reconnoitred them. They were very +numerous,[187] and armed for the most part with guns, pistols, and +swords. Some had bucklers of wood or raw-hide, and some wore those +corselets of tough twigs interwoven with cordage which their fathers had +used when fire-arms were unknown. The scouts added more, for they +declared that they had seen a Jesuit among the Iroquois; nay, that La +Salle himself was there, whence it must follow that Tonty and his men +were enemies and traitors. The supposed Jesuit was but an Iroquois chief +arrayed in a black hat, doublet, and stockings; while another, equipped +after a somewhat similar fashion, passed in the distance for La Salle. +But the Illinois were furious. Tonty's life hung by a hair. A crowd of +savages surrounded him, mad with rage and terror. He had come lately +from Europe, and knew little of Indians, but, as the friar Membré says +of him, "he was full of intelligence and courage," and when they heard +him declare that he and his Frenchmen would go with them to fight the +Iroquois, their threats grew less clamorous and their eyes glittered +with a less deadly lustre. + +[Sidenote: TONTY'S MEDIATION.] + +Whooping and screeching, they ran to their canoes, crossed the river, +climbed the woody hill, and swarmed down upon the plain beyond. About a +hundred of them had guns; the rest were armed with bows and arrows. They +were now face to face with the enemy, who had emerged from the woods of +the Vermilion, and were advancing on the open prairie. With unwonted +spirit, for their repute as warriors was by no means high, the Illinois +began, after their fashion, to charge; that is, they leaped, yelled, and +shot off bullets and arrows, advancing as they did so; while the +Iroquois replied with gymnastics no less agile and howlings no less +terrific, mingled with the rapid clatter of their guns. Tonty saw that +it would go hard with his allies. It was of the last moment to stop the +fight, if possible. The Iroquois were, or professed to be, at peace with +the French; and, taking counsel of his courage, he resolved on an +attempt to mediate, which may well be called a desperate one. He laid +aside his gun, took in his hand a wampum belt as a flag of truce, and +walked forward to meet the savage multitude, attended by Boisrondet, +another Frenchman, and a young Illinois who had the hardihood to +accompany him. The guns of the Iroquois still flashed thick and fast. +Some of them were aimed at him, on which he sent back the two Frenchmen +and the Illinois, and advanced alone, holding out the wampum belt.[188] +A moment more, and he was among the infuriated warriors. It was a +frightful spectacle,--the contorted forms, bounding, crouching, +twisting, to deal or dodge the shot; the small keen eyes that shone like +an angry snake's; the parted lips pealing their fiendish yells; the +painted features writhing with fear and fury, and every passion of an +Indian fight,--man, wolf, and devil, all in one.[189] With his swarthy +complexion and his half-savage dress, they thought he was an Indian, and +thronged about him, glaring murder. A young warrior stabbed at his heart +with a knife, but the point glanced aside against a rib, inflicting only +a deep gash. A chief called out that, as his ears were not pierced, he +must be a Frenchman. On this, some of them tried to stop the bleeding, +and led him to the rear, where an angry parley ensued, while the yells +and firing still resounded in the front. Tonty, breathless, and bleeding +at the mouth with the force of the blow he had received, found words to +declare that the Illinois were under the protection of the King and the +governor of Canada, and to demand that they should be left in +peace.[190] + +[Sidenote: PERIL OF TONTY.] + +A young Iroquois snatched Tonty's hat, placed it on the end of his gun, +and displayed it to the Illinois, who, thereupon thinking he was +killed, renewed the fight; and the firing in front clattered more +angrily than before. A warrior ran in, crying out that the Iroquois were +giving ground, and that there were Frenchmen among the Illinois, who +fired at them. On this, the clamor around Tonty was redoubled. Some +wished to kill him at once; others resisted. "I was never," he writes, +"in such perplexity; for at that moment there was an Iroquois behind me, +with a knife in his hand, lifting my hair as if he were going to scalp +me. I thought it was all over with me, and that my best hope was that +they would knock me in the head instead of burning me, as I believed +they would do." In fact, a Seneca chief demanded that he should be +burned; while an Onondaga chief, a friend of La Salle, was for setting +him free. The dispute grew fierce and hot. Tonty told them that the +Illinois were twelve hundred strong, and that sixty Frenchmen were at +the village, ready to back them. This invention, though not fully +believed, had no little effect. The friendly Onondaga carried his point; +and the Iroquois, having failed to surprise their enemies, as they had +hoped, now saw an opportunity to delude them by a truce. They sent back +Tonty with a belt of peace: he held it aloft in sight of the Illinois; +chiefs and old warriors ran to stop the fight; the yells and the firing +ceased; and Tonty, like one waked from a hideous nightmare, dizzy, +almost fainting with loss of blood, staggered across the intervening +prairie, to rejoin his friends. He was met by the two friars, Ribourde +and Membré, who in their secluded hut, a league from the village, had +but lately heard of what was passing, and who now, with benedictions and +thanksgiving, ran to embrace him as a man escaped from the jaws of +death. + +The Illinois now withdrew, re-embarking in their canoes, and crossing +again to their lodges; but scarcely had they reached them, when their +enemies appeared at the edge of the forest on the opposite bank. Many +found means to cross, and, under the pretext of seeking for provisions, +began to hover in bands about the skirts of the town, constantly +increasing in numbers. Had the Illinois dared to remain, a massacre +would doubtless have ensued; but they knew their foe too well, set fire +to their lodges, embarked in haste, and paddled down the stream to +rejoin their women and children at the sanctuary among the morasses. The +whole body of the Iroquois now crossed the river, took possession of the +abandoned town, building for themselves a rude redoubt or fort of the +trunks of trees and of the posts and poles forming the framework of the +lodges which escaped the fire. Here they ensconced themselves, and +finished the work of havoc at their leisure. + +Tonty and his companions still occupied their hut; but the Iroquois, +becoming suspicious of them, forced them to remove to the fort, crowded +as it was with the savage crew. On the second day, there was an alarm. +The Illinois appeared in numbers on the low hills, half a mile behind +the town; and the Iroquois, who had felt their courage, and who had +been told by Tonty that they were twice as numerous as themselves, +showed symptoms of no little uneasiness. They proposed that he should +act as mediator, to which he gladly assented, and crossed the meadow +towards the Illinois, accompanied by Membré, and by an Iroquois who was +sent as a hostage. The Illinois hailed the overtures with delight, gave +the ambassadors some refreshment, which they sorely needed, and sent +back with them a young man of their nation as a hostage on their part. +This indiscreet youth nearly proved the ruin of the negotiation; for he +was no sooner among the Iroquois than he showed such an eagerness to +close the treaty, made such promises, professed such gratitude, and +betrayed so rashly the numerical weakness of the Illinois, that he +revived all the insolence of the invaders. They turned furiously upon +Tonty, and charged him with having robbed them of the glory and the +spoils of victory. "Where are all your Illinois warriors, and where are +the sixty Frenchmen that you said were among them?" It needed all +Tonty's tact and coolness to extricate himself from this new danger. + +[Sidenote: IROQUOIS TREACHERY.] + +The treaty was at length concluded; but scarcely was it made, when the +Iroquois prepared to break it, and set about constructing canoes of +elm-bark, in which to attack the Illinois women and children in their +island sanctuary. Tonty warned his allies that the pretended peace was +but a snare for their destruction. The Iroquois, on their part, grew +hourly more jealous of him, and would certainly have killed him, had it +not been their policy to keep the peace with Frontenac and the French. + +Several days after, they summoned him and Membré to a council. Six packs +of beaver-skins were brought in; and the savage orator presented them to +Tonty in turn, explaining their meaning as he did so. The first two were +to declare that the children of Count Frontenac--that is, the +Illinois--should not be eaten; the next was a plaster to heal Tonty's +wound; the next was oil wherewith to anoint him and Membré, that they +might not be fatigued in travelling; the next proclaimed that the sun +was bright; and the sixth and last required them to decamp and go +home.[191] Tonty thanked them for their gifts, but demanded when they +themselves meant to go and leave the Illinois in peace. At this, the +conclave grew angry; and, despite their late pledge, some of them said +that before they went they would eat Illinois flesh. Tonty instantly +kicked away the packs of beaver-skins, the Indian symbol of the scornful +rejection of a proposal, telling them that since they meant to eat the +governor's children he would have none of their presents. The chiefs, +in a rage, rose and drove him from the lodge. The French withdrew to +their hut, where they stood all night on the watch, expecting an attack, +and resolved to sell their lives dearly. At daybreak, the chiefs ordered +them to begone. + +[Sidenote: MURDER OF RIBOURDE.] + +Tonty, with admirable fidelity and courage, had done all in the power of +man to protect the allies of Canada against their ferocious assailants; +and he thought it unwise to persist further in a course which could lead +to no good, and which would probably end in the destruction of the whole +party. He embarked in a leaky canoe with Membré, Ribourde, Boisrondet, +and the remaining two men, and began to ascend the river. After paddling +about five leagues, they landed to dry their baggage and repair their +crazy vessel; when Father Ribourde, breviary in hand, strolled across +the sunny meadows for an hour of meditation among the neighboring +groves. Evening approached, and he did not return. Tonty, with one of +the men, went to look for him, and, following his tracks, presently +discovered those of a band of Indians, who had apparently seized or +murdered him. Still, they did not despair. They fired their guns to +guide him, should he still be alive; built a huge fire by the bank, and +then, crossing the river, lay watching it from the other side. At +midnight, they saw the figure of a man hovering around the blaze; then +many more appeared, but Ribourde was not among them. In truth, a band of +Kickapoos, enemies of the Iroquois, about whose camp they had been +prowling in quest of scalps, had met and wantonly murdered the +inoffensive old man. They carried his scalp to their village, and danced +round it in triumph, pretending to have taken it from an enemy. Thus, in +his sixty-fifth year, the only heir of a wealthy Burgundian house +perished under the war-clubs of the savages for whose salvation he had +renounced station, ease, and affluence.[192] + +[Sidenote: ATTACK OF THE IROQUOIS.] + +Meanwhile, a hideous scene was enacted at the ruined village of the +Illinois. Their savage foes, balked of a living prey, wreaked their fury +on the dead. They dug up the graves; they threw down the scaffolds. Some +of the bodies they burned; some they threw to the dogs; some, it is +affirmed, they ate.[193] Placing the skulls on stakes as trophies, they +turned to pursue the Illinois, who, when the French withdrew, had +abandoned their asylum and retreated down the river. The Iroquois, +still, it seems, in awe of them, followed them along the opposite bank, +each night encamping face to face with them; and thus the adverse bands +moved slowly southward, till they were near the mouth of the river. +Hitherto, the compact array of the Illinois had held their enemies in +check; but now, suffering from hunger, and lulled into security by the +assurances of the Iroquois that their object was not to destroy them, +but only to drive them from the country, they rashly separated into +their several tribes. Some descended the Mississippi; some, more +prudent, crossed to the western side. One of their principal tribes, the +Tamaroas, more credulous than the rest, had the fatuity to remain near +the mouth of the Illinois, where they were speedily assailed by all the +force of the Iroquois. The men fled, and very few of them were killed; +but the women and children were captured to the number, it is said, of +seven hundred.[194] Then followed that scene of torture of which, some +two weeks later, La Salle saw the revolting traces.[195] Sated, at +length, with horrors, the conquerors withdrew, leading with them a host +of captives, and exulting in their triumphs over women, children, and +the dead. + +After the death of Father Ribourde, Tonty and his companions remained +searching for him till noon of the next day, and then in despair of +again seeing him, resumed their journey. They ascended the river, +leaving no token of their passage at the junction of its northern and +southern branches. For food, they gathered acorns and dug roots in the +meadows. Their canoe proved utterly worthless; and, feeble as they were, +they set out on foot for Lake Michigan. Boisrondet wandered off, and was +lost. He had dropped the flint of his gun, and he had no bullets; but he +cut a pewter porringer into slugs, with which he shot wild turkeys by +discharging his piece with a fire-brand, and after several days he had +the good fortune to rejoin the party. Their object was to reach the +Pottawattamies of Green Bay. Had they aimed at Michilimackinac, they +would have found an asylum with La Forest at the fort on the St. Joseph; +but unhappily they passed westward of that post, and, by way of Chicago, +followed the borders of Lake Michigan northward. The cold was intense; +and it was no easy task to grub up wild onions from the frozen ground to +save themselves from starving. Tonty fell ill of a fever and a swelling +of the limbs, which disabled him from travelling, and hence ensued a +long delay. At length they neared Green Bay, where they would have +starved, had they not gleaned a few ears of corn and frozen squashes in +the fields of an empty Indian town. + +[Sidenote: FRIENDS IN NEED.] + +This enabled them to reach the bay, and having patched an old canoe +which they had the good luck to find, they embarked in it; whereupon, +says Tonty, "there rose a northwest wind, which lasted five days, with +driving snow. We consumed all our food; and not knowing what to do next, +we resolved to go back to the deserted town, and die by a warm fire in +one of the wigwams. On our way, we saw a smoke; but our joy was short, +for when we reached the fire we found nobody there. We spent the night +by it; and before morning the bay froze. We tried to break a way for our +canoe through the ice, but could not; and therefore we determined to +stay there another night, and make moccasins in order to reach the town. +We made some out of Father Gabriel's cloak. I was angry with Étienne +Renault for not finishing his; but he excused himself on account of +illness, because he had a great oppression of the stomach, caused by +eating a piece of an Indian shield of raw-hide, which he could not +digest. His delay proved our salvation; for the next day, December +fourth, as I was urging him to finish the moccasins, and he was still +excusing himself on the score of his malady, a party of Kiskakon +Ottawas, who were on their way to the Pottawattamies, saw the smoke of +our fire, and came to us. We gave them such a welcome as was never seen +before. They took us into their canoes, and carried us to an Indian +village, only two leagues off. There we found five Frenchmen, who +received us kindly, and all the Indians seemed to take pleasure in +sending us food; so that, after thirty-four days of starvation, we found +our famine turned to abundance." + +This hospitable village belonged to the Pottawattamies, and was under +the sway of the chief who had befriended La Salle the year before, and +who was wont to say that he knew but three great captains in the +world,--Frontenac, La Salle, and himself.[196] + +THE ILLINOIS TOWN. + +The Site of the Great Illinois Town.--This has not till now been +determined, though there have been various conjectures concerning it. +From a study of the contemporary documents and maps, I became satisfied, +first, that the branch of the river Illinois, called the "Big +Vermilion," was the _Aramoni_ of the French explorers; and, secondly, +that the cliff called "Starved Rock" was that known to the French as _Le +Rocher_, or the Rock of St. Louis. If I was right in this conclusion, +then the position of the Great Village was established; for there is +abundant proof that it was on the north side of the river, above the +Aramoni, and below Le Rocher. I accordingly went to the village of +Utica, which, as I judged by the map, was very near the point in +question, and mounted to the top of one of the hills immediately behind +it, whence I could see the valley of the Illinois for miles, bounded on +the farther side by a range of hills, in some parts rocky and +precipitous, and in others covered with forests. Far on the right was a +gap in these hills, through which the Big Vermilion flowed to join the +Illinois; and somewhat towards the left, at the distance of a mile and a +half, was a huge cliff, rising perpendicularly from the opposite margin +of the river. This I assumed to be _Le Rocher_ of the French, though +from where I stood I was unable to discern the distinctive features +which I was prepared to find in it. In every other respect, the scene +before me was precisely what I had expected to see. There was a meadow +on the hither side of the river, on which stood a farmhouse; and this, +as it seemed to me, by its relations with surrounding objects, might be +supposed to stand in the midst of the space once occupied by the +Illinois town. + +On the way down from the hill I met Mr. James Clark, the principal +inhabitant of Utica, and one of the earliest settlers of this region. I +accosted him, told him my objects, and requested a half hour's +conversation with him, at his leisure. He seemed interested in the +inquiry, and said he would visit me early in the evening at the inn, +where, accordingly, he soon appeared. The conversation took place in the +porch, where a number of farmers and others were gathered. I asked Mr. +Clark if any Indian remains were found in the neighborhood. "Yes," he +replied, "plenty of them." I then inquired if there was any one spot +where they were more numerous than elsewhere. "Yes," he answered again, +pointing towards the farmhouse on the meadow; "on my farm down yonder by +the river, my tenant ploughs up teeth and bones by the peck every +spring, besides arrow-heads, beads, stone hatchets, and other things of +that sort." I replied that this was precisely what I had expected, as I +had been led to believe that the principal town of the Illinois Indians +once covered that very spot. "If," I added, "I am right in this belief, +the great rock beyond the river is the one which the first explorers +occupied as a fort; and I can describe it to you from their accounts of +it, though I have never seen it, except from the top of the hill where +the trees on and around it prevented me from seeing any part but the +front." The men present now gathered around to listen. "The rock," I +continued, "is nearly a hundred and fifty feet high, and rises directly +from the water. The front and two sides are perpendicular and +inaccessible; but there is one place where it is possible for a man to +climb up, though with difficulty. The top is large enough and level +enough for houses and fortifications." Here several of the men +exclaimed: "That's just it." "You've hit it exactly." I then asked if +there was any other rock on that side of the river which could answer to +the description. They all agreed that there was no such rock on either +side, along the whole length of the river. I then said: "If the Indian +town was in the place where I suppose it to have been, I can tell you +the nature of the country which lies behind the hills on the farther +side of the river, though I know nothing about it except what I have +learned from writings nearly two centuries old. From the top of the +hills, you look out upon a great prairie reaching as far as you can see, +except that it is crossed by a belt of woods, following the course of a +stream which enters the main river a few miles below." (See _ante_, p. +221, _note_.) "You are exactly right again," replied Mr. Clark; "we call +that belt of timber the 'Vermilion Woods,' and the stream is the Big +Vermilion." "Then," I said, "the Big Vermilion is the river which the +French called the Aramoni; 'Starved Rock' is the same on which they +built a fort called St. Louis, in the year 1682; and your farm is on the +site of the great town of the Illinois." + +I spent the next day in examining these localities, and was fully +confirmed in my conclusions. Mr. Clark's tenant showed me the spot where +the human bones were ploughed up. It was no doubt the graveyard violated +by the Iroquois. The Illinois returned to the village after their +defeat, and long continued to occupy it. The scattered bones were +probably collected and restored to their place of burial. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[179] For the particulars of this desertion, Membré in Le Clerc, ii. +171, _Relation des Découvertes_; Tonty, _Mémoire_, 1684, 1693; +_Déclaration faite par devant le Sr. Duchesneau, Intendant en Canada, +par Moyse Hillaret, charpentier de barque cy-devant au service du Sr. +de la Salle, Aoust, 1680_. + +Moyse Hillaret, the "Maître Moyse" of Hennepin, was a ring-leader of the +deserters, and seems to have been one of those captured by La Salle near +Fort Frontenac. Twelve days after, Hillaret was examined by La Salle's +enemy, the intendant; and this paper is the formal statement made by +him. It gives the names of most of the men, and furnishes incidental +confirmation of many statements of Hennepin, Tonty, Membré, and the +_Relation des Découvertes_. Hillaret, Leblanc, and Le Meilleur, the +blacksmith nicknamed La Forge, went off together, and the rest seem to +have followed afterwards. Hillaret does not admit that any goods were +wantonly destroyed. + +There is before me a schedule of the debts of La Salle, made after his +death. It includes a claim of this man for wages to the amount of 2,500 +livres. + +[180] Two of the messengers, Laurent and Messier, arrived safely. The +others seem to have deserted. + +[181] The Jesuits in North America. + +[182] Duchesneau, in _Paris Docs._, ix. 163. + +[183] There had long been a rankling jealousy between the Miamis and the +Illinois. According to Membré, La Salle's enemies had intrigued +successfully among the former, as well as among the Iroquois, to induce +them to take arms against the Illinois. + +[184] The above is from notes made on the spot. The following is La +Salle's description of the locality in the _Relation des Découvertes_, +written in 1681: "La rive gauche de la rivière, du coté du sud, est +occupée par un long rocher, fort étroit et escarpé presque partout, à la +réserve d'un endroit de plus d'une lieue de longueur, situé vis-à-vis du +village, ou le terrain, tout couvert de beaux chênes, s'étend par une +pente douce jusqu'au bord de la rivière. Au delà de cette hauteur est +une vaste plaine, qui s'étend bien loin du coté du sud, et qui est +traversée par la rivière Aramoni, dont les bords sont couverts d'une +lisière de bois peu large." + +The Aramoni is laid down on the great manuscript map of Franquelin, +1684, and on the map of Coronelli, 1688. It is, without doubt, the Big +Vermilion. _Aramoni_ is the Illinois word for "red," or "vermilion." +Starved Rock, or the Rock of St. Louis, is the highest and steepest +escarpment of the _long rocher_ above mentioned. + +[185] The Illinois were an aggregation of distinct though kindred +tribes,--the Kaskaskias, the Peorias, the Kahokias, the Tamaroas, the +Moingona, and others. Their general character and habits were those of +other Indian tribes; but they were reputed somewhat cowardly and +slothful. In their manners, they were more licentious than many of their +neighbors, and addicted to practices which are sometimes supposed to be +the result of a perverted civilization. Young men enacting the part of +women were frequently to be seen among them. These were held in great +contempt. Some of the early travellers, both among the Illinois and +among other tribes, where the same practice prevailed, mistook them for +hermaphrodites. According to Charlevoix (_Journal Historique_, 303), +this abuse was due in part to a superstition. The Miamis and Piankishaws +were in close affinities of language and habits with the Illinois. All +these tribes belonged to the great Algonquin family. The first +impressions which the French received of them, as recorded in the +_Relation_ of 1671, were singularly favorable; but a closer acquaintance +did not confirm them. The Illinois traded with the lake tribes, to whom +they carried slaves taken in war, receiving in exchange guns, hatchets, +and other French goods. Marquette in _Relation_, 1670, 91. + +[186] This is Membré's date. The narratives differ as to the day, though +all agree as to the month. + +[187] The _Relation des Découvertes_ says, five hundred Iroquois and one +hundred Shawanoes. Membré says that the allies were Miamis. He is no +doubt right, as the Miamis had promised their aid, and the Shawanoes +were at peace with the Illinois. Tonty is silent on the point. + +[188] Membré says that he went with Tonty: "J'étois aussi à côté du +Sieur de Tonty." This is an invention of the friar's vanity. "Les deux +pères Récollets étoient alors dans une cabane à une lieue du village, où +ils s'étoient retirés pour faire une espèce de retraite, et ils ne +furent avertis de l'arrivée des Iroquois que dans le temps du +combat."--_Relation des Découvertes_. "Je rencontrai en chemin les pères +Gabriel et Zenobe Membré, qui cherchoient de mes nouvelles."--Tonty, +_Mémoire_, 1693. This was on his return from the Iroquois. The +_Relation_ confirms the statement, as far as concerns Membré: "II +rencontra le Père Zenobe [_Membré_], qui venoit pour le secourir, aiant +été averti du combat et de sa blessure." + +The perverted _Dernières Découvertes_, published without authority, +under Tonty's name, says that he was attended by a slave, whom the +Illinois sent with him as interpreter. In his narrative of 1684, Tonty +speaks of a Sokokis (Saco) Indian who was with the Iroquois and who +spoke French enough to serve as interpreter. + +[189] Being once in an encampment of Sioux when a quarrel broke out, and +the adverse factions raised the war-whoop and began to fire at each +other, I had a good, though for the moment a rather dangerous, +opportunity of seeing the demeanor of Indians at the beginning of a +fight. The fray was quelled before much mischief was done, by the +vigorous intervention of the elder warriors, who ran between the +combatants. + +[190] "Je leur fis connoistre que les Islinois étoient sous la +protection du roy de France et du gouverneur du pays, que j'estois +surpris qu'ils voulussent rompre avec les François et qu'ils voulussent +_attendre_ [_sic_] à une paix."--Tonty, _Mémoire_, 1693. + +[191] An Indian speech, it will be remembered, is without validity if +not confirmed by presents, each of which has its special interpretation. +The meaning of the fifth pack of beaver, informing Tonty that the sun +was bright,--"que le soleil étoit beau," that is, that the weather was +favorable for travelling,--is curiously misconceived by the editor of +the _Dernières Découvertes_, who improves upon his original by +substituting the words "par le cinquième paquet _ils nous exhortoient à +adorer le Soleil_." + +[192] Tonty, _Mémoire_; Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 191. Hennepin, who hated +Tonty, unjustly charges him with having abandoned the search too soon, +admitting, however, that it would have been useless to continue it. This +part of his narrative is a perversion of Membré's account. + +[193] "Cependant les Iroquois, aussitôt après le départ du Sr. de +Tonty, exercèrent leur rage sur les corps morts des Ilinois, qu'ils +déterrèrent ou abbattèrent de dessus les échafauds où les Ilinois les +laissent longtemps exposés avant que de les mettre en terre. Ils en +brûlèrent la plus grande partie, ils en mangèrent même quelques uns, et +jettèrent le reste aux chiens. Ils plantèrent les têtes de ces cadavres +à demi décharnés sur des pieux," etc.--_Relation des Découvertes_. + +[194] _Relation des Découvertes_; Frontenac to the King, _N. Y. Col. +Docs._, ix. 147. A memoir of Duchesneau makes the number twelve hundred. + +[195] "Ils [_les Illinois_] trouvèrent dans leur campement des carcasses +de leurs enfans que ces anthropophages avoient mangez, ne voulant même +d'autre nourriture que la chair de ces infortunez."--_La Potherie_, ii. +145, 146. Compare _note, ante_, p. 211. + +[196] Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 199. The other authorities for the +foregoing chapter are the letters of La Salle, the _Relation des +Découvertes_, in which portions of them are embodied, and the two +narratives of Tonty, of 1684 and 1693. They all agree in essential +points. + +In his letters of this period, La Salle dwells at great length on the +devices by which, as he believed, his enemies tried to ruin him and his +enterprise. He is particularly severe against the Jesuit Allouez, whom +he charges with intriguing "pour commencer la guerre entre les Iroquois +et les Illinois par le moyen des Miamis qu'on engageoit dans cette +négociation afin ou de me faire massacrer avec mes gens par quelqu'une +de ces nations ou de me brouiller avec les Iroquois."--_Lettre (à +Thouret?), 22 Août, 1682_. He gives in detail the circumstances on which +this suspicion rests, but which are not convincing. He says, further, +that the Jesuits gave out that Tonty was dead in order to discourage the +men going to his relief, and that Allouez encouraged the deserters, +"leur servoit de conseil, bénit mesme leurs balles, et les asseura +plusieurs fois que M. de Tonty auroit la teste cassée." He also affirms +that great pains were taken to spread the report that he was himself +dead. A Kiskakon Indian, he says, was sent to Tonty with a story to this +effect; while a Huron named Scortas was sent to him (La Salle) with +false news of the death of Tonty. The latter confirms this statement, +and adds that the Illinois had been told "que M. de la Salle estoit venu +en leur pays pour les donner à manger aux Iroquois." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +1680. + +THE ADVENTURES OF HENNEPIN. + + Hennepin an Impostor: his Pretended Discovery; his Actual + Discovery; Captured by the Sioux.--The Upper Mississippi. + + +It was on the last day of the winter that preceded the invasion of the +Iroquois that Father Hennepin, with his two companions, Accau and Du +Gay, had set out from Fort Crèvecoeur to explore the Illinois to its +mouth. It appears from his own later statements, as well as from those +of Tonty, that more than this was expected of him, and that La Salle had +instructed him to explore, not alone the Illinois, but also the Upper +Mississippi. That he actually did so, there is no reasonable doubt; and +could he have contented himself with telling the truth, his name would +have stood high as a bold and vigorous discoverer. But his vicious +attempts to malign his commander and plunder him of his laurels have +wrapped his genuine merit in a cloud. + +Hennepin's first book was published soon after his return from his +travels, and while La Salle was still alive. In it he relates the +accomplishment of the instructions given him, without the smallest +intimation that he did more.[197] Fourteen years after, when La Salle +was dead, he published another edition of his travels,[198] in which he +advanced a new and surprising pretension. Reasons connected with his +personal safety, he declares, before compelled him to remain silent; but +a time at length had come when the truth must be revealed. And he +proceeds to affirm, that, before ascending the Mississippi, he, with his +two men, explored its whole course from the Illinois to the sea,--thus +anticipating the discovery which forms the crowning laurel of La Salle. + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN'S RESOLUTION.] + +"I am resolved," he says, "to make known here to the whole world the +mystery of this discovery, which I have hitherto concealed, that I might +not offend the Sieur de la Salle, who wished to keep all the glory and +all the knowledge of it to himself. It is for this that he sacrificed +many persons whose lives he exposed, to prevent them from making known +what they had seen, and thereby crossing his secret plans.... I was +certain that if I went down the Mississippi, he would not fail to +traduce me to my superiors for not taking the northern route, which I +was to have followed in accordance with his desire and the plan we had +made together. But I saw myself on the point of dying of hunger, and +knew not what to do; because the two men who were with me threatened +openly to leave me in the night, and carry off the canoe and everything +in it, if I prevented them from going down the river to the nations +below. Finding myself in this dilemma, I thought that I ought not to +hesitate, and that I ought to prefer my own safety to the violent +passion which possessed the Sieur de la Salle of enjoying alone the +glory of this discovery. The two men, seeing that I had made up my mind +to follow them, promised me entire fidelity; so, after we had shaken +hands together as a mutual pledge, we set out on our voyage."[199] + +He then proceeds to recount at length the particulars of his alleged +exploration. The story was distrusted from the first.[200] Why had he +not told it before? An excess of modesty, a lack of self-assertion, or a +too sensitive reluctance to wound the susceptibilities of others, had +never been found among his foibles. Yet some, perhaps, might have +believed him, had he not in the first edition of his book gratuitously +and distinctly declared that he did not make the voyage in question. "We +had some designs," he says, "of going down the river Colbert +[Mississippi] as far as its mouth; but the tribes that took us prisoners +gave us no time to navigate this river both up and down."[201] + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN AN IMPOSTOR.] + +In declaring to the world the achievement which he had so long concealed +and so explicitly denied, the worthy missionary found himself in serious +embarrassment. In his first book, he had stated that on the twelfth of +March he left the mouth of the Illinois on his way northward, and that +on the eleventh of April he was captured by the Sioux near the mouth of +the Wisconsin, five hundred miles above. This would give him only a +month to make his alleged canoe-voyage from the Illinois to the Gulf of +Mexico, and again upward to the place of his capture,--a distance of +three thousand two hundred and sixty miles. With his means of +transportation, three months would have been insufficient.[202] He saw +the difficulty; but, on the other hand, he saw that he could not greatly +change either date without confusing the parts of his narrative which +preceded and which followed. In this perplexity he chose a middle +course, which only involved him in additional contradictions. Having, as +he affirms, gone down to the Gulf and returned to the mouth of the +Illinois, he set out thence to explore the river above; and he assigns +the twenty-fourth of April as the date of this departure. This gives him +forty-three days for his voyage to the mouth of the river and back. +Looking further, we find that having left the Illinois on the +twenty-fourth he paddled his canoe two hundred leagues northward, and +was then captured by the Sioux on the twelfth of the same month. In +short, he ensnares himself in a hopeless confusion of dates.[203] + +Here, one would think, is sufficient reason for rejecting his story; and +yet the general truth of the descriptions, and a certain verisimilitude +which marks it, might easily deceive a careless reader and perplex a +critical one. These, however, are easily explained. Six years before +Hennepin published his pretended discovery, his brother friar, Father +Chrétien Le Clerc, published an account of the Récollet missions among +the Indians, under the title of "Établissement de la Foi." This book, +offensive to the Jesuits, is said to have been suppressed by order of +government; but a few copies fortunately survive.[204] One of these is +now before me. It contains the journal of Father Zenobe Membré, on his +descent of the Mississippi in 1681, in company with La Salle. The +slightest comparison of his narrative with that of Hennepin is +sufficient to show that the latter framed his own story out of incidents +and descriptions furnished by his brother missionary, often using his +very words, and sometimes copying entire pages, with no other +alterations than such as were necessary to make himself, instead of La +Salle and his companions, the hero of the exploit. The records of +literary piracy may be searched in vain for an act of depredation more +recklessly impudent.[205] + +Such being the case, what faith can we put in the rest of Hennepin's +story? Fortunately, there are tests by which the earlier parts of his +book can be tried; and, on the whole, they square exceedingly well with +contemporary records of undoubted authenticity. Bating his exaggerations +respecting the Falls of Niagara, his local descriptions, and even his +estimates of distance, are generally accurate. He constantly, it is +true, magnifies his own acts, and thrusts himself forward as one of the +chiefs of an enterprise to the costs of which he had contributed +nothing, and to which he was merely an appendage; and yet, till he +reaches the Mississippi, there can be no doubt that in the main he tells +the truth. As for his ascent of that river to the country of the Sioux, +the general statement is fully confirmed by La Salle, Tonty, and other +contemporary writers.[206] For the details of the journey we must rest +on Hennepin alone, whose account of the country and of the peculiar +traits of its Indian occupants afford, as far as they go, good evidence +of truth. Indeed, this part of his narrative could only have been +written by one well versed in the savage life of this northwestern +region.[207] Trusting, then, to his own guidance in the absence of +better, let us follow in the wake of his adventurous canoe. + +[Sidenote: HIS VOYAGE NORTHWARD.] + +It was laden deeply with goods belonging to La Salle, and meant by him +as presents to Indians on the way, though the travellers, it appears, +proposed to use them in trading on their own account. The friar was +still wrapped in his gray capote and hood, shod with sandals, and +decorated with the cord of St. Francis. As for his two companions, +Accau[208] and Du Gay, it is tolerably clear that the former was the +real leader of the party, though Hennepin, after his custom, thrusts +himself into the foremost place. Both were somewhat above the station of +ordinary hired hands; and Du Gay had an uncle who was an ecclesiastic of +good credit at Amiens, his native place. + +In the forests that overhung the river the buds were feebly swelling +with advancing spring. There was game enough. They killed buffalo, deer, +beavers, wild turkeys, and now and then a bear swimming in the river. +With these, and the fish which they caught in abundance, they fared +sumptuously, though it was the season of Lent. They were exemplary, +however, at their devotions. Hennepin said prayers at morning and night, +and the _angelus_ at noon, adding a petition to Saint Anthony of Padua +that he would save them from the peril that beset their way. In truth, +there was a lion in the path. The ferocious character of the Sioux, or +Dacotah, who occupied the region of the Upper Mississippi, was already +known to the French; and Hennepin, with excellent reason, prayed that it +might be his fortune to meet them, not by night, but by day. + +[Sidenote: CAPTURED BY THE SIOUX.] + +On the eleventh or twelfth of April, they stopped in the afternoon to +repair their canoe; and Hennepin busied himself in daubing it with +pitch, while the others cooked a turkey. Suddenly, a fleet of Sioux +canoes swept into sight, bearing a war-party of a hundred and twenty +naked savages, who on seeing the travellers raised a hideous clamor; +and, some leaping ashore and others into the water, they surrounded the +astonished Frenchmen in an instant.[209] Hennepin held out the +peace-pipe; but one of them snatched it from him. Next, he hastened to +proffer a gift of Martinique tobacco, which was better received. Some of +the old warriors repeated the name _Miamiha_, giving him to understand +that they were a war-party, on the way to attack the Miamis; on which, +Hennepin, with the help of signs and of marks which he drew on the sand +with a stick, explained that the Miamis had gone across the Mississippi, +beyond their reach. Hereupon, he says that three or four old men placed +their hands on his head, and began a dismal wailing; while he with his +handkerchief wiped away their tears, in order to evince sympathy with +their affliction, from whatever cause arising. Notwithstanding this +demonstration of tenderness, they refused to smoke with him in his +peace-pipe, and forced him and his companions to embark and paddle +across the river; while they all followed behind, uttering yells and +howlings which froze the missionary's blood. + +On reaching the farther side, they made their camp-fires, and allowed +their prisoners to do the same. Accau and Du Gay slung their kettle; +while Hennepin, to propitiate the Sioux, carried to them two turkeys, +of which there were several in the canoe. The warriors had seated +themselves in a ring, to debate on the fate of the Frenchmen; and two +chiefs presently explained to the friar, by significant signs, that it +had been resolved that his head should be split with a war-club. This +produced the effect which was no doubt intended. Hennepin ran to the +canoe, and quickly returned with one of the men, both loaded with +presents, which he threw into the midst of the assembly; and then, +bowing his head, offered them at the same time a hatchet with which to +kill him, if they wished to do so. His gifts and his submission seemed +to appease them. They gave him and his companions a dish of beaver's +flesh; but, to his great concern, they returned his peace-pipe,--an act +which he interpreted as a sign of danger. That night the Frenchmen slept +little, expecting to be murdered before morning. There was, in fact, a +great division of opinion among the Sioux. Some were for killing them +and taking their goods; while others, eager above all things that French +traders should come among them with the knives, hatchets, and guns of +which they had heard the value, contended that it would be impolitic to +discourage the trade by putting to death its pioneers. + +Scarcely had morning dawned on the anxious captives, when a young chief, +naked, and painted from head to foot, appeared before them and asked for +the pipe, which the friar gladly gave him. He filled it, smoked it, +made the warriors do the same, and, having given this hopeful pledge of +amity, told the Frenchmen that, since the Miamis were out of reach, the +war-party would return home, and that they must accompany them. To this +Hennepin gladly agreed, having, as he declares, his great work of +exploration so much at heart that he rejoiced in the prospect of +achieving it even in their company. + +[Sidenote: SUSPECTED OF SORCERY.] + +He soon, however, had a foretaste of the affliction in store for him; +for when he opened his breviary and began to mutter his morning +devotion, his new companions gathered about him with faces that betrayed +their superstitious terror, and gave him to understand that his book was +a bad spirit with which he must hold no more converse. They thought, +indeed, that he was muttering a charm for their destruction. Accau and +Du Gay, conscious of the danger, begged the friar to dispense with his +devotions, lest he and they alike should be tomahawked; but Hennepin +says that his sense of duty rose superior to his fears, and that he was +resolved to repeat his office at all hazards, though not until he had +asked pardon of his two friends for thus imperilling their lives. +Fortunately, he presently discovered a device by which his devotion and +his prudence were completely reconciled. He ceased the muttering which +had alarmed the Indians, and, with the breviary open on his knees, sang +the service in loud and cheerful tones. As this had no savor of sorcery, +and as they now imagined that the book was teaching its owner to sing +for their amusement, they conceived a favorable opinion of both alike. + +These Sioux, it may be observed, were the ancestors of those who +committed the horrible but not unprovoked massacres of 1862, in the +valley of the St. Peter. Hennepin complains bitterly of their treatment +of him, which, however, seems to have been tolerably good. Afraid that +he would lag behind, as his canoe was heavy and slow,[210] they placed +several warriors in it to aid him and his men in paddling. They kept on +their way from morning till night, building huts for their bivouac when +it rained, and sleeping on the open ground when the weather was +fair,--which, says Hennepin, "gave us a good opportunity to contemplate +the moon and stars." The three Frenchmen took the precaution of sleeping +at the side of the young chief who had been the first to smoke the +peace-pipe, and who seemed inclined to befriend them; but there was +another chief, one Aquipaguetin, a crafty old savage, who having lost a +son in war with the Miamis, was angry that the party had abandoned their +expedition, and thus deprived him of his revenge. He therefore kept up a +dismal lament through half the night; while other old men, crouching +over Hennepin as he lay trying to sleep, stroked him with their hands, +and uttered wailings so lugubrious that he was forced to the belief +that he had been doomed to death, and that they were charitably +bemoaning his fate.[211] + +[Sidenote: THE CAPTIVE FRIAR.] + +One night, the captives were, for some reason, unable to bivouac near +their protector, and were forced to make their fire at the end of the +camp. Here they were soon beset by a crowd of Indians, who told them +that Aquipaguetin had at length resolved to tomahawk them. The +malcontents were gathered in a knot at a little distance, and Hennepin +hastened to appease them by another gift of knives and tobacco. This was +but one of the devices of the old chief to deprive them of their goods +without robbing them outright. He had with him the bones of a deceased +relative, which he was carrying home wrapped in skins prepared with +smoke after the Indian fashion, and gayly decorated with bands of dyed +porcupine quills. He would summon his warriors, and placing these relics +in the midst of the assembly, call on all present to smoke in their +honor; after which, Hennepin was required to offer a more substantial +tribute in the shape of cloth, beads, hatchets, tobacco, and the like, +to be laid upon the bundle of bones. The gifts thus acquired were then, +in the name of the deceased, distributed among the persons present. + +On one occasion, Aquipaguetin killed a bear, and invited the chiefs and +warriors to feast upon it. They accordingly assembled on a prairie, west +of the river, where, after the banquet, they danced a "medicine-dance." +They were all painted from head to foot, with their hair oiled, +garnished with red and white feathers, and powdered with the down of +birds. In this guise they set their arms akimbo, and fell to stamping +with such fury that the hard prairie was dented with the prints of their +moccasins; while the chief's son, crying at the top of his throat, gave +to each in turn the pipe of war. Meanwhile, the chief himself, singing +in a loud and rueful voice, placed his hands on the heads of the three +Frenchmen, and from time to time interrupted his music to utter a +vehement harangue. Hennepin could not understand the words, but his +heart sank as the conviction grew strong within him that these +ceremonies tended to his destruction. It seems, however, that, after all +the chief's efforts, his party was in the minority, the greater part +being adverse to either killing or robbing the three strangers. + +Every morning, at daybreak, an old warrior shouted the signal of +departure; and the recumbent savages leaped up, manned their birchen +fleet, and plied their paddles against the current, often without +waiting to break their fast. Sometimes they stopped for a buffalo-hunt +on the neighboring prairies; and there was no lack of provisions. They +passed Lake Pepin, which Hennepin called the Lake of Tears, by reason +of the howlings and lamentations here uttered over him by Aquipaguetin, +and nineteen days after his capture landed near the site of St. Paul. +The father's sorrows now began in earnest. The Indians broke his canoe +to pieces, having first hidden their own among the alder-bushes. As they +belonged to different bands and different villages, their mutual +jealousy now overcame all their prudence; and each proceeded to claim +his share of the captives and the booty. Happily, they made an amicable +distribution, or it would have fared ill with the three Frenchmen; and +each taking his share, not forgetting the priestly vestments of +Hennepin, the splendor of which they could not sufficiently admire, they +set out across the country for their villages, which lay towards the +north in the neighborhood of Lake Buade, now called Mille Lac. + +[Sidenote: A HARD JOURNEY.] + +Being, says Hennepin, exceedingly tall and active, they walked at a +prodigious speed, insomuch that no European could long keep pace with +them. Though the month of May had begun, there were frosts at night; and +the marshes and ponds were glazed with ice, which cut the missionary's +legs as he waded through. They swam the larger streams, and Hennepin +nearly perished with cold as he emerged from the icy current. His two +companions, who were smaller than he, and who could not swim, were +carried over on the backs of the Indians. They showed, however, no +little endurance; and he declares that he should have dropped by the +way, but for their support. Seeing him disposed to lag, the Indians, to +spur him on, set fire to the dry grass behind him, and then, taking him +by the hands, ran forward with him to escape the flames. To add to his +misery, he was nearly famished, as they gave him only a small piece of +smoked meat once a day, though it does not appear that they themselves +fared better. On the fifth day, being by this time in extremity, he saw +a crowd of squaws and children approaching over the prairie, and +presently descried the bark lodges of an Indian town. The goal was +reached. He was among the homes of the Sioux. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[197] _Description de la Louisiane, nouvellement découverte_, Paris, +1683. + +[198] _Nouvelle Découverte d'un très grand Pays situé dans l'Amérique_, +Utrecht, 1697. + +[199] _Nouvelle Découverte_, 248, 250, 251. + +[200] See the preface of the Spanish translation by Don Sebastian +Fernandez de Medrano, 1699, and also the letter of Gravier, dated 1701, +in Shea's _Early Voyages on the Mississippi_. Barcia, Charlevoix, Kalm, +and other early writers put a low value on Hennepin's veracity. + +[201] _Description de la Louisiane_, 218. + +[202] La Salle, in the following year, with a far better equipment, was +more than three months and a half in making the journey. A Mississippi +trading-boat of the last generation, with sails and oars, ascending +against the current, was thought to do remarkably well if it could make +twenty miles a day. Hennepin, if we believe his own statements, must +have ascended at an average rate of sixty miles, though his canoe was +large and heavily laden. + +[203] Hennepin here falls into gratuitous inconsistencies. In the +edition of 1697, in order to gain a little time, he says that he left +the Illinois on his voyage southward on the eighth of March, 1680; and +yet in the preceding chapter he repeats the statement of the first +edition, that he was detained at the Illinois by floating ice till the +twelfth. Again, he says in the first edition that he was captured by the +Sioux on the eleventh of April; and in the edition of 1697 he changes +this date to the twelfth, without gaining any advantage by doing so. + +[204] Le Clerc's book had been made the text of an attack on the +Jesuits. See _Reflexions sur un Livre intitulé Premier Établissement de +la Foi_. This piece is printed in the _Morale Pratique des Jésuites_. + +[205] Hennepin may have copied from the unpublished journal of Membré, +which the latter had placed in the hands of his Superior; or he may have +compiled from Le Clerc's book, relying on the suppression of the edition +to prevent detection. He certainly saw and used it; for he elsewhere +borrows the exact words of the editor. He is so careless that he steals +from Membré passages which he might easily have written for himself; as, +for example, a description of the opossum and another of the +cougar,--animals with which he was acquainted. Compare the following +pages of the _Nouvelle Découverte_ with the corresponding pages of Le +Clerc: Hennepin, 252, Le Clerc, ii. 217; H. 253, Le C. ii. 218; H. 257, +Le C. ii. 221; H. 259, Le C. ii. 224; H. 262, Le C. ii. 226; H. 265, Le +C. ii. 229; H. 267, Le C. ii. 233; H. 270, Le C. ii. 235; H. 280, Le C. +ii. 240; H. 295, Le C. ii. 249; H. 296, Le C. ii. 250; H. 297, Le C. ii. +253; H. 299, Le C. ii. 254; H. 301, Le C. ii. 257. Some of these +parallel passages will be found in Sparks's _Life of La Salle_, where +this remarkable fraud was first fully exposed. In Shea's _Discovery of +the Mississippi_, there is an excellent critical examination of +Hennepin's works. His plagiarisms from Le Clerc are not confined to the +passages cited above; for in his later editions he stole largely from +other parts of the suppressed _Établissement de la Foi_. + +[206] It is certain that persons having the best means of information +believed at the time in Hennepin's story of his journeys on the Upper +Mississippi. The compiler of the _Relation des Découvertes_, who was in +close relations with La Salle and those who acted with him, does not +intimate a doubt of the truth of the report which Hennepin on his return +gave to the Provincial Commissary of his Order, and which is in +substance the same which he published two years later. The _Relation_, +it is to be observed, was written only a few months after the return of +Hennepin, and embodies the pith of his narrative of the Upper +Mississippi, no part of which had then been published. + +[207] In this connection, it is well to examine the various Sioux words +which Hennepin uses incidentally, and which he must have acquired by +personal intercourse with the tribe, as no Frenchman then understood the +language. These words, as far as my information reaches, are in every +instance correct. Thus, he says that the Sioux called his breviary a +"bad spirit,"--_Ouackanché_. _Wakanshe_, or _Wakanshecha_, would express +the same meaning in modern English spelling. He says elsewhere that they +called the guns of his companions _Manzaouackanché_, which he +translates, "iron possessed with a bad spirit." The western Sioux to +this day call a gun _Manzawakan_, "metal possessed with a spirit." +_Chonga (shonka)_, "a dog," _Ouasi (wahsee)_, "a pine-tree," _Chinnen +(shinnan)_, "a robe," or "garment," and other words, are given +correctly, with their interpretations. The word _Louis_, affirmed by +Hennepin to mean "the sun," seems at first sight a wilful inaccuracy, as +this is not the word used in general by the Sioux. The Yankton band of +this people, however, call the sun _oouee_, which, it is evident, +represents the French pronunciation of _Louis_, omitting the initial +letter. This Hennepin would be apt enough to supply, thereby conferring +a compliment alike on himself, Louis Hennepin, and on the King, Louis +XIV., who, to the indignation of his brother monarchs, had chosen the +sun as his emblem. + +Various trivial incidents touched upon by Hennepin, while recounting his +life among the Sioux, seem to me to afford a strong presumption of an +actual experience. I speak on this point with the more confidence, as +the Indians in whose lodges I was once domesticated for several weeks +belonged to a western band of the same people. + +[208] Called Ako by Hennepin. In contemporary documents, it is written +Accau, Acau, D'Accau, Dacau, Dacan, and D'Accault. + +[209] The edition of 1683 says that there were thirty-three canoes; that +of 1697 raises the number to fifty. The number of Indians is the same in +both. The later narrative is more in detail than the former. + +[210] And yet it had, by his account, made a distance of thirteen +hundred and eighty miles from the mouth of the Mississippi upward in +twenty-four days! + +[211] This weeping and wailing over Hennepin once seemed to me an +anomaly in his account of Sioux manners, as I am not aware that such +practices are to be found among them at present. They are mentioned, +however, by other early writers. Le Sueur, who was among them in +1699-1700, was wept over no less than Hennepin. See the abstract of his +journal in La Harpe. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +1680, 1681. + +HENNEPIN AMONG THE SIOUX. + + Signs of Danger.--Adoption.--Hennepin and his Indian + Relatives.--The Hunting Party.--The Sioux Camp.--Falls of St. + Anthony.--A Vagabond Friar: his Adventures on the + Mississippi.--Greysolon du Lhut.--Return to Civilization. + + +As Hennepin entered the village, he beheld a sight which caused him to +invoke Saint Anthony of Padua. In front of the lodges were certain +stakes, to which were attached bundles of straw, intended, as he +supposed, for burning him and his friends alive. His concern was +redoubled when he saw the condition of the Picard Du Gay, whose hair and +face had been painted with divers colors, and whose head was decorated +with a tuft of white feathers. In this guise he was entering the +village, followed by a crowd of Sioux, who compelled him to sing and +keep time to his own music by rattling a dried gourd containing a number +of pebbles. The omens, indeed, were exceedingly threatening; for +treatment like this was usually followed by the speedy immolation of the +captive. Hennepin ascribes it to the effect of his invocations, that, +being led into one of the lodges, among a throng of staring squaws and +children, he and his companions were seated on the ground, and presented +with large dishes of birch-bark, containing a mess of wild rice boiled +with dried whortleberries,--a repast which he declares to have been the +best that had fallen to his lot since the day of his captivity.[212] + +[Sidenote: THE SIOUX.] + +This soothed his fears; but, as he allayed his famished appetite, he +listened with anxious interest to the vehement jargon of the chiefs and +warriors, who were disputing among themselves to whom the three captives +should respectively belong; for it seems that, as far as related to +them, the question of distribution had not yet been definitely settled. +The debate ended in the assigning of Hennepin to his old enemy +Aquipaguetin, who, however, far from persisting in his evil designs, +adopted him on the spot as his son. The three companions must now part +company. Du Gay, not yet quite reassured of his safety, hastened to +confess himself to Hennepin; but Accau proved refractory, and refused +the offices of religion, which did not prevent the friar from embracing +them both, as he says, with an extreme tenderness. Tired as he was, he +was forced to set out with his self-styled father to his village, which +was fortunately not far off. An unpleasant walk of a few miles through +woods and marshes brought them to the borders of a sheet of water, +apparently Lake Buade, where five of Aquipaguetin's wives received the +party in three canoes, and ferried them to an island on which the +village stood. + +At the entrance of the chief's lodge, Hennepin was met by a decrepit old +Indian, withered with age, who offered him the peace-pipe, and placed +him on a bear-skin which was spread by the fire. Here, to relieve his +fatigue,--for he was well-nigh spent,--a small boy anointed his limbs +with the fat of a wild-cat, supposed to be sovereign in these cases by +reason of the great agility of that animal. His new father gave him a +bark-platter of fish, covered him with a buffalo-robe, and showed him +six or seven of his wives, who were thenceforth, he was told, to regard +him as a son. The chief's household was numerous; and his allies and +relatives formed a considerable clan, of which the missionary found +himself an involuntary member. He was scandalized when he saw one of his +adopted brothers carrying on his back the bones of a deceased friend, +wrapped in the chasuble of brocade which they had taken with other +vestments from his box. + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN AS A MISSIONARY.] + +Seeing their new relative so enfeebled that he could scarcely stand, the +Indians made for him one of their sweating baths,[213] where they +immersed him in steam three times a week,--a process from which he +thinks he derived great benefit. His strength gradually returned, in +spite of his meagre fare; for there was a dearth of food, and the squaws +were less attentive to his wants than to those of their children. They +respected him, however, as a person endowed with occult powers, and +stood in no little awe of a pocket compass which he had with him, as +well as of a small metal pot with feet moulded after the face of a lion. +This last seemed in their eyes a "medicine" of the most formidable +nature, and they would not touch it without first wrapping it in a +beaver-skin. For the rest, Hennepin made himself useful in various ways. +He shaved the heads of the children, as was the custom of the tribe; +bled certain asthmatic persons, and dosed others with orvietan, the +famous panacea of his time, of which he had brought with him a good +supply. With respect to his missionary functions, he seems to have given +himself little trouble, unless his attempt to make a Sioux vocabulary is +to be regarded as preparatory to a future apostleship. "I could gain +nothing over them," he says, "in the way of their salvation, by reason +of their natural stupidity." Nevertheless, on one occasion, he baptized +a sick child, naming it Antoinette in honor of Saint Anthony of Padua. +It seemed to revive after the rite, but soon relapsed and presently +died, "which," he writes, "gave me great joy and satisfaction." In this +he was like the Jesuits, who could find nothing but consolation in the +death of a newly baptized infant, since it was thus assured of a +paradise which, had it lived, it would probably have forfeited by +sharing in the superstitions of its parents. + +With respect to Hennepin and his Indian father, there seems to have been +little love on either side; but Ouasicoudé, the principal chief of the +Sioux of this region, was the fast friend of the three white men. He was +angry that they had been robbed, which he had been unable to prevent, as +the Sioux had no laws, and their chiefs little power; but he spoke his +mind freely, and told Aquipaguetin and the rest, in full council, that +they were like a dog who steals a piece of meat from a dish and runs +away with it. When Hennepin complained of hunger, the Indians had always +promised him that early in the summer he should go with them on a +buffalo hunt, and have food in abundance. The time at length came, and +the inhabitants of all the neighboring villages prepared for departure. +To each band was assigned its special hunting-ground, and he was +expected to accompany his Indian father. To this he demurred; for he +feared lest Aquipaguetin, angry at the words of the great chief, might +take this opportunity to revenge the insult put upon him. He therefore +gave out that he expected a party of "Spirits"--that is to say, +Frenchmen--to meet him at the mouth of the Wisconsin, bringing a supply +of goods for the Indians; and he declares that La Salle had in fact +promised to send traders to that place. Be this as it may, the Indians +believed him; and, true or false, the assertion, as will be seen, +answered the purpose for which it was made. + +[Sidenote: CAMP OF SAVAGES.] + +The Indians set out in a body to the number of two hundred and fifty +warriors, with their women and children. The three Frenchmen, who though +in different villages had occasionally met during the two months of +their captivity, were all of the party. They descended Rum River, which +forms the outlet of Mille Lac, and which is called the St. Francis by +Hennepin. None of the Indians had offered to give him passage; and, +fearing lest he should be abandoned, he stood on the bank, hailing the +passing canoes and begging to be taken in. Accau and Du Gay presently +appeared, paddling a small canoe which the Indians had given them; but +they would not listen to the missionary's call, and Accau, who had no +love for him, cried out that he had paddled him long enough already. Two +Indians, however, took pity on him, and brought him to the place of +encampment, where Du Gay tried to excuse himself for his conduct; but +Accau was sullen, and kept aloof. + +After reaching the Mississippi, the whole party encamped together +opposite to the mouth of Rum River, pitching their tents of skin, or +building their bark-huts, on the slope of a hill by the side of the +water. It was a wild scene, this camp of savages among whom as yet no +traders had come and no handiwork of civilization had found its +way,--the tall warriors, some nearly naked, some wrapped in +buffalo-robes, and some in shirts of dressed deer-skin fringed with hair +and embroidered with dyed porcupine quills, war-clubs of stone in their +hands, and quivers at their backs filled with stone-headed arrows; the +squaws, cutting smoke-dried meat with knives of flint, and boiling it in +rude earthen pots of their own making, driving away, meanwhile, with +shrill cries, the troops of lean dogs, which disputed the meal with a +crew of hungry children. The whole camp, indeed, was threatened with +starvation. The three white men could get no food but unripe +berries,--from the effects of which Hennepin thinks they might all have +died, but for timely doses of his orvietan. + +[Sidenote: FALLS OF ST. ANTHONY.] + +Being tired of the Indians, he became anxious to set out for the +Wisconsin to find the party of Frenchmen, real or imaginary, who were to +meet him at that place. That he was permitted to do so was due to the +influence of the great chief Ouasicoudé, who always befriended him, and +who had soundly berated his two companions for refusing him a seat in +their canoe. Du Gay wished to go with him; but Accau, who liked the +Indian life as much as he disliked Hennepin, preferred to remain with +the hunters. A small birch-canoe was given to the two adventurers, +together with an earthen pot; and they had also between them a gun, a +knife, and a robe of beaver-skin. Thus equipped, they began their +journey, and soon approached the Falls of St. Anthony, so named by +Hennepin in honor of the inevitable Saint Anthony of Padua.[214] As they +were carrying their canoe by the cataract, they saw five or six Indians, +who had gone before, and one of whom had climbed into an oak-tree beside +the principal fall, whence in a loud and lamentable voice he was +haranguing the spirit of the waters, as a sacrifice to whom he had just +hung a robe of beaver-skin among the branches.[215] Their attention was +soon engrossed by another object. Looking over the edge of the cliff +which overhung the river below the falls, Hennepin saw a snake, which, +as he avers, was six feet long,[216] writhing upward towards the holes +of the swallows in the face of the precipice, in order to devour their +young. He pointed him out to Du Gay, and they pelted him with stones +till he fell into the river, but not before his contortions and the +darting of his forked tongue had so affected the Picard's imagination +that he was haunted that night with a terrific incubus. + +[Sidenote: ADVENTURES.] + +They paddled sixty leagues down the river in the heats of July, and +killed no large game but a single deer, the meat of which soon spoiled. +Their main resource was the turtles, whose shyness and watchfulness +caused them frequent disappointments and many involuntary fasts. They +once captured one of more than common size; and, as they were +endeavoring to cut off his head, he was near avenging himself by +snapping off Hennepin's finger. There was a herd of buffalo in sight on +the neighboring prairie; and Du Gay went with his gun in pursuit of +them, leaving the turtle in Hennepin's custody. Scarcely was he gone +when the friar, raising his eyes, saw that their canoe, which they had +left at the edge of the water, had floated out into the current. Hastily +turning the turtle on his back, he covered him with his habit of St. +Francis, on which, for greater security, he laid a number of stones, and +then, being a good swimmer, struck out in pursuit of the canoe, which +he at length overtook. Finding that it would overset if he tried to +climb into it, he pushed it before him to the shore, and then paddled +towards the place, at some distance above, where he had left the turtle. +He had no sooner reached it than he heard a strange sound, and beheld a +long file of buffalo--bulls, cows, and calves--entering the water not +far off, to cross to the western bank. Having no gun, as became his +apostolic vocation, he shouted to Du Gay, who presently appeared, +running in all haste, and they both paddled in pursuit of the game. Du +Gay aimed at a young cow, and shot her in the head. She fell in shallow +water near an island, where some of the herd had landed; and being +unable to drag her out, they waded into the water and butchered her +where she lay. It was forty-eight hours since they had tasted food. +Hennepin made a fire, while Du Gay cut up the meat. They feasted so +bountifully that they both fell ill, and were forced to remain two days +on the island, taking doses of orvietan, before they were able to resume +their journey. + +Apparently they were not sufficiently versed in woodcraft to smoke the +meat of the cow; and the hot sun soon robbed them of it. They had a few +fishhooks, but were not always successful in the use of them. On one +occasion, being nearly famished, they set their line, and lay watching +it, uttering prayers in turn. Suddenly, there was a great turmoil in the +water. Du Gay ran to the line, and, with the help of Hennepin, drew in +two large cat-fish.[217] The eagles, or fish-hawks, now and then dropped +a newly caught fish, of which they gladly took possession; and once they +found a purveyor in an otter which they saw by the bank, devouring some +object of an appearance so wonderful that Du Gay cried out that he had a +devil between his paws. They scared him from his prey, which proved to +be a spade-fish, or, as Hennepin correctly describes it, a species of +sturgeon, with a bony projection from his snout in the shape of a +paddle. They broke their fast upon him, undeterred by this eccentric +appendage. + +[Sidenote: THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI.] + +If Hennepin had had an eye for scenery, he would have found in these his +vagabond rovings wherewith to console himself in some measure for his +frequent fasts. The young Mississippi, fresh from its northern springs, +unstained as yet by unhallowed union with the riotous Missouri, flowed +calmly on its way amid strange and unique beauties,--a wilderness, +clothed with velvet grass; forest-shadowed valleys; lofty heights, whose +smooth slopes seemed levelled with the scythe; domes and pinnacles, +ramparts and ruined towers, the work of no human hand. The canoe of the +voyagers, borne on the tranquil current, glided in the shade of gray +crags festooned with honeysuckles; by trees mantled with wild +grape-vines; dells bright with the flowers of the white euphorbia, the +blue gentian, and the purple balm; and matted forests, where the red +squirrels leaped and chattered. They passed the great cliff whence the +Indian maiden threw herself in her despair;[218] and Lake Pepin lay +before them, slumbering in the July sun,--the far-reaching sheets of +sparkling water, the woody slopes, the tower-like crags, the grassy +heights basking in sunlight or shadowed by the passing cloud; all the +fair outline of its graceful scenery, the finished and polished +master-work of Nature. And when at evening they made their bivouac fire +and drew up their canoe, while dim, sultry clouds veiled the west, and +the flashes of the silent heat-lightning gleamed on the leaden water, +they could listen, as they smoked their pipes, to the mournful cry of +the whippoorwills and the quavering scream of the owls. + +Other thoughts than the study of the picturesque occupied the mind of +Hennepin when one day he saw his Indian father, Aquipaguetin, whom he +had supposed five hundred miles distant, descending the river with ten +warriors in canoes. He was eager to be the first to meet the traders, +who, as Hennepin had given out, were to come with their goods to the +mouth of the Wisconsin. The two travellers trembled for the +consequences of this encounter; but the chief, after a short colloquy, +passed on his way. In three days he returned in ill-humor, having found +no traders at the appointed spot. The Picard was absent at the time, +looking for game; and Hennepin was sitting under the shade of his +blanket, which he had stretched on forked sticks to protect him from the +sun, when he saw his adopted father approaching with a threatening look, +and a war-club in his hand. He attempted no violence, however, but +suffered his wrath to exhale in a severe scolding, after which he +resumed his course up the river with his warriors. + +If Hennepin, as he avers, really expected a party of traders at the +Wisconsin, the course he now took is sufficiently explicable. If he did +not expect them, his obvious course was to rejoin Tonty on the Illinois, +for which he seems to have had no inclination; or to return to Canada by +way of the Wisconsin,--an attempt which involved the risk of starvation, +as the two travellers had but ten charges of powder left. Assuming, +then, his hope of the traders to have been real, he and Du Gay resolved, +in the mean time, to join a large body of Sioux hunters, who, as +Aquipaguetin had told them, were on a stream which he calls Bull River, +now the Chippeway, entering the Mississippi near Lake Pepin. By so +doing, they would gain a supply of food, and save themselves from the +danger of encountering parties of roving warriors. + +[Sidenote: HE REJOINS THE INDIANS.] + +They found this band, among whom was their companion Accau, and followed +them on a grand hunt along the borders of the Mississippi. Du Gay was +separated for a time from Hennepin, who was placed in a canoe with a +withered squaw more than eighty years old. In spite of her age, she +handled her paddle with great address, and used it vigorously, as +occasion required, to repress the gambols of three children, who, to +Hennepin's annoyance, occupied the middle of the canoe. The hunt was +successful. The Sioux warriors, active as deer, chased the buffalo on +foot with their stone-headed arrows, on the plains behind the heights +that bordered the river; while the old men stood sentinels at the top, +watching for the approach of enemies. One day an alarm was given. The +warriors rushed towards the supposed point of danger, but found nothing +more formidable than two squaws of their own nation, who brought strange +news. A war-party of Sioux, they said, had gone towards Lake Superior, +and had met by the way five "Spirits;" that is to say, five Europeans. +Hennepin was full of curiosity to learn who the strangers might be; and +they, on their part, were said to have shown great anxiety to know the +nationality of the three white men who, as they were told, were on the +river. The hunt was over; and the hunters, with Hennepin and his +companion, were on their way northward to their towns, when they met the +five "Spirits" at some distance below the Falls of St. Anthony. They +proved to be Daniel Greysolon du Lhut, with four well-armed Frenchmen. + +[Sidenote: DE LHUT'S EXPLORATIONS.] + +This bold and enterprising man, stigmatized by the Intendant Duchesneau +as a leader of _coureurs de bois_, was a cousin of Tonty, born at Lyons. +He belonged to that caste of the lesser nobles whose name was legion, +and whose admirable military qualities shone forth so conspicuously in +the wars of Louis XIV. Though his enterprises were independent of those +of La Salle, they were at this time carried on in connection with Count +Frontenac and certain merchants in his interest, of whom Du Lhut's +uncle, Patron, was one; while Louvigny, his brother-in-law, was in +alliance with the governor, and was an officer of his guard. Here, then, +was a kind of family league, countenanced by Frontenac, and acting +conjointly with him, in order, if the angry letters of the intendant are +to be believed, to reap a clandestine profit under the shadow of the +governor's authority, and in violation of the royal ordinances. The +rudest part of the work fell to the share of Du Lhut, who with a +persistent hardihood, not surpassed perhaps even by La Salle, was +continually in the forest, in the Indian towns, or in remote wilderness +outposts planted by himself, exploring, trading, fighting, ruling +lawless savages and whites scarcely less ungovernable, and on one or +more occasions varying his life by crossing the ocean to gain interviews +with the colonial minister Seignelay, amid the splendid vanities of +Versailles. Strange to say, this man of hardy enterprise was a martyr +to the gout, which for more than a quarter of a century grievously +tormented him; though for a time he thought himself cured by the +intercession of the Iroquois saint, Catharine Tegahkouita, to whom he +had made a vow to that end. He was, without doubt, an habitual breaker +of the royal ordinances regulating the fur-trade; yet his services were +great to the colony and to the crown, and his name deserves a place of +honor among the pioneers of American civilization.[219] + +When Hennepin met him, he had been about two years in the wilderness. In +September, 1678, he left Quebec for the purpose of exploring the region +of the Upper Mississippi, and establishing relations of friendship with +the Sioux and their kindred the Assiniboins. In the summer of 1679 he +visited three large towns of the eastern division of the Sioux, +including those visited by Hennepin in the following year, and planted +the King's arms in all of them. Early in the autumn he was at the head +of Lake Superior, holding a council with the Assiniboins and the lake +tribes, and inducing them to live at peace with the Sioux. In all this, +he acted in a public capacity, under the authority of the governor; but +it is not to be supposed that he forgot his own interests or those of +his associates. The intendant angrily complains that he aided and +abetted the _coureurs de bois_ in their lawless courses, and sent down +in their canoes great quantities of beaver-skins consigned to the +merchants in league with him, under cover of whose names the governor +reaped his share of the profits. + +In June, 1680, while Hennepin was in the Sioux villages, Du Lhut set out +from the head of Lake Superior, with two canoes, four Frenchmen, and an +Indian, to continue his explorations.[220] He ascended a river, +apparently the Burnt Wood, and reached from thence a branch of the +Mississippi, which seems to have been the St. Croix. It was now that, to +his surprise, he learned that there were three Europeans on the main +river below; and fearing that they might be Englishmen or Spaniards +encroaching on the territories of the King, he eagerly pressed forward +to solve his doubts. When he saw Hennepin, his mind was set at rest; and +the travellers met with mutual cordiality. They followed the Indians to +their villages of Mille Lac, where Hennepin had now no reason to +complain of their treatment of him. The Sioux gave him and Du Lhut a +grand feast of honor, at which were seated a hundred and twenty naked +guests; and the great chief Ouasicoudé, with his own hands, placed +before Hennepin a bark dish containing a mess of smoked meat and wild +rice. + +Autumn had come, and the travellers bethought them of going home. The +Sioux, consoled by their promises to return with goods for trade, did +not oppose their departure; and they set out together, eight white men +in all. As they passed St. Anthony's Falls, two of the men stole two +buffalo-robes which were hung on trees as offerings to the spirit of the +cataract. When Du Lhut heard of it he was very angry, telling the men +that they had endangered the lives of the whole party. Hennepin admitted +that in the view of human prudence he was right, but urged that the act +was good and praiseworthy, inasmuch as the offerings were made to a +false god; while the men, on their part, proved mutinous, declaring that +they wanted the robes and meant to keep them. The travellers continued +their journey in great ill-humor, but were presently soothed by the +excellent hunting which they found on the way. As they approached the +Wisconsin, they stopped to dry the meat of the buffalo they had killed, +when to their amazement they saw a war-party of Sioux approaching in a +fleet of canoes. Hennepin represents himself as showing on this occasion +an extraordinary courage, going to meet the Indians with a peace-pipe, +and instructing Du Lhut, who knew more of these matters than he, how he +ought to behave. The Sioux proved not unfriendly, and said nothing of +the theft of the buffalo-robes. They soon went on their way to attack +the Illinois and Missouris, leaving the Frenchmen to ascend the +Wisconsin unmolested. + +[Sidenote: THE RETURN.] + +After various adventures, they reached the station of the Jesuits at +Green Bay; but its existence is wholly ignored by Hennepin, whose zeal +for his own Order will not permit him to allude to this establishment of +the rival missionaries.[221] He is equally reticent with regard to the +Jesuit mission at Michilimackinac, where the party soon after arrived, +and where they spent the winter. The only intimation which he gives of +its existence consists in the mention of the Jesuit Pierson, who was a +Fleming like himself, and who often skated with him on the frozen lake, +or kept him company in fishing through a hole in the ice.[222] When the +spring opened, Hennepin descended Lake Huron, followed the Detroit to +Lake Erie, and proceeded thence to Niagara. Here he spent some time in +making a fresh examination of the cataract, and then resumed his voyage +on Lake Ontario. He stopped, however, at the great town of the Senecas, +near the Genesee, where, with his usual spirit of meddling, he took upon +him the functions of the civil and military authorities, convoked the +chiefs to a council, and urged them to set at liberty certain Ottawa +prisoners whom they had captured in violation of treaties. Having +settled this affair to his satisfaction, he went to Fort Frontenac, +where his brother missionary, Buisset, received him with a welcome +rendered the warmer by a story which had reached him that the Indians +had hanged Hennepin with his own cord of St. Francis. + +From Fort Frontenac he went to Montreal; and leaving his two men on a +neighboring island, that they might escape the payment of duties on a +quantity of furs which they had with them, he paddled alone towards the +town. Count Frontenac chanced to be here, and, looking from the window +of a house near the river, he saw approaching in a canoe a Récollet +father, whose appearance indicated the extremity of hard service; for +his face was worn and sunburnt, and his tattered habit of St. Francis +was abundantly patched with scraps of buffalo-skin. When at length he +recognized the long-lost Hennepin, he received him, as the father +writes, "with all the tenderness which a missionary could expect from a +person of his rank and quality." He kept him for twelve days in his own +house, and listened with interest to such of his adventures as the friar +saw fit to divulge. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S LETTERS.] + +And here we bid farewell to Father Hennepin. "Providence," he writes, +"preserved my life that I might make known my great discoveries to the +world." He soon after went to Europe, where the story of his travels +found a host of readers, but where he died at last in a deserved +obscurity.[223] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[212] The Sioux, or Dacotah, as they call themselves, were a numerous +people, separated into three great divisions, which were again +subdivided into bands. Those among whom Hennepin was a prisoner belonged +to the division known as the Issanti, Issanyati, or, as he writes it, +_Issati_, of which the principal band was the Meddewakantonwan. The +other great divisions, the Yanktons and the Tintonwans, or Tetons, lived +west of the Mississippi, extending beyond the Missouri, and ranging as +far as the Rocky Mountains. The Issanti cultivated the soil; but the +extreme western bands subsisted on the buffalo alone. The former had two +kinds of dwelling,--the _teepee_, or skin-lodge, and the bark-lodge. The +teepee, which was used by all the Sioux, consists of a covering of +dressed buffalo-hide, stretched on a conical stack of poles. The +bark-lodge was peculiar to the Eastern Sioux; and examples of it might +be seen, until within a few years, among the bands on the St. Peter's. +In its general character, it was like the Huron and Iroquois houses, but +was inferior in construction. It had a ridge roof, framed of poles, +extending from the posts which formed the sides; and the whole was +covered with elm-bark. The lodges in the villages to which Hennepin was +conducted were probably of this kind. + +The name Sioux is an abbreviation of _Nadouessioux_, an Ojibwa word, +meaning "enemies." The Ojibwas used it to designate this people, and +occasionally also the Iroquois, being at deadly war with both. + +Rev. Stephen B. Riggs, for many years a missionary among the Issanti +Sioux, says that this division consists of four distinct bands. They +ceded all their lands east of the Mississippi to the United States in +1837, and lived on the St. Peter's till driven thence in consequence of +the massacres of 1862, 1863. The Yankton Sioux consist of two bands, +which are again subdivided. The Assiniboins, or Hohays, are an offshoot +from the Yanktons, with whom they are now at war. The Tintonwan, or +Teton Sioux, forming the most western division and the largest, comprise +seven bands, and are among the bravest and fiercest tenants of the +prairie. + +The earliest French writers estimate the total number of the Sioux at +forty thousand; but this is little better than conjecture. Mr. Riggs, in +1852, placed it at about twenty-five thousand. + +[213] These baths consist of a small hut, covered closely with +buffalo-skins, into which the patient and his friends enter, carefully +closing every aperture. A pile of heated stones is placed in the middle, +and water is poured upon them, raising a dense vapor. They are still +(1868) in use among the Sioux and some other tribes. + +[214] Hennepin's notice of the falls of St. Anthony, though brief, is +sufficiently accurate. He says, in his first edition, that they are +forty or fifty feet high, but adds ten feet more in the edition of 1697. +In 1821, according to Schoolcraft, the perpendicular fall measured forty +feet. Great changes, however, have taken place here, and are still in +progress. The rock is a very soft, friable sandstone, overlaid by a +stratum of limestone; and it is crumbling with such rapidity under the +action of the water that the cataract will soon be little more than a +rapid. Other changes equally disastrous, in an artistic point of view, +are going on even more quickly. Beside the falls stands a city, which, +by an ingenious combination of the Greek and Sioux languages, has +received the name of Minneapolis, or City of the Waters, and which in +1867 contained ten thousand inhabitants, two national banks, and an +opera-house; while its rival city of St. Anthony, immediately opposite, +boasted a gigantic water-cure and a State university. In short, the +great natural beauty of the place is utterly spoiled. + +[215] Oanktayhee, the principal deity of the Sioux, was supposed to live +under these falls, though he manifested himself in the form of a +buffalo. It was he who created the earth, like the Algonquin Manabozho, +from mud brought to him in the paws of a musk-rat. Carver, in 1766, saw +an Indian throw everything he had about him into the cataract as an +offering to this deity. + +[216] In the edition of 1683. In that of 1697 he had grown to seven or +eight feet. The bank-swallows still make their nests in these cliffs, +boring easily into the soft sandstone. + +[217] Hennepin speaks of their size with astonishment, and says that the +two together would weigh twenty-five pounds. Cat-fish have been taken in +the Mississippi, weighing more than a hundred and fifty pounds. + +[218] The "Lover's Leap," or "Maiden's Rock" from which a Sioux girl, +Winona, or the "Eldest Born," is said to have thrown herself, in the +despair of disappointed affection. The story, which seems founded in +truth, will be found, not without embellishments, in Mrs. Eastman's +_Legends of the Sioux_. + +[219] The facts concerning Du Lhut have been gleaned from a variety of +contemporary documents, chiefly the letters of his enemy Duchesneau, who +always puts him in the worst light, especially in his despatch to +Seignelay of 10 Nov., 1679, where he charges both him and the governor +with carrying on an illicit trade with the English of New York. Du Lhut +himself, in a memoir dated 1685 (see Harrisse, _Bibliographie_, 176), +strongly denies these charges. Du Lhut built a trading fort on Lake +Superior, called Cananistigoyan (La Hontan), or Kamalastigouia (Perrot). +It was on the north side, at the mouth of a river entering Thunder Bay, +where Fort William now stands. In 1684 he caused two Indians, who had +murdered several Frenchmen on Lake Superior, to be shot. He displayed in +this affair great courage and coolness, undaunted by the crowd of +excited savages who surrounded him and his little band of Frenchmen. The +long letter, in which he recounts the capture and execution of the +murderers, is before me. Duchesneau makes his conduct on this occasion +the ground of a charge of rashness. In 1686 Denonville, then governor of +the colony, ordered him to fortify the Detroit; that is, the strait +between Lakes Erie and Huron. He went thither with fifty men and built a +palisade fort, which he occupied for some time. In 1687 he, together +with Tonty and Durantaye, joined Denonville against the Senecas, with a +body of Indians from the Upper Lakes. In 1689, during the panic that +followed the Iroquois invasion of Montreal, Du Lhut, with twenty-eight +Canadians, attacked twenty-two Iroquois in canoes, received their fire +without returning it, bore down upon them, killed eighteen of them, and +captured three, only one escaping. In 1695 he was in command at Fort +Frontenac. In 1697 he succeeded to the command of a company of infantry, +but was suffering wretchedly from the gout at Fort Frontenac. In 1710 +Vaudreuil, in a despatch to the minister Ponchartrain, announced his +death as occurring in the previous winter, and added the brief comment, +"c'était un très-honnête homme." Other contemporaries speak to the same +effect. "Mr. Dulhut, Gentilhomme Lionnois, qui a beaucoup de mérite +et de capacité."--_La Hontan_, i. 103 (1703). "Le Sieur du Lut, homme +d'esprit et d'expérience."--_Le Clerc_, ii. 137. Charlevoix calls him +"one of the bravest officers the King has ever had in this colony." His +name is variously spelled Du Luc, Du Lud, Du Lude, Du Lut, Du Luth, Du +Lhut. For an account of the Iroquois virgin, Tegahkouita, whose +intercession is said to have cured him of the gout, see Charlevoix, i. +572. + +On a contemporary manuscript map by the Jesuit Raffeix, representing the +routes of Marquette, La Salle, and Du Lhut, are the following words, +referring to the last-named discoverer, and interesting in connection +with Hennepin's statements: "Mr. du Lude le premier a esté chez les +Sioux en 1678, et a esté proche la source du Mississippi, et ensuite +vint retirer le P. Louis [_Hennepin_] qui avoit esté fait prisonnier +chez les Sioux." Du Lhut here appears as the deliverer of Hennepin. One +of his men was named Pepin; hence, no doubt, the name of Lake Pepin. + +[220] _Memoir on the French Dominion in Canada, N. Y. Col. Docs._, ix. +781. + +[221] On the other hand, he sets down on his map of 1683 a mission of +the Récollets at a point north of the farthest sources of the +Mississippi, to which no white man had ever penetrated. + +[222] He says that Pierson had come among the Indians to learn their +language; that he "retained the frankness and rectitude of our country" +and "a disposition always on the side of candor and sincerity. In a +word, he seemed to me to be all that a Christian ought to be" (1697), +433. + +[223] Since the two preceding chapters were written, the letters of La +Salle have been brought to light by the researches of M. Margry. They +confirm, in nearly all points, the conclusions given above; though, as +before observed (_note_, 186), they show misstatements on the part of +Hennepin concerning his position at the outset of the expedition. La +Salle writes: "J'ay fait remonter le fleuve Colbert, nommé par les +Iroquois Gastacha, par les Outaouais Mississipy par un canot conduit par +deux de mes gens, l'un nommé Michel Accault et l'autre Picard, auxquels +le R. P. Hennepin se joignit pour ne perdre pas l'occasion de prescher +l'Évangile aux peuples qui habitent dessus et qui n'en avoient jamais +oui parler." In the same letter he recounts their voyage on the Upper +Mississippi, and their capture by the Sioux in accordance with the story +of Hennepin himself. Hennepin's assertion, that La Salle had promised to +send a number of men to meet him at the mouth of the Wisconsin, turns +out to be true. "Estans tous revenus en chasse avec les Nadouessioux +[_Sioux_] vers Ouisconsing [_Wisconsin_], le R. P. Louis Hempin +[_Hennepin_] et Picard prirent résolution de venir jusqu'à l'emboucheure +de la rivière où j'avois promis d'envoyer de mes nouvelles, comme +j'avois fait par six hommes que les Jésuistes desbauchèrent en leur +disant que le R. P. Louis et ses compagnons de voyage avoient esté +tuez." + +It is clear that La Salle understood Hennepin; for, after speaking of +his journey, he adds: "J'ai cru qu'il estoit à propos de vous faire le +narré des aventures de ce canot parce que je ne doute pas qu'on en +parle; et si vous souhaitez en conférer avec le P. Louis Hempin, +Récollect, qui est repassé en France, il faut un peu le connoistre, car +il ne manquera pas d'exagérer toutes choses, c'est son caractère, et à +moy mesme il m'a escrit comme s'il eust esté tout près d'estre bruslé, +quoiqu'il n'en ait pas esté seulement en danger; mais il croit qu'il luy +est honorable de le faire de la sorte, et _il parle plus conformément à +ce qu'il veut qu'à ce qu'il scait_."--_Lettre de la Salle, 22 Août, +1682_ (1681?), Margry, ii. 259. + +On his return to France, Hennepin got hold of the manuscript, _Relation +des Découvertes_, compiled for the government from La Salle's letters, +and, as already observed, made very free use of it in the first edition +of his book, printed in 1683. In 1699 he wished to return to Canada; +but, in a letter of that year, Louis XIV. orders the governor to seize +him, should he appear, and send him prisoner to Rochefort. This seems to +have been in consequence of his renouncing the service of the French +crown, and dedicating his edition of 1697 to William III. of England. + +More than twenty editions of Hennepin's travels appeared, in French, +English, Dutch, German, Italian, and Spanish. Most of them include the +mendacious narrative of the pretended descent of the Mississippi. For a +list of them, see _Hist. Mag._, i. 346; ii. 24. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +1681. + +LA SALLE BEGINS ANEW. + + His Constancy; his Plans; his Savage Allies; he becomes + Snow-blind.--Negotiations.--Grand Council.--La Salle's + Oratory.--Meeting with Tonty.--Preparation.--Departure. + + +In tracing the adventures of Tonty and the rovings of Hennepin, we have +lost sight of La Salle, the pivot of the enterprise. Returning from the +desolation and horror in the valley of the Illinois, he had spent the +winter at Fort Miami, on the St. Joseph, by the borders of Lake +Michigan. Here he might have brooded on the redoubled ruin that had +befallen him,--the desponding friends, the exulting foes; the wasted +energies, the crushing load of debt, the stormy past, the black and +lowering future. But his mind was of a different temper. He had no +thought but to grapple with adversity, and out of the fragments of his +ruin to build up the fabric of success. + +He would not recoil; but he modified his plans to meet the new +contingency. His white enemies had found, or rather perhaps had made, a +savage ally in the Iroquois. Their incursions must be stopped, or his +enterprise would come to nought; and he thought he saw the means by +which this new danger could be converted into a source of strength. The +tribes of the West, threatened by the common enemy, might be taught to +forget their mutual animosities and join in a defensive league, with La +Salle at its head. They might be colonized around his fort in the valley +of the Illinois, where in the shadow of the French flag, and with the +aid of French allies, they could hold the Iroquois in check, and acquire +in some measure the arts of a settled life. The Franciscan friars could +teach them the Faith; and La Salle and his associates could supply them +with goods, in exchange for the vast harvest of furs which their hunters +could gather in these boundless wilds. Meanwhile, he would seek out the +mouth of the Mississippi; and the furs gathered at his colony in the +Illinois would then find a ready passage to the markets of the world. +Thus might this ancient slaughter-field of warring savages be redeemed +to civilization and Christianity; and a stable settlement, half-feudal, +half-commercial, grow up in the heart of the western wilderness. This +plan was but a part of the original scheme of his enterprise, adapted to +new and unexpected circumstances; and he now set himself to its +execution with his usual vigor, joined to an address which, when dealing +with Indians, never failed him. + +[Sidenote: INDIAN FRIENDS.] + +There were allies close at hand. Near Fort Miami were the huts of +twenty-five or thirty savages, exiles from their homes, and strangers +in this western world. Several of the English colonies, from Virginia to +Maine, had of late years been harassed by Indian wars; and the Puritans +of New England, above all, had been scourged by the deadly outbreak of +King Philip's war. Those engaged in it had paid a bitter price for their +brief triumphs. A band of refugees, chiefly Abenakis and Mohegans, +driven from their native seats, had roamed into these distant wilds, and +were wintering in the friendly neighborhood of the French. La Salle soon +won them over to his interests. One of their number was the Mohegan +hunter, who for two years had faithfully followed his fortunes, and who +had been four years in the West. He is described as a prudent and +discreet young man, in whom La Salle had great confidence, and who could +make himself understood in several western languages, belonging, like +his own, to the great Algonquin tongue. This devoted henchman proved an +efficient mediator with his countrymen. The New-England Indians, with +one voice, promised to follow La Salle, asking no recompense but to call +him their chief, and yield to him the love and admiration which he +rarely failed to command from this hero-worshipping race. + +New allies soon appeared. A Shawanoe chief from the valley of the Ohio, +whose following embraced a hundred and fifty warriors, came to ask the +protection of the French against the all-destroying Iroquois. "The +Shawanoes are too distant," was La Salle's reply; "but let them come to +me at the Illinois, and they shall be safe." The chief promised to join +him in the autumn, at Fort Miami, with all his band. But, more important +than all, the consent and co-operation of the Illinois must be gained; +and the Miamis, their neighbors and of late their enemies, must be +taught the folly of their league with the Iroquois, and the necessity of +joining in the new confederation. Of late, they had been made to see the +perfidy of their dangerous allies. A band of the Iroquois, returning +from the slaughter of the Tamaroa Illinois, had met and murdered a band +of Miamis on the Ohio, and had not only refused satisfaction, but had +intrenched themselves in three rude forts of trees and brushwood in the +heart of the Miami country. The moment was favorable for negotiating; +but, first, La Salle wished to open a communication with the Illinois, +some of whom had begun to return to the country they had abandoned. With +this view, and also, it seems, to procure provisions, he set out on the +first of March, with his lieutenant La Forest, and fifteen men. + +The country was sheeted in snow, and the party journeyed on snow-shoes; +but when they reached the open prairies, the white expanse glared in the +sun with so dazzling a brightness that La Salle and several of the men +became snow-blind. They stopped and encamped under the edge of a forest; +and here La Salle remained in darkness for three days, suffering extreme +pain. Meanwhile, he sent forward La Forest and most of the men, keeping +with him his old attendant Hunaut. Going out in quest of pine-leaves,--a +decoction of which was supposed to be useful in cases of +snow-blindness,--this man discovered the fresh tracks of Indians, +followed them, and found a camp of Outagamies, or Foxes, from the +neighborhood of Green Bay. From them he heard welcome news. They told +him that Tonty was safe among the Pottawattamies, and that Hennepin had +passed through their country on his return from among the Sioux.[224] + +[Sidenote: ILLINOIS ALLIES.] + +A thaw took place; the snow melted rapidly; the rivers were opened; the +blind men began to recover; and launching the canoes which they had +dragged after them, the party pursued their way by water. They soon met +a band of Illinois. La Salle gave them presents, condoled with them on +their losses, and urged them to make peace and alliance with the Miamis. +Thus, he said, they could set the Iroquois at defiance; for he himself, +with his Frenchmen and his Indian friends, would make his abode among +them, supply them with goods, and aid them to defend themselves. They +listened, well pleased, promised to carry his message to their +countrymen, and furnished him with a large supply of corn.[225] +Meanwhile he had rejoined La Forest, whom he now sent to +Michilimackinac to await Tonty, and tell him to remain there till he, La +Salle, should arrive. + +Having thus accomplished the objects of his journey, he returned to Fort +Miami, whence he soon after ascended the St. Joseph to the village of +the Miami Indians, on the portage, at the head of the Kankakee. Here he +found unwelcome guests. These were three Iroquois warriors, who had been +for some time in the place, and who, as he was told, had demeaned +themselves with the insolence of conquerors, and spoken of the French +with the utmost contempt. He hastened to confront them, rebuked and +menaced them, and told them that now, when he was present, they dared +not repeat the calumnies which they had uttered in his absence. They +stood abashed and confounded, and during the following night secretly +left the town and fled. The effect was prodigious on the minds of the +Miamis, when they saw that La Salle, backed by ten Frenchmen, could +command from their arrogant visitors a respect which they, with their +hundreds of warriors, had wholly failed to inspire. Here, at the outset, +was an augury full of promise for the approaching negotiations. + +There were other strangers in the town,--a band of eastern Indians, more +numerous than those who had wintered at the fort. The greater number +were from Rhode Island, including, probably, some of King Philip's +warriors; others were from New York, and others again from Virginia. La +Salle called them to a council, promised them a new home in the West +under the protection of the Great King, with rich lands, an abundance of +game, and French traders to supply them with the goods which they had +once received from the English. Let them but help him to make peace +between the Miamis and the Illinois, and he would insure for them a +future of prosperity and safety. They listened with open ears, and +promised their aid in the work of peace. + +[Sidenote: GRAND COUNCIL.] + +On the next morning, the Miamis were called to a grand council. It was +held in the lodge of their chief, from which the mats were removed, that +the crowd without might hear what was said. La Salle rose and harangued +the concourse. Few men were so skilled in the arts of forest rhetoric +and diplomacy. After the Indian mode, he was, to follow his chroniclers, +"the greatest orator in North America."[226] He began with a gift of +tobacco, to clear the brains of his auditory; next, for he had brought a +canoe-load of presents to support his eloquence, he gave them cloth to +cover their dead, coats to dress them, hatchets to build a grand +scaffold in their honor, and beads, bells, and trinkets of all sorts, to +decorate their relatives at a grand funeral feast. All this was mere +metaphor. The living, while appropriating the gifts to their own use, +were pleased at the compliment offered to their dead; and their delight +redoubled as the orator proceeded. One of their great chiefs had lately +been killed; and La Salle, after a eulogy of the departed, declared that +he would now raise him to life again; that is, that he would assume his +name and give support to his squaws and children. This flattering +announcement drew forth an outburst of applause; and when, to confirm +his words, his attendants placed before them a huge pile of coats, +shirts, and hunting-knives, the whole assembly exploded in yelps of +admiration. + +Now came the climax of the harangue, introduced by a further present of +six guns:-- + +"He who is my master, and the master of all this country, is a mighty +chief, feared by the whole world; but he loves peace, and the words of +his lips are for good alone. He is called the King of France, and he is +the mightiest among the chiefs beyond the great water. His goodness +reaches even to your dead, and his subjects come among you to raise them +up to life. But it is his will to preserve the life he has given; it is +his will that you should obey his laws, and make no war without the +leave of Onontio, who commands in his name at Quebec, and who loves all +the nations alike, because such is the will of the Great King. You +ought, then, to live at peace with your neighbors, and above all with +the Illinois. You have had causes of quarrel with them; but their defeat +has avenged you. Though they are still strong, they wish to make peace +with you. Be content with the glory of having obliged them to ask for +it. You have an interest in preserving them; since, if the Iroquois +destroy them, they will next destroy you. Let us all obey the Great +King, and live together in peace, under his protection. Be of my mind, +and use these guns that I have given you, not to make war, but only to +hunt and to defend yourselves."[227] + +[Sidenote: THE CHIEFS REPLY.] + +So saying, he gave two belts of wampum to confirm his words; and the +assembly dissolved. On the following day, the chiefs again convoked it, +and made their reply in form. It was all that La Salle could have +wished. "The Illinois is our brother, because he is the son of our +Father, the Great King." "We make you the master of our beaver and our +lands, of our minds and our bodies." "We cannot wonder that our brothers +from the East wish to live with you. We should have wished so too, if we +had known what a blessing it is to be the children of the Great King." +The rest of this auspicious day was passed in feasts and dances, in +which La Salle and his Frenchmen all bore part. His new scheme was +hopefully begun. It remained to achieve the enterprise, twice defeated, +of the discovery of the mouth of the Mississippi,--that vital condition +of his triumph, without which all other success was meaningless and +vain. + +To this end he must return to Canada, appease his creditors, and collect +his scattered resources. Towards the end of May he set out in canoes +from Fort Miami, and reached Michilimackinac after a prosperous voyage. +Here, to his great joy, he found Tonty and Zenobe Membré, who had lately +arrived from Green Bay. The meeting was one at which even his stoic +nature must have melted. Each had for the other a tale of disaster; but +when La Salle recounted the long succession of his reverses, it was with +the tranquil tone and cheerful look of one who relates the incidents of +an ordinary journey. Membré looked on him with admiration. "Any one +else," he says, "would have thrown up his hand and abandoned the +enterprise; but, far from this, with a firmness and constancy that never +had its equal, I saw him more resolved than ever to continue his work +and push forward his discovery."[228] + +Without loss of time they embarked together for Fort Frontenac, paddled +their canoes a thousand miles, and safely reached their destination. +Here, in this third beginning of his enterprise, La Salle found himself +beset with embarrassments. Not only was he burdened with the fruitless +costs of his two former efforts, but the heavy debts which he had +incurred in building and maintaining Fort Frontenac had not been wholly +paid. The fort and the seigniory were already deeply mortgaged; yet +through the influence of Count Frontenac, the assistance of his +secretary Barrois, a consummate man of business, and the support of a +wealthy relative, he found means to appease his creditors and even to +gain fresh advances. To this end, however, he was forced to part with a +portion of his monopolies. Having first made his will at Montreal, in +favor of a cousin who had befriended him,[229] he mustered his men, and +once more set forth, resolved to trust no more to agents, but to lead on +his followers, in a united body, under his own personal command.[230] + +[Sidenote: THE TORONTO PORTAGE.] + +At the beginning of autumn he was at Toronto, where the long and +difficult portage to Lake Simcoe detained him a fortnight. He spent a +part of it in writing an account of what had lately occurred to a +correspondent in France, and he closes his letter thus: "This is all I +can tell you this year. I have a hundred things to write, but you could +not believe how hard it is to do it among Indians. The canoes and their +lading must be got over the portage, and I must speak to them +continually and bear all their importunity, or else they will do nothing +I want. I hope to write more at leisure next year, and tell you the end +of this business, which I hope will turn out well: for I have M. de +Tonty, who is full of zeal; thirty Frenchmen, all good men, without +reckoning such as I cannot trust; and more than a hundred Indians, some +of them Shawanoes, and others from New England, all of whom know how to +use guns." + +It was October before he reached Lake Huron. Day after day and week +after week the heavy-laden canoes crept on along the lonely wilderness +shores, by the monotonous ranks of bristling moss-bearded firs; lake and +forest, forest and lake; a dreary scene haunted with yet more dreary +memories,--disasters, sorrows, and deferred hopes; time, strength, and +wealth spent in vain; a ruinous past and a doubtful future; slander, +obloquy, and hate. With unmoved heart, the patient voyager held his +course, and drew up his canoes at last on the beach at Fort Miami. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[224] _Relation des Découvertes._ Compare _Lettre de La Salle_ (Margry, +ii. 144). + +[225] This seems to have been taken from the secret repositories, or +_caches_, of the ruined town of the Illinois. + +[226] "En ce genre, il étoit le plus grand orateur de l'Amérique +Septentrionale."--_Relation des Découvertes._ + +[227] Translated from the _Relation_, where these councils are reported +at great length. + +[228] Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 208. Tonty, in his memoir of 1693, speaks +of the joy of La Salle at the meeting. The _Relation_, usually very +accurate, says, erroneously, that Tonty had gone to Fort Frontenac. La +Forest had gone thither, not long before La Salle's arrival. + +[229] _Copie du Testament du deffunt Sr. de la Salle, 11 Août, 1681._ +The relative was François Plet, to whom he was deeply in debt. + +[230] "On apprendra à la fin de cette année, 1682, le succès de la +découverte qu'il étoit résolu d'achever, au plus tard le printemps +dernier ou de périr en y travaillant. Tant de traverses et de malheurs +toujours arrivés en son absence l'ont fait résoudre à ne se fier plus à +personne et à conduire lui-même tout son monde, tout son équipage, et +toute son entreprise, de laquelle il espéroit une heureuse conclusion." + +The above is a part of the closing paragraph of the _Relation des +Découvertes_, so often cited. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +1681-1682. + +SUCCESS OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--The Chicago Portage.--Descent of the + Mississippi.--The Lost Hunter.--The Arkansas.--The Taensas.--The + Natchez.--Hostility.--The Mouth of the Mississippi.--Louis XIV. + proclaimed Sovereign of the Great West. + + +The season was far advanced. On the bare limbs of the forest hung a few +withered remnants of its gay autumnal livery; and the smoke crept upward +through the sullen November air from the squalid wigwams of La Salle's +Abenaki and Mohegan allies. These, his new friends, were savages whose +midnight yells had startled the border hamlets of New England; who had +danced around Puritan scalps, and whom Puritan imaginations painted as +incarnate fiends. La Salle chose eighteen of them, whom he added to the +twenty-three Frenchmen who remained with him, some of the rest having +deserted and others lagged behind. The Indians insisted on taking their +squaws with them. These were ten in number, besides three children; and +thus the expedition included fifty-four persons, of whom some were +useless, and others a burden. + +On the 21st of December, Tonty and Membré set out from Fort Miami with +some of the party in six canoes, and crossed to the little river +Chicago.[231] La Salle, with the rest of the men, joined them a few days +later. It was the dead of winter, and the streams were frozen. They made +sledges, placed on them the canoes, the baggage, and a disabled +Frenchman; crossed from the Chicago to the northern branch of the +Illinois, and filed in a long procession down its frozen course. They +reached the site of the great Illinois village, found it tenantless, and +continued their journey, still dragging their canoes, till at length +they reached open water below Lake Peoria. + +[Sidenote: PRUDHOMME.] + +La Salle had abandoned for a time his original plan of building a vessel +for the navigation of the Mississippi. Bitter experience had taught him +the difficulty of the attempt, and he resolved to trust to his canoes +alone. They embarked again, floating prosperously down between the +leafless forests that flanked the tranquil river; till, on the sixth of +February, they issued upon the majestic bosom of the Mississippi. Here, +for the time, their progress was stopped; for the river was full of +floating ice. La Salle's Indians, too, had lagged behind; but within a +week all had arrived, the navigation was once more free, and they +resumed their course. Towards evening they saw on their right the mouth +of a great river; and the clear current was invaded by the headlong +torrent of the Missouri, opaque with mud. They built their camp-fires in +the neighboring forest; and at daylight, embarking anew on the dark and +mighty stream, drifted swiftly down towards unknown destinies. They +passed a deserted town of the Tamaroas; saw, three days after, the mouth +of the Ohio;[232] and, gliding by the wastes of bordering swamp, landed +on the twenty-fourth of February near the Third Chickasaw Bluffs.[233] +They encamped, and the hunters went out for game. All returned, +excepting Pierre Prudhomme; and as the others had seen fresh tracks of +Indians, La Salle feared that he was killed. While some of his followers +built a small stockade fort on a high bluff[234] by the river, others +ranged the woods in pursuit of the missing hunter. After six days of +ceaseless and fruitless search, they met two Chickasaw Indians in the +forest; and through them La Salle sent presents and peace-messages to +that warlike people, whose villages were a few days' journey distant. +Several days later Prudhomme was found, and brought into the camp, +half-dead. He had lost his way while hunting; and to console him for his +woes La Salle christened the newly built fort with his name, and left +him, with a few others, in charge of it. + +Again they embarked; and with every stage of their adventurous progress +the mystery of this vast New World was more and more unveiled. More and +more they entered the realms of spring. The hazy sunlight, the warm and +drowsy air, the tender foliage, the opening flowers, betokened the +reviving life of Nature. For several days more they followed the +writhings of the great river on its tortuous course through wastes of +swamp and cane-brake, till on the thirteenth of March[235] they found +themselves wrapped in a thick fog. Neither shore was visible; but they +heard on the right the booming of an Indian drum and the shrill outcries +of the war-dance. La Salle at once crossed to the opposite side, where, +in less than an hour, his men threw up a rude fort of felled trees. +Meanwhile the fog cleared; and from the farther bank the astonished +Indians saw the strange visitors at their work. Some of the French +advanced to the edge of the water, and beckoned them to come over. +Several of them approached, in a wooden canoe, to within the distance of +a gun-shot. La Salle displayed the calumet, and sent a Frenchman to meet +them. He was well received; and the friendly mood of the Indians being +now apparent, the whole party crossed the river. + +[Sidenote: THE ARKANSAS.] + +On landing, they found themselves at a town of the Kappa band of the +Arkansas, a people dwelling near the mouth of the river which bears +their name. "The whole village," writes Membré to his superior, "came +down to the shore to meet us, except the women, who had run off. I +cannot tell you the civility and kindness we received from these +barbarians, who brought us poles to make huts, supplied us with firewood +during the three days we were among them, and took turns in feasting us. +But, my Reverend Father, this gives no idea of the good qualities of +these savages, who are gay, civil, and free-hearted. The young men, +though the most alert and spirited we had seen, are nevertheless so +modest that not one of them would take the liberty to enter our hut, but +all stood quietly at the door. They are so well formed that we were in +admiration at their beauty. We did not lose the value of a pin while we +were among them." + +Various were the dances and ceremonies with which they entertained the +strangers, who, on their part, responded with a solemnity which their +hosts would have liked less if they had understood it better. La Salle +and Tonty, at the head of their followers, marched to the open area in +the midst of the village. Here, to the admiration of the gazing crowd of +warriors, women, and children, a cross was raised bearing the arms of +France. Membré, in canonicals, sang a hymn; the men shouted _Vive le +Roi_; and La Salle, in the King's name, took formal possession of the +country.[236] The friar, not, he flatters himself, without success, +labored to expound by signs the mysteries of the Faith; while La Salle, +by methods equally satisfactory, drew from the chief an acknowledgement +of fealty to Louis XIV.[237] + +[Sidenote: THE TAENSAS.] + +After touching at several other towns of this people, the voyagers +resumed their course, guided by two of the Arkansas; passed the sites, +since become historic, of Vicksburg and Grand Gulf; and, about three +hundred miles below the Arkansas, stopped by the edge of a swamp on the +western side of the river.[238] Here, as their two guides told them, +was the path to the great town of the Taensas. Tonty and Membré were +sent to visit it. They and their men shouldered their birch canoe +through the swamp, and launched it on a lake which had once formed a +portion of the channel of the river. In two hours, they reached the +town; and Tonty gazed at it with astonishment. He had seen nothing like +it in America,--large square dwellings, built of sun-baked mud mixed +with straw, arched over with a dome-shaped roof of canes, and placed in +regular order around an open area. Two of them were larger and better +than the rest. One was the lodge of the chief; the other was the temple, +or house of the Sun. They entered the former, and found a single room, +forty feet square, where, in the dim light,--for there was no opening +but the door,--the chief sat awaiting them on a sort of bedstead, three +of his wives at his side; while sixty old men, wrapped in white cloaks +woven of mulberry-bark, formed his divan. When he spoke, his wives +howled to do him honor; and the assembled councillors listened with the +reverence due to a potentate for whom, at his death, a hundred victims +were to be sacrificed. He received the visitors graciously, and +joyfully accepted the gifts which Tonty laid before him.[239] This +interview over, the Frenchmen repaired to the temple, wherein were kept +the bones of the departed chiefs. In construction, it was much like the +royal dwelling. Over it were rude wooden figures, representing three +eagles turned towards the east. A strong mud wall surrounded it, planted +with stakes, on which were stuck the skulls of enemies sacrificed to the +Sun; while before the door was a block of wood, on which lay a large +shell surrounded with the braided hair of the victims. The interior was +rude as a barn, dimly lighted from the doorway, and full of smoke. There +was a structure in the middle which Membré thinks was a kind of altar; +and before it burned a perpetual fire, fed with three logs laid end to +end, and watched by two old men devoted to this sacred office. There was +a mysterious recess, too, which the strangers were forbidden to explore, +but which, as Tonty was told, contained the riches of the nation, +consisting of pearls from the Gulf, and trinkets obtained, probably +through other tribes, from the Spaniards and other Europeans. + +The chief condescended to visit La Salle at his camp,--a favor which he +would by no means have granted, had the visitors been Indians. A master +of ceremonies and six attendants preceded him, to clear the path and +prepare the place of meeting. When all was ready, he was seen advancing, +clothed in a white robe and preceded by two men bearing white fans, +while a third displayed a disk of burnished copper,--doubtless to +represent the Sun, his ancestor, or, as others will have it, his elder +brother. His aspect was marvellously grave, and he and La Salle met with +gestures of ceremonious courtesy. The interview was very friendly; and +the chief returned well pleased with the gifts which his entertainer +bestowed on him, and which, indeed, had been the principal motive of his +visit. + +[Sidenote: THE NATCHEZ.] + +On the next morning, as they descended the river, they saw a wooden +canoe full of Indians; and Tonty gave chase. He had nearly overtaken it, +when more than a hundred men appeared suddenly on the shore, with bows +bent to defend their countrymen. La Salle called out to Tonty to +withdraw. He obeyed; and the whole party encamped on the opposite bank. +Tonty offered to cross the river with a peace-pipe, and set out +accordingly with a small party of men. When he landed, the Indians made +signs of friendship by joining their hands,--a proceeding by which +Tonty, having but one hand, was somewhat embarrassed; but he directed +his men to respond in his stead. La Salle and Membré now joined him, and +went with the Indians to their village, three leagues distant. Here they +spent the night. "The Sieur de la Salle," writes Membré, "whose very +air, engaging manners, tact, and address attract love and respect +alike, produced such an effect on the hearts of these people that they +did not know how to treat us well enough."[240] + +The Indians of this village were the Natchez; and their chief was +brother of the great chief, or Sun, of the whole nation. His town was +several leagues distant, near the site of the city of Natchez; and +thither the French repaired to visit him. They saw what they had already +seen among the Taensas,--a religious and political despotism, a +privileged caste descended from the sun, a temple, and a sacred +fire.[241] La Salle planted a large cross, with the arms of France +attached, in the midst of the town; while the inhabitants looked on with +a satisfaction which they would hardly have displayed had they +understood the meaning of the act. + +[Sidenote: HOSTILITY.] + +The French next visited the Coroas, at their village two leagues below; +and here they found a reception no less auspicious. On the thirty-first +of March, as they approached Red River, they passed in the fog a town of +the Oumas, and three days later discovered a party of fishermen, in +wooden canoes, among the canes along the margin of the water. They fled +at sight of the Frenchmen. La Salle sent men to reconnoitre, who, as +they struggled through the marsh, were greeted with a shower of arrows; +while from the neighboring village of the Quinipissas,[242] invisible +behind the cane-brake, they heard the sound of an Indian drum and the +whoops of the mustering warriors. La Salle, anxious to keep the peace +with all the tribes along the river, recalled his men, and pursued his +voyage. A few leagues below they saw a cluster of Indian lodges on the +left bank, apparently void of inhabitants. They landed, and found three +of them filled with corpses. It was a village of the Tangibao, sacked by +their enemies only a few days before.[243] + +And now they neared their journey's end. On the sixth of April the river +divided itself into three broad channels. La Salle followed that of the +west, and Dautray that of the east; while Tonty took the middle passage. +As he drifted down the turbid current, between the low and marshy +shores, the brackish water changed to brine, and the breeze grew fresh +with the salt breath of the sea. Then the broad bosom of the great Gulf +opened on his sight, tossing its restless billows, limitless, voiceless, +lonely as when born of chaos, without a sail, without a sign of life. + +La Salle, in a canoe, coasted the marshy borders of the sea; and then +the reunited parties assembled on a spot of dry ground, a short distance +above the mouth of the river. Here a column was made ready, bearing the +arms of France, and inscribed with the words, "Louis Le Grand, Roy De +France Et De Navarre, Règne; Le Neuvième Avril, 1682." + +The Frenchmen were mustered under arms; and while the New England +Indians and their squaws looked on in wondering silence, they chanted +the _Te Deum_, the _Exaudiat_, and the _Domine salvum fac Regem_. Then, +amid volleys of musketry and shouts of _Vive le Roi_, La Salle planted +the column in its place, and, standing near it, proclaimed in a loud +voice,-- + +[Sidenote: POSSESSION TAKEN.] + +"In the name of the most high, mighty, invincible, and victorious +Prince, Louis the Great, by the grace of God King of France and of +Navarre, Fourteenth of that name, I, this ninth day of April, one +thousand six hundred and eighty-two, in virtue of the commission of his +Majesty, which I hold in my hand, and which may be seen by all whom it +may concern, have taken, and do now take, in the name of his Majesty and +of his successors to the crown, possession of this country of Louisiana, +the seas, harbors, ports, bays, adjacent straits, and all the nations, +peoples, provinces, cities, towns, villages, mines, minerals, fisheries, +streams, and rivers, within the extent of the said Louisiana, from the +mouth of the great river St. Louis, otherwise called the Ohio, ... as +also along the river Colbert, or Mississippi, and the rivers which +discharge themselves thereinto, from its source beyond the country of +the Nadouessioux ... as far as its mouth at the sea, or Gulf of Mexico, +and also to the mouth of the River of Palms, upon the assurance we have +had from the natives of these countries that we are the first Europeans +who have descended or ascended the said river Colbert; hereby protesting +against all who may hereafter undertake to invade any or all of these +aforesaid countries, peoples, or lands, to the prejudice of the rights +of his Majesty, acquired by the consent of the nations dwelling herein. +Of which, and of all else that is needful, I hereby take to witness +those who hear me, and demand an act of the notary here present."[244] + +Shouts of _Vive le Roi_ and volleys of musketry responded to his words. +Then a cross was planted beside the column, and a leaden plate buried +near it, bearing the arms of France, with a Latin inscription, +_Ludovicus Magnus regnat_. The weather-beaten voyagers joined their +voices in the grand hymn of the _Vexilla Regis_:-- + + "The banners of Heaven's King advance, + The mystery of the Cross shines forth;" + +and renewed shouts of _Vive le Roi_ closed the ceremony. + +On that day, the realm of France received on parchment a stupendous +accession. The fertile plains of Texas; the vast basin of the +Mississippi, from its frozen northern springs to the sultry borders of +the Gulf; from the woody ridges of the Alleghanies to the bare peaks of +the Rocky Mountains,--a region of savannas and forests, sun-cracked +deserts, and grassy prairies, watered by a thousand rivers, ranged by a +thousand warlike tribes, passed beneath the sceptre of the Sultan of +Versailles; and all by virtue of a feeble human voice, inaudible at half +a mile. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[231] La Salle, _Relation de la Découverte_, 1682, in Thomassy, +_Géologie Pratique de la Louisiane 9; Lettre du Père Zenobe Membré, 3 +Juin, 1682; Ibid., 14 Août, 1682_; Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 214; Tonty, +1684, 1693; _Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession de la Louisiane, +Feuilles détachées d'une Lettre de La Salle_ (Margry, ii. 164); _Récit +de Nicolas de la Salle_ (Ibid., i. 547). + +The narrative ascribed to Membré and published by Le Clerc is based on +the document preserved in the Archives Scientifiques de la Marine, +entitled _Relation de la Découverte de l'Embouchure de la Rivière +Mississippi faite par le Sieur de la Salle, l'année passée_, 1682. The +writer of the narrative has used it very freely, copying the greater +part verbatim, with occasional additions of a kind which seem to +indicate that he had taken part in the expedition. The _Relation de la +Découverte_, though written in the third person, is the official report +of the discovery made by La Salle, or perhaps for him by Membré. + +[232] Called by Membré the Ouabache (Wabash). + +[233] La Salle, _Relation de la Découverte de l'Embouchure, etc._; +Thomassy, 10. Membré gives the same date; but the _Procès Verbal_ makes +it the twenty-sixth. + +[234] Gravier, in his letter of 16 Feb., 1701, says that he encamped +near a "great bluff of stone, called Fort Prudhomme, because M. de La +Salle, going on his discovery, intrenched himself here with his party, +fearing that Prudhomme, who had lost himself in the woods, had been +killed by the Indians, and that he himself would be attacked." + +[235] La Salle, _Relation_; Thomassy, 11. + +[236] _Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession du Pays des Arkansas, 14 +Mars, 1682._ + +[237] The nation of the Akanseas, Alkansas, or Arkansas, dwelt on the +west bank of the Mississippi, near the mouth of the Arkansas. They were +divided into four tribes, living for the most part in separate villages. +Those first visited by La Salle were the Kappas, or Quapaws, a remnant +of whom still subsists. The others were the Topingas, or Tongengas; the +Torimans; and the Osotouoy, or Sauthouis. According to Charlevoix, who +saw them in 1721, they were regarded as the tallest and best-formed +Indians in America, and were known as _les Beaux Hommes_. Gravier says +that they once lived on the Ohio. + +[238] In Tensas County, Louisiana. Tonty's estimates of distance are +here much too low. They seem to be founded on observations of latitude, +without reckoning the windings of the river. It may interest sportsmen +to know that the party killed several large alligators, on their way. +Membré is much astonished that such monsters should be born of eggs like +chickens. + +[239] Tonty, 1684, 1693. In the spurious narrative, published in Tonty's +name, the account is embellished and exaggerated. Compare Membré in Le +Clerc, ii. 227. La Salle's statements in the _Relation_ of 1682 +(Thomassy, 12) sustain those of Tonty. + +[240] Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 232. + +[241] The Natchez and the Taensas, whose habits and customs were +similar, did not, in their social organization, differ radically from +other Indians. The same principle of clanship, or _totemship_, so widely +spread, existed in full force among them, combined with their religious +ideas, and developed into forms of which no other example, equally +distinct, is to be found. (For Indian clanship, see "The Jesuits in +North America," _Introduction_.) Among the Natchez and Taensas, the +principal clan formed a ruling caste; and its chiefs had the attributes +of demi-gods. As descent was through the female, the chief's son never +succeeded him, but the son of one of his sisters; and as she, by the +usual totemic law, was forced to marry in another clan,--that is, to +marry a common mortal,--her husband, though the destined father of a +demi-god, was treated by her as little better than a slave. She might +kill him, if he proved unfaithful; but he was forced to submit to her +infidelities in silence. + +The customs of the Natchez have been described by Du Pratz, Le Petit, +Penecaut, and others. Charlevoix visited their temple in 1721, and found +it in a somewhat shabby condition. At this time, the Taensas were +extinct. In 1729 the Natchez, enraged by the arbitrary conduct of a +French commandant, massacred the neighboring settlers, and were in +consequence expelled from their country and nearly destroyed. A few +still survive, incorporated with the Creeks; but they have lost their +peculiar customs. + +[242] In St. Charles County, on the left bank, not far above New +Orleans. + +[243] Hennepin uses this incident, as well as most of those which have +preceded it, in making up the story of his pretended voyage to the Gulf. + +[244] In the passages omitted above, for the sake of brevity, the Ohio +is mentioned as being called also the _Olighin_-(Alleghany) _Sipou_, and +_Chukagoua_; and La Salle declares that he takes possession of the +country with the consent of the nations dwelling in it, of whom he names +the Chaouanons (Shawanoes), Kious, or Nadouessious (Sioux), Chikachas +(Chickasaws), Motantees (?), Illinois, Mitchigamias, Arkansas, Natchez, +and Koroas. This alleged consent is, of course, mere farce. If there +could be any doubt as to the meaning of the words of La Salle, as +recorded in the _Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession de la +Louisiane_, it would be set at rest by Le Clerc, who says: "Le Sieur de +la Salle prit au nom de sa Majesté possession de ce fleuve, _de toutes +les rivières qui y entrent, et de tous les pays qu'elles arrosent_." +These words are borrowed from the report of La Salle (see Thomassy, 14). +A copy of the original _Procès Verbal_ is before me. It bears the name +of Jacques de la Metairie, Notary of Fort Frontenac, who was one of the +party. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +1682, 1683. + +ST. LOUIS OF THE ILLINOIS. + + Louisiana.--Illness of La Salle: his Colony on the Illinois.--Fort + St. Louis.--Recall of Frontenac.--Le Febvre de la Barre.--Critical + Position of la Salle.--Hostility Of the New Governor.--Triumph of + the Adverse Faction.--La Salle sails for France. + + +Louisiana was the name bestowed by La Salle on the new domain of the +French crown. The rule of the Bourbons in the West is a memory of the +past, but the name of the Great King still survives in a narrow corner +of their lost empire. The Louisiana of to-day is but a single State of +the American republic. The Louisiana of La Salle stretched from the +Alleghanies to the Rocky Mountains; from the Rio Grande and the Gulf to +the farthest springs of the Missouri.[245] + +La Salle had written his name in history; but his hard-earned success +was but the prelude of a harder task. Herculean labors lay before him, +if he would realize the schemes with which his brain was pregnant. Bent +on accomplishing them, he retraced his course, and urged his canoes +upward against the muddy current. The party were famished. They had +little to subsist on but the flesh of alligators. When they reached the +Quinipissas, who had proved hostile on their way down, they resolved to +risk an interview with them, in the hope of obtaining food. The +treacherous savages dissembled, brought them corn, and on the following +night made an attack upon them, but met with a bloody repulse. The party +next revisited the Coroas, and found an unfavorable change in their +disposition towards them. They feasted them, indeed, but during the +repast surrounded them with an overwhelming force of warriors. The +French, however, kept so well on their guard, that their entertainers +dared not make an attack, and suffered them to depart unmolested.[246] + +[Sidenote: ILLNESS OF LA SALLE.] + +And now, in a career of unwonted success and anticipated triumph, La +Salle was arrested by a foe against which the boldest heart avails +nothing. As he ascended the Mississippi, he was seized by a dangerous +illness. Unable to proceed, he sent forward Tonty to Michilimackinac, +whence, after despatching news of their discovery to Canada, he was to +return to the Illinois. La Salle himself lay helpless at Fort Prudhomme, +the palisade work which his men had built at the Chickasaw Bluffs on +their way down. Father Zenobe Membré attended him; and at the end of +July he was once more in a condition to advance by slow movements +towards Fort Miami, which he reached in about a month. + +In September he rejoined Tonty at Michilimackinac, and in the following +month wrote to a friend in France: "Though my discovery is made, and I +have descended the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico, I cannot send you +this year either an account of my journey or a map. On the way back I +was attacked by a deadly disease, which kept me in danger of my life for +forty days, and left me so weak that I could think of nothing for four +months after. I have hardly strength enough now to write my letters, and +the season is so far advanced that I cannot detain a single day this +canoe which I send expressly to carry them. If I had not feared being +forced to winter on the way, I should have tried to get to Quebec to +meet the new governor, if it is true that we are to have one; but in my +present condition this would be an act of suicide, on account of the bad +nourishment I should have all winter in case the snow and ice stopped me +on the way. Besides, my presence is absolutely necessary in the place to +which I am going. I pray you, my dear sir, to give me once more all the +help you can. I have great enemies, who have succeeded in all they have +undertaken. I do not pretend to resist them, but only to justify myself, +so that I can pursue by sea the plans I have begun here by land." + +This was what he had proposed to himself from the first; that is, to +abandon the difficult access through Canada, beset with enemies, and +open a way to his western domain through the Gulf and the Mississippi. +This was the aim of all his toilsome explorations. Could he have +accomplished his first intention of building a vessel on the Illinois +and descending in her to the Gulf, he would have been able to defray in +good measure the costs of the enterprise by means of the furs and +buffalo-hides collected on the way and carried in her to France. With a +fleet of canoes, this was impossible; and there was nothing to offset +the enormous outlay which he and his associates had made. He meant, as +we have seen, to found on the banks of the Illinois a colony of French +and Indians to answer the double purpose of a bulwark against the +Iroquois and a place of storage for the furs of all the western tribes; +and he hoped in the following year to secure an outlet for this colony +and for all the trade of the valley of the Mississippi, by occupying the +mouth of that river with a fort and another colony. This, too, was an +essential part of his original design. + +But for his illness, he would have gone to France to provide for its +execution. Meanwhile, he ordered Tonty to collect as many men as +possible, and begin the projected colony on the banks of the Illinois. A +report soon after reached him that those pests of the wilderness the +Iroquois were about to renew their attacks on the western tribes. This +would be fatal to his plans; and, following Tonty to the Illinois, he +rejoined him near the site of the great town. + +[Sidenote: "STARVED ROCK."] + +The cliff called "Starved Rock," now pointed out to travellers as the +chief natural curiosity of the region, rises, steep on three sides as a +castle wall, to the height of a hundred and twenty-five feet above the +river. In front, it overhangs the water that washes its base; its +western brow looks down on the tops of the forest trees below; and on +the east lies a wide gorge or ravine, choked with the mingled foliage of +oaks, walnuts, and elms; while in its rocky depths a little brook creeps +down to mingle with the river. From the trunk of the stunted cedar that +leans forward from the brink, you may drop a plummet into the river +below, where the cat-fish and the turtles may plainly be seen gliding +over the wrinkled sands of the clear and shallow current. The cliff is +accessible only from behind, where a man may climb up, not without +difficulty, by a steep and narrow passage. The top is about an acre in +extent. Here, in the month of December, La Salle and Tonty began to +intrench themselves. They cut away the forest that crowned the rock, +built store-houses and dwellings of its remains, dragged timber up the +rugged pathway, and encircled the summit with a palisade.[247] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S COLONY.] + +[Illustration: LA SALLE'S COLONY +on the Illinois, +FROM THE MAP OF +FRANQUELIN, +1684] + +Thus the winter passed, and meanwhile the work of negotiation went +prosperously on. The minds of the Indians had been already prepared. In +La Salle they saw their champion against the Iroquois, the standing +terror of all this region. They gathered round his stronghold like the +timorous peasantry of the middle ages around the rock-built castle of +their feudal lord. From the wooden ramparts of St. Louis,--for so he +named his fort,--high and inaccessible as an eagle's nest, a strange +scene lay before his eye. The broad, flat valley of the Illinois was +spread beneath him like a map, bounded in the distance by its low wall +of woody hills. The river wound at his feet in devious channels among +islands bordered with lofty trees; then, far on the left, flowed calmly +westward through the vast meadows, till its glimmering blue ribbon was +lost in hazy distance. + +There had been a time, and that not remote, when these fair meadows were +a waste of death and desolation, scathed with fire, and strewn with the +ghastly relics of an Iroquois victory. Now all was changed. La Salle +looked down from his rock on a concourse of wild human life. Lodges of +bark and rushes, or cabins of logs, were clustered on the open plain or +along the edges of the bordering forests. Squaws labored, warriors +lounged in the sun, naked children whooped and gambolled on the grass. +Beyond the river, a mile and a half on the left, the banks were studded +once more with the lodges of the Illinois, who, to the number of six +thousand, had returned, since their defeat, to this their favorite +dwelling-place. Scattered along the valley, among the adjacent hills, +or over the neighboring prairie, were the cantonments of a half-score of +other tribes and fragments of tribes, gathered under the protecting ægis +of the French,--Shawanoes from the Ohio, Abenakis from Maine, Miamis +from the sources of the Kankakee, with others whose barbarous names are +hardly worth the record.[248] Nor were these La Salle's only +dependants. By the terms of his patent, he held seigniorial rights over +this wild domain; and he now began to grant it out in parcels to his +followers. These, however, were as yet but a score,--a lawless band, +trained in forest license, and marrying, as their detractors affirm, a +new squaw every day in the week. This was after their lord's departure, +for his presence imposed a check on these eccentricities. + +La Salle, in a memoir addressed to the Minister of the Marine, reports +the total number of the Indians around Fort St. Louis at about four +thousand warriors, or twenty thousand souls. His diplomacy had been +crowned with a marvellous success,--for which his thanks were due, first +to the Iroquois, and the universal terror they inspired; next, to his +own address and unwearied energy. His colony had sprung up, as it were, +in a night; but might not a night suffice to disperse it? + +The conditions of maintaining it were twofold: first, he must give +efficient aid to his savage colonists against the Iroquois; secondly, he +must supply them with French goods in exchange for their furs. The men, +arms, and ammunition for their defence, and the goods for trading with +them, must be brought from Canada, until a better and surer avenue of +supply could be provided through the entrepôt which he meant to +establish at the mouth of the Mississippi. Canada was full of his +enemies; but as long as Count Frontenac was in power, he was sure of +support. Count Frontenac was in power no longer. He had been recalled to +France through the intrigues of the party adverse to La Salle; and Le +Febvre de la Barre reigned in his stead. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND LA BARRE.] + +La Barre was an old naval officer of rank, advanced to a post for which +he proved himself notably unfit. If he was without the arbitrary +passions which had been the chief occasion of the recall of his +predecessor, he was no less without his energies and his talents. He +showed a weakness and an avarice for which his age may have been in some +measure answerable. He was no whit less unscrupulous than his +predecessor in his secret violation of the royal ordinances regulating +the fur-trade, which it was his duty to enforce. Like Frontenac, he took +advantage of his position to carry on an illicit traffic with the +Indians; but it was with different associates. The late governor's +friends were the new governor's enemies; and La Salle, armed with his +monopolies, was the object of his especial jealousy.[249] + +Meanwhile, La Salle, buried in the western wilderness, remained for the +time ignorant of La Barre's disposition towards him, and made an effort +to secure his good-will and countenance. He wrote to him from his rock +of St. Louis, early in the spring of 1683, expressing the hope that he +should have from him the same support as from Count Frontenac; +"although," he says, "my enemies will try to influence you against me." +His attachment to Frontenac, he pursues, has been the cause of all the +late governor's enemies turning against him. He then recounts his voyage +down the Mississippi; says that, with twenty-two Frenchmen, he caused +all the tribes along the river to ask for peace; and speaks of his right +under the royal patent to build forts anywhere along his route, and +grant out lands around them, as at Fort Frontenac. + +"My losses in my enterprises," he continues, "have exceeded forty +thousand crowns. I am now going four hundred leagues south-southwest of +this place, to induce the Chickasaws to follow the Shawanoes and other +tribes, and settle, like them, at St. Louis. It remained only to settle +French colonists here, and this I have already done. I hope you will not +detain them as _coureurs de bois_, when they come down to Montreal to +make necessary purchases. I am aware that I have no right to trade with +the tribes who descend to Montreal, and I shall not permit such trade to +my men; nor have I ever issued licenses to that effect, as my enemies +say that I have done."[250] + +Again, on the fourth of June following, he writes to La Barre, from the +Chicago portage, complaining that some of his colonists, going to +Montreal for necessary supplies, have been detained by his enemies, and +begging that they may be allowed to return, that his enterprise may not +be ruined. "The Iroquois," he pursues, "are again invading the country. +Last year, the Miamis were so alarmed by them that they abandoned their +town and fled; but at my return they came back, and have been induced to +settle with the Illinois at my fort of St. Louis. The Iroquois have +lately murdered some families of their nation, and they are all in +terror again. I am afraid they will take flight, and so prevent the +Missouris and neighboring tribes from coming to settle at St. Louis, as +they are about to do. + +"Some of the Hurons and French tell the Miamis that I am keeping them +here for the Iroquois to destroy. I pray that you will let me hear from +you, that I may give these people some assurances of protection before +they are destroyed in my sight. Do not suffer my men who have come down +to the settlements to be longer prevented from returning. There is great +need here of reinforcements. The Iroquois, as I have said, have lately +entered the country; and a great terror prevails. I have postponed going +to Michilimackinac, because, if the Iroquois strike any blow in my +absence, the Miamis will think that I am in league with them; whereas, +if I and the French stay among them, they will regard us as protectors. +But, Monsieur, it is in vain that we risk our lives here, and that I +exhaust my means in order to fulfil the intentions of his Majesty, if +all my measures are crossed in the settlements below, and if those who +go down to bring munitions, without which we cannot defend ourselves, +are detained under pretexts trumped up for the occasion. If I am +prevented from bringing up men and supplies, as I am allowed to do by +the permit of Count Frontenac, then my patent from the King is useless. +It would be very hard for us, after having done what was required, even +before the time prescribed, and after suffering severe losses, to have +our efforts frustrated by obstacles got up designedly. + +"I trust that, as it lies with you alone to prevent or to permit the +return of the men whom I have sent down, you will not so act as to +thwart my plans. A part of the goods which I have sent by them belong +not to me, but to the Sieur de Tonty, and are a part of his pay. Others +are to buy munitions indispensable for our defence. Do not let my +creditors seize them. It is for their advantage that my fort, full as it +is of goods, should be held against the enemy. I have only twenty men, +with scarcely a hundred pounds of powder; and I cannot long hold the +country without more. The Illinois are very capricious and uncertain.... +If I had men enough to send out to reconnoitre the enemy, I would have +done so before this; but I have not enough. I trust you will put it in +my power to obtain more, that this important colony may be saved."[251] + +While La Salle was thus writing to La Barre, La Barre was writing to +Seignelay, the Marine and Colonial Minister, decrying his +correspondent's discoveries, and pretending to doubt their reality. "The +Iroquois," he adds, "have sworn his [La Salle's] death. The imprudence +of this man is about to involve the colony in war."[252] And again he +writes, in the following spring, to say that La Salle was with a score +of vagabonds at Green Bay, where he set himself up as a king, pillaged +his countrymen, and put them to ransom, exposed the tribes of the West +to the incursions of the Iroquois, and all under pretence of a patent +from his Majesty, the provisions of which he grossly abused; but, as his +privileges would expire on the twelfth of May ensuing, he would then be +forced to come to Quebec, where his creditors, to whom he owed more than +thirty thousand crowns, were anxiously awaiting him.[253] + +Finally, when La Barre received the two letters from La Salle, of which +the substance is given above, he sent copies of them to the Minister +Seignelay, with the following comment: "By the copies of the Sieur de la +Salle's letters, you will perceive that his head is turned, and that he +has been bold enough to give you intelligence of a false discovery, and +that, instead of returning to the colony to learn what the King wishes +him to do, he does not come near me, but keeps in the backwoods, five +hundred leagues off, with the idea of attracting the inhabitants to him, +and building up an imaginary kingdom for himself, by debauching all the +bankrupts and idlers of this country. If you will look at the two +letters I had from him, you can judge the character of this personage +better than I can. Affairs with the Iroquois are in such a state that I +cannot allow him to muster all their enemies together and put himself at +their head. All the men who brought me news from him have abandoned him, +and say not a word about returning, _but sell the furs they have brought +as if they were their own_; so that he cannot hold his ground much +longer."[254] Such calumnies had their effect. The enemies of La Salle +had already gained the ear of the King; and he had written in August, +from Fontainebleau, to his new governor of Canada: "I am convinced, like +you, that the discovery of the Sieur de la Salle is very useless, and +that such enterprises ought to be prevented in future, as they tend only +to debauch the inhabitants by the hope of gain, and to diminish the +revenue from beaver-skins."[255] + +In order to understand the posture of affairs at this time, it must be +remembered that Dutch and English traders of New York were urging on the +Iroquois to attack the western tribes, with the object of gaining, +through their conquest, the control of the fur-trade of the interior, +and diverting it from Montreal to Albany. The scheme was full of danger +to Canada, which the loss of the trade would have ruined. La Barre and +his associates were greatly alarmed at it. Its complete success would +have been fatal to their hopes of profit; but they nevertheless wished +it such a measure of success as would ruin their rival, La Salle. Hence, +no little satisfaction mingled with their anxiety when they heard that +the Iroquois were again threatening to invade the Miamis and the +Illinois; and thus La Barre, whose duty it was strenuously to oppose the +intrigue of the English, and use every effort to quiet the ferocious +bands whom they were hounding against the Indian allies of the French, +was, in fact, but half-hearted in the work. He cut off La Salle from all +supplies; detained the men whom he sent for succor; and, at a conference +with the Iroquois, told them that they were welcome to plunder and kill +him.[256] + +[Sidenote: A NEW ALARM.] + +The old governor, and the unscrupulous ring with which he was +associated, now took a step to which he was doubtless emboldened by the +tone of the King's letter, in condemnation of La Salle's enterprise. He +resolved to seize Fort Frontenac, the property of La Salle, under the +pretext that the latter had not fulfilled the conditions of the grant, +and had not maintained a sufficient garrison.[257] Two of his +associates, La Chesnaye and Le Ber, armed with an order from him, went +up and took possession, despite the remonstrances of La Salle's +creditors and mortgagees; lived on La Salle's stores, sold for their own +profit, and (it is said) that of La Barre, the provisions sent by the +King, and turned in the cattle to pasture on the growing crops. La +Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, was told that he might retain the command +of the fort if he would join the associates; but he refused, and sailed +in the autumn for France.[258] + +Meanwhile La Salle remained at the Illinois in extreme embarrassment, +cut off from supplies, robbed of his men who had gone to seek them, and +disabled from fulfilling the pledges he had given to the surrounding +Indians. Such was his position, when reports came to Fort St. Louis that +the Iroquois were at hand. The Indian hamlets were wild with terror, +beseeching him for succor which he had no power to give. Happily, the +report proved false. No Iroquois appeared; the threatened attack was +postponed, and the summer passed away in peace. But La Salle's position, +with the governor his declared enemy, was intolerable and untenable; and +there was no resource but in the protection of the court. Early in the +autumn, he left Tonty in command of the rock, bade farewell to his +savage retainers, and descended to Quebec, intending to sail for France. + +On his way, he met the Chevalier de Baugis, an officer of the King's +dragoons, commissioned by La Barre to take possession of Fort St. Louis, +and bearing letters from the governor ordering La Salle to come to +Quebec,--a superfluous command, as he was then on his way thither. He +smothered his wrath, and wrote to Tonty to receive De Baugis well. The +chevalier and his party proceeded to the Illinois, and took possession +of the fort,--De Baugis commanding for the governor, while Tonty +remained as representative of La Salle. The two officers could not live +in harmony; but, with the return of spring, each found himself in sore +need of aid from the other. Towards the end of March the Iroquois +attacked their citadel, and besieged it for six days, but at length +withdrew discomfited, carrying with them a number of Indian prisoners, +most of whom escaped from their clutches.[259] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE SAILS FOR FRANCE.] + +Meanwhile, La Salle had sailed for France. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[245] The boundaries are laid down on the great map of Franquelin, made +in 1684, and preserved in the Dépôt des Cartes of the Marine. The line +runs along the south shore of Lake Erie, and thence follows the heads of +the streams flowing into Lake Michigan. It then turns northwest, and is +lost in the vast unknown of the now British Territories. On the south, +it is drawn by the heads of the streams flowing into the Gulf, as far +west as Mobile, after which it follows the shore of the Gulf to a little +south of the Rio Grande; then runs west, northwest, and finally north, +along the range of the Rocky Mountains. + +[246] Tonty, 1684, 1693. + +[247] "Starved Rock" perfectly answers, in every respect, to the +indications of the contemporary maps and documents concerning "Le +Rocher," the site of La Salle's fort of St. Louis. It is laid down on +several contemporary maps, besides the great map of La Salle's +discoveries, made in 1684. They all place it on the south side of the +river; whereas Buffalo Rock, three miles above, which has been supposed +to be the site of the fort, is on the north. The latter is crowned by a +plateau of great extent, is but sixty feet high, is accessible at many +points, and would require a large force to defend it; whereas La Salle +chose "Le Rocher," because a few men could hold it against a multitude. +Charlevoix, in 1721, describes both rocks, and says that the top of +Buffalo Rock had been occupied by the Miami village, so that it was +known as _Le Fort des Miamis_. This is confirmed by Joutel, who found +the Miamis here in 1687. Charlevoix then speaks of "Le Rocher," calling +it by that name; says that it is about a league below, on the left or +south side, forming a sheer cliff, very high, and looking like a +fortress on the border of the river. He saw remains of palisades at the +top, which, he thinks, were made by the Illinois (_Journal Historique, +Let._ xxvii.), though his countrymen had occupied it only three years +before. "The French reside on the rock (Le Rocher), which is very lofty +and impregnable." (_Memoir on Western Indians_, 1718, _in N. Y. Col. +Docs._, ix. 890.) St. Cosme, passing this way in 1699, mentions it as +"Le Vieux Fort," and says that it is "a rock about a hundred feet high +at the edge of the river, where M. de la Salle built a fort, since +abandoned." (_Journal de St. Cosme._) Joutel, who was here in 1687, +says, "Fort St. Louis is on a steep rock, about two hundred feet high, +with the river running at its base." He adds that its only defences were +palisades. The true height, as stated above, is about a hundred and +twenty-five feet. + +A traditional interest also attaches to this rock. It is said that, in +the Indian wars that followed the assassination of Pontiac, a few years +after the cession of Canada, a party of Illinois, assailed by the +Pottawattamies, here took refuge, defying attack. At length they were +all destroyed by starvation, and hence the name of "Starved Rock." + +For other proofs concerning this locality, see _ante_, 239. + +[248] This singular extemporized colony of La Salle, on the banks of the +Illinois, is laid down in detail on the great map of La Salle's +discoveries, by Jean Baptiste Franquelin, finished in 1684. There can be +no doubt that this part of the work is composed from authentic data. La +Salle himself, besides others of his party, came down from the Illinois +in the autumn of 1683, and undoubtedly supplied the young engineer with +materials. The various Indian villages, or cantonments, are all +indicated, with the number of warriors belonging to each, the aggregate +corresponding very nearly with that of La Salle's report to the +minister. The Illinois, properly so called, are set down at 1,200 +warriors; the Miamis, at 1,300; the Shawanoes, at 200; the Ouiatnoens +(Weas), at 500; the Peanqhichia (Piankishaw) band, at 150; the +Pepikokia, at 160; the Kilatica, at 300; and the Ouabona, at 70,--in +all, 3,880 warriors. A few others, probably Abenakis, lived in the fort. + +The Fort St. Louis is placed, on the map, at the exact site of Starved +Rock, and the Illinois village at the place where, as already mentioned +(see 239), Indian remains in great quantities are yearly ploughed up. +The Shawanoe camp, or village, is placed on the south side of the river, +behind the fort. The country is here hilly, broken, and now, as in La +Salle's time, covered with wood, which, however, soon ends in the open +prairie. A short time since, the remains of a low, irregular earthwork +of considerable extent were discovered at the intersection of two +ravines, about twenty-four hundred feet behind, or south of, Starved +Rock. The earthwork follows the line of the ravines on two sides. On the +east, there is an opening, or gateway, leading to the adjacent prairie. +The work is very irregular in form, and shows no trace of the civilized +engineer. In the stump of an oak-tree upon it, Dr. Paul counted a +hundred and sixty rings of annual growth. The village of the Shawanoes +(Chaouenons), on Franquelin's map, corresponds with the position of this +earthwork. I am indebted to the kindness of Dr. John Paul and Col. D. F. +Hitt, the proprietor of Starved Rock, for a plan of these curious +remains and a survey of the neighboring district. I must also express my +obligations to Mr. W. E. Bowman, photographer at Ottawa, for views of +Starved Rock and other features of the neighboring scenery. + +An interesting relic of the early explorers of this region was found a +few years ago at Ottawa, six miles above Starved Rock, in the shape of a +small iron gun, buried several feet deep in the drift of the river. It +consists of a welded tube of iron, about an inch and a half in calibre, +strengthened by a series of thick iron rings, cooled on, after the most +ancient as well as the most recent method of making cannon. It is about +fourteen inches long, the part near the muzzle having been burst off. +The construction is very rude. Small field-pieces, on a similar +principle, were used in the fourteenth century. Several of them may be +seen at the Musée d'Artillerie at Paris. In the time of Louis XIV., the +art of casting cannon was carried to a high degree of perfection. The +gun in question may have been made by a French blacksmith on the spot. A +far less probable supposition is, that it is a relic of some unrecorded +visit of the Spaniards; but the pattern of the piece would have been +antiquated, even in the time of De Soto. + +[249] The royal instructions to La Barre, on his assuming the +government, dated at Versailles, 10 May, 1682, require him to give no +further permission to make journeys of discovery towards the Sioux and +the Mississippi, as his Majesty thinks his subjects better employed in +cultivating the land. The letter adds, however, that La Salle is to be +allowed to continue his discoveries, if they appear to be useful. The +same instructions are repeated in a letter of the Minister of the Marine +to the new intendant of Canada, De Meules. + +[250] _Lettre de La Salle à La Barre, Fort St. Louis, 2 Avril, 1683._ +The above is condensed from passages in the original. + +[251] _Lettre de La Salle à La Barre, Portage de Chicagou, 4 Juin, +1683._ The substance of the letter is given above, in a condensed form. +A passage is omitted, in which La Salle expresses his belief that his +vessel, the "Griffin," had been destroyed, not by Indians, but by the +pilot, who, as he thinks, had been induced to sink her, and then, with +some of the crew, attempted to join Du Lhut with their plunder, but were +captured by Indians on the Mississippi. + +[252] _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 14 Nov., 1682._ + +[253] _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 30 Avril, 1683._ La Salle had +spent the winter, not at Green Bay, as this slanderous letter declares, +but in the Illinois country. + +[254] _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 4 Nov., 1683._ + +[255] _Lettre du Roy à La Barre, 5 Août, 1683._ + +[256] _Mémoire pour rendre compte à Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay +de l'État où le Sieur de Lasalle a laissé le Fort Frontenac pendant le +temps de sa découverte._ On La Barre's conduct, see "Count Frontenac and +New France under Louis XIV.," chap. v. + +[257] La Salle, when at Mackinaw, on his way to Quebec, in 1682, had +been recalled to the Illinois, as we have seen, by a threatened Iroquois +invasion. There is before me a copy of a letter which he then wrote to +Count Frontenac, begging him to send up more soldiers to the fort, at +his (La Salle's) expense. Frontenac, being about to sail for France, +gave this letter to his newly arrived successor, La Barre, who, far from +complying with the request, withdrew La Salle's soldiers already at the +fort, and then made its defenceless state a pretext for seizing it. This +statement is made in the memoir addressed to Seignelay, before cited. + +[258] These are the statements of the memorial addressed in La Salle's +behalf to the minister, Seignelay. + +[259] Tonty, 1684, 1693; _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 5 Juin, 1684; +Ibid., 9 Juillet, 1684_. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +1680-1683. + +LA SALLE PAINTED BY HIMSELF. + + Difficulty of knowing him; his Detractors; his Letters; vexations + of his Position; his Unfitness for Trade; risks Of Correspondence; + his Reported Marriage; alleged Ostentation; motives of Action; + charges of Harshness; intrigues against him; unpopular Manners; a + Strange Confession; his Strength and his Weakness; contrasts of his + Character. + + +We have seen La Salle in his acts. While he crosses the sea, let us look +at him in himself. Few men knew him, even of those who saw him most. +Reserved and self-contained as he was, with little vivacity or gayety or +love of pleasure, he was a sealed book to those about him. His daring +energy and endurance were patent to all; but the motive forces that +urged him, and the influences that wrought beneath the surface of his +character, were hidden where few eyes could pierce. His enemies were +free to make their own interpretations, and they did not fail to use the +opportunity. + +The interests arrayed against him were incessantly at work. His men were +persuaded to desert and rob him; the Iroquois were told that he was +arming the western tribes against them; the western tribes were told +that he was betraying them to the Iroquois; his proceedings were +denounced to the court; and continual efforts were made to alienate his +associates. They, on their part, sore as they were from disappointment +and loss, were in a mood to listen to the aspersions cast upon him; and +they pestered him with letters, asking questions, demanding +explanations, and dunning him for money. It is through his answers that +we are best able to judge him; and at times, by those touches of nature +which make the whole world kin, they teach us to know him and to feel +for him. + +[Sidenote: CHARGES AGAINST LA SALLE.] + +The main charges against him were that he was a crack-brained schemer, +that he was harsh to his men, that he traded where he had no right to +trade, and that his discoveries were nothing but a pretence for making +money. No accusations appear that touch his integrity or his honor. + +It was hard to convince those who were always losing by him. A +remittance of good dividends would have been his best answer, and would +have made any other answer needless; but, instead of bills of exchange, +he had nothing to give but excuses and explanations. In the autumn of +1680, he wrote to an associate who had demanded the long-deferred +profits: "I have had many misfortunes in the last two years. In the +autumn of '78, I lost a vessel by the fault of the pilot; in the next +summer, the deserters I told you about robbed me of eight or ten +thousand livres' worth of goods. In the autumn of '79, I lost a vessel +worth more than ten thousand crowns; in the next spring, five or six +rascals stole the value of five or six thousand livres in goods and +beaver-skins, at the Illinois, when I was absent. Two other men of mine, +carrying furs worth four or five thousand livres, were killed or drowned +in the St. Lawrence, and the furs were lost. Another robbed me of three +thousand livres in beaver-skins stored at Michilimackinac. This last +spring, I lost about seventeen hundred livres' worth of goods by the +upsetting of a canoe. Last winter, the fort and buildings at Niagara +were burned by the fault of the commander; and in the spring the +deserters, who passed that way, seized a part of the property that +remained, and escaped to New York. All this does not discourage me in +the least, and will only defer for a year or two the returns of profit +which you ask for this year. These losses are no more my fault than the +loss of the ship 'St. Joseph' was yours. I cannot be everywhere, and +cannot help making use of the people of the country." + +He begs his correspondent to send out an agent of his own. "He need not +be very _savant_, but he must be faithful, patient of labor, and fond +neither of gambling, women, nor good cheer; for he will find none of +these with me. Trusting in what he will write you, you may close your +ears to what priests and Jesuits tell you. + +[Sidenote: VEXATIONS OF HIS POSITION.] + +"After having put matters in good trim for trade I mean to withdraw, +though I think it will be very profitable; for I am disgusted to find +that I must always be making excuses, which is a part I cannot play +successfully. I am utterly tired of this business; for I see that it is +not enough to put property and life in constant peril, but that it +requires more pains to answer envy and detraction than to overcome the +difficulties inseparable from my undertaking." + +And he makes a variety of proposals, by which he hopes to get rid of a +part of his responsibility to his correspondent. He begs him again to +send out a confidential agent, saying that for his part he does not want +to have any account to render, except that which he owes to the court, +of his discoveries. He adds, strangely enough for a man burdened with +such liabilities, "I have neither the habit nor the inclination to keep +books, nor have I anybody with me who knows how." He says to another +correspondent, "I think, like you, that partnerships in business are +dangerous, on account of the little practice I have in these matters." +It is not surprising that he wanted to leave his associates to manage +business for themselves: "You know that this trade is good; and with a +trusty agent to conduct it for you, you run no risk. As for me, I will +keep the charge of the forts, the command of posts and of men, the +management of Indians and Frenchmen, and the establishment of the +colony, which will remain my property, leaving your agent and mine to +look after our interests, and drawing my half without having any hand in +what belongs to you." + +La Salle was a very indifferent trader; and his heart was not in the +commercial part of his enterprise. He aimed at achievement, and thirsted +after greatness. His ambition was to found another France in the West; +and if he meant to govern it also,--as without doubt he did,--it is not +a matter of wonder or of blame. His misfortune was, that, in the pursuit +of a great design, he was drawn into complications of business with +which he was ill fitted to grapple. He had not the instinct of the +successful merchant. He dared too much, and often dared unwisely; +attempted more than he could grasp, and forgot, in his sanguine +anticipations, to reckon with enormous and incalculable risks. + +Except in the narrative parts, his letters are rambling and +unconnected,--which is natural enough, written, as they were, at odd +moments, by camp-fires and among Indians. The style is crude; and being +well aware of this, he disliked writing, especially as the risk was +extreme that his letters would miss their destination. "There is too +little good faith in this country, and too many people on the watch, for +me to trust anybody with what I wish to send you. Even sealed letters +are not too safe. Not only are they liable to be lost or stopped by the +way, but even such as escape the curiosity of spies lie at Montreal, +waiting a long time to be forwarded." + +[Sidenote: HIS LETTERS INTERCEPTED.] + +Again, he writes: "I cannot pardon myself for the stoppage of my +letters, though I made every effort to make them reach you. I wrote to +you in '79 (in August), and sent my letters to M. de la Forest, who gave +them in good faith to my brother. I don't know what he has done with +them. I wrote you another, by the vessel that was lost last year. I sent +two canoes, by two different routes; but the wind and the rain were so +furious that they wintered on the way, and I found my letters at the +fort on my return. I now send you one of them, which I wrote last year +to M. Thouret, in which you will find a full account of what passed, +from the time when we left the outlet of Lake Erie down to the sixteenth +of August, 1680. What preceded was told at full length in the letters my +brother has seen fit to intercept." + +This brother was the Sulpitian priest, Jean Cavelier, who had been +persuaded that La Salle's enterprise would be ruinous, and therefore set +himself sometimes to stop it altogether, and sometimes to manage it in +his own way. "His conduct towards me," says La Salle, "has always been +so strange, through the small love he bears me, that it was clear gain +for me when he went away; since while he stayed he did nothing but cross +all my plans, which I was forced to change every moment to suit his +caprice." + +There was one point on which the interference of his brother and of his +correspondents was peculiarly annoying. They thought it for their +interest that he should remain a single man; whereas, it seems that his +devotion to his purpose was not so engrossing as to exclude more tender +subjects. He writes:-- + +"I am told that you have been uneasy about my pretended marriage. I had +not thought about it at that time; and I shall not make any engagement +of the sort till I have given you reason to be satisfied with me. It is +a little extraordinary that I must render account of a matter which is +free to all the world. + +"In fine, Monsieur, it is only as an earnest of something more +substantial that I write to you so much at length. I do not doubt that +you will hereafter change the ideas about me which some persons wish to +give you, and that you will be relieved of the anxiety which all that +has happened reasonably causes you. I have written this letter at more +than twenty different times; and I am more than a hundred and fifty +leagues from where I began it. I have still two hundred more to get +over, before reaching the Illinois. I am taking with me twenty-five men +to the relief of the six or seven who remain with the Sieur de Tonty." + +This was the journey which ended in that scene of horror at the ruined +town of the Illinois. + +[Sidenote: CHARGED WITH OSTENTATION.] + +To the same correspondent, pressing him for dividends, he says: "You +repeat continually that you will not be satisfied unless I make you +large returns of profit. Though I have reason to thank you for what you +have done for this enterprise, it seems to me that I have done still +more, since I have put everything at stake; and it would be hard to +reproach me either with foolish outlays or with the ostentation which is +falsely imputed to me. Let my accusers explain what they mean. Since I +have been in this country, I have had neither servants nor clothes nor +fare which did not savor more of meanness than of ostentation; and the +moment I see that there is anything with which either you or the court +find fault, I assure you that I will give it up,--for the life I am +leading has no other attraction for me than that of honor; and the more +danger and difficulty there is in undertakings of this sort, the more +worthy of honor I think they are." + +His career attests the sincerity of these words. They are a momentary +betrayal of the deep enthusiasm of character which may be read in his +life, but to which he rarely allowed the faintest expression. + +"Above all," he continues, "if you want me to keep on, do not compel me +to reply to all the questions and fancies of priests and Jesuits. They +have more leisure than I; and I am not subtle enough to anticipate all +their empty stories. I could easily give you the information you ask; +but I have a right to expect that you will not believe all you hear, nor +require me to prove to you that I am not a madman. That is the first +point to which you should have attended, before having business with me; +and in our long acquaintance, either you must have found me out, or else +I must have had long intervals of sanity." + +To another correspondent he defends himself against the charge of +harshness to his men: "The facility I am said to want is out of place +with this sort of people, who are libertines for the most part; and to +indulge them means to tolerate blasphemy, drunkenness, lewdness, and a +license incompatible with any kind of order. It will not be found that I +have in any case whatever treated any man harshly, except for +blasphemies and other such crimes openly committed. These I cannot +tolerate: first, because such compliance would give grounds for another +accusation, much more just; secondly, because, if I allowed such +disorders to become habitual, it would be hard to keep the men in +subordination and obedience, as regards executing the work I am +commissioned to do; thirdly, because the debaucheries, too common with +this rabble, are the source of endless delays and frequent thieving; +and, finally, because I am a Christian, and do not want to bear the +burden of their crimes. + +[Sidenote: INTRIGUES AGAINST HIM.] + +"What is said about my servants has not even a show of truth; for I use +no servants here, and all my men are on the same footing. I grant that +as those who have lived with me are steadier and give me no reason to +complain of their behavior, I treat them as gently as I should treat the +others if they resembled them, and as those who were formerly my +servants are the only ones I can trust, I speak more openly to them than +to the rest, who are generally spies of my enemies. The twenty-two men +who deserted and robbed me are not to be believed on their word, +deserters and thieves as they are. They are ready enough to find some +pretext for their crime; and it needs as unjust a judge as the intendant +to prompt such rascals to enter complaints against a person to whom he +had given a warrant to arrest them. But, to show the falsity of these +charges, Martin Chartier, who was one of those who excited the rest to +do as they did, was never with me at all; and the rest had made their +plot before seeing me." And he proceeds to relate, in great detail, a +variety of circumstances to prove that his men had been instigated first +to desert, and then to slander him; adding, "Those who remain with me +are the first I had, and they have not left me for six years." + +"I have a hundred other proofs of the bad counsel given to these +deserters, and will produce them when wanted; but as they themselves are +the only witnesses of the severity they complain of, while the witnesses +of their crimes are unimpeachable, why am I refused the justice I +demand, and why is their secret escape connived at? + +"I do not know what you mean by having popular manners. There is nothing +special in my food, clothing, or lodging, which are all the same for me +as for my men. How can it be that I do not talk with them? I have no +other company. M. de Tonty has often found fault with me because I +stopped too often to talk with them. You do not know the men one must +employ here, when you exhort me to make merry with them. They are +incapable of that; for they are never pleased, unless one gives free +rein to their drunkenness and other vices. If that is what you call +having popular manners, neither honor nor inclination would let me stoop +to gain their favor in a way so disreputable: and, besides, the +consequences would be dangerous, and they would have the same contempt +for me that they have for all who treat them in this fashion. + +"You write me that even my friends say that I am not a man of popular +manners. I do not know what friends they are. I know of none in this +country. To all appearance they are enemies, more subtle and secret than +the rest. I make no exceptions; for I know that those who seem to give +me support do not do it out of love for me, but because they are in some +sort bound in honor, and that in their hearts they think I have dealt +ill with them. M. Plet will tell you what he has heard about it himself, +and the reasons they have to give.[260] I have seen it for a long time; +and these secret stabs they give me show it very plainly. After that, it +is not surprising that I open my mind to nobody, and distrust everybody. +I have reasons that I cannot write. + +"For the rest, Monsieur, pray be well assured that the information you +are so good as to give me is received with a gratitude equal to the +genuine friendship from which it proceeds; and, however unjust are the +charges made against me, I should be much more unjust myself if I did +not feel that I have as much reason to thank you for telling me of them +as I have to complain of others for inventing them. + +[Sidenote: HIS MANNERS.] + +"As for what you say about my look and manner, I myself confess that you +are not far from right. But _naturam expellas_; and if I am wanting in +expansiveness and show of feeling towards those with whom I associate, +_it is only through a timidity which is natural to me, and which has +made me leave various employments, where without it I could have +succeeded_. But as I judged myself ill-fitted for them on account of +this defect, I have chosen a life more suited to my solitary +disposition; which, nevertheless, does not make me harsh to my people, +though, joined to a life among savages, it makes me, perhaps, less +polished and complaisant than the atmosphere of Paris requires. I well +believe that there is self-love in this; and that, knowing how little I +am accustomed to a more polite life, the fear of making mistakes makes +me more reserved than I like to be. So I rarely expose myself to +conversation with those in whose company I am afraid of making blunders, +and can hardly help making them. Abbé Renaudot knows with what +repugnance I had the honor to appear before Monseigneur de Conti; and +sometimes it took me a week to make up my mind to go to the +audience,--that is, when I had time to think about myself, and was not +driven by pressing business. It is much the same with letters, which I +never write except when pushed to it, and for the same reason. It is a +defect of which I shall never rid myself as long as I live, often as it +spites me against myself, and often as I quarrel with myself about it." + +[Sidenote: HIS STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS.] + +Here is a strange confession for a man like La Salle. Without doubt, the +timidity of which he accuses himself had some of its roots in pride; but +not the less was his pride vexed and humbled by it. It is surprising +that, being what he was, he could have brought himself to such an avowal +under any circumstances or any pressure of distress. Shyness; a morbid +fear of committing himself; and incapacity to express, and much more to +simulate, feeling,--a trait sometimes seen in those with whom feeling is +most deep,--are strange ingredients in the character of a man who had +grappled so dauntlessly with life on its harshest and rudest side. They +were deplorable defects for one in his position. He lacked that +sympathetic power, the inestimable gift of the true leader of men, in +which lies the difference between a willing and a constrained obedience. +This solitary being, hiding his shyness under a cold reserve, could +rouse no enthusiasm in his followers. He lived in the purpose which he +had made a part of himself, nursed his plans in secret, and seldom asked +or accepted advice. He trusted himself, and learned more and more to +trust no others. One may fairly infer that distrust was natural to him; +but the inference may possibly be wrong. Bitter experience had schooled +him to it; for he lived among snares, pitfalls, and intriguing enemies. +He began to doubt even the associates who, under representations he had +made them in perfect good faith, had staked their money on his +enterprise, and lost it, or were likely to lose it. They pursued him +with advice and complaint, and half believed that he was what his +maligners called him,--a visionary or a madman. It galled him that they +had suffered for their trust in him, and that they had repented their +trust. His lonely and shadowed nature needed the mellowing sunshine of +success, and his whole life was a fight with adversity. + +All that appears to the eye is his intrepid conflict with obstacles +without; but this, perhaps, was no more arduous than the invisible and +silent strife of a nature at war with itself,--the pride, aspiration, +and bold energy that lay at the base of his character battling against +the superficial weakness that mortified and angered him. In such a man, +the effect of such an infirmity is to concentrate and intensify the +force within. In one form or another, discordant natures are common +enough; but very rarely is the antagonism so irreconcilable as it was in +him. And the greater the antagonism, the greater the pain. There are +those in whom the sort of timidity from which he suffered is matched +with no quality that strongly revolts against it. These gentle natures +may at least have peace, but for him there was no peace. + +Cavelier de La Salle stands in history like a statue cast in iron; but +his own unwilling pen betrays the man, and reveals in the stern, sad +figure an object of human interest and pity.[261] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[260] His cousin, François Plet, was in Canada in 1680, where, with La +Salle's approval, he carried on the trade of Fort Frontenac, in order to +indemnify himself for money advanced. La Salle always speaks of him with +esteem and gratitude. + +[261] The following is the character of La Salle, as drawn by his +friend, Abbé Bernou, in a memorial to the minister Seignelay: "Il est +irréprochable dans ses moeurs, réglé dans sa conduite, et qui veut de +l'ordre parmy ses gens. Il est savant, judicieux, politique, vigilant, +infatigable, sobre, et intrépide. Il entend suffisament l'architecture +civile, militaire, et navale ainsy que l'agriculture; il parle ou entend +quatre ou cinq langues des Sauvages, et a beaucoup de facilité pour +apprendre les autres. Il sçait toutes leurs manières et obtient d'eux +tout ce qu'il veut par son adresse, par son éloquence, et parce qu'il +est beaucoup estimé d'eux. Dans ses voyages il ne fait pas meilleure +chère que le moindre de ses gens et se donne plus de peine que pas un +pour les encourager, et il y a lieu de croire qu'avec la protection de +Monseigneur il fondera des colonies plus considérables que toutes celles +que les François ont établies jusqu'à présent."--_Mémoire pour +Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay_, 1682 (Margry, ii. 277). + +The extracts given in the foregoing chapter are from La Salle's long +letters of 29 Sept., 1680, and 22 Aug., 1682 (1681?). Both are printed +in the second volume of the Margry collection, and the originals of both +are in the Bibliothèque Nationale. The latter seems to have been written +to La Salle's friend, Abbé Bernou; and the former, to a certain M. +Thouret. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +1684. + +A NEW ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Court: his Proposals.--Occupation of + Louisiana.--Invasion of Mexico.--Royal Favor.--Preparation.--A + Divided Command.--Beaujeu and La Salle.--Mental Condition of La + Salle: his Farewell to his Mother. + + +When La Salle reached Paris, he went to his old lodgings in Rue de la +Truanderie, and, it is likely enough, thought for an instant of the +adventures and vicissitudes he had passed since he occupied them before. +Another ordeal awaited him. He must confront, not painted savages with +tomahawk and knife, but--what he shrank from more--the courtly throngs +that still live and move in the pages of Sévigné and Saint-Simon. + +The news of his discovery and the rumor of his schemes were the talk of +a moment among the courtiers, and then were forgotten. It was not so +with their master. La Salle's friends and patrons did not fail him. A +student and a recluse in his youth, and a backwoodsman in his manhood, +he had what was to him the formidable honor of an interview with royalty +itself, and stood with such philosophy as he could command before the +gilded arm-chair, where, majestic and awful, the power of France sat +embodied. The King listened to all he said; but the results of the +interview were kept so secret that it was rumored in the ante-chambers +that his proposals had been rejected.[262] + +On the contrary, they had met with more than favor. The moment was +opportune for La Salle. The King had long been irritated against the +Spaniards, because they not only excluded his subjects from their +American ports, but forbade them to enter the Gulf of Mexico. Certain +Frenchmen who had sailed on this forbidden sea had been seized and +imprisoned; and more recently a small vessel of the royal navy had been +captured for the same offence. This had drawn from the King a +declaration that every sea should be free to all his subjects; and Count +d'Estrées was sent with a squadron to the Gulf, to exact satisfaction of +the Spaniards, or fight them if they refused it.[263] This was in time +of peace. War had since arisen between the two crowns, and brought with +it the opportunity of settling the question forever. In order to do so, +the minister Seignelay, like his father Colbert, proposed to establish a +French port on the Gulf, as a permanent menace to the Spaniards and a +basis of future conquest. It was in view of this plan that La Salle's +past enterprises had been favored; and the proposals he now made were in +perfect accord with it. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S PROPOSALS.] + +These proposals were set forth in two memorials. The first of them +states that the late Monseigneur Colbert deemed it important for the +service of his Majesty to discover a port in the Gulf of Mexico; that to +this end the memorialist, La Salle, made five journeys of upwards of +five thousand leagues, in great part on foot; and traversed more than +six hundred leagues of unknown country, among savages and cannibals, at +the cost of a hundred and fifty thousand francs. He now proposes to +return by way of the Gulf of Mexico and the mouth of the Mississippi to +the countries he has discovered, whence great benefits may be expected: +first, the cause of God may be advanced by the preaching of the gospel +to many Indian tribes; and, secondly, great conquests may be effected +for the glory of the King, by the seizure of provinces rich in silver +mines, and defended only by a few indolent and effeminate Spaniards. The +Sieur de la Salle, pursues the memorial, binds himself to be ready for +the accomplishment of this enterprise within one year after his arrival +on the spot; and he asks for this purpose only one vessel and two +hundred men, with their arms, munitions, pay, and maintenance. When +Monseigneur shall direct him, he will give the details of what he +proposes. The memorial then describes the boundless extent, the +fertility and resources of the country watered by the river Colbert, or +Mississippi; the necessity of guarding it against foreigners, who will +be eager to seize it now that La Salle's discovery has made it known; +and the ease with which it may be defended by one or two forts at a +proper distance above its mouth, which would form the key to an interior +region eight hundred leagues in extent. "Should foreigners anticipate +us," he adds, "they will complete the ruin of New France, which they +already hem in by their establishments of Virginia, Pennsylvania, New +England, and Hudson's Bay."[264] + +The second memorial is more explicit. The place, it says, which the +Sieur de la Salle proposes to fortify, is on the river Colbert, or +Mississippi, sixty leagues above its mouth, where the soil is very +fertile, the climate very mild, and whence we, the French, may control +the continent,--since, the river being narrow, we could defend ourselves +by means of fire-ships against a hostile fleet, while the position is +excellent both for attacking an enemy or retreating in case of need. The +neighboring Indians detest the Spaniards, but love the French, having +been won over by the kindness of the Sieur de la Salle. We could form of +them an army of more than fifteen thousand savages, who, supported by +the French and Abenakis, followers of the Sieur de la Salle, could +easily subdue the province of New Biscay (the most northern province of +Mexico), where there are but four hundred Spaniards, more fit to work +the mines than to fight. On the north of New Biscay lie vast forests, +extending to the river Seignelay[265] (Red River), which is but forty or +fifty leagues from the Spanish province. This river affords the means of +attacking it to great advantage. + +In view of these facts, pursues the memorial, the Sieur de la Salle +offers, if the war with Spain continues, to undertake this conquest with +two hundred men from France. He will take on his way fifty buccaneers at +St. Domingo, and direct the four thousand Indian warriors at Fort St. +Louis of the Illinois to descend the river and join him. He will +separate his force into three divisions, and attack at the same time the +centre and the two extremities of the province. To accomplish this great +design, he asks only for a vessel of thirty guns, a few cannon for the +forts, and power to raise in France two hundred such men as he shall +think fit, to be armed, paid, and maintained six months at the King's +charge. And the Sieur de la Salle binds himself, if the execution of +this plan is prevented for more than three years, by peace with Spain, +to refund to his Majesty all the costs of the enterprise, on pain of +forfeiting the government of the ports he will have established.[266] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLES'S PLANS.] + +Such, in brief, was the substance of this singular proposition. And, +first, it is to be observed that it is based on a geographical blunder, +the nature of which is explained by the map of La Salle's discoveries +made in this very year. Here the river Seignelay, or Red River, is +represented as running parallel to the northern border of Mexico, and at +no great distance from it,--the region now called Texas being almost +entirely suppressed. According to the map, New Biscay might be reached +from this river in a few days; and, after crossing the intervening +forests, the coveted mines of Ste. Barbe, or Santa Barbara, would be +within striking distance.[267] That La Salle believed in the possibility +of invading the Spanish province of New Biscay from Red River there can +be no doubt; neither can it reasonably be doubted that he hoped at some +future day to make the attempt; and yet it is incredible that a man in +his sober senses could have proposed this scheme with the intention of +attempting to execute it at the time and in the manner which he +indicates.[268] This memorial bears some indications of being drawn up +in order to produce a certain effect on the minds of the King and his +minister. La Salle's immediate necessity was to obtain from them the +means for establishing a fort and a colony within the mouth of the +Mississippi. This was essential to his own plans; nor did he in the +least exaggerate the value of such an establishment to the French +nation, and the importance of anticipating other powers in the +possession of it. But he thought that he needed a more glittering lure +to attract the eyes of Louis and Seignelay; and thus, it may be, he held +before them, in a definite and tangible form, the project of Spanish +conquest which had haunted his imagination from youth,--trusting that +the speedy conclusion of peace, which actually took place, would absolve +him from the immediate execution of the scheme, and give him time, with +the means placed at his disposal, to mature his plans and prepare for +eventual action. Such a procedure may be charged with indirectness; but +there is a different explanation, which we shall suggest hereafter, and +which implies no such reproach.[269] + +Even with this madcap enterprise lopped off, La Salle's scheme of +Mississippi trade and colonization, perfectly sound in itself, was too +vast for an individual,--above all, for one crippled and crushed with +debt. While he grasped one link of the great chain, another, no less +essential, escaped from his hand; while he built up a colony on the +Mississippi, it was reasonably certain that evil would befall his +distant colony of the Illinois. + +[Sidenote: LA BARRE REBUKED.] + +The glittering project which he now unfolded found favor in the eyes of +the King and his minister; for both were in the flush of an unparalleled +success, and looked in the future, as in the past, for nothing but +triumphs. They granted more than the petitioner asked, as indeed they +well might, if they expected the accomplishment of all that he proposed +to attempt. La Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, ejected from Fort +Frontenac by La Barre, was now at Paris; and he was despatched to +Canada, empowered to reoccupy, in La Salle's name, both Fort Frontenac +and Fort St. Louis of the Illinois. The King himself wrote to La Barre +in a strain that must have sent a cold thrill through the veins of that +official. "I hear," he says, "that you have taken possession of Fort +Frontenac, the property of the Sieur de la Salle, driven away his men, +suffered his land to run to waste, and even told the Iroquois that they +might seize him as an enemy of the colony." He adds, that, if this is +true, La Barre must make reparation for the wrong, and place all La +Salle's property, as well as his men, in the hands of the Sieur de la +Forest, "as I am satisfied that Fort Frontenac was not abandoned, as you +wrote to me that it had been."[270] Four days later, he wrote to the +intendant of Canada, De Meules, to the effect that the bearer, La +Forest, is to suffer no impediment, and that La Barre is to surrender to +him without reserve all that belongs to La Salle.[271] Armed with this +letter, La Forest sailed for Canada.[272] + +A chief object of his mission, as it was represented to Seignelay, was, +not only to save the colony at the Illinois from being broken up by La +Barre, but also to collect La Salle's scattered followers, muster the +savage warriors around the rock of St. Louis, and lead the whole down +the Mississippi, to co-operate in the attack on New Biscay. If La Salle +meant that La Forest should seriously attempt to execute such a scheme, +then the charges of his enemies that his brain was turned were better +founded than he would have us think.[273] + +[Sidenote: PREPARATION.] + +He had asked for two vessels,[274] and four were given to him. Agents +were sent to Rochelle and Rochefort to gather recruits. A hundred +soldiers were enrolled, besides mechanics and laborers; and thirty +volunteers, including gentlemen and burghers of condition, joined the +expedition. And, as the plan was one no less of colonization than of +war, several families embarked for the new land of promise, as well as a +number of girls, lured by the prospect of almost certain matrimony. Nor +were missionaries wanting. Among them was La Salle's brother, Cavelier, +and two other priests of St. Sulpice. Three Récollets were +added,--Zenobe Membré, who was then in France, Anastase Douay, and +Maxime Le Clerc. The principal vessel was the "Joly," belonging to the +royal navy, and carrying thirty-six guns. Another armed vessel of six +guns was added, together with a store-ship and a ketch. + +La Salle had asked for sole command of the expedition, with a subaltern +officer, and one or two pilots to sail the vessels as he should direct. +Instead of complying, Seignelay gave the command of the vessels to +Beaujeu, a captain of the royal navy,--whose authority was restricted to +their management at sea, while La Salle was to prescribe the route they +were to take, and have entire control of the troops and colonists on +land.[275] This arrangement displeased both parties. Beaujeu, an old and +experienced officer, was galled that a civilian should be set over +him,--and he, too, a burgher lately ennobled; nor was La Salle the man +to soothe his ruffled spirit. Detesting a divided command, cold, +reserved, and impenetrable, he would have tried the patience of a less +excitable colleague. Beaujeu, on his part, though set to a task which he +disliked, seems to have meant to do his duty, and to have been willing +at the outset to make the relations between himself and his unwelcome +associate as agreeable as possible. Unluckily, La Salle discovered that +the wife of Beaujeu was devoted to the Jesuits. We have seen the extreme +distrust with which he regarded these guides of his youth, and he seems +now to have fancied that Beaujeu was their secret ally. Possibly, he +suspected that information of his movements would be given to the +Spaniards; more probably, he had undefined fears of adverse +machinations. Granting that such existed, it was not his interest to +stimulate them by needlessly exasperating the naval commander. His +deportment, however, was not conciliating; and Beaujeu, prepared to +dislike him, presently lost temper. While the vessels still lay at +Rochelle; while all was bustle and preparation; while stores, arms, and +munitions were embarking; while boys and vagabonds were enlisting as +soldiers for the expedition,--Beaujeu was venting his disgust in long +letters to the minister. + +[Sidenote: BEAUJEU AND LA SALLE.] + +"You have ordered me, Monseigneur, to give all possible aid to this +undertaking, and I shall do so to the best of my power; but permit me to +take great credit to myself, for I find it very hard to submit to the +orders of the Sieur de la Salle, whom I believe to be a man of merit, +but who has no experience of war except with savages, and who has no +rank, while I have been captain of a ship thirteen years, and have +served thirty by sea and land. Besides, Monseigneur, he has told me that +in case of his death you have directed that the Sieur de Tonty shall +succeed him. This, indeed, is very hard; for, though I am not acquainted +with that country, I should be very dull, if, being on the spot, I did +not know at the end of a month as much of it as they do. I beg, +Monseigneur, that I may at least share the command with them; and that, +as regards war, nothing may be done without my knowledge and +concurrence,--for, as to their commerce, I neither intend nor desire to +know anything about it." + +Seignelay answered by a rebuff, and told him to make no trouble about +the command. This increased his irritation, and he wrote: "In my last +letter, Monseigneur, I represented to you the hardship of compelling me +to obey M. de la Salle, who has no rank, and _never commanded anybody +but school-boys_; and I begged you at least to divide the command +between us. I now, Monseigneur, take the liberty to say that I will obey +without repugnance, if you order me to do so, having reflected that +there can be no competition between the said Sieur de la Salle and me. + +"Thus far, he has not told me his plan; and he changes his mind every +moment. He is a man so suspicious, and so afraid that one will penetrate +his secrets, that I dare not ask him anything. He says that M. de +Parassy, commissary's clerk, with whom he has often quarrelled, is paid +by his enemies to defeat his undertaking; and many other things with +which I will not trouble you.... + +"He pretends that I am only to command the sailors, and have no +authority over the volunteer officers and the hundred soldiers who are +to take passage in the 'Joly;' and that they are not to recognize or +obey me in any way during the voyage.... + +"He has covered the decks with boxes and chests of such prodigious size +that neither the cannon nor the capstan can be worked." + +La Salle drew up a long list of articles, defining the respective rights +and functions of himself and Beaujeu, to whom he presented it for +signature. Beaujeu demurred at certain military honors demanded by La +Salle, saying that if a marshal of France should come on board his ship, +he would have none left to offer him. The point was referred to the +naval intendant; and the articles of the treaty having been slightly +modified, Beaujeu set his name to it. "By this," he says, "you can judge +better of the character of M. de la Salle than by all I can say. He is a +man who wants smoke [form and ceremony]. I will give him his fill of it, +and, perhaps, more than he likes. + +"I am bound to an unknown country, to seek what is about as hard to find +as the philosopher's stone. It vexes me, Monseigneur, that you should +have been involved in a business the success of which is very uncertain. +M. de la Salle begins to doubt it himself." + +While Beaujeu wrote thus to the minister, he was also writing to Cabart +de Villermont, one of his friends at Paris, with whom La Salle was also +on friendly terms. These letters are lively and entertaining, and by no +means suggestive of any secret conspiracy. He might, it is true, have +been more reserved in his communications; but he betrays no confidence, +for none was placed in him. It is the familiar correspondence of an +irritable but not ill-natured veteran, who is placed in an annoying +position, and thinks he is making the best of it. + +La Salle thought that the minister had been too free in communicating +the secrets of the expedition to the naval intendant at Rochefort, and +through him to Beaujeu. It is hard to see how Beaujeu was to blame for +this; but La Salle nevertheless fell into a dispute with him. "He could +hardly keep his temper, and used expressions which obliged me to tell +him that I cared very little about his affairs, and that the King +himself would not speak as he did. He retracted, made excuses, and we +parted good friends.... + +"I do not like his suspiciousness. I think him a good, honest Norman; +but Normans are out of fashion. It is one thing to-day, another +to-morrow. It seems to me that he is not so sure about his undertaking +as he was at Paris. This morning he came to see me, and told me he had +changed his mind, and meant to give a new turn to the business, and go +to another coast. He gave very poor reasons, to which I assented, to +avoid a quarrel. I thought, by what he said, that he wanted to find a +scapegoat to bear the blame, in case his plan does not succeed as he +hopes. For the rest, I think him a brave man and a true; and I am +persuaded that if this business fails, it will be because he does not +know enough, and will not trust us of the profession. As for me, I shall +do my best to help him, as I have told you before; and I am delighted to +have him keep his secret, so that I shall not have to answer for the +result. Pray do not show my letters, for fear of committing me with him. +He is too suspicious already; and never was Norman so Norman as he, +which is a great hinderance to business." + +Beaujeu came from the same province and calls himself jocularly _un bon +gros Normand_. His good-nature, however, rapidly gave way as time went +on. "Yesterday," he writes, "this Monsieur told me that he meant to go +to the Gulf of Mexico. A little while ago, as I said before, he talked +about going to Canada. I see nothing certain in it. It is not that I do +not believe that all he says is true; but not being of the profession, +and not liking to betray his ignorance, he is puzzled what to do. + +"I shall go straight forward, without regarding a thousand whims and +_bagatelles_. His continual suspicion would drive anybody mad except a +Norman like me; but I shall humor him, as I have always done, even to +sailing my ship on dry land, if he likes." + +[Sidenote: AN OPEN QUARREL.] + +A few days later, there was an open quarrel. "M. de la Salle came to me, +and said, rather haughtily and in a tone of command, that I must put +provisions for three months more on board my vessel. I told him it was +impossible, as she had more lading already than anybody ever dared to +put in her before. He would not hear reason, but got angry and abused me +in good French, and found fault with me because the vessel would not +hold his three months' provisions. He said I ought to have told him of +it before. 'And how would you have me tell you,' said I, 'when you never +tell me what you mean to do?' We had still another quarrel. He asked me +where his officers should take their meals. I told him that they might +take them where he pleased; for I gave myself no trouble in the matter, +having no orders. He answered that they should not mess on bacon, while +the rest ate fowls and mutton. I said that if he would send fowls and +mutton on board, his people should eat them; but, as for bacon, I had +often ate it myself. At this, he went off and complained to M. Dugué +that I refused to embark his provisions, and told him that he must live +on bacon. I excused him as not knowing how to behave himself, having +spent his life among school-boy brats and savages. Nevertheless, I +offered to him, his brother, and two of his friends, seats at my table +and the same fare as myself. He answered my civility by an +impertinence, saying that he distrusted people who offered so much and +seemed so obliging. I could not help telling him that I saw he was +brought up in the provinces." + +This was touching La Salle on a sensitive point. Beaujeu continues: "In +fact, you knew him better than I; for I always took him for a gentleman +(_honnête homme_). I see now that he is anything but that. Pray set Abbé +Renaudot and M. Morel right about this man, and tell them he is not what +they take him for. Adieu. It has struck twelve: the postman is just +going." + +Bad as was the state of things, it soon grew worse. Renaudot wrote to La +Salle that Beaujeu was writing to Villermont everything that happened, +and that Villermont showed the letters to all his acquaintance. +Villermont was a relative of the Jesuit Beschefer; and this was +sufficient to suggest some secret machination to the mind of La Salle. +Villermont's fault, however, seems to have been simple indiscretion, for +which Beaujeu took him sharply to task. "I asked you to burn my letters; +and I cannot help saying that I am angry with you, not because you make +known my secrets, but because you show letters scrawled in haste, and +sent off without being even read over. M. de la Salle not having told me +his secret, though M. de Seignelay ordered him to tell me, I am not +obliged to keep it, and have as good a right as anybody to make my +conjectures on what I read about it in the _Gazette de Hollande_. Let +Abbé Renaudot glorify M. de la Salle as much as he likes, and make him a +Cortez, a Pizarro, or an Almagro,--that is nothing to me; but do not let +him speak of me as an obstacle in his hero's way. Let him understand +that I know how to execute the orders of the court as well as he.... + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S INDISCRETION.] + +"You ask how I get on with M. de la Salle. Don't you know that this man +is impenetrable, and that there is no knowing what he thinks of one? He +told a person of note whom I will not name that he had suspicions about +our correspondence, as well as about Madame de Beaujeu's devotion to the +Jesuits. His distrust is incredible. If he sees one of his people speak +to the rest, he suspects something, and is gruff with them. He told me +himself that he wanted to get rid of M. de Tonty, who is in America." + +La Salle's claim to exclusive command of the soldiers on board the +"Joly" was a source of endless trouble. Beaujeu declared that he would +not set sail till officers, soldiers, and volunteers had all sworn to +obey him when at sea; at which La Salle had the indiscretion to say, "If +I am not master of my soldiers, how can I make him [Beaujeu] do his duty +in case he does not want to do it?" + +Beaujeu says that this affair made a great noise among the officers at +Rochefort, and adds: "_There are very few people who do not think that +his brain is touched._ I have spoken to some who have known him twenty +years. They all say that he was always rather visionary." + +It is difficult not to suspect that the current belief at Rochefort had +some foundation; and that the deadly strain of extreme hardship, +prolonged anxiety, and alternation of disaster and success, joined to +the fever which nearly killed him, had unsettled his judgment and given +a morbid development to his natural defects. His universal suspicion, +which included even the stanch and faithful Henri de Tonty; his needless +provocation of persons whose good-will was necessary to him; his doubts +whether he should sail for the Gulf or for Canada, when to sail to +Canada would have been to renounce, or expose to almost certain defeat, +an enterprise long cherished and definitely planned,--all point to one +conclusion. It may be thought that his doubts were feigned, in order to +hide his destination to the last moment; but if so, he attempted to +blind not only his ill wishers, but his mother, whom he also left in +uncertainty as to his route. + +[Sidenote: AN OVERWROUGHT BRAIN.] + +Unless we assume that his scheme of invading Mexico was thrown out as a +bait to the King, it is hard to reconcile it with the supposition of +mental soundness. To base so critical an attempt on a geographical +conjecture, which rested on the slightest possible information, and was +in fact a total error; to postpone the perfectly sound plan of securing +the mouth of the Mississippi, to a wild project of leading fifteen +thousand savages for an unknown distance through an unknown country to +attack an unknown enemy,--was something more than Quixotic daring. The +King and the minister saw nothing impracticable in it, for they did not +know the country or its inhabitants. They saw no insuperable difficulty +in mustering and keeping together fifteen thousand of the most wayward +and unstable savages on earth, split into a score and more of tribes, +some hostile to each other and some to the French; nor in the problem of +feeding such a mob, on a march of hundreds of miles; nor in the plan of +drawing four thousand of them from the Illinois, nearly two thousand +miles distant, though some of these intended allies had no canoes or +other means of transportation, and though, travelling in such numbers, +they would infallibly starve on the way to the rendezvous. It is +difficult not to see in all this the chimera of an overwrought brain, no +longer able to distinguish between the possible and the impossible. + +Preparation dragged slowly on; the season was growing late; the King +grew impatient, and found fault with the naval intendant. Meanwhile, the +various members of the expedition had all gathered at Rochelle. Joutel, +a fellow-townsman of La Salle, returning to his native Rouen, after +sixteen years in the army, found all astir with the new project. His +father had been gardener to Henri Cavelier, La Salle's uncle; and being +of an adventurous spirit he volunteered for the enterprise, of which he +was to become the historian. With La Salle's brother the priest, and +two of his nephews, one of whom was a boy of fourteen, Joutel set out +for Rochelle, where all were to embark together for their promised +land.[276] + +[Sidenote: A PARTING LETTER.] + +La Salle wrote a parting letter to his mother at Rouen:-- + + + Rochelle, 18 July, 1684. + +Madame my Most Honored Mother,-- + +At last, after having waited a long time for a favourable wind, and +having had a great many difficulties to overcome, we are setting sail +with four vessels, and nearly four hundred men on board. Everybody is +well, including little Colin and my nephew. We all have good hope of a +happy success. We are not going by way of Canada, but by the Gulf of +Mexico. I passionately wish, and so do we all, that the success of this +voyage may contribute to your repose and comfort. Assuredly, I shall +spare no effort that it may; and I beg you, on your part, to preserve +yourself for the love of us. + +You need not be troubled by the news from Canada, which are nothing but +the continuation of the artifices of my enemies. I hope to be as +successful against them as I have been thus far, and to embrace you a +year hence with all the pleasure that the most grateful of children can +feel with so good a mother as you have always been. Pray let this hope, +which shall not disappoint you, support you through whatever trials may +happen, and be sure that you will always find me with a heart full of +the feelings which are due to you. + +Madame my Most Honored Mother, from your most humble and most obedient +servant and son, + + De la Salle. + +My brother, my nephews, and all the others greet you, and take their +leave of you. + +This memorable last farewell has lain for two hundred years among the +family papers of the Caveliers.[277] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[262] _Lettres de l'Abbé Tronson, 8 Avril, 10 Avril, 1684_ (Margry, ii. +354). + +[263] _Lettres du Roy et du Ministre sur la Navigation du Golfe du +Mexique, 1669-1682_ (Margry, iii. 3-14). + +[264] _Mémoire du Sr. de la Salle, pour rendre compte à Monseigneur +de Seignelay de la découverte qu'il a faite par l'ordre de sa Majesté._ + +[265] This name, also given to the Illinois, is used to designate Red +River on the map of Franquelin, where the forests above mentioned are +represented. + +[266] _Mémoire du Sr. de la Salle sur l'Entreprise qu'il a proposé à +Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay sur une des provinces de Mexique._ + +[267] Both the memorial and the map represent the banks of Red River as +inhabited by Indians, called Terliquiquimechi, and known to the +Spaniards as _Indios bravos_, or _Indios de guerra_. The Spaniards, it +is added, were in great fear of them, as they made frequent inroads into +Mexico. La Salle's Mexican geography was in all respects confused and +erroneous; nor was Seignelay better informed. Indeed, Spanish jealousy +placed correct information beyond their reach. + +[268] While the plan, as proposed in the memorial, was clearly +impracticable, the subsequent experience of the French in Texas tended +to prove that the tribes of that region could be used with advantage in +attacking the Spaniards of Mexico, and that an inroad on a comparatively +small scale might have been successfully made with their help. In 1689, +Tonty actually made the attempt, as we shall see, but failed, from the +desertion of his men. In 1697, the Sieur de Louvigny wrote to the +Minister of the Marine, asking to complete La Salle's discoveries, and +invade Mexico from Texas. (_Lettre de M. de Louvigny, 14 Oct., 1697._) +In an unpublished memoir of the year 1700, the seizure of the Mexican +mines is given as one of the motives of the colonization of Louisiana. + +[269] Another scheme, with similar aims, but much more practicable, was +at this very time before the court. Count Peñalossa, a Spanish Creole, +born in Peru, had been governor of New Mexico, where he fell into a +dispute with the Inquisition, which involved him in the loss of +property, and for a time of liberty. Failing to obtain redress in Spain, +he renounced his allegiance in disgust, and sought refuge in France, +where, in 1682, he first proposed to the King the establishment of a +colony of French buccaneers at the mouth of Rio Bravo, on the Gulf of +Mexico. In January, 1684, after the war had broken out, he proposed to +attack the Spanish town of Panuco, with twelve hundred buccaneers from +St. Domingo; then march into the interior, seize the mines, conquer +Durango, and occupy New Mexico. It was proposed to combine his plan with +that of La Salle; but the latter, who had an interview with him, +expressed distrust, and showed characteristic reluctance to accept a +colleague. It is extremely probable, however, that his knowledge of +Peñalossa's original proposal had some influence in stimulating him to +lay before the court proposals of his own, equally attractive. Peace was +concluded before the plans of the Spanish adventurer could be carried +into effect. + +[270] _Lettre du Roy à La Barre, Versailles, 10 Avril, 1684._ + +[271] _Lettre du Roy à De Meules, Versailles, 14 Avril, 1684._ Seignelay +wrote to De Meules to the same effect. + +[272] On La Forest's mission,--_Mémoire pour representer à Monseigneur +le Marquis de Seignelay la nécessité d'envoyer le Sr. de la Forest en +diligence à la Nouvelle France; Lettre du Roy à La Barre, 14 Avril, +1684; Ibid., 31 Oct., 1684._ + +There is before me a promissory note of La Salle to La Forest, of 5,200 +livres, dated at Rochelle, 17 July, 1684. This seems to be pay due to La +Forest, who had served as La Salle's officer for nine years. A +memorandum is attached, signed by La Salle, to the effect that it is his +wish that La Forest reimburse himself, "_par préférence_," out of any +property of his (La Salle's) in France or Canada. + +[273] The attitude of La Salle, in this matter, is incomprehensible. In +July, La Forest was at Rochefort, complaining because La Salle had +ordered him to stay in garrison at Fort Frontenac. _Beaujeu à +Villermont, 10 July, 1684_. This means an abandonment of the scheme of +leading the warriors at the rock of St. Louis down the Mississippi; but, +in the next month, La Salle writes to Seignelay that he is afraid La +Barre will use the Iroquois war as a pretext to prevent La Forest from +making his journey (to the Illinois), and that in this case he will +himself try to go up the Mississippi, and meet the Illinois warriors; so +that, in five or six months from the date of the letter, the minister +will hear of his departure to attack the Spaniards. (_La Salle à +Seignelay, Août, 1684._) Either this is sheer folly, or else it is meant +to delude the minister. + +[274] _Mémoire de ce qui aura esté accordé au Sieur de la Salle._ + +[275] _Lettre au Roy à La Salle, 12 Avril, 1684; Mémoire pour servir +d'Instruction au Sieur de Beaujeu, 14 Avril, 1684._ + +[276] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 12. + +[277] The letters of Beaujeu to Seignelay and to Cabart de Villermont, +with most of the other papers on which this chapter rests, will be found +in Margry, ii. 354-471. This indefatigable investigator has also brought +to light a number of letters from a brother officer of Beaujeu, +Machaut-Rougemont, written at Rochefort, just after the departure of the +expedition from Rochelle, and giving some idea of the views there +entertained concerning it. He says: "L'on ne peut pas faire plus +d'extravagances que le Sieur de la Salle n'en a fait sur toutes ses +prétentions de commandement. Je plains beaucoup le pauvre Beaujeu +d'avoir affaire à une humeur si saturnienne.... Je le croy beaucoup +visionnaire ... Beaujeu a une sotte commission." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +1684, 1685. + +THE VOYAGE. + + Disputes with Beaujeu.--St. Domingo.--La Salle Attacked with Fever: + his Desperate Condition.--The Gulf Of Mexico.--A Vain Search and a + Fatal Error. + + +The four ships sailed from Rochelle on the twenty-fourth of July. Four +days after, the "Joly" broke her bowsprit, by design as La Salle +fancied. They all put back to Rochefort, where the mischief was quickly +repaired; and they put to sea again. La Salle, and the chief persons of +the expedition, with a crowd of soldiers, artisans, and women, the +destined mothers of Louisiana, were all on board the "Joly." Beaujeu +wished to touch at Madeira, to replenish his water-casks. La Salle +refused, lest by doing so the secret of the enterprise might reach the +Spaniards. One Paget, a Huguenot, took up the word in support of +Beaujeu. La Salle told him that the affair was none of his; and as Paget +persisted with increased warmth and freedom, he demanded of Beaujeu if +it was with his consent that a man of no rank spoke to him in that +manner. Beaujeu sustained the Huguenot. "That is enough," returned La +Salle, and withdrew into his cabin.[278] + +This was not the first misunderstanding; nor was it the last. There was +incessant chafing between the two commanders; and the sailors of the +"Joly" were soon of one mind with their captain. When the ship crossed +the tropic, they made ready a tub on deck to baptize the passengers, +after the villanous practice of the time; but La Salle refused to permit +it, at which they were highly exasperated, having promised themselves a +bountiful ransom, in money or liquor, from their victims. "Assuredly," +says Joutel, "they would gladly have killed us all." + +[Sidenote: ST. DOMINGO.] + +When, after a wretched voyage of two months the ships reached St. +Domingo, a fresh dispute occurred. It had been resolved at a council of +officers to stop at Port de Paix; but Beaujeu, on pretext of a fair +wind, ran by that place in the night, and cast anchor at Petit Goave, on +the other side of the island. La Salle was extremely vexed; for he +expected to meet at Port de Paix the Marquis de Saint-Laurent, +lieutenant-general of the islands, Bégon the intendant, and De Cussy, +governor of La Tortue, who had orders to supply him with provisions and +give him all possible aid. + +The "Joly" was alone: the other vessels had lagged behind. She had more +than fifty sick men on board, and La Salle was of the number. He sent a +messenger to Saint-Laurent, Bégon, and Cussy, begging them to come to +him; ordered Joutel to get the sick ashore, suffocating as they were in +the hot and crowded ship; and caused the soldiers to be landed on a +small island in the harbor. Scarcely had the voyagers sung _Te Deum_ for +their safe arrival, when two of the lagging vessels appeared, bringing +tidings that the third, the ketch "St. François," had been taken by +Spanish buccaneers. She was laden with provisions, tools, and other +necessaries for the colony; and the loss was irreparable. Beaujeu was +answerable for it; for had he anchored at Port de Paix, it would not +have occurred. The lieutenant-general, with Bégon and Cussy, who +presently arrived, plainly spoke their minds to him.[279] + +[Sidenote: ILLNESS OF LA SALLE.] + +La Salle's illness increased. "I was walking with him one day," writes +Joutel, "when he was seized of a sudden with such a weakness that he +could not stand, and was obliged to lie down on the ground. When he was +a little better, I led him to a chamber of a house that the brothers +Duhaut had hired. Here we put him to bed, and in the morning he was +attacked by a violent fever."[280] "It was so violent that," says +another of his shipmates, "his imagination pictured to him things +equally terrible and amazing."[281] He lay delirious in the wretched +garret, attended by his brother, and one or two others who stood +faithful to him. A goldsmith of the neighborhood, moved at his +deplorable condition, offered the use of his house; and Abbé Cavelier +had him removed thither. But there was a tavern hard by, and the patient +was tormented with daily and nightly riot. At the height of the fever, a +party of Beaujeu's sailors spent a night in singing and dancing before +the house; and, says Cavelier, "The more we begged them to be quiet, the +more noise they made." La Salle lost reason and well-nigh life; but at +length his mind resumed its balance, and the violence of the disease +abated. A friendly Capucin friar offered him the shelter of his roof; +and two of his men supported him thither on foot, giddy with exhaustion +and hot with fever. Here he found repose, and was slowly recovering, +when some of his attendants rashly told him the loss of the ketch "St. +François;" and the consequence was a critical return of the +disease.[282] + +There was no one to fill his place. Beaujeu would not; Cavelier could +not. Joutel, the gardener's son, was apparently the most trusty man of +the company; but the expedition was virtually without a head. The men +roamed on shore, and plunged into every excess of debauchery, +contracting diseases which eventually killed them. + +[Sidenote: COMPLAINTS OF BEAUJEU.] + +Beaujeu, in the extremity of ill-humor, resumed his correspondence with +Seignelay. "But for the illness of the Sieur de la Salle," he writes, "I +could not venture to report to you the progress of our voyage, as I am +charged only with the navigation, and he with the secrets; but as his +malady has deprived him of the use of his faculties, both of body and +mind, I have thought myself obliged to acquaint you with what is +passing, and of the condition in which we are." + +He then declares that the ships freighted by La Salle were so slow that +the "Joly" had continually been forced to wait for them, thus doubling +the length of the voyage; that he had not had water enough for the +passengers, as La Salle had not told him that there were to be any such +till the day they came on board; that great numbers were sick, and that +he had told La Salle there would be trouble if he filled all the space +between decks with his goods, and forced the soldiers and sailors to +sleep on deck; that he had told him he would get no provisions at St. +Domingo, but that he insisted on stopping; that it had always been +so,--that whatever he proposed La Salle would refuse, alleging orders +from the King; "and now," pursues the ruffled commander, "everybody is +ill; and he himself has a violent fever, as dangerous, the surgeon tells +me, to the mind as to the body." + +The rest of the letter is in the same strain. He says that a day or two +after La Salle's illness began, his brother Cavelier came to ask him to +take charge of his affairs; but that he did not wish to meddle with +them, especially as nobody knows anything about them, and as La Salle +has sold some of the ammunition and provisions; that Cavelier tells him +that he thinks his brother keeps no accounts, wishing to hide his +affairs from everybody; that he learns from buccaneers that the entrance +of the Mississippi is very shallow and difficult, and that this is the +worst season for navigating the Gulf; that the Spaniards have in these +seas six vessels of from thirty to sixty guns each, besides row-galleys; +but that he is not afraid, and will perish, or bring back an account of +the Mississippi. "Nevertheless," he adds, "if the Sieur de la Salle +dies, I shall pursue a course different from that which he has marked +out; for I do not approve his plans." + +"If," he continues, "you permit me to speak my mind, M. de la Salle +ought to have been satisfied with discovering his river, without +undertaking to conduct three vessels with troops two thousand leagues +through so many different climates, and across seas entirely unknown to +him. I grant that he is a man of knowledge, that he has reading, and +even some tincture of navigation; but there is so much difference +between theory and practice, that a man who has only the former will +always be at fault. There is also a great difference between conducting +canoes on lakes and along a river, and navigating ships with troops on +distant oceans."[283] + +While Beaujeu was complaining of La Salle, his followers were deserting +him. It was necessary to send them on board ship, and keep them there; +for there were French buccaneers at Petit Goave, who painted the +promised land in such dismal colors that many of the adventurers +completely lost heart. Some, too, were dying. "The air of this place is +bad," says Joutel; "so are the fruits; and there are plenty of women +worse than either."[284] + +It was near the end of November before La Salle could resume the voyage. +He was told that Beaujeu had said that he would not wait longer for the +store-ship "Aimable," and that she might follow as she could.[285] +Moreover, La Salle was on ill terms with Aigron, her captain, who had +declared that he would have nothing more to do with him.[286] Fearing, +therefore, that some mishap might befall her, he resolved to embark in +her himself, with his brother Cavelier, Membré, Douay, and others, the +trustiest of his followers. On the twenty-fifth they set sail; the +"Joly" and the little frigate "Belle" following. They coasted the shore +of Cuba, and landed at the Isle of Pines, where La Salle shot an +alligator, which the soldiers ate; and the hunter brought in a wild pig, +half of which he sent to Beaujeu. Then they advanced to Cape St. +Antoine, where bad weather and contrary winds long detained them. A load +of cares oppressed the mind of La Salle, pale and haggard with recent +illness, wrapped within his own thoughts, and seeking sympathy from +none. + +[Sidenote: A VAIN SEARCH.] + +At length they entered the Gulf of Mexico, that forbidden sea whence by +a Spanish decree, dating from the reign of Philip II., all foreigners +were excluded on pain of extermination.[287] Not a man on board knew the +secrets of its perilous navigation. Cautiously feeling their way, they +held a north-westerly course, till on the twenty-eighth of December a +sailor at the mast-head of the "Aimable" saw land. La Salle and all the +pilots had been led to form an exaggerated idea of the force of the +easterly currents; and they therefore supposed themselves near the Bay +of Appalache, when, in fact, they were much farther westward. + +On New Year's Day they anchored three leagues from the shore. La Salle, +with the engineer Minet, went to explore it, and found nothing but a +vast marshy plain, studded with clumps of rushes. Two days after there +was a thick fog, and when at length it cleared, the "Joly" was nowhere +to be seen. La Salle in the "Aimable," followed closely by the little +frigate "Belle," stood westward along the coast. When at the mouth of +the Mississippi in 1682, he had taken its latitude, but unhappily could +not determine its longitude; and now every eye on board was strained to +detect in the monotonous lines of the low shore some tokens of the +great river. In fact, they had already passed it. On the sixth of +January, a wide opening was descried between two low points of land; and +the adjacent sea was discolored with mud. "La Salle," writes his brother +Cavelier, "has always thought that this was the Mississippi." To all +appearance, it was the entrance of Galveston Bay.[288] But why did he +not examine it? Joutel says that his attempts to do so were frustrated +by the objections of the pilot of the "Aimable," to which, with a +facility very unusual with him, he suffered himself to yield. Cavelier +declares, on the other hand, that he would not enter the opening because +he was afraid of missing the "Joly." But he might have entered with one +of his two vessels, while the other watched outside for the absent ship. +From whatever cause, he lay here five or six days, waiting in vain for +Beaujeu;[289] till, at last, thinking that he must have passed westward, +he resolved to follow. The "Aimable" and the "Belle" again spread their +sails, and coasted the shores of Texas. Joutel, with a boat's crew, +tried to land; but the sand-bars and breakers repelled him. A party of +Indians swam out through the surf, and were taken on board; but La Salle +could learn nothing from them, as their language was unknown to him. +Again Joutel tried to land, and again the breakers repelled him. He +approached as near as he dared, and saw vast plains and a dim expanse of +forest, buffalo running with their heavy gallop along the shore, and +deer grazing on the marshy meadows. + +[Sidenote: THE SHORES OF TEXAS.] + +Soon after, he succeeded in landing at a point somewhere between +Matagorda Island and Corpus Christi Bay. The aspect of the country was +not cheering, with its barren plains, its reedy marshes, its +interminable oyster-beds, and broad flats of mud bare at low tide. +Joutel and his men sought in vain for fresh water, and after shooting +some geese and ducks returned to the "Aimable." Nothing had been seen of +Beaujeu and the "Joly;" the coast was trending southward; and La Salle, +convinced that he must have passed the missing ship, turned to retrace +his course. He had sailed but a few miles when the wind failed, a fog +covered the sea, and he was forced to anchor opposite one of the +openings into the lagoons north of Mustang Island. At length, on the +nineteenth, there came a faint breeze; the mists rolled away before it, +and to his great joy he saw the "Joly" approaching. + +"His joy," says Joutel, "was short." Beaujeu's lieutenant, Aire, came on +board to charge him with having caused the separation, and La Salle +retorted by throwing the blame on Beaujeu. Then came a debate as to +their position. The priest Esmanville was present, and reports that La +Salle seemed greatly perplexed. He had more cause for perplexity than +he knew; for in his ignorance of the longitude of the Mississippi, he +had sailed more than four hundred miles beyond it. + +Of this he had not the faintest suspicion. In full sight from his ship +lay a reach of those vast lagoons which, separated from the sea by +narrow strips of land, line this coast with little interruption from +Galveston Bay to the Rio Grande. The idea took possession of him that +the Mississippi discharged itself into these lagoons, and thence made +its way to the sea through the various openings he had seen along the +coast, chief among which was that he had discovered on the sixth, about +fifty leagues from the place where he now was.[290] + +[Sidenote: PERPLEXITY OF LA SALLE.] + +Yet he was full of doubt as to what he should do. Four days after +rejoining Beaujeu, he wrote him the strange request to land the troops, +that he "might fulfil his commission;" that is, that he might set out +against the Spaniards.[291] More than a week passed, a gale had set in, +and nothing was done. Then La Salle wrote again, intimating some doubt +as to whether he was really at one of the mouths of the Mississippi, and +saying that, being sure that he had passed the principal mouth, he was +determined to go back to look for it.[292] Meanwhile, Beaujeu was in a +state of great irritation. The weather was stormy, and the coast was +dangerous. Supplies were scanty; and La Salle's soldiers, still crowded +in the "Joly," were consuming the provisions of the ship. Beaujeu gave +vent to his annoyance, and La Salle retorted in the same strain. + +According to Joutel, he urged the naval commander to sail back in search +of the river; and Beaujeu refused, unless La Salle should give the +soldiers provisions. La Salle, he adds, offered to supply them with +rations for fifteen days; and Beaujeu declared this insufficient. There +is reason, however, to believe that the request was neither made by the +one nor refused by the other so positively as here appears. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[278] _Lettre (sans nom d'auteur) écrite de St. Domingue, 14 Nov., 1684_ +(Margry, ii. 492); _Mémoire autographe de l'Abbé Jean Cavelier sur le +Voyage de 1684_. Compare Joutel. + +[279] _Mémoire de MM. de Saint-Laurens et Bégon_ (Margry, ii. 499); +Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 28. + +[280] _Relation de Henri Joutel_ (Margry, iii. 98). + +[281] _Lettre (sans nom d'auteur), 14 Nov., 1684_ (Margry, ii. 496). + +[282] The above particulars are from the memoir of La Salle's brother, +Abbé Cavelier, already cited. + +[283] _Lettre de Beaujeu au Ministre, 20 Oct., 1684._ + +[284] _Relation de Henri Joutel_ (Margry, iii. 105). + +[285] _Mémoire autographe de l'Abbé Jean Cavelier._ + +[286] _Lettre de Beaujeu au Ministre, 20 Oct., 1684._ + +[287] _Letter of Don Luis de Onis to the Secretary of State_ (American +State Papers, xii, 27-31). + +[288] "La hauteur nous a fait remarquer ... que ce que nous avions vu le +sixième janvier estoit en effet la principale entrée de la rivière que +nous cherchions."--_Lettre de La Salle au Ministre, 4 Mars, 1687._ + +[289] _Mémoire autographe de l'Abbé Cavelier._ + +[290] "Depuis que nous avions quitté cette rivière qu'il croyoit +infailliblement estre le fleuve Colbert _[Mississippi]_ nous avions fait +environ 45 lieues ou 50 au plus." (Cavelier, _Mémoire_.) This, taken in +connection with the statement of La Salle that this "principale entrée +de la rivière que nous cherchions" was twenty-five or thirty leagues +northeast from the entrance of the Bay of St. Louis (Matagorda Bay), +shows that it can have been no other than the entrance of Galveston Bay, +mistaken by him for the chief outlet of the Mississippi. It is evident +that he imagined Galveston Bay to form a part of the chain of lagoons +from which it is in fact separated. He speaks of these lagoons as "une +espèce de baye fort longue et fort large, _dans laquelle le fleuve +Colbert se décharge_." He adds that on his descent to the mouth of the +river in 1682 he had been deceived in supposing that this expanse of +salt water, where no shore was in sight, was the open sea. _Lettre de La +Salle au Ministre, 4 Mars, 1685._ Galveston Bay and the mouth of the +Mississippi differ little in latitude, though separated by about five +and a half degrees of longitude. + +[291] _Lettre de La Salle à Beaujeu, 23 Jan., 1685_ (Margry, ii. 526). + +[292] This letter is dated, "De l'emboucheure d'une rivière que _je +crois estre_ une des descharges du Mississipy" (Margry, ii. 528). + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +1685. + +LA SALLE IN TEXAS. + + A Party of Exploration--Wreck of the "Aimable."--Landing of the + Colonists.--A Forlorn Position.--Indian Neighbors.--Friendly + Advances of Beaujeu: his Departure.--A Fatal Discovery. + + +Impatience to rid himself of his colleague and to command alone no doubt +had its influence on the judgment of La Salle. He presently declared +that he would land the soldiers, and send them along shore till they +came to the principal outlet of the river. On this, the engineer Minet +took up the word,--expressed his doubts as to whether the Mississippi +discharged itself into the lagoons at all; represented that even if it +did, the soldiers would be exposed to great risks; and gave as his +opinion that all should reimbark and continue the search in company. The +advice was good, but La Salle resented it as coming from one in whom he +recognized no right to give it. "He treated me," complains the engineer, +"as if I were the meanest of mankind."[293] + +He persisted in his purpose, and sent Joutel and Moranget with a party +of soldiers to explore the coast. They made their way northeastward +along the shore of Matagorda Island, till they were stopped on the third +day by what Joutel calls a river, but which was in fact the entrance of +Matagorda Bay. Here they encamped, and tried to make a raft of +drift-wood. "The difficulty was," says Joutel, "our great number of men, +and the few of them who were fit for anything except eating. As I said +before, they had all been caught by force or surprise, so that our +company was like Noah's ark, which contained animals of all sorts." +Before their raft was finished, they descried to their great joy the +ships which had followed them along the coast.[294] + +[Sidenote: LANDING OF LA SALLE.] + +La Salle landed, and announced that here was the western mouth of the +Mississippi, and the place to which the King had sent him. He said +further that he would land all his men, and bring the "Aimable" and the +"Belle" to the safe harborage within. Beaujeu remonstrated, alleging the +shallowness of the water and the force of the currents; but his +remonstrance was vain.[295] + +The Bay of St. Louis, now Matagorda Bay, forms a broad and sheltered +harbor, accessible from the sea by a narrow passage, obstructed by +sand-bars and by the small island now called Pelican Island. Boats were +sent to sound and buoy out the channel, and this was successfully +accomplished on the sixteenth of February. The "Aimable" was ordered to +enter; and, on the twentieth, she weighed anchor. La Salle was on shore +watching her. A party of men, at a little distance, were cutting down a +tree to make a canoe. Suddenly some of them ran towards him with +terrified faces, crying out that they had been set upon by a troop of +Indians, who had seized their companions and carried them off. La Salle +ordered those about him to take their arms, and at once set out in +pursuit. He overtook the Indians, and opened a parley with them; but +when he wished to reclaim his men, he discovered that they had been led +away during the conference to the Indian camp, a league and a half +distant. Among them was one of his lieutenants, the young Marquis de la +Sablonnière. He was deeply vexed, for the moment was critical; but the +men must be recovered, and he led his followers in haste towards the +camp. Yet he could not refrain from turning a moment to watch the +"Aimable," as she neared the shoals; and he remarked with deep anxiety +to Joutel, who was with him, that if she held that course she would soon +be aground. + +[Sidenote: WRECK OF THE "AIMABLE".] + +They hurried on till they saw the Indian huts. About fifty of them, +oven-shaped, and covered with mats and hides, were clustered on a rising +ground, with their inmates gathered among and around them. As the French +entered the camp, there was the report of a cannon from the seaward. +The startled savages dropped flat with terror. A different fear seized +La Salle, for he knew that the shot was a signal of disaster. Looking +back, he saw the "Aimable" furling her sails, and his heart sank with +the conviction that she had struck upon the reef. Smothering his +distress,--she was laden with all the stores of the colony,--he pressed +forward among the filthy wigwams, whose astonished inmates swarmed about +the band of armed strangers, staring between curiosity and fear. La +Salle knew those with whom he was dealing, and, without ceremony, +entered the chief's lodge with his followers. The crowd closed around +them, naked men and half-naked women, described by Joutel as of singular +ugliness. They gave buffalo meat and dried porpoise to the unexpected +guests, but La Salle, racked with anxiety, hastened to close the +interview; and having without difficulty recovered the kidnapped men, he +returned to the beach, leaving with the Indians, as usual, an impression +of good-will and respect. + +When he reached the shore, he saw his worst fears realized. The +"Aimable" lay careened over on the reef, hopelessly aground. Little +remained but to endure the calamity with firmness, and to save, as far +as might be, the vessel's cargo. This was no easy task. The boat which +hung at her stern had been stove in,--it is said, by design. Beaujeu +sent a boat from the "Joly," and one or more Indian pirogues were +procured. La Salle urged on his men with stern and patient energy, and +a quantity of gunpowder and flour was safely landed. But now the wind +blew fresh from the sea; the waves began to rise; a storm came on; the +vessel, rocking to and fro on the sand-bar, opened along her side, and +the ravenous waves were strewn with her treasures. When the confusion +was at its height, a troop of Indians came down to the shore, greedy for +plunder. The drum was beat; the men were called to arms; La Salle set +his trustiest followers to guard the gunpowder, in fear, not of the +Indians alone, but of his own countrymen. On that lamentable night, the +sentinels walked their rounds through the dreary bivouac among the +casks, bales, and boxes which the sea had yielded up; and here, too, +their fate-hunted chief held his drearier vigil, encompassed with +treachery, darkness, and the storm. + +Not only La Salle, but Joutel and others of his party, believed that the +wreck of the "Aimable" was intentional. Aigron, who commanded her, had +disobeyed orders and disregarded signals. Though he had been directed to +tow the vessel through the channel, he went in under sail; and though +little else was saved from the wreck, his personal property, including +even some preserved fruits, was all landed safely. He had long been on +ill terms with La Salle.[296] + +All La Salle's company were now encamped on the sands at the left side +of the inlet where the "Aimable" was wrecked.[297] "They were all," says +the engineer Minet, "sick with nausea and dysentery. Five or six died +every day, in consequence of brackish water and bad food. There was no +grass, but plenty of rushes and plenty of oysters. There was nothing to +make ovens, so that they had to eat flour saved from the wreck, boiled +into messes of porridge with this brackish water. Along the shore were +quantities of uprooted trees and rotten logs, thrown up by the sea and +the lagoon." Of these, and fragments of the wreck, they made a sort of +rampart to protect their camp; and here, among tents and hovels, bales, +boxes, casks, spars, dismounted cannon, and pens for fowls and swine, +were gathered the dejected men and homesick women who were to seize New +Biscay, and hold for France a region large as half Europe. The +Spaniards, whom they were to conquer, were they knew not where. They +knew not where they were themselves; and for the fifteen thousand Indian +allies who were to have joined them, they found two hundred squalid +savages, more like enemies than friends. + +In fact, it was soon made plain that these their neighbors wished them +no good. A few days after the wreck, the prairie was seen on fire. As +the smoke and flame rolled towards them before the wind, La Salle caused +all the grass about the camp to be cut and carried away, and especially +around the spot where the powder was placed. The danger was averted; but +it soon became known that the Indians had stolen a number of blankets +and other articles, and carried them to their wigwams. Unwilling to +leave his camp, La Salle sent his nephew Moranget and several other +volunteers, with a party of men, to reclaim them. They went up the bay +in a boat, landed at the Indian camp, and, with more mettle than +discretion, marched into it, sword in hand. The Indians ran off, and the +rash adventurers seized upon several canoes as an equivalent for the +stolen goods. Not knowing how to manage them, they made slow progress on +their way back, and were overtaken by night before reaching the French +camp. They landed, made a fire, placed a sentinel, and lay down on the +dry grass to sleep. The sentinel followed their example, when suddenly +they were awakened by the war-whoop and a shower of arrows. Two +volunteers, Oris and Desloges, were killed on the spot; a third, named +Gayen, was severely wounded; and young Moranget received an arrow +through the arm. He leaped up and fired his gun at the vociferous but +invisible foe. Others of the party did the same, and the Indians fled. + +[Sidenote: BEAUJEU AND LA SALLE.] + +It was about this time that Beaujeu prepared to return to France. He had +accomplished his mission, and landed his passengers at what La Salle +assured him to be one of the mouths of the Mississippi. His ship was in +danger on this exposed and perilous coast, and he was anxious to find +shelter. For some time past, his relations with La Salle had been +amicable, and it was agreed between them that Beaujeu should stop at +Galveston Bay, the supposed chief mouth of the Mississippi; or, failing +to find harborage here, that he should proceed to Mobile Bay, and wait +there till April, to hear from his colleague. Two days before the wreck +of the "Aimable," he wrote to La Salle: "I wish with all my heart that +you would have more confidence in me. For my part, I will always make +the first advances; and I will follow your counsel whenever I can do so +without risking my ship. I will come back to this place, if you want to +know the results of the voyage I am going to make. If you wish, I will +go to Martinique for provisions and reinforcements. In fine, there is +nothing I am not ready to do: you have only to speak." + +La Salle had begged him to send ashore a number of cannon and a quantity +of iron, stowed in the "Joly," for the use of the colony; and Beaujeu +replies: "I wish very much that I could give you your iron, but it is +impossible except in a harbor; for it is on my ballast, and under your +cannon, my spare anchors, and all my stowage. It would take three days +to get it out, which cannot be done in this place, where the sea runs +like mountains when the slightest wind blows outside. I would rather +come back to give it to you, in case you do not send the 'Belle' to Baye +du St. Esprit [Mobile Bay] to get it.... I beg you once more to consider +the offer I make you to go to Martinique to get provisions for your +people. I will ask the intendant for them in your name; and if they are +refused, I will take them on my own account."[298] + +To this La Salle immediately replied: "I received with singular pleasure +the letter you took the trouble to write me; for I found in it +extraordinary proofs of kindness in the interest you take in the success +of an affair which I have the more at heart, as it involves the glory of +the King and the honor of Monseigneur de Seignelay. I have done my part +towards a perfect understanding between us, and have never been wanting +in confidence; but even if I could be so, the offers you make are so +obliging that they would inspire complete trust." He nevertheless +declines them,--assuring Beaujeu at the same time that he has reached +the place he sought, and is in a fair way of success if he can but have +the cannon, cannonballs, and iron stowed on board the "Joly."[299] + +Directly after he writes again, "I cannot help conjuring you once more +to try to give us the iron." Beaujeu replies: "To show you how ardently +I wish to contribute to the success of your undertaking, I have ordered +your iron to be got out, in spite of my officers and sailors, who tell +me that I endanger my ship by moving everything in the depth of the hold +on a coast like this, where the seas are like mountains. I hesitated to +disturb my stowage, not so much to save trouble as because no ballast is +to be got hereabout; and I have therefore had six cannon, from my lower +deck battery, let down into the hold to take the place of the iron." And +he again urges La Salle to accept his offer to bring provisions to the +colonists from Martinique. + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE OF BEAUJEU.] + +On the next day, the "Aimable" was wrecked. Beaujeu remained a fortnight +longer on the coast, and then told La Salle that being out of wood, +water, and other necessaries, he must go to Mobile Bay to get them. +Nevertheless, he lingered a week more, repeated his offer to bring +supplies from Martinique, which La Salle again refused, and at last set +sail on the twelfth of March, after a leave-taking which was courteous +on both sides.[300] + +La Salle and his colonists were left alone. Several of them had lost +heart, and embarked for home with Beaujeu. Among these was Minet the +engineer, who had fallen out with La Salle, and who when he reached +France was imprisoned for deserting him. Even his brother, the priest +Jean Cavelier, had a mind to abandon the enterprise, but was persuaded +at last to remain, along with his nephew the hot-headed Moranget, and +the younger Cavelier, a mere school-boy. The two Récollet friars, Zenobe +Membré and Anastase Douay, the trusty Joutel, a man of sense and +observation, and the Marquis de la Sablonnière, a debauched noble whose +patrimony was his sword, were now the chief persons of the forlorn +company. The rest were soldiers, raw and undisciplined, and artisans, +most of whom knew nothing of their vocation. Add to these the miserable +families and the infatuated young women who had come to tempt fortune in +the swamps and cane-brakes of the Mississippi. + +La Salle set out to explore the neighborhood. Joutel remained in command +of the so-called fort. He was beset with wily enemies, and often at +night the Indians would crawl in the grass around his feeble stockade, +howling like wolves; but a few shots would put them to flight. A strict +guard was kept; and a wooden horse was set in the enclosure, to punish +the sentinel who should sleep at his post. They stood in daily fear of a +more formidable foe, and once they saw a sail, which they doubted not +was Spanish; but she happily passed without discovering them. They +hunted on the prairies, and speared fish in the neighboring pools. On +Easter Day, the Sieur le Gros, one of the chief men of the company, +went out after the service to shoot snipes; but as he walked barefoot +through the marsh, a snake bit him, and he soon after died. Two men +deserted, to starve on the prairie, or to become savages among savages. +Others tried to escape, but were caught; and one of them was hung. A +knot of desperadoes conspired to kill Joutel; but one of them betrayed +the secret, and the plot was crushed. + +La Salle returned from his exploration, but his return brought no cheer. +He had been forced to renounce the illusion to which he had clung so +long, and was convinced at last that he was not at the mouth of the +Mississippi. The wreck of the "Aimable" itself was not pregnant with +consequences so disastrous. + +[Sidenote: CONDUCT OF BEAUJEU.] + +Note.--The conduct of Beaujeu, hitherto judged chiefly by the printed +narrative of Joutel, is set in a new and more favorable light by his +correspondence with La Salle. Whatever may have been their mutual +irritation, it is clear that the naval commander was anxious to +discharge his duty in a manner to satisfy Seignelay, and that he may be +wholly acquitted of any sinister design. When he left La Salle on the +twelfth of March, he meant to sail in search of the Bay of Mobile (Baye +du St. Esprit),--partly because he hoped to find it a safe harbor, where +he could get La Salle's cannon out of the hold and find ballast to take +their place; and partly to get a supply of wood and water, of which he +was in extreme need. He told La Salle that he would wait there till the +middle of April, in order that he (La Salle) might send the "Belle" to +receive the cannon; but on this point there was no definite agreement +between them. Beaujeu was ignorant of the position of the bay, which he +thought much nearer than it actually was. After trying two days to reach +it, the strong head-winds and the discontent of his crew induced him to +bear away for Cuba; and after an encounter with pirates and various +adventures, he reached France about the first of July. He was coldly +received by Seignelay, who wrote to the intendant at Rochelle: "His +Majesty has seen what you wrote about the idea of the Sieur de Beaujeu, +that the Sieur de la Salle is not at the mouth of the Mississippi. He +seems to found this belief on such weak conjectures that no great +attention need be given to his account, especially as _this man_ has +been prejudiced from the first against La Salle's enterprise." (_Lettre +de Seignelay à Arnoul, 22 Juillet, 1685._ Margry, ii. 604.) The minister +at the same time warns Beaujeu to say nothing in disparagement of the +enterprise, under pain of the King's displeasure. + +The narrative of the engineer, Minet, sufficiently explains a curious +map, made by him, as he says, not on the spot, but on the voyage +homeward, and still preserved in the Archives Scientifiques de la +Marine. This map includes two distinct sketches of the mouth of the +Mississippi. The first, which corresponds to that made by Franquelin in +1684, is entitled "Embouchure de la Rivière comme M. de la Salle la +marque dans sa Carte." The second bears the words, "Costes et Lacs par +la Hauteur de sa Rivière, comme nous les avons trouvés." These "Costes +et Lacs" are a rude representation of the lagoons of Matagorda Bay and +its neighborhood, into which the Mississippi is made to discharge, in +accordance with the belief of La Salle. A portion of the coast-line is +drawn from actual, though superficial observation. The rest is merely +conjectural. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[293] _Relation de Minet; Lettre de Minet à Seignelay, 6 July, 1685_ +(Margry, ii. 591, 602). + +[294] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 68; _Relation_ (Margry, iii. +143-146) Compare _Journal d'Esmanville_ (Margry, ii. 510). + +[295] _Relation de Minet_ (Margry, ii. 591). + +[296] _Procès Verbal du Sieur de la Salle sur le Naufrage de la Flûte +l'Aimable_; _Lettre de La Salle à Seignelay, 4 Mars, 1685_; _Lettre de +Beaujeu à Seignelay, sans date_. Beaujeu did his best to save the cargo. +The loss included nearly all the provisions, 60 barrels of wine, 4 +cannon, 1,620 balls, 400 grenades, 4,000 pounds of iron, 5,000 pounds of +lead, most of the tools, a forge, a mill, cordage, boxes of arms, nearly +all the medicines, and most of the baggage of the soldiers and +colonists. Aigron returned to France in the "Joly," and was thrown into +prison, "comme il paroist clairement que cet accident est arrivé par sa +faute."--_Seignelay au Sieur Arnoul, 22 Juillet, 1685_ (Margry, ii. +604). + +[297] A map, entitled _Entrée du Lac où on a laisse le Sr. de la +Salle_, made by the engineer Minet, and preserved in the Archives de la +Marine, represents the entrance of Matagorda Bay, the camp of La Salle +on the left, Indian camps on the borders of the bay, the "Belle" at +anchor within, the "Aimable" stranded at the entrance, and the "Joly" +anchored in the open sea. + +[298] _Lettre de Beaujeu à La Salle, 18 Fév., 1685_ (Margry, ii. 542). + +[299] _Lettre de La Salle à Beaujeu, 18 Fév., 1685_ (Margry, ii. 546). + +[300] The whole of this correspondence between Beaujeu and La Salle will +be found in Margry, ii. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +1685-1687. + +ST. LOUIS OF TEXAS. + + The Fort.--Misery and Dejection.--Energy of La Salle: his Journey + of Exploration.--Adventures and Accidents.--The + Buffalo.--Duhaut.--Indian Massacre.--Return Of La Salle.--A New + Calamity.--A Desperate Resolution.--Departure for Canada.--Wreck of + the "Belle."--Marriage.--Sedition.--Adventures Of la Salle's + Party.--The Cenis.--The Camanches.--The Only Hope.--The Last + Farewell. + + +Of what avail to plant a colony by the mouth of a petty Texan river? The +Mississippi was the life of the enterprise, the condition of its growth +and of its existence. Without it, all was futile and meaningless,--a +folly and a ruin. Cost what it might, the Mississippi must be found. + +But the demands of the hour were imperative. The hapless colony, cast +ashore like a wreck on the sands of Matagorda Bay, must gather up its +shattered resources and recruit its exhausted strength, before it +essayed anew its pilgrimage to the "fatal river." La Salle during his +explorations had found a spot which he thought well fitted for a +temporary establishment. It was on the river which he named the La +Vache,[301] now the Lavaca, which enters the head of Matagorda Bay; and +thither he ordered all the women and children, and most of the men, to +remove; while the rest, thirty in number, remained with Joutel at the +fort near the mouth of the bay. Here they spent their time in hunting, +fishing, and squaring the logs of drift-wood which the sea washed up in +abundance, and which La Salle proposed to use in building his new +station on the Lavaca. Thus the time passed till midsummer, when Joutel +received orders to abandon his post, and rejoin the main body of the +colonists. To this end, the little frigate "Belle" was sent down the +bay. She was a gift from the King to La Salle, who had brought her +safely over the bar, and regarded her as a main-stay of his hopes. She +now took on board the stores and some of the men, while Joutel with the +rest followed along shore to the post on the Lavaca. Here he found a +state of things that was far from cheering. Crops had been sown, but the +drought and the cattle had nearly destroyed them. The colonists were +lodged under tents and hovels; and the only solid structure was a small +square enclosure of pickets, in which the gunpowder and the brandy were +stored. The site was good, a rising ground by the river; but there was +no wood within the distance of a league, and no horses or oxen to drag +it. Their work must be done by men. Some felled and squared the timber; +and others dragged it by main force over the matted grass of the +prairie, under the scorching Texan sun. The gun-carriages served to make +the task somewhat easier; yet the strongest men soon gave out under it. +Joutel went down to the first fort, made a raft and brought up the +timber collected there, which proved a most seasonable and useful +supply. Palisades and buildings began to rise. The men labored without +spirit, yet strenuously; for they labored under the eye of La Salle. The +carpenters brought from Rochelle proved worthless; and he himself made +the plans of the work, marked out the tenons and mortises, and directed +the whole.[302] + +[Sidenote: MISERY AND DEJECTION.] + +Death, meanwhile, made withering havoc among his followers; and under +the sheds and hovels that shielded them from the sun lay a score of +wretches slowly wasting away with the diseases contracted at St. +Domingo. Of the soldiers enlisted for the expedition by La Salle's +agents, many are affirmed to have spent their lives in begging at the +church doors of Rochefort, and were consequently incapable of +discipline. It was impossible to prevent either them or the sailors from +devouring persimmons and other wild fruits to a destructive excess. +Nearly all fell ill; and before the summer had passed, the graveyard had +more than thirty tenants.[303] The bearing of La Salle did not aid to +raise the drooping spirits of his followers. The results of the +enterprise had been far different from his hopes; and, after a season of +flattering promise, he had entered again on those dark and obstructed +paths which seemed his destined way of life. The present was beset with +trouble; the future, thick with storms. The consciousness quickened his +energies; but it made him stern, harsh, and often unjust to those +beneath him. + +Joutel was returning to camp one afternoon with the master-carpenter, +when they saw game; and the carpenter went after it. He was never seen +again. Perhaps he was lost on the prairie, perhaps killed by Indians. He +knew little of his trade, but they nevertheless had need of him. Le +Gros, a man of character and intelligence, suffered more and more from +the bite of the snake received in the marsh on Easter Day. The injured +limb was amputated, and he died. La Salle's brother, the priest, lay +ill; and several others among the chief persons of the colony were in +the same condition. + +Meanwhile, the work was urged on. A large building was finished, +constructed of timber, roofed with boards and raw hides, and divided +into apartments for lodging and other uses. La Salle gave the new +establishment his favorite name of Fort St. Louis, and the neighboring +bay was also christened after the royal saint.[304] The scene was not +without its charms. Towards the southeast stretched the bay with its +bordering meadows; and on the northeast the Lavaca ran along the base of +green declivities. Around, far and near, rolled a sea of prairie, with +distant forests, dim in the summer haze. At times, it was dotted with +the browsing buffalo, not yet scared from their wonted pastures; and the +grassy swells were spangled with the flowers for which Texas is +renowned, and which now form the gay ornaments of our gardens. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S EXPLORATIONS.] + +And now, the needful work accomplished, and the colony in some measure +housed and fortified, its indefatigable chief prepared to renew his +quest of the "fatal river," as Joutel repeatedly calls it. Before his +departure he made some preliminary explorations, in the course of which, +according to the report of his brother the priest, he found evidence +that the Spaniards had long before had a transient establishment at a +spot about fifteen leagues from Fort St. Louis.[305] + +[Sidenote: LIFE AT THE FORT.] + +It was the last day of October when La Salle set out on his great +journey of exploration. His brother Cavelier, who had now recovered, +accompanied him with fifty men; and five cannon-shot from the fort +saluted them as they departed. They were lightly equipped; but some of +them wore corselets made of staves, to ward off arrows. Descending the +Lavaca, they pursued their course eastward on foot along the margin of +the bay, while Joutel remained in command of the fort. It was two +leagues above the mouth of the river; and in it were thirty-four +persons, including three Récollet friars, a number of women and girls +from Paris, and two young orphan daughters of one Talon, a Canadian, who +had lately died. Their live-stock consisted of some hogs and a litter of +eight pigs, which, as Joutel does not forget to inform us, passed their +time in wallowing in the ditch of the palisade; a cock and hen, with a +young family; and a pair of goats, which, in a temporary dearth of fresh +meat, were sacrificed to the needs of the invalid Abbé Cavelier. Joutel +suffered no man to lie idle. The blacksmith, having no anvil, was +supplied with a cannon as a substitute. Lodgings were built for the +women and girls, and separate lodgings for the men. A small chapel was +afterwards added, and the whole was fenced with a palisade. At the four +corners of the house were mounted eight pieces of cannon, which, in the +absence of balls, were loaded with bags of bullets.[306] Between the +palisades and the stream lay a narrow strip of marsh, the haunt of +countless birds; and at a little distance it deepened into pools full of +fish. All the surrounding prairies swarmed with game,--buffalo, deer, +hares, turkeys, ducks, geese, swans, plover, snipe, and grouse. The +river supplied the colonists with turtles, and the bay with oysters. Of +these last, they often found more than they wanted; for when in their +excursions they shoved their log canoes into the water, wading shoeless +through the deep, tenacious mud, the sharp shells would cut their feet +like knives; "and what was worse," says Joutel, "the salt water came +into the gashes, and made them smart atrociously." + +He sometimes amused himself with shooting alligators. "I never spared +them when I met them near the house. One day I killed an extremely large +one, which was nearly four feet and a half in girth, and about twenty +feet long." He describes with accuracy that curious native of the +southwestern plains, the "horned frog," which, deceived by its +uninviting appearance, he erroneously supposed to be venomous. "We had +some of our animals bitten by snakes; among the others, a bitch that had +belonged to the deceased Sieur le Gros. She was bitten in the jaw when +she was with me, as I was fishing by the shore of the bay. I gave her a +little theriac [an antidote then in vogue], which cured her, as it did +one of our sows, which came home one day with her head so swelled that +she could hardly hold it up. Thinking it must be some snake that had +bitten her, I gave her a dose of the theriac mixed with meal and water." +The patient began to mend at once. "I killed a good many rattle-snakes +by means of the aforesaid bitch, for when she saw one she would bark +around him, sometimes for a half hour together, till I took my gun and +shot him. I often found them in the bushes, making a noise with their +tails. When I had killed them, our hogs ate them." He devotes many pages +to the plants and animals of the neighborhood, most of which may easily +be recognized from his description. + +[Sidenote: THE BUFFALO.] + +With the buffalo, which he calls "our daily bread," his experiences were +many and strange. Being, like the rest of the party, a novice in the art +of shooting them, he met with many disappointments. Once, having mounted +to the roof of the large house in the fort, he saw a dark moving object +on a swell of the prairie three miles off; and rightly thinking that it +was a herd of buffalo, he set out with six or seven men to try to kill +some of them. After a while, he discovered two bulls lying in a hollow; +and signing to the rest of his party to keep quiet, he made his +approach, gun in hand. The bulls presently jumped up, and stared +through their manes at the intruder. Joutel fired. It was a close shot; +but the bulls merely shook their shaggy heads, wheeled about, and +galloped heavily away. The same luck attended him the next day. "We saw +plenty of buffalo. I approached several bands of them, and fired again +and again, but could not make one of them fall." He had not yet learned +that a buffalo rarely falls at once, unless hit in the spine. He +continues: "I was not discouraged; and after approaching several more +bands,--which was hard work, because I had to crawl on the ground, so as +not to be seen,--I found myself in a herd of five or six thousand, but, +to my great vexation, I could not bring one of them down. They all ran +off to the right and left. It was near night, and I had killed nothing. +Though I was very tired, I tried again, approached another band, and +fired a number of shots; but not a buffalo would fall. The skin was off +my knees with crawling. At last, as I was going back to rejoin our men, +I saw a buffalo lying on the ground. I went towards it, and saw that it +was dead. I examined it, and found that the bullet had gone in near the +shoulder. Then I found others dead like the first. I beckoned the men to +come on, and we set to work to cut up the meat,--a task which was new to +us all." It would be impossible to write a more true and characteristic +sketch of the experience of a novice in shooting buffalo on foot. A few +days after, he went out again, with Father Anastase Douay; approached a +bull, fired, and broke his shoulder. The bull hobbled off on three legs. +Douay ran in his cassock to head him back, while Joutel reloaded his +gun; upon which the enraged beast butted at the missionary, and knocked +him down. He very narrowly escaped with his life. "There was another +missionary," pursues Joutel, "named Father Maxime Le Clerc, who was very +well fitted for such an undertaking as ours, because he was equal to +anything, even to butchering a buffalo; and as I said before that every +one of us must lend a hand, because we were too few for anybody to be +waited upon, I made the women, girls, and children do their part, as +well as him; for as they all wanted to eat, it was fair that they all +should work." He had a scaffolding built near the fort, and set them to +smoking buffalo meat, against a day of scarcity.[307] + +[Sidenote: RETURN OF DUHAUT.] + +Thus the time passed till the middle of January; when late one evening, +as all were gathered in the principal building, conversing perhaps, or +smoking, or playing at cards, or dozing by the fire in homesick dreams +of France, a man on guard came in to report that he had heard a voice +from the river. They all went down to the bank, and descried a man in a +canoe, who called out, "Dominic!" This was the name of the younger of +the two brothers Duhaut, who was one of Joutel's followers. As the +canoe approached, they recognized the elder, who had gone with La Salle +on his journey of discovery, and who was perhaps the greatest villain of +the company. Joutel was much perplexed. La Salle had ordered him to +admit nobody into the fort without a pass and a watchword. Duhaut, when +questioned, said that he had none, but told at the same time so +plausible a story that Joutel no longer hesitated to receive him. As La +Salle and his men were pursuing their march along the prairie, Duhaut, +who was in the rear, had stopped to mend his moccasins, and when he +tried to overtake the party, had lost his way, mistaking a buffalo-path +for the trail of his companions. At night he fired his gun as a signal, +but there was no answering shot. Seeing no hope of rejoining them, he +turned back for the fort, found one of the canoes which La Salle had +hidden at the shore, paddled by night and lay close by day, shot +turkeys, deer, and buffalo for food, and, having no knife, cut the meat +with a sharp flint, till after a month of excessive hardship he reached +his destination. As the inmates of Fort St. Louis gathered about the +weather-beaten wanderer, he told them dreary tidings. The pilot of the +"Belle," such was his story, had gone with five men to sound along the +shore, by order of La Salle, who was then encamped in the neighborhood +with his party of explorers. The boat's crew, being overtaken by the +night, had rashly bivouacked on the beach without setting a guard; and +as they slept, a band of Indians had rushed in upon them, and butchered +them all. La Salle, alarmed by their long absence, had searched along +the shore, and at length found their bodies scattered about the sands +and half-devoured by wolves.[308] Well would it have been, if Duhaut had +shared their fate. + +Weeks and months dragged on, when, at the end of March, Joutel, chancing +to mount on the roof of one of the buildings, saw seven or eight men +approaching over the prairie. He went out to meet them with an equal +number, well armed; and as he drew near recognized, with mixed joy and +anxiety, La Salle and some of those who had gone with him. His brother +Cavelier was at his side, with his cassock so tattered that, says +Joutel, "there was hardly a piece left large enough to wrap a farthing's +worth of salt. He had an old cap on his head, having lost his hat by the +way. The rest were in no better plight, for their shirts were all in +rags. Some of them carried loads of meat, because M. de la Salle was +afraid that we might not have killed any buffalo. We met with great joy +and many embraces. After our greetings were over, M. de la Salle, seeing +Duhaut, asked me in an angry tone how it was that I had received this +man who had abandoned him. I told him how it had happened, and repeated +Duhaut's story. Duhaut defended himself, and M. de la Salle's anger was +soon over. We went into the house, and refreshed ourselves with some +bread and brandy, as there was no wine left."[309] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S ADVENTURES.] + +La Salle and his companions told their story. They had wandered on +through various savage tribes, with whom they had more than one +encounter, scattering them like chaff by the terror of their fire-arms. +At length they found a more friendly band, and learned much touching the +Spaniards, who, they were told, were universally hated by the tribes of +that country. It would be easy, said their informants, to gather a host +of warriors and lead them over the Rio Grande; but La Salle was in no +condition for attempting conquests, and the tribes in whose alliance he +had trusted had, a few days before, been at blows with him. The invasion +of New Biscay must be postponed to a more propitious day. Still +advancing, he came to a large river, which he at first mistook for the +Mississippi; and building a fort of palisades, he left here several of +his men.[310] The fate of these unfortunates does not appear. He now +retraced his steps towards Fort St. Louis, and, as he approached it, +detached some of his men to look for his vessel, the "Belle," for whose +safety, since the loss of her pilot, he had become very anxious. + +On the next day these men appeared at the fort, with downcast looks. +They had not found the "Belle" at the place where she had been ordered +to remain, nor were any tidings to be heard of her. From that hour, the +conviction that she was lost possessed the mind of La Salle. Surrounded +as he was, and had always been, with traitors, the belief now possessed +him that her crew had abandoned the colony, and made sail for the West +Indies or for France. The loss was incalculable. He had relied on this +vessel to transport the colonists to the Mississippi, as soon as its +exact position could be ascertained; and thinking her a safer place of +deposit than the fort, he had put on board of her all his papers and +personal baggage, besides a great quantity of stores, ammunition, and +tools.[311] In truth, she was of the last necessity to the unhappy +exiles, and their only resource for escape from a position which was +fast becoming desperate. + +La Salle, as his brother tells us, now fell dangerously ill,--the +fatigues of his journey, joined to the effects upon his mind of this +last disaster, having overcome his strength, though not his fortitude. +"In truth," writes the priest, "after the loss of the vessel which +deprived us of our only means of returning to France, we had no resource +but in the firm guidance of my brother, whose death each of us would +have regarded as his own."[312] + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE FOR CANADA.] + +La Salle no sooner recovered than he embraced a resolution which could +be the offspring only of a desperate necessity. He determined to make +his way by the Mississippi and the Illinois to Canada, whence he might +bring succor to the colonists, and send a report of their condition to +France. The attempt was beset with uncertainties and dangers. The +Mississippi was first to be found, then followed through all the +perilous monotony of its interminable windings to a goal which was to be +but the starting-point of a new and not less arduous journey. Cavelier +his brother, Moranget his nephew, the friar Anastase Douay, and others +to the number of twenty, were chosen to accompany him. Every corner of +the magazine was ransacked for an outfit. Joutel generously gave up the +better part of his wardrobe to La Salle and his two relatives. Duhaut, +who had saved his baggage from the wreck of the "Aimable," was +required to contribute to the necessities of the party; and the +scantily-furnished chests of those who had died were used to supply the +wants of the living. Each man labored with needle and awl to patch his +failing garments, or supply their place with buffalo or deer skins. On +the twenty-second of April, after mass and prayers in the chapel, they +issued from the gate, each bearing his pack and his weapons, some with +kettles slung at their backs, some with axes, some with gifts for +Indians. In this guise, they held their way in silence across the +prairie; while anxious eyes followed them from the palisades of St. +Louis, whose inmates, not excepting Joutel himself, seem to have been +ignorant of the extent and difficulty of the undertaking.[313] + +[Sidenote: WRECK OF THE "BELLE."] + +"On May Day," he writes, "at about two in the afternoon, as I was +walking near the house, I heard a voice from the river below, crying out +several times, _Qui vive?_ Knowing that the Sieur Barbier had gone that +way with two canoes to hunt buffalo, I thought that it might be one of +these canoes coming back with meat, and did not think much of the matter +till I heard the same voice again. I answered, _Versailles_, which was +the password I had given the Sieur Barbier, in case he should come back +in the night. But, as I was going towards the bank, I heard other voices +which I had not heard for a long time. I recognized among the rest that +of M. Chefdeville, which made me fear that some disaster had happened. I +ran down to the bank, and my first greeting was to ask what had become +of the 'Belle.' They answered that she was wrecked on the other side of +the bay, and that all on board were drowned except the six who were in +the canoe; namely, the Sieur Chefdeville, the Marquis de la Sablonnière, +the man named Teissier, a soldier, a girl, and a little boy."[314] + +From the young priest Chefdeville, Joutel learned the particulars of the +disaster. Water had failed on board the "Belle"; a boat's crew of five +men had gone in quest of it; the wind rose, their boat was swamped, and +they were all drowned. Those who remained had now no means of going +ashore; but if they had no water, they had wine and brandy in abundance, +and Teissier, the master of the vessel, was drunk every day. After a +while they left their moorings, and tried to reach the fort; but they +were few, weak, and unskilful. A violent north wind drove them on a +sand-bar. Some of them were drowned in trying to reach land on a raft. +Others were more successful; and, after a long delay, they found a +stranded canoe, in which they made their way to St. Louis, bringing with +them some of La Salle's papers and baggage saved from the wreck. + +These multiplied disasters bore hard on the spirits of the colonists; +and Joutel, like a good commander as he was, spared no pains to cheer +them. "We did what we could to amuse ourselves and drive away care. I +encouraged our people to dance and sing in the evenings; for when M. de +la Salle was among us, pleasure was often banished. Now, there is no +use in being melancholy on such occasions. It is true that M. de la +Salle had no great cause for merry-making, after all his losses and +disappointments; but his troubles made others suffer also. Though he had +ordered me to allow to each person only a certain quantity of meat at +every meal, I observed this rule only when meat was rare. The air here +is very keen, and one has a great appetite. One must eat and act, if he +wants good health and spirits. I speak from experience; for once, when I +had ague chills, and was obliged to keep the house with nothing to do, I +was dreary and down-hearted. On the contrary, if I was busy with hunting +or anything else, I was not so dull by half. So I tried to keep the +people as busy as possible. I set them to making a small cellar to keep +meat fresh in hot weather; but when M. de la Salle came back, he said it +was too small. As he always wanted to do everything on a grand scale, he +prepared to make a large one, and marked out the plan." This plan of the +large cellar, like more important undertakings of its unhappy projector, +proved too extensive for execution, the colonists being engrossed by the +daily care of keeping themselves alive. + +[Sidenote: MATRIMONY.] + +A gleam of hilarity shot for an instant out of the clouds. The young +Canadian, Barbier, usually conducted the hunting-parties; and some of +the women and girls often went out with them, to aid in cutting up the +meat. Barbier became enamoured of one of the girls; and as his devotion +to her was the subject of comment, he asked Joutel for leave to marry +her. The commandant, after due counsel with the priests and friars, +vouchsafed his consent, and the rite was duly solemnized; whereupon, +fired by the example, the Marquis de la Sablonnière begged leave to +marry another of the girls. Joutel, the gardener's son, concerned that a +marquis should so abase himself, and anxious at the same time for the +morals of the fort, which La Salle had especially commended to his care, +not only flatly refused, but, in the plenitude of his authority, forbade +the lovers all further intercourse. + +Father Zenobe Membré, superior of the mission, gave unwilling occasion +for further merriment. These worthy friars were singularly unhappy in +their dealings with the buffalo, one of which, it may be remembered, had +already knocked down Father Anastase. Undeterred by his example, Father +Zenobe one day went out with the hunters, carrying a gun like the rest. +Joutel shot a buffalo, which was making off, badly wounded, when a +second shot stopped it, and it presently lay down. The father superior +thought it was dead; and, without heeding the warning shout of Joutel, +he approached, and pushed it with the butt of his gun. The bull sprang +up with an effort of expiring fury, and, in the words of Joutel, +"trampled on the father, took the skin off his face in several places, +and broke his gun, so that he could hardly manage to get away, and +remained in an almost helpless state for more than three months. Bad as +the accident was, he was laughed at nevertheless for his rashness." + +The mishaps of the friars did not end here. Father Maxime Le Clerc was +set upon by a boar belonging to the colony. "I do not know," says +Joutel, "what spite the beast had against him, whether for a beating or +some other offence; but, however this may be, I saw the father running +and crying for help, and the boar running after him. I went to the +rescue, but could not come up in time. The father stooped as he ran, to +gather up his cassock from about his legs; and the boar, which ran +faster than he, struck him in the arm with his tusks, so that some of +the nerves were torn. Thus, all three of our good Récollet fathers were +near being the victims of animals."[315] + +In spite of his efforts to encourage them, the followers of Joutel were +fast losing heart. Father Maxime Le Clerc kept a journal, in which he +set down various charges against La Salle. Joutel got possession of the +paper, and burned it on the urgent entreaty of the friars, who dreaded +what might ensue, should the absent commander become aware of the +aspersions cast upon him. The elder Duhaut fomented the rising +discontent of the colonists, played the demagogue, told them that La +Salle would never return, and tried to make himself their leader. Joutel +detected the mischief, and, with a lenity which he afterwards deeply +regretted, contented himself with a rebuke to the offender, and words +of reproof and encouragement to the dejected band. + +[Sidenote: ADVENTURES OF THE TRAVELLERS.] + +He had caused the grass to be cut near the fort, so as to form a sort of +playground; and here, one evening, he and some of the party were trying +to amuse themselves, when they heard shouts from beyond the river, and +Joutel recognized the voice of La Salle. Hastening to meet him in a +wooden canoe, he brought him and his party to the fort. Twenty men had +gone out with him, and eight had returned. Of the rest, four had +deserted, one had been lost, one had been devoured by an alligator; and +the others, giving out on the march, had probably perished in attempting +to regain the fort. The travellers told of a rich country, a wild and +beautiful landscape,--woods, rivers, groves, and prairies; but all +availed nothing, and the acquisition of five horses was but an +indifferent return for the loss of twelve men. + +After leaving the fort, they had journeyed towards the northeast, over +plains green as an emerald with the young verdure of April, till at +length they saw, far as the eye could reach, the boundless prairie alive +with herds of buffalo. The animals were in one of their tame or stupid +moods; and they killed nine or ten of them without the least difficulty, +drying the best parts of the meat. They crossed the Colorado on a raft, +and reached the banks of another river, where one of the party, named +Hiens, a German of Würtemberg, and an old buccaneer, was mired and +nearly suffocated in a mud-hole. Unfortunately, as will soon appear, he +managed to crawl out; and, to console him, the river was christened with +his name. The party made a bridge of felled trees, on which they crossed +in safety. La Salle now changed their course, and journeyed eastward, +when the travellers soon found themselves in the midst of a numerous +Indian population, where they were feasted and caressed without measure. +At another village they were less fortunate. The inhabitants were +friendly by day and hostile by night. They came to attack the French in +their camp, but withdrew, daunted by the menacing voice of La Salle, who +had heard them approaching through the cane-brake. + +La Salle's favorite Shawanoe hunter, Nika, who had followed him from +Canada to France, and from France to Texas, was bitten by a rattlesnake; +and, though he recovered, the accident detained the party for several +days. At length they resumed their journey, but were stopped by a river, +called by Douay, "La Rivière des Malheurs." La Salle and Cavelier, with +a few others, tried to cross on a raft, which, as it reached the +channel, was caught by a current of marvellous swiftness. Douay and +Moranget, watching the transit from the edge of the cane-brake, beheld +their commander swept down the stream, and vanishing, as it were, in an +instant. All that day they remained with their companions on the bank, +lamenting in despair for the loss of their guardian angel, for so Douay +calls La Salle.[316] It was fast growing dark, when, to their +unspeakable relief, they saw him advancing with his party along the +opposite bank, having succeeded, after great exertion, in guiding the +raft to land. How to rejoin him was now the question. Douay and his +companions, who had tasted no food that day, broke their fast on two +young eagles which they knocked out of their nest, and then spent the +night in rueful consultation as to the means of crossing the river. In +the morning they waded into the marsh, the friar with his breviary in +his hood to keep it dry, and hacked among the canes till they had +gathered enough to make another raft; on which, profiting by La Salle's +experience, they safely crossed, and rejoined him. + +Next, they became entangled in a cane-brake, where La Salle, as usual +with him in such cases, took the lead, a hatchet in each hand, and hewed +out a path for his followers. They soon reached the villages of the +Cenis Indians, on and near the river Trinity,--a tribe then powerful, +but long since extinct. Nothing could surpass the friendliness of their +welcome. The chiefs came to meet them, bearing the calumet, and followed +by warriors in shirts of embroidered deer-skin. Then the whole village +swarmed out like bees, gathering around the visitors with offerings of +food and all that was precious in their eyes. La Salle was lodged with +the great chief; but he compelled his men to encamp at a distance, lest +the ardor of their gallantry might give occasion of offence. The lodges +of the Cenis, forty or fifty feet high, and covered with a thatch of +meadow-grass, looked like huge bee-hives. Each held several families, +whose fire was in the middle, and their beds around the circumference. +The spoil of the Spaniards was to be seen on all sides,--silver lamps +and spoons, swords, old muskets, money, clothing, and a bull of the Pope +dispensing the Spanish colonists of New Mexico from fasting during +summer.[317] These treasures, as well as their numerous horses, were +obtained by the Cenis from their neighbors and allies the Camanches, +that fierce prairie banditti who then, as now, scourged the Mexican +border with their bloody forays. A party of these wild horsemen was in +the village. Douay was edified at seeing them make the sign of the cross +in imitation of the neophytes of one of the Spanish missions. They +enacted, too, the ceremony of the mass; and one of them, in his rude +way, drew a sketch of a picture he had seen in some church which he had +pillaged, wherein the friar plainly recognized the Virgin weeping at the +foot of the cross. They invited the French to join them on a raid into +New Mexico; and they spoke with contempt, as their tribesmen will speak +to this day, of the Spanish creoles, saying that it would be easy to +conquer a nation of cowards who make people walk before them with fans +to cool them in hot weather.[318] + +Soon after leaving the Cenis villages, both La Salle and his nephew +Moranget were attacked by fever. This caused a delay of more than two +months, during which the party seem to have remained encamped on the +Neches, or possibly the Sabine. When at length the invalids had +recovered sufficient strength to travel, the stock of ammunition was +nearly spent, some of the men had deserted, and the condition of the +travellers was such that there seemed no alternative but to return to +Fort St. Louis. This they accordingly did, greatly aided in their march +by the horses bought from the Cenis, and suffering no very serious +accident by the way,--excepting the loss of La Salle's servant, +Dumesnil, who was seized by an alligator while attempting to cross the +Colorado. + +[Sidenote: DEJECTION.] + +The temporary excitement caused among the colonists by their return soon +gave place to a dejection bordering on despair. "This pleasant land," +writes Cavelier, "seemed to us an abode of weariness and a perpetual +prison." Flattering themselves with the delusion, common to exiles of +every kind, that they were objects of solicitude at home, they watched +daily, with straining eyes, for an approaching sail. Ships, indeed, had +ranged the coast to seek them, but with no friendly intent. Their +thoughts dwelt, with unspeakable yearning, on the France they had left +behind, which, to their longing fancy, was pictured as an unattainable +Eden. Well might they despond; for of a hundred and eighty colonists, +besides the crew of the "Belle," less than forty-five remained. The +weary precincts of Fort St. Louis, with its fence of rigid palisades, +its area of trampled earth, its buildings of weather-stained timber, and +its well-peopled graveyard without, were hateful to their sight. La +Salle had a heavy task to save them from despair. His composure, his +unfailing equanimity, his words of encouragement and cheer, were the +breath of life to this forlorn company; for though he could not impart +to minds of less adamantine temper the audacity of hope with which he +still clung to the final accomplishment of his purposes, the contagion +of his hardihood touched, nevertheless, the drooping spirits of his +followers.[319] + +[Sidenote: TWELFTH NIGHT.] + +The journey to Canada was clearly their only hope; and, after a brief +rest, La Salle prepared to renew the attempt. He proposed that Joutel +should this time be of the party; and should proceed from Quebec to +France, with his brother Cavelier, to solicit succors for the colony, +while he himself returned to Texas. A new obstacle was presently +interposed. La Salle, whose constitution seems to have suffered from his +long course of hardships, was attacked in November with hernia. Joutel +offered to conduct the party in his stead; but La Salle replied that his +own presence was indispensable at the Illinois. He had the good fortune +to recover, within four or five weeks, sufficiently to undertake the +journey; and all in the fort busied themselves in preparing an outfit. +In such straits were they for clothing, that the sails of the "Belle" +were cut up to make coats for the adventurers. Christmas came, and was +solemnly observed. There was a midnight mass in the chapel, where +Membré, Cavelier, Douay, and their priestly brethren stood before the +altar, in vestments strangely contrasting with the rude temple and the +ruder garb of the worshippers. And as Membré elevated the consecrated +wafer, and the lamps burned dim through the clouds of incense, the +kneeling group drew from the daily miracle such consolation as true +Catholics alone can know. When Twelfth Night came, all gathered in the +hall, and cried, after the jovial old custom, "The King drinks," with +hearts, perhaps, as cheerless as their cups, which were filled with cold +water. + +[Sidenote: THE LAST FAREWELL.] + +On the morrow, the band of adventurers mustered for the fatal +journey.[320] The five horses, bought by La Salle of the Indians, stood +in the area of the fort, packed for the march; and here was gathered the +wretched remnant of the colony,--those who were to go, and those who +were to stay behind. These latter were about twenty in all,--Barbier, +who was to command in the place of Joutel; Sablonnière, who, despite his +title of marquis, was held in great contempt;[321] the friars, Membré +and Le Clerc,[322] and the priest Chefdeville, besides a surgeon, +soldiers, laborers, seven women and girls, and several children, doomed, +in this deadly exile, to wait the issues of the journey, and the +possible arrival of a tardy succor. La Salle had made them a last +address, delivered, we are told, with that winning air which, though +alien from his usual bearing, seems to have been at times a natural +expression of this unhappy man.[323] It was a bitter parting, one of +sighs, tears, and embracings,--the farewell of those on whose souls had +sunk a heavy boding that they would never meet again.[324] Equipped and +weaponed for the journey, the adventurers filed from the gate, crossed +the river, and held their slow march over the prairies beyond, till +intervening woods and hills shut Fort St. Louis forever from their +sight. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[301] Called by Joutel, Rivière aux Boeufs. + +[302] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 108; _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 174); +_Procès Verbal fait au poste de St. Louis, le 18 Avril, 1686_. + +[303] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 109. Le Clerc, who was not present, +says a hundred. + +[304] The Bay of St. Louis, St. Bernard's Bay, or Matagorda Bay,--for it +has borne all these names,--was also called Espiritu Santo Bay by the +Spaniards, in common with several other bays in the Gulf of Mexico. An +adjoining bay still retains the name. + +[305] Cavelier, in his report to the minister, says: "We reached a large +village, enclosed with a kind of wall made of clay and sand, and +fortified with little towers at intervals, where we found the arms of +Spain engraved on a plate of copper, with the date of 1588, attached to +a stake. The inhabitants gave us a kind welcome, and showed us some +hammers and an anvil, two small pieces of iron cannon, a small brass +culverin, some pike-heads, some old sword-blades, and some books of +Spanish comedy; and thence they guided us to a little hamlet of +fishermen, about two leagues distant, where they showed us a second +stake, also with the arms of Spain, and a few old chimneys. All this +convinced us that the Spaniards had formerly been here." (Cavelier, +_Relation du Voyage que mon frère entreprit pour découvrir l'embouchure +du fleuve de Missisipy_.) The above is translated from the original +draft of Cavelier, which is in my possession. It was addressed to the +colonial minister, after the death of La Salle. The statement concerning +the Spaniards needs confirmation. + +[306] Compare Joutel with the Spanish account in _Carta en que se da +noticia de un viaje hecho á la Bahia de Espíritu Santo y de la poblacion +que tenian ahi los Franceses; Coleccion de Varios Documentos_, 25. + +[307] For the above incidents of life at Fort St. Louis, see Joutel, +_Relation_ (Margry, iii. 185-218, _passim_). The printed condensation of +the narrative omits most of these particulars. + +[308] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 206). Compare Le Clerc, ii. 296. +Cavelier, always disposed to exaggerate, says that ten men were killed. +La Salle had previously had encounters with the Indians, and punished +them severely for the trouble they had given his men. Le Clerc says of +the principal fight: "Several Indians were wounded, a few were killed, +and others made prisoners,--one of whom, a girl of three or four years, +was baptized, and died a few days after, as the first-fruit of this +mission, and a sure conquest sent to heaven." + +[309] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 219). + +[310] Cavelier says that he actually reached the Mississippi; but, on +the one hand, the abbé did not know whether the river in question was +the Mississippi or not; and, on the other, he is somewhat inclined to +mendacity. Le Clerc says that La Salle thought he had found the river. +According to the _Procès Verbal_ of 18 April, 1686, "il y arriva le 13 +Février." Joutel says that La Salle told him "qu'il n'avoit point trouvé +sa rivière." + +[311] _Procès Verbal fait au poste de St. Louis, le 18 Avril, 1686._ + +[312] Cavelier, _Relation du Voyage pour découvrir l'Embouchure du +Fleuve de Missisipy_. + +[313] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 140; Anastase Douay in Le Clerc, ii. +303; Cavelier, _Relation_. The date is from Douay. It does not appear, +from his narrative, that they meant to go farther than the Illinois. +Cavelier says that after resting here they were to go to Canada. Joutel +supposed that they would go only to the Illinois. La Salle seems to have +been even more reticent than usual. + +[314] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 226). + +[315] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 244, 246). + +[316] "Ce fût une desolation extrême pour nous tous qui desesperions de +revoir jamais nostre Ange tutélaire, le Sieur de la Salle.... Tout le +jour se passa en pleurs et en larmes."--_Douay in Le Clerc_, ii. 315. + +[317] Douay in Le Clerc, ii. 321; Cavelier, _Relation_. + +[318] Douay in Le Clerc, ii. 324, 325. + +[319] "L'égalité d'humeur du Chef rassuroit tout le monde; et il +trouvoit des resources à tout par son esprit qui relevoit les espérances +les plus abatues."--Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 152. + +"Il seroit difficile de trouver dans l'Histoire un courage plus +intrepide et plus invincible que celuy du Sieur de la Salle dans les +évenemens contraires; il ne fût jamais abatu, et il espéroit toujours +avec le secours du Ciel de venir à bout de son entreprise malgré tous +les obstacles qui se présentoient."--_Douay in Le Clerc_, ii. 327. + +[320] I follow Douay's date, who makes the day of departure the seventh +of January, or the day after Twelfth Night. Joutel thinks it was the +twelfth of January, but professes uncertainty as to all his dates at +this time, as he lost his notes. + +[321] He had to be kept on short allowance, because he was in the habit +of bargaining away everything given to him. He had squandered the little +that belonged to him at St. Domingo, in amusements "indignes de sa +naissance," and in consequence was suffering from diseases which +disabled him from walking. (_Procès Verbal, 18 Avril, 1686._) + +[322] Maxime le Clerc was a relative of the author of _L'Établissement +de la Foi_. + +[323] "Il fit une Harangue pleine d'éloquence et de cet air engageant +qui luy estoit si naturel: toute la petite Colonie y estoit presente et +en fût touchée jusques aux larmes, persuadée de la nécessité de son +voyage et de la droiture de ses intentions."--_Douay in Le Clerc_, ii, +330. + +[324] "Nous nous separâmes les uns des autres, d'une manière si tendre +et si triste qu'il sembloit que nous avions tous le secret pressentiment +que nous ne nous reverrions jamais."--Joutel, _Journal Historique_, +158. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +1687. + +ASSASSINATION OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--Prairie Travelling--A Hunters' Quarrel--The Murder + of Moranget.--The Conspiracy.--Death of La Salle: his Character. + + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S FOLLOWERS.] + +The travellers were crossing a marshy prairie towards a distant belt of +woods that followed the course of a little river. They led with them +their five horses, laden with their scanty baggage, and, with what was +of no less importance, their stock of presents for Indians. Some wore +the remains of the clothing they had worn from France, eked out with +deer-skins, dressed in the Indian manner; and some had coats of old +sail-cloth. Here was La Salle, in whom one would have known, at a +glance, the chief of the party; and the priest, Cavelier, who seems to +have shared not one of the high traits of his younger brother. Here, +too, were their nephews, Moranget and the boy Cavelier, now about +seventeen years old; the trusty soldier Joutel; and the friar Anastase +Douay. Duhaut followed, a man of respectable birth and education; and +Liotot, the surgeon of the party. At home, they might perhaps have +lived and died with a fair repute; but the wilderness is a rude +touchstone, which often reveals traits that would have lain buried and +unsuspected in civilized life. The German Hiens, the ex-buccaneer, was +also of the number. He had probably sailed with an English crew; for he +was sometimes known as _Gemme Anglais_, or "English Jem."[325] The Sieur +de Marie; Teissier, a pilot; L'Archevêque, a servant of Duhaut; and +others, to the number in all of seventeen,--made up the party; to which +is to be added Nika, La Salle's Shawanoe hunter, who, as well as another +Indian, had twice crossed the ocean with him, and still followed his +fortunes with an admiring though undemonstrative fidelity. + +They passed the prairie, and neared the forest. Here they saw buffalo; +and the hunters approached, and killed several of them. Then they +traversed the woods; found and forded the shallow and rushy stream, and +pushed through the forest beyond, till they again reached the open +prairie. Heavy clouds gathered over them, and it rained all night; but +they sheltered themselves under the fresh hides of the buffalo they had +killed. + +[Sidenote: PRAIRIE TRAVELLING.] + +It is impossible, as it would be needless, to follow the detail of their +daily march.[326] It was such an one, though with unwonted hardship, as +is familiar to the memory of many a prairie traveller of our own time. +They suffered greatly from the want of shoes, and found for a while no +better substitute than a casing of raw buffalo-hide, which they were +forced to keep always wet, as, when dry, it hardened about the foot like +iron. At length they bought dressed deer-skin from the Indians, of which +they made tolerable moccasins. The rivers, streams, and gullies filled +with water were without number; and to cross them they made a boat of +bull-hide, like the "bull boat" still used on the Upper Missouri. This +did good service, as, with the help of their horses, they could carry it +with them. Two or three men could cross in it at once, and the horses +swam after them like dogs. Sometimes they traversed the sunny prairie; +sometimes dived into the dark recesses of the forest, where the buffalo, +descending daily from their pastures in long files to drink at the +river, often made a broad and easy path for the travellers. When foul +weather arrested them, they built huts of bark and long meadow-grass; +and safely sheltered lounged away the day, while their horses, picketed +near by, stood steaming in the rain. At night, they usually set a rude +stockade about their camp; and here, by the grassy border of a brook, +or at the edge of a grove where a spring bubbled up through the sands, +they lay asleep around the embers of their fire, while the man on guard +listened to the deep breathing of the slumbering horses, and the howling +of the wolves that saluted the rising moon as it flooded the waste of +prairie with pale mystic radiance. + +They met Indians almost daily,--sometimes a band of hunters, mounted or +on foot, chasing buffalo on the plains; sometimes a party of fishermen; +sometimes a winter camp, on the slope of a hill or under the sheltering +border of a forest. They held intercourse with them in the distance by +signs; often they disarmed their distrust, and attracted them into their +camp; and often they visited them in their lodges, where, seated on +buffalo-robes, they smoked with their entertainers, passing the pipe +from hand to hand, after the custom still in use among the prairie +tribes. Cavelier says that they once saw a band of a hundred and fifty +mounted Indians attacking a herd of buffalo with lances pointed with +sharpened bone. The old priest was delighted with the sport, which he +pronounces "the most diverting thing in the world." On another occasion, +when the party were encamped near the village of a tribe which Cavelier +calls Sassory, he saw them catch an alligator about twelve feet long, +which they proceeded to torture as if he were a human enemy,--first +putting out his eyes, and then leading him to the neighboring prairie, +where, having confined him by a number of stakes, they spent the entire +day in tormenting him.[327] + +Holding a northerly course, the travellers crossed the Brazos, and +reached the waters of the Trinity. The weather was unfavorable, and on +one occasion they encamped in the rain during four or five days +together. It was not an harmonious company. La Salle's cold and haughty +reserve had returned, at least for those of his followers to whom he was +not partial. Duhaut and the surgeon Liotot, both of whom were men of +some property, had a large pecuniary stake in the enterprise, and were +disappointed and incensed at its ruinous result. They had a quarrel with +young Moranget, whose hot and hasty temper was as little fitted to +conciliate as was the harsh reserve of his uncle. Already at Fort St. +Louis, Duhaut had intrigued among the men; and the mild admonition of +Joutel had not, it seems, sufficed to divert him from his sinister +purposes. Liotot, it is said, had secretly sworn vengeance against La +Salle, whom he charged with having caused the death of his brother, or, +as some will have it, his nephew. On one of the former journeys this +young man's strength had failed; and, La Salle having ordered him to +return to the fort, he had been killed by Indians on the way. + +[Sidenote: MURDER OF MORANGET.] + +The party moved again as the weather improved, and on the fifteenth of +March encamped within a few miles of a spot which La Salle had passed on +his preceding journey, and where he had left a quantity of Indian corn +and beans in _cache_; that is to say, hidden in the ground or in a +hollow tree. As provisions were falling short, he sent a party from the +camp to find it. These men were Duhaut, Liotot,[328] Hiens the +buccaneer, Teissier, L'Archevêque, Nika the hunter, and La Salle's +servant Saget. They opened the _cache_, and found the contents spoiled; +but as they returned from their bootless errand they saw buffalo, and +Nika shot two of them. They now encamped on the spot, and sent the +servant to inform La Salle, in order that he might send horses to bring +in the meat. Accordingly, on the next day, he directed Moranget and De +Marle, with the necessary horses, to go with Saget to the hunters' camp. +When they arrived, they found that Duhaut and his companions had already +cut up the meat, and laid it upon scaffolds for smoking, though it was +not yet so dry as, it seems, this process required. Duhaut and the +others had also put by, for themselves, the marrow-bones and certain +portions of the meat, to which, by woodland custom, they had a perfect +right. Moranget, whose rashness and violence had once before caused a +fatal catastrophe, fell into a most unreasonable fit of rage, berated +and menaced Duhaut and his party, and ended by seizing upon the whole of +the meat, including the reserved portions. This added fuel to the fire +of Duhaut's old grudge against Moranget and his uncle. There is reason +to think that he had harbored deadly designs, the execution of which +was only hastened by the present outbreak. The surgeon also bore hatred +against Moranget, whom he had nursed with constant attention when +wounded by an Indian arrow, and who had since repaid him with abuse. +These two now took counsel apart with Hiens, Teissier, and L'Archevêque; +and it was resolved to kill Moranget that night. Nika, La Salle's +devoted follower, and Saget, his faithful servant, must die with him. +All of the five were of one mind except the pilot Teissier, who neither +aided nor opposed the plot. + +Night came: the woods grew dark; the evening meal was finished, and the +evening pipes were smoked. The order of the guard was arranged; and, +doubtless by design, the first hour of the night was assigned to +Moranget, the second to Saget, and the third to Nika. Gun in hand, each +stood watch in turn over the silent but not sleeping forms around him, +till, his time expiring, he called the man who was to relieve him, +wrapped himself in his blanket, and was soon buried in a slumber that +was to be his last. Now the assassins rose. Duhaut and Hiens stood with +their guns cocked, ready to shoot down any one of the destined victims +who should resist or fly. The surgeon, with an axe, stole towards the +three sleepers, and struck a rapid blow at each in turn. Saget and Nika +died with little movement; but Moranget started spasmodically into a +sitting posture, gasping and unable to speak; and the murderers +compelled De Marle, who was not in their plot, to compromise himself by +despatching him. + +The floodgates of murder were open, and the torrent must have its way. +Vengeance and safety alike demanded the death of La Salle. Hiens, or +"English Jem," alone seems to have hesitated; for he was one of those to +whom that stern commander had always been partial. Meanwhile, the +intended victim was still at his camp, about six miles distant. It is +easy to picture, with sufficient accuracy, the features of the +scene,--the sheds of bark and branches, beneath which, among blankets +and buffalo-robes, camp-utensils, pack-saddles, rude harness, guns, +powder-horns, and bullet-pouches, the men lounged away the hour, +sleeping or smoking, or talking among themselves; the blackened kettles +that hung from tripods of poles over the fires; the Indians strolling +about the place or lying, like dogs in the sun, with eyes half-shut, yet +all observant; and, in the neighboring meadow, the horses grazing under +the eye of a watchman. + +[Sidenote: SUSPENSE.] + +It was the eighteenth of March. Moranget and his companions had been +expected to return the night before; but the whole day passed, and they +did not appear. La Salle became very anxious. He resolved to go and look +for them; but not well knowing the way, he told the Indians who were +about the camp that he would give them a hatchet if they would guide +him. One of them accepted the offer; and La Salle prepared to set out in +the morning, at the same time directing Joutel to be ready to go with +him. Joutel says: "That evening, while we were talking about what could +have happened to the absent men, he seemed to have a presentiment of +what was to take place. He asked me if I had heard of any machinations +against them, or if I had noticed any bad design on the part of Duhaut +and the rest. I answered that I had heard nothing, except that they +sometimes complained of being found fault with so often; and that this +was all I knew; besides which, as they were persuaded that I was in his +interest, they would not have told me of any bad design they might have. +We were very uneasy all the rest of the evening." + +[Sidenote: THE FATAL SHOT.] + +In the morning, La Salle set out with his Indian guide. He had changed +his mind with regard to Joutel, whom he now directed to remain in charge +of the camp and to keep a careful watch. He told the friar Anastase +Douay to come with him instead of Joutel, whose gun, which was the best +in the party, he borrowed for the occasion, as well as his pistol. The +three proceeded on their way,--La Salle, the friar, and the Indian. "All +the way," writes the friar, "he spoke to me of nothing but matters of +piety, grace, and predestination; enlarging on the debt he owed to God, +who had saved him from so many perils during more than twenty years of +travel in America. Suddenly, I saw him overwhelmed with a profound +sadness, for which he himself could not account. He was so much moved +that I scarcely knew him." He soon recovered his usual calmness; and +they walked on till they approached the camp of Duhaut, which was on the +farther side of a small river. Looking about him with the eye of a +woodsman, La Salle saw two eagles circling in the air nearly over him, +as if attracted by carcasses of beasts or men. He fired his gun and his +pistol, as a summons to any of his followers who might be within +hearing. The shots reached the ears of the conspirators. Rightly +conjecturing by whom they were fired, several of them, led by Duhaut, +crossed the river at a little distance above, where trees or other +intervening objects hid them from sight. Duhaut and the surgeon crouched +like Indians in the long, dry, reed-like grass of the last summer's +growth, while L'Archevêque stood in sight near the bank. La Salle, +continuing to advance, soon saw him, and, calling to him, demanded where +was Moranget. The man, without lifting his hat, or any show of respect, +replied in an agitated and broken voice, but with a tone of studied +insolence, that Moranget was strolling about somewhere. La Salle rebuked +and menaced him. He rejoined with increased insolence, drawing back, as +he spoke, towards the ambuscade, while the incensed commander advanced +to chastise him. At that moment a shot was fired from the grass, +instantly followed by another; and, pierced through the brain, La Salle +dropped dead. + +The friar at his side stood terror-stricken, unable to advance or to +fly; when Duhaut, rising from the ambuscade, called out to him to take +courage, for he had nothing to fear. The murderers now came forward, and +with wild looks gathered about their victim. "There thou liest, great +Bashaw! There thou liest!"[329] exclaimed the surgeon Liotot, in base +exultation over the unconscious corpse. With mockery and insult, they +stripped it naked, dragged it into the bushes, and left it there, a prey +to the buzzards and the wolves. + +Thus in the vigor of his manhood, at the age of forty-three, died Robert +Cavelier de la Salle, "one of the greatest men," writes Tonty, "of this +age;" without question one of the most remarkable explorers whose names +live in history. His faithful officer Joutel thus sketches his portrait: +"His firmness, his courage, his great knowledge of the arts and +sciences, which made him equal to every undertaking, and his untiring +energy, which enabled him to surmount every obstacle, would have won at +last a glorious success for his grand enterprise, had not all his fine +qualities been counterbalanced by a haughtiness of manner which often +made him insupportable, and by a harshness towards those under his +command which drew upon him an implacable hatred, and was at last the +cause of his death."[330] + +[Sidenote: HIS CHARACTER.] + +The enthusiasm of the disinterested and chivalrous Champlain was not +the enthusiasm of La Salle; nor had he any part in the self-devoted zeal +of the early Jesuit explorers. He belonged not to the age of the +knight-errant and the saint, but to the modern world of practical study +and practical action. He was the hero not of a principle nor of a faith, +but simply of a fixed idea and a determined purpose. As often happens +with concentred and energetic natures, his purpose was to him a passion +and an inspiration; and he clung to it with a certain fanaticism of +devotion. It was the offspring of an ambition vast and comprehensive, +yet acting in the interest both of France and of civilization. + +Serious in all things, incapable of the lighter pleasures, incapable of +repose, finding no joy but in the pursuit of great designs, too shy for +society and too reserved for popularity, often unsympathetic and always +seeming so, smothering emotions which he could not utter, schooled to +universal distrust, stern to his followers and pitiless to himself, +bearing the brunt of every hardship and every danger, demanding of +others an equal constancy joined to an implicit deference, heeding no +counsel but his own, attempting the impossible and grasping at what was +too vast to hold,--he contained in his own complex and painful nature +the chief springs of his triumphs, his failures, and his death. + +It is easy to reckon up his defects, but it is not easy to hide from +sight the Roman virtues that redeemed them. Beset by a throng of +enemies, he stands, like the King of Israel, head and shoulders above +them all. He was a tower of adamant, against whose impregnable front +hardship and danger, the rage of man and of the elements, the southern +sun, the northern blast, fatigue, famine, disease, delay, +disappointment, and deferred hope emptied their quivers in vain. That +very pride which, Coriolanus-like, declared itself most sternly in the +thickest press of foes, has in it something to challenge admiration. +Never, under the impenetrable mail of paladin or crusader, beat a heart +of more intrepid mettle than within the stoic panoply that armed the +breast of La Salle. To estimate aright the marvels of his patient +fortitude, one must follow on his track through the vast scene of his +interminable journeyings,--those thousands of weary miles of forest, +marsh, and river, where, again and again, in the bitterness of baffled +striving, the untiring pilgrim pushed onward towards the goal which he +was never to attain. America owes him an enduring memory; for in this +masculine figure she sees the pioneer who guided her to the possession +of her richest heritage.[331] + +[Sidenote: DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE.] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[325] Tonty also speaks of him as "un flibustier anglois." In another +document, he is called "James." + +[326] Of the three narratives of this journey, those of Joutel, +Cavelier, and Anastase Douay, the first is by far the best. That of +Cavelier seems the work of a man of confused brain and indifferent +memory. Some of his statements are irreconcilable with those of Joutel +and Douay; and known facts of his history justify the suspicion of a +wilful inaccuracy. Joutel's account is of a very different character, +and seems to be the work of an honest and intelligent man. Douay's +account if brief; but it agrees with that of Joutel, in most essential +points. + +[327] Cavelier, _Relation_. + +[328] Called Lanquetot by Tonty. + +[329] "Te voilà, grand Bacha, te voilà!"--Joutel, _Journal Historique_, +203. + +[330] _Ibid._ + +[331] On the assassination of La Salle, the evidence is fourfold: 1. The +narrative of Douay, who was with him at the time. 2. That of Joutel, who +learned the facts, immediately after they took place, from Douay and +others, and who parted from La Salle an hour or more before his death. +3. A document preserved in the Archives de la Marine, entitled _Relation +de la Mort du Sr. de la Salle, suivant le rapport d'un nommé Couture à +qui M. Cavelier l'apprit en passant au pays des Akansa, avec toutes les +circonstances que le dit Couture a apprises d'un François que M. +Cavelier avoit laissé aux dits pays des Akansa, crainte qu'il ne gardât +pas le secret_. 4. The authentic memoir of Tonty, of which a copy from +the original is before me, and which has recently been printed by +Margry. + +The narrative of Cavelier unfortunately fails us several weeks before +the death of his brother, the remainder being lost. On a study of these +various documents, it is impossible to resist the conclusion that +neither Cavelier nor Douay always wrote honestly. Joutel, on the +contrary, gives the impression of sense, intelligence, and candor +throughout. Charlevoix, who knew him long after, says that he was "un +fort honnête homme, et le seul de la troupe de M. de la Salle, sur qui +ce célèbre voyageur pût compter." Tonty derived his information from the +survivors of La Salle's party. Couture, whose statements are embodied in +the _Relation de la Mort de M. de la Salle_, was one of Tonty's men, +who, as will be seen hereafter, were left by him at the mouth of the +Arkansas, and to whom Cavelier told the story of his brother's death. +Couture also repeats the statements of one of La Salle's followers, +undoubtedly a Parisian boy, named Barthelemy, who was violently +prejudiced against his chief, whom he slanders to the utmost of his +skill, saying that he was so enraged at his failures that he did not +approach the sacraments for two years; that he nearly starved his +brother Cavelier, allowing him only a handful of meal a day; that he +killed with his own hand "quantité de personnes," who did not work to +his liking; and that he killed the sick in their beds, without mercy, +under the pretence that they were counterfeiting sickness in order to +escape work. These assertions certainly have no other foundation than +the undeniable rigor of La Salle's command. Douay says that he confessed +and made his devotions on the morning of his death, while Cavelier +always speaks of him as the hope and the staff of the colony. + +Douay declares that La Salle lived an hour after the fatal shot; that he +gave him absolution, buried his body, and planted a cross on his grave. +At the time, he told Joutel a different story; and the latter, with the +best means of learning the facts, explicitly denies the friar's printed +statement. Couture, on the authority of Cavelier himself, also says that +neither he nor Douay was permitted to take any step for burying the +body. Tonty says that Cavelier begged leave to do so, but was refused. +Douay, unwilling to place upon record facts from which the inference +might easily be drawn that he had been terrified from discharging his +duty, no doubt invented the story of the burial, as well as that of the +edifying behavior of Moranget, after he had been struck in the head with +an axe. + +The locality of La Salle's assassination is sufficiently clear, from a +comparison of the several narratives; and it is also indicated on a +contemporary manuscript map, made on the return of the survivors of the +party to France. The scene of the catastrophe is here placed on a +southern branch of the Trinity. + +La Salle's debts, at the time of his death, according to a schedule +presented in 1701 to Champigny, intendant of Canada, amounted to 106,831 +livres, without reckoning interest. This cannot be meant to include all, +as items are given which raise the amount much higher. In 1678 and 1679 +alone, he contracted debts to the amount of 97,184 livres, of which +46,000 were furnished by Branssac, fiscal attorney of the Seminary of +Montreal. This was to be paid in beaver-skins. Frontenac, at the same +time, became his surety for 13,623 livres. In 1684, he borrowed 34,825 +livres from the Sieur Pen, at Paris. These sums do not include the +losses incurred by his family, which, in the memorial presented by them +to the King, are set down at 500,000 livres for the expeditions between +1678 and 1683, and 300,000 livres for the fatal Texan expedition of 1684 +These last figures are certainly exaggerated. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +1687, 1688. + +THE INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY. + + Triumph of the Murderers.--Danger of Joutel.--Joutel among the + Cenis.--White Savages.--Insolence of Duhaut and his + Accomplices.--Murder of Duhaut and Liotot.--Hiens, the + Buccaneer.--Joutel and his Party: their Escape; they reach the + Arkansas.--Bravery and Devotion of Tonty.--The Fugitives reach + the Illinois.--Unworthy Conduct of Cavelier.--He and his Companions + return to France. + +Father Anastase Douay returned to the camp, and, aghast with grief and +terror, rushed into the hut of Cavelier. "My poor brother is dead!" +cried the priest, instantly divining the catastrophe from the +horror-stricken face of the messenger. Close behind came the murderers, +Duhaut at their head. Cavelier, his young nephew, and Douay himself, all +fell on their knees, expecting instant death. The priest begged +piteously for half an hour to prepare for his end; but terror and +submission sufficed, and no more blood was shed. The camp yielded +without resistance; and Duhaut was lord of all. In truth, there were +none to oppose him; for, except the assassins themselves, the party was +now reduced to six persons,--Joutel, Douay, the elder Cavelier, his +young nephew, and two other boys, the orphan Talon and a lad called +Barthelemy. + +[Sidenote: DOUBT AND ANXIETY.] + +Joutel, for the moment, was absent; and L'Archevêque, who had a kindness +for him, went quietly to seek him. He found him on a hillock, making a +fire of dried grass in order that the smoke might guide La Salle on his +return, and watching the horses grazing in the meadow below. "I was very +much surprised," writes Joutel, "when I saw him approaching. When he +came up to me he seemed all in confusion, or, rather, out of his wits. +He began with saying that there was very bad news. I asked what it was. +He answered that the Sieur de la Salle was dead, and also his nephew the +Sieur de Moranget, his Indian hunter, and his servant. I was petrified, +and did not know what to say; for I saw that they had been murdered. The +man added that, at first, the murderers had sworn to kill me too. I +easily believed it, for I had always been in the interest of M. de la +Salle, and had commanded in his place; and it is hard to please +everybody, or prevent some from being dissatisfied. I was greatly +perplexed as to what I ought to do, and whether I had not better escape +to the woods, whithersoever God should guide me; but, by bad or good +luck, I had no gun and only one pistol, without balls or powder except +what was in my powder-horn. To whatever side I turned, my life was in +great peril. It is true that L'Archevêque assured me that they had +changed their minds, and had agreed to murder nobody else, unless they +met with resistance. So, being in no condition, as I just said, to go +far, having neither arms nor powder, I abandoned myself to Providence, +and went back to the camp, where I found that these wretched murderers +had seized everything belonging to M. de la Salle, and even my personal +effects. They had also taken possession of all the arms. The first words +that Duhaut said to me were, that each should command in turn; to which +I made no answer. I saw M. Cavelier praying in a corner, and Father +Anastase in another. He did not dare to speak to me, nor did I dare to +go towards him till I had seen the designs of the assassins. They were +in furious excitement, but, nevertheless, very uneasy and embarrassed. I +was some time without speaking, and, as it were, without moving, for +fear of giving umbrage to our enemies. + +"They had cooked some meat, and when it was supper-time they distributed +it as they saw fit, saying that formerly their share had been served out +to them, but that it was they who would serve it out in future. They, no +doubt, wanted me to say something that would give them a chance to make +a noise; but I managed always to keep my mouth closed. When night came +and it was time to stand guard, they were in perplexity, as they could +not do it alone; therefore they said to M. Cavelier, Father Anastase, +me, and the others who were not in the plot with them, that all we had +to do was to stand guard as usual; that there was no use in thinking +about what had happened,--that what was done was done; that they had +been driven to it by despair, and that they were sorry for it, and meant +no more harm to anybody. M. Cavelier took up the word, and told them +that when they killed M. de la Salle they killed themselves, for there +was nobody but him who could get us out of this country. At last, after +a good deal of talk on both sides, they gave us our arms. So we stood +guard; during which, M. Cavelier told me how they had come to the camp, +entered his hut like so many madmen, and seized everything in it." + +Joutel, Douay, and the two Caveliers spent a sleepless night, consulting +as to what they should do. They mutually pledged themselves to stand by +each other to the last, and to escape as soon as they could from the +company of the assassins. In the morning, Duhaut and his accomplices, +after much discussion, resolved to go to the Cenis villages; and, +accordingly, the whole party broke up their camp, packed their horses, +and began their march. They went five leagues, and encamped at the edge +of a grove. On the following day they advanced again till noon, when +heavy rains began, and they were forced to stop by the banks of a river. +"We passed the night and the next day there," says Joutel; "and during +that time my mind was possessed with dark thoughts. It was hard to +prevent ourselves from being in constant fear among such men, and we +could not look at them without horror. When I thought of the cruel +deeds they had committed, and the danger we were in from them, I longed +to revenge the evil they had done us. This would have been easy while +they were asleep; but M. Cavelier dissuaded us, saying that we ought to +leave vengeance to God, and that he himself had more to revenge than we, +having lost his brother and his nephew." + +[Sidenote: JOURNEY TO THE CENIS.] + +The comic alternated with the tragic. On the twenty-third, they reached +the bank of a river too deep to ford. Those who knew how to swim crossed +without difficulty, but Joutel, Cavelier, and Douay were not of the +number. Accordingly, they launched a log of light, dry wood, embraced it +with one arm, and struck out for the other bank with their legs and the +arm that was left free. But the friar became frightened. "He only clung +fast to the aforesaid log," says Joutel, "and did nothing to help us +forward. While I was trying to swim, my body being stretched at full +length, I hit him in the belly with my feet; on which he thought it was +all over with him, and, I can answer for it, he invoked Saint Francis +with might and main. I could not help laughing, though I was myself in +danger of drowning." Some Indians who had joined the party swam to the +rescue, and pushed the log across. + +The path to the Cenis villages was exceedingly faint, and but for the +Indians they would have lost the way. They crossed the main stream of +the Trinity in a boat of raw hides, and then, being short of +provisions, held a council to determine what they should do. It was +resolved that Joutel, with Hiens, Liotot, and Teissier, should go in +advance to the villages and buy a supply of corn. Thus, Joutel found +himself doomed to the company of three villains, who, he strongly +suspected, were contriving an opportunity to kill him; but, as he had no +choice, he dissembled his doubts, and set out with his sinister +companions, Duhaut having first supplied him with goods for the intended +barter. + +[Sidenote: JOUTEL AND THE CENIS.] + +They rode over hills and plains till night, encamped, supped on a wild +turkey, and continued their journey till the afternoon of the next day, +when they saw three men approaching on horseback, one of whom, to +Joutel's alarm, was dressed like a Spaniard. He proved, however, to be a +Cenis Indian, like the others. The three turned their horses' heads, and +accompanied the Frenchmen on their way. At length they neared the Indian +town, which, with its large thatched lodges, looked like a cluster of +gigantic haystacks. Their approach had been made known, and they were +received in solemn state. Twelve of the elders came to meet them in +their dress of ceremony, each with his face daubed red or black, and his +head adorned with painted plumes. From their shoulders hung deer-skins +wrought with gay colors. Some carried war-clubs; some, bows and arrows; +some, the blades of Spanish rapiers, attached to wooden handles +decorated with hawk's bells and bunches of feathers. They stopped +before the honored guests, and, raising their hands aloft, uttered howls +so extraordinary that Joutel could hardly preserve the gravity which the +occasion demanded. Having next embraced the Frenchmen, the elders +conducted them into the village, attended by a crowd of warriors and +young men; ushered them into their town-hall, a large lodge, devoted to +councils, feasts, dances, and other public assemblies; seated them on +mats, and squatted in a ring around them. Here they were regaled with +sagamite or Indian porridge, corn-cake, beans, bread made of the meal of +parched corn, and another kind of bread made of the kernels of nuts and +the seed of sunflowers. Then the pipe was lighted, and all smoked +together. The four Frenchmen proposed to open a traffic for provisions, +and their entertainers grunted assent. + +Joutel found a Frenchman in the village. He was a young man from +Provence, who had deserted from La Salle on his last journey, and was +now, to all appearance, a savage like his adopted countrymen, being +naked like them, and affecting to have forgotten his native language. He +was very friendly, however, and invited the visitors to a neighboring +village, where he lived, and where, as he told them, they would find a +better supply of corn. They accordingly set out with him, escorted by a +crowd of Indians. They saw lodges and clusters of lodges scattered along +their path at intervals, each with its field of corn, beans, and +pumpkins, rudely cultivated with a wooden hoe. Reaching their +destination, which was four or five leagues distant, they were greeted +with the same honors as at the first village, and, the ceremonial of +welcome over, were lodged in the abode of the savage Frenchman. It is +not to be supposed, however, that he and his squaws, of whom he had a +considerable number, dwelt here alone; for these lodges of the Cenis +often contained eight or ten families. They were made by firmly planting +in a circle tall, straight young trees, such as grew in the swamps. The +tops were then bent inward and lashed together; great numbers of +cross-pieces were bound on; and the frame thus constructed was thickly +covered with thatch, a hole being left at the top for the escape of the +smoke. The inmates were ranged around the circumference of the +structure, each family in a kind of stall, open in front, but separated +from those adjoining it by partitions of mats. Here they placed their +beds of cane, their painted robes of buffalo and deer-skin, their +cooking utensils of pottery, and other household goods; and here, too, +the head of the family hung his bow, quiver, lance, and shield. There +was nothing in common but the fire, which burned in the middle of the +lodge, and was never suffered to go out. These dwellings were of great +size, and Joutel declares that he has seen some of them sixty feet in +diameter.[332] + +It was in one of the largest that the four travellers were now lodged. A +place was assigned them where to bestow their baggage; and they took +possession of their quarters amid the silent stares of the whole +community. They asked their renegade countryman, the Provençal, if they +were safe. He replied that they were; but this did not wholly reassure +them, and they spent a somewhat wakeful night. In the morning, they +opened their budgets, and began a brisk trade in knives, awls, beads, +and other trinkets, which they exchanged for corn and beans. Before +evening, they had acquired a considerable stock; and Joutel's three +companions declared their intention of returning with it to the camp, +leaving him to continue the trade. They went, accordingly, in the +morning; and Joutel was left alone. On the one hand, he was glad to be +rid of them; on the other, he found his position among the Cenis very +irksome, and, as he thought, insecure. Besides the Provençal, who had +gone with Liotot and his companions, there were two other French +deserters among this tribe, and Joutel was very desirous to see them, +hoping that they could tell him the way to the Mississippi; for he was +resolved to escape, at the first opportunity, from the company of Duhaut +and his accomplices. He therefore made the present of a knife to a young +Indian, whom he sent to find the two Frenchmen and invite them to come +to the village. Meanwhile he continued his barter, but under many +difficulties; for he could only explain himself by signs, and his +customers, though friendly by day, pilfered his goods by night. This, +joined to the fears and troubles which burdened his mind, almost +deprived him of sleep, and, as he confesses, greatly depressed his +spirits. Indeed, he had little cause for cheerfulness as to the past, +present, or future. An old Indian, one of the patriarchs of the tribe, +observing his dejection and anxious to relieve it, one evening brought +him a young wife, saying that he made him a present of her. She seated +herself at his side; "but," says Joutel, "as my head was full of other +cares and anxieties, I said nothing to the poor girl. She waited for a +little time; and then, finding that I did not speak a word, she went +away."[333] + +[Sidenote: WHITE SAVAGES.] + +Late one night, he lay between sleeping and waking on the buffalo-robe +that covered his bed of canes. All around the great lodge, its inmates +were buried in sleep; and the fire that still burned in the midst cast +ghostly gleams on the trophies of savage chivalry--the treasured +scalp-locks, the spear and war-club, and shield of whitened +bull-hide--that hung by each warrior's resting-place. Such was the +weird scene that lingered on the dreamy eyes of Joutel, as he closed +them at last in a troubled sleep. The sound of a footstep soon wakened +him; and, turning, he saw at his side the figure of a naked savage, +armed with a bow and arrows. Joutel spoke, but received no answer. Not +knowing what to think, he reached out his hand for his pistols; on which +the intruder withdrew, and seated himself by the fire. Thither Joutel +followed; and as the light fell on his features, he looked at him +closely. His face was tattooed, after the Cenis fashion, in lines drawn +from the top of the forehead and converging to the chin; and his body +was decorated with similar embellishments. Suddenly, this supposed +Indian rose and threw his arms around Joutel's neck, making himself +known, at the same time, as one of the Frenchmen who had deserted from +La Salle and taken refuge among the Cenis. He was a Breton sailor named +Ruter. His companion, named Grollet, also a sailor, had been afraid to +come to the village lest he should meet La Salle. Ruter expressed +surprise and regret when he heard of the death of his late commander. He +had deserted him but a few months before. That brief interval had +sufficed to transform him into a savage; and both he and his companion +found their present reckless and ungoverned way of life greatly to their +liking. He could tell nothing of the Mississippi; and on the next day he +went home, carrying with him a present of beads for his wives, of which +last he had made a large collection. + +In a few days he reappeared, bringing Grollet with him. Each wore a +bunch of turkey-feathers dangling from his head, and each had wrapped +his naked body in a blanket. Three men soon after arrived from Duhaut's +camp, commissioned to receive the corn which Joutel had purchased. They +told him that Duhaut and Liotot, the tyrants of the party, had resolved +to return to Fort St. Louis, and build a vessel to escape to the West +Indies,--"a visionary scheme," writes Joutel, "for our carpenters were +all dead; and even if they had been alive, they were so ignorant that +they would not have known how to go about the work; besides, we had no +tools for it. Nevertheless, I was obliged to obey, and set out for the +camp with the provisions." + +On arriving, he found a wretched state of affairs. Douay and the two +Caveliers, who had been treated by Duhaut with great harshness and +contempt, had been told to make their mess apart; and Joutel now joined +them. This separation restored them their freedom of speech, of which +they had hitherto been deprived; but it subjected them to incessant +hunger, as they were allowed only food enough to keep them from +famishing. Douay says that quarrels were rife among the assassins +themselves,--the malcontents being headed by Hiens, who was enraged that +Duhaut and Liotot should have engrossed all the plunder. Joutel was +helpless, for he had none to back him but two priests and a boy. + +[Sidenote: SCHEMES OF ESCAPE.] + +He and his companions talked of nothing around their solitary camp-fire +but the means of escaping from the villanous company into which they +were thrown. They saw no resource but to find the Mississippi, and thus +make their way to Canada,--a prodigious undertaking in their forlorn +condition; nor was there any probability that the assassins would permit +them to go. These, on their part, were beset with difficulties. They +could not return to civilization without manifest peril of a halter; and +their only safety was to turn buccaneers or savages. Duhaut, however, +still held to his plan of going back to Fort St. Louis; and Joutel and +his companions, who with good reason stood in daily fear of him, devised +among themselves a simple artifice to escape from his company. The elder +Cavelier was to tell him that they were too fatigued for the journey, +and wished to stay among the Cenis; and to beg him to allow them a +portion of the goods, for which Cavelier was to give his note of hand. +The old priest, whom a sacrifice of truth even on less important +occasions cost no great effort, accordingly opened the negotiation, and +to his own astonishment and that of his companions, gained the assent of +Duhaut. Their joy, however, was short; for Ruter, the French savage, to +whom Joutel had betrayed his intention, when inquiring the way to the +Mississippi, told it to Duhaut, who on this changed front and made the +ominous declaration that he and his men would also go to Canada. Joutel +and his companions were now filled with alarm; for there was no +likelihood that the assassins would permit them, the witnesses of their +crime, to reach the settlements alive. In the midst of their trouble, +the sky was cleared as by the crash of a thunderbolt. + +[Sidenote: THE CRISIS.] + +Hiens and several others had gone, some time before, to the Cenis +villages to purchase horses; and here they had been detained by the +charms of the Indian women. During their stay, Hiens heard of Duhaut's +new plan of going to Canada by the Mississippi; and he declared to those +with him that he would not consent. On a morning early in May he +appeared at Duhaut's camp, with Ruter and Grollet, the French savages, +and about twenty Indians. Duhaut and Liotot, it is said, were passing +the time by practising with bows and arrows in front of their hut. One +of them called to Hiens, "Good-morning;" but the buccaneer returned a +sullen answer. He then accosted Duhaut, telling him that he had no mind +to go up the Mississippi with him, and demanding a share of the goods. +Duhaut replied that the goods were his own, since La Salle had owed him +money. "So you will not give them to me?" returned Hiens. "No," was the +answer. "You are a wretch!" exclaimed Hiens; "you killed my +master."[334] And drawing a pistol from his belt he fired at Duhaut, +who staggered three or four paces and fell dead. Almost at the same +instant Ruter fired his gun at Liotot, shot three balls into his body, +and stretched him on the ground mortally wounded. + +Douay and the two Caveliers stood in extreme terror, thinking that their +turn was to come next. Joutel, no less alarmed, snatched his gun to +defend himself; but Hiens called to him to fear nothing, declaring that +what he had done was only to avenge the death of La Salle,--to which, +nevertheless, he had been privy, though not an active sharer in the +crime. Liotot lived long enough to make his confession, after which +Ruter killed him by exploding a pistol loaded with a blank charge of +powder against his head. Duhaut's myrmidon, L'Archevêque, was absent, +hunting, and Hiens was for killing him on his return; but the two +priests and Joutel succeeded in dissuading him. + +The Indian spectators beheld these murders with undisguised amazement, +and almost with horror. What manner of men were these who had pierced +the secret places of the wilderness to riot in mutual slaughter? Their +fiercest warriors might learn a lesson in ferocity from these heralds of +civilization. Joutel and his companions, who could not dispense with the +aid of the Cenis, were obliged to explain away, as they best might, the +atrocity of what they had witnessed.[335] + +Hiens, and others of the French, had before promised to join the Cenis +on an expedition against a neighboring tribe with whom they were at war; +and the whole party having removed to the Indian village, the warriors +and their allies prepared to depart. Six Frenchmen went with Hiens; and +the rest, including Joutel, Douay, and the Caveliers, remained behind, +in the lodge where Joutel had been domesticated, and where none were now +left but women, children, and old men. Here they remained a week or +more, watched closely by the Cenis, who would not let them leave the +village; when news at length arrived of a great victory, and the +warriors soon after returned with forty-eight scalps. It was the French +guns that won the battle, but not the less did they glory in their +prowess; and several days were spent in ceremonies and feasts of +triumph.[336] + +When all this hubbub of rejoicing had subsided, Joutel and his +companions broke to Hiens their plan of attempting to reach home by way +of the Mississippi. As they had expected, he opposed it vehemently, +declaring that for his own part he would not run such a risk of losing +his head; but at length he consented to their departure, on condition +that the elder Cavelier should give him a certificate of his entire +innocence of the murder of La Salle, which the priest did not hesitate +to do. For the rest, Hiens treated his departing fellow-travellers with +the generosity of a successful free-booter; for he gave them a good +share of the plunder he had won by his late crime, supplying them with +hatchets, knives, beads, and other articles of trade, besides several +horses. Meanwhile, adds Joutel, "we had the mortification and chagrin of +seeing this scoundrel walking about the camp in a scarlet coat laced +with gold which had belonged to the late Monsieur de la Salle, and which +he had seized upon, as also upon all the rest of his property." A +well-aimed shot would have avenged the wrong, but Joutel was clearly a +mild and moderate person; and the elder Cavelier had constantly opposed +all plans of violence. Therefore they stifled their emotions, and armed +themselves with patience. + +[Sidenote: JOUTEL AND HIS PARTY.] + +Joutel's party consisted, besides himself, of the Caveliers (uncle and +nephew), Anastase Douay, De Marle, Teissier, and a young Parisian named +Barthelemy. Teissier, an accomplice in the murders of Moranget and La +Salle, had obtained a pardon, in form, from the elder Cavelier. They had +six horses and three Cenis guides. Hiens embraced them at parting, as +did the ruffians who remained with him. Their course was northeast, +toward the mouth of the Arkansas,--a distant goal, the way to which was +beset with so many dangers that their chance of reaching it seemed +small. It was early in June, and the forests and prairies were green +with the verdure of opening summer. + +They soon reached the Assonis, a tribe near the Sabine, who received +them well, and gave them guides to the nations dwelling towards Red +River. On the twenty-third, they approached a village, the inhabitants +of which, regarding them as curiosities of the first order, came out in +a body to see them; and, eager to do them honor, they required them to +mount on their backs, and thus make their entrance in procession. +Joutel, being large and heavy, weighed down his bearer, insomuch that +two of his countrymen were forced to sustain him, one on each side. On +arriving, an old chief washed their faces with warm water from an +earthen pan, and then invited them to mount on a scaffold of canes, +where they sat in the hot sun listening to four successive speeches of +welcome, of which they understood not a word.[337] + +At the village of another tribe, farther on their way, they met with a +welcome still more oppressive. Cavelier, the unworthy successor of his +brother, being represented as the chief of the party, became the +principal victim of their attentions. They danced the calumet before +him; while an Indian, taking him, with an air of great respect, by the +shoulders as he sat, shook him in cadence with the thumping of the drum. +They then placed two girls close beside him, as his wives; while, at the +same time, an old chief tied a painted feather in his hair. These +proceedings so scandalized him that, pretending to be ill, he broke off +the ceremony; but they continued to sing all night, with so much zeal +that several of them were reduced to a state of complete exhaustion. + +[Sidenote: ARRIVAL AT THE ARKANSAS.] + +At length, after a journey of about two months, during which they lost +one of their number,--De Marle, accidentally drowned while bathing,--the +travellers approached the river Arkansas, at a point not far above its +junction with the Mississippi. Led by their Indian guides, they +traversed a rich district of plains and woods, and stood at length on +the borders of the stream. Nestled beneath the forests of the farther +shore, they saw the lodges of a large Indian town; and here, as they +gazed across the broad current, they presently descried an object which +nerved their spent limbs, and thrilled their homesick hearts with joy. +It was a tall, wooden cross; and near it was a small house, built +evidently by Christian hands. With one accord they fell on their knees, +and raised their hands to Heaven in thanksgiving. Two men, in European +dress, issued from the door of the house and fired their guns to salute +the excited travellers, who on their part replied with a volley. Canoes +put out from the farther shore and ferried them to the town, where they +were welcomed by Couture and De Launay, two followers of Henri de +Tonty.[338] + +That brave, loyal, and generous man, always vigilant and always active, +beloved and feared alike by white men and by red,[339] had been +ejected, as we have seen, by the agent of the governor, La Barre, from +the command of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois. An order from the King +had reinstated him; and he no sooner heard the news of La Salle's +landing on the shores of the Gulf, and of the disastrous beginnings of +his colony,[340] than he prepared, on his own responsibility and at his +own cost, to go to his assistance. He collected twenty-five Frenchmen +and eleven Indians, and set out from his fortified rock on the +thirteenth of February, 1686;[341] descended the Mississippi, and +reached its mouth in Holy Week. All was solitude, a voiceless desolation +of river, marsh, and sea. He despatched canoes to the east and to the +west, searching the coast for some thirty leagues on either side. +Finding no trace of his friend, who at that moment was ranging the +prairies of Texas in no less fruitless search of his "fatal river," +Tonty wrote for him a letter, which he left in the charge of an Indian +chief, who preserved it with reverential care, and gave it, fourteen +years after, to Iberville, the founder of Louisiana.[342] Deeply +disappointed at his failure, Tonty retraced his course, and ascended the +Mississippi to the villages of the Arkansas, where some of his men +volunteered to remain. He left six of them; and of this number were +Couture and De Launay.[343] + +[Sidenote: A HOSPITABLE RECEPTION.] + +Cavelier and his companions, followed by a crowd of Indians, some +carrying their baggage, some struggling for a view of the white +strangers, entered the log cabin of their two hosts. Rude as it was, +they found in it an earnest of peace and safety, and a foretaste of +home. Couture and De Launay were moved even to tears by the story of +their disasters, and of the catastrophe that crowned them. La Salle's +death was carefully concealed from the Indians, many of whom had seen +him on his descent of the Mississippi, and who regarded him with +prodigious respect. They lavished all their hospitality on his +followers; feasted them on corn-bread, dried buffalo meat, and +watermelons, and danced the calumet before them, the most august of all +their ceremonies. On this occasion, Cavelier's patience failed him +again; and pretending, as before, to be ill, he called on his nephew to +take his place. There were solemn dances, too, in which the +warriors--some bedaubed with white clay, some with red, and some with +both; some wearing feathers, and some the horns of buffalo; some naked, +and some in painted shirts of deer-skin, fringed with scalp-locks, +insomuch, says Joutel, that they looked like a troop of devils--leaped, +stamped, and howled from sunset till dawn. All this was partly to do the +travellers honor, and partly to extort presents. They made objections, +however, when asked to furnish guides; and it was only by dint of great +offers that four were at length procured. + +[Sidenote: THE MISSISSIPPI.] + +With these, the travellers resumed their journey in a wooden canoe, +about the first of August,[344] descended the Arkansas, and soon reached +the dark and inexorable river, so long the object of their search, +rolling, like a destiny, through its realms of solitude and shade. They +launched their canoe on its turbid bosom, plied their oars against the +current, and slowly won their way upward, following the writhings of +this watery monster through cane-brake, swamp, and fen. It was a hard +and toilsome journey, under the sweltering sun of August,--now on the +water, now knee-deep in mud, dragging their canoe through the +unwholesome jungle. On the nineteenth, they passed the mouth of the +Ohio; and their Indian guides made it an offering of buffalo meat. On +the first of September, they passed the Missouri, and soon after saw +Marquette's pictured rock, and the line of craggy heights on the east +shore, marked on old French maps as "the Ruined Castles." Then, with a +sense of relief, they turned from the great river into the peaceful +current of the Illinois. They were eleven days in ascending it, in their +large and heavy wooden canoe; when at length, on the afternoon of the +fourteenth of September, they saw, towering above the forest and the +river, the cliff crowned with the palisades of Fort St. Louis of the +Illinois. As they drew near, a troop of Indians, headed by a Frenchman, +descended from the rock, and fired their guns to salute them. They +landed, and followed the forest path that led towards the fort, when +they were met by Boisrondet, Tonty's comrade in the Iroquois war, and +two other Frenchmen, who no sooner saw them than they called out, +demanding where was La Salle. Cavelier, fearing lest he and his party +would lose the advantage they might derive from his character of +representative of his brother, was determined to conceal his death; and +Joutel, as he himself confesses, took part in the deceit. Substituting +equivocation for falsehood, they replied that La Salle had been with +them nearly as far as the Cenis villages, and that, when they parted, +he was in good health. This, so far as they were concerned, was, +literally speaking, true; but Douay and Teissier, the one a witness and +the other a sharer in his death, could not have said so much without a +square falsehood, and therefore evaded the inquiry. + +Threading the forest path, and circling to the rear of the rock, they +climbed the rugged height, and reached the top. Here they saw an area, +encircled by the palisades that fenced the brink of the cliff, and by +several dwellings, a store-house, and a chapel. There were Indian lodges +too; for some of the red allies of the French made their abode with +them.[345] Tonty was absent, fighting the Iroquois; but his lieutenant, +Bellefontaine, received the travellers, and his little garrison of +bush-rangers greeted them with a salute of musketry, mingled with the +whooping of the Indians. A _Te Deum_ followed at the chapel; "and, with +all our hearts," says Joutel, "we gave thanks to God, who had preserved +and guided us." At length, the tired travellers were among countrymen +and friends. Bellefontaine found a room for the two priests; while +Joutel, Teissier, and young Cavelier were lodged in the store-house. + +[Sidenote: THE JESUIT ALLOUEZ.] + +The Jesuit Allouez was lying ill at the fort; and Joutel, Cavelier, and +Douay went to visit him. He showed great anxiety when told that La Salle +was alive, and on his way to the Illinois; asked many questions, and +could not hide his agitation. When, some time after, he had partially +recovered, he left St. Louis, as if to shun a meeting with the object of +his alarm.[346] Once before, in 1679, Allouez had fled from the +Illinois on hearing of the approach of La Salle. + +The season was late, and they were eager to hasten forward that they +might reach Quebec in time to return to France in the autumn ships. +There was not a day to lose. They bade farewell to Bellefontaine, from +whom, as from all others, they had concealed the death of La Salle, and +made their way across the country to Chicago. Here they were detained a +week by a storm; and when at length they embarked in a canoe furnished +by Bellefontaine, the tempest soon forced them to put back. On this, +they abandoned their design, and returned to Fort St. Louis, to the +astonishment of its inmates. + +[Sidenote: CONDUCT OF CAVELIER.] + +It was October when they arrived; and, meanwhile, Tonty had returned +from the Iroquois war, where he had borne a conspicuous part in the +famous attack on the Senecas by the Marquis de Denonville.[347] He +listened with deep interest to the mournful story of his guests. +Cavelier knew him well. He knew, so far as he was capable of knowing, +his generous and disinterested character, his long and faithful +attachment to La Salle, and the invaluable services he had rendered him. +Tonty had every claim on his confidence and affection. Yet he did not +hesitate to practise on him the same deceit which he had practised on +Bellefontaine. He told him that he had left his brother in good health +on the Gulf of Mexico, and drew upon him, in La Salle's name, for an +amount stated by Joutel at about four thousand livres, in furs, besides +a canoe and a quantity of other goods, all of which were delivered to +him by the unsuspecting victim.[348] + +This was at the end of the winter, when the old priest and his +companions had been living for months on Tonty's hospitality. They set +out for Canada on the twenty-first of March, reached Chicago on the +twenty-ninth, and thence proceeded to Michilimackinac. Here Cavelier +sold some of Tonty's furs to a merchant, who gave him in payment a draft +on Montreal, thus putting him in funds for his voyage home. The party +continued their journey in canoes by way of French River and the Ottawa, +and safely reached Montreal on the seventeenth of July. Here they +procured the clothing of which they were wofully in need, and then +descended the river to Quebec, where they took lodging,--some with the +Récollet friars, and some with the priests of the Seminary,--in order to +escape the questions of the curious. At the end of August they embarked +for France, and early in October arrived safely at Rochelle. None of the +party were men of especial energy or force of character; and yet, under +the spur of a dire necessity, they had achieved one of the most +adventurous journeys on record. + +[Sidenote: THE COLONISTS ABANDONED.] + +Now, at length, they disburdened themselves of their gloomy secret; but +the sole result seems to have been an order from the King for the arrest +of the murderers, should they appear in Canada.[349] Joutel was +disappointed. It had been his hope throughout that the King would send a +ship to the relief of the wretched band at Fort St. Louis of Texas. But +Louis XIV. hardened his heart, and left them to their fate. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[332] The lodges of the Florida Indians were somewhat similar. The +winter lodges of the now nearly extinct Mandans, though not so high in +proportion to their width, and built of more solid materials, as the +rigor of a northern climate requires, bear a general resemblance to +those of the Cenis. + +The Cenis tattooed their faces and some parts of their bodies, by +pricking powdered charcoal into the skin. The women tattooed the +breasts; and this practice was general among them, notwithstanding the +pain of the operation, as it was thought very ornamental. Their dress +consisted of a sort of frock, or wrapper of skin, from the waist to the +knees. The men, in summer, wore nothing but the waist-cloth. + +[333] _Journal Historique_, 237. + +[334] "Tu es un misérable. Tu as tué mon maistre."--Tonty, _Mémoire_. +Tonty derived his information from some of those present. Douay and +Joutel have each left an account of this murder. They agree in essential +points; though Douay says that when it took place, Duhaut had moved his +camp beyond the Cenis villages, which is contrary to Joutel's statement. + +[335] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 371). + +[336] These are described by Joutel. Like nearly all the early observers +of Indian manners, he speaks of the practice of cannibalism. + +[337] These Indians were a portion of the Cadodaquis, or Caddoes, then +living on Red River. The travellers afterwards visited other villages of +the same people. Tonty was here two years afterwards, and mentions the +curious custom of washing the faces of guests. + +[338] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 298. + +[339] _Journal de St. Cosme_, 1699. This journal has been printed by Mr. +Shea, from the copy in my possession. St. Cosme, who knew Tonty well, +speaks of him in the warmest terms of praise. + +[340] In the autumn of 1685, Tonty made a journey from the Illinois to +Michilimackinac, to seek news of La Salle. He there learned, by a letter +of the new governor, Denonville, just arrived from France, of the +landing of La Salle, and the loss of the "Aimable," as recounted by +Beaujeu, on his return. He immediately went back on foot to Fort St. +Louis of the Illinois, and prepared to descend the Mississippi, "dans +l'espérance de lui donner secours." _Lettre de Tonty au Ministre, 24 +Aoust, 1686; Ibid., à Cabart de Villermont, même date_; _Mémoire de +Tonty_; _Procès Verbal de Tonty, 13 Avril, 1686._ + +[341] The date is from the _Procès Verbal_. In the _Mémoire_, hastily +written long after, he falls into errors of date. + +[342] Iberville sent it to France, and Charlevoix gives a portion of it. +(_Histoire de la Nouvelle France_, ii. 259.) Singularly enough, the +date, as printed by him, is erroneous, being 20 April, 1685, instead of +1686. There is no doubt whatever, from its relations with concurrent +events, that this journey was in the latter year. + +[343] Tonty, _Mémoire; Ibid., Lettre à Monseigneur de Ponchartrain_, +1690. Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 301. + +[344] Joutel says that the Parisian boy, Barthelemy, was left behind. It +was this youth who afterwards uttered the ridiculous defamation of La +Salle mentioned in a preceding note. The account of the death of La +Salle, taken from the lips of Couture, was received by him from Cavelier +and his companions, during their stay at the Arkansas. Couture was by +trade a carpenter, and was a native of Rouen. + +[345] The condition of Fort St. Louis, at this time, may be gathered +from several passages of Joutel. The houses, he says, were built at the +brink of the cliff, forming, with the palisades, the circle of defence. +The Indians lived in the area. + +[346] Joutel adds that this was occasioned by "une espèce de +conspiration qu'on a voulu faire contre les interests de Monsieur de la +Salle."--_Journal Historique_, 350. + +"Ce Père appréhendoit que le dit sieur ne l'y rencontrast, ... suivant +ce que j'en ai pu apprendre, les Pères avoient avancé plusieurs choses +pour contrebarrer l'entreprise et avoient voulu détacher plusieurs +nations de Sauvages, lesquelles s'estoient données à M. de la Salle. Ils +avoient esté mesme jusques à vouloir destruire le fort Saint-Louis, en +ayant construit un à Chicago, où ils avoient attiré une partie des +Sauvages, ne pouvant en quelque façon s'emparer du dit fort. Pour +conclure, le bon Père ayant eu peur d'y estre trouvé, aima mieux se +précautionner en prenant le devant.... Quoyque M. Cavelier eust dit au +Père qu'il pouvoit rester, il partit quelques sept ou huit jours avant +nous."--_Relation_ (Margry, iii. 500). + +La Salle always saw the influence of the Jesuits in the disasters that +befell him. His repeated assertion, that they wished to establish +themselves in the valley of the Mississippi, receives confirmation from +a document entitled _Mémoire sur la proposition à faire par les R. Pères +Jésuites pour la découverte des environs de la rivière du Mississipi et +pour voir si elle est navigable jusqu'à la mer_. It is a memorandum of +propositions to be made to the minister Seignelay, and was apparently +put forward as a feeler, before making the propositions in form. It was +written after the return of Beaujeu to France, and before La Salle's +death became known. It intimates that the Jesuits were entitled to +precedence in the valley of the Mississippi, as having first explored +it. It affirms that _La Salle had made a blunder, and landed his colony, +not at the mouth of the river, but at another place_; and it asks +permission to continue the work in which he has failed. To this end, it +petitions for means to build a vessel at St. Louis of the Illinois, +together with canoes, arms, tents, tools, provisions, and merchandise +for the Indians; and it also asks for La Salle's maps and papers, and +for those of Beaujeu. On their part, it pursues, the Jesuits will engage +to make a complete survey of the river, and return an exact account of +its inhabitants, its plants, and its other productions. + +[347] Tonty, Du Lhut, and Durantaye came to the aid of Denonville with a +hundred and eighty Frenchmen, chiefly _coureurs de bois_, and four +hundred Indians from the upper country. Their services were highly +appreciated; and Tonty especially is mentioned in the despatches of +Denonville with great praise. + +[348] "Monsieur Tonty, croyant M. de la Salle vivant, ne fit pas de +difficulté de luy donner pour environ quatre mille liv. de pelleterie, +de castors, loutres, un canot, et autres effets."--Joutel, _Journal +Historique_, 349. + +Tonty himself does not make the amount so great: "Sur ce qu'ils +m'assuroient qu'il étoit resté au Golfe de Mexique en bonne santé, je +les reçus comme si ç'avoit esté lui mesme et luy prestay [_à Cavelier_] +plus de 700 francs."--Tonty, _Mémoire_. + +Cavelier must have known that La Salle was insolvent. Tonty had long +served without pay. Douay says that he made the stay of the party at the +fort very agreeable, and speaks of him, with some apparent compunction, +as "ce brave gentilhomme, toujours inséparablement attaché aux intérêts +du Sieur de la Salle, dont nous luy avons caché la déplorable destinée." + +Couture, from the Arkansas, brought word to Tonty, several months after, +of La Salle's death, adding that Cavelier had concealed it, with no +other purpose than that of gaining money or supplies from him (Tonty), +in his brother's name. Cavelier had a letter from La Salle, desiring +Tonty to give him supplies, and pay him 2,652 livres in beaver. If +Cavelier is to be believed, this beaver belonged to La Salle. + +[349] _Lettre du Roy à Denonville, 1 Mai, 1689._ Joutel must have been a +young man at the time of the Mississippi expedition; for Charlevoix saw +him at Rouen, thirty-five years after. He speaks of him with emphatic +praise; but it must be admitted that his connivance in the deception +practised by Cavelier on Tonty leaves a shade on his character, as well +as on that of Douay. In other respects, everything that appears +concerning him is highly favorable, which is not the case with Douay, +who, on one or two occasions, makes wilful misstatements. + +Douay says that the elder Cavelier made a report of the expedition to +the minister Seignelay. This report remained unknown in an English +collection of autographs and old manuscripts, whence I obtained it by +purchase, in 1854, both the buyer and seller being at the time ignorant +of its exact character. It proved, on examination, to be a portion of +the first draft of Cavelier's report to Seignelay. It consists of +twenty-six small folio pages, closely written in a clear hand, though in +a few places obscured by the fading of the ink, as well as by occasional +erasures and interlineations of the writer. It is, as already stated, +confused and unsatisfactory in its statements; and all the latter part +has been lost. On reaching France, he had the impudence to tell Abbé +Tronson, Superior of St. Sulpice, "qu'il avait laissé M. de la Salle +dans un très-beau pays avec M. de Chefdeville en bonne santé."--_Lettre +de Tronson à Mad. Fauvel-Cavelier, 29 Nov., 1688._ + +Cavelier addressed to the King a memorial on the importance of keeping +possession of the Illinois. It closes with an earnest petition for money +in compensation for his losses, as, according to his own statement, he +was completely _épuisé_. It is affirmed in a memorial of the heirs of +his cousin, François Plet, that he concealed the death of La Salle some +time after his return to France, in order to get possession of property +which would otherwise have been seized by the creditors of the deceased. +The prudent abbé died rich and very old, at the house of a relative, +having inherited a large estate after his return from America. +Apparently, this did not satisfy him; for there is before me the copy of +a petition, written about 1717, in which he asks, jointly with one of +his nephews, to be given possession of the seigniorial property held by +La Salle in America. The petition was refused. + +Young Cavelier, La Salle's nephew, died some years after, an officer in +a regiment. He has been erroneously supposed to be the same with one De +la Salle, whose name is appended to a letter giving an account of +Louisiana, and dated at Toulon, 3 Sept., 1698. This person was the son +of a naval official at Toulon, and was not related to the Caveliers. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +1688-1689. + +FATE OF THE TEXAN COLONY. + + Tonty attempts to rescue the Colonists: his Difficulties and + Hardships.--Spanish Hostility.--Expedition of Alonzo de Leon: he + reaches Fort St. Louis.--A Scene of Havoc.--Destruction of the + French.--The End. + + +[Sidenote: COURAGE OF TONTY.] + +Henri De Tonty, on his rock of St. Louis, was visited in September by +Couture and two Indians from the Arkansas. Then, for the first time, he +heard with grief and indignation of the death of La Salle, and the +deceit practised by Cavelier. The chief whom he had served so well was +beyond his help; but might not the unhappy colonists left on the shores +of Texas still be rescued from destruction? Couture had confirmed what +Cavelier and his party had already told him, that the tribes south of +the Arkansas were eager to join the French in an invasion of northern +Mexico; and he soon after received from the governor, Denonville, a +letter informing him that war had again been declared against Spain. As +bold and enterprising as La Salle himself, Tonty resolved on an effort +to learn the condition of the few Frenchmen left on the borders of the +Gulf, relieve their necessities, and, should it prove practicable, make +them the nucleus of a war-party to cross the Rio Grande, and add a new +province to the domain of France. It was the revival, on a small scale, +of La Salle's scheme of Mexican invasion; and there is no doubt that, +with a score of French musketeers, he could have gathered a formidable +party of savage allies from the tribes of Red River, the Sabine, and the +Trinity. This daring adventure and the rescue of his suffering +countrymen divided his thoughts, and he prepared at once to execute the +double purpose.[350] + +[Sidenote: TONTY MISREPRESENTED.] + +He left Fort St. Louis of the Illinois early in December, in a pirogue, +or wooden canoe, with five Frenchmen, a Shawanoe warrior, and two Indian +slaves; and, after a long and painful journey, he reached the villages +of the Caddoes on Red River on the twenty-eighth of March. Here he was +told that Hiens and his companions were at a village eighty leagues +distant; and thither he was preparing to go in search of them, when all +his men, excepting the Shawanoe and one Frenchman, declared themselves +disgusted with the journey, and refused to follow him. Persuasion was +useless, and there was no means of enforcing obedience. He found himself +abandoned; but he still pushed on, with the two who remained faithful. A +few days after, they lost nearly all their ammunition in crossing a +river. Undeterred by this accident, Tonty made his way to the village +where Hiens and those who had remained with him were said to be; but no +trace of them appeared, and the demeanor of the Indians, when he +inquired for them, convinced him that they had been put to death. He +charged them with having killed the Frenchmen, whereupon the women of +the village raised a wail of lamentation; "and I saw," he says, "that +what I had said to them was true." They refused to give him guides; and +this, with the loss of his ammunition, compelled him to forego his +purpose of making his way to the colonists on the Bay of St. Louis. With +bitter disappointment, he and his two companions retraced their course, +and at length approached Red River. Here they found the whole country +flooded. Sometimes they waded to the knees, sometimes to the neck, +sometimes pushed their slow way on rafts. Night and day it rained +without ceasing. They slept on logs placed side by side to raise them +above the mud and water, and fought their way with hatchets through the +inundated cane-brakes. They found no game but a bear, which had taken +refuge on an island in the flood; and they were forced to eat their +dogs. "I never in my life," writes Tonty, "suffered so much." In judging +these intrepid exertions, it is to be remembered that he was not, at +least in appearance, of a robust constitution, and that he had but one +hand. They reached the Mississippi on the eleventh of July, and the +Arkansas villages on the thirty-first. Here Tonty was detained by an +attack of fever. He resumed his journey when it began to abate, and +reached his fort of the Illinois in September.[351] + +[Sidenote: A SCENE OF HAVOC.] + +While the King of France abandoned the exiles of Texas to their fate, a +power dark, ruthless, and terrible was hovering around the feeble colony +on the Bay of St. Louis, searching with pitiless eye to discover and +tear out that dying germ of civilization from the bosom of the +wilderness in whose savage immensity it lay hidden. Spain claimed the +Gulf of Mexico and all its coasts as her own of unanswerable right, and +the viceroys of Mexico were strenuous to enforce her claim. The capture +of one of La Salle's four vessels at St. Domingo had made known his +designs, and in the course of the three succeeding years no less than +four expeditions were sent out from Vera Cruz to find and destroy him. +They scoured the whole extent of the coast, and found the wrecks of the +"Aimable" and the "Belle;" but the colony of St. Louis,[352] inland and +secluded, escaped their search. For a time, the jealousy of the +Spaniards was lulled to sleep. They rested in the assurance that the +intruders had perished, when fresh advices from the frontier province of +New Leon caused the Viceroy, Galve, to order a strong force, under +Alonzo de Leon, to march from Coahuila, and cross the Rio Grande. Guided +by a French prisoner, probably one of the deserters from La Salle, they +pushed their way across wild and arid plains, rivers, prairies, and +forests, till at length they approached the Bay of St. Louis, and +descried, far off, the harboring-place of the French.[353] As they drew +near, no banner was displayed, no sentry challenged; and the silence of +death reigned over the shattered palisades and neglected dwellings. The +Spaniards spurred their reluctant horses through the gateway, and a +scene of desolation met their sight. No living thing was stirring. Doors +were torn from their hinges; broken boxes, staved barrels, and rusty +kettles, mingled with a great number of stocks of arquebuses and +muskets, were scattered about in confusion. Here, too, trampled in mud +and soaked with rain, they saw more than two hundred books, many of +which still retained the traces of costly bindings. On the adjacent +prairie lay three dead bodies, one of which, from fragments of dress +still clinging to the wasted remains, they saw to be that of a woman. It +was in vain to question the imperturbable savages, who, wrapped to the +throat in their buffalo-robes, stood gazing on the scene with looks of +wooden immobility. Two strangers, however, at length arrived.[354] Their +faces were smeared with paint, and they were wrapped in buffalo-robes +like the rest; yet these seeming Indians were L'Archevêque, the tool of +La Salle's murderer Duhaut, and Grollet, the companion of the white +savage Ruter. The Spanish commander, learning that these two men were in +the district of the tribe called Texas,[355] had sent to invite them to +his camp under a pledge of good treatment; and they had resolved to +trust Spanish clemency rather than endure longer a life that had become +intolerable. From them the Spaniards learned nearly all that is known of +the fate of Barbier, Zenobe Membré, and their companions. Three months +before, a large band of Indians had approached the fort, the inmates of +which had suffered severely from the ravages of the small-pox. From fear +of treachery, they refused to admit their visitors, but received them at +a cabin without the palisades. Here the French began a trade with them; +when suddenly a band of warriors, yelling the war-whoop, rushed from an +ambuscade under the bank of the river, and butchered the greater number. +The children of one Talon, together with an Italian and a young man from +Paris named Breman, were saved by the Indian women, who carried them off +on their backs. L'Archevêque and Grollet, who with others of their stamp +were domesticated in the Indian villages, came to the scene of +slaughter, and, as they affirmed, buried fourteen dead bodies.[356] + +[Sidenote: THE SURVIVORS.] + +L'Archevêque and Grollet were sent to Spain, where, in spite of the +pledge given them, they were thrown into prison, with the intention of +sending them back to labor in the mines. The Indians, some time after De +Leon's expedition, gave up their captives to the Spaniards. The Italian +was imprisoned at Vera Cruz. Breman's fate is unknown. Pierre and Jean +Baptiste Talon, who were now old enough to bear arms, were enrolled in +the Spanish navy, and, being captured in 1696 by a French ship of war, +regained their liberty; while their younger brothers and their sister +were carried to Spain by the Viceroy.[357] With respect to the ruffian +companions of Hiens, the conviction of Tonty that they had been put to +death by the Indians may have been well founded; but the buccaneer +himself is said to have been killed in a quarrel with his accomplice +Ruter, the white savage; and thus in ignominy and darkness died the last +embers of the doomed colony of La Salle. + + * * * * * + +[Sidenote: FRUIT OF EXPLORATIONS.] + +Here ends the wild and mournful story of the explorers of the +Mississippi. Of all their toil and sacrifice, no fruit remained but a +great geographical discovery, and a grand type of incarnate energy and +will. Where La Salle had ploughed, others were to sow the seed; and on +the path which the undespairing Norman had hewn out, the Canadian +D'Iberville was to win for France a vast though a transient dominion. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[350] Tonty, _Mémoire_. + +[351] Two causes have contributed to detract, most unjustly, from +Tonty's reputation,--the publication, under his name, but without his +authority, of a perverted account of the enterprises in which he took +part; and the confounding him with his brother, Alphonse de Tonty, who +long commanded at Detroit, where charges of peculation were brought +against him. There are very few names in French-American history +mentioned with such unanimity of praise as that of Henri de Tonty. +Hennepin finds some fault with him; but his censure is commendation. The +despatches of the governor, Denonville, speak in strong terms of his +services in the Iroquois war, praise his character, and declare that he +is fit for any bold enterprise, adding that he deserves reward from the +King. The missionary, St. Cosme, who travelled under his escort in 1699, +says of him: "He is beloved by all the _voyageurs_.... It was with deep +regret that we parted from him: ... he is the man who best knows the +country; ... he is loved and feared everywhere.... Your grace will, I +doubt not, take pleasure in acknowledging the obligations we owe him." + +Tonty held the commission of captain; but, by a memoir which he +addressed to Ponchartrain in 1690, it appears that he had never received +any pay. Count Frontenac certifies the truth of the statement, and adds +a recommendation of the writer. In consequence, probably, of this, the +proprietorship of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois was granted in the same +year to Tonty, jointly with La Forest, formerly La Salle's lieutenant. +Here they carried on a trade in furs. In 1699, a royal declaration was +launched against the _coureurs de bois_; but an express provision was +added in favor of Tonty and La Forest, who were empowered to send up the +country yearly two canoes, with twelve men, for the maintenance of this +fort. With such a limitation, this fort and the trade carried on at it +must have been very small. In 1702, we find a royal order, to the effect +that La Forest is henceforth to reside in Canada, and Tonty on the +Mississippi; and that the establishment at the Illinois is to be +discontinued. In the same year, Tonty joined D'Iberville in Lower +Louisiana, and was sent by that officer from Mobile to secure the +Chickasaws in the French interest. His subsequent career and the time of +his death do not appear. He seems never to have received the reward +which his great merit deserved. Those intimate with the late lamented +Dr. Sparks will remember his often-expressed wish that justice should be +done to the memory of Tonty. + +Fort St. Louis of the Illinois was afterwards reoccupied by the French. +In 1718, a number of them, chiefly traders, were living here; but three +years later it was again deserted, and Charlevoix, passing the spot, saw +only the remains of its palisades. + +[352] Fort St. Louis of Texas is not to be confounded with Fort St. +Louis of the Illinois. + +[353] After crossing the Del Norte, they crossed in turn the Upper +Nueces, the Hondo (Rio Frio), the De Leon (San Antonio), and the +Guadalupe, and then, turning southward, descended to the Bay of St. +Bernard.... Manuscript map of "Route que firent les Espagnols, pour +venir enlever les Français restez à la Baye St. Bernard ou St. Louis, +après la perte du vaisseau de Mr. de la Salle en 1689." (Margry's +collection.) + +[354] May 1st. The Spaniards reached the fort April 22. + +[355] This is the first instance in which the name occurs. In a letter +written by a member of De Leon's party, the Texan Indians are mentioned +several times. (See _Coleccion de Varios Documentos_, 25.) They are +described as an agricultural tribe, and were, to all appearance, +identical with the Cenis. The name Tejas, or Texas, was first applied as +a local designation to a spot on the river Neches, in the Cenis +territory, whence it extended to the whole country. (See Yoakum, +_History of Texas_, 52.) + +[356] _Derrotero de la Jornada que hizo el General Alonso de Leon para +el descubrimiento de la Bahia del Espíritu Santo, y poblacion de +Franceses. Ano de 1689._--This is the official journal of the +expedition, signed by Alonzo de Leon. I am indebted to Colonel Thomas +Aspinwall for the opportunity of examining it. The name of Espiritu +Santo was, as before mentioned, given by the Spaniards to St. Louis, or +Matagorda Bay, as well as to two other bays of the Gulf of Mexico. + +_Carta en que se da noticia de un viaje hecho à la Bahia de Espíritu +Santo y de la poblacion que tenian ahi los Franceses. Coleccion de +Varios Documentos para la Historia de la Florida_, 25.--This is a letter +from a person accompanying the expedition of De Leon. It is dated May +18, 1689, and agrees closely with the journal cited above, though +evidently by another hand. Compare Barcia, _Ensayo Cronologico_, 294. +Barcia's story has been doubted; but these authentic documents prove the +correctness of his principal statements, though on minor points he seems +to have indulged his fancy. + +The Viceroy of New Spain, in a report to the King, 1690, says that, in +order to keep the Texas and other Indians of that region in obedience to +his Majesty, he has resolved to establish eight missions among them. He +adds that he has appointed as governor, or commander, in that province, +Don Domingo Teran de los Rios, who will make a thorough exploration of +it, carry out what De Leon has begun; prevent the further intrusion of +foreigners like La Salle, and go in pursuit of the remnant of the +French, who are said still to remain among the tribes of Red River. I +owe this document to the kindness of Mr. Buckingham Smith. + +[357] _Mémoire sur lequel on a interrogé les deux Canadiens [Pierre et +Jean Baptiste Talon] qui sont soldats dans la Compagnie de Feuguerolles. +A Brest, 14 Février, 1698._ + +_Interrogations faites à Pierre et Jean Baptiste Talon à leur arrivée de +la Veracrux._--This paper, which differs in some of its details from the +preceding, was sent by D'Iberville, the founder of Louisiana, to Abbé +Cavelier. Appended to it is a letter from D'Iberville, written in May, +1704, in which he confirms the chief statements of the Talons, by +information obtained by him from a Spanish officer at Pensacola. + + + + +APPENDIX. + + +I. + +EARLY UNPUBLISHED MAPS OF THE MISSISSIPPI AND THE GREAT LAKES. + + Most of the maps described below are to be found in the Dépôt des + Cartes de la Marine et des Colonies, at Paris. Taken together, they + exhibit the progress of western discovery, and illustrate the + records of the explorers. + +1. The map of Galinée, 1670, has a double title,--_Carte du Canada et +des Terres découvertes vers le lac Derié, and Carte du Lac Ontario et +des habitations qui l'environnent ensemble le pays que Messrs. Dolier +et Galinée, missionnaires du seminaire de St. Sulpice, ont parcouru_. It +professes to represent only the country actually visited by the two +missionaries. Beginning with Montreal, it gives the course of the Upper +St. Lawrence and the shores of Lake Ontario, the river Niagara, the +north shore of Lake Erie, the Strait of Detroit, and the eastern and +northern shores of Lake Huron. Galinée did not know the existence of the +peninsula of Michigan, and merges Lakes Huron and Michigan into one, +under the name of "Michigané, ou Mer Douce des Hurons." He was also +entirely ignorant of the south shore of Lake Erie. He represents the +outlet of Lake Superior as far as the Saut Ste. Marie, and lays down +the river Ottawa in great detail, having descended it on his return. The +Falls of the Genesee are indicated, as also the Falls of Niagara, with +the inscription, "Sault qui tombe au rapport des sauvages de plus de 200 +pieds de haut." Had the Jesuits been disposed to aid him, they could +have given him much additional information, and corrected his most +serious errors; as, for example, the omission of the peninsula of +Michigan. The first attempt to map out the Great Lakes was that of +Champlain, in 1632. This of Galinée may be called the second. + +2. The map of Lake Superior, published in the Jesuit Relation of 1670, +1671, was made at about the same time with Galinée's map. Lake Superior +is here styled "Lac Tracy, ou Supérieur." Though not so exact as it has +been represented, this map indicates that the Jesuits had explored every +part of this fresh-water ocean, and that they had a thorough knowledge +of the straits connecting the three Upper Lakes, and of the adjacent +bays, inlets, and shores. The peninsula of Michigan, ignored by Galinée, +is represented in its proper place. + +3. Three years or more after Galinée made the map mentioned above, +another, indicating a greatly increased knowledge of the country, was +made by some person whose name does not appear. This map, which is +somewhat more than four feet long and about two feet and a half wide, +has no title. All the Great Lakes, through their entire extent, are laid +down on it with considerable accuracy. Lake Ontario is called "Lac +Ontario, ou de Frontenac." Fort Frontenac is indicated, as well as the +Iroquois colonies of the north shore. Niagara is "Chute haute de 120 +toises par où le Lac Erié tombe dans le Lac Frontenac." Lake Erie is +"Lac Teiocha-rontiong, dit communément Lac Erié." Lake St. Clair is +"Tsiketo, ou Lac de la Chaudière." Lake Huron is "Lac Huron, ou Mer +Douce des Hurons." Lake Superior is "Lac Supérieur." Lake Michigan is +"Lac Mitchiganong, ou des Illinois." On Lake Michigan, immediately +opposite the site of Chicago, are written the words, of which the +following is the literal translation: "The largest vessels can come to +this place from the outlet of Lake Erie, where it discharges into Lake +Frontenac [Ontario]; and from this marsh into which they can enter there +is only a distance of a thousand paces to the River La Divine [Des +Plaines], which can lead them to the River Colbert [Mississippi], and +thence to the Gulf of Mexico." This map was evidently made after that +voyage of La Salle in which he discovered the Illinois, or at least the +Des Plaines branch of it. The Ohio is laid down with the inscription, +"River Ohio, so called by the Iroquois on account of its beauty, which +the Sieur de la Salle descended." (_Ante_, 32, _note_.) + +4. We now come to the map of Marquette, which is a rude sketch of a +portion of Lakes Superior and Michigan, and of the route pursued by him +and Joliet up the Fox River of Green Bay, down the Wisconsin, and thence +down the Mississippi as far as the Arkansas. The river Illinois is also +laid down, as it was by this course that he returned to Lake Michigan +after his memorable voyage. He gives no name to the Wisconsin. The +Mississippi is called "Rivière de la Conception;" the Missouri, the +Pekitanoui; and the Ohio, the Ouabouskiaou, though La Salle, its +discoverer, had previously given it its present name, borrowed from the +Iroquois. The Illinois is nameless, like the Wisconsin. At the mouth of +a river, perhaps the Des Moines, Marquette places the three villages of +the Peoria Indians visited by him. These, with the Kaskaskias, Maroas, +and others, on the map, were merely sub-tribes of the aggregation of +savages known as the Illinois. On or near the Missouri he places the +Ouchage (Osages), the Oumessourit (Missouris), the Kansa (Kanzas), the +Paniassa (Pawnees), the Maha (Omahas), and the Pahoutet (Pah-Utahs?). +The names of many other tribes, "esloignées dans les terres," are also +given along the course of the Arkansas, a river which is nameless on the +map. Most of these tribes are now indistinguishable. This map has +recently been engraved and published. + +5. Not long after Marquette's return from the Mississippi, another map +was made by the Jesuits, with the following title: _Carte de la nouvelle +decouverte que les peres Iesuites ont fait en l'année 1672, et continuée +par le P. Iacques Marquette de la mesme Compagnie accompagné de quelques +françois en l'année 1673, qu'on pourra nommer en françois la +Manitoumie_. This title is very elaborately decorated with figures drawn +with a pen, and representing Jesuits instructing Indians. The map is the +same published by Thevenot, not without considerable variations, in +1681. It represents the Mississippi from a little above the Wisconsin to +the Gulf of Mexico, the part below the Arkansas being drawn from +conjecture. The river is named "Mitchisipi, ou grande Rivière." The +Wisconsin, the Illinois, the Ohio, the Des Moines(?), the Missouri, and +the Arkansas are all represented, but in a very rude manner. Marquette's +route, in going and returning, is marked by lines; but the return route +is incorrect. The whole map is so crude and careless, and based on +information so inexact, that it is of little interest. + +6. The Jesuits made also another map, without title, of the four Upper +Lakes and the Mississippi to a little below the Arkansas. The +Mississippi is called "Riuiere Colbert." The map is remarkable as +including the earliest representation of the Upper Mississippi, based, +perhaps, on the reports of Indians. The Falls of St. Anthony are +indicated by the word "Saut." It is possible that the map may be of +later date than at first appears, and that it may have been drawn in the +interval between the return of Hennepin from the Upper Mississippi and +that of La Salle from his discovery of the mouth of the river. The +various temporary and permanent stations of the Jesuits are marked by +crosses. + +7. Of far greater interest is the small map of Louis Joliet made and +presented to Count Frontenac after the discoverer's return from the +Mississippi. It is entitled _Carte de la decouverte du Sr. Jolliet ou +l'on voit La Communication du fleuve St. Laurens avec les lacs +frontenac, Erié, Lac des Hurons et Ilinois_. Then succeeds the +following, written in the same antiquated French, as if it were a part +of the title: "Lake Frontenac [Ontario] is separated by a fall of half a +league from Lake Erié, from which one enters that of the Hurons, and by +the same navigation, into that of the Illinois [Michigan], from the head +of which one crosses to the Divine River [Rivière Divine; _i. e._, the +Des Plaines branch of the river Illinois], by a portage of a thousand +paces. This river falls into the river Colbert [Mississippi], which +discharges itself into the Gulf of Mexico." A part of this map is based +on the Jesuit map of Lake Superior, the legends being here for the most +part identical, though the shape of the lake is better given by Joliet. +The Mississippi, or "Riuiere Colbert," is made to flow from three lakes +in latitude 47°; and it ends in latitude 37°, a little below the mouth +of the Ohio, the rest being apparently cut off to make room for Joliet's +letter to Frontenac (_ante_, 76), which is written on the lower part of +the map. The valley of the Mississippi is called on the map "Colbertie, +ou Amerique Occidentale." The Missouri is represented without name, and +against it is a legend, of which the following is the literal +translation: "By one of these great rivers which come from the west and +discharge themselves into the river Colbert, one will find a way to +enter the Vermilion Sea (Gulf of California). I have seen a village +which was not more than twenty days' journey by land from a nation which +has commerce with those of California. If I had come two days sooner, I +should have spoken with those who had come from thence, and had brought +four hatchets as a present." The Ohio has no name, but a legend over it +states that La Salle had descended it. (See _ante_, 32, _note_). + +8. Joliet, at about the same time, made another map, larger than that +just mentioned, but not essentially different. The letter to Frontenac +is written upon both. There is a third map, of which the following is +the title: _Carte generalle de la France septentrionale contenant la +descouuerte du pays des Illinois, faite par le Sr. Jolliet_. This +map, which is inscribed with a dedication by the Intendant Duchesneau to +the minister Colbert, was made some time after the voyage of Joliet and +Marquette. It is an elaborate piece of work, but very inaccurate. It +represents the continent from Hudson's Strait to Mexico and California, +with the whole of the Atlantic and a part of the Pacific coast. An open +sea is made to extend from Hudson's Strait westward to the Pacific. The +St. Lawrence and all the Great Lakes are laid down with tolerable +correctness, as also is the Gulf of Mexico. The Mississippi, called +"Messasipi," flows into the Gulf, from which it extends northward nearly +to the "Mer du Nord." Along its course, above the Wisconsin, which is +called "Miskous," is a long list of Indian tribes, most of which cannot +now be recognized, though several are clearly sub-tribes of the Sioux. +The Ohio is called "Ouaboustikou." The whole map is decorated with +numerous figures of animals, natives of the country, or supposed to be +so. Among them are camels, ostriches, and a giraffe, which are placed on +the plains west of the Mississippi. But the most curious figure is that +which represents one of the monsters seen by Joliet and Marquette, +painted on a rock by the Indians. It corresponds with Marquette's +description (_ante_, 68). This map, which is an early effort of the +engineer Franquelin, does more credit to his skill as a designer than to +his geographical knowledge, which appears in some respects behind his +time. + +9. _Carte de l'Amérique Septentrionale depuis l'embouchure de la Rivière +St. Laurens jusques au Sein Mexique._ On this curious little map, the +Mississippi is called "Riuiere Buade" (the family name of Frontenac); +and the neighboring country is "La Frontenacie." The Illinois is +"Riuiere de la Diuine ou Loutrelaise," and the Arkansas is "Riuiere +Bazire." The Mississippi is made to head in three lakes, and to +discharge itself into "B. du S. Esprit" (Mobile Bay). Some of the +legends and the orthography of various Indian names are clearly borrowed +from Marquette. This map appears to be the work of Raudin, Frontenac's +engineer. I owe a tracing of it to the kindness of Henry Harrisse, Esq. + +10. _Carte des Parties les plus occidentales du Canada, par le Père +Pierre Raffeix_, S. J. This rude map shows the course of Du Lhut from +the head of Lake Superior to the Mississippi, and partly confirms the +story of Hennepin, who, Raffeix says in a note, was rescued by Du Lhut. +The course of Joliet and Marquette is given, with the legend "Voyage et +première descouverte du Mississipy faite par le P. Marquette et Mr. +Joliet en 1672." The route of La Salle in 1679, 1680, is also laid down. + +11. In the Dépôt des Cartes de la Marine is another map of the Upper +Mississippi, which seems to have been made by or for Du Lhut. Lac Buade, +the "Issatis," the "Tintons," the "Houelbatons," the "Poualacs," and +other tribes of this region appear upon it. This is the map numbered +208 in the _Cartographie_ of Harrisse. + +12. Another map deserving mention is a large and fine one, entitled +_Carte de l'Amérique Septentrionale et partie de la Meridionale ... avec +les nouvelles découvertes de la Rivière Missisipi, ou Colbert_. It +appears to have been made in 1682 or 1683, before the descent of La +Salle to the mouth of the Mississippi was known to the maker, who seems +to have been Franquelin. The lower Mississippi is omitted, but its upper +portions are elaborately laid down; and the name _La Louisiane_ appears +in large gold letters along its west side. The Falls of St. Anthony are +shown, and above them is written "Armes du Roy gravées sur cet arbre +l'an 1679." This refers to the _acte de prise de possession_ of Du Lhut +in July of that year, and this part of the map seems made from data +supplied by him. + +13. We now come to the great map of Franquelin, the most remarkable of +all the early maps of the interior of North America, though hitherto +completely ignored by both American and Canadian writers. It is entitled +_Carte de la Louisiane ou des Voyages du Sr. de la Salle et des pays +qu'il a découverts depuis la Nouvelle France jusqu'au Golfe Mexique les +années 1679, 80, 81, et 82, par Jean Baptiste Louis Franquelin, l'an +1684. Paris._ Franquelin was a young engineer, who held the post of +hydrographer to the King, at Quebec, in which Joliet succeeded him. +Several of his maps are preserved, including one made in 1681, in which +he lays down the course of the Mississippi,--the lower part from +conjecture,--making it discharge itself into Mobile Bay. It appears from +a letter of the governor, La Barre, that Franquelin was at Quebec in +1683, engaged on a map which was probably that of which the title is +given above, though had La Barre known that it was to be called a map of +the journeys of his victim La Salle, he would have been more sparing of +his praises. "He" (Franquelin), writes the governor, "is as skilful as +any in France, but extremely poor and in need of a little aid from his +Majesty as an Engineer; he is at work on a very correct map of the +country, which I shall send you next year in his name; meanwhile, I +shall support him with some little assistance."--_Colonial Documents of +New York_, IX. 205. + +The map is very elaborately executed, and is six feet long and four and +a half wide. It exhibits the political divisions of the continent, as +the French then understood them; that is to say, all the regions drained +by streams flowing into the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi are claimed +as belonging to France, and this vast domain is separated into two grand +divisions, La Nouvelle France and La Louisiane. The boundary line of the +former, New France, is drawn from the Penobscot to the southern +extremity of Lake Champlain, and thence to the Mohawk, which it crosses +a little above Schenectady, in order to make French subjects of the +Mohawk Indians. Thence it passes by the sources of the Susquehanna and +the Alleghany, along the southern shore of Lake Erie, across Southern +Michigan, and by the head of Lake Michigan, whence it sweeps +northwestward to the sources of the Mississippi. Louisiana includes the +entire valley of the Mississippi and the Ohio, besides the whole of +Texas. The Spanish province of Florida comprises the peninsula and the +country east of the Bay of Mobile, drained by streams flowing into the +Gulf; while Carolina, Virginia, and the other English provinces, form a +narrow strip between the Alleghanies and the Atlantic. + +The Mississippi is called "Missisipi, ou Rivière Colbert;" the Missouri, +"Grande Rivière des Emissourittes, ou Missourits;" the Illinois, +"Rivière des Ilinois, ou Macopins;" the Ohio, which La Salle had before +called by its present name, "Fleuve St. Louis, ou Chucagoa, ou +Casquinampogamou;" one of its principal branches is "Ohio, ou Olighin" +(Alleghany); the Arkansas, "Rivière des Acansea;" the Red River, +"Rivière Seignelay," a name which had once been given to the Illinois. +Many smaller streams are designated by names which have been entirely +forgotten. + +The nomenclature differs materially from that of Coronelli's map, +published four years later. Here the whole of the French territory is +laid down as "Canada, ou La Nouvelle France," of which "La Louisiane" +forms an integral part. The map of Homannus, like that of Franquelin, +makes two distinct provinces, of which one is styled "Canada" and the +other "La Louisiane," the latter including Michigan and the greater part +of New York. Franquelin gives the shape of Hudson's Bay, and of all the +Great Lakes, with remarkable accuracy. He makes the Mississippi bend +much too far to the West. The peculiar sinuosities of its course are +indicated; and some of its bends--as, for example, that at New +Orleans--are easily recognized. Its mouths are represented with great +minuteness; and it may be inferred from the map that, since La Salle's +time, they have advanced considerably into the sea. + +Perhaps the most interesting feature in Franquelin's map is his sketch +of La Salle's evanescent colony on the Illinois, engraved for this +volume. He reproduced the map in 1688, for presentation to the King, +with the title _Carte de l'Amérique Septentrionale, depuis le 25 jusq'au +65 degré de latitude et environ 140 et 235 degrés de longitude, etc._ In +this map, Franquelin corrects various errors in that which preceded. One +of these corrections consists in the removal of a branch of the river +Illinois which he had marked on his first map,--as will be seen by +referring to the portion of it in this book,--but which does not in fact +exist. On this second map, La Salle's colony appears in much diminished +proportions, his Indian settlements having in good measure dispersed. + +Two later maps of New France and Louisiana, both bearing Franquelin's +name, are preserved in the Dépôt des Cartes de la Marine, as well as a +number of smaller maps and sketches, also by him. They all have more or +less of the features of the great map of 1684, which surpasses them all +in interest and completeness. + +The remarkable manuscript map of the Upper Mississippi by Le Sueur +belongs to a period later than the close of this narrative. + +These various maps, joined to contemporary documents, show that the +Valley of the Mississippi received, at an early date, the several names +of Manitoumie, Frontenacie, Colbertie, and La Louisiane. This last name, +which it long retained, is due to La Salle. The first use of it which I +have observed is in a conveyance of the Island of Belleisle made by him +to his lieutenant, La Forest, in 1679. + + +II. + +THE ELDORADO OF MATHIEU SÂGEAN. + +Father Hennepin had among his contemporaries two rivals in the +fabrication of new discoveries. The first was the noted La Hontan, whose +book, like his own, had a wide circulation and proved a great success. +La Hontan had seen much, and portions of his story have a substantial +value; but his account of his pretended voyage up the "Long River" is a +sheer fabrication. His "Long River" corresponds in position with the +St. Peter, but it corresponds in nothing else; and the populous nations +whom he found on it--the Eokoros, the Esanapes, and the Gnacsitares, no +less than their neighbors the Mozeemlek and the Tahuglauk--are as real +as the nations visited by Captain Gulliver. But La Hontan did not, like +Hennepin, add slander and plagiarism to mendacity, or seek to +appropriate to himself the credit of genuine discoveries made by others. + +Mathieu Sâgean is a personage less known than Hennepin or La Hontan; for +though he surpassed them both in fertility of invention, he was +illiterate, and never made a book. In 1701, being then a soldier in a +company of marines at Brest, he revealed a secret which he declared that +he had locked within his breast for twenty years, having been unwilling +to impart it to the Dutch and English, in whose service he had been +during the whole period. His story was written down from his dictation, +and sent to the minister Ponchartrain. It is preserved in the +Bibliothèque Nationale, and in 1863 it was printed by Mr. Shea. + +He was born, he declares, at La Chine in Canada, and engaged in the +service of La Salle about twenty years before the revelation of his +secret; that is, in 1681. Hence, he would have been, at the utmost, only +fourteen years old, as La Chine did not exist before 1667. He was with +La Salle at the building of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, and was left +here as one of a hundred men under command of Tonty. Tonty, it is to be +observed, had but a small fraction of this number; and Sâgean describes +the fort in a manner which shows that he never saw it. Being desirous of +making some new discovery, he obtained leave from Tonty, and set out +with eleven other Frenchmen and two Mohegan Indians. They ascended the +Mississippi a hundred and fifty leagues, carried their canoes by a +cataract, went forty leagues farther, and stopped a month to hunt. +While thus employed, they found another river, fourteen leagues distant, +flowing south-southwest. They carried their canoes thither, meeting on +the way many lions, leopards, and tigers, which did them no harm; then +they embarked, paddled a hundred and fifty leagues farther, and found +themselves in the midst of the great nation of the Acanibas, dwelling in +many fortified towns, and governed by King Hagaren, who claimed descent +from Montezuma. The King, like his subjects, was clothed with the skins +of men. Nevertheless, he and they were civilized and polished in their +manners. They worshipped certain frightful idols of gold in the royal +palace. One of them represented the ancestor of their monarch armed with +lance, bow, and quiver, and in the act of mounting his horse; while in +his mouth he held a jewel as large as a goose's egg, which shone like +fire, and which, in the opinion of Sâgean, was a carbuncle. Another of +these images was that of a woman mounted on a golden unicorn, with a +horn more than a fathom long. After passing, pursues the story, between +these idols, which stand on platforms of gold, each thirty feet square, +one enters a magnificent vestibule, conducting to the apartment of the +King. At the four corners of this vestibule are stationed bands of +music, which, to the taste of Sâgean, was of very poor quality. The +palace is of vast extent, and the private apartment of the King is +twenty-eight or thirty feet square; the walls, to the height of eighteen +feet, being of bricks of solid gold, and the pavement of the same. Here +the King dwells alone, served only by his wives, of whom he takes a new +one every day. The Frenchmen alone had the privilege of entering, and +were graciously received. + +These people carry on a great trade in gold with a nation, believed by +Sâgean to be the Japanese, as the journey to them lasts six months. He +saw the departure of one of the caravans, which consisted of more than +three thousand oxen, laden with gold, and an equal number of horsemen, +armed with lances, bows, and daggers. They receive iron and steel in +exchange for their gold. The King has an army of a hundred thousand men, +of whom three fourths are cavalry. They have golden trumpets, with which +they make very indifferent music; and also golden drums, which, as well +as the drummer, are carried on the backs of oxen. The troops are +practised once a week in shooting at a target with arrows; and the King +rewards the victor with one of his wives, or with some honorable +employment. + +These people are of a dark complexion and hideous to look upon, because +their faces are made long and narrow by pressing their heads between two +boards in infancy. The women, however, are as fair as in Europe; though, +in common with the men, their ears are enormously large. All persons of +distinction among the Acanibas wear their fingernails very long. They +are polygamists, and each man takes as many wives as he wants. They are +of a joyous disposition, moderate drinkers, but great smokers. They +entertained Sâgean and his followers during five months with the fat of +the land; and any woman who refused a Frenchman was ordered to be +killed. Six girls were put to death with daggers for this breach of +hospitality. The King, being anxious to retain his visitors in his +service, offered Sâgean one of his daughters, aged fourteen years, in +marriage; and when he saw him resolved to depart, promised to keep her +for him till he should return. + +The climate is delightful, and summer reigns throughout the year. The +plains are full of birds and animals of all kinds, among which are many +parrots and monkeys, besides the wild cattle, with humps like camels, +which these people use as beasts of burden. + +King Hagaren would not let the Frenchmen go till they had sworn by the +sky, which is the customary oath of the Acanibas, that they would return +in thirty-six moons, and bring him a supply of beads and other trinkets +from Canada. As gold was to be had for the asking, each of the eleven +Frenchmen took away with him sixty small bars, weighing about four +pounds each. The King ordered two hundred horsemen to escort them, and +carry the gold to their canoes; which they did, and then bade them +farewell with terrific howlings, meant, doubtless, to do them honor. + +After many adventures, wherein nearly all his companions came to a +bloody end, Sâgean, and the few others who survived, had the ill luck to +be captured by English pirates, at the mouth of the St. Lawrence. He +spent many years among them in the East and West Indies, but would not +reveal the secret of his Eldorado to these heretical foreigners. + +Such was the story, which so far imposed on the credulity of the +minister Ponchartrain as to persuade him that the matter was worth +serious examination. Accordingly, Sâgean was sent to Louisiana, then in +its earliest infancy as a French colony. Here he met various persons who +had known him in Canada, who denied that he had ever been on the +Mississippi, and contradicted his account of his parentage. +Nevertheless, he held fast to his story, and declared that the gold +mines of the Acanibas could be reached without difficulty by the river +Missouri. But Sauvolle and Bienville, chiefs of the colony, were +obstinate in their unbelief; and Sâgean and his King Hagaren lapsed +alike into oblivion. + + + + +INDEX. + + +Abenakis, the, 285, 295, 316, 346. + +Acanibas, the, great nation of, + description of, 487-489; + gold mines of, 489. + +"Acansea" (Arkansas) River, the, 484. + +Accau, Michel, 186, 187, 249, 251, 253, 261, 265, 266, 273. + +African travel, history of, 198. + +Agniers (Mohawks), the, 136. + +Aigron, Captain, on ill-terms with La Salle, 372, 382, 383. + +Ailleboust, Madame d', 111. + +"Aimable," La Salle's store-ship, 372, 373, 374, 375, 379, 380, + 381, 405, 454, 468. + +Aire, Beaujeu's lieutenant, 375. + +Akanseas, nation of the, 300. See also _Arkansas Indians, the_. + +Albanel, + prominent among the Jesuit explorers, 109; + his journey up the Saguenay to Hudson's Bay, 109. + +Albany, 118, 200, 220. + +Algonquin Indians, the, + Jean Nicollet among, 3; + at Ste. Marie du Saut, 39; + the Iroquois spread desolation among, 219. + +Alkansas, nation of the, 300. See also _Arkansas Indians, the_. + +Alleghany Mountains, the, 84, 308, 309, 483. + +Alleghany River, the, 307, 483, 484. + +Allouez, Father Claude, + explores a part of Lake Superior, 6; + name of Lake Michigan, 42, 155; + sent to Green Bay to found a mission, 43; + joined by Dablon, 43; + among the Mascoutins and the Miamis, 44; + among the Foxes, 45; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + addresses the Indians at Saut Ste. Marie, 53; + population of the Illinois Valley, 169; + intrigues against La Salle, 175, 238; + at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 458; + his fear of La Salle, 459. + +Allumette Island, 3. + +Alton, city of, 68. + +America, + debt due La Salle from, 432. + +"Amerique Occidentale" (Mississippi Valley), 479. + +Amikoués, the, + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Andastes, + reduced to helpless insignificance by the Iroquois, 219. + +André, Louis, + mission of the Manitoulin Island assigned to, 41; + makes a missionary tour among the Nipissings, 41; + his experiences among them, 42; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Anthony, St., of Padua, the patron of La Salle's great + enterprise, 152, 250, 259. + +Anticosti, great island of, + granted to Joliet, 76. + +Appalache, Bay of, 373. + +Aquipaguetin, Chief, 254; + plots against Hennepin, 255, 261, 262, 264, 271, 272. + +Aramoni River, the, 221, 225, 239. + +Arctic travel, + history of, 198. + +Arkansas Indians, the, + Joliet and Marquette among, 72, 184; + La Salle among, 299; + various names of, 300; + tallest and best-formed Indians in America, 300, 308; + villages of, 466. + +Arkansas River, the, 71; + Joutel's arrival at, 453; + Joutel descends, 456; 478, 484. + +Arnoul, Sieur, 383, 390. + +Arouet, François Marie, see _Voltaire_. + +Aspinwall, Col. Thomas, 471. + +Assiniboins, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40, 261; + Du Lhut among, 276. + +Assonis, the, + Joutel among, 451; + Tonty among, 452. + +Atlantic coast, the, 480. + +Atlantic Ocean, the, 74. + +Auguel, Antoine, 186. + See also _Du Gay, Picard_. + +Autray, Sieur d', 200. + + +Bancroft, 75. + +Barbier, Sieur, 406; + marriage of, 408, 418; + fate of, 470. + +Barcia, 244, 471. + +Barrois, secretary of Count Frontenac, 293. + +Barthelemy, 433, 451, 456. + +Baugis, Chevalier de, 326, 327. + +Bazire, 101. + +Beauharnois, forest of, 14. + +Beaujeu, Madame de, + devotion to the Jesuits, 361. + +Beaujeu, Sieur de, + divides with La Salle the command of the new enterprise, 353; + lack of harmony between La Salle and, 354-361; + letters to Seignelay, 354-356; + letters to Cabart de Villermont, 357-360; + sails from Rochelle, 366; + disputes with La Salle, 366; + the voyage, 368; + complaints of, 370; + La Salle waiting for, 374; + meeting with La Salle, 375; + in Texas, 381; + makes friendly advances to La Salle, 385; + departure of, 387; + conduct of, 389; + coldly received by Seignelay, 389, 454. + +"Beautiful River" (Ohio), the, 70. + +Bégon, the intendant, 367, 368. + +"Belle," La Salle's frigate, 372, 373, 374, 379, 383, 386, 389, + 392, 401, 404, 406, 407, 416, 417, 468. + +Bellefontaine, Tonty's lieutenant, 458, 460. + +Belle Isle, 203. + +Belleisle, Island of, 485. + +Bellinzani, 129. + +Bernon, Abbé, + on the character of La Salle, 342. + +Bibliothèque Mazarine, the, 17. + +Bienville, 489. + +Big Vermilion River, the, 221, 239, 241. + +Bissot, Claire, + her marriage to Louis Joliet, 76. + +Black Rock, 149. + +Boeufs, Rivière aux, 392. + +Bois Blanc, Island of, 153. + +Boisrondet, Sieur de, 218, 223, 227, 233, 236, 457. + +Boisseau, 101. + +Bolton, Captain, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + +Boston, 5; + rumored that the Dutch fleet had captured, 88. + +Boughton Hill, 21. + +Bourbon, Louis Armand de, see, _Conti, Prince de_. + +Bourdon, the engineer, 111. + +Bourdon, Jean, 200. + See also _Dautray_. + +Bourdon, Madame, superior of the Sainte Famille, 111. + +Bowman, W. E., 317. + +Branssac, + loans merchandise to La Salle, 49, 434. + +Brazos River, the, 424. + +Breman, + fate of, 471, 472. + +Brest, 486. + +Brinvilliers, + burned alive, 179. + +British territories, the, 309. + +Brodhead, 136. + +Bruyas, the Jesuit, 115; + among the Onondagas and the Mohawks, 115, 135; + the "Racines Agnières" of, 136. + +Buade, Lake, 257, 262, 481. + +Buade, Louis de, see _Frontenac, Count_. + +Buade, Rivière (Mississippi), 481. + +Buffalo, the, 205, 398. + +Buffalo Rock, 169, 314; + occupied by the Miami village, 314; + described by Charlevoix, 314. + +Buisset, Luc, the Récollet, 121; + at Fort Frontenac, 132, 135, 137, 280. + +Bull River, 272. + +Burnt Wood River, the, 277. + + +Caddoes, the, 452; + villages of, 465. + +Cadodaquis, the, 452. + +California, Gulf of, 15, 31, 41, 63, 74, 84, 480. + +California, State of, 480. + +Camanches, the, 414. + +Cambray, Archbishop of, 16. + +Canada, 10; + Frontenac's treaty with the Indians confers an inestimable + blessing on all, 95; + no longer merely a mission, 104, 484. + +Canadian Parliament, Library of, the, 13. + +Cananistigoyan, 275. + +Carignan, regiment of, 12, 91. + +Carolina, 483. + +Carver, 62, 267. + +"Casquinampogamou" (St. Louis) River, the, 484. + +Casson, Dollier de, 15; + among the Nipissings, 16; + leads an expedition of conversion, 16; + combines his expedition with that of La Salle, 17; + journey of, 19, 20; + _belles paroles_ of La Salle, 25; + discoveries of La Salle, 29, 475. + +Cataraqui Bridge, the, 90. + +Cataraqui River, the, 87; + Frontenac at, 90; + fort built on the banks of, 92. + +Cavelier, nephew of La Salle, 420, 435, 438, 446, 449, 451, 458, 463. + +Cavelier, Henri, uncle of La Salle, 7, 363. + +Cavelier, Jean, father of La Salle, 7. + +Cavelier, Abbé Jean, brother of La Salle, 9; + at Montreal, 98; + La Salle defamed to, 113; + causes La Salle no little annoyance, 114, 333, 353, 367, 369, 370, + 371, 372, 374, 376, 388, 394, 396, 402, 405, 406, 412, 415, 416, + 417, 420, 421, 423; + unreliable in his writings, 433, 435, 436; + doubt and anxiety, 437, 438, 446; + plans to escape, 447; + the murder of Duhaut, 449; + sets out for home, 450, 451; + among the Assonis, 452, 453; + on the Arkansas, 455; + at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 457; + visit to Father Allouez, 459; + conceals La Salle's death, 460; + reaches Montreal, 462; + embarks for France, 462; + his report to Seignelay, 462, 463; + his memorial to the King, 463, 464. + +Cavelier, Madeleine, 28, 34. + +Cavelier, René Robert, see _La Salle, Sieur de_. + +Cayuga Creek, 145, 146. + +Cayugas, the, + Frontenac's address to, 91. + +Cenis, the, + La Salle among, 413; + villages of, 415; + Duhaut's journey to, 438; + Joutel among, 440-445; + customs of, 443; + joined by Hiens on a war-expedition, 450. + +Champigny, Intendant of Canada, 434. + +Champlain, Lake, 483. + +Champlain, Samuel de, + dreams of the South Sea, 14; + map of, 139; + his enthusiasm compared with that of La Salle, 431; + first to map out the Great Lakes, 476. + +Chaouanons (Shawanoes), the, 307, 317. + +Charlevoix, 50; + death of Marquette, 82; 103; + the names of the Illinois River, 167; + the loss of the "Griffin," 182; + the Illinois Indians, 223; + doubted veracity of Hennepin, 244; + the Iroquois virgin, Tegahkouita, 275; + the Arkansas nation, 300; + visits the Natchez Indians, 304; + describes "Starved Rock" and Buffalo Rock, 314; + speaks of "Le Rocher," 314; + character of La Salle, 433, 454; + the remains of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 468. + +Charon, creditor of La Salle, 150. + +Charron, Madame, 111. + +Chartier, Martin, 337. + +Chassagoac, chief of the Illinois, + meeting with La Salle, 192. + +Chassagouasse, Chief, 192. + +Chateauguay, forest of, 14. + +"Chaudière, Lac de la" (Lake St. Clair), 476. + +Chaumonot, the Jesuit, + founds the association of the Sainte Famille, 111. + +Chefdeville, M. de, 406, 407, 418, 463. + +Cheruel, 167. + +Chicago, 50, 236, 460, 462, 477. + +Chicago Portage, the, 320. + +Chicago River, the, 31; + Marquette on, 78, 296. + +Chickasaw Bluffs, the, 311. + +Chickasaw Indians, the, 184, 296, 307, 320, 468. + +Chikachas (Chickasaws), the, 307. + +China, 6, 14, 29. + +China, Sea of, 38, 83. + +Chippewa Creek, 139, 145. + +Chippeway River, the, 272. + +"Chucagoa" (St. Louis) River, the, 484. + +Chukagoua (Ohio) River, the, 307. + +Clark, James, 169, 170; + the site of the Great Illinois Town, 239. + +Coahuila, 469. + +Colbert, the minister, + Joliet's discovery of the Mississippi announced to, 34; + Frontenac's despatch, recommending La Salle, 99; + La Salle defamed to, 119; + a memorial of La Salle laid before, 122, 344, 345, 480. + +Colbert River (Mississippi), the, 35, 244, 307, 346, 376, 477, 479, 482. + +"Colbertie" (Mississippi Valley), 479. + +Collin, 187. + +Colorado River, the, 411, 415. + +Comet of 1680, the Great, 213. + +"Conception, Rivière de la" (Mississippi River), 477. + +Conti, Fort, 128; + location of, 129, 148. + +Conti, Lac de (Lake Erie), 129. + +Conti, Prince de (second), + patron of La Salle, 106; + letter from La Salle, 118. + +Copper mines of Lake Superior, 23; + Joliet attempts to discover, 23; + the Jesuits labor to explore, 38; + Indian legends concerning, 39; + Saint-Lusson sets out to discover, 49. + +Coroas, the, + visited by the French, 305, 310. + +Coronelli, map made by, 221, 484. + +Corpus Christi Bay, 375. + +Cosme, St., 69, 314, 454; + commendation of Tonty, 467. + +Courcelle, Governor, 11, 15, 17, 35; + quarrel with Talon, 56; + schemes to protect French trade in Canada, 85. + +Couture, + the assassination of La Salle, 433; + welcomes Joutel, 453, 455, 456, 461, 464. + +Creeks, the, 304. + +Crees, the, + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Crèvecoeur, Fort, 34; + built by La Salle, 180; + La Salle at, 180-188; + destroyed by the mutineers, 199; + La Salle finds the ruins of, 211. + +Crow Indians, the, + make war upon the dead, 207. + +Cuba, 372, 389. + +Cussy, De, governor of La Tortue, 367, 368. + + +Dablon, Father Claude the Jesuit, + at Ste. Marie du Saut, 27, 51; + reports the discovery of copper, 38; + the location of the Illinois Indians, 41; + the name of Lake Michigan, 42; + joins Father Allouez at the Green Bay Mission, 43; + among the Mascoutins and the Miamis, 44; + the Cross among the Foxes, 45; + the authority and state of the Miami chief, 50; + Allouez's harangue at Saut Ste. Marie, 55; + rumors of the Dutch fleet, 88, 112. + +Dacotah (Sioux) Indians, the, 260. + +Dauphin, Fort, 128; + location of, 129. + +Dauphin, Lac (Lake Michigan), 155. + +Daupin, François, 203. + +Dautray, 187, 199, 210, 306. + +De Launay, see _Launay, De_. + +De Leon, see _Leon, Alonzo de_. + +De Leon (San Antonio), the, 469. + +Del Norte, the, 469. + +De Marle, see _Marle, De_. + +Denonville, Marquis de, 21, 121, 275, 454; + in the Iroquois War, 460; + announces war against Spain, 464; + commendation of Tonty, 467. + +Des Groseilliers, Médard Chouart, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + +Deslauriers, 118. + +Desloges, 384. + +Des Moines, 65. + +Des Moines River, the, 477, 478. + +De Soto, Hernando, + buried in the Mississippi, 3. + +Des Plaines River, the, 79, 477, 479. + +Detroit, 26. + +Detroit River, the, 31, 197, 279. + +Detroit, the Strait of, + first recorded passage of white men through, 26; + the "Griffin" in, 151; + Du Lhut ordered to fortify, 275, 475. + +Divine, the Rivière de la, 167, 479. + +Dollier, see _Casson, Dollier de_. + +Douay, Anastase, 69, 155; + joins La Salle's new enterprise, 353, 372; + in Texas, 388; + at Fort St. Louis, 399, 405, 406, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, + 417, 418, 420, 421, 422, 428; + the assassination of La Salle, 432; + unreliable in his writings, 433, 435; + doubt and anxiety, 437, 446; + the murder of Duhaut, 448, 449; + sets out for home, 451, 458; + visit to Father Allouez, 459; + character of, 462. + +Druilletes, Gabriel, + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + teaches Marquette the Montagnais language, 59. + +Duchesneau, the intendant, 69, 78, 101, 102, 125, 126, 138, 156, + 164, 197, 217, 218, 219, 235, 274, 275, 480. + +Du Gay, Picard, 186, 187, 250, 251, 253; + among the Sioux, 259, 261, 265, 266, 268, 269, 270, 272, 273. + +Duhaut, the brothers, 368, 400. + +Duhaut, the elder, + return of, 401; + at Fort St. Louis, 405; + plots against La Salle, 410, 420, 424; + quarrel with Moranget, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + assassinates La Salle, 429; + triumph of, 435; + journey to the Cenis villages, 438; + resolves to return to Fort St. Louis, 446; + quarrel with Hiens, 446; + plans to go to Canada, 448; + murder of, 448. + +Du Lhut, Daniel Greysolon, 182; + meeting with Hennepin, 273; + sketch of, 274; + exploits of, 275, 276; + route of, 276; + explorations of, 276-278; + among the Assiniboins and the Sioux, 276; + joined by Hennepin, 278; + reaches the Green Bay Mission, 279, 322; + in the Iroquois War, 460, 481, 482. + +Dumesnil, La Salle's servant, 415. + +Dumont, + La Salle borrows money from, 127. + +Duplessis, + attempts to murder La Salle, 166. + +Dupont, Nicolas, 99. + +Du Pratz, + customs of the Natchez, 304. + +Durango, 350. + +Durantaye, 275; + in the Iroquois War, 460. + +Dutch, the, + trade with the Indians, 219; + encourage the Iroquois to fight, 324. + +Dutch fleet, the, + rumored to have captured Boston, 88. + + +East Indies, the, 489. + +Eastman, Mrs., legend of Winona, 271. + +"Emissourites, Rivière des" (Missouri), 70. + +English, the, + hold out great inducements to Joliet to join them, 76; + French company formed to compete at Hudson's Bay with, 76; + trade with the Indians, 219; + encourage the Iroquois to fight, 324. + +"English Jem," 421. + +Eokoros, the, 486. + +Erie, Lake, 23, 25, 26, 29, 31, 96, 124, 141, 146, 151, 196, 197, + 275, 279, 309, 333, 475, 476, 477, 479, 483. + +Eries, the, + exterminated by the Iroquois, 219. + +Esanapes, the, 486. + +Esmanville, the priest, 375, 379. + +Espiritu Santo Bay, 394, 471. + +Estrées, Count d', 344. + + +Faillon, Abbé, + connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, 8; + the seigniory of La Salle, 12, 13; + detailed plan of Montreal, 13; + La Salle's discoveries, 29; + La Salle in need of money, 49; + throws much light on the life of, 58, 98; + on the establishment of the association of the Sainte Famille, 112; + plan of Fort Frontenac, 121. + +Fauvel-Cavelier, Mme., 463. + +Fénelon, Abbé, 16; + attempts to mediate between Frontenac and Perrot, 97; + preaches against Frontenac at Montreal, 98. + +Ferland, + throws much light on the life of Joliet, 58. + +Fire Nation, the, 44. + +Five Nations, the, 11. + +Florida, 483. + +Florida Indians, the, + lodges of, 442. + +Folles-Avoines, Nation des, 61. + +Forked River (Mississippi), the, 5. + +Fox River, the, 4, 43, 50, 62, 477. + +Foxes, the + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 43; + Father Allouez among, 45; + incensed against the French, 45; + the Cross among, 45, 287. + +France, + takes possession of the West, 52; + receives on parchment a stupendous accession, 308. + +Francheville, Pierre, 58. + +Francis, St., 249. + +Franciscans, the, 133. + +Franquelin, Jean Baptiste Louis, + manuscript map made by, 169, 221, + 309, 316, 317, 347, 390, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485. + +Fremin, the Jesuit, 21. + +French, the, + Hurons the allies of, 4; + in western New York, 19-23; + the Iroquois felt the power of, 42; + the Foxes incensed against, 45; + the Jesuits seek to embroil the Iroquois with, 115; + seeking to secure a monopoly of the furs of the north and west, 219; + in Texas, 348; + reoccupy Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 468. + +French River, 28, 462. + +Frontenac, Count, + La Salle addresses a memorial to, 32; + announces Joliet's discovery of the Mississippi to Colbert, 34; + speaks slightingly of Joliet, 34; + succeeds Courcelle as governor, 56, 57, 60, 67; + letter from Joliet to, 76; + favorably disposed to La Salle, 85; + comes to Canada a ruined man, 85; + schemes of, 86; + at Montreal, 87; + his journey to Lake Ontario, 88; + faculty for managing the Indians, 89; + reaches Lake Ontario, 89; + at Cataraqui, 90; + addresses the Indians, 91; + admirable dealing with the Indians, 92, 93; + his enterprise a complete success, 95; + confers an inestimable benefit on all Canada, 95; + his plan to command the Upper Lakes, 96; + quarrel with Perrot, 96; + arrests Perrot, 96; + has Montreal well in hand, 96; + the Abbé Fénelon attempts to mediate between Perrot and, 97; + the Abbé Fénelon preaches against, 98; + championed by La Salle, 99; + recommends La Salle to Colbert, 99; + expects to share in profits of La Salle's new post, 101; + hatred of the Jesuits, 102; + protects the Récollets, 109; + intrigues of the Jesuits, 118, 125, 201, 232, 235, 238, 274; + entertains Father Hennepin, 280, 292; + recalled to France, 318; + obligations of La Salle to, 434; + commendation of Tonty, 467, 479, 480, 481. + +Frontenac, Fort, 34; + granted to La Salle, 100; + rebuilt by La Salle, 101, 112; + La Salle at, 120; + plan of, 121; + not established for commercial gain alone, 122, 148, 203, 292; + La Barre takes possession of, 325; + restored to La Salle by the King, 351, 476. + +Frontenac (Ontario), Lake, 128, 476, 477, 479. + +Frontenac, Madame de, 167. + +"Frontenacie, La," 481. + +Fur-trade, the, + the Jesuits accused of taking part in, 109, 110; + the Jesuits seek to establish a monopoly in, 114. + + +Gabriel, Father, 158, 159, 227, 237. + +Gaeta, 128. + +Galinée, Father, 17; + recounts the journey of La Salle and the Sulpitians, 19, 20, 26; + cruelty of the Senecas, 22; + the work of the Jesuits, 28; + makes the earliest map of the Upper Lakes, 28, 106, 140, 475. + +Galve, Viceroy, 469. + +Galveston Bay, 374, 376, 385. + +Garakontié, Chief, 91. + +Garnier, Julien, 59; + among the Senecas, 141. + +Gayen, 384. + +Geest, Catherine + mother of La Salle, 7; + La Salle's farewell to, 364. + +Geest, Nicolas, 7. + +Gendron, 139. + +Genesee, the Falls of the, 476. + +Genesee River, the, 140, 142, 279. + +Georgian Bay of Lake Huron, 27, 203. + +Giton, + La Salle borrows money from, 150. + +Gnacsitares, the, 486. + +Gould, Dr. B. A., + on the "Great Comet of 1680," 213. + +Grandfontaine, Chevalier de, 56. + +Grand Gulf, 300. + +Grand River, 23, 25. + +Gravier, 244, 297; + the Arkansas nation, 300. + +Great Lakes, the, 4; + Joliet makes a map of the region of, 32; + early unpublished maps of, 475-485; + Champlain makes the first attempt to map out, 476. + +Great Manitoulin Island, the, 41. + +"Great Mountain," the Indian name for the governor of Canada, 156. + +Green Bay of Lake Michigan, the, 4, 31, 42, 43, 75; + La Salle at, 155; 236. + +Green Bay Mission, the, + Father Allouez sent to found, 43; + Marquette at, 62; + Father Hennepin and Du Lhut reach, 279. + +"Griffin," the, + building of, 144-148; + finished, 149; + voyage of, 151-153; + at St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 154; + set sail for Niagara laden with furs, 156; + La Salle's forebodings concerning, 163; + loss of, 181, 322. + +Grollet, 445, 446, 448, 470, 471; + sent to Spain, 472. + +Guadalupe, the, 469. + +Gulliver, Captain, 486. + + +Hagaren, King of the Acanibas, 487-489. + +Hamilton, town of, 23. + +Harrisse, Henry, 76, 481, 482. + +Haukiki (Marest) River, the, 167. + +Hennepin, Louis, + connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, 8; + at Fort Frontenac, 121; + meets La Salle on his return to Canada, 130; + receives permission to join La Salle, 131; + his journey to Fort Frontenac, 132; + sets out with La Motte for Niagara, 132; + portrait of, 133; + his past life, 133; + sails for Canada, 134; + relations with La Salle, 134, 135; + work among the Indians, 135; + the most impudent of liars, 136; + daring of, 137; + embarks on the journey, 137; + reaches the Niagara, 138; + account of the falls and river of Niagara, 139; + among the Senecas, 140, 141; + at the Niagara Portage, 145-147; + the launch of the "Griffin," 148, 149; + on board the "Griffin," 151; + St. Anthony of Padua the patron saint of La Salle's great + enterprise, 152; + the departure of the "Griffin" for Niagara, 157; + La Salle's encounter with the Outagamies, 161; + La Salle rejoined by Tonty, 163; + La Salle's forebodings concerning the "Griffin," 163; + population of the Illinois Valley, 169; + among the Illinois, 173, 174; + the story of Monso, 177; + La Salle's men desert him, 178; + at Fort Crèvecoeur, 181; + sent to the Mississippi, 185; + the journey from Fort Crèvecoeur, 201; + the mutineers at Fort Crèvecoeur, 218; 234; + sets out to explore the Illinois River, 242; + his claims to the discovery of the Mississippi, 243; + doubted veracity of, 244; + captured by the Sioux, 245; + proved an impostor, 245; + steals passages from Membré and Le Clerc, 247; + his journey northward, 249; + suspected of sorcery, 253; + plots against, 255; + a hard journey, 257; + among the Sioux, 259-282; + adopted as a son by the Sioux, 261; + sets out for the Wisconsin, 266; + notice of the Falls of St. Anthony, 267; + rejoins the Indians, 273; + meeting with Du Lhut, 273; + joins Du Lhut, 278; + reaches the Green Bay Mission, 279; + reaches Fort Frontenac, 280; + goes to Montreal, 280; + entertained by Frontenac, 280; + returns to Europe, 280; + dies in obscurity, 281; + Louis XIV. orders the arrest of, 282; + various editions of the travels of, 282; + finds fault with Tonty, 467, 479, 481; + rivals of, 485, 486. + +Hiens, the German, 411, 421, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + quarrel with Duhaut and Liotot, 446; + murders Duhaut, 448; + joins the Cenis on a war expedition, 450, 465; + fate of, 472. + +Hillaret Moïse, 147, 178, 187, 193, 217, 218. + +Hitt, Col. D. F., 317. + +Hohays, the, 261. + +Homannus, + map made by, 484. + +Hondo (Rio Frio), the, 469. + +Horse Shoe Fall, the, 139. + +Hôtel-Dieu at Montreal, the, 13, 98. + +Hudson's Bay, + Joliet's voyage to, 76; + Albanel's journey to, 109, 346, 484. + +Hudson's Strait, 480. + +Humber River, the, 138, 203. + +Hunaut, 187, 210, 287. + +Hundred Associates, Company of the, 57. + +Huron Indians, the, + quarrel with the Winnebagoes, 4; + allies of the French, 4; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + Marquette among, 40; + terrified by the Sioux, 41; + destroyed by the Iroquois, 219. + +Huron, Lake, 26, 27, 31; + the Jesuits on, 37, 41; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52; + La Salle on, 152, 475, 476, 479. + +Huron Mission, the, 27. + +Huron River, the, 196. + +"Hyacinth, confection of," 159. + + +Iberville, the founder of Louisiana, 455; + joined by Tonty, 467, 472, 473. + +Ignatius, Saint, 78. + +Illinois, Great Town of the, 170; + deserted, 191; + La Salle at, 205; + description of, 221; + Tonty in, 223; + abandoned to the Iroquois, 230; + site of, 239. + +Illinois Indians, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 40, 41, 60; + Joliet and Marquette among, 66, 77, 78, 154, 155, 161; + La Salle among, 171-173; + hospitality of, 173; + deep-rooted jealousy of the Osages, 174, 203; + war with the Iroquois, 210, 220; + the Miamis join the Iroquois against, 220; + rankling jealousy between the Miamis and, 220; + an aggregation of kindred tribes, 223; + characteristics of, 223; + Tonty intercedes for, 228; + treaty made with the Iroquois, 231; + attacked by the Iroquois, 235; + become allies of La Salle, 287, 307; + at "Starved Rock," 314; + join La Salle's colony, 315, 316; + very capricious and uncertain, 322, 477. + +Illinois, Lake of the (Lake Michigan), 42, 75, 155, 477, 479. + +Illinois River, the, 31, 33, 34; + discovered by La Salle, 35; + Joliet and Marquette on, 74, 132; + La Salle on, 168; + various names of, 16, 204; + ravaged granaries of, 213, 220; + Father Hennepin sets out to explore, 242, 245, 296; + La Salle's projected colony on the banks of, 313, 315, 316, 405, 406; + Joutel on, 457, 477, 478, 481, 484. + +Illinois, State of, + first civilized occupation of, 181. + +Illinois, Valley of the, population of, 169. + +Immaculate Conception, the, doctrine of, + a favorite tenet of the + Jesuits, 61. + +Immaculate Conception, Mission of the, + Marquette sets out to found, 77. + +Incarnation, Marie de l', 111. + +Indians, the, + Father Jogues and Raymbault preach among, 5; + ferocity of, 11; + manitous of, 26, 44, 68; + their game of la crosse, 50; + the tribes meet at Saut Ste. Marie to confer with + Saint-Lusson, 51-56; + reception to Joliet and Marquette, 63; + lodges of, 75; + reception to Frontenac, 90; + Frontenac's admirable dealing with, 92, 93; + Alphabetical list of tribes referred to:-- + Abenakis, + Acanibas, + Agniers, + Akanseas, + Algonquins, + Alkansas, + Amikoués, + Andastes, + Arkansas, + Assiniboins, + Assonis, + Caddoes, + Cadodaquis, + Camanches, + Cenis, + Chaouanons, + Chickasaws, + Chikachas, + Coroas, + Creeks, + Crees, + Crows, + Dacotah, + Eries, + Fire Nation, + Five Nations, + Floridas, + Foxes, + Hohays, + Hurons, + Illinois, + Iroquois, + Issanti, + Issanyati, + Issati, + Kahokias, + Kanzas, + Kappas, + Kaskaskias, + Kickapoos, + Kilatica, + Kious, + Kiskakon Ottawas, + Knisteneaux, + Koroas, + Malhoumines, + Malouminek, + Mandans, + Maroas, + Mascoutins, + Meddewakantonwan, + Menomonies, + Miamis, + Mitchigamias, + Mohawks, + Mohegans, + Moingona, + Monsonis, + Motantees, + Nadouessioux, + Natchez, + Nation des Folles-Avoines, + Nation of the Prairie, + Neutrals, + Nipissings, + Ojibwas, + Omahas, + Oneidas, + Onondagas, + Osages, + Osotouoy, + Ottawas, + Ouabona, + Ouiatenons, + Oumalouminek, + Oumas, + Outagamies, + Pah-Utahs, + Pawnees, + Peanqhichia, + Peorias, + Pepikokia, + Piankishaws, + Pottawattamies, + Quapaws, + Quinipissas, + Sacs, + Sauteurs, + Sauthouis, + Senecas, + Shawanoes, + Sioux, + Sokokis, + Taensas, + Tamaroas, + Tangibao, + Terliquiquimechi, + Tetons, + Texas, + Tintonwans, + Tongengas, + Topingas, + Torimans, + Wapoos, + Weas, + Wild-rice, + Winnebagoes, + Yankton Sioux. + +Irondequoit Bay, 20. + +Iroquois Indians, the, 11; + alone remain, 37; + felt the power of the French, 42; + the "Beautiful River," 70; + Onondaga the political centre of, 87; + the Jesuits seek to embroil them with the French, 115; + ferocious character of, 207; + war with the Illinois, 210; + ferocious triumphs of, 219; + break into war, 219; + trade with the Dutch and the English, 219; + jealous of La Salle, 219; + joined by the Miamis against the Illinois, 220; + attack on the Illinois village, 225; + grant a truce to Tonty, 230; + take possession of the Illinois village, 230; + make a treaty with the Illinois, 231; + treachery of, 231; + Tonty departs from, 233; + attack on the dead, 234; + attack on the Illinois, 235, 320; + encouraged to fight by the Dutch and English traders, 324; + attack Fort St. Louis, 327. + +Iroquois War, the, + havoc and desolation of, 5, 219; + a war of commercial advantage, 219; + the French in, 460. + +Isle of Pines, the, 372. + +Issanti, the, 260. + +Issanyati, the, 260. + +Issati, the, 260. + +"Issatis," the, 481. + + +Jacques, companion of Marquette, 78, 80. + +Jansenists, the, 110. + +Japan, 6, 14. + +Japanese, the, 487. + +Jesuitism, + no diminution in the vital force of, 103. + +Jesuits, the, + their thoughts dwell on the Mississippi, 6; + La Salle's connection with, 8; + La Salle parts with, 9; + influence exercised by, 16; + want no help from the Sulpitians, 27; + a change of spirit, 36, 37; + their best hopes in the North and West, 37; + on the Lakes, 37; + labor to explore the copper mines of Lake Superior, 38; + a mixture of fanaticism, 38; + claimed a monopoly of conversion, 38; + make a map of Lake Superior, 38; + the missionary stations, 46; + trading with the Indians, 47; + doctrine of the Immaculate Conception a favorite tenet of, 61; + greatly opposed to the establishment of forts and trading-posts + in the upper country, 88; + opposition to Frontenac and La Salle, 102; + Frontenac's hatred of, 102; + turn their eyes towards the Valley of the Mississippi, 103; + no longer supreme in Canada, 104; + La Salle their most dangerous rival for the control of the West, 104; + masters at Quebec, 108; + accused of selling brandy to the Indians, 109; + accused of carrying on a fur-trade, 109, 110; + comparison between the Récollets and Sulpitians and, 112; + seek to establish a monopoly in the fur-trade, 114; + intrigues against La Salle, 115; + seek to embroil the Iroquois with the French, 115; + exculpated by La Salle from the attempt to poison him, 116; + induce men to desert from La Salle, 118; + have a mission among the Mohawks, 118; + plan against La Salle, 459; + maps made by, 478. + +Jesus, Order of, 37. + +Jesus, Society of, see _Society of Jesus_. + +Jogues, Father Isaac, + preaches among the Indians, 5, 59. + +Joliet, Louis, + destined to hold a conspicuous place in history of + western discovery, 23; + early life of, 23; + sent to discover the copper mines of Lake Superior, 23, 58; + his failure, 23; + meeting with La Salle and the Sulpitians, 23; + passage through the Strait of Detroit, 27; + makes maps of the region of the Mississippi and the Great Lakes, 32; + claims the discovery of the Mississippi, 33; + Frontenac speaks slightingly of, 34; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + sent by Talon to discover the Mississippi, 56; + early history of, 57; + characteristics of, 58; + Shea first to discover history of, 58; + Ferland, Faillon, and Margry throw much light on the life of, 58; + Marquette chosen to accompany him on his search for the + Mississippi, 59; + the departure, 60; + the Mississippi at last, 64; + on the Mississippi, 65; + meeting with the Illinois, 66; + at the mouth of the Missouri, 69; + on the lower Mississippi, 71; + among the Arkansas Indians, 72; + determines that the Mississippi discharges into the Gulf of + Mexico, 74; + resolves to return to Canada, 74; + serious accident to, 75; + letter to Frontenac, 76; + smaller map of his discoveries, 76; + marriage to Claire Bissot, 76; + journey to Hudson's Bay, 76; + the English hold out great inducements to, 76; + receives grants of land, 76; + engages in fisheries, 76; + makes a chart of the St. Lawrence, 77; + Sir William Phips makes a descent on the establishment of, 77; + explores the coast of Labrador, 77; + made royal pilot for the St. Lawrence by Frontenac, 77; + appointed hydrographer at Quebec, 77; + death of, 77; + said to be an impostor, 118; + refused permission to plant a trading station in the Valley of the + Mississippi, 126, 477; + maps made by, 479, 480, 481, 482. + +Joliet, town of, 193. + +"Joly," the vessel, 353, 366, 367, 372, 373, 374, 375, 377, 381, + 383, 385. + +Jolycoeur (Nicolas Perrot), 116. + +Joutel, Henri, 69, 314, 363, 367, 368, 372, 374, 375, 377, 379, + 380, 382, 388, 389, 392, 393, 395, 396, 397, 399, 400, 401, 402, + 403, 406, 407, 409, 410, 411, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 428; + sketches the portrait of La Salle, 430; + the assassination of La Salle, 432, 433; + danger of, 436; friendship of L'Archevêque for, 436; + doubt and anxiety, 437, 438; + among the Cenis Indians, 440-445; + plans to escape, 445-447; + the murder of Duhaut, 448, 449; + sets out for home, 450; + his party, 451; + among the Assonis, 451-453; + arrival at the Arkansas, 453; + friendly reception, 455; + descends the Arkansas, 456; + on the Illinois, 457; + at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 457; + visit to Father Allouez, 459; + reaches Montreal, 462; + embarks for France, 462; + character of, 462. + + +Kahokias, the, 223. + +Kalm, 244. + +Kamalastigouia, 275. + +Kankakee, + the sources of, 167, 204, 288, 316. + +Kansa (Kanzas), the, 478. + +Kanzas, the, 478. + +Kappa band, the, of the Arkansas, 299. + +"Kaskaskia," + Illinois village of, 74; + the mission at, 79. + +Kaskaskias, the, 223, 477. + +Kiakiki River, the, 167. + +Kickapoos, the, + location of 43; + join the Mascoutins and Miamis, 62; + murder Father Ribourde, 233. + +Kilatica, the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +King Philip's War, 285. + +Kingston, 87, 90. + +Kious (Sioux), the, 307. + +Kiskakon Ottawas, the, 81, 237. + +Knisteneaux, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40. + +Koroas, the, 308. + + +La Barre, Le Febvre de, 182; + succeeds Frontenac as governor, 318; + weakness and avarice of, 318; + royal instructions to, 319; + letters from La Salle, 319-322; + defames La Salle to Seignelay, 322-324; + plots against La Salle, 325; + takes possession of Fort Frontenac and Fort St. Louis, 325-327; + ordered by the King to make restitution, 351, 482. + +Labrador, coasts of, 58; + explored by Joliet, 77. + +La Chapelle, 193; + takes false reports of La Salle to Fort Crèvecoeur, 217. + +La Chesnaye, 102, 326. + +La Chine, + the seigniory of La Salle at, 12; + La Salle lays the rude beginnings of a settlement at, 13; + La Salle and the Sulpitians set out from, 19; + origin of the name, 29, 88, 486. + +La Chine Rapids, the, 75. + +La Crosse, Indian game of, 50. + +La Divine River, the (Des Plaines River), 477, 481. + +La Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, 101, 143, 203, 204, 208, 215, 236, + 286, 287, 292, 326, 333, 351, 352, 467, 485. + +La Forge, 147, 218. + +La Harpe, 255. + +La Hontan, 145, 153; + loss of the "Griffin," 182, 275, 276, 485, 486. + +Lakes, Upper, 24, 27; + Galinée, makes the earliest map of, 28, 38; + Jesuit missions on, 39; + Marquette on, 59, 85; + Frontenac's plan to command, 96; + first vessel on, 145; + La Salle on, 151-163. + +Lalemant, 139. + +La Metairie, Jacques de, 308. + +La Motte, see _Lussière, La Motte de_. + +Lanquetot, see _Liotot_. + +Laon, 59. + +La Pointe, Jesuit mission of St. Esprit at, 40. + +La Potherie, 49; + reception of Saint-Lusson by the Miamis, 50; + Henri de Tonty's iron hand, 129; + loss of the "Griffin," 182; + the Iroquois attack on the Illinois, 235. + +L'Archevêque, 421, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + the assassination of La Salle, 429; + friendship for Joutel, 436; + danger of, 449, 470, 471; + sent to Spain, 472. + +La Sablonnière, Marquis de, 380, 388, 407, 409, 418. + +La Salle, Sieur de, birth of, 7; + origin of his name, 7; + connection with the Jesuits, 8; + characteristics of, 9; + parts with the Jesuits, 9; + sails for Canada, 10; + at Montreal, 10; + schemes of, 11; + his seigniory at La Chine, 12; + begins to study Indian languages, 14; + plans of discovery, 14, 15; + sells his seigniory, 16; + joins his expedition to that of the seminary priests, 17; + sets out from La Chine, 19; + journey of, 19, 20; + hospitality of the Senecas, 21; + fears for his safety, 22; + meeting with Joliet, 23; + _belles paroles_ of, 25; + parts with the Sulpitians, 25; + obscurity of his subsequent work, 28; + goes to Onondaga, 29; + deserted by his men, 30; + meeting with Perrot, 30; + reported movements of, 31; + Talon claims to have sent him to explore, 31; + affirms that he discovered the Ohio, 32; + discovery of the Mississippi, 33; + discovered the Illinois River, 35; + pays the expenses of his expeditions, 49; + in great need of money, 49; + borrows merchandise from the Seminary, 49; + contrasted with Marquette, 83; + called a visionary, 83; + projects of, 84; + Frontenac favorably disposed towards, 85; + faculty for managing the Indians, 89; + at Montreal, 97; + champions Frontenac, 99; + goes to France, 99; recommended to Colbert by Frontenac, 99; + petitions for a patent of nobility and a grant of Fort + Frontenac, 100; + his petition granted, 100; + returns to Canada, 101; + oppressed by the merchants of Canada, 101; + Le Ber becomes the bitter enemy of, 101; + aims at the control of the valleys of the Ohio and the + Mississippi, 102; + opposed by the Jesuits, 102; + the most dangerous rival of the Jesuits for the control of + the West, 104; + the Prince de Conti the patron of, 106; + the Abbé Renaudot's memoir of, 106, 107; + account of, 107; + not well inclined towards the Récollets, 108; + plots against, 113; + caused no little annoyance by his brother, 114; + Jesuit intrigues against, 115; + attempt to poison, 116; + exculpates the Jesuits, 116; + letter to the Prince de Conti, 118; + the Jesuits induce men to desert from, 118; + defamed to Colbert, 119; + at Fort Frontenac, 120; + sails again for France, 122; + his memorial laid before Colbert, 122; + urges the planting of colonies in the West, 123; + receives a patent from Louis XIV., 124; + forbidden to trade with the Ottawas, 125; + given the monopoly of buffalo-hides, 126; + makes plans to carry out his designs, 126; + assistance received from his friends, 127; + invaluable aid received from Henri de Tonty, 127; + joined by La Motte de Lussière, 129; + sails for Canada, 129; + makes a league with the Canadian merchants, 129; + met by Father Hennepin on his return to Canada, 130; + joined by Father Hennepin, 131; + relations with Father Hennepin, 134, 135; + sets out to join La Motte, 141; + almost wrecked, 142; + treachery of his pilot, 142; + pacifies the Senecas, 142; + delayed by jealousies, 143; + returns to Fort Frontenac, 143; + unfortunate in the choice of subordinates, 143; + builds a vessel above the Niagara cataract, 144; + jealousy and discontent, 147; + lays foundation for blockhouses at Niagara, 148; + the launch of the "Griffin," 149; + his property attached by his creditors, 150; + on Lake Huron, 152; + commends his great enterprise to St. Anthony of Padua, 152; + at St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 153; + rivals and enemies, 154; + on Lake Michigan, 155; + at Green Bay, 155; + finds the Pottawattamies friendly, 155; + sends the "Griffin" back to Niagara laden with furs, 156; + trades with the Ottawas, 156; + hardships, 158; + encounter with the Outagamies, 160, 161; + rejoined by Tonty, 162; + forebodings concerning the "Griffin," 163; + on the St. Joseph, 164; + lost in the forest, 165; + on the Illinois, 166; + Duplessis attempts to murder, 166; + the Illinois town, 169, 170; + hunger relieved, 171; + Illinois hospitality, 173; + still followed by the intrigues of his enemies, 175; + harangues the Indians, 177; + deserted by his men, 178; + another attempt to poison, 178; + builds Fort Crèvecoeur, 180; + loss of the "Griffin," 181; + anxieties of, 183; + a happy artifice, 184; + builds another vessel, 185; + sends Hennepin to the Mississippi, 185; + parting with Tonty, 188; + hardihood of, 189-201; + his winter journey to Fort Frontenac, 189; + the deserted town of the Illinois, 191; + meeting with Chief Chassagoac, 192; + "Starved Rock," 192; + Lake Michigan, 193; + the wilderness, 193, 194; + Indian alarms, 195; + reaches Niagara, 197; + man and nature in arms against, 198; + mutineers at Fort Crèvecoeur, 199; + chastisement of the mutineers, 201; + strength in the face of adversity, 202; + his best hope in Tonty, 202; + sets out to succor Tonty, 203; + kills buffalo, 205; + a night of horror, 207; + fears for Tonty, 209; + finds the ruins of Fort Crèvecoeur, 211; + beholds the Mississippi, 212; + beholds the "Great Comet of 1680," 213; + returns to Fort Miami, 215; + jealousy of the Iroquois of, 219, 238; + route of, 276; + Margry brings to light the letters of, 281; + begins anew, 283; + plans for a defensive league, 284; + Indian friends, 285; + hears good news of Tonty, 287; + Illinois allies, 287; + calls the Indians to a grand council, 289; + his power of oratory, 289; + his harangue, 289; + the reply of the chiefs, 291; + finds Tonty, 292; + parts with a portion of his monopolies, 293; + at Toronto, 293; + reaches Lake Huron, 294; + at Fort Miami, 294; + on the Mississippi, 297; + among the Arkansas Indians, 299; + takes formal possession of the Arkansas country, 300; + visited by the chief of the Taensas, 302; + visits the Coroas, 305; + hostility, 305; + the mouth of the Mississippi, 306; + takes possession of the Great West for France, 306; + bestows the name of "Louisiana" on the new domain, 309; + attacked by the Quinipissas, 310; + revisits the Coroas, 310; + seized by a dangerous illness, 310; + rejoins Tonty at Michilimackinac, 311; + his projected colony on the banks of the Illinois, 313; + intrenches himself at "Starved Rock," 313; + gathers his Indian allies at Fort St. Louis, 315; + his colony on the Illinois, 316; + success of his colony, 318; + letters to La Barre, 319-322; + defamed by La Barre to Seignelay, 322-324; + La Barre plots against, 325; + La Barre takes possession of Fort Frontenac and Fort + St. Louis, 325-327; + sails for France, 327; + painted by himself, 328-342; + difficulty of knowing him, 328; + his detractors, 329; + his letters, 329-331; + vexations of his position, 331; + his unfitness for trade, 332; + risks of correspondence, 332; + his reported marriage, 334; + alleged ostentation, 335; + motives of actions, 335; + charges of harshness, 336; + intrigues against him, 337; + unpopular manners, 337, 338; + a strange confession, 339; + his strength and his weakness, 340, 341; + contrasts of his character, 341, 342; + at court, 343; + received by the King, 344; + new proposals of, 345-347; + small knowledge of Mexican geography, 348; + plans of, 349; + his petitions granted, 350; + Forts Frontenac and St. Louis restored by the King to, 351; + preparations for his new enterprise, 353; + divides his command with Beaujeu, 353; + lack of harmony between Beaujeu and, 354-361; + indiscretion of, 361; + overwrought brain of, 362; + farewell to his mother, 364; + sails from Rochelle, 366; + disputes with Beaujeu, 366; + the voyage, 368; + his illness, 368; + Beaujeu's complaints of, 370; + resumes his journey, 372; + enters the Gulf of Mexico, 373; + waiting for Beaujeu, 374; + coasts the shores of Texas, 374; + meeting with Beaujeu, 375; + perplexity of, 375-377; + lands in Texas, 379; + attacked by the Indians, 380; + wreck of the "Aimable," 381; + forlorn position of, 383; + Indian neighbors, 384; + Beaujeu makes friendly advances to, 385; + departure of Beaujeu, 387; + at Matagorda Bay, 391; + misery and dejection, 393; + the new Fort St. Louis, 394; + explorations of, 395; + adventures of, 402; + again falls ill, 404; + departure for Canada, 405; + wreck of the "Belle," 407; + Maxime Le Clerc makes charges against, 410; + Duhaut plots against, 410; + return to Fort St. Louis, 411; + account of his adventures, 411-413; + among the Cenis Indians, 413; + attacked with hernia, 417; + Twelfth Night at Fort St. Louis, 417; + his last farewell, 418; + followers of, 420; + prairie travelling, 423; + Liotot swears vengeance against, 424; + the murder of Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + his premonition of disaster, 428; + murdered by Duhaut, 429; + character of, 430; + his enthusiasm compared with that of Champlain, 431; + his defects, 431; + America owes him an enduring memory, 432; + the marvels of his patient fortitude, 432; + evidences of his assassination, 432; + undeniable rigor of his command, 433; + locality of his assassination, 434; + his debts, 434; + Tonty's plan to assist, 453-455; + fear of Father Allouez for, 459; + Jesuit plans against, 459, 477, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, + 485, 486. + +La Salle, village of, 146, 167. + +La Taupine (Pierre Moreau), 78. + +La Tortue, 367. + +Launay, De, 453, 455. + +Laurent, 199, 218. + +Lavaca River, the, 392, 395, 396. + +La Vache River, the, 392. + +Laval-Montmorency, François Xavier de, + first bishop of Quebec, 110; + accused of harshness and intolerance, 110; + encourages the establishment of the association of + the Sainte Famille, 111. + +La Violette, 187. + +La Voisin, + burned alive at Paris, 179. + +Le Baillif, M., 34. + +Le Ber, Jacques, 97; + becomes La Salle's bitter enemy, 101, 326. + +Leblanc, 193; + takes false reports of La Salle to Fort Crèvecoeur, 217, 218. + +Le Clerc, Father Chrétien, 169, 175, 192, 198, 217, 234, 238; + his account of the Récollet missions among the Indians, 246; + Hennepin steals passages from, 247; + character of Du Lhut, 276; + energy of La Salle, 292, 296; + Louis XIV. becomes the sovereign of the Great West, 308; + misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, 393, 403, 406, 413, 414, + 415, 416, 417. + +Le Clerc, Maxime, + joins La Salle's new enterprise, 353; + in Texas, 400; + adventure with a boar, 410; + makes charges against La Salle, 410, 418. + +Le Fèvre, Father, 131. + +Le Gros, Simon, 388, 394, 398. + +Le Meilleur, 218. + +Le Moyne, 102. + +Lenox, Mr., + the Journal of Marquette, 75; + death of Marquette, 81, 169. + +Leon, Alonzo de, 469, 471. + +Le Petit, + customs of the Natchez, 304. + +L'Espérance, 216, 218, 223. + +Le Sueur, map made by, 225, 485. + +Le Tardieu, Charles, 99. + +Lewiston, mountain ridge of, 138, 143; + rapids at, 144. + +Liotot, + La Salle's surgeon, 420; + swears vengeance against La Salle, 424, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + the assassination of La Salle, 429, 430; + resolves to return to Fort St. Louis, 446; + quarrels with Hiens, 446; + murder of, 449. + +Long Point, 25; + the Sulpitians spend the winter at, 25. + +"Long River," the, 485. + +Long Saut, the, 89. + +Louis XIV. + becomes the sovereign of the Great West, 308; + misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, 393, 403, 406, 413, 414, 415, + 416, 417. + +Louis XIV., of France, 26, 52, 115; + grants a patent to La Salle, 124; + orders the arrest of Hennepin, 282; + proclaimed by La Salle the sovereign of the Great West, 306; + receives La Salle, 344; + irritated against the Spaniards, 344; + grants La Salle's petitions, 350; + abandons the colonists, 463; + Cavelier's memorial to, 463. + +Louisiana, country of, 307; + name bestowed by La Salle, 309; + vast extent of, 309; + boundaries of, 309; + Iberville the founder of, 455, 483, 484, 485, 489. + +Louisville, 29, 32. + +Louvigny, Sieur de, 274, 349. + +"Lover's leap," the, 271. + +Loyola, Disciples of, + losing ground in Canada, 104. + +Lussière, La Motte de, + joins La Salle, 129, 132; + embarks on the journey, 137; + reaches the Niagara, 138; + begins to build fortifications, 140; + jealousy of the Senecas, 140; + seeks to conciliate the Senecas, 140, 141; + fidelity to La Salle doubtful, 143. + + +Machaut-Rougemont, 365. + +Mackinaw, La Salle at, 325. + +Mackinaw, Island of, 153. + +Macopins, Rivière des (Illinois River), 167, 483. + +Madeira, 366. + +Maha (Omahas), the, 478. + +"Maiden's Rock," the, 271. + +"Malheurs, La Rivière des," 402. + +Malhoumines, the, 61. + +Malouminek, the, 61. + +Manabozho, the Algonquin deity, 267. + +Mance, Mlle., 112. + +Mandans, the, + winter lodges of, 442. + +Manitoulin Island, + Mission of, 41; + assigned to André, 41. + +Manitoulin Islands, + Saint-Lusson winters at, 50; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52, 153, 203. + +Manitoulins, the, 27. + +Manitoumie (Mississippi Valley), 485. + +Manitous, 26, 44, 68. + +Maps, + Champlain's map (the first) of the Great Lakes, 476; + Coronelli's map, 221, 484; + manuscript map of Franquelin, 169, 221, 316, 317, 347, 390, 481, + 482, 483, 484, 485; + map of Galinée, 475; + map of Lake Superior, 476; + map of the Great Lakes, 476; + map of Marquette, 477; + maps of the Jesuits, 478; + small maps of Joliet, 479, 480; + Raudin's map, 481; + rude map of Father Raffeix, 481; + Franquelin's map of Louisiana, 482; + the great map of Franquelin, 482; + map of Le Sueur, 481, 485; + map of Homannus, 484. + +Margry, + birth of La Salle, 7; + La Salle's connection with the Jesuits, 8; + La Salle sells his seigniory, 16; + La Salle's claims to the discovery of the Mississippi, 34, 35; + throws much light on the life of Joliet, 58, 77; + La Salle's marriage prevented by his brother, 114; + La Salle at Fort Frontenac, 121; + assistance given to La Salle, 127; + Henri de Tonty, 128, 130, 132; + La Motte at Niagara, 140; + La Salle pacifies the Senecas, 142; + La Salle at Niagara, 148; + La Salle attached by his creditors, 150; + the names of the Illinois, 167; + intrigues against La Salle, 175; + brings to light the letters of La Salle, 281, 296, 342; + letters of Beaujeu to Seignelay and to Cabart de Villermont, 365; + La Salle's disputes with Beaujeu, 366; + illness of La Salle, 368; + La Salle resumes his voyage, 372; + La Salle lands in Texas, 379; + Beaujeu makes friendly advances to La Salle, 386, 387; + misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, 393; + life at Fort St. Louis, 400; + the murder of Duhaut and Liotot, 449; + Allouez's fear of La Salle, 459. + +Marle, Sieur de, 421; + murders Moranget, 427; + sets out for home, 451; + drowned, 453. + +Maroas, the, 477. + +Marquette, Jacques, the Jesuit, + at Ste. Marie du Saut, 27; + voyage of, 32; + discovery of the Mississippi, 33; + among the Hurons and the Ottawas, 40; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + the mission of Michilimackinac assigned to, 41, 51; + chosen to accompany Joliet in his search for the Mississippi, 59; + early life of, 59; + on the Upper Lakes, 59; + great talents as a linguist, 59; + traits of character, 59; + journal of his voyage to the Mississippi, 60; + especially devoted to the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, 61; + at the Green Bay Mission, 62; + among the Mascoutins and Miamis, 62; + on the Wisconsin River, 63; + the Mississippi at last, 64; on the Mississippi, 65; + map drawn by, 65; + meeting with the Illinois, 66; + affrighted by the Indian manitous, 68; + at the mouth of the Missouri, 69; + on the lower Mississippi, 71; + among the Arkansas Indians, 72; + determines that the Mississippi discharges into the + Gulf of Mexico, 74; + resolves to return to Canada, 74; + illness of, 74; + remains at Green Bay, 75; + journal of, 75; + true map of, 75; + sets out to found the mission of the Immaculate Conception, 77; + gives the name of "Immaculate Conception" to the Mississippi, 77; + on the Chicago River, 78; + return of his illness, 78; + founds the mission at the village "Kaskaskia," 79; + peaceful death of, 80; + burial of, 81; + his bones removed to St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 81; + miracle at the burial of, 81; + tradition of the death of, 82; + contrasted with La Salle, 83; 169, 223; + route of, 276; + pictured rock of, 457; + maps made by, 477, 478, 480, 481. + +Marshall, O. H., 140, 146. + +Martin, 75; death of Marquette, 81. + +Martin, Father Felix, + connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, 8. + +Martinique, 385, 386, 387. + +Mascoutins, the, + location of, 43; + Fathers Allouez and Dablon among, 44; + joined by the Kickapoos, 62; + visited by Marquette, 62; + La Salle falls in with, 195. + +Matagorda Bay, 376, 379, 383, 391, 471. + See also _St. Louis, Bay of._ + +Matagorda Island, 375, 379. + +Mather, Increase, 213. + +Mazarin, Cardinal, 129. + +Meddewakantonwan, the, 260. + +Medrano, Sebastian Fernandez de, 244. + +Membré, Father Zenobe, 150, 155, 169, 185, 191, 192, 198, 201, 204, 216; + the mutineers at Fort Crèvecoeur, 217, 218; + intrigues of La Salle's enemies, 220, 223, 224; + the Iroquois attack on the Illinois village, 225, 227, 230, 231, 233; + the Iroquois attack on the dead, 234, 238; + his journal on his descent of the Mississippi with La Salle, 246; + Hennepin steals passages from, 247; + meeting with La Salle, 292; + sets out from Fort Miami, 296; + among the Arkansas Indians, 299; + visits the Taensas, 301; + attends La Salle during his illness, 311; + joins La Salle's new enterprise, 353; + on the "Joly," 372; + in Texas, 388; + adventure with a buffalo, 409, 417, 418; + fate of, 470. + +Ménard, the Jesuit, + attempts to plant a mission on southern shore of Lake Superior, 6. + +Menomonie River, the, 51. + +Menomonies, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 42; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + village of, 61. + +"Mer Douce des Hurons" (Lake Huron), 476. + +"Mer du Nord," the, 480. + +"Messasipi" (Mississippi River), the, 480. + +Messier, 199, 218. + +"Messipi" River, the, 6. + +Meules, De, the Intendant of Canada, 319, 351. + +Mexico, 5, 6, 32, 117, 125, 126, 129, 346, 348; + Spaniards in, 349; 464, 480. + +Mexico, Gulf of, 31, 32, 38, 48, 63, 70, 74, 84, 245, 306, 309, 311, + 312, 344, 345, 358, 371, 373, 394; + claimed by Spain, 468, 471, 477, 478, 479, 481, 482, 483. + +Mexican mines, the, 349. + +Miami, Fort, 162, 163; La Salle + returns to, 215, 283, 284, 286, 288, 292, 294, 296, 311. + +Miami River, the, 32. + +Miamis, the, + location of, 43, 44; + Fathers Allouez and Dablon among, 44; + receive Saint-Lusson, 50; + authority and state of the chief of, 50; + joined by the Kickapoos, 62; + visited by Marquette, 62; + join the Iroquois against the Illinois, 220; + rankling jealousy between the Illinois and, 220, 223, 251, 286; + village of, 288; + called by La Salle to a grand council, 289; + at Buffalo Rock, 314; + join La Salle's colony, 316; + afraid of the Iroquois, 320. + +Miamis, Le Fort des (Buffalo Rock), 314. + +Miamis River (St. Joseph), 162. + +Michigan, + shores of, 31; + forest wastes of, 153; + peninsula of, 475, 476, 483, 484. + +Michigan, Lake, 4, 31; + the Jesuits on, 37; + the name of, 42, 61, 75, 77, 132; + La Salle on, 155, 162, 193, 236, 309, 475, 477, 479. + +Michilimackinac, + mission of, 41; + assigned to Marquette, 41, 279, 311. + +Michilimackinac, Straits of, 31, 41, 42, 59, 61, 80, 110, 197, 203, + 236, 288, 292. + +Migeon, 150. + +Mignan, islands of, + granted to Joliet, 76. + +Mille Lac, 257, 265, 277. + +Milot, Jean, 16. + +Milwaukee, 159. + +Minet, La Salle's engineer, 373, 378, 379, 383, 387, 390. + +Minneapolis, city of, 267. + +Minong, Isle, 38. + +"Miskous" (Wisconsin), the, 480. + +Missions, early, + decline in the religious exaltation of, 103. + +Mississaquenk, 54. + +Mississippi River, the, + discovered by the Spaniards, 3; + De Soto buried in, 3; + Jean Nicollet reaches, 3; + Colonel Wood reaches, 5; + Captain Bolton reaches, 5; + Radisson and Des Groseilliers reach, 5; + the thoughts of the Jesuits dwell on, 6; + speculations concerning, 6; 30, 31; + Joliet makes a map of the region of, 32; 45, 46; + Talon resolves to find, 56; + Joliet selected to find, 56; + Marquette chosen to accompany Joliet, 59; + the discovery by Joliet and Marquette, 64; + its outlet into the Gulf of Mexico determined by Joliet and + Marquette, 74; + Marquette gives the name of "Immaculate Conception" to, 77; + La Salle's plans to control, 84; + Hennepin sent to, 185; + La Salle beholds, 212; + claims of Hennepin to the discovery of, 243; + Membré's journal on his descent of, 246; + La Salle on, 297, 307, 310, 311, 312, 345, 346, 352, 371, 373, + 374, 376, 389, 390, 391, 403, 404, 405, 457, 459, 466; + early unpublished maps of, 475-486. + +Mississippi, Valley of the, + La Salle aims at the control of, 102; + the Jesuits turn their eyes towards, 103; 479; + various names given to, 485. + +Missouri River, the, 6; + Joliet and Marquette at the mouth of, 69, 297, 457, 477, 478, 479, + 483, 489. + +Missouris, the, 279, 320. + +"Mitchigamea," village of, 72. + +Mitchigamias, the, 308. + +"Mitchiganong, Lac" (Lake Michigan), 477. + +Mobile Bay, 129, 385, 386, 387, 389, 481, 482, 483. + +Mobile, city of, 309, 467. + +Mohawk River, the, 483. + +Mohawks, the, 91; + Bruyas among, 115; + Jesuit mission among, 118; + Father Hennepin among, 135, 136, 483. + +Mohegan Indians, the, 285, 295, 486. + +Moingona, the, 223. + +Moingouena (Peoria), 65. + +Monso, the Mascoutin chief, + plots against La Salle, 174, 177, 192. + +Monsonis, the, at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Montagnais, the, 59. + +Montezuma, 487. + +Montreal, La Salle at, 10; + the most dangerous place in Canada, 10; + detailed plan of, 13; + Frontenac at, 87; + Frontenac has it well in hand, 96; + Joutel and Cavelier reach, 462, 475. + +Montreal, Historical Society of, 17. + +Moranget, La Salle's nephew, 379, 384, 385, 405, 412, 415, 420, 424; + quarrel with Duhaut, 425; + murder of, 426, 433. + +Moreau, Pierre, 78. + +Morel, M., 360. + +Morice, Marguerite, 7. + +Motantees (?), the, 307. + +Moyse, Maître, 147, 217. + +Mozeemlek, the, 486. + +Mustang Island, 375. + + +Nadouessious (Sioux), the, 307. + +Nadouessioux, the country of, 307. + +Natchez, the, + village of, 303; + differ from other Indians, 304; + customs of, 304, 308. + +Natchez, city of, 304. + +Neches River, the, 415, 470. + +Neenah (Fox) River, the, 44. + +Neutrals, the, + exterminated by the Iroquois, 219. + +New Biscay, province of, 346, 348, 352, 383, 403. + +New England, 5, 346. + +New England Indians, the, 285. + +New France, 483, 484, 485. + +New Leon, province of, 468. + +New Mexico, 5, 350; + Spanish colonists of, 414. + +New Orleans, 484. + +New York, the French in western, 19-23, 288, 484. + +Niagara, name of, 139; + the key to the four great lakes above, 140, 197, 198, 279. + +Niagara Falls, 23; + Father Hennepin's account of, 139; + Hennepin's exaggerations respecting, 248, 476. + +Niagara, Fort, 129, 138, 148. + +Niagara Portage, the, 144, 145. + +Niagara River, the, 23, 96; + Father Hennepin's account of, 139, 475. + +Nicanopé, 175, 177, 178, 192. + +Nicollet, Jean, + reaches the Mississippi, 3; + among the Indians, 3; + sent to make peace between the Winnebagoes and the Hurons, 4; + descends the Wisconsin, 5. + +Nika, La Salle's favorite Shawanoe hunter, 412, 421, 425; + murder of, 426. + +Nipissing, Lake, 28. + +Nipissings, the, + Jean Nicollet among, 3; + Dollier de Casson among, 16; + André makes a missionary tour among, 41; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Noiseux, M., Grand Vicar of Quebec, 82. + +North Sea, the, 38. + +Nueces, the upper, 469. + + +Oanktayhee, principal deity of the Sioux, 267. + +O'Callaghan, Dr., 139. + +Ohio River, the, 15, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 29, 32; + La Salle affirms that he discovered, 32; + the "Beautiful River," 70, 297, 307, 457, 477, 478, 479, 480, + 483, 484. + +Ohio, Valley of the, + La Salle aims at the control of, 102. + +Ojibwas, the, at Ste. Marie du Saut, 39. + +Olighin (Alleghany) River, the, 307. + +"Olighin" (Alleghany) River, the, 484. + +Omahas, the, 478. + +Omawha, Chief, 175. + +Oneida Indians, the, 18, 91, 135. + +Ongiara (Niagara), 139. + +Onguiaahra (Niagara), 139. + +Onis, Luis de, 373. + +Onondaga, + La Salle goes to, 29; + the political centre of the Iroquois, 87; + Hennepin reaches, 135. + +Onondaga Indians, the, 91; + Bruyas among, 115. + +"Onontio," the governor of Canada, 54. + +Ontario, Lake, 16; + discovered, 20, 23, 58, 85, 87; + Frontenac reaches, 89, 96, 99, 128, 135, 147, 200, 279, 475, 476, 479. + +Ontonagan River, the, 39. + +Orange, settlement of (Albany), 136. + +Oris, 384. + +Osages, the, 174; + deep-rooted jealousy of the Illinois for, 174, 184, 477. + +"Osages, Rivière des" (Missouri), 70. + +Osotouoy, the, 300. + +Otinawatawa, 22, 23. + +Ottawa, town of, 75, 169, 193. + +Ottawa River, the, 27, 30, 462, 476. + +Ottawas, the, 27; + Marquette among, 40; + terrified by the Sioux, 41; + La Salle forbidden to trade with, 125; + La Salle trades with, 156, 182. + +"Ouabache" (Wabash), River, the, 70, 297. + +Ouabona, the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +"Ouabouskiaou" (Ohio) River, the, 70, 477. + +"Ouaboustikou" (Ohio), the, 480. + +Ouasicoudé, principal chief of the Sioux, 264; + friendship for Hennepin, 266, 277. + +Ouchage (Osages), the, 477. + +Ouiatnoens (Weas), the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +Oumalouminek, the, 61. + +Oumas, the, 305. + +Oumessourit (Missouris), the, 478. + +"Oumessourits, Rivière des" (Missouri), 70. + +Outagamies (Foxes), the, + location of, 43. + +Outagamies, the, + encounter with La Salle, 160, 161, 287. + +Outrelaise, Mademoiselle d', 167. + +Outrelaise, the Rivière del', 167. + + +Pacific coast, the, 480. + +Pacific Ocean, 84. + +Paget, 366. + +Pahoutet (Pah-Utahs?), the, 478. + +Pah-Utahs (?), the, 478. + +Palluau, Count of, see _Frontenac, Count_. + +Palms, the River of, 307. + +Paniassa (Pawnees), the, 478. + +Panuco, Spanish town of, 350. + +Paraguay, + the old and the new, 102, 103, 104, 117. + +Parassy, M. de, 356. + +Patron, 274. + +Paul, Dr. John, 317. + +Pawnees, the, 478. + +Peanqhichia (Piankishaw), the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +"Pekitanouï" River (Missouri), the, 69, 477. + +Pelée, Point, 26, 197. + +Pelican Island, 379. + +Peloquin, 150. + +Pen, Sieur, + obligations of La Salle to, 434. + +Peñalossa, Count, 350. + +Penicaut, + customs of the Natchez, 304. + +Pennsylvania, State of, 346. + +Penobscot River, the, 483. + +Pensacola, 472. + +Peoria, city of, 34, 171. + +Peoria Indians, the, + villages of, 171, 223, 477. + +Peoria Lake, 171, 190, 211, 296. + +Peouaria (Peoria), 65. + +Pepikokia, the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +Pepin, 276. + +Pepin Lake, 256, 271, 272. + +Péré, 58. + +Perrot, the curé, 98. + +Pérrot, Nicolas, + meeting with La Salle, 30; + accompanies Saint-Lusson in search of copper mines on Lake + Superior, 49; + conspicuous among Canadian voyageurs, 49; + characteristics of, 50; + marvellous account of the authority and state of the Miami chief, 50; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + local governor of Montreal, 87; + quarrel with Frontenac, 96; + arrested by Frontenac, 96; + the Abbé Fénelon attempts to mediate between Frontenac and, 97; + attempts to poison La Salle, 116. + +Peru, 350. + +Petit Goave, 367, 372. + +Philip, King, 288. + +Philip II. of Spain, 373. + +Phips, Sir William, + makes a descent on Joliet's establishment, 77. + +Piankishaws, the, 223; + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +"Picard, Le" (Du Gay), 186. + +Pierre, companion of Marquette, 78, 80. + +Pierron, the Jesuit, 115; + among the Senecas, 115. + +Pierson, the Jesuit, 279. + +Pimitoui River, the, 171. + +Platte, the, 207. + +Plet, François, 127, 293, 463. + +Poisoning, the epoch of, 179. + +Ponchartrain, the minister, 133, 276, 455, 467, 486, 489. + +Pontiac, + assassination of, 314. + +Port de Paix, 367, 368. + +Pottawattamies, the, + in grievous need of spiritual succor, 24; + the Sulpitians determine to visit, 24; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 42, 50, 77; + friendly to La Salle, 155, 182, 236, 237, 238; + Tonty among, 287; + at "Starved Rock," 314. + +"Poualacs," the, 481. + +Prairie du Chien, Fort, 64. + +Prairie, Nation of the, 44. + +Provence, 441. + +Prudhomme, Fort, 297; + La Salle ill at, 311. + +Prudhomme, Pierre, 297, 298. + +Puants, les (Winnebagoes), 42. + +Puants, La Baye des (Green Bay), 31, 42. + + +Quapaws, the, 300. + +Quebec, 15; + the Jesuits masters at, 108, 311, 460, 462, 482. + +Queenstown Heights, 138. + +Queylus, Superior of the Seminary of St. Sulpice, 11, 16. + +Quinipissas, the, 305; + attack La Salle, 310. + +Quinté, + Jesuit Mission at, 16. + +Quinté, Bay of, 87, 142, 200. + + +Radisson, Pierre Esprit, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + +Raffeix, Father Pierre, the Jesuit, + manuscript map of, 75; + among the Senecas, 141, 276, 481. + +Raoul, 126. + +Rasle, 170. + +Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, 92, 167, 481. + +Raymbault,----, + preaches among the Indians, 5. + +Récollet Missions, + Le Clerc's account of, 246. + +Récollets, the, + La Salle not well inclined towards, 108; + protected by Frontenac, 109; + comparison between the Sulpitians and the Jesuits and, 112, 218. + +Red River, 305, 347, 348, 451, 465, 466, 471, 484. + +Renaudot, Abbé, + memoir of La Salle, 106, 107; + assists La Salle, 127, 133, 339, 360, 361. + +Renault, Étienne, 223, 237. + +Rhode Island, State of, 288. + +Ribourde, Gabriel, + at Fort Frontenac, 132, 137; + at Niagara, 150; + at Fort Crèvecoeur, 185, 187, 192, 216, 224, 229; + murder of, 233. + +Riggs, Rev. Stephen R., + divisions of the Sioux, 261. + +Rio Bravo, + French colony proposed at the mouth of, 350. + +Rio Frio, the, 469. + +Rio Grande River, the, 309, 376, 403, 465, 469. + +Rios, Domingo Teran de los, 471. + +Robertson, 103. + +Rochefort, 352, 366, 393. + +Rochelle, 129, 364, 393, 462. + +"Rocher, Le," 314; + Charlevoix speaks of, 314. + +Rochester, 140. + +Rocky Mountains, the, 260, 308, 309. + +Rouen, 7. + +Royale, Isle, 38. + +"Ruined Castles," the, 68, 457. + +Rum River, 265. + +Ruter, 445, 446, 447, 448; + murders Liotot, 449, 470, 472. + + +Sabine River, the, 415, 451, 465. + +Saco Indians, the, 227. + +Sacs, the, + location of, 43; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Sâgean, Mathieu, + the Eldorado of, 485-489; + sketch of, 486; + +Saget, + La Salle's servant, 425; + murder of, 426. + +Saguenay River, the, 76; + Albanel's journey up, 109. + +St. Anthony, city of, 267. + +St. Anthony, the falls of, 267; + Hennepin's notice of, 267, 478, 482. + +St. Antoine Cape, 372. + +St. Bernard's Bay, 394, 469. + +St. Clair, Lake, 476. + +St. Claire, Lake, 152. + +St. Croix River, the, 277. + +St. Domingo, 347, 350, 367, 370, 393, 418, 468. + +St. Esprit, Bay of (Mobile Bay), 129, 386, 389, 481. + +St. Esprit, + Jesuit mission of, 40; + Indians at, 40. + +St. Francis, Order of, 133. + +St. Francis River, the, 265. + +"St. François," the ketch, 368; + loss of, 369. + +St. François Xavier, + council of congregated tribes held at, 43. + +St. Ignace, Point, 41, 59; + Jesuit chapel at, 82. + +St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 81; + La Salle reaches, 153; + inhabitants of, 153. + +"St. Joseph," the ship, 330. + +St. Joseph, Lac (Lake Michigan), 155. + +St. Joseph River, the, 44, 162, 163; + La Salle on, 164, 203; + La Forest on, 236, 283, 288. + +Saint-Laurent, Marquis de, 367, 368. + +St. Lawrence River, the, 3, 12, 13, 15, 34, 63, 89, 122, 197, 198, + 219, 475, 480, 481, 483, 489. + +St. Louis, city of, 70. + +St. Louis, Bay of (Matagorda Bay), 376, 379, 394, 466, 468, 469, 471. + +St. Louis, Castle of, 87. + +St. Louis, Fort, of the Illinois, 241; + location of, 314; + La Salle's Indian allies gather at, 315; + location of, 316; + total number of Indians around, 317; + the Indians protected at, 320; + La Barre takes possession of, 327; + attacked by the Iroquois, 327, 347; + restored to La Salle by the King, 351; + Tonty returns to, 454; + Joutel at, 457; + condition of, 458; + Joutel's return to, 460; + Tonty leaves, 465; + reoccupied by the French, 468, 486. + +St. Louis, Fort, of Texas, 394, 395; + life at, 397; + La Salle returns to, 411, 415; + Twelfth Night at, 417; + Duhaut resolves to return to, 446; + abandoned by Louis XIV., 463; + the Spaniards at, 469; + desolation of, 469. + +St. Louis, Lake of, 13, 14, 19. + +St. Louis, Rock of, see "_Starved Rock_." + +St. Louis River, the, 307, 484. + +Saint-Lusson, Daumont de, + sent out by Talon to discover copper mines on Lake Superior, 49; + winters at the Manitoulin Islands, 50; + received by the Miamis, 50; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + takes possession of the West for France, 52; + proceeds to Lake Superior, 56; + returns to Quebec, 56. + +St. Malo, 5. + +St. Paul, site of, 257. + +St. Peter, the Valley of the, + unprovoked massacre by the Sioux + in, 254, 260. + +St. Peter River, the, 486. + +Saint-Simon, 343. + +St. Simon, mission of, 41, 42. + +St. Sulpice, Seminary of, 10; + buys back a part of La Salle's seigniory, 16; + plan an expedition of discovery, 16. + +Ste. Barbe, mines of, 348. + +Sainte Claire, 152. + +Sainte-Famille, the, association of, + a sort of female inquisition, 111; + founded by Chaumonot, 111; + encouraged by Laval, 111. + +Ste. Marie, Falls of, 155. + +Ste. Marie du Saut, + the Sulpitians arrive at, 27; + Jesuit mission at, 39; + a noted fishing-place, 39; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52. + +San Antonio, the, 469. + +Sanson, map of, 139. + +Santa Barbara, 348. + +Sargent, Winthrop, 182. + +Sassory tribe, the, 423. + +Sauteurs, the, 39; + the village of, 51. + +Sauthouis, the, 300. + +Saut Ste. Marie, the, 27; + a noted fishing-place, 42; + gathering of the tribes at, 51, 475. + +Sauvolle, 489. + +Schenectady, 483. + +Schoolcraft, the Falls of St. Anthony, 267. + +Scioto River, the, 32. + +Scortas, the Huron, 238. + +Seignelay, Marquis de, + memorials presented to, 35, 120, 274, 342; + La Barre defames La Salle to, 322, 344; + object of La Salle's mission, 352; + letters of Beaujeu to, 354-356; + complaints of Beaujeu, 370; + complaint of Minet, 378; + receives Beaujeu coldly, 389; + Jesuit petitions to, 459; + Cavelier's report to, 462, 463. + +Seignelay River (Red River), the, 167, 347, 348, 484. + +Seneca Indians, the, 14, 19, 20; + villages of, 21; + their hospitality to La Salle, 21; + cruelty of, 22, 29, 91; + Pierron among, 115; + village of, 138; + jealous of La Motte, 140; + La Motte seeks to conciliate, 140, 141; + pacified by La Salle, 142; + the great town of, 279; + Denonville's attack on, 460. + +Seneff, + bloody fight of, 134. + +Severn River, the, 203. + +Sévigné, 343. + +Sévigné, Madame de, letters of, 179. + +Shawanoes, the, 23, 225, 285, 307; + join La Salle's colony, 316, 320. + +Shea, J. G., + first to discover the history of Joliet, 58; + the journal of Marquette, 75; + death of Marquette, 81, 82, 115; + the "Racines Agnières" of Bruyas, 136; + the veracity of Hennepin, 244; + critical examination of Hennepin's works, 247; + Tonty and La Barre, 454; + story of Mathieu Sâgean, 486. + +Silhouette, the minister, 34. + +Simcoe, Lake, 203, 293. + +Simon, St., memoirs of, 167. + +Simonnet, 126. + +Sioux Indians, the, 6; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + break into open war, 41; + the Jesuits trade with, 110, 182, 207, 228; + capture Father Hennepin, 245, 250; + suspect Father Hennepin of sorcery, 253; + unprovoked massacres in the valley of the St. Peter, 254; + Hennepin among, 259-282; + divisions of, 260; + meaning of the word, 260; + total number of, 261; + use of the sweating-bath among, 263; + Du Lhut among, 276, 307, 480. + +Sipou (Ohio) River, the, 307. + +"Sleeping Bear," the, promontory of, 81. + +Smith, Buckingham, 471. + +Society of Jesus, the, + a powerful attraction for La Salle, 8; + an image of regulated power, 8. + +Sokokis Indians, the, 227. + +Soto, De, Hernando, see, _De Soto, Hernando_. + +South Bend, village of, 164. + +Southey, the poet, 182. + +South Sea, the, 6, 14, 38, 46, 52, 63, 70. + +Spain, + war declared against, 464; + claims the Gulf of Mexico, 468. + +Spaniards, the, + discover the Mississippi, 3; + Talon's plans to keep them in check, 48; + Louis XIV. irritated against, 344; + in Mexico, 349; + at Fort St. Louis of Texas, 469. + +Spanish Inquisition, the, 350. + +Spanish missions, the, 414, 471. + +Sparks, + exposes the plagiarism of Hennepin, 247, 468. + +"Starved Rock," 169; + attracts the attention of La Salle, 192; + Tonty sent to examine, 192, 205, 217, 221, 239; + description of, 313; + La Salle and Tonty intrench themselves at, 313; + described by Charlevoix, 314; + origin of the name, 314. + +"Sturgeon Cove," 77. + +Sulpice, St., 9. + +Sulpitians, the, + plan an expedition of discovery, 16; + join forces with La Salle, 17; + set out from La Chine, 19; + journey of, 19, 20; + meeting with Joliet, 23; + determine to visit the Pottawattamies, 24; + La Salle parts with, 25; + spends the winter at Long Point, 25; + resume their voyage, 26; + the storm, 26; + decide to return to Montreal, 26; + pass through the Strait of Detroit, 26; + arrive at Ste. Marie du Saut, 27; + the Jesuits want no help from, 27; + comparison between the Récollets and, 112. + +Superior, Lake, 5; + Ménard attempts to plant a mission on southern shore of, 6; + Allouez explores a part of, 6; + Joliet attempts to discover the copper mines of, 23, 27; + the Jesuits on, 37; + the Jesuits make a map of, 38; + Saint-Lusson sets out to find the copper mines of, 49; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52, 273, 276, 475; + map of, 476, 477, 479, 481. + +Susquehanna River, the, 483. + +Sweating-baths, Indian, 262. + + +Table Rock, 139. + +Tadoussac, 59. + +Taensas, the, great town of, 301; + visited by Membrè and Tonty, 301; + differ from other Indians, 304. + +Tahuglauk, the, 486. + +Taiaiagon, Indian town of, 138. + +Tailhan, Father, 35, 49. + +Talon, 15. + +Talon, + among the Texan colonists, 471. + +Talon, Jean, Intendant of Canada, + sends Joliet to discover the copper + mines of Lake Superior, 23; + claims to have sent La Salle to explore, 31; + full of projects for the colony, 48; + his singular economy of the King's purse, 48; + sends Saint-Lusson to discover copper mines on Lake Superior, 49; + resolves to find the Mississippi, 56; + makes choice of Joliet, 56; + quarrels with Courcelle, 56; + returns to France, 57, 60, 109. + +Talon, Jean Baptiste, 472. + +Talon, Pierre, 472. + +Tamaroas, the, 223, 235, 286, 297. + +Tangibao, the, 305. + +Tears, the Lake of, 256. + +Tegahkouita, Catharine, the Iroquois saint, 275, 276. + +"Teiocha-rontiong, Lac" (Lake Erie), 476. + +Teissier, a pilot, 407, 421, 425, 451, 458. + +Tejas (Texas), 470. + +Terliquiquimechi, the, 348. + +Tetons, the, 260. + +Texan colony, the, fate of, 464-473. + +Texan expedition, La Salle's, 391-419, 434. + +Texan Indians, the, 470. + +Texas, + fertile plains of, 308; + French in, 348; + shores of, 374; + La Salle lands in, 379; + application of the name, 470, 483. + +Theakiki, the, 167. + +Thevenot, + on the journal of Marquette, 75; + map made by, 478. + +Third Chickasaw Bluffs, the, 297. + +Thomassy, 115, 175, 296, 298, 302, 308. + +Thouret, 201, 238, 333, 342. + +Thousand Islands, the, 89. + +Three Rivers, 3, 86, 90. + +Thunder Bay, 275. + +Tilly, Sieur de, 99. + +"Tintons," the, 481. + +Tintonwans, the, 260. + +Tongengas, the, 300. + +Tonty, Alphonse de, 467. + +Tonty, Henri de, 127; + renders assistance to La Salle, 128; + in Canada, 129; + La Motte at Niagara, 140; + sets out to join La Motte, 141; + almost wrecked, 142; + at the Niagara Portage, 144-147; + the building of the "Griffin," 144-148; + the launch, 149; 154, 155; + rejoins La Salle, 162; + among the Illinois, 172; + the attempt to poison La Salle, 179; + Hennepin sent to the Mississippi, 187; + La Salle's parting with, 188; + sent to examine "Starved Rock," 192; 194; + deserted by his men, 199, 217; + the journey from Fort Crèvecoeur, 201; + La Salle's best hope in, 202; + La Salle sets out to succor, 203; + La Salle has fears for the safety of, 209; + sets out to examine "Starved Rock," 217; + in the Illinois village, 223; + attacked by the Iroquois, 225; + intercedes for the Illinois, 228; + peril of, 229; + a truce granted to, 229; + departs from the Iroquois, 233; + falls ill, 236; + friends in need, 237; + La Salle hears good news of, 287; + meeting with La Salle, 292; + sets out from Fort Miami, 296; + among the Arkansas Indians, 300; + visits the Taensas, 301; + illness of La Salle, 310; + sent to Michilimackinac, 311; + intrenches himself at "Starved Rock," 313; + left in charge of Fort St. Louis, 326, 334, 337; + attempts to attack the Spaniards of Mexico, 349, 355, 361, 421, 425; + the assassination of La Salle, 430, 433; + the murder of Duhaut, 448; + among the Assonis, 452; + plans to assist La Salle, 453-455; + his journey, seeking news of La Salle, 454, 455, 458; + in the Iroquois War, 460; + Cavelier conceals La Salle's death from, 461; + learns of La Salle's death, 464; + revives La Salle's scheme of Mexican invasion, 465; + sets out from Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 465; + deserted by his men, 465; + courage of, 465; + difficulties and hardships, 466; + attacked by fever, 467; + misrepresented, 467; + praises of, 467; + joins Iberville in Lower Louisiana, 467, 486. + +Topingas, the, 300. + +Torimans, the, 300. + +Toronto, 27, 138. + +Toronto Portage, the, 293. + +Toulon, 463. + +"Tracy, Lac" (Lake Superior), 476. + +Trinity River, the, 413, 424, 434, 439, 465. + +Tronson, Abbé, 344, 463. + +"Tsiketo, Lac" (Lake St. Clair), 220. + +Turenne, 17. + +Two Mountains, Lake of, 82. + + +Upper Lakes, the, see _Lakes, Upper_. + +Ursulines, the, 95. + +Utica, village of, 79, 169, 170, 220, 239. + + +Vaudreuil, 276. + +Vera Cruz, 468, 472. + +Vermilion River, the, 221, 225, 226. + See also _Big Vermilion River, the_. + +"Vermilion Sea" (Gulf of California), the, 15, 38, 74, 480. + +"Vermilion Woods," the, 241. + +Verreau, H., 98. + +Vicksburg, 300. + +Victor, town of, 21, 140. + +"Vieux, Fort Le," 314. + +Villermont, Cabart de, + letters of Beaujeu to, 357-360; + letter of Tonty to, 454. + +Virginia, 288, 346, 483. + +"Virginia, Sea of," 6, 74. + +Voltaire, 7. + + +Watteau, Melithon, 150. + +Weas, the, join La Salle's colony, 316. + +West Indies, the, 181, 404, 446, 489. + +Wild Rice Indians (Menomonies), the, 61. + +William, Fort, 275. + +William III. of England, 282. + +Winnebago Lake, 43, 44, 62. + +Winnebagoes, the, + Jean Nicollet sent to, 4; + quarrel with the Hurons, 4; + location of, 42; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Winona, legend of, 271. + +Winthrop, 213. + +Wisconsin, shores of, 157. + +Wisconsin River, the, 5, 63, 245, 265, 266, 272, 278, 477, 478, 480. + +Wood, Colonel, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + + +Yanktons, the, 260. + +Yoakum, 470. + +You, 210. + +Zenobe (Membré), Father, 181. + +[Illustration] + + + + +FRANCIS PARKMAN'S WORKS. + +NEW LIBRARY EDITION. + + +Printed from entirely new plates, in clear and beautiful type, +upon a choice laid paper. Illustrated with twenty-six photogravure +plates executed by Goupil from historical portraits, and +from original drawings and paintings by Howard Pyle, De Cost +Smith, Thule de Thulstrup, Frederic Remington, Orson Lowell, +Adrien Moreau, and other artists. + +_Thirteen volumes, medium octavo, cloth, gilt top, price, $26.00; +half calf, extra, gilt top, $58.50; half crushed Levant morocco, +extra, gilt top, $78.00; half morocco, gilt top, $58.50. Any +work separately in cloth, $2.00 per volume._ + + + LIST OF VOLUMES. + + PIONEERS OF FRANCE IN THE NEW WORLD 1 vol. + THE JESUITS IN NORTH AMERICA 1 vol. + LA SALLE AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST 1 vol. + THE OLD RÉGIME IN CANADA 1 vol. + COUNT FRONTENAC AND NEW FRANCE UNDER LOUIS XIV. 1 vol. + A HALF CENTURY OF CONFLICT 2 vols. + MONTCALM AND WOLFE 2 vols. + THE CONSPIRACY OF PONTIAC AND THE INDIAN WAR AFTER + THE CONQUEST OF CANADA 2 vols. + THE OREGON TRAIL 1 vol. + LIFE OF PARKMAN. By Charles Haight Farnham 1 vol. + + +ILLUSTRATIONS. + +1. Portrait of Francis Parkman. + +2. Jacques Cartier. From the painting at St. Malo. + +3. Madame de la Peltrie. From the painting in the Convent des +Ursulines. + +4. Father Jogues Haranguing the Mohawks. From the picture +by Thule de Thulstrup. + +5. Father Hennepin Celebrating Mass. From the picture by Howard +Pyle. + +6. La Salle Presenting a Petition to Louis XIV. From the painting +by Adrien Moreau. + +7. Jean Baptiste Colbert. From a painting by Claude Lefèvbre at +Versailles. + +8. Jean Guyon before Bouillé. From a picture by Orson Lowell. + +9. Madame de Frontenac. From the painting at Versailles. + +10. Entry of Sir William Phips into the Quebec Basin. From +a picture by L. Rossi. + +11. The Sacs and Foxes. From the picture by Charles Bodmer. + +12. The Return from Deerfield. From the painting by Howard Pyle. + +13. Sir William Pepperrell. From the painting by Smibert. + +14. Marquis de Beauharnois, Governor of Canada. From the +painting by Tonnières in the Musée de Grenoble. + +15. Marquis de Montcalm. From the original painting in the possession +of the present Marquis de Montcalm. + +16. Marquis de Vaudreuil. From the painting in the possession of the +Countess de Clermont Tonnerre. + +17. General Wolfe. From the original painting by Highmore. + +18. The Fall of Montcalm. From the painting by Howard Pyle. + +19. View of the Taking of Quebec. From the early engraving of a +drawing made on the spot by Captain Hervey Smyth, Wolfe's aid-de-camp. + +20. Col. Henry Bouquet. From the original painting by Benjamin West. + +21. The Death of Pontiac. From the picture by De Cost Smith. + +22. Sir William Johnson. From a Mezzotint engraving. + +23. Half Sliding, Half Plunging. From a drawing by Frederic +Remington. + +24. The Thunder Fighters. From the picture by Frederic Remington. + +25. Francis Parkman. From a miniature taken about 1844. + +26. Francis Parkman. From a photograph taken in 1882. + +It is hardly necessary to quote here from the innumerable tributes to so +famous an American author as Francis Parkman. Among writers who +have bestowed the highest praise upon his writings are such names as James +Russell Lowell, Dr. John Fisk, President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard +University, George William Curtis, Edward Eggleston, W. D. Howells, +James Schouler, and Dr. Conan Doyle, as well as many prominent critics in +the United States, in Canada, and in England. + +In two respects Francis Parkman was exceptionally fortunate. He chose +a theme of the closest interest to his countrymen,--the colonization of the +American Continent and the wars for its possession,--and he lived through +fifty years of toil to complete his great historical series. + +The text of the New Library Edition is that of the latest issue of each +work prepared for the press by the distinguished author. He carefully +revised and added to several of his works, not through change of views, +but in the light of new documentary evidence which his patient research +and untiring zeal extracted from the hidden archives of the past. Thus he +rewrote and enlarged "The Conspiracy of Pontiac"; the new edition of +"La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West" (1878), and the 1885 +edition of "Pioneers of France" included very important additions; and a +short time before his death he added to "The Old Régime" fifty pages, +under the title of "The Feudal Chiefs of Acadia." The New Library Edition +therefore includes each work in its final state as perfected by the +historian. The indexes have been entirely remade. + + LITTLE, BROWN, & CO., Publishers, + 254 Washington Street. Boston. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of La Salle and the Discovery of the +Great West, by Francis Parkman + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LA SALLE *** + +***** This file should be named 40143-8.txt or 40143-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/1/4/40143/ + +Produced by Sharon Joiner, Christian Boissonnas, Charles +Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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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: La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West + France and England in North America + +Author: Francis Parkman + +Release Date: July 4, 2012 [EBook #40143] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LA SALLE *** + + + + +Produced by Sharon Joiner, Christian Boissonnas, Charles +Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + +<div class="transnote"> +<h3><a name="Transcribers_Note" id="Transcribers_Note"></a>Transcriber's + Note:</h3> +<p>Obvious punctuation and spelling errors repaired. Original spelling and + its variations were not harmonized.</p> +<p>Footnotes were moved to the ends of the chapters in which they +belonged and numbered in one continuous sequence. The pagination in index entries which referred to these footnotes was not changed to match their new locations and is therefore incorrect. </p> +</div> +<p class="center"> </p> +<p class="center font1">Francis Parkman's Works.</p> +<p> </p> +<p class="center font1">NEW LIBRARY EDITION.</p> +<p class="font2">Vol. III.</p> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<table width="75%" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary="Parkman's Works"> + <tr> + <td><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" summary="Works Headings"> + <tr> + <td><a name="FRANCIS_PARKMANS_WORKS_1" id="FRANCIS_PARKMANS_WORKS_1"></a> + <p class="font2">FRANCIS PARKMAN'S WORKS.</p></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="center">New Library Edition.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td><table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Works List"> + <tr> + <td style="width:85%"></td> + <td style="width:15%"></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">Pioneers of France in the New World </td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">The Jesuits in North America</td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">La Salle and the Discovery of the + Great West</td> + <td class="c1">1 vol. </td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">The Old Régime in Canada</td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">Count Frontenac and New France under + Louis XIV</td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">A Half Century of Conflict</td> + <td class="c1">2 vols.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">Montcalm and Wolfe</td> + <td class="c1">2 vols.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">The Conspiracy of Pontiac and the + Indian War after the Conquest of Canada </td> + <td class="c1">2 vols.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1">The Oregon Trail</td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + </table></td> + </tr> + </table></td> + </tr> +</table> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<div class="figcenter bord"><a name="frontis.jpg" id="frontis.jpg"></a> + <img src="images/frontis.jpg" alt="Frontispiece" /></div> + <div style="text-align:center"><i>Copyright, 1897, by Little, Brown & C<sup>o</sup></i> + <i>Goupil & C<sup>o</sup>., Paris</i><br /> +<i>La Salle Presenting a Petition to Louis XIV.</i><br /> +Drawn by Adrien Moreau.<br /> +La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, <i>Frontispiece</i></div> +<p> </p> + +<h1> +<big>LA SALLE</big><br /><br /> +<small>AND THE</small><br /><br /> +DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST.<br /> +FRANCE AND ENGLAND IN NORTH AMERICA.</h1> +<div class="center"> <span class="smcap">Part Third.</span></div> + +<p class="title">BY<br /> +<big>FRANCIS PARKMAN.</big></p> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> + +<div class="center">BOSTON:<br /> + LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.<br /> +1908</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> </p> +<div class="center"> + Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1869, by<br /> + <span class="smcap">Francis Parkman,</span><br /> + In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.<br /><br /> +</div> + +<div class="center"> + Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1879, by<br /> + <span class="smcap">Francis Parkman,</span><br /> + in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.<br /><br /> +</div> + +<div class="center"><i>Copyright, 1897,</i><br /> + <span class="smcap">By Little, Brown, and Company.</span><br /><br /> +</div> +<div class="center"><i>Copyright, 1897,</i><br /> + <span class="smcap">By Grace P. Coffin and Katharine S. Coolidge.</span><br /><br /> +</div> +<div class="center"><i>Copyright, 1907,</i><br /> + <span class="smcap">By Grace P. Coffin.</span> +</div> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<div class="center">Printers<br /> + <span class="smcap">S. J. Parkhill & Co., Boston, U. S. A.</span> +</div> + +<p> </p> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> </p><p> </p> +<div class="center">TO<br /> + THE CLASS OF 1844,<br /> + Harvard College,<br /> + THIS BOOK IS CORDIALLY DEDICATED<br /> + BY ONE OF THEIR NUMBER. +</div> + <p> </p><p> </p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii"> +[Pg vii]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="PREFACE_ELEVENTH_ED" id="PREFACE_ELEVENTH_ED"></a>PREFACE OF THE ELEVENTH EDITION.</h2> +<p>When the earlier editions of this book were published, I was aware of + the existence of a collection of documents relating to La Salle, and + containing important material to which I had not succeeded in gaining + access. This collection was in possession of M. Pierre Margry, director + of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies at Paris, and was the result + of more than thirty years of research. With rare assiduity and zeal, M. + Margry had explored not only the vast depository with which he has been + officially connected from youth, and of which he is now the chief, but + also the other public archives of France, and many private collections + in Paris and the provinces. The object of his search was to throw light + on the career and achievements of French explorers, and, above all, of + La Salle. A collection of extraordinary richness grew gradually upon his + hands. In the course of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" + id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>my own inquiries, I owed much to his + friendly aid; but his collections, as a whole, remained inaccessible, + since he naturally wished to be the first to make known the results of + his labors. An attempt to induce Congress to furnish him with the means + of printing documents so interesting to American history was made in + 1870 and 1871, by Henry Harrisse, Esq., aided by the American minister + at Paris; but it unfortunately failed.</p> + +<p>In the summer and autumn of 1872, I had numerous interviews with M. + Margry, and at his desire undertook to try to induce some American + bookseller to publish the collection. On returning to the United States, + I accordingly made an arrangement with Messrs. Little, Brown & Co., + of Boston, by which they agreed to print the papers if a certain number + of subscriptions should first be obtained. The condition proved very + difficult; and it became clear that the best hope of success lay in + another appeal to Congress. This was made in the following winter, in + conjunction with Hon. E. B. Washburne; Colonel Charles Whittlesey, of + Cleveland; O. H. Marshall, Esq., of Buffalo; and other gentlemen + interested in early American history. The attempt succeeded. Congress + made an appropriation <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" + id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span> for the purchase of five hundred copies of + the work, to be printed at Paris, under direction of M. Margry; and the + three volumes devoted to La Salle are at length before the public.</p> +<p>Of the papers contained in them which I had not before examined, the most + interesting are the letters of La Salle, found in the original by M. + Margry, among the immense accumulations of the Archives of the Marine + and Colonies and the Bibliothèque Nationale. The narrative of La + Salle's companion, Joutel, far more copious than the abstract printed in + 1713, under the title of "Journal Historique," also deserves special + mention. These, with other fresh material in these three volumes, while + they add new facts and throw new light on the character of La Salle, + confirm nearly every statement made in the first edition of the + Discovery of the Great West. The only exception of consequence relates + to the causes of La Salle's failure to find the mouth of the Mississippi + in 1684, and to the conduct, on that occasion, of the naval commander, + Beaujeu.</p> + +<p>This edition is revised throughout, and in part rewritten with large additions. + A map of the country traversed by the explorers is also added. The name + of La Salle is placed on the titlepage, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg + x]</a></span> as seems to be demanded by his increased prominence in + the narrative of which he is the central figure.</p> +<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, 10 December, 1878.</span> </p> +<p class="blockquot"> <span class="smcap">Note</span>.—The +title of M. Margry's printed collection is +Découvertes et Établissements +des Français dans l'Ouest et dans le +Sud de l'Amérique Septentrionale +(1614-1754), Mémoires et Documents +originaux." I., II., III. Besides the three +volumes relating to La +Salle, there will be two others, relating +to other explorers. In +accordance with the agreement with Congress, +an independent edition +will appear in France, with an introduction +setting forth the +circumstances of the publication.</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="PREFACE_OF_THE_FIRST_EDITION" id="PREFACE_OF_THE_FIRST_EDITION"></a>PREFACE + OF THE FIRST EDITION.</h2> +<p>The discovery of the "Great West," or the valleys of the Mississippi and + the Lakes, is a portion of our history hitherto very obscure. Those magnificent + regions were revealed to the world through a series of daring enterprises, + of which the motives and even the incidents have been but partially and + superficially known. The chief actor in them wrote much, but printed nothing; + and the published writings of his associates stand wofully in need of + interpretation from the unpublished documents which exist, but which have + not heretofore been used as material for history.</p> +<p>This volume attempts to supply the defect. Of the large amount of wholly + new material employed in it, by far the greater part is drawn from the + various public archives of France, and the rest from private sources. + The discovery of many of these documents is due to the indefatigable research + of M. Pierre Margry, assistant <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg + xii]</a></span> director of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies at + Paris, whose labors as an investigator of the maritime and colonial history + of France can be appreciated only by those who have seen their results. + In the department of American colonial history, these results have been + invaluable; for, besides several private collections made by him, he rendered + important service in the collection of the French portion of the Brodhead + documents, selected and arranged the two great series of colonial papers + ordered by the Canadian government, and prepared with vast labor analytical + indexes of these and of supplementary documents in the French archives, + as well as a copious index of the mass of papers relating to Louisiana. + It is to be hoped that the valuable publications on the maritime history + of France which have appeared from his pen are an earnest of more extended + contributions in future.</p> +<p>The late President Sparks, some time after the publication of his Life + of La Salle, caused a collection to be made of documents relating to that + explorer, with the intention of incorporating them in a future edition. + This intention was never carried into effect, and the documents were never + used. With the liberality which always distinguished him, he placed them + at my <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span> disposal, + and this privilege has been kindly continued by Mrs. Sparks.</p> +<p>Abbé Faillon, the learned author of "La Colonie Française + en Canada," has sent me copies of various documents found by him, including + family papers of La Salle. Among others who in various ways have aided + my inquiries are Dr. John Paul, of Ottawa, Ill.; Count Adolphe de Circourt, + and M. Jules Marcou, of Paris; M. A. Gérin Lajoie, Assistant Librarian + of the Canadian Parliament; M. J. M. Le Moine, of Quebec; General Dix, + Minister of the United States at the Court of France; O. H. Marshall, + of Buffalo; J. G. Shea, of New York; Buckingham Smith, of St. Augustine; + and Colonel Thomas Aspinwall, of Boston.</p> +<p>The smaller map contained in the book is a portion of the manuscript map + of Franquelin, of which an account will be found in the Appendix.</p> +<p>The next volume of the series will be devoted to the efforts of Monarchy + and Feudalism under Louis XIV. to establish a permanent power on this + continent, and to the stormy career of Louis de Buade, Count of Frontenac.</p> +<p><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, 16 September, 1869.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span></p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<h2>CONTENTS</h2> +<table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" summary="CONTENTS"> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4"></td> +<td class="c5"><span class="smcap">Page</span> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">INTRODUCTION</td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#Page_3" style="text-decoration: none;">3</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER I.<br />1643-1669. <br />CAVELIER DE LA SALLE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td> <div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Youth of La Salle: his Connection with the Jesuits; he goes to Canada; his Character; his Schemes; his Seigniory at La Chine; +his Expedition in Search of a Western Passage to India.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_I" style="text-decoration: none;">7</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER II.<br />1669-1671.<br />LA SALLE AND THE SULPITIANS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The French in Western New York.—Louis Joliet.—The Sulpitians on +Lake Erie; at Detroit; at Saut Ste. Marie.—The Mystery of La +Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he +reach the Mississippi?</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_II" style="text-decoration: none;">19</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER III.<br />1670-1672<br />THE JESUITS ON THE LAKE.<br /></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Old Missions and the New.—A Change of Spirit.—Lake Superior and +the Copper-mines.—Ste. Marie.—LaPointe.— Michilimackinac.— +Jesuits on Lake Michigan.—Allouez and Dablon.—The Jesuit Fur-trade.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_III" style="text-decoration: none;">36</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER IV. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span><br />1667-1672.<br />FRANCE TAKES POSSESSION OF THE WEST.<br /></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Talon.—Saint-Lusson.—Perrot.—The Ceremony at Saut Ste. Marie.—The Speech of Allouez.—Count Frontenac.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV" style="text-decoration: none;">48</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER V.<br />1672-1675.<br />THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Joliet sent to find the Mississippi.—Jacques Marquette.—Departure.— +Green Bay.—The Wisconsin.—The Mississippi.—Indians.—Manitous.— +The Arkansas.—The Illinois.—Joliet's Misfortune.—Marquette at Chicago: his +Illness; his Death.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_V" style="text-decoration: none;">57</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER VI.<br />1673-1678.<br />LA SALLE AND FRONTENAC.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Objects of La Salle.—Frontenac favors him.—Projects of Frontenac.—Cataraqui.—Frontenac on Lake Ontario.—Fort Frontenac.—La Salle and Fénelon.—Success of La Salle: his Enemies.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI" style="text-decoration: none;">83</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER VII.<br />1678.<br />PARTY STRIFE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">La Salle and his Reporter.—Jesuit Ascendency.—The Missions and the +Fur-trade.—Female Inquisitors.—Plots against La Salle: his Brother the +Priest.—Intrigues of the Jesuits.—La Salle poisoned: he exculpates the +Jesuits.—Renewed Intrigues.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII" style="text-decoration: none;">106</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER VIII. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span><br />1677, 1678.<br />THE GRAND ENTERPRISE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">La Salle at Fort Frontenac.—La Salle at Court: his Memorial.—Approval + of the King.—Money and Means.—Henri de Tonty.—Return to Canada.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII" style="text-decoration: none;">120</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER IX.<br />1678-1679.<br />LA SALLE AT NIAGARA.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Father Louis Hennepin: his Past Life; his Character.—Embarkation.— +Niagara Falls.—Indian Jealousy.—La Motte and the Senecas.— +A Disaster.—La Salle and his Followers.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX" style="text-decoration: none;">131</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER X.<br />1679.<br />THE LAUNCH OF THE "GRIFFIN."</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Niagara Portage.—A Vessel on the Stocks.—Suffering and +Discontent.—La Salle's Winter Journey.—The Vessel launched.— +Fresh Disasters.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_X" style="text-decoration: none;">144</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XI.<br />1679.<br />LA SALLE ON THE UPPER LAKES.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Voyage of the "Griffin."—Detroit.—A Storm.—St. Ignace of +Michilimackinac.—Rivals and Enemies.—Lake Michigan.— +Hardships.—A Threatened Fight.—Fort Miami.—Tonty's +Misfortunes.—Forebodings.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI" style="text-decoration: none;">151</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XII.<br />1679, 1680.<br />LA SALLE ON THE ILLINOIS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The St. Joseph.—Adventure of La Salle.—The Prairies.—Famine.— +The Great Town of the Illinois.—Indians.—Intrigues.— +Difficulties.—Policy of La Salle.—Desertion.—Another Attempt +to poison La Salle.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII" style="text-decoration: none;">164</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XIII. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span><br />1680.<br />FORT CRÈVECŒUR.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Building of the Fort.—Loss of the "Griffin."—A Bold +Resolution.—Another Vessel.—Hennepin sent to the +Mississippi.—Departure of La Salle.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII" style="text-decoration: none;">180</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XIV.<br />1680.<br />HARDIHOOD OF LA SALLE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Winter Journey.—The Deserted Town.—Starved Rock.—Lake +Michigan.—The Wilderness.—War Parties.—La Salle's Men give +out.—Ill Tidings.—Mutiny.—Chastisement of the Mutineers.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV" style="text-decoration: none;">189</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XV.<br />1680.<br />INDIAN CONQUERORS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Enterprise renewed.—Attempt to rescue Tonty.—Buffalo.—A +Frightful Discovery.—Iroquois Fury.—The Ruined Town.—A Night +of Horror.—Traces of the Invaders.—No News of Tonty.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV" style="text-decoration: none;">202</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XVI.<br />1680.<br />TONTY AND THE IROQUOIS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Deserters.—The Iroquois War.—The Great Town of the +Illinois.—The Alarm.—Onset of the Iroquois.—Peril of +Tonty.—A Treacherous Truce.—Intrepidity of Tonty.—Murder of +Ribourde.—War upon the Dead.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI" style="text-decoration: none;">216</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XVII.<br />1680.<br />THE ADVENTURES OF HENNEPIN.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Hennepin an Impostor: his Pretended Discovery; his Actual Discovery; captured by the Sioux.—The Upper Mississippi.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII" style="text-decoration: none;">242</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XVIII. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span><br />1680, 1681.<br />HENNEPIN AMONG THE SIOUX.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Signs of Danger.—Adoption.—Hennepin and his Indian +Relatives.—The Hunting Party.—The Sioux Camp.—Falls of St. +Anthony.—A Vagabond Friar: his Adventures on the +Mississippi.—Greysolon Du Lhut.—Return to Civilization.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII" style="text-decoration: none;">259</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XIX.<br />1681.<br />LA SALLE BEGINS ANEW.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">His Constancy; his Plans; his Savage Allies; he becomes +Snow-blind.—Negotiations.—Grand Council.—La Salle's +Oratory.—Meeting with Tonty.—Preparation.—Departure.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX" style="text-decoration: none;">283</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XX.<br />1681-1682.<br />SUCCESS OF LA SALLE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">His Followers.—The Chicago Portage.—Descent of the +Mississippi.—The Lost Hunter.—The Arkansas.—The +Taensas.—The Natchez.—Hostility.—The Mouth of the +Mississippi.—Louis XIV. proclaimed Sovereign of the Great West.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX" style="text-decoration: none;">295</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XXI.<br />1682, 1683.<br />ST. LOUIS OF THE ILLINOIS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Louisiana.—Illness of La Salle: his Colony on the Illinois.— Fort St. Louis.—Recall of Frontenac.—Le Febvre de +la Barre.—Critical Position of La Salle.—Hostility of the New +Governor.—Triumph of the Adverse Faction.—La Salle sails for France.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI" style="text-decoration: none;">309</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4"> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span>CHAPTER XXII. +<br />1680-1683.<br />LA SALLE PAINTED BY HIMSELF.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Difficulty of knowing him: +his Detractors; his Letters; vexations +of his Position; his Unfitness for Trade; risks of +Correspondence; his Reported Marriage; alleged Ostentation; +motives of Action; charges of Harshness; intrigues against him; +unpopular Manners; a Strange Confession; his Strength and his +Weakness; contrasts of his Character.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII" style="text-decoration: none;">328</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XXIII.<br />1684.<br />A NEW ENTERPRISE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">La Salle at Court: his Proposals.—Occupation of Louisiana.—Invasion of Mexico.—Royal Favor.— +Preparation.—A Divided Command.—Beaujeu and La Salle.—Mental +Condition of La Salle: his Farewell to his Mother.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII" style="text-decoration: none;">343</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XXIV.<br />1684, 1685.<br />THE VOYAGE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Disputes with Beaujeu.—St. Domingo.—La Salle attacked with Fever: his Desperate Condition.—The +Gulf of Mexico.—A Vain Search and a Fatal Error.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV" style="text-decoration: none;">366</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XXV.<br />1685.<br />LA SALLE IN TEXAS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">A Party of Exploration.—Wreck of the "Aimable."—Landing of Colonists.—A Forlorn Position.—Indian +Neighbors.—Friendly Advances of Beaujeu: his Departure.—A Fatal Discovery.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV" style="text-decoration: none;">378</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4"> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[Pg xxi]</a></span>CHAPTER XXVI. +<br />1685-1687.<br />ST. LOUIS OF TEXAS.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">The Fort.—Misery and Dejection.— +Energy of La Salle: his Journey of Exploration.—Adventures and Accidents.— +Buffalo.—Duhaut.—Indian Massacre.—Return of La Salle.—A New +Calamity.—A Desperate Resolution.—Departure for Canada.—Wreck +of the "Belle."—Marriage.—Sedition.—Adventures of La Salle's +Party.—The Cenis.—The Camanches.—The Only Hope.—The Last +Farewell.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI" style="text-decoration: none;">391</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XXVII.<br />1687.<br />ASSASSINATION OF LA SALLE.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">His Followers.—Prairie +Travelling.—A Hunters' Quarrel.—The + Murder of Moranget.—The Conspiracy.—Death of La Salle: his Character.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII" style="text-decoration: none;">420</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XXVIII.<br />1687, 1688.<br />THE INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Triumph of the Murderers.—Danger of +Joutel.—Joutel among the Cenis.—White Savages.— +Insolence of Duhaut and his Accomplices.—Murder of Duhaut and Liotot.—Hiens, the +Buccaneer.—Joutel and his Party: their Escape; they reach the Arkansas.—Bravery and + Devotion of Tonty.—The Fugitives reach +the Illinois.—Unworthy Conduct of Cavelier.—He and his +Companions return to France.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII" style="text-decoration: none;">435</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">CHAPTER XXIX.<br />1688-1689.<br />FATE OF THE TEXAN COLONY.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">Tonty attempts to rescue the Colonists: his +Difficulties and Hardships.—Spanish Hostility.—Expedition of Alonzo de Leon: +he reaches Fort St. Louis.—A Scene of Havoc.—Destruction of +the French.—The End.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX" style="text-decoration: none;">464</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4"> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">[Pg xxii]</a></span>APPENDIX.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">I. Early Unpublished Maps of the Mississippi +and the Great Lakes.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#APPENDIX_I" style="text-decoration: none;">475</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td><div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;">II. The Eldorado of Mathieu Sâgean.</div></td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#APPENDIX_II" style="text-decoration: none;">485</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="c3"> </td> +<td class="c4">INDEX.</td> +<td class="c5"><a href="#INDEX" style="text-decoration: none;">493</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> </td> +</tr> +</table> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p class="center font1">LA SALLE</p> <p class="center">AND THE</p> <p class="center font1">DISCOVERY + OF THE GREAT WEST.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<div class="figcenter bord"><a name="map_029.png" id="map_029.png"></a> + <img src="images/map_029.png" alt="map_1" /></div> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<h2><a name="LA_SALLE" id="LA_SALLE"></a>LA SALLE</h2> +<p class="center">AND THE</p> +<h2>DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST.</h2> + +<hr style="width: 25%;" /> + +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p> +<h3>INTRODUCTION</h3> +<p>The Spaniards discovered the Mississippi. De Soto was buried beneath its + waters; and it was down its muddy current that his followers fled from + the Eldorado of their dreams, transformed to a wilderness of misery and + death. The discovery was never used, and was well-nigh forgotten. On early + Spanish maps, the Mississippi is often indistinguishable from other affluents + of the Gulf. A century passed after De Soto's journeyings in the South, + before a French explorer reached a northern tributary of the great river.</p> +<p>This was Jean Nicollet, interpreter at Three Rivers on the St. Lawrence. + He had been some twenty years in Canada, had lived among the savage Algonquins + of Allumette Island, and spent eight or nine years among the Nipissings, + on the lake which bears their name. Here he became an Indian in all <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg + 4]</a></span> his habits, but remained, nevertheless, a zealous Catholic, + and returned to civilization at last because he could not live without + the sacraments. Strange stories were current among the Nipissings of a + people without hair or beard, who came from the West to trade with a tribe + beyond the Great Lakes. Who could doubt that these strangers were Chinese + or Japanese? Such tales may well have excited Nicollet's curiosity; and + when, in 1635, or possibly in 1638, he was sent as an ambassador to the + tribe in question, he would not have been surprised if on arriving he + had found a party of mandarins among them. Perhaps it was with a view + to such a contingency that he provided himself, as a dress of ceremony, + with a robe of Chinese damask embroidered with birds and flowers. The + tribe to which he was sent was that of the Winnebagoes, living near the + head of the Green Bay of Lake Michigan. They had come to blows with the + Hurons, allies of the French; and Nicollet was charged to negotiate a + peace. When he approached the Winnebago town, he sent one of his Indian + attendants to announce his coming, put on his robe of damask, and advanced + to meet the expectant crowd with a pistol in each hand. The squaws and + children fled, screaming that it was a manito, or spirit, armed with thunder + and lightning; but the chiefs and warriors regaled him with so bountiful + a hospitality that a hundred and twenty beavers were devoured at a single + feast. From the Winnebagoes, he passed westward, ascended Fox <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg + 5]</a></span> River, crossed to the Wisconsin, and descended it so far + that, as he reported on his return, in three days more he would have reached + the sea. The truth seems to be that he mistook the meaning of his Indian + guides, and that the "great water" to which he was so near was not the + sea, but the Mississippi.</p> + +<p>It has been affirmed that one Colonel Wood, of Virginia, reached a branch + of the Mississippi as early as the year 1654, and that about 1670 a certain + Captain Bolton penetrated to the river itself. Neither statement is sustained + by sufficient evidence. It is further affirmed that, in 1678, a party + from New England crossed the Mississippi, reached New Mexico, and, returning, + reported their discoveries to the authorities of Boston,—a story + without proof or probability. Meanwhile, French Jesuits and fur-traders + pushed deeper and deeper into the wilderness of the northern lakes. In + 1641, Jogues and Raymbault preached the Faith to a concourse of Indians + at the outlet of Lake Superior. Then came the havoc and desolation of + the Iroquois war, and for years farther exploration was arrested. In 1658-59 + Pierre Esprit Radisson, a Frenchman of St. Malo, and his brother-in-law, + Médard Chouart des Groseilliers, penetrated the regions beyond + Lake Superior, and roamed westward till, as Radisson declares, they reached + what was called the Forked River, "because it has two branches, the one + towards the west, the other towards the south, which, we believe, runs + towards Mexico,"—which seems to point to the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg + 6]</a></span> Mississippi and its great confluent the Missouri. Two years + later, the aged Jesuit Ménard attempted to plant a mission on the + southern shore of Lake Superior, but perished in the forest by famine + or the tomahawk. Allouez succeeded him, explored a part of Lake Superior, + and heard, in his turn, of the Sioux and their great river the "Messipi." More + and more, the thoughts of the Jesuits—and not of the Jesuits alone—dwelt + on this mysterious stream. Through what regions did it flow; and whither + would it lead them,—to the South Sea or the "Sea of Virginia;" to + Mexico, Japan, or China? The problem was soon to be solved, and the mystery + revealed.</p> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg + 7]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2> +<p class="center">1643-1669.</p> +<p class="center">CAVELIER DE LA SALLE.</p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em;text-indent:-1.5em;"> +<span class="smcap">The Youth of La Salle: +his Connection with the Jesuits; he goes to Canada; his Character; his Schemes; his +Seigniory at La Chine; his Expedition in Search of a Western +Passage to India.</span></div> +<p><span class="smcap">Among</span> the burghers of Rouen was the old and rich family of the Caveliers. + Though citizens and not nobles, some of their connections held high diplomatic + posts and honorable employments at Court. They were destined to find a + better claim to distinction. In 1643 was born at Rouen Robert Cavelier, + better known by the designation of La Salle.<a name="fnanchor_1" id="fnanchor_1"></a><a href="#footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> His father Jean and his + uncle Henri were wealthy merchants, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg + 8]</a></span> living more like nobles than like burghers; and the boy + received an education answering to the marked traits of intellect and + character which he soon began to display. He showed an inclination for + the exact sciences, and especially for the mathematics, in which he made + great proficiency. At an early age, it is said, he became connected with + the Jesuits; and, though doubt has been expressed of the statement, it + is probably true.<a name="fnanchor_2" id="fnanchor_2"></a><a href="#footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> </p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE AND THE JESUITS.</div> +<p>La Salle was always an earnest Catholic; and yet, judging by the qualities + which his after-life evinced, he was not very liable to religious enthusiasm. + It is nevertheless clear that the Society of Jesus may have had a powerful + attraction for his youthful imagination. This great organization, so complicated + yet so harmonious, a mighty machine moved from the centre by a single + hand, was an image of regulated power, full of fascination for a mind + like his. But if it was likely that he would be drawn into it, it was + no less likely that he would soon wish to escape. To find <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg + 9]</a></span> himself not at the centre of power, but at the circumference; + not the mover, but the moved; the passive instrument of another's will, + taught to walk in prescribed paths, to renounce his individuality and + become a component atom of a vast whole,—would have been intolerable + to him. Nature had shaped him for other uses than to teach a class of + boys on the benches of a Jesuit school. Nor, on his part, was he likely + to please his directors; for, self-controlled and self-contained as he + was, he was far too intractable a subject to serve their turn. A youth + whose calm exterior hid an inexhaustible fund of pride; whose inflexible + purposes, nursed in secret, the confessional and the "manifestation of + conscience" could hardly drag to the light; whose strong personality would + not yield to the shaping hand; and who, by a necessity of his nature, + could obey no initiative but his own,—was not after the model that + Loyola had commended to his followers.</p> +<p>La Salle left the Jesuits, parting with them, it is said, on good terms, + and with a reputation of excellent acquirements and unimpeachable morals. + This last is very credible. The cravings of a deep ambition, the hunger + of an insatiable intellect, the intense longing for action and achievement, + subdued in him all other passions; and in his faults the love of pleasure + had no part. He had an elder brother in Canada, the Abbé Jean Cavelier, + a priest of St. Sulpice. Apparently, it was this that shaped his destinies. + His connection with the Jesuits had deprived him, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg + 10]</a></span> under the French law, of the inheritance of his father, + who had died not long before. An allowance was made to him of three or + (as is elsewhere stated) four hundred livres a year, the capital of which + was paid over to him; and with this pittance he sailed for Canada, to + seek his fortune, in the spring of 1666.<a name="fnanchor_3" id="fnanchor_3"></a><a href="#footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE AT MONTREAL.</div> +<p>Next, we find him at Montreal. In another volume, we have seen how an + association of enthusiastic devotees had made a settlement at this place.<a name="fnanchor_4" id="fnanchor_4"></a><a href="#footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> + Having in some measure accomplished its work, it was now dissolved; and + the corporation of priests, styled the Seminary of St. Sulpice, which + had taken a prominent part in the enterprise, and, indeed, had been created + with a view to it, was now the proprietor and the feudal lord of Montreal. + It was destined to retain its seignorial rights until the abolition of + the feudal tenures of Canada in our own day, and it still holds vast possessions + in the city and island. These worthy ecclesiastics, models of a discreet + and sober conservatism, were holding a post with which a band of veteran + soldiers or warlike frontiersmen would have been better matched. Montreal + was perhaps the most dangerous place in Canada. In time <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg + 11]</a></span> of war, which might have been called the normal condition + of the colony, it was exposed by its position to incessant inroads of + the Iroquois, or Five Nations, of New York; and no man could venture into + the forests or the fields without bearing his life in his hand. The savage + confederates had just received a sharp chastisement at the hands of Courcelle, + the governor; and the result was a treaty of peace which might at any + moment be broken, but which was an inexpressible relief while it lasted.</p> +<p>The priests of St. Sulpice were granting out their lands, on very easy + terms, to settlers. They wished to extend a thin line of settlements along + the front of their island, to form a sort of outpost, from which an alarm + could be given on any descent of the Iroquois. La Salle was the man for + such a purpose. Had the priests understood him,—which they evidently + did not, for some of them suspected him of levity, the last foible with + which he could be charged,—had they understood him, they would have + seen in him a young man in whom the fire of youth glowed not the less + ardently for the veil of reserve that covered it; who would shrink from + no danger, but would not court it in bravado; and who would cling with + an invincible tenacity of gripe to any purpose which he might espouse. + There is good reason to think that he had come to Canada with purposes + already conceived, and that he was ready to avail himself of any stepping-stone + which might help to realize them. Queylus, Superior of the Seminary, made + him a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> generous + offer; and he accepted it. This was the gratuitous grant of a large tract + of land at the place now called La Chine, above the great rapids of the + same name, and eight or nine miles from Montreal. On one hand, the place + was greatly exposed to attack; and, on the other, it was favorably situated + for the fur-trade. La Salle and his successors became its feudal proprietors, + on the sole condition of delivering to the Seminary, on every change of + ownership, a medal of fine silver, weighing one mark.<a name="fnanchor_5" id="fnanchor_5"></a><a href="#footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> He entered on + the improvement of his new domain with what means he could command, and + began to grant out his land to such settlers as would join him.</p> +<p>Approaching the shore where the city of Montreal now stands, one would + have seen a row of small compact dwellings, extending along a narrow street, + parallel to the river, and then, as now, called St. Paul Street. On a + hill at the right stood the windmill of the seigniors, built of stone, + and pierced with loopholes to serve, in time of need, as a place of defence. + On the left, in an angle formed by the junction of a rivulet with the + St. Lawrence, was a square bastioned fort of stone. Here lived the military + governor, appointed by the Seminary, and commanding a few soldiers of + the regiment of Carignan. In front, on the line of the street, were the + enclosure and buildings of the Seminary, and, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg + 13]</a></span> nearly adjoining them, those of the Hôtel-Dieu, or + Hospital, both provided for defence in case of an Indian attack. In the + hospital enclosure was a small church, opening on the street, and, in + the absence of any other, serving for the whole settlement.<a name="fnanchor_6" id="fnanchor_6"></a><a href="#footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p> +<p>Landing, passing the fort, and walking southward along the shore, one + would soon have left the rough clearings, and entered the primeval forest. + Here, mile after mile, he would have journeyed on in solitude, when the + hoarse roar of the rapids, foaming in fury on his left, would have reached + his listening ear; and at length, after a walk of some three hours, he + would have found the rude beginnings of a settlement. It was where the + St. Lawrence widens into the broad expanse called the Lake of St. Louis. + Here, La Salle had traced out the circuit of a palisaded village, and + assigned to each settler half an arpent, or about the third of an acre, + within the enclosure, for which he was to render to the young seignior + a yearly acknowledgment of three capons, besides six deniers—that + is, half a sou—in money. To each was assigned, moreover, sixty arpents + of land beyond the limits of the village, with the perpetual rent of half + a sou for each arpent. He also set apart a common, two hundred arpents + in extent, for the use of the settlers, on condition of the payment <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg + 14]</a></span> by each of five sous a year. He reserved four hundred and + twenty arpents for his own personal domain, and on this he began to clear + the ground and erect buildings. Similar to this were the beginnings of + all the Canadian seigniories formed at this troubled period.<a name="fnanchor_7" id="fnanchor_7"></a><a href="#footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA CHINE.</div> +<p>That La Salle came to Canada with objects distinctly in view, is probable + from the fact that he at once began to study the Indian languages,—and + with such success that he is said, within two or three years, to have + mastered the Iroquois and seven or eight other languages and dialects.<a name="fnanchor_8" id="fnanchor_8"></a><a href="#footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> + From the shore of his seigniory, he could gaze westward over the broad + breast of the Lake of St. Louis, bounded by the dim forests of Chateauguay + and Beauharnois; but his thoughts flew far beyond, across the wild and + lonely world that stretched towards the sunset. Like Champlain, and all + the early explorers, he dreamed of a passage to the South Sea, and a new + road for commerce to the riches of China and Japan. Indians often came + to his secluded settlement; and, on one occasion, he was visited by a + band of the Seneca Iroquois, not long before the scourge of the colony, + but now, in virtue of the treaty, wearing the semblance <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg + 15]</a></span> of friendship. The visitors spent the winter with him, + and told him of a river called the Ohio, rising in their country, and + flowing into the sea, but at such a distance that its mouth could only + be reached after a journey of eight or nine months. Evidently, the Ohio + and the Mississippi are here merged into one.<a name="fnanchor_9" id="fnanchor_9"></a><a href="#footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> In accordance with geographical + views then prevalent, he conceived that this great river must needs flow + into the "Vermilion Sea;" that is, the Gulf of California. If so, it would + give him what he sought, a western passage to China; while, in any case, + the populous Indian tribes said to inhabit its banks might be made a source + of great commercial profit.</p> +<div class="sidenote">SCHEMES OF DISCOVERY.</div> +<p>La Salle's imagination took fire. His resolution was soon formed; and + he descended the St. Lawrence to Quebec, to gain the countenance of the + governor for his intended exploration. Few men were more skilled than + he in the art of clear and plausible statement. Both the governor Courcelle + and the intendant Talon were readily won over to his plan; for which, + however, they seem to have given him no more substantial aid than that + of the governor's letters patent authorizing the enterprise.<a name="fnanchor_10" id="fnanchor_10"></a><a href="#footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> The cost + was to be his own; and he had no money, having spent it all on his seigniory. + He therefore proposed that the Seminary, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg + 16]</a></span> which had given it to him, should buy it back again, with + such improvements as he had made. Queylus, the Superior, being favorably + disposed towards him, consented, and bought of him the greater part; while + La Salle sold the remainder, including the clearings, to one Jean Milot, + an iron-monger, for twenty-eight hundred livres.<a name="fnanchor_11" id="fnanchor_11"></a><a href="#footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> With this he bought + four canoes, with the necessary supplies, and hired fourteen men.</p> +<p>Meanwhile, the Seminary itself was preparing a similar enterprise. The + Jesuits at this time not only held an ascendency over the other ecclesiastics + in Canada, but exercised an inordinate influence on the civil government. + The Seminary priests of Montreal were jealous of these powerful rivals, + and eager to emulate their zeal in the saving of souls and the conquering + of new domains for the Faith. Under this impulse, they had, three years + before, established a mission at Quinté, on the north shore of + Lake Ontario, in charge of two of their number, one of whom was the Abbé Fénelon, + elder brother of the celebrated Archbishop of Cambray. Another of them, + Dollier de Casson, had spent the winter in a hunting-camp of the Nipissings, + where an Indian prisoner, captured in the Northwest, told him of populous + tribes of that quarter living in heathenish darkness. On this, the Seminary + priests resolved to essay their conversion; and an expedition, to be directed + by Dollier, was fitted out to this end. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg + 17]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">DEPARTURE.</div> +<p>He was not ill suited to the purpose. He had been a soldier in his youth, + and had fought valiantly as an officer of cavalry under Turenne. He was + a man of great courage; of a tall, commanding person; and of uncommon + bodily strength, which he had notably proved in the campaign of Courcelle + against the Iroquois, three years before.<a name="fnanchor_12" id="fnanchor_12"></a><a href="#footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> On going to Quebec to procure + the necessary outfit, he was urged by Courcelle to modify his plans so + far as to act in concert with La Salle in exploring the mystery of the + great unknown river of the West. Dollier and his brother priests consented. + One of them, Galinée, was joined with him as a colleague, because + he was skilled in surveying, and could make a map of their route. Three + canoes were procured, and seven hired men completed the party. It was + determined that La Salle's expedition and that of the Seminary should + be combined in one,—an arrangement ill suited to the character of + the young explorer, who was unfit for any enterprise of which he was not + the undisputed chief.</p> +<p>Midsummer was near, and there was no time to lose. Yet the moment was + most unpropitious, for a Seneca chief had lately been murdered by three + scoundrel soldiers of the fort of Montreal; and, while they were undergoing + their trial, it became known <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg + 18]</a></span> that three other Frenchmen had treacherously put to death + several Iroquois of the Oneida tribe, in order to get possession of their + furs. The whole colony trembled in expectation of a new outbreak of the + war. Happily, the event proved otherwise. The authors of the last murder + escaped; but the three soldiers were shot at Montreal, in presence of + a considerable number of the Iroquois, who declared themselves satisfied + with the atonement; and on this same day, the sixth of July, the adventurers + began their voyage.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_1" id="footnote_1"></a><a href="#fnanchor_1"> <span class="label">[1]</span></a> + The following is the <i>acte de naissance</i>, discovered by Margry + in the <i>registres de l'état civil</i>, Paroisse St. Herbland, + Rouen: "Le vingt-deuxième jour de novembre, 1643, a été baptisé Robert + Cavelier, fils de honorable homme Jean Cavelier et de Catherine Geest; + ses parrain et marraine honorables personnes Nicolas Geest et Marguerite + Morice."</p> + <p>La Salle's name in full was René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la + Salle. La Salle was the name of an estate near Rouen, belonging to + the Caveliers. The wealthy French burghers often distinguished the + various members of their families by designations borrowed from landed + estates. Thus, François Marie Arouet, son of an ex-notary, received + the name of Voltaire, which he made famous.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_2" id="footnote_2"></a><a href="#fnanchor_2"> <span class="label">[2]</span></a> Margry, after investigations at Rouen, is satisfied of its truth + (<i>Journal Général de l'Instruction Publique</i>, xxxi. + 571.) Family papers of the Caveliers, examined by the Abbé Faillon, + and copies of some of which he has sent to me, lead to the same conclusion. + We shall find several allusions hereafter to La Salle's having in his + youth taught in a school, which, in his position, could only have been + in connection with some religious community. The doubts alluded to + have proceeded from the failure of Father Felix Martin, S. J., to find + the name of La Salle on the list of novices. If he had looked for the + name of Robert Cavelier, he would probably have found it. The companion + of La Salle, Hennepin, is very explicit with regard to this connection + with the Jesuits, a point on which he had no motive for falsehood.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_3" id="footnote_3"></a><a href="#fnanchor_3"> <span class="label">[3]</span></a> It does not appear what vows La Salle had taken. By a recent ordinance + (1666), persons entering religious orders could not take the final + vows before the age of twenty-five. By the family papers above mentioned, + it appears, however, that he had brought himself under the operation + of the law, which debarred those who, having entered religious orders, + afterwards withdrew, from claiming the inheritance of relatives who + had died after their entrance.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_4" id="footnote_4"></a><a href="#fnanchor_4"> <span class="label">[4]</span></a> The Jesuits in North America, chap. xv.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_5" id="footnote_5"></a><a href="#fnanchor_5"> <span class="label">[5]</span></a> <i>Transport de la Seigneurie de St. Sulpice</i>, cited by Faillon. + La Salle called his new domain as above. Two or three years later, + it received the name of La Chine, for a reason which will appear.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_6" id="footnote_6"></a><a href="#fnanchor_6"> <span class="label">[6]</span></a> A detailed plan of Montreal at this time is preserved in the Archives + de l'Empire, and has been reproduced by Faillon. There is another, + a few years later, and still more minute, of which a fac-simile will + be found in the Library of the Canadian Parliament.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_7" id="footnote_7"></a><a href="#fnanchor_7"> <span class="label">[7]</span></a> The above particulars have been unearthed by the indefatigable + Abbé Faillon. Some of La Salle's grants are still preserved + in the ancient records of Montreal.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_8" id="footnote_8"></a><a href="#fnanchor_8"> <span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Papiers de Famille.</i> He is said to have made several journeys + into the forests, towards the North, in the years 1667 and 1668, and + to have satisfied himself that little could be hoped from explorations + in that direction.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_9" id="footnote_9"></a><a href="#fnanchor_9"> <span class="label">[9]</span></a> According to Dollier de Casson, who had good opportunities of knowing, + the Iroquois always called the Mississippi the Ohio, while the Algonquins + gave it its present name.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_10" id="footnote_10"></a><a href="#fnanchor_10"> <span class="label">[10]</span></a> <i>Patoulet à Colbert, 11 Nov., 1669.</i></p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_11" id="footnote_11"></a><a href="#fnanchor_11"> <span class="label">[11]</span></a> <i>Cession de la Seigneurie; Contrat de Vente</i> (Margry, i. + 103, 104).</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_12" id="footnote_12"></a><a href="#fnanchor_12"> <span class="label">[12]</span></a> He was the author of the very curious and valuable <i>Histoire + de Montréal</i>, preserved in the Bibliothèque Mazarine, + of which a copy is in my possession. The Historical Society of Montreal + has recently resolved to print it.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2> +<p class="center">1669-1671.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE AND THE SULPITIANS.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The French in Western +New York.—Louis Joliet.—The Sulpitians on Lake Erie; at Detroit; at Saut Ste. Marie.—The Mystery of La Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends +the Illinois; did he reach the Mississippi?</div> +<p><span class="smcap">La Chine</span> was the starting-point; and the combined parties, in all twenty-four + men with seven canoes, embarked on the Lake of St. Louis. With them were + two other canoes, bearing the party of Senecas who had wintered at La + Salle's settlement, and who were now to act as guides. Father Galinée + recounts the journey. He was no woodsman: the river, the forests, the + rapids, were all new to him, and he dilates on them with the minuteness + of a novice. Above all, he admired the Indian birch canoes. "If God," he + says, "grants me the grace of returning to France, I shall try to carry + one with me." Then he describes the bivouac: "Your lodging is as extraordinary + as your vessels; for, after paddling or carrying the canoes all day, you + find mother earth ready to receive your wearied body. If the weather is + fair, you make a fire and lie down <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg + 20]</a></span> to sleep without further trouble; but if it rains, you + must peel bark from the trees, and make a shed by laying it on a frame + of sticks. As for your food, it is enough to make you burn all the cookery + books that ever were written; for in the woods of Canada one finds means + to live well without bread, wine, salt, pepper, or spice. The ordinary + food is Indian corn, or Turkey wheat as they call it in France, which + is crushed between two stones and boiled, seasoning it with meat or fish, + when you can get them. This sort of life seemed so strange to us that + we all felt the effects of it; and before we were a hundred leagues from + Montreal, not one of us was free from some malady or other. At last, after + all our misery, on the second of August, we discovered Lake Ontario, like + a great sea with no land beyond it."</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE SENECA VILLAGES.</div> +<p>Thirty-five days after leaving La Chine, they reached Irondequoit Bay, + on the south side of the lake. Here they were met by a number of Seneca + Indians, who professed friendship and invited them to their villages, + fifteen or twenty miles distant. As this was on their way to the upper + waters of the Ohio, and as they hoped to find guides at the villages to + conduct them, they accepted the invitation. Dollier, with most of the + men, remained to guard the canoes; while La Salle, with Galinée + and eight other Frenchmen, accompanied by a troop of Indians, set out + on the morning of the twelfth, and reached the principal village before + evening. It stood on a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg + 21]</a></span> hill, in the midst of a clearing nearly two leagues in + compass.<a name="fnanchor_13" id="fnanchor_13"></a><a href="#footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> A rude stockade surrounded it; and as the visitors drew near + they saw a band of old men seated on the grass, waiting to receive them. + One of these veterans, so feeble with age that he could hardly stand, + made them an harangue, in which he declared that the Senecas were their + brothers, and invited them to enter the village. They did so, surrounded + by a crowd of savages, and presently found themselves in the midst of + a disorderly cluster of large but filthy abodes of bark, about a hundred + and fifty in number, the most capacious of which was assigned to their + use. Here they made their quarters, and were soon overwhelmed by Seneca + hospitality. Children brought them pumpkins and berries from the woods; + and boy messengers came to summon them to endless feasts, where they were + regaled with the flesh of dogs and with boiled maize seasoned with oil + pressed from nuts and the seed of sunflowers.</p> +<p>La Salle had flattered himself that he knew enough Iroquois to hold communication + with the Senecas; but he failed completely in the attempt. The priests + had a Dutch interpreter, who spoke Iroquois fluently, but knew so little + French, and was withal so obstinate, that he proved useless; so that it + was necessary to employ a man in the service of the Jesuit Fremin, whose + mission was at this village. What the party needed was a guide to conduct + them to the Ohio; and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg + 22]</a></span> soon after their arrival a party of warriors appeared, + with a young prisoner belonging to one of the tribes of that region. Galinée + wanted to beg or buy him from his captors; but the Senecas had other intentions. "I + saw," writes the priest, "the most miserable spectacle I ever beheld in + my life." It was the prisoner tied to a stake and tortured for six hours + with diabolical ingenuity, while the crowd danced and yelled with delight, + and the chiefs and elders sat in a row smoking their pipes and watching + the contortions of the victim with an air of serene enjoyment. The body + was at last cut up and eaten, and in the evening the whole population + occupied themselves in scaring away the angry ghost by beating with sticks + against the bark sides of the lodges.</p> +<p>La Salle and his companions began to fear for their own safety. Some of + their hosts wished to kill them in revenge for the chief murdered near + Montreal; and as these and others were at times in a frenzy of drunkenness, + the position of the French became critical. They suspected that means + had been used to prejudice the Senecas against them. Not only could they + get no guides, but they were told that if they went to the Ohio the tribes + of those parts would infallibly kill them. Their Dutch interpreter became + disheartened and unmanageable, and, after staying a month at the village, + the hope of getting farther on their way seemed less than ever. Their + plan, it was clear, must be changed; and an Indian from Otinawatawa, a + kind of Iroquois colony at the head <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg + 23]</a></span> of Lake Ontario, offered to guide them to his village and + show them a better way to the Ohio. They left the Senecas, coasted the + south shore of the lake, passed the mouth of the Niagara, where they heard + the distant roar of the cataract, and on the twenty-fourth of September + reached Otinawatawa, which was a few miles north of the present town of + Hamilton. The inhabitants proved friendly, and La Salle received the welcome + present of a Shawanoe prisoner, who told them that the Ohio could be reached + in six weeks, and that he would guide them to it. Delighted at this good + fortune, they were about to set out; when they heard, to their astonishment, + of the arrival of two other Frenchmen at a neighboring village.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LOUIS JOLIET.</div> +<p>One of the strangers was destined to hold a conspicuous place in the history + of western discovery. This was Louis Joliet, a young man of about the + age of La Salle. Like him, he had studied for the priesthood; but the + world and the wilderness had conquered his early inclinations, and changed + him to an active and adventurous fur-trader. Talon had sent him to discover + and explore the copper-mines of Lake Superior. He had failed in the attempt, + and was now returning. His Indian guide, afraid of passing the Niagara + portage lest he should meet enemies, had led him from Lake Erie, by way + of Grand River, towards the head of Lake Ontario; and thus it was that + he met La Salle and the Sulpitians.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg + 24]</a></span></p> +<p>This meeting caused a change of plan. Joliet showed the priests a map + which he had made of such parts of the Upper Lakes as he had visited, + and gave them a copy of it; telling them, at the same time, of the Pottawattamies + and other tribes of that region in grievous need of spiritual succor. + The result was a determination on their part to follow the route which + he suggested, notwithstanding the remonstrances of La Salle, who in vain + reminded them that the Jesuits had preoccupied the field, and would regard + them as intruders. They resolved that the Pottawattamies should no longer + sit in darkness; while, as for the Mississippi, it could be reached, as + they conceived, with less risk by this northern route than by that of + the south.</p> +<p>La Salle was of a different mind. His goal was the Ohio, and not the northern + lakes. A few days before, while hunting, he had been attacked by a fever, + sarcastically ascribed by Galinée to his having seen three large + rattle-snakes crawling up a rock. He now told his two colleagues that + he was in no condition to go forward, and should be forced to part with + them. The staple of La Salle's character, as his life will attest, was + an invincible determination of purpose, which set at naught all risks + and all sufferings. He had cast himself with all his resources into this + enterprise; and, while his faculties remained, he was not a man to recoil + from it. On the other hand, the masculine fibre of which he was made did + not always withhold him from the practice of the arts of address, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg + 25]</a></span> and the use of what Dollier de Casson styles <i>belles + paroles</i>. He respected the priesthood, with the exception, it seems, + of the Jesuits; and he was under obligations to the Sulpitians of Montreal. + Hence there can be no doubt that he used his illness as a pretext for + escaping from their company without ungraciousness, and following his + own path in his own way.</p> +<div class="sidenote">SEPARATION.</div> +<p>On the last day of September, the priests made an altar, supported by + the paddles of the canoes laid on forked sticks. Dollier said mass; La + Salle and his followers received the sacrament, as did also those of his + late colleagues; and thus they parted, the Sulpitians and their party + descending the Grand River towards Lake Erie, while La Salle, as they + supposed, began his return to Montreal. What course he actually took we + shall soon inquire; and meanwhile, for a few moments, we will follow the + priests. When they reached Lake Erie, they saw it tossing like an angry + ocean. They had no mind to tempt the dangerous and unknown navigation, + and encamped for the winter in the forest near the peninsula called the + Long Point. Here they gathered a good store of chestnuts, hickory-nuts, + plums, and grapes, and built themselves a log cabin, with a recess at + the end for an altar. They passed the winter unmolested, shooting game + in abundance, and saying mass three times a week. Early in spring, they + planted a large cross, attached to it the arms of France, and took formal + possession of the country in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg + 26]</a></span> the name of Louis XIV. This done, they resumed their voyage, + and, after many troubles, landed one evening in a state of exhaustion + on or near Point Pelée, towards the western extremity of Lake Erie. + A storm rose as they lay asleep, and swept off a great part of their baggage, + which, in their fatigue, they had left at the edge of the water. Their + altar-service was lost with the rest,—a misfortune which they ascribed + to the jealousy and malice of the Devil. Debarred henceforth from saying + mass, they resolved to return to Montreal and leave the Pottawattamies + uninstructed. They presently entered the strait by which Lake Huron joins + Lake Erie, and landing near where Detroit now stands, found a large stone, + somewhat suggestive of the human figure, which the Indians had bedaubed + with paint, and which they worshipped as a manito. In view of their late + misfortune, this device of the arch-enemy excited their utmost resentment. "After + the loss of our altar-service," writes Galinée, "and the hunger + we had suffered, there was not a man of us who was not filled with hatred + against this false deity. I devoted one of my axes to breaking him in + pieces; and then, having fastened our canoes side by side, we carried + the largest piece to the middle of the river, and threw it, with all the + rest, into the water, that he might never be heard of again. God rewarded + us immediately for this good action, for we killed a deer and a bear that + same day."</p> +<div class="sidenote">AT STE. MARIE DU SAUT.</div> +<p>This is the first recorded passage of white men <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg + 27]</a></span> through the Strait of Detroit; though Joliet had, + no doubt, passed this way on his return from the Upper Lakes.<a name="fnanchor_14" id="fnanchor_14"></a><a href="#footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> + The two missionaries took this course, with the intention of proceeding + to the Saut Ste. Marie, and there joining the Ottawas, and other + tribes of that region, in their yearly descent to Montreal. They + issued upon Lake Huron; followed its eastern shores till they reached + the Georgian Bay, near the head of which the Jesuits had established + their great mission of the Hurons, destroyed, twenty years before, + by the Iroquois;<a name="fnanchor_15" id="fnanchor_15"></a><a href="#footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> and, ignoring or slighting the labors of the + rival missionaries, held their way northward along the rocky archipelago + that edged those lonely coasts. They passed the Manitoulins, and, + ascending the strait by which Lake Superior discharges its waters, + arrived on the twenty-fifth of May at Ste. Marie du Saut. Here they + found the two Jesuits, Dablon and Marquette, in a square fort of + cedar pickets, built by their men within the past year, and enclosing + a chapel and a house. Near by, they had cleared a large tract of + land, and sown it with wheat, Indian corn, peas, and other crops. + The new-comers were graciously received, and invited to vespers + in the chapel; but they very soon found La Salle's prediction made + good, and saw that the Jesuit fathers wanted no help from St. Sulpice. + Galinée, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg + 28]</a></span> on his part, takes occasion to remark, that, though + the Jesuits had baptized a few Indians at the Saut, not one of them + was a good enough Christian to receive the Eucharist; and he intimates + that the case, by their own showing, was still worse at their mission + of St. Esprit. The two Sulpitians did not care to prolong their + stay; and, three days after their arrival, they left the Saut,—not, + as they expected, with the Indians, but with a French guide, furnished + by the Jesuits. Ascending French River to Lake Nipissing, they crossed + to the waters of the Ottawa, and descended to Montreal, which they + reached on the eighteenth of June. They had made no discoveries + and no converts; but Galinée, after his arrival, made the + earliest map of the Upper Lakes known to exist.<a name="fnanchor_16" id="fnanchor_16"></a><a href="#footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S DISCOVERIES.</div> +<p>We return now to La Salle, only to find ourselves involved in mist and + obscurity. What did he do after he left the two priests? Unfortunately, + a definite answer is not possible; and the next two years of his life + remain in some measure an enigma. That he was busied in active exploration, + and that he made important discoveries, is certain; but the extent and + character of these discoveries remain wrapped in doubt. He is known to + have kept journals and made maps; and these were in existence, and in + possession of his niece, Madeleine Cavelier, then in advanced <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg + 29]</a></span> age, as late as the year 1756; beyond which time the most + diligent inquiry has failed to trace them. Abbé Faillon affirms + that some of La Salle's men, refusing to follow him, returned to La Chine, + and that the place then received its name, in derision of the young adventurer's + dream of a westward passage to China.<a name="fnanchor_17" id="fnanchor_17"></a><a href="#footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> As for himself, the only distinct + record of his movements is that contained in a paper, entitled "Histoire + de Monsieur de la Salle." It is an account of his explorations, and of + the state of parties in Canada previous to the year 1678,—taken + from the lips of La Salle himself, by a person whose name does not appear, + but who declares that he had ten or twelve conversations with him at Paris, + whither he had come with a petition to the Court. The writer himself had + never been in America, and was ignorant of its geography; hence blunders + on his part might reasonably be expected. His statements, however, are + in some measure intelligible; and the following is the substance of them.</p> +<p>After leaving the priests, La Salle went to Onondaga, where we are left + to infer that he succeeded better in getting a guide than he had before + done among the Senecas. Thence he made his way to a point six or seven + leagues distant from Lake Erie, where he reached a branch of the Ohio, + and, descending it, followed the river as far as the rapids at Louisville,—or, + as has been maintained, beyond <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg + 30]</a></span> its confluence with the Mississippi. His men now refused + to go farther, and abandoned him, escaping to the English and the Dutch; + whereupon he retraced his steps alone.<a name="fnanchor_18" id="fnanchor_18"></a><a href="#footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> This must have been in the + winter of 1669-70, or in the following spring; unless there is an error + of date in the statement of Nicolas Perrot, the famous <i>voyageur</i>, + who says that he met him in the summer of 1670, hunting on the Ottawa + with a party of Iroquois.<a name="fnanchor_19" id="fnanchor_19"></a><a href="#footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE RIVER ILLINOIS.</div> +<p>But how was La Salle employed in the following year? The same memoir has + its solution to the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg + 31]</a></span> problem. By this it appears that the indefatigable explorer + embarked on Lake Erie, ascended the Detroit to Lake Huron, coasted the + unknown shores of Michigan, passed the Straits of Michilimackinac, and, + leaving Green Bay behind him, entered what is described as an incomparably + larger bay, but which was evidently the southern portion of Lake Michigan. + Thence he crossed to a river flowing westward,—evidently the Illinois,—and + followed it until it was joined by another river flowing from the northwest + to the southeast. By this, the Mississippi only can be meant; and he is + reported to have said that he descended it to the thirty-sixth degree + of latitude; where he stopped, assured that it discharged itself not into + the Gulf of California, but into the Gulf of Mexico, and resolved to follow + it thither at a future day, when better provided with men and supplies.<a name="fnanchor_20" id="fnanchor_20"></a><a href="#footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE MISSISSIPPI.</div> +<p>The first of these statements,—that relating to the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg + 32]</a></span> Ohio,—confused, vague, and in great part incorrect, + as it certainly is, is nevertheless well sustained as regards one + essential point. La Salle himself, in a memorial addressed to Count + Frontenac in 1677, affirms that he discovered the Ohio, and descended + it as far as to a fall which obstructed it.<a name="fnanchor_21" id="fnanchor_21"></a><a href="#footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> Again, his rival, + Louis Joliet, whose testimony on this point cannot be suspected, + made two maps of the region of the Mississippi and the Great Lakes. + The Ohio is laid down on both of them, with an inscription to the + effect that it had been explored by La Salle.<a name="fnanchor_22" id="fnanchor_22"></a><a href="#footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> That <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg + 33]</a></span> he discovered the Ohio may then be regarded as established. + That he descended it to the Mississippi, he himself does not pretend; + nor is there reason to believe that he did so.</p> +<p>With regard to his alleged voyage down the Illinois, the case is different. + Here, he is reported to have made a statement which admits but one interpretation,—that + of the discovery by him of the Mississippi prior to its discovery by Joliet + and Marquette. This statement is attributed to a man not prone to vaunt + his own exploits, who never proclaimed them in print, and whose testimony, + even in his own case, must therefore have weight. But it comes to us through + the medium of a person strongly biassed in favor of La Salle, and against + Marquette and the Jesuits.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S DISCOVERIES.</div> +<p>Seven years had passed since the alleged discovery, and La Salle had not + before laid claim to it; although it was matter of notoriety that during + five years it had been claimed by Joliet, and that his claim was generally + admitted. The correspondence of the governor and the intendant is silent + as to La Salle's having penetrated to the Mississippi, though the attempt + was made under the auspices of the latter, as his own letters declare; + while both had the discovery of the great river earnestly at heart. The + governor, Frontenac, La Salle's ardent supporter and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg + 34]</a></span> ally, believed in 1672, as his letters show, that the Mississippi + flowed into the Gulf of California; and, two years later, he announces + to the minister Colbert its discovery by Joliet.<a name="fnanchor_23" id="fnanchor_23"></a><a href="#footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> After La Salle's + death, his brother, his nephew, and his niece addressed a memorial to + the king, petitioning for certain grants in consideration of the discoveries + of their relative, which they specify at some length; but they do not + pretend that he reached the Mississippi before his expeditions of 1679 + to 1682.<a name="fnanchor_24" id="fnanchor_24"></a><a href="#footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> This silence is the more significant, as it is this very + niece who had possession of the papers in which La Salle recounts the + journeys of which the issues are in question.<a name="fnanchor_25" id="fnanchor_25"></a><a href="#footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg + 35]</a></span> Had they led him to the Mississippi, it is reasonably certain + that she would have made it known in her memorial. La Salle discovered + the Ohio, and in all probability the Illinois also; but that he discovered + the Mississippi has not been proved, nor, in the light of the evidence + we have, is it likely.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_13" id="footnote_13"></a><a href="#fnanchor_13"> <span class="label">[13]</span></a> This village seems to have been that attacked by Denonville in + 1687. It stood on Boughton Hill, near the present town of Victor.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_14" id="footnote_14"></a><a href="#fnanchor_14"> <span class="label">[14]</span></a> The Jesuits and fur-traders, on their way to the Upper Lakes, + had followed the route of the Ottawa, or, more recently, that of Toronto + and the Georgian Bay. Iroquois hostility had long closed the Niagara + portage and Lake Erie against them.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_15" id="footnote_15"></a><a href="#fnanchor_15"> <span class="label">[15]</span></a> The Jesuits in North America.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_16" id="footnote_16"></a><a href="#fnanchor_16"> <span class="label">[16]</span></a> See Appendix. The above narrative is from <i>Récit de ce + qui s'est passé de plus remarquable dans le Voyage de MM. + Dollier et Galinée</i>. (Bibliothèque Nationale.)</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_17" id="footnote_17"></a><a href="#fnanchor_17"> <span class="label">[17]</span></a> Dollier de Casson alludes to this as "cette transmigration célèbre + qui se fit de la Chine dans ces quartiers."</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_18" id="footnote_18"></a><a href="#fnanchor_18"> <span class="label">[18]</span></a> The following is the passage relating to this journey in the remarkable + paper above mentioned. After recounting La Salle's visit with the Sulpitians + to the Seneca village, and stating that the intrigues of the Jesuit + missionary prevented them from obtaining a guide, it speaks of the + separation of the travellers and the journey of Galinée and + his party to the Saut Ste. Marie, where "les Jésuites les congédièrent." It + then proceeds as follows: "Cependant M{r.} de la Salle continua son + chemin par une rivière qui va de l'est à l'ouest; et + passe à Onontaqué [<i>Onondaga</i>], puis à six + ou sept lieues au-dessous du Lac Erié; et estant parvenu jusqu'au + 280<sup>me</sup> ou 83<sup>me</sup> degré de longitude, et jusqu'au + 41<sup>me</sup> degré de latitude, trouva un sault qui tombe + vers l'ouest dans un pays bas, marescageux, tout couvert de vielles + souches, dont il y en a quelques-unes qui sont encore sur pied. Il + fut donc contraint de prendre terre, et suivant une hauteur qui le + pouvoit mener loin, il trouva quelques sauvages qui luy dirent que + fort loin de là le mesme fleuve qui se perdoit dans cette terre + basse et vaste se réunnissoit en un lit. Il continua donc son + chemin, mais comme la fatigue estoit grande, 23 ou 24 hommes qu'il + avoit menez jusques là le quittèrent tous en une nuit, + regagnèrent le fleuve, et se sauvèrent, les uns à la + Nouvelle Hollande et les autres à la Nouvelle Angleterre. Il + se vit donc seul à 400 lieues de chez luy, où il ne laisse + pas de revenir, remontant la rivière et vivant de chasse, d'herbes, + et de ce que luy donnèrent les sauvages qu'il rencontra en son + chemin."</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_19" id="footnote_19"></a><a href="#fnanchor_19"> <span class="label">[19]</span></a> Perrot, <i>Mémoires</i>, 119, 120.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_20" id="footnote_20"></a><a href="#fnanchor_20"> <span class="label">[20]</span></a> The memoir—after stating, as above, that he entered Lake + Huron, doubled the peninsula of Michigan, and passed La Baye des Puants + (<i>Green Bay</i>)—says: "Il reconnut une baye incomparablement + plus large; au fond de laquelle vers l'ouest il trouva un très-beau + havre et au fond de ce havre un fleuve qui va de l'est à l'ouest. + Il suivit ce fleuve, et estant parvenu jusqu'environ le 280<sup>me</sup> degré de + longitude et le 39<sup>me</sup> de latitude, il trouva un autre fleuve + qui se joignant au premier coulait du nordouest au sudest, et il suivit + ce fleuve jusqu'au 36<sup>me</sup> degré de latitude."</p> + <p>The "très-beau havre" may have been the entrance of the river + Chicago, whence, by an easy portage, he might have reached the Des + Plaines branch of the Illinois. We shall see that he took this course + in his famous exploration of 1682.</p> + <p>The intendant Talon announces, in his despatches of this year that + he had sent La Salle southward and westward to explore.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_21" id="footnote_21"></a><a href="#fnanchor_21"> <span class="label">[21]</span></a> The following are his words (he speaks of himself in the third + person): "L'année 1667, et les suivantes, il fit divers voyages + avec beaucoup de dépenses, dans lesquels il découvrit + le premier beaucoup de pays au sud des grands lacs, et <i>entre autres + la grande rivière d'Ohio</i>; il la suivit jusqu'à un + endroit où elle tombe de fort haut dans de vastes marais, à la + hauteur de 37 degrés, après avoir été grossie + par une autre rivière fort large qui vient du nord; et toutes + ces eaux se dêchargent selon toutes les apparences dans le Golfe + du Mexique."</p> + <p>This "autre rivière," which, it seems, was above the fall, may + have been the Miami or the Scioto. There is but one fall on the river, + that of Louisville, which is not so high as to deserve to be described + as "fort haut," being only a strong rapid. The latitude, as will be + seen, is different in the two accounts, and incorrect in both.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_22" id="footnote_22"></a><a href="#fnanchor_22"> <span class="label">[22]</span></a> One of these maps is entitled <i>Carte de la découverte + du Sieur Joliet</i>, 1674. Over the lines representing the Ohio + are the words, "Route du sieur de la Salle pour aller dans le Mexique." The + other map of Joliet bears, also written over the Ohio, the words, "Rivière + par où descendit le sieur de la Salle au sortir du lac Erié pour + aller dans le Mexique." I have also another manuscript map, made + before the voyage of Joliet and Marquette, and apparently in the + year 1673, on which the Ohio is represented as far as to a point + a little below Louisville, and over it is written, "Rivière + Ohio, ainsy appellée par les Iroquois à cause de sa + beauté, par où le sieur de la Salle est descendu." The + Mississippi is not represented on this map; but—and this is + very significant, as indicating the extent of La Salle's exploration + of the following year—a small part of the upper Illinois is + laid down.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_23" id="footnote_23"></a><a href="#fnanchor_23"> <span class="label">[23]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 14 Nov., 1674.</i> He here + speaks of "la grande rivière qu'il [<i>Joliet</i>] a trouvée, + qui va du nord au sud, et qui est aussi large que celle du Saint-Laurent + vis-à-vis de Québec." Four years later, Frontenac speaks + slightingly of Joliet, but neither denies his discovery of the Mississippi, + nor claims it for La Salle, in whose interest he writes.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_24" id="footnote_24"></a><a href="#fnanchor_24"> <span class="label">[24]</span></a> <i>Papiers de Famille; Mémoire présenté au + Roi.</i> The following is an extract: "Il parvient ... jusqu'à la + rivière des Illinois. Il y construisit un fort situé à 350 + lieues au-delà du fort de Frontenac, et suivant ensuite le + cours de cette rivière, il trouva qu'elle se jettoit dans + un grand fleuve appellé par ceux du pays Mississippi, c'est à dire <i>grande + eau</i>, environ cent lieues au-dessous du fort qu'il venoit de + construire." This fort was Fort Crèvecœur, built in 1680, + near the site of Peoria. The memoir goes on to relate the descent + of La Salle to the Gulf, which concluded this expedition of 1679-82.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_25" id="footnote_25"></a><a href="#fnanchor_25"> <span class="label">[25]</span></a> The following is an extract, given by Margry, from a letter of + the aged Madeleine Cavelier, dated 21 Février, 1756, and addressed + to her nephew, M. Le Baillif, who had applied for the papers in behalf + of the minister, Silhouette: "J'ay cherché une occasion sûre + pour vous anvoyé les papiers de M. de la Salle. Il y a des cartes + que j'ay jointe à ces papiers, qui doivent prouver que, en 1675, + M. de Lasalle avet déja fet deux voyages en ces decouverte, + puisqu'il y avet une carte, que je vous envoye, par laquelle il est + fait mention de l'androit auquel M. de Lasalle aborda près le + fleuve de Mississipi; un autre androit qu'il nomme le fleuve Colbert; + en un autre il prans possession de ce pais au nom du roy et fait planter + une crois."</p> + <p>The words of the aged and illiterate writer are obscure, but her expression "aborda + près" seems to indicate that La Salle had not reached the Mississippi + prior to 1675, but only approached it. Finally, a memorial presented + to Seignelay, along with the official narrative of 1679-81, by a friend + of La Salle, whose object was to place the discoverer and his achievements + in the most favorable light, contains the following: "Il [<i>La Salle</i>] + a esté le premier à former le dessein de ces descouvertes, + qu'il communiqua, il y a plus de quinze ans, à M. de Courcelles, + gouverneur, et à M. Talon, intendant du Canada, qui l'approuvèrent. + Il a fait ensuite plusieurs voyages de ce costé-là, et + un entr'autres en 1669 avec MM. Dolier et Galinée, prestres + du Séminaire de St. Sulpice. <i>Il est vray que le sieur Jolliet, + pour le prévenir, fit un voyage in 1673, à la rivière + Colbert</i>; mais ce fut uniquement pour y faire commerce." See Margry, + ii. 285. This passage is a virtual admission that Joliet reached the + Mississippi (<i>Colbert</i>) before La Salle.</p> + <p>Margry, in a series of papers in the <i>Journal Général + de l'Instruction Publique</i> for 1862, first took the position + that La Salle reached the Mississippi in 1670 and 1671, and has + brought forward in defence of it all the documents which his unwearied + research enabled him to discover. Father Tailhan, S.J., has replied + at length, in the copious notes to his edition of Nicolas Perrot, + but without having seen the principal document cited by Margry, + and of which extracts have been given in the notes to this chapter.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2> +<p class="center">1670-1672.</p> +<p class="center">THE JESUITS ON THE LAKES.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The Old Missions and +the New.—A Change of Spirit.—Lake Superior +and the Copper-mines.—Ste. Marie.—La +Pointe.—Michilimackinac.— Jesuits on Lake Michigan.—Allouez and +Dablon.—The Jesuit Fur-trade.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">What</span> were the Jesuits doing? Since the ruin of their great mission of + the Hurons, a perceptible change had taken place in them. They had put + forth exertions almost superhuman, set at naught famine, disease, and + death, lived with the self-abnegation of saints and died with the devotion + of martyrs; and the result of all had been a disastrous failure. From + no short-coming on their part, but from the force of events beyond the + sphere of their influence, a very demon of havoc had crushed their incipient + churches, slaughtered their converts, uprooted the populous communities + on which their hopes had rested, and scattered them in bands of wretched + fugitives far and wide through the wilderness.<a name="fnanchor_26" id="fnanchor_26"></a><a href="#footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> They had devoted themselves + in the fulness of faith to the building up <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg + 37]</a></span> of a Christian and Jesuit empire on the conversion of the + great stationary tribes of the lakes; and of these none remained but the + Iroquois, the destroyers of the rest,—among whom, indeed, was a + field which might stimulate their zeal by an abundant promise of sufferings + and martyrdoms, but which, from its geographical position, was too much + exposed to Dutch and English influence to promise great and decisive results. + Their best hopes were now in the North and the West; and thither, in great + part, they had turned their energies.</p> +<div class="sidenote">REPORTS OF THE JESUITS.</div> +<p>We find them on Lake Huron, Lake Superior, and Lake Michigan, laboring + vigorously as of old, but in a spirit not quite the same. Now, as before, + two objects inspired their zeal,—the "greater glory of God," and + the influence and credit of the Order of Jesus. If the one motive had + somewhat lost in power, the other had gained. The epoch of the saints + and martyrs was passing away; and henceforth we find the Canadian Jesuit + less and less an apostle, more and more an explorer, a man of science, + and a politician. The yearly reports of the missions are still, for the + edification of the pious reader, filled with intolerably tedious stories + of baptisms, conversions, and the exemplary deportment of neophytes,—for + these have become a part of the formula; but they are relieved abundantly + by more mundane topics. One finds observations on the winds, currents, + and tides of the Great Lakes; speculations on a subterranean outlet of + Lake Superior; accounts of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg + 38]</a></span> its copper-mines, and how we, the Jesuit fathers, are laboring + to explore them for the profit of the colony; surmises touching the North + Sea, the South Sea, the Sea of China, which we hope ere long to discover; + and reports of that great mysterious river of which the Indians tell us,—flowing + southward, perhaps to the Gulf of Mexico, perhaps to the Vermilion Sea,—and + the secrets whereof, with the help of the Virgin, we will soon reveal + to the world.</p> +<p>The Jesuit was as often a fanatic for his Order as for his faith; and + oftener yet the two fanaticisms mingled in him inextricably. Ardently + as he burned for the saving of souls, he would have none saved on the + Upper Lakes except by his brethren and himself. He claimed a monopoly + of conversion, with its attendant monopoly of toil, hardship, and martyrdom. + Often disinterested for himself, he was inordinately ambitious for the + great corporate power in which he had merged his own personality; and + here lies one cause, among many, of the seeming contradictions which abound + in the annals of the Order.</p> +<p>Prefixed to the <i>Relation</i> of 1671 is that monument of Jesuit hardihood + and enterprise, the map of Lake Superior,—a work of which, however, + the exactness has been exaggerated, as compared with other Canadian maps + of the day. While making surveys, the priests were diligently looking + for copper. Father Dablon reports that they had found it in greatest abundance + on Isle Minong, now Isle Royale. "A day's journey from the head of the + lake, on the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> south + side, there is," he says, "a rock of copper weighing from six hundred + to eight hundred pounds, lying on the shore where any who pass may see + it;" and he further speaks of great copper boulders in the bed of the + river Ontonagan.<a name="fnanchor_27" id="fnanchor_27"></a><a href="#footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">STE. MARIE DU SAUT.</div> +<p>There were two principal missions on the Upper Lakes, which were, in a + certain sense, the parents of the rest. One of these was Ste. Marie du + Saut,—the same visited by Dollier and Galinée,—at the + outlet of Lake Superior. This was a noted fishing-place; for the rapids + were full of white-fish, and Indians came thither in crowds. The permanent + residents were an Ojibwa band, whom the French called Sauteurs, and whose + bark lodges were clustered <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg + 40]</a></span> at the foot of the rapids, near the fort of the Jesuits. + Besides these, a host of Algonquins, of various tribes, resorted thither + in the spring and summer,—living in abundance on the fishery, and + dispersing in winter to wander and starve in scattered hunting-parties + far and wide through the forests.</p> +<p>The other chief mission was that of St. Esprit, at La Pointe, near the + western extremity of Lake Superior. Here were the Hurons, fugitives twenty + years before from the slaughter of their countrymen; and the Ottawas, + who, like them, had sought an asylum from the rage of the Iroquois. Many + other tribes—Illinois, Pottawattamies, Foxes, Menomonies, Sioux, + Assiniboins, Knisteneaux, and a multitude besides—came hither yearly + to trade with the French. Here was a young Jesuit, Jacques Marquette, + lately arrived from the Saut Ste. Marie. His savage flock disheartened + him by its backslidings; and the best that he could report of the Hurons, + after all the toil and all the blood lavished in their conversion, was, + that they "still retain a little Christianity;" while the Ottawas are "far + removed from the kingdom of God, and addicted beyond all other tribes + to foulness, incantations, and sacrifices to evil spirits."<a name="fnanchor_28" id="fnanchor_28"></a><a href="#footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">MARQUETTE AND ANDRÉ.</div> +<p>Marquette heard from the Illinois—yearly visitors at La Pointe—of + the great river which they had crossed on their way,<a name="fnanchor_29" id="fnanchor_29"></a><a href="#footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> and which, as + he conjectured, flowed <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg + 41]</a></span> into the Gulf of California. He heard marvels of it also + from the Sioux, who lived on its banks; and a strong desire possessed + him to explore the mystery of its course. A sudden calamity dashed his + hopes. The Sioux—the Iroquois of the West, as the Jesuits call them—had + hitherto kept the peace with the expatriated tribes of La Pointe; but + now, from some cause not worth inquiry, they broke into open war, and + so terrified the Hurons and Ottawas that they abandoned their settlements + and fled. Marquette followed his panic-stricken flock, who, passing the + Saut Ste. Marie, and descending to Lake Huron, stopped at length,—the + Hurons at Michilimackinac, and the Ottawas at the Great Manitoulin Island. + Two missions were now necessary to minister to the divided bands. That + of Michilimackinac was assigned to Marquette, and that of the Manitoulin + Island to Louis André. The former took post at Point St. Ignace, + on the north shore of the Straits of Michilimackinac, while the latter + began the mission of St. Simon at the new abode of the Ottawas. When winter + came, scattering his flock to their hunting-grounds, André made + a missionary tour among the Nipissings and other neighboring tribes. The + shores of Lake Huron had long been an utter <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg + 42]</a></span> solitude, swept of their denizens by the terror of the + all-conquering Iroquois; but now that these tigers had felt the power + of the French, and learned for a time to leave their Indian allies in + peace, the fugitive hordes were returning to their ancient abodes. André's + experience among them was of the roughest. The staple of his diet was + acorns and <i>tripe de roche</i>,—a species of lichen, which, being + boiled, resolved itself into a black glue, nauseous, but not void of nourishment. + At times, he was reduced to moss, the bark of trees, or moccasins and + old moose-skins cut into strips and boiled. His hosts treated him very + ill, and the worst of their fare was always his portion. When spring came + to his relief, he returned to his post of St. Simon, with impaired digestion + and unabated zeal.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE GREEN BAY MISSION.</div> +<p>Besides the Saut Ste. Marie and Michilimackinac, both noted fishing-places, + there was another spot, no less famous for game and fish, and therefore + a favorite resort of Indians. This was the head of the Green Bay of Lake + Michigan.<a name="fnanchor_30" id="fnanchor_30"></a><a href="#footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> Here and in adjacent districts several distinct tribes had + made their abode. The Menomonies were on the river which bears their name; + the Pottawattamies and Winnebagoes were <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg + 43]</a></span> near the borders of the bay; the Sacs, on Fox River; the + Mascoutins, Miamis, and Kickapoos, on the same river, above Lake Winnebago; + and the Outagamies, or Foxes, on a tributary of it flowing from the north. + Green Bay was manifestly suited for a mission; and, as early as the autumn + of 1669, Father Claude Allouez was sent thither to found one. After nearly + perishing by the way, he set out to explore the destined field of his + labors, and went as far as the town of the Mascoutins. Early in the autumn + of 1670, having been joined by Dablon, Superior of the missions on the + Upper Lakes, he made another journey, but not until the two fathers had + held a council with the congregated tribes at St. François Xavier; + for so they named their mission of Green Bay. Here, as they harangued + their naked audience, their gravity was put to the proof; for a band of + warriors, anxious to do them honor, walked incessantly up and down, aping + the movements of the soldiers on guard before the governor's tent at Montreal. "We + could hardly keep from laughing," writes Dablon, "though, we were discoursing + on very important subjects; namely, the mysteries of our religion, and + the things necessary to escaping from eternal fire."<a name="fnanchor_31" id="fnanchor_31"></a><a href="#footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p> +<p>The fathers were delighted with the country, which Dablon calls an earthly + paradise; but he adds that the way to it is as hard as the path to heaven. + He alludes especially to the rapids of Fox River, which gave the two travellers + great trouble. Having <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg + 44]</a></span> safely passed them, they saw an Indian idol on the bank, + similar to that which Dollier and Galinée found at Detroit,—being + merely a rock, bearing some resemblance to a man, and hideously painted. + With the help of their attendants, they threw it into the river. Dablon + expatiates on the buffalo, which he describes apparently on the report + of others, as his description is not very accurate. Crossing Winnebago + Lake, the two priests followed the river leading to the town of the Mascoutins + and Miamis, which they reached on the fifteenth of September.<a name="fnanchor_32" id="fnanchor_32"></a><a href="#footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> These + two tribes lived together within the compass of the same enclosure of + palisades,—to the number, it is said, of more than three thousand + souls. The missionaries, who had brought a highly colored picture of the + Last Judgment, called the Indians to council and displayed it before them; + while Allouez, who spoke Algonquin, harangued them on hell, demons, and + eternal flames. They listened with open ears, beset him night and day + with questions, and invited him and his companion to unceasing feasts. + They were welcomed in every lodge, and followed everywhere with eyes of + curiosity, wonder, and awe. Dablon overflows with praises of the Miami + chief, who was honored by his subjects like a king, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg + 45]</a></span> whose demeanor towards his guests had no savor of the savage.</p> +<p>Their hosts told them of the great river Mississippi, rising far in the + north and flowing southward,—they knew not whither,—and of + many tribes that dwelt along its banks. When at length they took their + departure, they left behind them a reputation as medicine-men of transcendent + power.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE CROSS AMONG THE FOXES.</div> +<p>In the winter following, Allouez visited the Foxes, whom he found in extreme + ill-humor. They were incensed against the French by the ill-usage which + some of their tribe had lately met when on a trading visit to Montreal; + and they received the Faith with shouts of derision. The priest was horror-stricken + at what he saw. Their lodges, each containing from five to ten families, + seemed in his eyes like seraglios; for some of the chiefs had eight wives. + He armed himself with patience, and at length gained a hearing. Nay, he + succeeded so well, that when he showed them his crucifix they would throw + tobacco on it as an offering; and, on another visit which he made them + soon after, he taught the whole village to make the sign of the cross. + A war-party was going out against their enemies, and he bethought him + of telling them the story of the Cross and the Emperor Constantine. This + so wrought upon them that they all daubed the figure of a cross on their + shields of bull-hide, set out for the war, and came back victorious, extolling + the sacred symbol as a great war-medicine. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg + 46]</a></span></p> +<p>"Thus it is," writes Dablon, who chronicles the incident, "that our holy + faith is established among these people; and we have good hope that we + shall soon carry it to the famous river called the Mississippi, and perhaps + even to the South Sea."<a name="fnanchor_33" id="fnanchor_33"></a><a href="#footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> Most things human have their phases of the + ludicrous; and the heroism of these untiring priests is no exception to + the rule.</p> +<div class="sidenote">TRADING WITH INDIANS.</div> +<p>The various missionary stations were much alike. They consisted of a chapel + (commonly of logs) and one or more houses, with perhaps a store-house + and a workshop; the whole fenced with palisades, and forming, in fact, + a stockade fort, surrounded with clearings and cultivated fields. It is + evident that the priests had need of other hands than their own and those + of the few lay brothers attached to the mission. They required men inured + to labor, accustomed to the forest life, able to guide canoes and handle + tools and weapons. In the earlier epoch of the missions, when enthusiasm + was at its height, they were served in great measure by volunteers, who + joined them through devotion or penitence, and who were known as <i>donnés</i> or "given + men." Of late, the number of these had much diminished; and they now relied + chiefly on hired men, or <i>engagés</i>. These were employed in + building, hunting, fishing, clearing, and tilling the ground, guiding + canoes, and (if faith is to be placed in reports current throughout the + colony) in trading with the Indians for the profit <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg + 47]</a></span> of the missions. This charge of trading—which, if + the results were applied exclusively to the support of the missions, does + not of necessity involve much censure—is vehemently reiterated in + many quarters, including the official despatches of the governor of Canada; + while, so far as I can discover, the Jesuits never distinctly denied it, + and on several occasions they partially admitted its truth.<a name="fnanchor_34" id="fnanchor_34"></a><a href="#footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_26" id="footnote_26"></a><a href="#fnanchor_26"> <span class="label">[26]</span></a> See "The Jesuits in North America."</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_27" id="footnote_27"></a><a href="#fnanchor_27"> <span class="label">[27]</span></a> He complains that the Indians were very averse to giving information + on the subject, so that the Jesuits had not as yet discovered the metal <i>in + situ</i>, though they hoped soon to do so. The Indians told him that + the copper had first been found by four hunters, who had landed on + a certain island, near the north shore of the lake. Wishing to boil + their food in a vessel of bark, they gathered stones on the shore, + heated them red hot, and threw them in, but presently discovered them + to be pure copper. Their repast over, they hastened to re-embark, being + afraid of the lynxes and the hares, which, on this island, were as + large as dogs, and which would have devoured their provisions, and + perhaps their canoe. They took with them some of the wonderful stones; + but scarcely had they left the island, when a deep voice, like thunder, + sounded in their ears, "Who are these thieves who steal the toys of + my children?" It was the God of the Waters, or some other powerful + manito. The four adventurers retreated in great terror; but three of + them soon died, and the fourth survived only long enough to reach his + village, and tell the story. The island has no foundation, but floats + with the movement of the wind; and no Indian dares land on its shores, + dreading the wrath of the manito. Dablon, <i>Relation</i>, 1670, 84.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_28" id="footnote_28"></a><a href="#fnanchor_28"> <span class="label">[28]</span></a> <i>Lettre du Père Jacques Marquette au R. P. Supérieur + des Missions;</i> in <i>Relation</i>, 1670, 87.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_29" id="footnote_29"></a><a href="#fnanchor_29"> <span class="label">[29]</span></a> The Illinois lived at this time beyond the Mississippi, thirty + days' journey from La Pointe; whither they had been driven by the Iroquois, + from their former abode near Lake Michigan. Dablon (<i>Relation</i>, + 1671, 24, 25) says that they lived seven days' journey beyond the Mississippi, + in eight villages. A few years later, most of them returned to the + east side, and made their abode on the river Illinois.</p> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_30" id="footnote_30"></a><a href="#fnanchor_30"> <span class="label">[30]</span></a> The Baye des Puants of the early writers; or, more correctly, + La Baye des Eaux Puantes. The Winnebago Indians, living near it, were + called Les Puans, apparently for no other reason than because some + portion of the bay was said to have an odor like the sea.</p> + <p>Lake Michigan, the "Lac des Illinois" of the French, was, according + to a letter of Father Allouez, called "Machihiganing" by the Indians. + Dablon writes the name "Mitchiganon."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_31" id="footnote_31"></a><a href="#fnanchor_31"> <span class="label">[31]</span></a> <i>Relation</i>, 1671, 43.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_32" id="footnote_32"></a><a href="#fnanchor_32"> <span class="label">[32]</span></a> This town was on the Neenah or Fox River, above Lake Winnebago. + The Mascoutins, Fire Nation, or Nation of the Prairie, are extinct + or merged in other tribes. See "The Jesuits in North America." The + Miamis soon removed to the banks of the river St. Joseph, near Lake + Michigan.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_33" id="footnote_33"></a><a href="#fnanchor_33"> <span class="label">[33]</span></a> <i>Relation</i>, 1672, 42.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_34" id="footnote_34"></a><a href="#fnanchor_34"> <span class="label">[34]</span></a> This charge was made from the first establishment of the missions. + For remarks on it, see "The Jesuits in North America" and "The Old + Régime in Canada."</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2> +<p class="center">1667-1672.</p> +<p class="center">FRANCE TAKES POSSESSION OF THE WEST.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Talon.—Saint-Lusson.—Perrot.—The Ceremony at Saut Ste. Marie.—The Speech of Allouez.—Count +Frontenac.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">Jean Talon</span>, intendant of Canada, was full of projects + for the good of the colony. On the one hand, he set himself to the development + of its industries, and, on the other, to the extension of its domain. + He meant to occupy the interior of the continent, control the rivers, + which were its only highways, and hold it for France against every other + nation. On the east, England was to be hemmed within a narrow strip of + seaboard; while, on the south, Talon aimed at securing a port on the Gulf + of Mexico, to keep the Spaniards in check, and dispute with them the possession + of the vast regions which they claimed as their own. But the interior + of the continent was still an unknown world. It behooved him to explore + it; and to that end he availed himself of Jesuits, officers, fur-traders, + and enterprising schemers like La Salle. His efforts at discovery seem + to have been conducted with a singular economy <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg + 49]</a></span> of the King's purse. La Salle paid all the expenses of + his first expedition made under Talon's auspices; and apparently of the + second also, though the intendant announces it in his despatches as an + expedition sent out by himself.<a name="fnanchor_35" id="fnanchor_35"></a><a href="#footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> When, in 1670, he ordered Daumont + de Saint-Lusson to search for copper mines on Lake Superior, and at the + same time to take formal possession of the whole interior for the King, + it was arranged that he should pay the costs of the journey by trading + with the Indians.<a name="fnanchor_36" id="fnanchor_36"></a><a href="#footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">SAINT-LUSSON AND PERROT.</div> +<p>Saint-Lusson set out with a small party of men, and Nicolas Perrot as + his interpreter. Among Canadian <i>voyageurs</i>, few names are so conspicuous + as that of Perrot; not because there were not others who matched him in + achievement, but because he could write, and left behind him a tolerable + account of what he had seen.<a name="fnanchor_37" id="fnanchor_37"></a><a href="#footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> He was at this time twenty-six years + old, and had formerly been an <i>engagé</i> of the Jesuits. He + was a man of enterprise, courage, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg + 50]</a></span> address,—the last being especially shown in his dealings + with Indians, over whom he had great influence. He spoke Algonquin fluently, + and was favorably known to many tribes of that family.</p> +<p>Saint-Lusson wintered at the Manitoulin Islands; while Perrot, having + first sent messages to the tribes of the north, inviting them to meet + the deputy of the governor at the Saut Ste. Marie in the following spring, + proceeded to Green Bay, to urge the same invitation upon the tribes of + that quarter. They knew him well, and greeted him with clamors of welcome. + The Miamis, it is said, received him with a sham battle, which was designed + to do him honor, but by which nerves more susceptible would have been + severely shaken.<a name="fnanchor_38" id="fnanchor_38"></a><a href="#footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> They entertained him also with a grand game of <i>la + crosse</i>, the Indian ball-play. Perrot gives a marvellous account of + the authority and state of the Miami chief, who, he says, was attended + day and night by a guard of warriors,—an assertion which would be + incredible, were it not sustained by the account of the same chief given + by the Jesuit Dablon. Of the tribes of the Bay, the greater part promised + to send delegates to the Saut; but the Pottawattamies dissuaded the Miami + potentate from attempting so long a journey, lest the fatigue incident + to it might injure his health; and he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg + 51]</a></span> therefore deputed them to represent him and his tribesmen + at the great meeting. Their principal chiefs, with those of the Sacs, + Winnebagoes, and Menomonies, embarked, and paddled for the place of rendezvous, + where they and Perrot arrived on the fifth of May.<a name="fnanchor_39" id="fnanchor_39"></a><a href="#footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p> +<p>Saint-Lusson was here with his men, fifteen in number, among whom was + Louis Joliet;<a name="fnanchor_40" id="fnanchor_40"></a><a href="#footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> and Indians were fast thronging in from their wintering + grounds, attracted, as usual, by the fishery of the rapids or moved by + the messages sent by Perrot,—Crees, Monsonis, Amikoués, Nipissings, + and many more. When fourteen tribes, or their representatives, had arrived, + Saint-Lusson prepared to execute the commission with which he was charged.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CEREMONY AT THE SAUT.</div> +<p>At the foot of the rapids was the village of the Sauteurs, above the village + was a hill, and hard by stood the fort of the Jesuits. On the morning + of the fourteenth of June, Saint-Lusson led his followers to the top of + the hill, all fully equipped and under arms. Here, too, in the vestments + of their priestly office, were four Jesuits,—Claude Dablon, Superior + of the Missions of the lakes, Gabriel Druilletes, Claude Allouez, and + Louis André.<a name="fnanchor_41" id="fnanchor_41"></a><a href="#footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> All around the great throng of Indians stood, + or crouched, or reclined at length, with eyes and ears intent. A <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg + 52]</a></span> large cross of wood had been made ready. Dablon, in solemn + form, pronounced his blessing on it; and then it was reared and planted + in the ground, while the Frenchmen, uncovered, sang the <i>Vexilla Regis</i>. + Then a post of cedar was planted beside it, with a metal plate attached, + engraven with the royal arms; while Saint-Lusson's followers sang the <i>Exaudiat</i>, + and one of the Jesuits uttered a prayer for the King. Saint-Lusson now + advanced, and, holding his sword in one hand, and raising with the other + a sod of earth, proclaimed in a loud voice,—</p> +<p>"In the name of the Most High, Mighty, and Redoubted Monarch, Louis, Fourteenth + of that name, Most Christian King of France and of Navarre, I take possession + of this place, Sainte Marie du Saut, as also of Lakes Huron and Superior, + the Island of Manitoulin, and all countries, rivers, lakes, and streams + contiguous and adjacent thereunto,—both those which have been discovered + and those which may be discovered hereafter, in all their length and breadth, + bounded on the one side by the seas of the North and of the West, and + on the other by the South Sea: declaring to the nations thereof that from + this time forth they are vassals of his Majesty, bound to obey his laws + and follow his customs; promising them on his part all succor and protection + against the incursions and invasions of their enemies: declaring to all + other potentates, princes, sovereigns, states, and republics,—to + them and to their subjects,—that they cannot and are not to seize + or settle upon any <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg + 53]</a></span> parts of the aforesaid countries, save only under the good + pleasure of His Most Christian Majesty, and of him who will govern in + his behalf; and this on pain of incurring his resentment and the efforts + of his arms. <i>Vive le Roi</i>."<a name="fnanchor_42" id="fnanchor_42"></a><a href="#footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p> +<p>The Frenchmen fired their guns and shouted "Vive le Roi," and the yelps + of the astonished Indians mingled with the din.</p> +<p>What now remains of the sovereignty thus pompously proclaimed? Now and + then the accents of France on the lips of some straggling boatman or vagabond + half-breed,—this, and nothing more.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ALLOUEZ'S HARANGUE.</div> +<p>When the uproar was over, Father Allouez addressed the Indians in a solemn + harangue; and these were his words: "It is a good work, my brothers, an + important work, a great work, that brings us together in council to-day. + Look up at the cross which rises so high above your heads. It was there + that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, after making himself a man for the + love of men, was nailed and died, to satisfy his Eternal Father for our + sins. He is the master of our lives; the ruler of Heaven, Earth, and Hell. + It is he of whom I am continually speaking to you, and whose name and + word I have borne through all your country. But look at this post to which + are fixed the arms of the great chief of France, whom we call King. He + lives across the sea. He is the chief of the greatest chiefs, and has + no equal on earth. All the chiefs whom you have ever seen are but children <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg + 54]</a></span> beside him. He is like a great tree, and they are but the + little herbs that one walks over and tramples under foot. You know Onontio,<a name="fnanchor_43" id="fnanchor_43"></a><a href="#footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> + that famous chief at Quebec; you know and you have seen that he is the + terror of the Iroquois, and that his very name makes them tremble, since + he has laid their country waste and burned their towns with fire. Across + the sea there are ten thousand Onontios like him, who are but the warriors + of our great King, of whom I have told you. When he says, 'I am going + to war,' everybody obeys his orders; and each of these ten thousand chiefs + raises a troop of a hundred warriors, some on sea and some on land. Some + embark in great ships, such as you have seen at Quebec. Your canoes carry + only four or five men, or, at the most, ten or twelve; but our ships carry + four or five hundred, and sometimes a thousand. Others go to war by land, + and in such numbers that if they stood in a double file they would reach + from here to Mississaquenk, which is more than twenty leagues off. When + our King attacks his enemies, he is more terrible than the thunder: the + earth trembles; the air and the sea are all on fire with the blaze of + his cannon: he is seen in the midst of his warriors, covered over with + the blood of his enemies, whom he kills in such numbers that he does not + reckon them by the scalps, but by the streams of blood which he causes + to flow. He takes so many prisoners that he holds them in no account, + but lets them go where they will, to show <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg + 55]</a></span> that he is not afraid of them. But now nobody dares make + war on him. All the nations beyond the sea have submitted to him and begged + humbly for peace. Men come from every quarter of the earth to listen to + him and admire him. All that is done in the world is decided by him alone.</p> +<p>"But what shall I say of his riches? You think yourselves rich when you + have ten or twelve sacks of corn, a few hatchets, beads, kettles, and + other things of that sort. He has cities of his own, more than there are + of men in all this country for five hundred leagues around. In each city + there are store-houses where there are hatchets enough to cut down all + your forests, kettles enough to cook all your moose, and beads enough + to fill all your lodges. His house is longer than from here to the top + of the Saut,—that is to say, more than half a league,—and + higher than your tallest trees; and it holds more families than the largest + of your towns."<a name="fnanchor_44" id="fnanchor_44"></a><a href="#footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> The father added more in a similar strain; but the + peroration of his harangue is not on record.</p> +<p>Whatever impression this curious effort of Jesuit rhetoric may have produced + upon the hearers, it did not prevent them from stripping the royal arms + from the post to which they were nailed, as soon as Saint-Lusson and his + men had left the Saut; probably, not because they understood the import + of the symbol, but because they feared it as a charm. Saint-Lusson <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg + 56]</a></span> proceeded to Lake Superior, where, however, he accomplished + nothing, except, perhaps, a traffic with the Indians on his own account; + and he soon after returned to Quebec. Talon was resolved to find the Mississippi, + the most interesting object of search, and seemingly the most attainable, + in the wild and vague domain which he had just claimed for the King. The + Indians had described it; the Jesuits were eager to discover it; and La + Salle, if he had not reached it, had explored two several avenues by which + it might be approached. Talon looked about him for a fit agent of the + enterprise, and made choice of Louis Joliet, who had returned from Lake + Superior.<a name="fnanchor_45" id="fnanchor_45"></a><a href="#footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> But the intendant was not to see the fulfilment of his design. + His busy and useful career in Canada was drawing to an end. A misunderstanding + had arisen between him and the governor, Courcelle. Both were faithful + servants of the King; but the relations between the two chiefs of the + colony were of a nature necessarily so critical, that a conflict of authority + was scarcely to be avoided. Each thought his functions encroached upon, + and both asked for recall. Another governor succeeded; one who was to + stamp his mark, broad, bold, and ineffaceable, on the most memorable page + of French-American History,—Louis de Buade, Count of Palluau and + Frontenac.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_35" id="footnote_35"></a><a href="#fnanchor_35"> <span class="label">[35]</span></a> At least, La Salle was in great need of money, about the time + of his second journey. On the sixth of August, 1671, he had received + on credit, "dans son grand besoin et nécessité," from + Branssac, fiscal attorney of the Seminary, merchandise to the amount + of four hundred and fifty livres; and on the eighteenth of December + of the following year he gave his promise to pay the same sum, in money + or furs, in the August following. Faillon found the papers in the ancient + records of Montreal.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_36" id="footnote_36"></a><a href="#fnanchor_36"> <span class="label">[36]</span></a> In his despatch of 2d Nov., 1671, Talon writes to the King that "Saint-Lusson's + expedition will cost nothing, as he has received beaver enough from + the Indians to pay him."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_37" id="footnote_37"></a><a href="#fnanchor_37"> <span class="label">[37]</span></a> <i>Mœurs, Coustumes, et Relligion des Sauvages de l'Amérique + Septentrionale.</i> This work of Perrot, hitherto unpublished, appeared + in 1864, under the editorship of Father Tailhan, S.J. A great part + of it is incorporated in La Potherie.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_38" id="footnote_38"></a><a href="#fnanchor_38"> <span class="label">[38]</span></a> See La Potherie, ii. 125. Perrot himself does not mention it. + Charlevoix erroneously places this interview at Chicago. Perrot's narrative + shows that he did not go farther than the tribes of Green Bay; and + the Miamis were then, as we have seen, on the upper part of Fox River.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_39" id="footnote_39"></a><a href="#fnanchor_39"> <span class="label">[39]</span></a> Perrot, <i>Mémoires</i>, 127.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_40" id="footnote_40"></a><a href="#fnanchor_40"> <span class="label">[40]</span></a> <i>Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession, etc., 14 Juin, + 1671.</i> The names are attached to this instrument.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_41" id="footnote_41"></a><a href="#fnanchor_41"> <span class="label">[41]</span></a> Marquette is said to have been present; but the official act just + cited, proves the contrary. He was still at St. Esprit.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_42" id="footnote_42"></a><a href="#fnanchor_42"> <span class="label">[42]</span></a> <i>Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_43" id="footnote_43"></a><a href="#fnanchor_43"> <span class="label">[43]</span></a> The Indian name of the governor of Canada.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_44" id="footnote_44"></a><a href="#fnanchor_44"> <span class="label">[44]</span></a> A close translation of Dablon's report of the speech. See <i>Relation</i>, + 1671, 27.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_45" id="footnote_45"></a><a href="#fnanchor_45"> <span class="label">[45]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 2 Nov., 1672.</i> In the Brodhead + Collection, by a copyist's error, the name of the Chevalier de Grandfontaine + is substituted for that of Talon.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2> +<p class="center">1672-1675.</p> +<p class="center">THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Joliet sent to find the +Mississippi. Marquette.—Departure.—Green Bay.—The +Wisconsin.—The Mississippi.—Indians.—Manitous.—The +Arkansas.—The Illinois.—Joliet's Misfortune.—Marquette +at Chicago: his Illness; his Death.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">If</span> Talon had remained in the colony, Frontenac would infallibly have quarrelled + with him; but he was too clear-sighted not to approve his plans for the + discovery and occupation of the interior. Before sailing for France, Talon + recommended Joliet as a suitable agent for the discovery of the Mississippi, + and the governor accepted his counsel.<a name="fnanchor_46" id="fnanchor_46"></a><a href="#footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p> +<p>Louis Joliet was the son of a wagon-maker in the service of the Company + of the Hundred Associates,<a name="fnanchor_47" id="fnanchor_47"></a><a href="#footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> then owners of Canada. He was born at Quebec + in 1645, and was educated by the Jesuits. When still very young, he resolved + to be a priest. He received the tonsure and the minor orders at the age + of seventeen. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg + 58]</a></span> Four years after, he is mentioned with especial honor for + the part he bore in the disputes in philosophy, at which the dignitaries + of the colony were present, and in which the intendant himself took part.<a name="fnanchor_48" id="fnanchor_48"></a><a href="#footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> + Not long after, he renounced his clerical vocation, and turned fur-trader. + Talon sent him, with one Péré, to explore the copper-mines + of Lake Superior; and it was on his return from this expedition that he + met La Salle and the Sulpitians near the head of Lake Ontario.<a name="fnanchor_49" id="fnanchor_49"></a><a href="#footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p> +<p>In what we know of Joliet, there is nothing that reveals any salient or + distinctive trait of character, any especial breadth of view or boldness + of design. He appears to have been simply a merchant, intelligent, well + educated, courageous, hardy, and enterprising. Though he had renounced + the priesthood, he retained his partiality for the Jesuits; and it is + more than probable that their influence had aided not a little to determine + Talon's choice. One of their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg + 59]</a></span> number, Jacques Marquette, was chosen to accompany him.</p> +<div class="sidenote">MARQUETTE.</div> +<p>He passed up the lakes to Michilimackinac, and found his destined companion + at Point St. Ignace, on the north side of the strait, where, in his palisaded + mission-house and chapel, he had labored for two years past to instruct + the Huron refugees from St. Esprit, and a band of Ottawas who had joined + them. Marquette was born in 1637, of an old and honorable family at Laon, + in the north of France, and was now thirty-five years of age. When about + seventeen, he had joined the Jesuits, evidently from motives purely religious; + and in 1666 he was sent to the missions of Canada. At first, he was destined + to the station of Tadoussac; and to prepare himself for it, he studied + the Montagnais language under Gabriel Druilletes. But his destination + was changed, and he was sent to the Upper Lakes in 1668, where he had + since remained. His talents as a linguist must have been great; for within + a few years he learned to speak with ease six Indian languages. The traits + of his character are unmistakable. He was of the brotherhood of the early + Canadian missionaries, and the true counterpart of Garnier or Jogues. + He was a devout votary of the Virgin Mary, who, imaged to his mind in + shapes of the most transcendent loveliness with which the pencil of human + genius has ever informed the canvas, was to him the object of an adoration + not unmingled with a sentiment of chivalrous devotion. The longings of + a sensitive heart, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg + 60]</a></span> divorced from earth, sought solace in the skies. A subtile + element of romance was blended with the fervor of his worship, and hung + like an illumined cloud over the harsh and hard realities of his daily + lot. Kindled by the smile of his celestial mistress, his gentle and noble + nature knew no fear. For her he burned to dare and to suffer, discover + new lands and conquer new realms to her sway.</p> +<p>He begins the journal of his voyage thus: "The day of the Immaculate Conception + of the Holy Virgin; whom I had continually invoked since I came to this + country of the Ottawas to obtain from God the favor of being enabled to + visit the nations on the river Mississippi,—this very day was precisely + that on which M. Joliet arrived with orders from Count Frontenac, our + governor, and from M. Talon, our intendant, to go with me on this discovery. + I was all the more delighted at this good news, because I saw my plans + about to be accomplished, and found myself in the happy necessity of exposing + my life for the salvation of all these tribes,—and especially of + the Illinois, who, when I was at Point St. Esprit, had begged me very + earnestly to bring the word of God among them."</p> +<div class="sidenote">DEPARTURE.</div> +<p>The outfit of the travellers was very simple. They provided themselves + with two birch canoes, and a supply of smoked meat and Indian corn; embarked + with five men, and began their voyage on the seventeenth of May. They + had obtained all possible information from the Indians, and had made, + by means <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> of + it, a species of map of their intended route. "Above all," writes Marquette, "I + placed our voyage under the protection of the Holy Virgin Immaculate, + promising that if she granted us the favor of discovering the great river, + I would give it the name of the Conception."<a name="fnanchor_50" id="fnanchor_50"></a><a href="#footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> Their course was westward; + and, plying their paddles, they passed the Straits of Michilimackinac, + and coasted the northern shores of Lake Michigan, landing at evening to + build their camp-fire at the edge of the forest, and draw up their canoes + on the strand. They soon reached the river Menomonie, and ascended it + to the village of the Menomonies, or Wild-rice Indians.<a name="fnanchor_51" id="fnanchor_51"></a><a href="#footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> When they + told them the object of their voyage, they were filled with astonishment, + and used their best ingenuity to dissuade them. The banks of the Mississippi, + they said, were inhabited by ferocious tribes, who put every stranger + to death, tomahawking all new-comers without cause or provocation. They + added that there was a demon in a certain part of the river, whose roar + could be heard at a great distance, and who would engulf them in the abyss + where he dwelt; that its waters were full of frightful monsters, who would + devour them and their canoe; and, finally, that the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg + 62]</a></span> heat was so great that they would perish inevitably. Marquette + set their counsel at naught, gave them a few words of instruction in the + mysteries of the Faith, taught them a prayer, and bade them farewell.</p> +<p>The travellers next reached the mission at the head of Green Bay; entered + Fox River; with difficulty and labor dragged their canoes up the long + and tumultuous rapids; crossed Lake Winnebago; and followed the quiet + windings of the river beyond, where they glided through an endless growth + of wild rice, and scared the innumerable birds that fed upon it. On either + hand rolled the prairie, dotted with groves and trees, browsing elk and + deer.<a name="fnanchor_52" id="fnanchor_52"></a><a href="#footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> On the seventh of June, they reached the Mascoutins and Miamis, + who, since the visit of Dablon and Allouez, had been joined by the Kickapoos. + Marquette, who had an eye for natural beauty, was delighted with the situation + of the town, which he describes as standing on the crown of a hill; while, + all around, the prairie stretched beyond the sight, interspersed with + groves and belts of tall forest. But he was still more delighted when + he saw a cross planted in the midst of the place. The Indians had decorated + it with a number of dressed deer-skins, red girdles, and bows and arrows, + which they had hung upon it as an offering to the Great Manitou of the + French; a sight by which Marquette says he was "extremely consoled."</p> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg + 63]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE WISCONSIN RIVER.</div> +<p>The travellers had no sooner reached the town than they called the chiefs + and elders to a council. Joliet told them that the governor of Canada + had sent him to discover new countries, and that God had sent his companion + to teach the true faith to the inhabitants; and he prayed for guides to + show them the way to the waters of the Wisconsin. The council readily + consented; and on the tenth of June the Frenchmen embarked again, with + two Indians to conduct them. All the town came down to the shore to see + their departure. Here were the Miamis, with long locks of hair dangling + over each ear, after a fashion which Marquette thought very becoming; + and here, too, the Mascoutins and the Kickapoos, whom he describes as + mere boors in comparison with their Miami townsmen. All stared alike at + the seven adventurers, marvelling that men could be found to risk an enterprise + so hazardous.</p> +<p>The river twisted among lakes and marshes choked with wild rice; and, + but for their guides, they could scarcely have followed the perplexed + and narrow channel. It brought them at last to the portage, where, after + carrying their canoes a mile and a half over the prairie and through the + marsh, they launched them on the Wisconsin, bade farewell to the waters + that flowed to the St. Lawrence, and committed themselves to the current + that was to bear them they knew not whither,—perhaps to the Gulf + of Mexico, perhaps to the South Sea or the Gulf of California. They glided + calmly down the tranquil stream, by <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg + 64]</a></span> islands choked with trees and matted with entangling grape-vines; + by forests, groves, and prairies, the parks and pleasure-grounds of a + prodigal Nature; by thickets and marshes and broad bare sand-bars; under + the shadowing trees, between whose tops looked down from afar the bold + brow of some woody bluff. At night, the bivouac,—the canoes inverted + on the bank, the flickering fire, the meal of bison-flesh or venison, + the evening pipes, and slumber beneath the stars; and when in the morning + they embarked again, the mist hung on the river like a bridal veil, then + melted before the sun, till the glassy water and the languid woods basked + breathless in the sultry glare.<a name="fnanchor_53" id="fnanchor_53"></a><a href="#footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE MISSISSIPPI.</div> +<p>On the seventeenth of June they saw on their right the broad meadows, + bounded in the distance by rugged hills, where now stand the town and + fort of Prairie du Chien. Before them a wide and rapid current coursed + athwart their way, by the foot of lofty heights wrapped thick in forests. + They had found what they sought, and "with a joy," writes Marquette, "which + I cannot express," they steered forth their canoes on the eddies of the + Mississippi.</p> +<p>Turning southward, they paddled down the stream, through a solitude unrelieved + by the faintest trace of man. A large fish, apparently one of the huge + cat-fish of the Mississippi, blundered against Marquette's canoe, with + a force which seems to have startled him; and once, as they drew in their + net, they caught <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg + 65]</a></span> a "spade-fish," whose eccentric appearance greatly astonished + them. At length the buffalo began to appear, grazing in herds on the great + prairies which then bordered the river; and Marquette describes the fierce + and stupid look of the old bulls, as they stared at the intruders through + the tangled mane which nearly blinded them.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE ILLINOIS INDIANS.</div> +<p>They advanced with extreme caution, landed at night, and made a fire to + cook their evening meal; then extinguished it, embarked again, paddled + some way farther, and anchored in the stream, keeping a man on the watch + till morning. They had journeyed more than a fortnight without meeting + a human being, when, on the twenty-fifth, they discovered footprints of + men in the mud of the western bank, and a well-trodden path that led to + the adjacent prairie. Joliet and Marquette resolved to follow it; and + leaving the canoes in charge of their men, they set out on their hazardous + adventure. The day was fair, and they walked two leagues in silence, following + the path through the forest and across the sunny prairie, till they discovered + an Indian village on the banks of a river, and two others on a hill half + a league distant.<a name="fnanchor_54" id="fnanchor_54"></a><a href="#footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> Now, with beating hearts, they invoked the aid of + Heaven, and, again advancing, came so near, without being seen, that they + could <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> hear + the voices of the Indians among the wigwams. Then they stood forth in + full view, and shouted to attract attention. There was great commotion + in the village. The inmates swarmed out of their huts, and four of their + chief men presently came forward to meet the strangers, advancing very + deliberately, and holding up toward the sun two calumets, or peace-pipes, + decorated with feathers. They stopped abruptly before the two Frenchmen, + and stood gazing at them without speaking a word. Marquette was much relieved + on seeing that they wore French cloth, whence he judged that they must + be friends and allies. He broke the silence, and asked them who they were; + whereupon they answered that they were Illinois, and offered the pipe; + which having been duly smoked, they all went together to the village. + Here the chief received the travellers after a singular fashion, meant + to do them honor. He stood stark naked at the door of a large wigwam, + holding up both hands as if to shield his eyes. "Frenchmen, how bright + the sun shines when you come to visit us! All our village awaits you; + and you shall enter our wigwams in peace." So saying, he led them into + his own, which was crowded to suffocation with savages, staring at their + guests in silence. Having smoked with the chiefs and old men, they were + invited to visit the great chief of all the Illinois, at one of the villages + they had seen in the distance; and thither they proceeded, followed by + a throng of warriors, squaws, and children. On <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg + 67]</a></span> arriving, they were forced to smoke again, and listen to + a speech of welcome from the great chief, who delivered it standing between + two old men, naked like himself. His lodge was crowded with the dignitaries + of the tribe, whom Marquette addressed in Algonquin, announcing himself + as a messenger sent by the God who had made them, and whom it behooves + them to recognize and obey. He added a few words touching the power and + glory of Count Frontenac, and concluded by asking information concerning + the Mississippi, and the tribes along its banks, whom he was on his way + to visit. The chief replied with a speech of compliment; assuring his + guests that their presence added flavor to his tobacco, made the river + more calm, the sky more serene, and the earth more beautiful. In conclusion, + he gave them a young slave and a calumet, begging them at the same time + to abandon their purpose of descending the Mississippi.</p> +<p>A feast of four courses now followed. First, a wooden bowl full of a porridge + of Indian meal boiled with grease was set before the guests; and the master + of ceremonies fed them in turn, like infants, with a large spoon. Then + appeared a platter of fish; and the same functionary, carefully removing + the bones with his fingers, and blowing on the morsels to cool them, placed + them in the mouths of the two Frenchmen. A large dog, killed and cooked + for the occasion, was next placed before them; but, failing to tempt their + fastidious appetites, was supplanted by a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg + 68]</a></span> dish of fat buffalo-meat, which concluded the entertainment. + The crowd having dispersed, buffalo-robes were spread on the ground, and + Marquette and Joliet spent the night on the scene of the late festivity. + In the morning, the chief, with some six hundred of his tribesmen, escorted + them to their canoes, and bade them, after their stolid fashion, a friendly + farewell.</p> +<div class="sidenote">A REAL DANGER.</div> +<p>Again they were on their way, slowly drifting down the great river. They + passed the mouth of the Illinois, and glided beneath that line of rocks + on the eastern side, cut into fantastic forms by the elements, and marked + as "The Ruined Castles" on some of the early French maps. Presently they + beheld a sight which reminded them that the Devil was still lord paramount + of this wilderness. On the flat face of a high rock were painted, in red, + black, and green, a pair of monsters, each "as large as a calf, with horns + like a deer, red eyes, a beard like a tiger, and a frightful expression + of countenance. The face is something like that of a man, the body covered + with scales; and the tail so long that it passes entirely round the body, + over the head and between the legs, ending like that of a fish." Such + is the account which the worthy Jesuit gives of these manitous, or Indian + gods.<a name="fnanchor_55" id="fnanchor_55"></a><a href="#footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> He confesses that at first they frightened <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg + 69]</a></span> him; and his imagination and that of his credulous companions + was so wrought upon by these unhallowed efforts of Indian art, that they + continued for a long time to talk of them as they plied their paddles. + They were thus engaged, when they were suddenly aroused by a real danger. + A torrent of yellow mud rushed furiously athwart the calm blue current + of the Mississippi, boiling and surging, and sweeping in its course logs, + branches, and uprooted trees. They had reached the mouth of the Missouri, + where that savage river, descending from its mad career through a vast + unknown of barbarism, poured its turbid floods into the bosom of its gentler + sister. Their light canoes whirled on the miry vortex like dry leaves + on an angry brook. "I never," writes Marquette, "saw anything more terrific;" but + they escaped with their fright, and held their way down the turbulent + and swollen current of the now united rivers.<a name="fnanchor_56" id="fnanchor_56"></a><a href="#footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> They passed the lonely + forest that covered <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg + 70]</a></span> the site of the destined city of St. Louis, and, a few + days later, saw on their left the mouth of the stream to which the Iroquois + had given the well-merited name of Ohio, or the "Beautiful River."<a name="fnanchor_57" id="fnanchor_57"></a><a href="#footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> + Soon they began to see the marshy shores buried in a dense growth of the + cane, with its tall straight stems and feathery light-green foliage. The + sun glowed through the hazy air with a languid stifling heat, and by day + and night mosquitoes in myriads left them no peace. They floated slowly + down the current, crouched in the shade of the sails which they had spread + as awnings, when suddenly they saw Indians on the east bank. The surprise + was mutual, and each party was as much frightened as the other. Marquette + hastened to display the calumet which the Illinois had given him by way + of passport; and the Indians, recognizing the pacific symbol, replied + with an invitation to land. Evidently, they were in communication with + Europeans, for they were armed with guns, knives, and hatchets, wore garments + of cloth, and carried their gunpowder in small bottles of thick glass. + They feasted the Frenchmen with buffalo-meat, bear's oil, and white plums; + and gave them a variety of doubtful information, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg + 71]</a></span> including the agreeable but delusive assurance that they + would reach the mouth of the river in ten days. It was, in fact, more + than a thousand miles distant.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI.</div> +<p>They resumed their course, and again floated down the interminable monotony + of river, marsh, and forest. Day after day passed on in solitude, and + they had paddled some three hundred miles since their meeting with the + Indians, when, as they neared the mouth of the Arkansas, they saw a cluster + of wigwams on the west bank. Their inmates were all astir, yelling the + war-whoop, snatching their weapons, and running to the shore to meet the + strangers, who, on their part, called for succor to the Virgin. In truth, + they had need of her aid; for several large wooden canoes, filled with + savages, were putting out from the shore, above and below them, to cut + off their retreat, while a swarm of headlong young warriors waded into + the water to attack them. The current proved too strong; and, failing + to reach the canoes of the Frenchmen, one of them threw his war-club, + which flew over the heads of the startled travellers. Meanwhile, Marquette + had not ceased to hold up his calumet, to which the excited crowd gave + no heed, but strung their bows and notched their arrows for immediate + action; when at length the elders of the village arrived, saw the peace-pipe, + restrained the ardor of the youth, and urged the Frenchmen to come ashore. + Marquette and his companions complied, trembling, and found a better reception + than <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> they + had reason to expect. One of the Indians spoke a little Illinois, and + served as interpreter; a friendly conference was followed by a feast of + sagamite and fish; and the travellers, not without sore misgivings, spent + the night in the lodges of their entertainers.<a name="fnanchor_58" id="fnanchor_58"></a><a href="#footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE ARKANSAS.</div> +<p>Early in the morning, they embarked again, and proceeded to a village + of the Arkansas tribe, about eight leagues below. Notice of their coming + was sent before them by their late hosts; and as they drew near they were + met by a canoe, in the prow of which stood a naked personage, holding + a calumet, singing, and making gestures of friendship. On reaching the + village, which was on the east side,<a name="fnanchor_59" id="fnanchor_59"></a><a href="#footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> opposite the mouth of the river + Arkansas, they were conducted to a sort of scaffold, before the lodge + of the war-chief. The space beneath had been prepared for their reception, + the ground being neatly covered with rush mats. On these they were seated; + the warriors sat around them in a semi-circle; then the elders of the + tribe; and then the promiscuous crowd of villagers, standing, and staring + over the heads of the more dignified members of the assembly. All the + men were naked; but, to compensate for the lack of clothing, they wore + strings of beads in their noses and ears. The women were clothed in shabby + skins, and wore their hair clumped in a mass behind each <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg + 73]</a></span> ear. By good luck, there was a young Indian in the village, + who had an excellent knowledge of Illinois; and through him Marquette + endeavored to explain the mysteries of Christianity, and to gain information + concerning the river below. To this end he gave his auditors the presents + indispensable on such occasions, but received very little in return. They + told him that the Mississippi was infested by hostile Indians, armed with + guns procured from white men; and that they, the Arkansas, stood in such + fear of them that they dared not hunt the buffalo, but were forced to + live on Indian corn, of which they raised three crops a year.</p> +<p>During the speeches on either side, food was brought in without ceasing,—sometimes + a platter of sagamite or mush; sometimes of corn boiled whole; sometimes + a roasted dog. The villagers had large earthen pots and platters, made + by themselves with tolerable skill, as well as hatchets, knives, and beads, + gained by traffic with the Illinois and other tribes in contact with the + French or Spaniards. All day there was feasting without respite, after + the merciless practice of Indian hospitality; but at night some of their + entertainers proposed to kill and plunder them,—a scheme which was + defeated by the vigilance of the chief, who visited their quarters, and + danced the calumet dance to reassure his guests.</p> +<p>The travellers now held counsel as to what course they should take. They + had gone far enough, as they thought, to establish one important point,—that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg + 74]</a></span> the Mississippi discharged its waters, not into the Atlantic + or sea of Virginia, nor into the Gulf of California or Vermilion Sea, + but into the Gulf of Mexico. They thought themselves nearer to its mouth + than they actually were, the distance being still about seven hundred + miles; and they feared that if they went farther they might be killed + by Indians or captured by Spaniards, whereby the results of their discovery + would be lost. Therefore they resolved to return to Canada, and report + what they had seen.</p> +<p>They left the Arkansas village, and began their homeward voyage on the + seventeenth of July. It was no easy task to urge their way upward, in + the heat of midsummer, against the current of the dark and gloomy stream, + toiling all day under the parching sun, and sleeping at night in the exhalations + of the unwholesome shore, or in the narrow confines of their birchen vessels, + anchored on the river. Marquette was attacked with dysentery. Languid + and well-nigh spent, he invoked his celestial mistress, as day after day, + and week after week, they won their slow way northward. At length, they + reached the Illinois, and, entering its mouth, followed its course, charmed, + as they went, with its placid waters, its shady forests, and its rich + plains, grazed by the bison and the deer. They stopped at a spot soon + to be made famous in the annals of western discovery. This was a village + of the Illinois, then called "Kaskaskia;" a name afterwards transferred + to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> another + locality.<a name="fnanchor_60" id="fnanchor_60"></a><a href="#footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> A chief, with a band of young warriors, offered to guide + them to the Lake of the Illinois; that is to say, Lake Michigan. Thither + they repaired; and, coasting its shores, reached Green Bay at the end + of September, after an absence of about four months, during which they + had paddled their canoes somewhat more than two thousand five hundred + miles.<a name="fnanchor_61" id="fnanchor_61"></a><a href="#footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">RETURN TO CANADA.</div> +<p>Marquette remained to recruit his exhausted strength; but Joliet descended + to Quebec, to bear the report of his discovery to Count Frontenac. Fortune + had wonderfully favored him on his long and perilous journey; but now + she abandoned him on the very threshold of home. At the foot of the rapids + of La Chine, and immediately above Montreal, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg + 76]</a></span> his canoe was overset, two of his men and an Indian boy + were drowned, all his papers were lost, and he himself narrowly escaped.<a name="fnanchor_62" id="fnanchor_62"></a><a href="#footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> + In a letter to Frontenac, he speaks of the accident as follows: "I had + escaped every peril from the Indians; I had passed forty-two rapids; and + was on the point of disembarking, full of joy at the success of so long + and difficult an enterprise, when my canoe capsized, after all the danger + seemed over. I lost two men and my box of papers, within sight of the + first French settlements, which I had left almost two years before. Nothing + remains to me but my life, and the ardent desire to employ it on any service + which you may please to direct."<a name="fnanchor_63" id="fnanchor_63"></a><a href="#footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></p> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg + 77]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">MARQUETTE'S MISSION.</div> +<p>Marquette spent the winter and the following summer at the mission of + Green Bay, still suffering from his malady. In the autumn, however, it + abated; and he was permitted by his Superior to attempt the execution + of a plan to which he was devotedly attached,—the founding, at the + principal town of the Illinois, of a mission to be called the "Immaculate + Conception," a name which he had already given to the river Mississippi. + He set out on this errand on the twenty-fifth of October, accompanied + by two men, named Pierre and Jacques, one of whom had been with him on + his great journey of discovery. A band of Pottawattamies and another band + of Illinois also joined him. The united parties—ten canoes in all—followed + the east shore of Green Bay as far as the inlet then called "Sturgeon + Cove," from the head of which they crossed by a difficult portage through + the forest to the shore of Lake Michigan. November had come. The bright + hues of the autumn foliage were changed to rusty brown. The shore was + desolate, and the lake was stormy. They were more <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg + 78]</a></span> than a month in coasting its western border, when at length + they reached the river Chicago, entered it, and ascended about two leagues. + Marquette's disease had lately returned, and hemorrhage now ensued. He + told his two companions that this journey would be his last. In the condition + in which he was, it was impossible to go farther. The two men built a + log hut by the river, and here they prepared to spend the winter; while + Marquette, feeble as he was, began the spiritual exercises of Saint Ignatius, + and confessed his two companions twice a week.</p> +<p>Meadow, marsh, and forest were sheeted with snow, but game was abundant. + Pierre and Jacques killed buffalo and deer, and shot wild turkeys close + to their hut. There was an encampment of Illinois within two days' journey; + and other Indians, passing by this well-known thoroughfare, occasionally + visited them, treating the exiles kindly, and sometimes bringing them + game and Indian corn. Eighteen leagues distant was the camp of two adventurous + French traders,—one of them, a noted <i>coureur de bois</i>, nicknamed + La Taupine;<a name="fnanchor_64" id="fnanchor_64"></a><a href="#footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> and the other, a self-styled surgeon. They also visited + Marquette, and befriended him to the best of their power.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE MISSION AT KASKASKIA.</div> +<p>Urged by a burning desire to lay, before he died, the foundation of his + new mission of the Immaculate Conception, Marquette begged his two followers + to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> join + him in a <i>novena</i>, or nine days' devotion to the Virgin. In consequence + of this, as he believed, his disease relented; he began to regain strength, + and in March was able to resume the journey. On the thirtieth of the month, + they left their hut, which had been inundated by a sudden rise of the + river, and carried their canoe through mud and water over the portage + which led to the Des Plaines. Marquette knew the way, for he had passed + by this route on his return from the Mississippi. Amid the rains of opening + spring, they floated down the swollen current of the Des Plaines, by naked + woods and spongy, saturated prairies, till they reached its junction with + the main stream of the Illinois, which they descended to their destination, + the Indian town which Marquette calls "Kaskaskia." Here, as we are told, + he was received "like an angel from Heaven." He passed from wigwam to + wigwam, telling the listening crowds of God and the Virgin, Paradise and + Hell, angels and demons; and, when he thought their minds prepared, he + summoned them all to a grand council.</p> +<p>It took place near the town, on the great meadow which lies between the + river and the modern village of Utica. Here five hundred chiefs and old + men were seated in a ring; behind stood fifteen hundred youths and warriors, + and behind these again all the women and children of the village. Marquette, + standing in the midst, displayed four large pictures of the Virgin; harangued + the assembly on the mysteries of the Faith, and exhorted them to adopt + it. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> The + temper of his auditory met his utmost wishes. They begged him to stay + among them and continue his instructions; but his life was fast ebbing + away, and it behooved him to depart.</p> +<div class="sidenote">BURIAL OF MARQUETTE.</div> +<p>A few days after Easter he left the village, escorted by a crowd of Indians, + who followed him as far as Lake Michigan. Here he embarked with his two + companions. Their destination was Michilimackinac, and their course lay + along the eastern borders of the lake. As, in the freshness of advancing + spring, Pierre and Jacques urged their canoe along that lonely and savage + shore, the priest lay with dimmed sight and prostrated strength, communing + with the Virgin and the angels. On the nineteenth of May, he felt that + his hour was near; and, as they passed the mouth of a small river, he + requested his companions to land. They complied, built a shed of bark + on a rising ground near the bank, and carried thither the dying Jesuit. + With perfect cheerfulness and composure, he gave directions for his burial, + asked their forgiveness for the trouble he had caused them, administered + to them the sacrament of penitence, and thanked God that he was permitted + to die in the wilderness, a missionary of the Faith and a member of the + Jesuit brotherhood. At night, seeing that they were fatigued, he told + them to take rest, saying that he would call them when he felt his time + approaching. Two or three hours after, they heard a feeble voice, and, + hastening to his side, found him at the point of death. He expired calmly, + murmuring <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> the + names of Jesus and Mary, with his eyes fixed on the crucifix which one + of his followers held before him. They dug a grave beside the hut, and + here they buried him according to the directions which he had given them; + then, re-embarking, they made their way to Michilimackinac, to bear the + tidings to the priests at the mission of St. Ignace.<a name="fnanchor_65" id="fnanchor_65"></a><a href="#footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a></p> +<p>In the winter of 1676, a party of Kiskakon Ottawas were hunting on Lake + Michigan; and when, in the following spring, they prepared to return home, + they bethought them, in accordance with an Indian custom, of taking with + them the bones of Marquette, who had been their instructor at the mission + of St. Esprit. They repaired to the spot, found the grave, opened it, + washed and dried the bones and placed them carefully in a box of birch-bark. + Then, in a procession of thirty canoes, they bore it, singing their funeral + songs, to St. Ignace of Michilimackinac. As they approached, priests, + Indians, and traders all thronged to the shore. The relics of Marquette + were received with solemn ceremony, and buried beneath the floor of the + little chapel of the mission.<a name="fnanchor_66" id="fnanchor_66"></a><a href="#footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a></p> + <div class="footnotes"> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg + 82]</a></span></p> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + <p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_46" id="footnote_46"></a><a href="#fnanchor_46"> <span class="label">[46]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 2 Nov., 1672; Ibid., 14 Nov., + 1674</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_47" id="footnote_47"></a><a href="#fnanchor_47"> <span class="label">[47]</span></a> See "The Jesuits in North America."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_48" id="footnote_48"></a><a href="#fnanchor_48"> <span class="label">[48]</span></a> "Le 2 Juillet (1666) les premières disputes de philosophie + se font dans la congrégation avec succès. Toutes les + puissances s'y trouvent; M. l'Intendant entr'autres y a argumenté très-bien. + M. Jolliet et Pierre Francheville y ont très-bien répondu + de toute la logique."—<i>Journal des Jésuites.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_49" id="footnote_49"></a><a href="#fnanchor_49"> <span class="label">[49]</span></a> Nothing was known of Joliet till Shea investigated his history. + Ferland, in his <i>Notes sur les Registres de Notre-Dame de Québec</i>; + Faillon, in his <i>Colonie Française en Canada</i>; and Margry, + in a series of papers in the <i>Journal Général de l'Instruction + Publique</i>,—have thrown much new light on his life. From journals + of a voyage made by him at a later period to the coast of Labrador, + given in substance by Margry, he seems to have been a man of close + and intelligent observation. His mathematical acquirements appear to + have been very considerable.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_50" id="footnote_50"></a><a href="#fnanchor_50"> <span class="label">[50]</span></a> The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, sanctioned in our own + time by the Pope, was always a favorite tenet of the Jesuits; and Marquette + was especially devoted to it.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_51" id="footnote_51"></a><a href="#fnanchor_51"> <span class="label">[51]</span></a> The Malhoumines, Malouminek, Oumalouminek, or Nation des Folles-Avoines, + of early French writers. The <i>folle-avoine</i>, wild oats or "wild + rice" (<i>Zizania aquatica</i>), was their ordinary food, as also of + other tribes of this region.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_52" id="footnote_52"></a><a href="#fnanchor_52"> <span class="label">[52]</span></a> Dablon, on his journey with Allouez in 1670, was delighted with + the aspect of the country and the abundance of game along this river. + Carver, a century later, speaks to the same effect, saying that the + birds rose up in clouds from the wild-rice marshes.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_53" id="footnote_53"></a><a href="#fnanchor_53"> <span class="label">[53]</span></a> The above traits of the scenery of the Wisconsin are taken from + personal observation of the river during midsummer.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_54" id="footnote_54"></a><a href="#fnanchor_54"> <span class="label">[54]</span></a> The Indian villages, under the names of Peouaria (<i>Peoria</i>) + and Moingouena, are represented in Marquette's map upon a river corresponding + in position with the Des Moines; though the distance from the Wisconsin, + as given by him, would indicate a river farther north.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_55" id="footnote_55"></a><a href="#fnanchor_55"> <span class="label">[55]</span></a> The rock where these figures were painted is immediately above + the city of Alton. The tradition of their existence remains, though + they are entirely effaced by time. In 1867, when I passed the place, + a part of the rock had been quarried away, and, instead of Marquette's + monsters, it bore a huge advertisement of "Plantation Bitters." Some + years ago, certain persons, with more zeal than knowledge, proposed + to restore the figures, after conceptions of their own; but the idea + was abandoned.</p> + <p>Marquette made a drawing of the two monsters, but it is lost. I have, + however, a fac-simile of a map made a few years later, by order of + the Intendant Duchesneau, which is decorated with the portrait of one + of them, answering to Marquette's description, and probably copied + from his drawing. St. Cosme, who saw them in 1699, says that they were + even then almost effaced. Douay and Joutel also speak of them,—the + former, bitterly hostile to his Jesuit contemporaries, charging Marquette + with exaggeration in his account of them. Joutel could see nothing + terrifying in their appearance; but he says that his Indians made sacrifices + to them as they passed.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_56" id="footnote_56"></a><a href="#fnanchor_56"> <span class="label">[56]</span></a> The Missouri is called "Pekitanouï" by Marquette. It also + bears, on early French maps, the names of "Rivière des Osages," and "Rivière + des Emissourites," or "Oumessourits." On Marquette's map, a tribe of + this name is placed near its banks, just above the Osages. Judging + by the course of the Mississippi that it discharged into the Gulf of + Mexico, he conceived the hope of one day reaching the South Sea by + way of the Missouri.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_57" id="footnote_57"></a><a href="#fnanchor_57"> <span class="label">[57]</span></a> Called, on Marquette's map, "Ouabouskiaou." On some of the earliest + maps, it is called "Ouabache" (Wabash).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_58" id="footnote_58"></a><a href="#fnanchor_58"> <span class="label">[58]</span></a> This village, called "Mitchigamea," is represented on several + contemporary maps.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_59" id="footnote_59"></a><a href="#fnanchor_59"> <span class="label">[59]</span></a> A few years later, the Arkansas were all on the west side.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_60" id="footnote_60"></a><a href="#fnanchor_60"> <span class="label">[60]</span></a> Marquette says that it consisted at this time of seventy-four + lodges. These, like the Huron and Iroquois lodges, contained each several + fires and several families. This village was about seven miles below + the site of the present town of Ottawa.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_61" id="footnote_61"></a><a href="#fnanchor_61"> <span class="label">[61]</span></a> The journal of Marquette, first published in an imperfect form + by Thevenot, in 1681, has been reprinted by Mr. Lenox, under the direction + of Mr. Shea, from the manuscript preserved in the archives of the Canadian + Jesuits. It will also be found in Shea's <i>Discovery and Exploration + of the Mississippi Valley</i>, and the <i>Relations Inédites</i> of + Martin. The true map of Marquette accompanies all these publications. + The map published by Thevenot and reproduced by Bancroft is not Marquette's. + The original of this, of which I have a fac-simile, bears the title <i>Carte + de la Nouvelle Découverte que les Pères Jésuites + ont faite en l'année 1672, et continuée par le Père + Jacques Marquette, etc.</i> The return route of the expedition is incorrectly + laid down on it. A manuscript map of the Jesuit Raffeix, preserved + in the Bibliothèque Impériale, is more accurate in this + particular. I have also another contemporary manuscript map, indicating + the various Jesuit stations in the West at this time, and representing + the Mississippi, as discovered by Marquette. For these and other maps, + see Appendix.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_62" id="footnote_62"></a><a href="#fnanchor_62"> <span class="label">[62]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, Québec, 14 Nov., 1674.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_63" id="footnote_63"></a><a href="#fnanchor_63"> <span class="label">[63]</span></a> This letter is appended to Joliet's smaller map of his discoveries. + See Appendix. Compare <i>Détails sur le Voyage de Louis Joliet</i> and <i>Relation + de la Descouverte de plusieurs Pays situez au midi de la Nouvelle France, + faite en 1673</i> (Margry, i. 259). These are oral accounts given by + Joliet after the loss of his papers. Also, <i>Lettre de Joliet, Oct. + 10, 1674</i> (Harrisse). On the seventh of October, 1675, Joliet married + Claire Bissot, daughter of a wealthy Canadian merchant, engaged in + trade with the northern Indians. This drew Joliet's attention to Hudson's + Bay; and he made a journey thither in 1679, by way of the Saguenay. + He found three English forts on the bay, occupied by about sixty men, + who had also an armed vessel of twelve guns and several small trading-craft. + The English held out great inducements to Joliet to join them; but + he declined, and returned to Quebec, where he reported that unless + these formidable rivals were dispossessed, the trade of Canada would + be ruined. In consequence of this report, some of the principal merchants + of the colony formed a company to compete with the English in the trade + of Hudson's Bay. In the year of this journey, Joliet received a grant + of the islands of Mignan; and in the following year, 1652, he received + another grant, of the great island of Anticosti in the lower St. Lawrence. + In 1681 he was established here, with his wife and six servants. He + was engaged in fisheries; and, being a skilful navigator and surveyor, + he made about this time a chart of the St. Lawrence. In 1690, Sir William + Phips, on his way with an English fleet to attack Quebec, made a descent + on Joliet's establishment, burnt his buildings, and took prisoners + his wife and his mother-in-law. In 1694 Joliet explored the coasts + of Labrador, under the auspices of a company formed for the whale and + seal fishery. On his return, Frontenac made him royal pilot for the + St. Lawrence; and at about the same time he received the appointment + of hydrographer at Quebec. He died, apparently poor, in 1699 or 1700, + and was buried on one of the islands of Mignan. The discovery of the + above facts is due in great part to the researches of Margry.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_64" id="footnote_64"></a><a href="#fnanchor_64"> <span class="label">[64]</span></a> Pierre Moreau, <i>alias</i> La Taupine, was afterwards bitterly + complained of by the Intendant Duchesneau, for acting as the governor's + agent in illicit trade with the Indians.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_65" id="footnote_65"></a><a href="#fnanchor_65"> <span class="label">[65]</span></a> The contemporary <i>Relation</i> tells us that a miracle took + place at the burial of Marquette. One of the two Frenchmen, overcome + with grief and colic, bethought him of applying a little earth from + the grave to the seat of pain. This at once restored him to health + and cheerfulness.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_66" id="footnote_66"></a><a href="#fnanchor_66"> <span class="label">[66]</span></a> For Marquette's death, see the contemporary <i>Relation</i>, published + by Shea, Lenox, and Martin, with the accompanying <i>Lettre et Journal</i>. + The river where he died is a small stream in the west of Michigan, + some distance south of the promontory called the "Sleeping Bear." It + long bore his name, which is now borne by a larger neighboring stream, + Charlevoix's account of Marquette's death is derived from tradition, + and is not supported by the contemporary narrative. In 1877, human + bones, with fragments of birch-bark, were found buried on the supposed + site of the Jesuit chapel at Point St. Ignace.</p> + <p>In 1847, the missionary of the Algonquins at the Lake of Two Mountains, + above Montreal, wrote down a tradition of the death of Marquette, from + the lips of an old Indian woman, born in 1777, at Michilimackinac. + Her ancestress had been baptized by the subject of the story. The tradition + has a resemblance to that related as fact by Charlevoix. The old squaw + said that the Jesuit was returning, very ill, to Michilimackinac, when + a storm forced him and his two men to land near a little river. Here + he told them that he should die, and directed them to ring a bell over + his grave and plant a cross. They all remained four days at the spot; + and, though without food, the men felt no hunger. On the night of the + fourth day he died, and the men buried him as he had directed. On waking + in the morning, they saw a sack of Indian corn, a quantity of bacon, + and some biscuit, miraculously sent to them, in accordance with the + promise of Marquette, who had told them that they should have food + enough for their journey to Michilimackinac. At the same instant, the + stream began to rise, and in a few moments encircled the grave of the + Jesuit, which formed, thenceforth, an islet in the waters. The tradition + adds, that an Indian battle afterwards took place on the banks of this + stream, between Christians and infidels; and that the former gained + the victory, in consequence of invoking the name of Marquette. This + story bears the attestation of the priest of the Two Mountains that + it is a literal translation of the tradition, as recounted by the old + woman.</p> + <p>It has been asserted that the Illinois country was visited by two priests, + some time before the visit of Marquette. This assertion was first made + by M. Noiseux, late Grand Vicar of Quebec, who gives no authority for + it. Not the slightest indication of any such visit appears in any contemporary + document or map, thus far discovered. The contemporary writers, down + to the time of Marquette and La Salle, all speak of the Illinois as + an unknown country. The entire groundlessness of Noiseux's assertion + is shown by Shea, in a paper in the "Weekly Herald," of New York, April + 21, 1855.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg + 83]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2> +<p class="center">1673-1678.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE AND FRONTENAC.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Objects of La Salle.—Frontenac favors him.—Projects of Frontenac.—Cataraqui.—Frontenac +on Lake Ontario.—Fort Frontenac.—La Salle and Fénelon.—Success +of La Salle: his Enemies.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">We</span> turn from the humble Marquette, thanking God with his last breath that + he died for his Order and his Faith; and by our side stands the masculine + form of Cavelier de la Salle. Prodigious was the contrast between the + two discoverers: the one, with clasped hands and upturned eyes, seems + a figure evoked from some dim legend of mediæval saintship; the + other, with feet firm planted on the hard earth, breathes the self-relying + energies of modern practical enterprise. Nevertheless, La Salle's enemies + called him a visionary. His projects perplexed and startled them. At first, + they ridiculed him; and then, as step by step he advanced towards his + purpose, they denounced and maligned him. What was this purpose? It was + not of sudden growth, but developed as years went on. La Salle at La Chine + dreamed of a western passage to China, and nursed vague <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg + 84]</a></span> schemes of western discovery. Then, when his earlier journeyings + revealed to him the valley of the Ohio and the fertile plains of Illinois, + his imagination took wing over the boundless prairies and forests drained + by the great river of the West. His ambition had found its field. He would + leave barren and frozen Canada behind, and lead France and civilization + into the valley of the Mississippi. Neither the English nor the Jesuits + should conquer that rich domain: the one must rest content with the country + east of the Alleghanies, and the other with the forests, savages, and + beaver-skins of the northern lakes. It was for him to call into light + the latent riches of the great West. But the way to his land of promise + was rough and long: it lay through Canada, filled with hostile traders + and hostile priests, and barred by ice for half the year. The difficulty + was soon solved. La Salle became convinced that the Mississippi flowed, + not into the Pacific or the Gulf of California, but into the Gulf of Mexico. + By a fortified post at its mouth, he could guard it against both English + and Spaniards, and secure for the trade of the interior an access and + an outlet under his own control, and open at every season. Of this trade, + the hides of the buffalo would at first form the staple, and along with + furs would reward the enterprise till other resources should be developed.</p> +<p>Such were the vast projects that unfolded themselves in the mind of La + Salle. Canada must needs be, at the outset, his base of action, and without + the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> support + of its authorities he could do nothing. This support he found. From the + moment when Count Frontenac assumed the government of the colony, he seems + to have looked with favor on the young discoverer. There were points of + likeness between the two men. Both were ardent, bold, and enterprising. + The irascible and fiery pride of the noble found its match in the reserved + and seemingly cold pride of the ambitious burgher. Each could comprehend + the other; and they had, moreover, strong prejudices and dislikes in common. + An understanding, not to say an alliance, soon grew up between them.</p> +<div class="sidenote">PROJECTS OF FRONTENAC.</div> +<p>Frontenac had come to Canada a ruined man. He was ostentatious, lavish, + and in no way disposed to let slip an opportunity of mending his fortune. + He presently thought that he had found a plan by which he could serve + both the colony and himself. His predecessor, Courcelle, had urged upon + the King the expediency of building a fort on Lake Ontario, in order to + hold the Iroquois in check and intercept the trade which the tribes of + the Upper Lakes had begun to carry on with the Dutch and English of New + York. Thus a stream of wealth would be turned into Canada, which would + otherwise enrich her enemies. Here, to all appearance, was a great public + good, and from the military point of view it was so in fact; but it was + clear that the trade thus secured might be made to profit, not the colony + at large, but those alone who had control of the fort, which would then + become the instrument of a monopoly. This <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg + 86]</a></span> the governor understood; and, without doubt, he meant + that the projected establishment should pay him tribute. How far he and + La Salle were acting in concurrence at this time, it is not easy to say; + but Frontenac often took counsel of the explorer, who, on his part, saw + in the design a possible first step towards the accomplishment of his + own far-reaching schemes.</p> +<div class="sidenote">EXPEDITION OF FRONTENAC</div> +<p>Such of the Canadian merchants as were not in the governor's confidence + looked on his plan with extreme distrust. Frontenac, therefore, thought + it expedient "to make use," as he expresses it, "of address." He gave + out merely that he intended to make a tour through the upper parts of + the colony with an armed force, in order to inspire the Indians with respect, + and secure a solid peace. He had neither troops, money, munitions, nor + means of transportation; yet there was no time to lose, for, should he + delay the execution of his plan, it might be countermanded by the King. + His only resource, therefore, was in a prompt and hardy exertion of the + royal authority; and he issued an order requiring the inhabitants of Quebec, + Montreal, Three Rivers, and other settlements to furnish him, at their + own cost, as soon as the spring sowing should be over, with a certain + number of armed men, besides the requisite canoes. At the same time, he + invited the officers settled in the country to join the expedition,—an + invitation which, anxious as they were to gain his good graces, few of + them cared to decline. Regardless of murmurs and discontent, he pushed + his preparation <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg + 87]</a></span> vigorously, and on the third of June left Quebec with + his guard, his staff, a part of the garrison of the Castle of St. Louis, + and a number of volunteers. He had already sent to La Salle, who was then + at Montreal, directing him to repair to Onondaga, the political centre + of the Iroquois, and invite their sachems to meet the governor in council + at the Bay of Quinté on the north of Lake Ontario. La Salle had + set out on his mission, but first sent Frontenac a map, which convinced + him that the best site for his proposed fort was the mouth of the Cataraqui, + where Kingston now stands. Another messenger was accordingly despatched, + to change the rendezvous to this point.</p> +<p>Meanwhile, the governor proceeded at his leisure towards Montreal, stopping + by the way to visit the officers settled along the bank, who, eager to + pay their homage to the newly risen sun, received him with a hospitality + which under the roof of a log hut was sometimes graced by the polished + courtesies of the salon and the boudoir. Reaching Montreal, which he had + never before seen, he gazed, we may suppose, with some interest at the + long row of humble dwellings which lined the bank, the massive buildings + of the Seminary, and the spire of the church predominant over all. It + was a rude scene, but the greeting that awaited him savored nothing of + the rough simplicity of the wilderness. Perrot, the local governor, was + on the shore with his soldiers and the inhabitants, drawn up under arms + and firing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> a + salute to welcome the representative of the King. Frontenac was compelled + to listen to a long harangue from the judge of the place, followed by + another from the syndic. Then there was a solemn procession to the church, + where he was forced to undergo a third effort of oratory from one of the + priests. <i>Te Deum</i> followed, in thanks for his arrival; and then + he took refuge in the fort. Here he remained thirteen days, busied with + his preparations, organizing the militia, soothing their mutual jealousies, + and settling knotty questions of rank and precedence. During this time, + every means, as he declares, was used to prevent him from proceeding; + and among other devices a rumor was set on foot that a Dutch fleet, having + just captured Boston, was on its way to attack Quebec.<a name="fnanchor_67" id="fnanchor_67"></a><a href="#footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">FRONTENAC'S JOURNEY</div> +<p>Having sent men, canoes, and baggage, by land, to La Salle's old settlement + of La Chine, Frontenac himself followed on the twenty-eighth of June. + Including Indians from the missions, he now had with him about four hundred + men and a hundred and twenty canoes, besides two large flat-boats, which + he caused to be painted in red and blue, with strange devices, intended + to dazzle the Iroquois by a display of unwonted splendor. Now their hard + task began. Shouldering canoes through the forest, dragging the flat-boats + along the shore, working like beavers,—sometimes <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg + 89]</a></span> in water to the knees, sometimes to the armpits, their + feet cut by the sharp stones, and they themselves well-nigh swept down + by the furious current,—they fought their way upward against the + chain of mighty rapids that break the navigation of the St. Lawrence. + The Indians were of the greatest service. Frontenac, like La Salle, showed + from the first a special faculty of managing them; for his keen, incisive + spirit was exactly to their liking, and they worked for him as they would + have worked for no man else. As they approached the Long Saut, rain fell + in torrents; and the governor, without his cloak, and drenched to the + skin, directed in person the amphibious toil of his followers. Once, it + is said, he lay awake all night, in his anxiety lest the biscuit should + be wet, which would have ruined the expedition. No such mischance took + place, and at length the last rapid was passed, and smooth water awaited + them to their journey's end. Soon they reached the Thousand Islands, and + their light flotilla glided in long file among those watery labyrinths, + by rocky islets, where some lonely pine towered like a mast against the + sky; by sun-scorched crags, where the brown lichens crisped in the parching + glare; by deep dells, shady and cool, rich in rank ferns, and spongy, + dark-green mosses; by still coves, where the water-lilies lay like snow-flakes + on their broad, flat leaves,—till at length they neared their goal, + and the glistening bosom of Lake Ontario opened on their sight.</p> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg + 90]</a></span></p> +<p>Frontenac, to impose respect on the Iroquois, now set his canoes in order + of battle. Four divisions formed the first line, then came the two flat-boats; + he himself, with his guards, his staff, and the gentlemen volunteers, + followed, with the canoes of Three Rivers on his right, and those of the + Indians on his left, while two remaining divisions formed a rear line. + Thus, with measured paddles, they advanced over the still lake, till they + saw a canoe approaching to meet them. It bore several Iroquois chiefs, + who told them that the dignitaries of their nation awaited them at Cataraqui, + and offered to guide them to the spot. They entered the wide mouth of + the river, and passed along the shore, now covered by the quiet little + city of Kingston, till they reached the point at present occupied by the + barracks, at the western end of Cataraqui bridge. Here they stranded their + canoes and disembarked. Baggage was landed, fires lighted, tents pitched, + and guards set. Close at hand, under the lee of the forest, were the camping + sheds of the Iroquois, who had come to the rendezvous in considerable + numbers.</p> +<div class="sidenote">FRONTENAC AT CATARAQUI</div> +<p>At daybreak of the next morning, the thirteenth of July, the drums beat, + and the whole party were drawn up under arms. A double line of men extended + from the front of Frontenac's tent to the Indian camp; and, through the + lane thus formed, the savage deputies, sixty in number, advanced to the + place of council. They could not hide their admiration at the martial + array of the French, many of whom were old <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg + 91]</a></span> soldiers of the regiment of Carignan; and when they reached + the tent they ejaculated their astonishment at the uniforms of the governor's + guard who surrounded it. Here the ground had been carpeted with the sails + of the flat-boats, on which the deputies squatted themselves in a ring + and smoked their pipes for a time with their usual air of deliberate gravity; + while Frontenac, who sat surrounded by his officers, had full leisure + to contemplate the formidable adversaries whose mettle was hereafter to + put his own to so severe a test. A chief named Garakontié, a noted + friend of the French, at length opened the council, in behalf of all the + five Iroquois nations, with expressions of great respect and deference + towards "Onontio;" that is to say, the governor of Canada. Whereupon Frontenac, + whose native arrogance where Indians were concerned always took a form + which imposed respect without exciting anger, replied in the following + strain:—</p> +<p>"Children! Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas. I am glad + to see you here, where I have had a fire lighted for you to smoke by, + and for me to talk to you. You have done well, my children, to obey the + command of your Father. Take courage: you will hear his word, which is + full of peace and tenderness. For do not think that I have come for war. + My mind is full of peace, and she walks by my side. Courage, then, children, + and take rest."</p> +<p>With that, he gave them six fathoms of tobacco, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg + 92]</a></span> reiterated his assurances of friendship, promised + that he would be a kind father so long as they should be obedient + children, regretted that he was forced to speak through an interpreter, + and ended with a gift of guns to the men, and prunes and raisins + to their wives and children. Here closed this preliminary meeting, + the great council being postponed to another day.</p> +<p>During the meeting, Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, was tracing out the + lines of a fort, after a predetermined plan; and the whole party, under + the direction of their officers, now set themselves to construct it. Some + cut down trees, some dug the trenches, some hewed the palisades; and with + such order and alacrity was the work urged on, that the Indians were lost + in astonishment. Meanwhile, Frontenac spared no pains to make friends + of the chiefs, some of whom he had constantly at his table. He fondled + the Iroquois children, and gave them bread and sweetmeats, and in the + evening feasted the squaws to make them dance. The Indians were delighted + with these attentions, and conceived a high opinion of the new Onontio.</p> +<div class="sidenote">FRONTENAC AND THE INDIANS.</div> +<p>On the seventeenth, when the construction of the fort was well advanced, + Frontenac called the chiefs to a grand council, which was held with all + possible state and ceremony. His dealing with the Indians on this and + other occasions was truly admirable. Unacquainted as he was with them, + he seems to have had an instinctive perception of the treatment they required. + His predecessors had never ventured to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg + 93]</a></span> address the Iroquois as "Children," but had always styled + them "Brothers;" and yet the assumption of paternal authority on the part + of Frontenac was not only taken in good part, but was received with apparent + gratitude. The martial nature of the man, his clear, decisive speech, + and his frank and downright manner, backed as they were by a display of + force which in their eyes was formidable, struck them with admiration, + and gave tenfold effect to his words of kindness. They thanked him for + that which from another they would not have endured.</p> +<p>Frontenac began by again expressing his satisfaction that they had obeyed + the commands of their Father, and come to Cataraqui to hear what he had + to say. Then he exhorted them to embrace Christianity; and on this theme + he dwelt at length, in words excellently adapted to produce the desired + effect,—words which it would be most superfluous to tax as insincere, + though doubtless they lost nothing in emphasis because in this instance + conscience and policy aimed alike. Then, changing his tone, he pointed + to his officers, his guard, the long files of the militia, and the two + flat-boats, mounted with cannon, which lay in the river near by. "If," he + said, "your Father can come so far, with so great a force, through such + dangerous rapids, merely to make you a visit of pleasure and friendship, + what would he do, if you should awaken his anger, and make it necessary + for him to punish his disobedient children? He is the arbiter of peace + and war. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> Beware + how you offend him!" And he warned them not to molest the Indian allies + of the French, telling them, sharply, that he would chastise them for + the least infraction of the peace.</p> +<p>From threats he passed to blandishments, and urged them to confide in + his paternal kindness, saying that, in proof of his affection, he was + building a store-house at Cataraqui, where they could be supplied with + all the goods they needed, without the necessity of a long and dangerous + journey. He warned them against listening to bad men, who might seek to + delude them by misrepresentations and falsehoods; and he urged them to + give heed to none but "men of character, like the Sieur de la Salle." He + expressed a hope that they would suffer their children to learn French + from the missionaries, in order that they and his nephews—meaning + the French colonists—might become one people; and he concluded by + requesting them to give him a number of their children to be educated + in the French manner, at Quebec.</p> +<div class="sidenote">TREATY WITH THE INDIANS.</div> +<p>This speech, every clause of which was reinforced by abundant presents, + was extremely well received; though one speaker reminded him that he had + forgotten one important point, inasmuch as he had not told them at what + prices they could obtain goods at Cataraqui. Frontenac evaded a precise + answer, but promised them that the goods should be as cheap as possible, + in view of the great difficulty of transportation. As to the request concerning + their children, they said that they could not accede to it till they <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg + 95]</a></span> had talked the matter over in their villages; but it is + a striking proof of the influence which Frontenac had gained over them, + that, in the following year, they actually sent several of their children + to Quebec to be educated,—the girls among the Ursulines, and the + boys in the household of the governor.</p> +<p>Three days after the council, the Iroquois set out on their return; and + as the palisades of the fort were now finished, and the barracks nearly + so, Frontenac began to send his party homeward by detachments. He himself + was detained for a time by the arrival of another band of Iroquois, from + the villages on the north side of Lake Ontario. He repeated to them the + speech he had made to the others; and, this final meeting over, he embarked + with his guard, leaving a sufficient number to hold the fort, which was + to be provisioned for a year by means of a convoy then on its way up the + river. Passing the rapids safely, he reached Montreal on the first of + August.</p> +<p>His enterprise had been a complete success. He had gained every point, + and, in spite of the dangerous navigation, had not lost a single canoe. + Thanks to the enforced and gratuitous assistance of the inhabitants, the + whole had cost the King only about ten thousand francs, which Frontenac + had advanced on his own credit. Though in a commercial point of view the + new establishment was of very questionable benefit to the colony at large, + the governor had, nevertheless, conferred an inestimable blessing on all + Canada by the assurance he had gained of a long <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg + 96]</a></span> respite from the fearful scourge of Iroquois hostility. "Assuredly," he + writes, "I may boast of having impressed them at once with respect, fear, + and good-will."<a name="fnanchor_68" id="fnanchor_68"></a><a href="#footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> He adds that the fort at Cataraqui, with the aid of + a vessel now building, will command Lake Ontario, keep the peace with + the Iroquois, and cut off the trade with the English; and he proceeds + to say that by another fort at the mouth of the Niagara, and another vessel + on Lake Erie, we, the French, can command all the Upper Lakes. This plan + was an essential link in the schemes of La Salle; and we shall soon find + him employed in executing it.</p> +<p>A curious incident occurred soon after the building of the fort on Lake + Ontario. Frontenac, on his way back, quarrelled with Perrot, the governor + of Montreal, whom, in view of his speculations in the fur-trade, he seems + to have regarded as a rival in business; but who, by his folly and arrogance, + would have justified any reasonable measure of severity. Frontenac, however, + was not reasonable. He arrested Perrot, threw him into prison, and set + up a man of his own as governor in his place; and as the judge of Montreal + was not in his interest, he removed him, and substituted another on whom + he could rely. Thus for a time he had Montreal well in hand.</p> +<p>The priests of the Seminary, seigniors of the island, regarded these arbitrary + proceedings with extreme uneasiness. They claimed the right of nominating + their own governor; and Perrot, though he held a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg + 97]</a></span> commission from the King, owed his place to their appointment. + True, he had set them at nought, and proved a veritable King Stork; yet + nevertheless they regarded his removal as an infringement of their rights.</p> +<p>During the quarrel with Perrot, La Salle chanced to be at Montreal, lodged + in the house of Jacques Le Ber, who, though one of the principal merchants + and most influential inhabitants of the settlement, was accustomed to + sell goods across his counter in person to white men and Indians, his + wife taking his place when he was absent. Such were the primitive manners + of the secluded little colony. Le Ber, at this time, was in the interest + of Frontenac and La Salle; though he afterwards became one of their most + determined opponents. Amid the excitement and discussion occasioned by + Perrot's arrest, La Salle declared himself an adherent of the governor, + and warned all persons against speaking ill of him in his hearing.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ABBÉ FÉNELON.</div> +<p>The Abbé Fénelon, already mentioned as half-brother to the + famous Archbishop, had attempted to mediate between Frontenac and Perrot, + and to this end had made a journey to Quebec on the ice, in midwinter. + Being of an ardent temperament, and more courageous than prudent, he had + spoken somewhat indiscreetly, and had been very roughly treated by the + stormy and imperious Count. He returned to Montreal greatly excited, and + not without cause. It fell to his lot to preach the Easter sermon. The <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg + 98]</a></span> service was held in the little church of the Hôtel-Dieu, + which was crowded to the porch, all the chief persons of the settlement + being present. The curé of the parish, whose name also was Perrot, + said High Mass, assisted by La Salle's brother, Cavelier, and two other + priests. Then Fénelon mounted the pulpit. Certain passages of his + sermon were obviously levelled against Frontenac. Speaking of the duties + of those clothed with temporal authority, he said that the magistrate, + inspired with the spirit of Christ, was as ready to pardon offences against + himself as to punish those against his prince; that he was full of respect + for the ministers of the altar, and never maltreated them when they attempted + to reconcile enemies and restore peace; that he never made favorites of + those who flattered him, nor under specious pretexts oppressed other persons + in authority who opposed his enterprises; that he used his power to serve + his king, and not to his own advantage; that he remained content with + his salary, without disturbing the commerce of the country, or abusing + those who refused him a share in their profits; and that he never troubled + the people by inordinate and unjust levies of men and material, using + the name of his prince as a cover to his own designs.<a name="fnanchor_69" id="fnanchor_69"></a><a href="#footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a></p> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg + 99]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE AND FÉNELON.</div> +<p>La Salle sat near the door; but as the preacher proceeded he suddenly + rose to his feet in such a manner as to attract the notice of the congregation. + As they turned their heads, he signed to the principal persons among them, + and by his angry looks and gesticulation called their attention to the + words of Fénelon. Then meeting the eye of the curé, who + sat beside the altar, he made the same signs to him, to which the curé replied + by a deprecating shrug of the shoulders. Fénelon changed color, + but continued his sermon.<a name="fnanchor_70" id="fnanchor_70"></a><a href="#footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a></p> +<p>This indecent proceeding of La Salle, and the zeal with which throughout + the quarrel he took the part of the governor, did not go unrewarded. Henceforth, + Frontenac was more than ever his friend; and this plainly appeared in + the disposition made, through his influence, of the new fort on Lake Ontario. + Attempts had been made to induce the king to have it demolished; but it + was resolved at last that, being built, it should be allowed to stand; + and, after long delay, a final arrangement was made for its maintenance, + in the manner following: In the autumn of 1674, La Salle went to France, + with letters of strong recommendation from Frontenac.<a name="fnanchor_71" id="fnanchor_71"></a><a href="#footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> He was well <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg + 100]</a></span> received at Court; and he made two petitions to the King,—the + one for a patent of nobility, in consideration of his services as an explorer; + and the other for a grant in seigniory of Fort Frontenac, for so he called + the new post, in honor of his patron. On his part, he offered to pay back + the ten thousand francs which the fort had cost the King; to maintain + it at his own charge, with a garrison equal to that of Montreal, besides + fifteen or twenty laborers; to form a French colony around it; to build + a church, whenever the number of inhabitants should reach one hundred; + and, meanwhile, to support one or more Récollet friars; and, finally, + to form a settlement of domesticated Indians in the neighborhood. His + offers were accepted. He was raised to the rank of the untitled nobles; + received a grant of the fort and lands adjacent, to the extent of four + leagues in front and half a league in depth, besides the neighboring islands; + and was invested with the government of the fort and settlement, subject + to the orders of the governor-general.<a name="fnanchor_72" id="fnanchor_72"></a><a href="#footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg + 101]</a></span></p> +<p>La Salle returned to Canada, proprietor of a seigniory which, all things + considered, was one of the most valuable in the colony. His friends and + his family, rejoicing in his good fortune and not unwilling to share it, + made him large advances of money, enabling him to pay the stipulated sum + to the King, to rebuild the fort in stone, maintain soldiers and laborers, + and procure in part, at least, the necessary outfit. Had La Salle been + a mere merchant, he was in a fair way to make a fortune, for he was in + a position to control the better part of the Canadian fur-trade. But he + was not a mere merchant; and no commercial profit could content his ambition.</p> +<p>Those may believe, who will, that Frontenac did not expect a share in + the profits of the new post. That he did expect it, there is positive + evidence; for a deposition is extant, taken at the instance of his enemy + the Intendant Duchesneau, in which three witnesses attest that the governor, + La Salle, his lieutenant La Forest, and one Boisseau, had formed a partnership + to carry on the trade of Fort Frontenac.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ENEMIES OF LA SALLE.</div> +<p>No sooner was La Salle installed in his new post than the merchants of + Canada joined hands to oppose him. Le Ber, once his friend, became his + bitter enemy; for he himself had hoped to share the monopoly of Fort Frontenac, + of which he and one Bazire had at first been placed provisionally in control, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg + 102]</a></span> and from which he now saw himself ejected. La Chesnaye, + Le Moyne, and others of more or less influence took part in the league, + which, in fact, embraced all the traders in the colony except the few + joined with Frontenac and La Salle. Duchesneau, intendant of the colony, + aided the malcontents. As time went on, their bitterness grew more bitter; + and when at last it was seen that, not satisfied with the monopoly of + Fort Frontenac, La Salle aimed at the control of the valleys of the Ohio + and the Mississippi, and the usufruct of half a continent, the ire of + his opponents redoubled, and Canada became for him a nest of hornets, + buzzing in wrath and watching the moment to sting. But there was another + element of opposition, less noisy, but not less formidable; and this arose + from the Jesuits. Frontenac hated them; and they, under befitting forms + of duty and courtesy, paid him back in the same coin. Having no love for + the governor, they would naturally have little for his partisan and <i>protégé</i>; + but their opposition had another and a deeper root, for the plans of the + daring young schemer jarred with their own.</p> +<div class="sidenote">PURPOSES OF THE JESUITS.</div> +<p>We have seen the Canadian Jesuits in the early apostolic days of their + mission, when the flame of their zeal, fed by an ardent hope, burned bright + and high. This hope was doomed to disappointment. Their avowed purpose + of building another Paraguay on the borders of the Great Lakes<a name="fnanchor_73" id="fnanchor_73"></a><a href="#footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> was + never accomplished, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg + 103]</a></span> and their missions and their converts were swept away + in an avalanche of ruin. Still, they would not despair. From the lakes + they turned their eyes to the Valley of the Mississippi, in the hope to + see it one day the seat of their new empire of the Faith. But what did + this new Paraguay mean? It meant a little nation of converted and domesticated + savages, docile as children, under the paternal and absolute rule of Jesuit + fathers, and trained by them in industrial pursuits, the results of which + were to inure, not to the profit of the producers, but to the building + of churches, the founding of colleges, the establishment of warehouses + and magazines, and the construction of works of defence,—all controlled + by Jesuits, and forming a part of the vast possessions of the Order. Such + was the old Paraguay;<a name="fnanchor_74" id="fnanchor_74"></a><a href="#footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> and such, we may suppose, would have been the + new, had the plans of those who designed it been realized.</p> +<p>I have said that since the middle of the century the religious exaltation + of the early missions had sensibly declined. In the nature of things, + that grand enthusiasm was too intense and fervent to be long sustained. + But the vital force of Jesuitism had suffered no diminution. That marvellous <i>esprit + de corps</i>, that extinction of self and absorption of the individual + in the Order which has marked the Jesuits from their first existence as + a body, was no whit changed or lessened,—a principle, which, though <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg + 104]</a></span> different, was no less strong than the self-devoted patriotism + of Sparta or the early Roman Republic.</p> +<p>The Jesuits were no longer supreme in Canada; or, in other words, Canada + was no longer simply a mission. It had become a colony. Temporal interests + and the civil power were constantly gaining ground; and the disciples + of Loyola felt that relatively, if not absolutely, they were losing it. + They struggled vigorously to maintain the ascendency of their Order, or, + as they would have expressed it, the ascendency of religion; but in the + older and more settled parts of the colony it was clear that the day of + their undivided rule was past. Therefore, they looked with redoubled solicitude + to their missions in the West. They had been among its first explorers; + and they hoped that here the Catholic Faith, as represented by Jesuits, + might reign with undisputed sway. In Paraguay, it was their constant aim + to exclude white men from their missions. It was the same in North America. + They dreaded fur-traders, partly because they interfered with their teachings + and perverted their converts, and partly for other reasons. But La Salle + was a fur-trader, and far worse than a fur-trader: he aimed at occupation, + fortification, and settlement. The scope and vigor of his enterprises, + and the powerful influence that aided them, made him a stumbling-block + in their path. He was their most dangerous rival for the control of the + West, and from first to last they set themselves against him.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg + 105]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">SPIRIT OF LA SALLE.</div> +<p>What manner of man was he who could conceive designs so vast and defy + enmities so many and so powerful? And in what spirit did he embrace these + designs? We will look hereafter for an answer.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_67" id="footnote_67"></a><a href="#fnanchor_67"> <span class="label">[67]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Frontenac à Colbert, 13 Nov., 1673.</i> This + rumor, it appears, originated with the Jesuit Dablon. <i>Journal du + Voyage du Comte de Frontenac au lac Ontario</i>. The Jesuits were greatly + opposed to the establishment of forts and trading-posts in the upper + country, for reasons that will appear hereafter.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_68" id="footnote_68"></a><a href="#fnanchor_68"> <span class="label">[68]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 13 Nov., 1673.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_69" id="footnote_69"></a><a href="#fnanchor_69"> <span class="label">[69]</span></a> Faillon, <i>Colonie Française</i>, iii. 497, and manuscript + authorities there cited. I have examined the principal of these. Faillon + himself is a priest of St. Sulpice. Compare H. Verreau, <i>Les Deux + Abbés de Fénelon</i>, chap. vii.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_70" id="footnote_70"></a><a href="#fnanchor_70"> <span class="label">[70]</span></a> <i>Information faicte par nous, Charles le Tardieu, Sieur de Tilly, + et Nicolas Dupont, etc., etc., contre le S<sup>r.</sup> Abbé de + Fénelon.</i> Tilly and Dupont were sent by Frontenac to inquire + into the affair. Among the deponents is La Salle himself.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_71" id="footnote_71"></a><a href="#fnanchor_71"> <span class="label">[71]</span></a> In his despatch to the minister Colbert, of the fourteenth of + November, 1674, Frontenac speaks of La Salle as follows: "I cannot + help, Monseigneur, recommending to you the Sieur de la Salle, who is + about to go to France, and who is a man of intelligence and ability, + more capable than anybody else I know here to accomplish every kind + of enterprise and discovery which may be intrusted to him, as he has + the most perfect knowledge of the state of the country, as you will + see, if you are disposed to give him a few moments of audience."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_72" id="footnote_72"></a><a href="#fnanchor_72"> <span class="label">[72]</span></a> <i>Mémoire pour l'entretien du Fort Frontenac, par le S<sup>r.</sup> de + la Salle, 1674. Petition du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle au Roi. Lettres + patentes de concession, du Fort de Frontenac et terres adjacentes + au profit du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle; données à Compiègne + le 13 Mai, 1675. Arrêt qui accepte les offres faites par Robert + Cavelier S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle; à Compiègne le + 13 Mai, 1675. Lettres de noblesse pour le S<sup>r.</sup> Cavelier + de la Salle; données à Compiègne le 13 Mai, + 1675. Papiers de Famille. Mémoire au Roi.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_73" id="footnote_73"></a><a href="#fnanchor_73"> <span class="label">[73]</span></a> This purpose is several times indicated in the <i>Relations</i>. + For an instance, see "The Jesuits in North America," 245.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_74" id="footnote_74"></a><a href="#fnanchor_74"> <span class="label">[74]</span></a> Compare Charlevoix, <i>Histoire de Paraguay</i>, with Robertson, <i>Letters + on Paraguay</i>.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2> +<p class="center">1678.</p> +<p class="center">PARTY STRIFE.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">La Salle and his Reporter.—Jesuit +Ascendency.—The Missions and the Fur-trade.—Female Inquisitors.—Plots +against La Salle: his Brother the Priest.—Intrigues Of +the Jesuits.—La Salle poisoned: he exculpates the Jesuits.—Renewed +Intrigues.</div> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S MEMOIR.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">One</span> of the most curious monuments of La Salle's time is a long memoir, + written by a person who made his acquaintance at Paris in the summer of + 1678, when, as we shall soon see, he had returned to France in prosecution + of his plans. The writer knew the Sulpitian Galinée,<a name="fnanchor_75" id="fnanchor_75"></a><a href="#footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> who, as + he says, had a very high opinion of La Salle; and he was also in close + relations with the discoverer's patron, the Prince de Conti.<a name="fnanchor_76" id="fnanchor_76"></a><a href="#footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> He says + that he had ten or twelve interviews with La Salle; and, becoming interested + in him and in that which he communicated, he wrote down the substance + of his conversation. The paper is divided into two <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg + 107]</a></span> parts: the first, called "Mémoire sur Mr. de la + Salle," is devoted to the state of affairs in Canada, and chiefly to the + Jesuits; the second, entitled "Histoire de Mr. de la Salle," is an account + of the discoverer's life, or as much of it as the writer had learned from + him.<a name="fnanchor_77" id="fnanchor_77"></a><a href="#footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> Both parts bear throughout the internal evidence of being what + they profess to be; but they embody the statements of a man of intense + partisan feeling, transmitted through the mind of another person in sympathy + with him, and evidently sharing his prepossessions. In one respect, however, + the paper is of unquestionable historical value; for it gives us a vivid + and not an exaggerated picture of the bitter strife of parties which then + raged in Canada, and which was destined to tax to the utmost the vast + energy and fortitude of La Salle. At times, the memoir is fully sustained + by contemporary evidence; but often, again, it rests on its own unsupported + authority. I give an abstract of its statements as I find them.</p> +<p>The following is the writer's account of La Salle: "All those among my + friends who have seen him find him a man of great intelligence and sense. + He rarely speaks of any subject except when questioned about it, and his + words are very few and very precise. He distinguishes perfectly between + that which he knows with certainly and that which he knows with some mingling + of doubt. When he does not know, he does <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg + 108]</a></span> not hesitate to avow it; and though I have heard him say + the same thing more than five or six times, when persons were present + who had not heard it before, he always said it in the same manner. In + short, I never heard anybody speak whose words carried with them more + marks of truth."<a name="fnanchor_78" id="fnanchor_78"></a><a href="#footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">JESUIT ASCENDENCY.</div> +<p>After mentioning that he is thirty-three or thirty-four years old, and + that he has been twelve years in America, the memoir declares that he + made the following statements: that the Jesuits are masters at Quebec; + that the bishop is their creature, and does nothing but in concert with + them;<a name="fnanchor_79" id="fnanchor_79"></a><a href="#footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> that he is not well inclined towards the Récollets,<a name="fnanchor_80" id="fnanchor_80"></a><a href="#footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> + who have little <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg + 109]</a></span> credit, but who are protected by Frontenac; that in Canada + the Jesuits think everybody an enemy to religion who is an enemy to them; + that, though they refused absolution to all who sold brandy to the Indians, + they sold it themselves, and that he, La Salle, had himself detected them + in it;<a name="fnanchor_81" id="fnanchor_81"></a><a href="#footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> that the bishop laughs at the orders of the King when they + do not agree with the wishes of the Jesuits; that the Jesuits dismissed + one of their servants named Robert, because he told of their trade in + brandy; that Albanel,<a name="fnanchor_82" id="fnanchor_82"></a><a href="#footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> in particular, carried on a great fur-trade, + and that the Jesuits have built their college in part from the profits + of this kind of traffic; that they <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg + 110]</a></span> admitted that they carried on a trade, but denied that + they gained so much by it as was commonly supposed.<a name="fnanchor_83" id="fnanchor_83"></a><a href="#footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">FEMALE INQUISITORS.</div> +<p>The memoir proceeds to affirm that they trade largely with the Sioux at + Ste. Marie, and with other tribes at Michilimackinac, and that they are + masters of the trade of that region, where the forts are in their possession.<a name="fnanchor_84" id="fnanchor_84"></a><a href="#footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> + An Indian said, in full council, at Quebec, that he had prayed and been + a Christian as long as the Jesuits would stay and teach him, but since + no more beaver were left in his country, the missionaries were gone also. + The Jesuits, pursues the memoir, will have no priests but themselves in + their missions, and call them all Jansenists, not excepting the priests + of St. Sulpice.</p> +<p>The bishop is next accused of harshness and intolerance, as well as of + growing rich by tithes, and even by trade, in which it is affirmed he + has a covert interest.<a name="fnanchor_85" id="fnanchor_85"></a><a href="#footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> It is added that there exists in Quebec, under + the auspices of the Jesuits, an association <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg + 111]</a></span> called the Sainte Famille, of which Madame Bourdon<a name="fnanchor_86" id="fnanchor_86"></a><a href="#footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> + is superior. They meet in the cathedral every Thursday, with closed doors, + where they relate to each other—as they are bound by a vow to do—all + they have learned, whether good or evil, concerning other people, during + the week. It is a sort of female inquisition, for the benefit of the Jesuits, + the secrets of whose friends, it is said, are kept, while no such discretion + is observed with regard to persons not of their party.<a name="fnanchor_87" id="fnanchor_87"></a><a href="#footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg + 112]</a></span></p> +<p>Here follow a series of statements which it is needless to repeat, as + they do not concern La Salle. They relate to abuse of the confessional, + hostility to other priests, hostility to civil authorities, and over-hasty + baptisms, in regard to which La Salle is reported to have made a comparison, + unfavorable to the Jesuits, between them and the Récollets and + Sulpitians.</p> +<div class="sidenote">PLOTS AGAINST LA SALLE.</div> +<p>We now come to the second part of the memoir, entitled "History of Monsieur + de la Salle." After stating that he left France at the age of twenty-one + or twenty-two, with the purpose of attempting some new discovery, it makes + the statements repeated in a former chapter, concerning his discovery + of the Ohio, the Illinois, and possibly the Mississippi. It then mentions + the building of Fort Frontenac, and says that one object of it was to + prevent the Jesuits from becoming undisputed masters of the fur-trade.<a name="fnanchor_88" id="fnanchor_88"></a><a href="#footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> + Three years ago, it pursues, La Salle came to France, and obtained a grant + of the fort; and it proceeds to give examples of the means used by the + party opposed to him to injure his good name and bring him within reach + of the law. Once, when he was at Quebec, the farmer of the King's revenue, + one of the richest <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg + 113]</a></span> men in the place, was extremely urgent in his proffers + of hospitality, and at length, though he knew La Salle but slightly, persuaded + him to lodge in his house. He had been here but a few days when his host's + wife began to enact the part of the wife of Potiphar, and this with so + much vivacity that on one occasion La Salle was forced to take an abrupt + leave, in order to avoid an infringement of the laws of hospitality. As + he opened the door, he found the husband on the watch, and saw that it + was a plot to entrap him.<a name="fnanchor_89" id="fnanchor_89"></a><a href="#footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></p> +<p>Another attack, of a different character, though in the same direction, + was soon after made. The remittances which La Salle received from the + various members and connections of his family were sent through the hands + of his brother, Abbé Cavelier, from whom his enemies were, therefore, + very eager to alienate him. To this end, a report was made to reach the + priest's ears that La Salle had seduced a young woman, with whom he was + living in an open and scandalous manner at Fort Frontenac. The effect + of this device exceeded the wishes of its contrivers; for the priest, + aghast at what he had heard, set out for the fort, to administer his fraternal + rebuke, but on arriving, in place of the expected abomination, found his + brother, assisted by two Récollet friars, ruling with edifying + propriety over a most exemplary household.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg + 114]</a></span></p> +<p>Thus far the memoir. From passages in some of La Salle's letters, it may + be gathered that Abbé Cavelier gave him at times no little annoyance. + In his double character of priest and elder brother, he seems to have + constituted himself the counsellor, monitor, and guide of a man who, though + many years his junior, was in all respects incomparably superior to him, + as the sequel will show. This must have been almost insufferable to a + nature like that of La Salle, who, nevertheless, was forced to arm himself + with patience, since his brother held the purse-strings. On one occasion + his forbearance was put to a severe proof, when, wishing to marry a damsel + of good connections in the colony, Abbé Cavelier saw fit for some + reason to interfere, and prevented the alliance.<a name="fnanchor_90" id="fnanchor_90"></a><a href="#footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">INTRIGUES OF THE JESUITS.</div> +<p>To resume the memoir. It declares that the Jesuits procured an ordinance + from the Supreme Council prohibiting traders from going into the Indian + country, in order that they, the Jesuits, being already established there + in their missions, might carry on trade without competition. But La Salle + induced a good number of the Iroquois to settle around his fort; thus + bringing the trade to his own door, without breaking the ordinance. These + Iroquois, he is further reported to have said, were very fond of him, + and aided him in rebuilding the fort with cut stone. The Jesuits told + the Iroquois on the south side of the lake, where they were established <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg + 115]</a></span> as missionaries, that La Salle was strengthening his defences + with the view of making war on them. They and the intendant, who was their + creature, endeavored to embroil the Iroquois with the French in order + to ruin La Salle; writing to him at the same time that he was the bulwark + of the country, and that he ought to be always on his guard. They also + tried to persuade Frontenac that it was necessary to raise men and prepare + for war. La Salle suspected them; and seeing that the Iroquois, in consequence + of their intrigues, were in an excited state, he induced the governor + to come to Fort Frontenac to pacify them. He accordingly did so; and a + council was held, which ended in a complete restoration of confidence + on the part of the Iroquois.<a name="fnanchor_91" id="fnanchor_91"></a><a href="#footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> At this council they accused the two + Jesuits, Bruyas and Pierron,<a name="fnanchor_92" id="fnanchor_92"></a><a href="#footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> of spreading reports that the French + were preparing to attack them. La Salle thought that the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg + 116]</a></span> object of the intrigue was to make the Iroquois jealous + of him, and engage Frontenac in expenses which would offend the King. + After La Salle and the governor had lost credit by the rupture, the Jesuits + would come forward as pacificators, in the full assurance that they could + restore quiet, and appear in the attitude of saviors of the colony.</p> +<p>La Salle, pursues his reporter, went on to say that about this time a + quantity of hemlock and verdigris was given him in a salad; and that the + guilty person was a man in his employ named Nicolas Perrot, otherwise + called Jolycœur, who confessed the crime.<a name="fnanchor_93" id="fnanchor_93"></a><a href="#footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> The memoir adds that + La Salle, who recovered from the effects of the poison, wholly exculpates + the Jesuits.</p> +<p>This attempt, which was not, as we shall see, the only one of the kind + made against La Salle, is alluded to by him in a letter to a friend at + Paris, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> written + in Canada when he was on the point of departure on his great expedition + to descend the Mississippi. The following is an extract from it:</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE EXCULPATES THE JESUITS.</div> +<p>"I hope to give myself the honor of sending you a more particular account + of this enterprise when it shall have had the success which I hope for + it; but I have need of a strong protection for its support. It traverses + the commercial operations of certain persons, who will find it hard to + endure it. They intended to make a new Paraguay in these parts, and the + route which I close against them gave them facilities for an advantageous + correspondence with Mexico. This check will infallibly be a mortification + to them; and you know how they deal with whatever opposes them. <i>Nevertheless, + I am bound to render them the justice to say that the poison which was + given me was not at all of their instigation.</i> The person who was conscious + of the guilt, believing that I was their enemy because he saw that our + sentiments were opposed, thought to exculpate himself by accusing them, + and I confess that at the time I was not sorry to have this indication + of their ill-will; but having afterwards carefully examined the affair, + I clearly discovered the falsity of the accusation which this rascal had + made against them. I nevertheless pardoned him, in order not to give notoriety + to the affair; as the mere suspicion might sully their reputation, to + which I should scrupulously avoid doing the slightest injury unless I + thought it necessary to the good of the public, and unless the fact were + fully proved. Therefore, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg + 118]</a></span> Monsieur, if anybody shared the suspicion which I felt, + oblige me by undeceiving him."<a name="fnanchor_94" id="fnanchor_94"></a><a href="#footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p> +<p>This letter, so honorable to La Salle, explains the statement made in + the memoir, that, notwithstanding his grounds of complaint against the + Jesuits, he continued to live on terms of courtesy with them, entertained + them at his fort, and occasionally corresponded with them. The writer + asserts, however, that they intrigued with his men to induce them to desert,—employing + for this purpose a young man named Deslauriers, whom they sent to him + with letters of recommendation. La Salle took him into his service; but + he soon after escaped, with several other men, and took refuge in the + Jesuit missions.<a name="fnanchor_95" id="fnanchor_95"></a><a href="#footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> The object of the intrigue is said to have been the + reduction of La Salle's garrison to a number less than that which he was + bound to maintain, thus exposing him to a forfeiture of his title of possession.</p> +<div class="sidenote">RENEWED INTRIGUES.</div> +<p>He is also stated to have declared that Louis Joliet was an impostor,<a name="fnanchor_96" id="fnanchor_96"></a><a href="#footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> + and a <i>donné</i> of the Jesuits,—that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg + 119]</a></span> is, a man who worked for them without pay; and, further, + that when he, La Salle, came to court to ask for privileges enabling him + to pursue his discoveries, the Jesuits represented in advance to the minister + Colbert that his head was turned, and that he was fit for nothing but + a mad-house. It was only by the aid of influential friends that he was + at length enabled to gain an audience.</p> +<p>Here ends this remarkable memoir, which, criticise it as we may, does + not exaggerate the jealousies and enmities that beset the path of the + discoverer.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_75" id="footnote_75"></a><a href="#fnanchor_75"> <span class="label">[75]</span></a> <i>Ante</i>, p. 17.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_76" id="footnote_76"></a><a href="#fnanchor_76"> <span class="label">[76]</span></a> Louis-Armand de Bourbon, second Prince de Conti. The author of + the memoir seems to have been Abbé Renaudot, a learned churchman.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_77" id="footnote_77"></a><a href="#fnanchor_77"> <span class="label">[77]</span></a> Extracts from this have already been given in connection with + La Salle's supposed discovery of the Mississippi. <i>Ante</i>, p. 29.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_78" id="footnote_78"></a><a href="#fnanchor_78"> <span class="label">[78]</span></a> "Tous ceux de mes amis qui l'ont vu luy trouve beaucoup d'esprit + et un très-grand sens; il ne parle guère que des choses + sur lesquelles on l'interroge; il les dit en très-peu de mots + et très-bien circonstanciées; il distingue parfaitement + ce qu'il scait avec certitude, de ce qu'il scait avec quelque mélange + de doute. Il avoue sans aucune façon ne pas savoir ce qu'il + ne scait pas, et quoyque je luy aye ouy dire plus de cinq ou six fois + les mesme choses à l'occasion de quelques personnes qui ne les + avaient point encore entendues, je les luy ay toujours ouy dire de + la mesme manière. En un mot je n'ay jamais ouy parler personne + dont les paroles portassent plus de marques de vérité."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_79" id="footnote_79"></a><a href="#fnanchor_79"> <span class="label">[79]</span></a>] "Il y a une autre chose qui me déplait, qui est l'entière + dépendence dans laquelle les Prêtres du Séminaire + de Québec et le Grand Vicaire de l'Evêque sont pour les + Pères Jésuites, car il ne fait pas la moindre chose sans + leur ordre; ce qui fait qu'indirectement ils sont les maîtres + de ce qui regarde le spirituel, qui, comme vous savez, est une grande + machine pour remuer tout le reste."—<i>Lettre de Frontenac à Colbert, + 2 Nov., 1672.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_80" id="footnote_80"></a><a href="#fnanchor_80"> <span class="label">[80]</span></a> "Ces réligieux [<i>les Récollets</i>] sont fort + protégés partout par le comte de Frontenac, gouverneur + du pays, et à cause de cela assez maltraités par l'évesque, + parceque la doctrine de l'évesque et des Jésuites est + que les affaires de la Réligion chrestienne n'iront point bien + dans ce pays-là que quand le gouverneur sera créature + des Jésuites, ou que l'évesque sera gouverneur."—<i>Mémoire + sur M<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_81" id="footnote_81"></a><a href="#fnanchor_81"> <span class="label">[81]</span></a> "Ils [<i>les Jésuites</i>] refusent l'absolution à ceux + qui ne veulent pas promettre de n'en plus vendre [<i>de l'eau-de-vie</i>], + et s'ils meurent en cet étât, ils les privent de la sépulture + ecclésiastique; au contraire ils se permettent à eux-mêmes + sans aucune difficulté ce mesme trafic quoique toute sorte de + trafic soit interdite à tous les ecclésiastiques par + les ordonnances du Roy, et par une bulle expresse du Pape. La Bulle + et les ordonnances sont notoires, et quoyqu'ils cachent le trafic qu'ils + font d'eau-de-vie, M. de la Salle prétend qu'il ne l'est pas + moins; qu'outre la notoriété il en a des preuves certaines, + et qu'il les a surpris dans ce trafic, et qu'ils luy ont tendu des + pièges pour l'y surprendre.... Ils ont chassé leur valet + Robert à cause qu'il révéla qu'ils en traitaient + jour et nuit."—<i>Ibid.</i> The writer says that he makes this + last statement, not on the authority of La Salle, but on that of a + memoir made at the time when the intendant, Talon, with whom he elsewhere + says that he was well acquainted, returned to France. A great number + of particulars are added respecting the Jesuit trade in furs.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_82" id="footnote_82"></a><a href="#fnanchor_82"> <span class="label">[82]</span></a> Albanel was prominent among the Jesuit explorers at this time. + He is best known by his journey up the Saguenay to Hudson's Bay in + 1672.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_83" id="footnote_83"></a><a href="#fnanchor_83"> <span class="label">[83]</span></a> "Pour vous parler franchement, ils [<i>les Jésuites</i>] + songent autant à la conversion du Castor qu'à celle des âmes."—<i>Lettre + de Frontenac à Colbert, 2 Nov., 1672</i>.</p> + <p>In his despatch of the next year, he says that the Jesuits ought to + content themselves with instructing the Indians in their old missions, + instead of neglecting them to make new ones in countries where there + are "more beaver-skins to gain than souls to save."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_84" id="footnote_84"></a><a href="#fnanchor_84"> <span class="label">[84]</span></a> These forts were built by them, and were necessary to the security + of their missions.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_85" id="footnote_85"></a><a href="#fnanchor_85"> <span class="label">[85]</span></a> François Xavier de Laval-Montmorency, first bishop of Quebec, + was a prelate of austere character. His memory is cherished in Canada + by adherents of the Jesuits and all ultramontane Catholics.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_86" id="footnote_86"></a><a href="#fnanchor_86"> <span class="label">[86]</span></a> This Madame Bourdon was the widow of Bourdon, the engineer (see "The + Jesuits in North America," 297). If we may credit the letters of Marie + de l'Incarnation, she had married him from a religious motive, in order + to charge herself with the care of his motherless children; stipulating + in advance that he should live with her, not as a husband, but as a + brother. As may be imagined, she was regarded as a most devout and + saint-like person.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_87" id="footnote_87"></a><a href="#fnanchor_87"> <span class="label">[87]</span></a> "Il y a dans Québec une congrégation de femmes et + de filles qu'ils [<i>les Jésuites</i>] appellent la sainte famille, + dans laquelle on fait vœu sur les Saints Evangiles de dire tout + ce qu'on sait de bien et de mal des personnes qu'on connoist. La Supérieure + de cette compagnie s'appelle Madame Bourdon; une M<sup>de.</sup> d'Ailleboust + est, je crois, l'assistante et une M<sup>de.</sup> Charron, la Trésorière. + La Compagnie s'assemble tous les Jeudis dans la Cathédrale, à porte + fermée, et là elles se disent les unes aux autres tout + ce qu'elles ont appris. C'est une espèce d'Inquisition contre + toutes les personnes qui ne sont pas unies avec les Jésuites. + Ces personnes sont accusées de tenir secret ce qu'elles apprennent + de mal des personnes de leur party et de n'avoir pas la mesme discretion + pour les autres."—<i>Mémoire sur M^r. de la Salle</i>.</p> + <p>The Madame d'Ailleboust mentioned above was a devotee like Madame Bourdon, + and, in one respect, her history was similar. See "The Jesuits in North + America," 360.</p> + <p>The association of the Sainte Famille was founded by the Jesuit Chaumonot + at Montreal in 1663. Laval, Bishop of Quebec, afterwards encouraged + its establishment at that place; and, as Chaumonot himself writes, + caused it to be attached to the cathedral. <i>Vie de Chaumonot</i>, + 83. For its establishment at Montreal, see Faillon, <i>Vie de M<sup>lle</sup>. + Mance</i>, i. 233.</p> + <p>"Ils [<i>les Jésuites</i>] ont tous une si grande envie de savoir + tout ce qui se fait dans les familles qu'ils ont des Inspecteurs à gages + dans la Ville, qui leur rapportent tout ce qui se fait dans les maisons," etc., + etc.—<i>Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 13 Nov., 1673.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_88" id="footnote_88"></a><a href="#fnanchor_88"> <span class="label">[88]</span></a> Mention has been made (p. 88, <i>note</i>) of the report set on + foot by the Jesuit Dablon, to prevent the building of the fort.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_89" id="footnote_89"></a><a href="#fnanchor_89"> <span class="label">[89]</span></a> This story is told at considerable length, and the advances of + the lady particularly described.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_90" id="footnote_90"></a><a href="#fnanchor_90"> <span class="label">[90]</span></a> Letter of La Salle, in possession of M. Margry.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_91" id="footnote_91"></a><a href="#fnanchor_91"> <span class="label">[91]</span></a> Louis XIV. alludes to this visit, in a letter to Frontenac, dated + 28 April, 1677. "I cannot but approve," he writes, "of what you have + done, in your voyage to Fort Frontenac, to reconcile the minds of the + Five Iroquois Nations, and to clear yourself from the suspicions they + had entertained, and from the motives that might induce them to make + war." Frontenac's despatches of this year, as well as of the preceding + and following years, are missing from the archives.</p> + <p>In a memoir written in November, 1680, La Salle alludes to "le désir + que l'on avoit que Monseigneur le Comte de Frontenac fit la guerre + aux Iroquois." See Thomassy, <i>Géologie Pratique de la Louisiane</i>, + 203.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_92" id="footnote_92"></a><a href="#fnanchor_92"> <span class="label">[92]</span></a> Bruyas was about this time stationed among the Onondagas. Pierron + was among the Senecas. He had lately removed to them from the Mohawk + country. <i>Relation des Jésuites, 1673-79</i>, 140 (Shea). + Bruyas was also for a long time among the Mohawks.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_93" id="footnote_93"></a><a href="#fnanchor_93"> <span class="label">[93]</span></a> This puts the character of Perrot in a new light; for it is not + likely that any other can be meant than the famous <i>voyageur</i>. + I have found no mention elsewhere of the synonyme of Jolycœur. Poisoning + was the current crime of the day, and persons of the highest rank had + repeatedly been charged with it. The following is the passage:—</p> + <p>"Quoiqu'il en soit, M<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle se sentit quelque temps + après empoisonné d'une salade dans laquelle on avoit + meslé du ciguë, qui est poison en ce pays là, et + du verd de gris. Il en fut malade à l'extrémité, + vomissant presque continuellement 40 ou 50 jours après, et il + ne réchappa que par la force extrême de sa constitution. + Celuy qui luy donna le poison fut un nommé Nicolas Perrot, autrement + Jolycœur, l'un de ses domestiques.... Il pouvait faire mourir cet + homme, qui a confessé son crime, mais il s'est contenté de + l'enfermer les fers aux pieds."—<i>Histoire de M<sup>r.</sup> de + la Salle.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_94" id="footnote_94"></a><a href="#fnanchor_94"> <span class="label">[94]</span></a> The following words are underlined in the original: "<i>Je suis + pourtant obligé de leur rendre une justice, que le poison + qu'on m'avoit donné n'éstoit point de leur instigation."—Lettre + de La Salle au Prince de Conti, 31 Oct., 1678.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_95" id="footnote_95"></a><a href="#fnanchor_95"> <span class="label">[95]</span></a> In a letter to the King, Frontenac mentions that several men who + had been induced to desert from La Salle had gone to Albany, where + the English had received them well. <i>Lettre de Frontenac au Roy, + 6 Nov., 1679.</i> The Jesuits had a mission in the neighboring tribe + of the Mohawks and elsewhere in New York.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_96" id="footnote_96"></a><a href="#fnanchor_96"> <span class="label">[96]</span></a> This agrees with expressions used by La Salle in a memoir addressed + by him to Frontenac in November, 1680. In this, he intimates his belief + that Joliet went but little below the mouth of the Illinois, thus doing + flagrant injustice to that brave explorer.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2> +<p class="center">1677, 1678.</p> +<p class="center">THE GRAND ENTERPRISE.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"> La Salle at Fort Frontenac.—La Salle at Court: his Memorial.—Approval of the King.—Money +and Means.—Henri de Tonty.—Return to Canada.</div> +<p>"<span class="smcap">If</span>," writes a friend of La Salle," he had preferred gain to glory, + he had only to stay at his fort, where he was making more than twenty-five + thousand livres a year."<a name="fnanchor_97" id="fnanchor_97"></a><a href="#footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> He loved solitude and he loved power; and + at Fort Frontenac he had both, so far as each consisted with the other. + The nearest settlement was a week's journey distant, and he was master + of all around him. He had spared no pains to fulfil the conditions on + which his wilderness seigniory had been granted, and within two years + he had demolished the original wooden fort, replacing it by another much + larger, enclosed on the land side by ramparts and bastions of stone, and + on the water side by palisades. It contained a range of barracks of squared + timber, a guard-house, a lodging for officers, a forge, a well, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg + 121]</a></span> a mill, and a bakery. Nine small cannon were mounted on + the walls. Two officers and a surgeon, with ten or twelve soldiers, made + up the garrison; and three or four times that number of masons, laborers, + and canoe-men were at one time maintained at the place.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE AT FORT FRONTENAC.</div> +<p>Along the shore south of the fort was a small village of French families, + to whom La Salle had granted farms, and, farther on, a village of Iroquois, + whom he had persuaded to settle here. Near these villages were the house + and chapel of two Récollet friars, Luc Buisset and Louis Hennepin. + More than a hundred French acres of land had been cleared of wood, and + planted in part with crops; while cattle, fowls, and swine had been brought + up from Montreal. Four vessels, of from twenty-five to forty tons, had + been built for the lake and the river; but canoes served best for ordinary + uses, and La Salle's followers became so skilled in managing them that + they were reputed the best canoe-men in America. Feudal lord of the forests + around him, commander of a garrison raised and paid by himself, founder + of the mission, and patron of the church, he reigned the autocrat of his + lonely little empire.<a name="fnanchor_98" id="fnanchor_98"></a><a href="#footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg + 122]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S MEMORIAL.</div> +<p>It was not solely or chiefly for commercial gain that La Salle had established + Fort Frontenac. He regarded it as a first step towards greater things; + and now, at length, his plans were ripe and his time was come. In the + autumn of 1677 he left the fort in charge of his lieutenant, descended + the St. Lawrence to Quebec, and sailed for France. He had the patronage + of Frontenac and the help of strong friends in Paris. It is said, as we + have seen already, that his enemies denounced him, in advance, as a madman; + but a memorial of his, which his friends laid before the minister Colbert, + found a favorable hearing. In it he set forth his plans, or a portion + of them. He first recounted briefly the discoveries he had made, and then + described the country he had seen south and west of the great lakes. "It + is nearly all so beautiful and so fertile; so free from forests, and so + full of meadows, brooks, and rivers; so abounding in fish, game, and venison, + that one can find there in plenty, and with little trouble, all that is + needful for the support of flourishing colonies. The soil will produce + everything that is raised in France. Flocks and herds can be left out + at pasture all winter; and there are even native wild cattle, which, instead + of hair, have a fine wool that may answer for making cloth and hats. Their + hides are better than those of France, as appears <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg + 123]</a></span> by the sample which the Sieur de la Salle has brought + with him. Hemp and cotton grow here naturally, and may be manufactured + with good results; so there can be no doubt that colonies planted here + would become very prosperous. They would be increased by a great number + of western Indians, who are in the main of a tractable and social disposition; + and as they have the use neither of our weapons nor of our goods, and + are not in intercourse with other Europeans, they will readily adapt themselves + to us and imitate our way of life as soon as they taste the advantages + of our friendship and of the commodities we bring them, insomuch that + these countries will infallibly furnish, within a few years, a great many + new subjects to the Church and the King.</p> +<p>"It was the knowledge of these things, joined to the poverty of Canada, + its dense forests, its barren soil, its harsh climate, and the snow that + covers the ground for half the year, that led the Sieur de la Salle to + undertake the planting of colonies in these beautiful countries of the + West."</p> +<p>Then he recounts the difficulties of the attempt,—the vast distances, + the rapids and cataracts that obstruct the way; the cost of men, provisions, + and munitions; the danger from the Iroquois, and the rivalry of the English, + who covet the western country, and would gladly seize it for themselves. "But + this last reason," says the memorial, "only animates the Sieur de la Salle + the more, and impels <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg + 124]</a></span> him to anticipate them by the promptness of his action."</p> +<p>He declares that it was for this that he had asked for the grant of Fort + Frontenac; and he describes what he had done at that post, in order to + make it a secure basis for his enterprise. He says that he has now overcome + the chief difficulties in his way, and that he is ready to plant a new + colony at the outlet of Lake Erie, of which the English, if not prevented, + might easily take possession. Towards the accomplishment of his plans, + he asks the confirmation of his title to Fort Frontenac, and the permission + to establish at his own cost two other posts, with seigniorial rights + over all lands which he may discover and colonize within twenty years, + and the government of all the country in question. On his part, he proposes + to renounce all share in the trade carried on between the tribes of the + Upper Lakes and the people of Canada.</p> +<p>La Salle seems to have had an interview with the minister, in which the + proposals of his memorial were somewhat modified. He soon received in + reply the following patent from the King:—</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE KING'S APPROVAL.</div> +<p>"Louis, by the grace of God King of France and Navarre, to our dear and + well-beloved Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, greeting. We have received + with favor the very humble petition made us in your name, to permit you + to labor at the discovery of the western parts of New France; and we have + the more willingly entertained this proposal, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg + 125]</a></span> since we have nothing more at heart than the exploration + of this country, through which, to all appearance, a way may be found + to Mexico.... For this and other causes thereunto moving us, we permit + you by these presents, signed with our hand, to labor at the discovery + of the western parts of our aforesaid country of New France; and, for + the execution of this enterprise, to build forts at such places as you + may think necessary, and enjoy possession thereof under the same clauses + and conditions as of Fort Frontenac, conformably to our letters patent + of May thirteenth, 1675, which, so far as needful, we confirm by these + presents. And it is our will that they be executed according to their + form and tenor: on condition, nevertheless, that you finish this enterprise + within five years, failing which, these presents shall be void, and of + no effect; that you carry on no trade with the savages called Ottawas, + or with other tribes who bring their peltries to Montreal; and that you + do the whole at your own cost and that of your associates, to whom we + have granted the sole right of trade in buffalo-hides. And we direct the + Sieur Count Frontenac, our governor and lieutenant-general, and also Duchesneau, + intendant of justice, police, and finance, and the officers of the supreme + council of the aforesaid country, to see to the execution of these presents; + for such is our pleasure.</p> +<p>"Given at St. Germain en Laye, this 12th day of May, 1678, and of our + reign the 35th year."</p> +<p>This patent grants both more and less than the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg + 126]</a></span> memorial had asked. It authorizes La Salle to build + and own, not two forts only, but as many as he may see fit, provided + that he do so within five years; and it gives him, besides, the + monopoly of buffalo-hides, for which at first he had not petitioned. + Nothing is said of colonies. To discover the country, secure it + by forts, and find, if possible, a way to Mexico, are the only object + set forth; for Louis XIV. always discountenanced settlement in the + West, partly as tending to deplete Canada, and partly as removing + his subjects too far from his paternal control. It was but the year + before that he refused to Louis Joliet the permission to plant a + trading station in the Valley of the Mississippi.<a name="fnanchor_99" id="fnanchor_99"></a><a href="#footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> La Salle, + however, still held to his plan of a commercial and industrial colony, + and in connection with it to another purpose, of which his memorial + had made no mention. This was the building of a vessel on some branch + of the Mississippi, in order to sail down that river to its mouth, + and open a route to commerce through the Gulf of Mexico. It is evident + that this design was already formed; for he had no sooner received + his patent, than he engaged ship-carpenters, and procured iron, + cordage, and anchors, not for one vessel, but for two.</p> +<div class="sidenote">MONEY AND MEANS.</div> +<p>What he now most needed was money; and having none of his own, he set + himself to raising it from others. A notary named Simonnet lent him four + thousand livres; an advocate named Raoul, twenty-four <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg + 127]</a></span> thousand; and one Dumont, six thousand. His cousin François + Plet, a merchant of Rue St. Martin, lent him about eleven thousand, at + the interest of forty per cent; and when he returned to Canada, Frontenac + found means to procure him another loan of about fourteen thousand, secured + by the mortgage of Fort Frontenac. But his chief helpers were his family, + who became sharers in his undertaking. "His brothers and relations," says + a memorial afterwards addressed by them to the King, "spared nothing to + enable him to respond worthily to the royal goodness;" and the document + adds, that, before his allotted five years were ended, his discoveries + had cost them more than five hundred thousand livres (francs).<a name="fnanchor_100" id="fnanchor_100"></a><a href="#footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> La + Salle himself believed, and made others believe, that there was more profit + than risk in his schemes.</p> +<p>Lodged rather obscurely in Rue de la Truanderie, and of a nature reserved + and shy, he nevertheless found countenance and support from personages + no less exalted than Colbert, Seignelay, and the Prince de Conti. Others, + too, in stations less conspicuous, warmly espoused his cause, and none + more so than the learned Abbé Renaudot, who helped him with tongue + and pen, and seems to have been instrumental in introducing to him a man + who afterwards proved invaluable. This was Henri de Tonty, an Italian <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg + 128]</a></span> officer, a <i>protégé</i> of the Prince + de Conti, who sent him to La Salle as a person suited to his purposes, + Tonty had but one hand, the other having been blown off by a grenade in + the Sicilian wars.<a name="fnanchor_101" id="fnanchor_101"></a><a href="#footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> His father, who had been governor of Gaeta, but + who had come to France in consequence of political disturbances in Naples, + had earned no small reputation as a financier, and had invented the form + of life insurance still called the Tontine. La Salle learned to know his + new lieutenant on the voyage across the Atlantic; and, soon after reaching + Canada, he wrote of him to his patron in the following terms: "His honorable + character and his amiable disposition were well known to you; but perhaps + you would not have thought him capable of doing things for which a strong + constitution, an acquaintance with the country, and the use of both hands + seemed absolutely necessary. Nevertheless, his energy and address make + him equal to anything; and now, at a season when everybody is in fear + of the ice, he is setting out to begin a new fort, two hundred leagues + from this place, and to which I have taken the liberty to give the name + of Fort Conti. It is situated near that great cataract, more than a hundred + and twenty <i>toises</i> in height, by which the lakes of higher elevation + precipitate themselves into Lake Frontenac [Ontario]. From there one goes + by water, five hundred leagues, to the place where Fort Dauphin is to + be begun; from which it only remains to descend the great <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg + 129]</a></span> river of the Bay of St. Esprit, to reach the Gulf of Mexico."<a name="fnanchor_102" id="fnanchor_102"></a><a href="#footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">RETURN TO CANADA.</div> +<p>Besides Tonty, La Salle found in France another ally, La Motte de Lussière, + to whom he offered a share in the enterprise, and who joined him at Rochelle, + the place of embarkation. Here vexatious delays occurred. Bellinzani, + director of trade, who had formerly taken lessons in rascality in the + service of Cardinal Mazarin, abused his official position to throw obstacles + in the way of La Salle, in order to extort money from him; and he extorted, + in fact, a considerable sum, which his victim afterwards reclaimed. It + was not till the fourteenth of July that La Salle, with Tonty, La Motte, + and thirty men, set sail for Canada, and two months more elapsed before + he reached Quebec. Here, to increase his resources and strengthen his + position, he seems to have made a league with several Canadian merchants, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg + 130]</a></span> some of whom had before been his enemies, and were to + be so again. Here, too, he found Father Louis Hennepin, who had come down + from Fort Frontenac to meet him.<a name="fnanchor_103" id="fnanchor_103"></a><a href="#footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_97" id="footnote_97"></a><a href="#fnanchor_97"> <span class="label">[97]</span></a> <i>Mémoire pour Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay sur + les Descouvertes du Sieur de la Salle</i>, 1682.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_98" id="footnote_98"></a><a href="#fnanchor_98"> <span class="label">[98]</span></a> <i>État de la dépense faite par M<sup>r.</sup> de + la Salle, Gouverneur du Fort Frontenac. Récit de Nicolas + de la Salle. Revue faite au Fort de Frontenac, 1677; Mémoire + sur le Projet du Sieur de la Salle</i> (Margry, i. 329). Plan of + Fort Frontenac, published by Faillon, from the original sent to + France by Denonville in 1685. <i>Relation des Découvertes + du Sieur de la Salle.</i> When Frontenac was at the fort in September, + 1677, he found only four <i>habitants</i>. It appears, by the <i>Relation + des Découvertes du Sieur de la Salle</i>, that, three or + four years later, there were thirteen or fourteen families. La Salle + spent 34,426 francs on the fort. <i>Mémoire au Roy, Papiers + de Famille.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_99" id="footnote_99"></a><a href="#fnanchor_99"> <span class="label">[99]</span></a> <i>Colbert à Duchesneau, 28 Avril, 1677.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_100" id="footnote_100"></a><a href="#fnanchor_100"> <span class="label">[100]</span></a> <i>Mémoire au Roy, présenté sous la Régence; + Obligation du Sieur de la Salle envers le Sieur Plet; Autres Emprunts + de Cavelier de la Salle</i> (Margry, i. 423-432).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_101" id="footnote_101"></a><a href="#fnanchor_101"> <span class="label">[101]</span></a> Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>, in Margry, <i>Relations et Mémoires + inédits</i>, 5.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_102" id="footnote_102"></a><a href="#fnanchor_102"> <span class="label">[102]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle, 31 Oct., 1678.</i> Fort Conti was to have + been built on the site of the present Fort Niagara. The name of Lac + de Conti was given by La Salle to Lake Erie. The fort mentioned as + Fort Dauphin was built, as we shall see, on the Illinois, though under + another name. La Salle, deceived by Spanish maps, thought that the + Mississippi discharged itself into the Bay of St. Esprit (Mobile Bay).</p> + <p>Henri de Tonty signed his name in the Gallicized, and not in the original + Italian form <i>Tonti</i>. He wore a hand of iron or some other metal, + which was usually covered with a glove. La Potherie says that he once + or twice used it to good purpose when the Indians became disorderly, + in breaking the heads of the most contumacious or knocking out their + teeth. Not knowing at the time the secret of the unusual efficacy of + his blows, they regarded him as a "medicine" of the first order. La + Potherie erroneously ascribes the loss of his hand to a sabre-cut received + in a <i>sortie</i> at Messina.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_103" id="footnote_103"></a><a href="#fnanchor_103"> <span class="label">[103]</span></a> <i>La Motte de Lussière à ——, sans + date; Mémoíre de la Salle sur les Extorsions commises + par Bellinzani; Société formée par La Salle; + Relation de Henri de Tonty</i>, 1684 (Margry, i. 338, 573; ii. 2, + 25).</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2> +<p class="center">1678-1679.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE AT NIAGARA.</p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"><span class="smcap">Father Louis Hennepin: +his Past Life; his Character.—Embarkation.—Niagara +Falls.—Indian Jealousy.—La Motte and the Senecas.—A Disaster.—La +Salle and his Followers.</span></div> +<p><span class="smcap">Hennepin</span> was all eagerness to join in the adventure; and, to his great + satisfaction, La Salle gave him a letter from his Provincial, Father Le + Fèvre, containing the coveted permission. Whereupon, to prepare + himself, he went into retreat at the Récollet convent of Quebec, + where he remained for a time in such prayer and meditation as his nature, + the reverse of spiritual, would permit. Frontenac, always partial to his + Order, then invited him to dine at the château; and having visited + the bishop and asked his blessing, he went down to the Lower Town and + embarked. His vessel was a small birch canoe, paddled by two men. With + sandalled feet, a coarse gray capote, and peaked hood, the cord of St. + Francis about his waist, and a rosary and crucifix hanging at his side, + the father set forth on his memorable journey. He <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg + 132]</a></span> carried with him the furniture of a portable altar, which + in time of need he could strap on his back like a knapsack.</p> +<p>He slowly made his way up the St. Lawrence, stopping here and there, where + a clearing and a few log houses marked the feeble beginning of a parish + and a seigniory. The settlers, though good Catholics, were too few and + too poor to support a priest, and hailed the arrival of the friar with + delight. He said mass, exhorted a little, as was his custom, and on one + occasion baptized a child. At length he reached Montreal, where the enemies + of the enterprise enticed away his two canoe-men. He succeeded in finding + two others, with whom he continued his voyage, passed the rapids of the + upper St. Lawrence, and reached Fort Frontenac at eleven o'clock at night + of the second of November, where his brethren of the mission, Ribourde + and Buisset, received him with open arms.<a name="fnanchor_104" id="fnanchor_104"></a><a href="#footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> La Motte, with most of + the men, appeared on the eighth; but La Salle and Tonty did not arrive + till more than a month later. Meanwhile, in pursuance of his orders, fifteen + men set out in canoes for Lake Michigan and the Illinois, to trade with + the Indians and collect provisions, while La Motte embarked in a small + vessel for Niagara, accompanied by Hennepin.<a name="fnanchor_105" id="fnanchor_105"></a><a href="#footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a></p> + +<p> </p> + +<div class="figcenter bord"><a name="illo_163.png" id="illo_163.png"></a> + <img src="images/illo_163.png" alt="Hennepin Mass" /></div> + <div style="text-align:center"><i>Copyright, 1897, by Little, Brown & C<sup>o</sup></i> + <i>Goupil & C<sup>o</sup>., Paris</i><br /> +<i>Father Hennepin Celebrating Mass.</i><br/> +Drawn by Howard Pyle.</div> + +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg + 133]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">HENNEPIN</div> +<p>This bold, hardy, and adventurous friar, the historian of the expedition, + and a conspicuous actor in it, has unwittingly painted his own portrait + with tolerable distinctness. "I always," he says, "felt a strong inclination + to fly from the world and live according to the rules of a pure and severe + virtue; and it was with this view that I entered the Order of St. Francis."<a name="fnanchor_106" id="fnanchor_106"></a><a href="#footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> + He then speaks of his zeal for the saving of souls, but admits that a + passion for travel and a burning desire to visit strange lands had no + small part in his inclination for the missions.<a name="fnanchor_107" id="fnanchor_107"></a><a href="#footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> Being in a convent + in Artois, his Superior sent him to Calais, at the season of the herring-fishery, + to beg alms, after the practice of the Franciscans. Here and at Dunkirk + he made friends of the sailors, and was never tired of their stories. + So insatiable, indeed, was his appetite for them, that "often," he says, "I + hid myself behind tavern doors while the sailors were telling of their + voyages. The tobacco smoke made me very sick at the stomach; but, notwithstanding, + I listened attentively to all they said about their adventures at sea + and their travels in distant countries. I could have passed whole days + and nights in this way without eating."<a name="fnanchor_108" id="fnanchor_108"></a><a href="#footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></p> +<p>He presently set out on a roving mission through <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg +134]</a></span> Holland; and he recounts various mishaps which befell + him, "in consequence of my zeal in laboring for the saving of souls," "I + was at the bloody fight of Seneff," he pursues, "where so many perished + by fire and sword, and where I had abundance of work in comforting + and consoling the poor wounded soldiers. After undergoing great + fatigues, and running extreme danger in the sieges of towns, in + the trenches, and in battles, where I exposed myself freely for + the salvation of others while the soldiers were breathing nothing + but blood and carnage, I found myself at last in a way of satisfying + my old inclination for travel."<a name="fnanchor_109" id="fnanchor_109"></a><a href="#footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a></p> +<p>He got leave from his superiors to go to Canada, the most adventurous + of all the missions, and accordingly sailed in 1675, in the ship which + carried La Salle, who had just obtained the grant of Fort Frontenac. In + the course of the voyage, he took it upon him to reprove a party of girls + who were amusing themselves and a circle of officers and other passengers + by dancing on deck. La Salle, who was among the spectators, was annoyed + at Hennepin's interference, and told him that he was behaving like a pedagogue. + The friar retorted, by alluding— unconsciously, as he says—to + the circumstance that La Salle was once a pedagogue himself, having, according + to Hennepin, been for ten or twelve years teacher of a class in a Jesuit + school. La Salle, he adds, turned pale with rage, and never forgave him <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg + 135]</a></span> to his dying day, but always maligned and persecuted him.<a name="fnanchor_110" id="fnanchor_110"></a><a href="#footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a></p> +<p>On arriving in Canada, he was sent up to Fort Frontenac, as a missionary. + That wild and remote post was greatly to his liking. He planted a gigantic + cross, superintended the building of a chapel for himself and his colleague + Buisset, and instructed the Iroquois colonists of the place. He visited, + too, the neighboring Indian settlements, —paddling his canoe in + summer, when the lake was open, and journeying in winter on snow-shoes, + with a blanket slung at his back. His most noteworthy journey was one + which he made in the winter,—apparently of 1677,—with a soldier + of the fort. They crossed the eastern extremity of Lake Ontario on snow-shoes, + and pushed southward through the forests, towards Onondaga,—stopping + at evening to dig away the snow, which was several feet deep, and collect + wood for their fire, which they were forced to replenish repeatedly during + the night, to keep themselves from freezing. At length, they reached the + great Onondaga town, where the Indians were much amazed at their hardihood. + Thence they proceeded eastward to the Oneidas, and afterwards to the Mohawks, + who regaled them with small frogs, pounded up with a porridge of Indian + corn. Here Hennepin found the Jesuit Bruyas, who permitted him to copy + a dictionary <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg + 136]</a></span> of the Mohawk language<a name="fnanchor_111" id="fnanchor_111"></a><a href="#footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> which he had compiled; and + here he presently met three Dutchmen, who urged him to visit the neighboring + settlement of Orange, or Albany,—an invitation which he seems to + have declined.<a name="fnanchor_112" id="fnanchor_112"></a><a href="#footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></p> +<p>They were pleased with him, he says, because he spoke Dutch. Bidding them + farewell, he tied on his snow-shoes again, and returned with his companion + to Fort Frontenac. Thus he inured himself to the hardships of the woods, + and prepared for the execution of the grand plan of discovery which he + calls his own,—"an enterprise," to borrow his own words, "capable + of terrifying anybody but me."<a name="fnanchor_113" id="fnanchor_113"></a><a href="#footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a> When the later editions of his book + appeared, doubts had been expressed of his veracity. "I here protest to + you, before God," he writes, addressing the reader, "that my narrative + is faithful and sincere, and that you may believe everything related in + it."<a name="fnanchor_114" id="fnanchor_114"></a><a href="#footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> And yet, as we shall see, this reverend father was the most + impudent of liars; and the narrative of which he speaks is a rare monument + of brazen mendacity. Hennepin, however, had seen and dared much; for <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg + 137]</a></span> among his many failings fear had no part, and where his + vanity or his spite was not involved, he often told the truth. His books + have their value, with all their enormous fabrications.<a name="fnanchor_115" id="fnanchor_115"></a><a href="#footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a></p> +<p>La Motte and Hennepin, with sixteen men, went on board the little vessel + of ten tons, which lay at Fort Frontenac. The friar's two brethren, Buisset + and Ribourde, threw their arms about his neck as they bade him farewell; + while his Indian proselytes, learning whither he was bound, stood with + their hands pressed upon their mouths, in amazement at the perils which + awaited their ghostly instructor. La Salle, with the rest of the party, + was to follow as soon as he could finish his preparations. It was a boisterous + and gusty day, the eighteenth of November. The sails were spread; the + shore receded,—the stone walls of the fort, the huge cross that + the friar had reared, the wigwams, the settlers' cabins, the group of + staring Indians on the strand. The lake was rough; and the men, crowded + in so small a craft, grew nervous and uneasy. They hugged the northern + shore, to escape the fury of the wind, which blew savagely from the northeast; + while the long gray sweep of naked forests on their right betokened that + winter was fast closing in. On the twenty-sixth, they reached the neighborhood + of the Indian town of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg + 138]</a></span> Taiaiagon,<a name="fnanchor_116" id="fnanchor_116"></a><a href="#footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> not far from Toronto, and ran their vessel, + for safety, into the mouth of a river,—probably the Humber,—where + the ice closed about her, and they were forced to cut her out with axes. + On the fifth of December, they attempted to cross to the mouth of the + Niagara; but darkness overtook them, and they spent a comfortless night, + tossing on the troubled lake, five or six miles from shore. In the morning, + they entered the mouth of the Niagara, and landed on the point at its + eastern side, where now stand the historic ramparts of Fort Niagara. Here + they found a small village of Senecas, attracted hither by the fisheries, + who gazed with curious eyes at the vessel, and listened in wonder as the + voyagers sang <i>Te Deum</i> in gratitude for their safe arrival.</p> +<div class="sidenote">NIAGARA FALLS.</div> +<p>Hennepin, with several others, now ascended the river in a canoe to the + foot of the mountain ridge of Lewiston, which, stretching on the right + hand and on the left, forms the acclivity of a vast plateau, rent with + the mighty chasm, along which, from this point to the cataract, seven + miles above, rush, with the fury of an Alpine torrent, the gathered waters + of four inland oceans. To urge the canoe farther was impossible. He landed, + with his companions, on the west bank, near the foot of that part of the + ridge now called Queenstown Heights, climbed the steep ascent, and pushed + through the wintry forest on a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg + 139]</a></span> tour of exploration. On his left sank the cliffs, the + furious river raging below; till at length, in primeval solitudes unprofaned + as yet by the pettiness of man, the imperial cataract burst upon his sight.<a name="fnanchor_117" id="fnanchor_117"></a><a href="#footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a></p> +<p>The explorers passed three miles beyond it, and encamped for the night + on the banks of Chippewa Creek, scraping away the snow, which was a foot + deep, in order to kindle a fire. In the morning they retraced their steps, + startling a number of deer and wild turkeys on their way, and rejoined + their companions at the mouth of the river.</p><p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg + 140]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA MOTTE AND THE SENECAS.</div> +<p>La Motte now began the building of a fortified house, some two leagues + above the mouth of the Niagara.<a name="fnanchor_118" id="fnanchor_118"></a><a href="#footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> Hot water was used to soften the + frozen ground; but frost was not the only obstacle. The Senecas of the + neighboring village betrayed a sullen jealousy at a design which, indeed, + boded them no good. Niagara was the key to the four great lakes above; + and whoever held possession of it could, in no small measure, control + the fur-trade of the interior. Occupied by the French, it would in time + of peace intercept the trade which the Iroquois carried on between the + western Indians and the Dutch and English at Albany, and in time of war + threaten them with serious danger. La Motte saw the necessity of conciliating + these formidable neighbors, and, if possible, cajoling them to give their + consent to the plan. La Salle, indeed, had instructed him to that effect. + He resolved on a journey to the great village of the Senecas, and called + on Hennepin, who was busied in building a bark chapel for himself, to + accompany him. They accordingly set out with several men well armed and + equipped, and bearing at their backs presents of very considerable value. + The village was beyond the Genesee, southeast of the site of Rochester.<a name="fnanchor_119" id="fnanchor_119"></a><a href="#footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> + After a march of five days, they reached it on the last day of December. + They were conducted <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg + 141]</a></span> to the lodge of the great chief, where they were beset + by a staring crowd of women and children. Two Jesuits, Raffeix and Julien + Garnier, were in the village; and their presence boded no good for the + embassy. La Motte, who seems to have had little love for priests of any + kind, was greatly annoyed at seeing them; and when the chiefs assembled + to hear what he had to say, he insisted that the two fathers should leave + the council-house. At this, Hennepin, out of respect for his cloth, thought + it befitting that he should retire also. The chiefs, forty-two in number, + squatted on the ground, arrayed in ceremonial robes of beaver, wolf, or + black-squirrel skin. "The senators of Venice," writes Hennepin, "do not + look more grave or speak more deliberately than the counsellors of the + Iroquois." La Motte's interpreter harangued the attentive conclave, placed + gift after gift at their feet,—coats, scarlet cloth, hatchets, knives, + and beads,—and used all his eloquence to persuade them that the + building of a fort on the banks of the Niagara, and a vessel on Lake Erie, + were measures vital to their interest. They gladly took the gifts, but + answered the interpreter's speech with evasive generalities; and having + been entertained with the burning of an Indian prisoner, the discomfited + embassy returned, half-famished, to Niagara.</p> +<p>Meanwhile, La Salle and Tonty were on their way from Fort Frontenac, with + men and supplies, to join La Motte and his advance party. They were <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg + 142]</a></span> in a small vessel, with a pilot either unskilful or treacherous. + On Christmas eve, he was near wrecking them off the Bay of Quinté. + On the next day they crossed to the mouth of the Genesee; and La Salle, + after some delay, proceeded to the neighboring town of the Senecas, where + he appears to have arrived just after the departure of La Motte and Hennepin. + He, too, called them to a council, and tried to soothe the extreme jealousy + with which they regarded his proceedings. "I told them my plan," he says, "and + gave the best pretexts I could, and I succeeded in my attempt."<a name="fnanchor_120" id="fnanchor_120"></a><a href="#footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> More + fortunate than La Motte, he persuaded them to consent to his carrying + arms and ammunition by the Niagara portage, building a vessel above the + cataract, and establishing a fortified warehouse at the mouth of the river.</p> +<div class="sidenote">JEALOUSIES.</div> +<p>This success was followed by a calamity. La Salle had gone up the Niagara + to find a suitable place for a ship-yard, when he learned that the pilot + in charge of the vessel he had left had disobeyed his orders, and ended + by wrecking it on the coast. Little was saved except the anchors and cables + destined for the new vessel to be built above the cataract. This loss + threw him into extreme perplexity, and, as Hennepin says, "would have + made anybody but him give up the enterprise."<a name="fnanchor_121" id="fnanchor_121"></a><a href="#footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> The whole party were + now gathered <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg + 143]</a></span> at the palisaded house which La Motte had built, a little + below the mountain ridge of Lewiston. They were a motley crew of French, + Flemings, and Italians, all mutually jealous. La Salle's enemies had tampered + with some of the men; and none of them seemed to have had much heart for + the enterprise. The fidelity even of La Motte was doubtful. "He served + me very ill," says La Salle; "and Messieurs de Tonty and de la Forest + knew that he did his best to debauch all my men."<a name="fnanchor_122" id="fnanchor_122"></a><a href="#footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> His health soon + failed under the hardships of these winter journeyings, and he returned + to Fort Frontenac, half-blinded by an inflammation of the eyes.<a name="fnanchor_123" id="fnanchor_123"></a><a href="#footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> La + Salle, seldom happy in the choice of subordinates, had, perhaps, in all + his company but one man whom he could fully trust; and this was Tonty. + He and Hennepin were on indifferent terms. Men thrown together in a rugged + enterprise like this quickly learn to know each other; and the vain and + assuming friar was not likely to commend himself to La Salle's brave and + loyal lieutenant. Hennepin says that it was La Salle's policy to govern + through the dissensions of his followers; and, from whatever cause, it + is certain that those beneath him were rarely in perfect harmony.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_104" id="footnote_104"></a><a href="#fnanchor_104"> <span class="label">[104]</span></a> Hennepin, <i>Description de la Louisiane</i> (1683), 19; Ibid., <i>Voyage + Curieux</i> (1704), 66. Ribourde had lately arrived.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_105" id="footnote_105"></a><a href="#fnanchor_105"> <span class="label">[105]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Motte de la Lussière, sans date; Relation + de Henri de Tonty écrite de Québec, le 14 Novembre, + 1684</i> (Margry, i. 573). This paper, apparently addressed to Abbé Renaudot, + is entirely distinct from Tonty's memoir of 1693, addressed to the + minister Ponchartrain.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_106" id="footnote_106"></a><a href="#fnanchor_106"> <span class="label">[106]</span></a> Hennepin, <i>Nouvelle Découverte</i> (1697), 8.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_107" id="footnote_107"></a><a href="#fnanchor_107"> <span class="label">[107]</span></a> Ibid., <i>Avant Propos</i>, 5.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_108" id="footnote_108"></a><a href="#fnanchor_108"> <span class="label">[108]</span></a> Ibid., <i>Voyage Curieux</i> (1704), 12.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_109" id="footnote_109"></a><a href="#fnanchor_109"> <span class="label">[109]</span></a> Hennepin, <i>Voyage Curieux</i> (1704), 18.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_110" id="footnote_110"></a><a href="#fnanchor_110"> <span class="label">[110]</span></a> Ibid. <i>Avis au Lecteur.</i> He elsewhere represents himself + as on excellent terms with La Salle; with whom, he says, he used to + read histories of travels at Fort Frontenac, after which they discussed + together their plans of discovery.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_111" id="footnote_111"></a><a href="#fnanchor_111"> <span class="label">[111]</span></a> This was the <i>Racines Agnières</i> of Bruyas. It was + published by Mr. Shea in 1862. Hennepin seems to have studied it carefully; + for on several occasions he makes use of words evidently borrowed from + it, putting them into the mouths of Indians speaking a dialect different + from that of the Agniers, or Mohawks.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_112" id="footnote_112"></a><a href="#fnanchor_112"> <span class="label">[112]</span></a> Compare Brodhead in <i>Hist. Mag.</i>, x. 268.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_113" id="footnote_113"></a><a href="#fnanchor_113"> <span class="label">[113]</span></a> "Une enterprise capable d'épouvanter tout autre que moi."—Hennepin, <i>Voyage + Curieux, Avant Propos</i> (1704).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_114" id="footnote_114"></a><a href="#fnanchor_114"> <span class="label">[114]</span></a> "Je vous proteste ici devant Dieu, que ma Relation est fidèle + et sincère," etc.—Ibid., <i>Avis au Lecteur</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_115" id="footnote_115"></a><a href="#fnanchor_115"> <span class="label">[115]</span></a> The nature of these fabrications will be shown hereafter. They + occur, not in the early editions of Hennepin's narrative, which are + comparatively truthful, but in the edition of 1697 and those which + followed. La Salle was dead at the time of their publication.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_116" id="footnote_116"></a><a href="#fnanchor_116"> <span class="label">[116]</span></a> This place is laid down on a manuscript map sent to France by + the Intendant Duchesneau, and now preserved in the Archives de la Marine, + and also on several other contemporary maps.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_117" id="footnote_117"></a><a href="#fnanchor_117"> <span class="label">[117]</span></a> Hennepin's account of the falls and river of Niagara—especially + his second account, on his return from the West—is very minute, + and on the whole very accurate. He indulges in gross exaggeration as + to the height of the cataract, which, in the edition of 1683, he states + at five hundred feet, and raises to six hundred in that of 1697. He + also says that there was room for four carriages to pass abreast under + the American Fall without being wet. This is, of course, an exaggeration + at the best; but it is extremely probable that a great change has taken + place since his time. He speaks of a small lateral fall at the west + side of the Horse Shoe Fall which does not now exist. Table Rock, now + destroyed, is distinctly figured in his picture. He says that he descended + the cliffs on the west side to the foot of the cataract, but that no + human being can get down on the east side.</p> + <p>The name of Niagara, written <i>Onguiaahra</i> by Lalemant in 1641, + and <i>Ongiara</i> by Sanson, on his map of 1657, is used by Hennepin + in its present form. His description of the falls is the earliest known + to exist. They are clearly indicated on the map of Champlain, 1632. + For early references to them, see "The Jesuits in North America," 235, <i>note</i>. + A brief but curious notice of them is given by Gendron, <i>Quelques + Particularitez du Pays des Hurons</i>, 1659. The indefatigable Dr. + O'Callaghan has discovered thirty-nine distinct forms of the name Niagara. <i>Index + to Colonial Documents of New York</i>, 465. It is of Iroquois origin, + and in the Mohawk dialect is pronounced Nyàgarah.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_118" id="footnote_118"></a><a href="#fnanchor_118"> <span class="label">[118]</span></a> Tonty, <i>Relation</i>, 1684 (Margry, i. 573).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_119" id="footnote_119"></a><a href="#fnanchor_119"> <span class="label">[119]</span></a> Near the town of Victor. It is laid down on the map of Galinée, + and other unpublished maps. Compare Marshall, <i>Historical Sketches + of the Niagara Frontier</i>, 14.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_120" id="footnote_120"></a><a href="#fnanchor_120"> <span class="label">[120]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle à un de ses associés</i> (Margry, + ii. 32).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_121" id="footnote_121"></a><a href="#fnanchor_121"> <span class="label">[121]</span></a> <i>Description de la Louisiane</i> (1683), 41. It is characteristic + of Hennepin that, in the editions of his book published after La Salle's + death, he substitutes, for "anybody but him," "anybody but those who + had formed so generous a design,"—meaning to include himself, + though he lost nothing by the disaster, and had not formed the design.</p> + <p>On these incidents, compare the two narratives of Tonty, of 1684 and + 1693. The book bearing Tonty's name is a compilation full of errors. + He disowned its authorship.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_122" id="footnote_122"></a><a href="#fnanchor_122"> <span class="label">[122]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle, 22 Août, 1682</i> (Margry, ii. 212).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_123" id="footnote_123"></a><a href="#fnanchor_123"> <span class="label">[123]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Motte, sans date.</i></p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg + 144]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2> +<p class="center">1679.</p> +<p class="center">THE LAUNCH OF THE "GRIFFIN."</p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"><span class="smcap">The Niagara Portage.—A +Vessel on the Stocks.—Suffering and Discontent.—La Salle's Winter Journey.—The +Vessel launched.—Fresh Disasters.</span></div> +<div class="sidenote">THE NIAGARA PORTAGE.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">A more</span> important work than that of the warehouse at the mouth of the river + was now to be begun. This was the building of a vessel above the cataract. + The small craft which had brought La Motte and Hennepin with their advance + party had been hauled to the foot of the rapids at Lewiston, and drawn + ashore with a capstan, to save her from the drifting ice. Her lading was + taken out, and must now be carried beyond the cataract to the calm water + above. The distance to the destined point was at least twelve miles, and + the steep heights above Lewiston must first be climbed. This heavy task + was accomplished on the twenty-second of January. The level of the plateau + was reached, and the file of burdened men, some thirty in number, toiled + slowly on its way over the snowy plains and through the gloomy forests + of spruce and naked oak-trees; while Hennepin plodded through the drifts + with his portable altar <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg + 145]</a></span> lashed fast to his back. They came at last to the mouth + of a stream which entered the Niagara two leagues above the cataract, + and which was undoubtedly that now called Cayuga Creek.<a name="fnanchor_124" id="fnanchor_124"></a><a href="#footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg + 146]</a></span></p> +<p>Trees were felled, the place cleared, and the master-carpenter set his + ship-builders at work. Meanwhile, two Mohegan hunters, attached to the + party, made bark wigwams to lodge the men. Hennepin had his chapel, apparently + of the same material, where he placed his altar, and on Sundays and saints' + days said mass, preached, and exhorted; while some of the men, who knew + the Gregorian chant, lent their aid at the service. When the carpenters + were ready to lay the keel of the vessel, La Salle asked the friar to + drive the first bolt; "but the modesty of my religious profession," he + says, "compelled me to decline this honor."</p> +<p>Fortunately, it was the hunting-season of the Iroquois, and most of the + Seneca warriors were in the forests south of Lake Erie; yet enough remained + to cause serious uneasiness. They loitered sullenly about the place, expressing + their displeasure at the proceedings of the French. One of them, pretending <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg + 147]</a></span> to be drunk, attacked the blacksmith and tried to kill + him; but the Frenchman, brandishing a red-hot bar of iron, held him at + bay till Hennepin ran to the rescue, when, as he declares, the severity + of his rebuke caused the savage to desist.<a name="fnanchor_125" id="fnanchor_125"></a><a href="#footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> The work of the ship-builders + advanced rapidly; and when the Indian visitors beheld the vast ribs of + the wooden monster, their jealousy was redoubled. A squaw told the French + that they meant to burn the vessel on the stocks. All now stood anxiously + on the watch. Cold, hunger, and discontent found imperfect antidotes in + Tonty's energy and Hennepin's sermons.</p> +<div class="sidenote">SUFFERING AND DISCONTENT.</div> +<p>La Salle was absent, and his lieutenant commanded in his place. Hennepin + says that Tonty was jealous because he, the friar, kept a journal, and + that he was forced to use all manner of just precautions to prevent the + Italian from seizing it. The men, being half-starved, in consequence of + the loss of their provisions on Lake Ontario, were restless and moody; + and their discontent was fomented by one of their number, who had very + probably been tampered with by La Salle's enemies.<a name="fnanchor_126" id="fnanchor_126"></a><a href="#footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> The Senecas refused + to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> supply + them with corn, and the frequent exhortations of the Récollet father + proved an insufficient substitute. In this extremity, the two Mohegans + did excellent service,—bringing deer and other game, which relieved + the most pressing wants of the party, and went far to restore their cheerfulness.</p> +<p>La Salle, meanwhile, had gone down to the mouth of the river, with a sergeant + and a number of men; and here, on the high point of land where Fort Niagara + now stands, he marked out the foundations of two blockhouses.<a name="fnanchor_127" id="fnanchor_127"></a><a href="#footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> Then, + leaving his men to build them, he set out on foot for Fort Frontenac, + where the condition of his affairs demanded his presence, and where he + hoped to procure supplies to replace those lost in the wreck of his vessel. + It was February, and the distance was some two hundred and fifty miles, + through the snow-encumbered forests of the Iroquois and over the ice of + Lake Ontario. Two men attended him, and a dog dragged his baggage on a + sledge. For food, they had only a bag of parched corn, which failed them + two days before they reached the fort; and they made the rest of the journey + fasting.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE SHIP FINISHED.</div> +<p>During his absence, Tonty finished the vessel, which was of about forty-five + tons' burden.<a name="fnanchor_128" id="fnanchor_128"></a><a href="#footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> As <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg + 149]</a></span> spring opened, she was ready for launching. The friar + pronounced his blessing on her; the assembled company sang <i>Te Deum</i>; + cannon were fired; and French and Indians, warmed alike by a generous + gift of brandy, shouted and yelped in chorus as she glided into the Niagara. + Her builders towed her out and anchored her in the stream, safe at last + from incendiary hands; and then, swinging their hammocks under her deck, + slept in peace, beyond reach of the tomahawk. The Indians gazed on her + with amazement. Five small cannon looked out from her portholes; and on + her prow was carved a portentous monster, the Griffin, whose name she + bore, in honor of the armorial bearings of Frontenac. La Salle had often + been heard to say that he would make the griffin fly above the crows, + or, in other words, make Frontenac triumph over the Jesuits.</p> +<p>They now took her up the river, and made her fast below the swift current + at Black Rock. Here they finished her equipment, and waited for La Salle's + return; but the absent commander did not appear. The spring and more than + half of the summer had passed before they saw him again. At length, early + in August, he arrived at the mouth of the Niagara, bringing three more + friars; for, though no friend of the Jesuits, he was zealous for the Faith, + and was rarely without a missionary in his journeyings. Like Hennepin, + the three friars were all Flemings. One <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg + 150]</a></span> of them, Melithon Watteau, was to remain at Niagara; the + others, Zenobe Membré and Gabriel Ribourde, were to preach the + Faith among the tribes of the West. Ribourde was a hale and cheerful old + man of sixty-four. He went four times up and down the Lewiston heights, + while the men were climbing the steep pathway with their loads. It required + four of them, well stimulated with brandy, to carry up the principal anchor + destined for the "Griffin."</p> +<p>La Salle brought a tale of disaster. His enemies, bent on ruining the + enterprise, had given out that he was embarked on a harebrained venture, + from which he would never return. His creditors, excited by rumors set + afloat to that end, had seized on all his property in the settled parts + of Canada, though his seigniory of Fort Frontenac alone would have more + than sufficed to pay all his debts. There was no remedy. To defer the + enterprise would have been to give his adversaries the triumph that they + sought; and he hardened himself against the blow with his usual stoicism.<a name="fnanchor_129" id="fnanchor_129"></a><a href="#footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_124" id="footnote_124"></a><a href="#fnanchor_124"> <span class="label">[124]</span></a> It has been a matter of debate on which side of the Niagara the + first vessel on the Upper Lakes was built. A close study of Hennepin, + and a careful examination of the localities, have convinced me that + the spot was that indicated above. Hennepin repeatedly alludes to a + large detached rock, rising out of the water at the foot of the rapids + above Lewiston, on the west side of the river. This rock may still + be seen immediately under the western end of the Lewiston suspension-bridge. + Persons living in the neighborhood remember that a ferry-boat used + to pass between it and the cliffs of the western shore; but it has + since been undermined by the current and has inclined in that direction, + so that a considerable part of it is submerged, while the gravel and + earth thrown down from the cliff during the building of the bridge + has filled the intervening channel. Opposite to this rock, and on the + east side of the river, says Hennepin, are three mountains, about two + leagues below the cataract. (<i>Nouveau Voyage</i> (1704), 462, 466.) + To these "three mountains," as well as to the rock, he frequently alludes. + They are also spoken of by La Hontan, who clearly indicates their position. + They consist in the three successive grades of the acclivity: first, + that which rises from the level of the water, forming the steep and + lofty river-bank; next, an intermediate ascent, crowned by a sort of + terrace, where the tired men could find a second resting-place and + lay down their burdens, whence a third effort carried them with difficulty + to the level top of the plateau. That this was the actual "portage," or + carrying place of the travellers, is shown by Hennepin (1704), 114, + who describes the carrying of anchors and other heavy articles up these + heights in August, 1679. La Hontan also passed the Falls by way of + the "three mountains" eight years later. La Hontan (1703), 106. It + is clear, then, that the portage was on the east side, whence it would + be safe to conclude that the vessel was built on the same side. Hennepin + says that she was built at the mouth of a stream (<i>rivière</i>) + entering the Niagara two leagues above the Falls. Excepting one or + two small brooks, there is no stream on the west side but Chippewa + Creek, which Hennepin had visited and correctly placed at about a league + from the cataract. His distances on the Niagara are usually correct. + On the east side there is a stream which perfectly answers the conditions. + This is Cayuga Creek, two leagues above the Falls. Immediately in front + of it is an island about a mile long, separated from the shore by a + narrow and deep arm of the Niagara, into which Cayuga Creek discharges + itself. The place is so obviously suited to building and launching + a vessel, that, in the early part of this century, the government of + the United States chose it for the construction of a schooner to carry + supplies to the garrisons of the Upper Lakes. The neighboring village + now bears the name of La Salle.</p> + <p>In examining this and other localities on the Niagara, I have been + greatly aided by my friend O. H. Marshall, Esq., of Buffalo, who is + unrivalled in his knowledge of the history and traditions of the Niagara + frontier.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_125" id="footnote_125"></a><a href="#fnanchor_125"> <span class="label">[125]</span></a> Hennepin (1704), 97. On a paper drawn up at the instance of the + Intendant Duchesneau, the names of the greater number of La Salle's + men are preserved. These agree with those given by Hennepin: thus, + the master-carpenter, whom he calls Maître Moyse, appears as + Moïse Hillaret; and the blacksmith, whom he calls La Forge, is + mentioned as—(illegible) dit la Forge.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_126" id="footnote_126"></a><a href="#fnanchor_126"> <span class="label">[126]</span></a> "This bad man," says Hennepin, "would infallibly have debauched + our workmen, if I had not reassured them by the exhortations which + I made them on fête-days and Sundays, after divine service." (1704), + 98.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_127" id="footnote_127"></a><a href="#fnanchor_127"> <span class="label">[127]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle, 22 Août, 1682</i> (Margry, ii. 197); <i>Relation + de Tonty</i>, 1684 (Ibid., i. 577). He called this new post Fort + Conti. It was burned some months after, by the carelessness of the + sergeant in command, and was the first of a succession of forts + on this historic spot.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_128" id="footnote_128"></a><a href="#fnanchor_128"> <span class="label">[128]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 46. In the edition of 1697, he says that it + was of sixty tons. I prefer to follow the earlier and more trustworthy + narrative.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_129" id="footnote_129"></a><a href="#fnanchor_129"> <span class="label">[129]</span></a> La Salle's embarrassment at this time was so great that he purposed + to send Tonty up the lakes in the "Griffin," while he went back to + the colony to look after his affairs; but suspecting that the pilot, + who had already wrecked one of his vessels, was in the pay of his enemies, + he resolved at last to take charge of the expedition himself, to prevent + a second disaster. (<i>Lettre de La Salle, 22 Août, 1682</i>; + Margry, ii. 214.) Among the creditors who bore hard upon him were Migeon, + Charon, Giton, and Peloquin, of Montreal, in whose name his furs at + Fort Frontenac had been seized. The intendant also placed under seal + all his furs at Quebec, among which is set down the not very precious + item of two hundred and eighty-four skins of <i>enfants du diable</i>, + or skunks.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2> +<p class="center">1679.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE ON THE UPPER LAKES.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The Voyage of the "Griffin."—Detroit.—A +Storm.—St. Ignace of Michilimackinac.—Rivals and Enemies.—Lake Michigan.—Hardships.—A Threatened +Fight.—Fort Miami.—Tonty's Misfortunes.—Forebodings.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> "Griffin" had lain moored by the shore, so near that Hennepin could + preach on Sundays from the deck to the men encamped along the bank. She + was now forced up against the current with tow-ropes and sails, till she + reached the calm entrance of Lake Erie. On the seventh of August, La Salle + and his followers embarked, sang <i>Te Deum</i>, and fired their cannon. + A fresh breeze sprang up; and with swelling canvas the "Griffin" ploughed + the virgin waves of Lake Erie, where sail was never seen before. For three + days they held their course over these unknown waters, and on the fourth + turned northward into the Strait of Detroit. Here, on the right hand and + on the left, lay verdant prairies, dotted with groves and bordered with + lofty forests. They saw walnut, chestnut, and wild plum trees, and oaks + festooned with grape-vines; herds of deer, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg + 152]</a></span> and flocks of swans and wild turkeys. The bulwarks of + the "Griffin" were plentifully hung with game which the men killed on + shore, and among the rest with a number of bears, much commended by Hennepin + for their want of ferocity and the excellence of their flesh. "Those," he + says, "who will one day have the happiness to possess this fertile and + pleasant strait, will be very much obliged to those who have shown them + the way." They crossed Lake St. Clair,<a name="fnanchor_130" id="fnanchor_130"></a><a href="#footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> and still sailed northward + against the current, till now, sparkling in the sun, Lake Huron spread + before them like a sea.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ST. IGNACE.</div> +<p>For a time they bore on prosperously. Then the wind died to a calm, then + freshened to a gale, then rose to a furious tempest; and the vessel tossed + wildly among the short, steep, perilous waves of the raging lake. Even + La Salle called on his followers to commend themselves to Heaven. All + fell to their prayers but the godless pilot, who was loud in complaint + against his commander for having brought him, after the honor he had won + on the ocean, to drown at last ignominiously in fresh water. The rest + clamored to the saints. St. Anthony of Padua was promised a chapel to + be built in his honor, if he would but save them from their jeopardy; + while in the same breath La Salle and the friars declared him patron of + their great enterprise.<a name="fnanchor_131" id="fnanchor_131"></a><a href="#footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> The saint heard their prayers. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg + 153]</a></span>The obedient winds were tamed; and the "Griffin" plunged + on her way through foaming surges that still grew calmer as she advanced. + Now the sun shone forth on woody islands, Bois Blanc and Mackinaw and + the distant Manitoulins,—on the forest wastes of Michigan and the + vast blue bosom of the angry lake; and now her port was won, and she found + her rest behind the point of St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, floating in + that tranquil cove where crystal waters cover but cannot hide the pebbly + depths beneath. Before her rose the house and chapel of the Jesuits, enclosed + with palisades; on the right, the Huron village, with its bark cabins + and its fence of tall pickets; on the left, the square compact houses + of the French traders; and, not far off, the clustered wigwams of an Ottawa + village.<a name="fnanchor_132" id="fnanchor_132"></a><a href="#footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> Here was a centre of the Jesuit missions, and a centre of + the Indian trade; and here, under the shadow of the cross, was much sharp + practice in the service of Mammon. Keen traders, with or without a license, + and lawless <i>coureurs de bois</i>, whom a few years of forest life had + weaned from civilization, made St. Ignace their resort; and here there + were many of them when the "Griffin" came. They and their employers hated + and feared La Salle, who, sustained as he was by the governor, might set + at nought the prohibition of the King, debarring him from traffic with + these tribes. Yet, while plotting <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg + 154]</a></span> against him, they took pains to allay his distrust by + a show of welcome.</p> +<p>The "Griffin" fired her cannon, and the Indians yelped in wonder and amazement. + The adventurers landed in state, and marched under arms to the bark chapel + of the Ottawa village, where they heard mass. La Salle knelt before the + altar, in a mantle of scarlet bordered with gold. Soldiers, sailors, and + artisans knelt around him,—black Jesuits, gray Récollets, + swarthy <i>voyageurs</i>, and painted savages; a devout but motley concourse.</p> +<p>As they left the chapel, the Ottawa chiefs came to bid them welcome, and + the Hurons saluted them with a volley of musketry. They saw the "Griffin" at + her anchorage, surrounded by more than a hundred bark canoes, like a Triton + among minnows. Yet it was with more wonder than good-will that the Indians + of the mission gazed on the "floating fort," for so they called the vessel. + A deep jealousy of La Salle's designs had been infused into them. His + own followers, too, had been tampered with. In the autumn before, it may + be remembered, he had sent fifteen men up the lakes to trade for him, + with orders to go thence to the Illinois and make preparation against + his coming. Early in the summer, Tonty had been despatched in a canoe + from Niagara to look after them.<a name="fnanchor_133" id="fnanchor_133"></a><a href="#footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> It was high time. Most of the men + had been seduced from their duty, and had disobeyed <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg + 155]</a></span> their orders, squandered the goods intrusted to them, + or used them in trading on their own account. La Salle found four of them + at Michilimackinac. These he arrested, and sent Tonty to the Falls of + Ste. Marie, where two others were captured, with their plunder. The rest + were in the woods, and it was useless to pursue them.</p> +<div class="sidenote">RIVALS AND ENEMIES.</div> +<p>Anxious and troubled as to the condition of his affairs in Canada. La + Salle had meant, after seeing his party safe at Michilimackinac, to leave + Tonty to conduct it to the Illinois, while he himself returned to the + colony. But Tonty was still at Ste. Marie, and he had none to trust but + himself. Therefore, he resolved at all risks to remain with his men; "for," he + says, "I judged my presence absolutely necessary to retain such of them + as were left me, and prevent them from being enticed away during the winter." Moreover, + he thought that he had detected an intrigue of his enemies to hound on + the Iroquois against the Illinois, in order to defeat his plan by involving + him in the war.</p> +<p>Early in September he set sail again, and passing westward into Lake Michigan,<a name="fnanchor_134" id="fnanchor_134"></a><a href="#footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> + cast anchor near one of the islands at the entrance of Green Bay. Here, + for once, he found a friend in the person of a Pottawattamie chief, who + had been so wrought upon <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg + 156]</a></span> by the politic kindness of Frontenac that he declared + himself ready to die for the children of Onontio.<a name="fnanchor_135" id="fnanchor_135"></a><a href="#footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> Here, too, he found + several of his advance party, who had remained faithful and collected + a large store of furs. It would have been better had they proved false, + like the rest. La Salle, who asked counsel of no man, resolved, in spite + of his followers, to send back the "Griffin" laden with these furs, and + others collected on the way, to satisfy his creditors.<a name="fnanchor_136" id="fnanchor_136"></a><a href="#footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> It was a rash + resolution, for it involved trusting her to the pilot, who had already + proved either incompetent or treacherous. She fired a parting shot, and + on the eighteenth of September set sail for Niagara, with orders to return + to the head of Lake Michigan as soon as she had discharged her cargo. + La Salle, with the fourteen men who remained, in four canoes deeply laden + with a forge, tools, merchandise, and arms, put out from the island and + resumed his voyage.</p> +<div class="sidenote">POTTAWATTAMIES.</div> +<p>The parting was not auspicious. The lake, glassy and calm in the afternoon, + was convulsed at night with a sudden storm, when the canoes were midway + between the island and the main shore. It was with difficulty that they + could keep together, the men <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg + 157]</a></span> shouting to each other through the darkness. Hennepin, + who was in the smallest canoe with a heavy load, and a carpenter for a + companion who was awkward at the paddle, found himself in jeopardy which + demanded all his nerve. The voyagers thought themselves happy when they + gained at last the shelter of a little sandy cove, where they dragged + up their canoes, and made their cheerless bivouac in the drenched and + dripping forest. Here they spent five days, living on pumpkins and Indian + corn, the gift of their Pottawattamie friends, and on a Canada porcupine + brought in by La Salle's Mohegan hunter. The gale raged meanwhile with + relentless fury. They trembled when they thought of the "Griffin." When + at length the tempest lulled, they re-embarked, and steered southward + along the shore of Wisconsin; but again the storm fell upon them, and + drove them for safety to a bare, rocky islet. Here they made a fire of + drift-wood, crouched around it, drew their blankets over their heads, + and in this miserable plight, pelted with sleet and rain, remained for + two days.</p> +<p>At length they were afloat again; but their prosperity was brief. On the + twenty-eighth, a fierce squall drove them to a point of rocks covered + with bushes, where they consumed the little that remained of their provisions. + On the first of October they paddled about thirty miles, without food, + when they came to a village of Pottawattamies, who ran down to the shore + to help them to land; but La Salle, fearing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg + 158]</a></span> that some of his men would steal the merchandise and desert + to the Indians, insisted on going three leagues farther, to the great + indignation of his followers. The lake, swept by an easterly gale, was + rolling its waves against the beach, like the ocean in a storm. In the + attempt to land, La Salle's canoe was nearly swamped. He and his three + canoe-men leaped into the water, and in spite of the surf, which nearly + drowned them, dragged their vessel ashore with all its load. He then went + to the rescue of Hennepin, who with his awkward companion was in woful + need of succor. Father Gabriel, with his sixty-four years, was no match + for the surf and the violent undertow. Hennepin, finding himself safe, + waded to his relief, and carried him ashore on his sturdy shoulders; while + the old friar, though drenched to the skin, laughed gayly under his cowl + as his brother missionary staggered with him up the beach.<a name="fnanchor_137" id="fnanchor_137"></a><a href="#footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a></p> +<p>When all were safe ashore, La Salle, who distrusted the Indians they had + passed, took post on a hill, and ordered his followers to prepare their + guns for action. Nevertheless, as they were starving, an effort must be + risked to gain a supply of food; and he sent three men back to the village + to purchase it. Well armed, but faint with toil and famine, they made + their way through the stormy forest bearing a pipe of peace, but on arriving + saw that the scared inhabitants had fled. They found, however, a stock + of corn, of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg + 159]</a></span> which they took a portion, leaving goods in exchange, + and then set out on their return.</p> +<p>Meanwhile, about twenty of the warriors, armed with bows and arrows, approached + the camp of the French to reconnoitre. La Salle went to meet them with + some of his men, opened a parley with them, and kept them seated at the + foot of the hill till his three messengers returned, when on seeing the + peace-pipe the warriors set up a cry of joy. In the morning they brought + more corn to the camp, with a supply of fresh venison, not a little cheering + to the exhausted Frenchmen, who, in dread of treachery, had stood under + arms all night.</p> +<div class="sidenote">HARDSHIPS.</div> +<p>This was no journey of pleasure. The lake was ruffled with almost ceaseless + storms; clouds big with rain above, a turmoil of gray and gloomy waves + beneath. Every night the canoes must be shouldered through the breakers + and dragged up the steep banks, which, as they neared the site of Milwaukee, + became almost insurmountable. The men paddled all day, with no other food + than a handful of Indian corn. They were spent with toil, sick with the + haws and wild berries which they ravenously devoured, and dejected at + the prospect before them. Father Gabriel's good spirits began to fail. + He fainted several times from famine and fatigue, but was revived by a + certain "confection of Hyacinth" administered by Hennepin, who had a small + box of this precious specific.</p> +<p>At length they descried at a distance, on the stormy shore, two or three + eagles among a busy <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg + 160]</a></span> congregation of crows or turkey buzzards. They paddled + in all haste to the spot. The feasters took flight; and the starved travellers + found the mangled body of a deer, lately killed by the wolves. This good + luck proved the inauguration of plenty. As they approached the head of + the lake, game grew abundant; and, with the aid of the Mohegan, there + was no lack of bear's meat and venison. They found wild grapes, too, in + the woods, and gathered them by cutting down the trees to which the vines + clung.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ENCOUNTER WITH INDIANS.</div> +<p>While thus employed, they were startled by a sight often so fearful in + the waste and the wilderness,—the print of a human foot. It was + clear that Indians were not far off. A strict watch was kept, not, as + it proved, without cause; for that night, while the sentry thought of + little but screening himself and his gun from the floods of rain, a party + of Outagamies crept under the bank, where they lurked for some time before + he discovered them. Being challenged, they came forward, professing great + friendship, and pretending to have mistaken the French for Iroquois. In + the morning, however, there was an outcry from La Salle's servant, who + declared that the visitors had stolen his coat from under the inverted + canoe where he had placed it; while some of the carpenters also complained + of being robbed. La Salle well knew that if the theft were left unpunished, + worse would come of it. First, he posted his men at the woody point of + a peninsula, whose sandy neck was interposed between them and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg + 161]</a></span> the main forest. Then he went forth, pistol in hand, met + a young Outagami, seized him, and led him prisoner to his camp. This done, + he again set out, and soon found an Outagami chief,—for the wigwams + were not far distant,—to whom he told what he had done, adding that + unless the stolen goods were restored, the prisoner should be killed. + The Indians were in perplexity, for they had cut the coat to pieces and + divided it. In this dilemma they resolved, being strong in numbers, to + rescue their comrade by force. Accordingly, they came down to the edge + of the forest, or posted themselves behind fallen trees on the banks, + while La Salle's men in their stronghold braced their nerves for the fight. + Here three Flemish friars with their rosaries, and eleven Frenchmen with + their guns, confronted a hundred and twenty screeching Outagamies. Hennepin, + who had seen service, and who had always an exhortation at his tongue's + end, busied himself to inspire the rest with a courage equal to his own. + Neither party, however, had an appetite for the fray. A parley ensued: + full compensation was made for the stolen goods, and the aggrieved Frenchmen + were farther propitiated with a gift of beaver-skins.</p> +<p>Their late enemies, now become friends, spent the next day in dances, + feasts, and speeches. They entreated La Salle not to advance farther, + since the Illinois, through whose country he must pass, would be sure + to kill him; for, added these friendly counsellors, they hated the French + because they had been <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg + 162]</a></span> instigating the Iroquois to invade their country, Here + was another subject of anxiety. La Salle was confirmed in his belief that + his busy and unscrupulous enemies were intriguing for his destruction.</p> +<p>He pushed on, however, circling around the southern shore of Lake Michigan, + till he reached the mouth of the St. Joseph, called by him the Miamis. + Here Tonty was to have rejoined him with twenty men, making his way from + Michilimackinac along the eastern shore of the lake; but the rendezvous + was a solitude,—Tonty was nowhere to be seen. It was the first of + November; winter was at hand, and the streams would soon be frozen. The + men clamored to go forward, urging that they should starve if they could + not reach the villages of the Illinois before the tribe scattered for + the winter hunt. La Salle was inexorable. If they should all desert, he + said, he, with his Mohegan hunter and the three friars, would still remain + and wait for Tonty. The men grumbled, but obeyed; and, to divert their + thoughts, he set them at building a fort of timber on a rising ground + at the mouth of the river.</p> +<p>They had spent twenty days at this task, and their work was well advanced, + when at length Tonty appeared. He brought with him only half of his men. + Provisions had failed; and the rest of his party had been left thirty + leagues behind, to sustain themselves by hunting. La Salle told him to + return and hasten them forward. He set out with two men. A violent north + wind arose. He tried to run <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg + 163]</a></span> his canoe ashore through the breakers. The two men could + not manage their vessel, and he with his one hand could not help them. + She swamped, rolling over in the surf. Guns, baggage, and provisions were + lost; and the three voyagers returned to the Miamis, subsisting on acorns + by the way. Happily, the men left behind, excepting two deserters, succeeded, + a few days after, in rejoining the party.<a name="fnanchor_138" id="fnanchor_138"></a><a href="#footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">FOREBODINGS.</div> +<p>Thus was one heavy load lifted from the heart of La Salle. But where was + the "Griffin"? Time enough, and more than enough, had passed for her voyage + to Niagara and back again. He scanned the dreary horizon with an anxious + eye. No returning sail gladdened the watery solitude, and a dark foreboding + gathered on his heart. Yet further delay was impossible. He sent back + two men to Michilimackinac to meet her, if she still existed, and pilot + her to his new fort of the Miamis, and then prepared to ascend the river, + whose weedy edges were already glassed with thin flakes of ice.<a name="fnanchor_139" id="fnanchor_139"></a><a href="#footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_130" id="footnote_130"></a><a href="#fnanchor_130"> <span class="label">[130]</span></a> They named it Sainte Claire, of which the present name is a perversion.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_131" id="footnote_131"></a><a href="#fnanchor_131"> <span class="label">[131]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 58.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_132" id="footnote_132"></a><a href="#fnanchor_132"> <span class="label">[132]</span></a> There is a rude plan of the establishment in La Hontan, though + in several editions its value is destroyed by the reversal of the plate.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_133" id="footnote_133"></a><a href="#fnanchor_133"> <span class="label">[133]</span></a> <i>Relation de Tonty, 1684; Ibid., 1693</i>. He was overtaken + at the Detroit by the "Griffin."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_134" id="footnote_134"></a><a href="#fnanchor_134"> <span class="label">[134]</span></a> Then usually known as Lac des Illinois, because it gave access + to the country of the tribes so called. Three years before, Allouez + gave it the name of Lac St. Joseph, by which it is often designated + by the early writers. Membré, Douay, and others, call it Lac + Dauphin.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_135" id="footnote_135"></a><a href="#fnanchor_135"> <span class="label">[135]</span></a> "The Great Mountain," the Iroquois name for the governor of Canada. + It was borrowed by other tribes also.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_136" id="footnote_136"></a><a href="#fnanchor_136"> <span class="label">[136]</span></a> In the license of discovery granted to La Salle, he is expressly + prohibited from trading with the Ottawas and others who brought furs + to Montreal. This traffic on the lakes was, therefore, illicit. His + enemy, the Intendant Duchesneau, afterwards used this against him. <i>Lettre + de Duchesneau au Ministre, 10 Nov., 1680.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_137" id="footnote_137"></a><a href="#fnanchor_137"> <span class="label">[137]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 79.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_138" id="footnote_138"></a><a href="#fnanchor_138"> <span class="label">[138]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 112; <i>Relation de Tonty</i>, 1693.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_139" id="footnote_139"></a><a href="#fnanchor_139"> <span class="label">[139]</span></a> The official account of this journey is given at length in the <i>Relation + des Découvertes et des Voyages du Sieur de la Salle</i>, + 1679-1681. This valuable document, compiled from letters and diaries + of La Salle, early in the year 1682, was known to Hennepin, who + evidently had a copy of it before him when he wrote his book, in + which he incorporated many passages from it.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2> +<p class="center">1679, 1680.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE ON THE ILLINOIS.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The St. Joseph.—Adventure +of La Salle.—The Prairies.—Famine.—The Great Town +of the Illinois.—Indians.—Intrigues.—Difficulties.—Policy +of la Salle.—Desertion.—Another Attempt +to poison La Salle.</div> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S ADVENTURE.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">On</span> the third of December the party re-embarked, thirty-three in all, in + eight canoes,<a name="fnanchor_140" id="fnanchor_140"></a><a href="#footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> and ascended the chill current of the St. Joseph, bordered + with dreary meadows and bare gray forests. When they approached the site + of the present village of South Bend, they looked anxiously along the + shore on their right to find the portage or path leading to the headquarters + of the Illinois. The Mohegan was absent, hunting; and, unaided by his + practised eye, they passed the path without seeing it. La Salle landed + to search the woods. Hours passed, and he did not return. Hennepin and + Tonty grew uneasy, disembarked, bivouacked, ordered guns to be fired, + and sent out men to scour the country. Night came, but not their lost + leader. Muffled in their blankets and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg + 165]</a></span> powdered by the thick-falling snow-flakes, they sat ruefully + speculating as to what had befallen him; nor was it till four o'clock + of the next afternoon that they saw him approaching along the margin of + the river. His face and hands were besmirched with charcoal; and he was + further decorated with two opossums which hung from his belt, and which + he had killed with a stick as they were swinging head downwards from the + bough of a tree, after the fashion of that singular beast. He had missed + his way in the forest, and had been forced to make a wide circuit around + the edge of a swamp; while the snow, of which the air was full, added + to his perplexities. Thus he pushed on through the rest of the day and + the greater part of the night, till, about two o'clock in the morning, + he reached the river again, and fired his gun as a signal to his party. + Hearing no answering shot, he pursued his way along the bank, when he + presently saw the gleam of a fire among the dense thickets close at hand. + Not doubting that he had found the bivouac of his party, he hastened to + the spot. To his surprise, no human being was to be seen. Under a tree + beside the fire was a heap of dry grass impressed with the form of a man + who must have fled but a moment before, for his couch was still warm. + It was no doubt an Indian, ambushed on the bank, watching to kill some + passing enemy. La Salle called out in several Indian languages; but there + was dead silence all around. He then, with admirable coolness, took possession + of the quarters he had found, shouting to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg + 166]</a></span> their invisible proprietor that he was about to sleep + in his bed; piled a barricade of bushes around the spot, rekindled the + dying fire, warmed his benumbed hands, stretched himself on the dried + grass, and slept undisturbed till morning.</p> +<p>The Mohegan had rejoined the party before La Salle's return, and with + his aid the portage was soon found. Here the party encamped. La Salle, + who was excessively fatigued, occupied, together with Hennepin, a wigwam + covered in the Indian manner with mats of reeds. The cold forced them + to kindle a fire, which before daybreak set the mats in a blaze; and the + two sleepers narrowly escaped being burned along with their hut.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE KANKAKEE.</div> +<p>In the morning, the party shouldered their canoes and baggage and began + their march for the sources of the river Illinois, some five miles distant. + Around them stretched a desolate plain, half-covered with snow and strewn + with the skulls and bones of buffalo; while, on its farthest verge, they + could see the lodges of the Miami Indians, who had made this place their + abode. As they filed on their way, a man named Duplessis, bearing a grudge + against La Salle, who walked just before him, raised his gun to shoot + him through the back, but was prevented by one of his comrades. They soon + reached a spot where the oozy, saturated soil quaked beneath their tread. + All around were clumps of alder-bushes, tufts of rank grass, and pools + of glistening water. In the midst a dark and lazy current, which a tall + man might <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> bestride, + crept twisting like a snake among the weeds and rushes. Here were the + sources of the Kankakee, one of the heads of the Illinois.<a name="fnanchor_141" id="fnanchor_141"></a><a href="#footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> They set + their canoes on this thread of water, embarked their baggage and themselves, + and pushed down the sluggish streamlet, looking, at a little distance, + like men who sailed on land. Fed by an unceasing tribute of the spongy + soil, it quickly widened to a river; and they floated on their way through + a voiceless, lifeless solitude of dreary oak barrens, or boundless marshes + overgrown with reeds. At night, they built their fire on ground made firm + by frost, and bivouacked among the rushes. A few days brought them to + a more favored region. On the right hand and on the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg + 168]</a></span> left stretched the boundless prairie, dotted with leafless + groves and bordered by gray wintry forests, scorched by the fires kindled + in the dried grass by Indian hunters, and strewn with the carcasses and + the bleached skulls of innumerable buffalo. The plains were scored with + their pathways, and the muddy edges of the river were full of their hoof-prints. + Yet not one was to be seen. At night, the horizon glowed with distant + fires; and by day the savage hunters could be descried at times roaming + on the verge of the prairie. The men, discontented and half-starved, would + have deserted to them had they dared. La Salle's Mohegan could kill no + game except two lean deer, with a few wild geese and swans. At length, + in their straits, they made a happy discovery. It was a buffalo bull, + fast mired in a slough. They killed him, lashed a cable about him, and + then twelve men dragged out the shaggy monster, whose ponderous carcass + demanded their utmost efforts.</p> +<p>The scene changed again as they descended. On either hand ran ranges of + woody hills, following the course of the river; and when they mounted + to their tops, they saw beyond them a rolling sea of dull green prairie, + a boundless pasture of the buffalo and the deer, in our own day strangely + transformed,—yellow in harvest-time with ripened wheat, and dotted + with the roofs of a hardy and valiant yeomanry.<a name="fnanchor_142" id="fnanchor_142"></a><a href="#footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg + 169]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE ILLINOIS TOWN.</div> +<p>They passed the site of the future town of Ottawa, and saw on their right + the high plateau of Buffalo Rock, long a favorite dwelling-place of Indians. + A league below, the river glided among islands bordered with stately woods. + Close on their left towered a lofty cliff,<a name="fnanchor_143" id="fnanchor_143"></a><a href="#footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> crested with trees that + overhung the rippling current; while before them spread the valley of + the Illinois, in broad low meadows, bordered on the right by the graceful + hills at whose foot now lies the village of Utica. A population far more + numerous then tenanted the valley. Along the right bank of the river were + clustered the lodges of a great Indian town. Hennepin counted four hundred + and sixty of them.<a name="fnanchor_144" id="fnanchor_144"></a><a href="#footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> In shape, they were somewhat like the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg + 170]</a></span> arched top of a baggage-wagon. They were built of a framework + of poles, covered with mats of rushes closely interwoven; and each contained + three or four fires, of which the greater part served for two families.</p> +<div class="sidenote">HUNGER RELIEVED.</div> +<p>Here, then, was the town; but where were the inhabitants? All was silent + as the desert. The lodges were empty, the fires dead, and the ashes cold. + La Salle had expected this; for he knew that in the autumn the Illinois + always left their towns for their winter hunting, and that the time of + their return had not yet come. Yet he was not the less <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg + 171]</a></span> embarrassed, for he would fain have bought a supply of + food to relieve his famished followers. Some of them, searching the deserted + town, presently found the <i>caches</i>, or covered pits, in which the + Indians hid their stock of corn. This was precious beyond measure in their + eyes, and to touch it would be a deep offence. La Salle shrank from provoking + their anger, which might prove the ruin of his plans; but his necessity + overcame his prudence, and he took thirty <i>minots</i> of corn, hoping + to appease the owners by presents. Thus provided, the party embarked again, + and resumed their downward voyage.</p> +<p>On New Year's Day, 1680, they landed and heard mass. Then Hennepin wished + a happy new year to La Salle first, and afterwards to all the men, making + them a speech, which, as he tells us, was "most touching."<a name="fnanchor_145" id="fnanchor_145"></a><a href="#footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> He and + his two brethren next embraced the whole company in turn, "in a manner," writes + the father, "most tender and affectionate," exhorting them, at the same + time, to patience, faith, and constancy. Four days after these solemnities, + they reached the long expansion of the river then called Pimitoui, and + now known as Peoria Lake, and leisurely made their way downward to the + site of the city of Peoria.<a name="fnanchor_146" id="fnanchor_146"></a><a href="#footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> Here, as evening drew near, they <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg + 172]</a></span> saw a faint spire of smoke curling above the gray forest, + betokening that Indians were at hand. La Salle, as we have seen, had been + warned that these tribes had been taught to regard him as their enemy; + and when, in the morning, he resumed his course, he was prepared alike + for peace or war.</p> +<p>The shores now approached each other; and the Illinois was once more a + river, bordered on either hand with overhanging woods.<a name="fnanchor_147" id="fnanchor_147"></a><a href="#footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a></p> +<p>At nine o'clock, doubling a point, he saw about eighty Illinois wigwams, + on both sides of the river. He instantly ordered the eight canoes to be + ranged in line, abreast, across the stream,—Tonty on the right, + and he himself on the left. The men laid down their paddles and seized + their weapons; while, in this warlike guise, the current bore them swiftly + into the midst of the surprised and astounded savages. The camps were + in a panic. Warriors whooped and howled; squaws and children screeched + in chorus. Some snatched their bows and war-clubs; some ran in terror; + and, in the midst of the hubbub, La Salle leaped ashore, followed by his + men. None knew better how to deal with Indians; and he made no sign of + friendship, knowing that it might be construed as a token of fear. His + little knot of Frenchmen stood, gun in hand, passive, yet prepared for + battle. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> The + Indians, on their part, rallying a little from their fright, made all + haste to proffer peace. Two of their chiefs came forward, holding out + the calumet; while another began a loud harangue, to check the young warriors + who were aiming their arrows from the farther bank. La Salle, responding + to these friendly overtures, displayed another calumet; while Hennepin + caught several scared children and soothed them with winning blandishments.<a name="fnanchor_148" id="fnanchor_148"></a><a href="#footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> + The uproar was quelled; and the strangers were presently seated in the + midst of the camp, beset by a throng of wild and swarthy figures.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ILLINOIS HOSPITALITY.</div> +<p>Food was placed before them; and, as the Illinois code of courtesy enjoined, + their entertainers conveyed the morsels with their own hands to the lips + of these unenviable victims of their hospitality, while others rubbed + their feet with bear's grease. La Salle, on his part, made them a gift + of tobacco and hatchets; and when he had escaped from their caresses, + rose and harangued them. He told them that he had been forced to take + corn from their granaries, lest his men should die of hunger; but he prayed + them not to be offended, promising full restitution or ample payment. + He had come, he said, to protect them against their enemies, and teach + them to pray to the true God. As for the Iroquois, they were subjects + of the Great King, and therefore brethren of the French; yet, nevertheless, + should they begin a war and invade the country of the Illinois, he would <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg + 174]</a></span> stand by them, give them guns, and fight in their defence, + if they would permit him to build a fort among them for the security of + his men. It was also, he added, his purpose to build a great wooden canoe, + in which to descend the Mississippi to the sea, and then return, bringing + them the goods of which they stood in need; but if they would not consent + to his plans and sell provisions to his men, he would pass on to the Osages, + who would then reap all the benefits of intercourse with the French, while + they were left destitute, at the mercy of the Iroquois.<a name="fnanchor_149" id="fnanchor_149"></a><a href="#footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p> +<p>This threat had its effect, for it touched their deep-rooted jealousy + of the Osages. They were lavish of promises, and feasts and dances consumed + the day. Yet La Salle soon learned that the intrigues of his enemies were + still pursuing him. That evening, unknown to him, a stranger appeared + in the Illinois camp. He was a Mascoutin chief, named Monso, attended + by five or six Miamis, and bringing a gift of knives, hatchets, and kettles + to the Illinois.<a name="fnanchor_150" id="fnanchor_150"></a><a href="#footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> The chiefs assembled in a secret nocturnal session, + where, smoking their pipes, they listened with open ears to the harangue + of the envoys. Monso told them that he had come in behalf of certain Frenchmen, + whom he named, to warn his hearers against the designs of La Salle, whom + he denounced <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg + 175]</a></span> as a partisan and spy of the Iroquois, affirming that + he was now on his way to stir up the tribes beyond the Mississippi to + join in a war against the Illinois, who, thus assailed from the east and + from the west, would be utterly destroyed. There was no hope for them, + he added, but in checking the farther progress of La Salle, or, at least, + retarding it, thus causing his men to desert him. Having thrown his fire-brand, + Monso and his party left the camp in haste, dreading to be confronted + with the object of their aspersions.<a name="fnanchor_151" id="fnanchor_151"></a><a href="#footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">FRESH INTRIGUES.</div> +<p>In the morning, La Salle saw a change in the behavior of his hosts. They + looked on him askance, cold, sullen, and suspicious. There was one Omawha, + a chief, whose favor he had won the day before by the politic gift of + two hatchets and three knives, and who now came to him in secret to tell + him what had taken place at the nocturnal council. La Salle at once saw + in it a device of his enemies; and this belief was confirmed, when, in + the afternoon, Nicanopé, brother of the head chief, sent to invite + the Frenchmen to a feast. They repaired to his lodge; but before dinner + was served,—that is to say, while the guests, white and red, were + seated on <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> mats, + each with his hunting-knife in his hand, and the wooden bowl before him + which was to receive his share of the bear's or buffalo's meat, or the + corn boiled in fat, with which he was to be regaled,—while such + was the posture of the company, their host arose and began a long speech. + He told the Frenchmen that he had invited them to his lodge less to refresh + their bodies with good cheer than to cure their minds of the dangerous + purpose which possessed them, of descending the Mississippi. Its shores, + he said, were beset by savage tribes, against whose numbers and ferocity + their valor would avail nothing; its waters were infested by serpents, + alligators, and unnatural monsters; while the river itself, after raging + among rocks and whirlpools, plunged headlong at last into a fathomless + gulf, which would swallow them and their vessel forever.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE AND THE INDIANS.</div> +<p>La Salle's men were for the most part raw hands, knowing nothing of the + wilderness, and easily alarmed at its dangers; but there were two among + them, old <i>coureurs de bois</i>, who unfortunately knew too much; for + they understood the Indian orator, and explained his speech to the rest. + As La Salle looked around on the circle of his followers, he read an augury + of fresh trouble in their disturbed and rueful visages. He waited patiently, + however, till the speaker had ended, and then answered him, through his + interpreter, with great composure. First, he thanked him for the friendly + warning which his affection had impelled him to utter; but, he continued, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg + 177]</a></span> the greater the danger, the greater the honor; and even + if the danger were real, Frenchmen would never flinch from it. But were + not the Illinois jealous? Had they not been deluded by lies? "We were + not asleep, my brother, when Monso came to tell you, under cover of night, + that we were spies of the Iroquois. The presents he gave you, that you + might believe his falsehoods, are at this moment buried in the earth under + this lodge. If he told the truth, why did he skulk away in the dark? Why + did he not show himself by day? Do you not see that when we first came + among you, and your camp was all in confusion, we could have killed you + without needing help from the Iroquois? And now, while I am speaking, + could we not put your old men to death, while your young warriors are + all gone away to hunt? If we meant to make war on you, we should need + no help from the Iroquois, who have so often felt the force of our arms. + Look at what we have brought you. It is not weapons to destroy you, but + merchandise and tools for your good. If you still harbor evil thoughts + of us, be frank as we are, and speak them boldly. Go after this impostor + Monso, and bring him back, that we may answer him face to face; for he + never saw either us or the Iroquois, and what can he know of the plots + that he pretends to reveal?"<a name="fnanchor_152" id="fnanchor_152"></a><a href="#footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> Nicanopé had nothing to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg + 178]</a></span> reply, and, grunting assent in the depths of his throat, + made a sign that the feast should proceed.</p> +<p>The French were lodged in huts, near the Indian camp; and, fearing treachery, + La Salle placed a guard at night. On the morning after the feast, he came + out into the frosty air and looked about him for the sentinels. Not one + of them was to be seen. Vexed and alarmed, he entered hut after hut and + roused his drowsy followers. Six of the number, including two of the best + carpenters, were nowhere to be found. Discontented and mutinous from the + first, and now terrified by the fictions of Nicanopé, they had + deserted, preferring the hardships of the midwinter forest to the mysterious + terrors of the Mississippi. La Salle mustered the rest before him, and + inveighed sternly against the cowardice and baseness of those who had + thus abandoned him, regardless of his many favors. If any here, he added, + are afraid, let them but wait till the spring, and they shall have free + leave to return to Canada, safely and without dishonor.<a name="fnanchor_153" id="fnanchor_153"></a><a href="#footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE AGAIN POISONED.</div> +<p>This desertion cut him to the heart. It showed him that he was leaning + on a broken reed; and he felt that, on an enterprise full of doubt and + peril, there were scarcely four men in his party whom he could trust. + Nor was desertion the worst he had to fear; for here, as at Fort Frontenac, + an attempt was made to kill him. Tonty tells us that poison was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg + 179]</a></span> placed in the pot in which their food was cooked, and + that La Salle was saved by an antidote which some of his friends had given + him before he left France. This, it will be remembered, was an epoch of + poisoners. It was in the following month that the notorious La Voisin + was burned alive, at Paris, for practices to which many of the highest + nobility were charged with being privy, not excepting some in whose veins + ran the blood of the gorgeous spendthrift who ruled the destinies of France.<a name="fnanchor_154" id="fnanchor_154"></a><a href="#footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a></p> +<p>In these early French enterprises in the West, it was to the last degree + difficult to hold men to their duty. Once fairly in the wilderness, completely + freed from the sharp restraints of authority in which they had passed + their lives, a spirit of lawlessness broke out among them with a violence + proportioned to the pressure which had hitherto controlled it. Discipline + had no resources and no guarantee; while those outlaws of the forest, + the <i>coureurs de bois</i>, were always before their eyes, a standing + example of unbridled license. La Salle, eminently skilful in his dealings + with Indians, was rarely so happy with his own countrymen; and yet the + desertions from which he was continually suffering were due far more to + the inevitable difficulty of his position than to any want of conduct + on his part.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_140" id="footnote_140"></a><a href="#fnanchor_140"> <span class="label">[140]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Duchesneau à ——, 10 Nov., 1680.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_141" id="footnote_141"></a><a href="#fnanchor_141"> <span class="label">[141]</span></a> The Kankakee was called at this time the Theakiki, or Haukiki + (Marest); a name which, as Charlevoix says, was afterwards corrupted + by the French to Kiakiki whence, probably, its present form. In La + Salle's time, the name "Theakiki" was given to the river Illinois through + all its course. It was also called the Rivière Seignelay, the + Rivière des Macopins, and the Rivière Divine, or Rivière + de la Divine. The latter name, when Charlevoix visited the country + in 1721, was confined to the northern branch. He gives an interesting + and somewhat graphic account of the portage and the sources of the + Kankakee, in his letter dated <i>De la Source du Theakiki, ce dix-sept + Septembre</i>, 1721.</p> + <p>Why the Illinois should ever have been called the "Divine," it is not + easy to see. The Memoirs of St. Simon suggest an explanation. Madame + de Frontenac and her friend Mademoiselle d'Outrelaise, he tells us, + lived together in apartments at the Arsenal, where they held their <i>salon</i> and + exercised a great power in society. They were called at court <i>les + Divines</i>. (St. Simon, v. 335: Cheruel.) In compliment to Frontenac, + the river may have been named after his wife or her friend. The suggestion + is due to M. Margry. I have seen a map by Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, + on which the river is called "Rivière de la Divine ou l'Outrelaise."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_142" id="footnote_142"></a><a href="#fnanchor_142"> <span class="label">[142]</span></a> The change is very recent. Within the memory of men not yet old, + wolves and deer, besides wild swans, wild turkeys, cranes, and pelicans, + abounded in this region. In 1840, a friend of mine shot a deer from + the window of a farmhouse, near the present town of La Salle. Running + wolves on horseback was his favorite amusement in this part of the + country. The buffalo long ago disappeared; but the early settlers found + frequent remains of them. Mr. James Clark, of Utica, Ill., told me + that he once found a large quantity of their bones and skulls in one + place, as if a herd had perished in the snowdrifts.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_143" id="footnote_143"></a><a href="#fnanchor_143"> <span class="label">[143]</span></a> "Starved Rock." It will hold, hereafter, a conspicuous place + in the narrative.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_144" id="footnote_144"></a><a href="#fnanchor_144"> <span class="label">[144]</span></a> <i>La Louisiane</i>, 137. Allouez (<i>Relation</i>, 1673-79) + found three hundred and fifty-one lodges. This was in 1677. The population + of this town, which embraced five or six distinct tribes of the Illinois, + was continually changing. In 1675, Marquette addressed here an auditory + composed of five hundred chiefs and old men, and fifteen hundred young + men, besides women and children. He estimates the number of fires at + five or six hundred. (<i>Voyages du Père Marquette</i>, 98: + Lenox.) Membré, who was here in 1680, says that it then contained + seven or eight thousand souls. (Membré in Le Clerc, <i>Premier Établissement + de la Foy</i>, ii. 173.) On the remarkable manuscript map of Franquelin, + 1684, it is set down at twelve hundred warriors, or about six thousand + souls. This was after the destructive inroad of the Iroquois. Some + years later, Rasle reported upwards of twenty-four hundred families. + (<i>Lettre à son Frère, in Lettres Édifiantes.</i>)</p> + <p>At times, nearly the whole Illinois population was gathered here. At + other times, the several tribes that composed it separated, some dwelling + apart from the rest; so that at one period the Illinois formed eleven + villages, while at others they were gathered into two, of which this + was much the larger. The meadows around it were extensively cultivated, + yielding large crops, chiefly of Indian corn. The lodges were built + along the river-bank for a distance of a mile, and sometimes far more. + In their shape, though not in their material, they resembled those + of the Hurons. There were no palisades or embankments.</p> + <p>This neighborhood abounds in Indian relics. The village graveyard appears + to have been on a rising ground, near the river immediately in front + of the town of Utica. This is the only part of the river bottom, from + this point to the Mississippi, not liable to inundation in the spring + floods. It now forms part of a farm occupied by a tenant of Mr. James + Clark. Both Mr. Clark and his tenant informed me that every year great + quantities of human bones and teeth were turned up here by the plough. + Many implements of stone are also found, together with beads and other + ornaments of Indian and European fabric.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_145" id="footnote_145"></a><a href="#fnanchor_145"> <span class="label">[145]</span></a> "Les paroles les plus touchantes."—<i>Hennepin</i> (1683), + 139. The later editions add the modest qualification, "que je pus."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_146" id="footnote_146"></a><a href="#fnanchor_146"> <span class="label">[146]</span></a> Peoria was the name of one of the tribes of the Illinois. Hennepin's + dates here do not exactly agree with those of La Salle (<i>Lettre du + 29 Sept., 1680</i>), who says that they were at the Illinois village + on the first of January, and at Peoria Lake on the fifth.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_147" id="footnote_147"></a><a href="#fnanchor_147"> <span class="label">[147]</span></a> At least, it is so now at this place. Perhaps, in La Salle's + time, it was not wholly so; for there is evidence, in various parts + of the West, that the forest has made considerable encroachments on + the open country.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_148" id="footnote_148"></a><a href="#fnanchor_148"> <span class="label">[148]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 142.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_149" id="footnote_149"></a><a href="#fnanchor_149"> <span class="label">[149]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 144-149. The later editions omit a part of the + above.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_150" id="footnote_150"></a><a href="#fnanchor_150"> <span class="label">[150]</span></a> "Un sauvage, nommé Monso, qui veut dire Chevreuil<i>."—La + Salle.</i> Probably Monso is a misprint for Mouso, as <i>mousoa</i> is + Illinois for <i>chevreuil</i>, or deer.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_151" id="footnote_151"></a><a href="#fnanchor_151"> <span class="label">[151]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 151, (1704), 205; Le Clerc, ii. 157; <i>Mémoire + du Voyage de M. de la Salle</i>. This is a paper appended to Frontenac's + Letter to the Minister, 9 Nov., 1680. Hennepin prints a translation + of it in the English edition of his later work. It charges the Jesuit + Allouez with being at the bottom of the intrigue. Compare <i>Lettre + de La Salle, 29 Sept., 1680</i> (Margry, ii. 41), and <i>Mémoire + de La Salle</i>, in Thomassy, <i>Géologie Pratique de la + Louisiane</i>, 203.</p> + <p>The account of the affair of Monso, in the spurious work bearing Tonty's + name, is mere romance.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_152" id="footnote_152"></a><a href="#fnanchor_152"> <span class="label">[152]</span></a> The above is a paraphrase, with some condensation, from Hennepin, + whose account is substantially identical with that of La Salle.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_153" id="footnote_153"></a><a href="#fnanchor_153"> <span class="label">[153]</span></a> Hennepin (1683), 162. <i>Déclaration faite par Moyse Hillaret, + charpentier de barque, cy devant au service du S<sup>r.</sup> de + la Salle.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_154" id="footnote_154"></a><a href="#fnanchor_154"> <span class="label">[154]</span></a> The equally noted Brinvilliers was burned four years before. + An account of both will be found in the Letters of Madame de Sévigné. + The memoirs of the time abound in evidence of the frightful prevalence + of these practices, and the commotion which they excited in all ranks + of society.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2> +<p class="center">1680.</p> +<p class="center">FORT CRÈVECŒUR.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Building of the Fort.—Loss +of the "Griffin."—A Bold Resolution.—Another Vessel.—Hennepin +sent to the Mississippi.—Departure of La Salle.</div> +<div class="sidenote">BUILDING OF THE FORT.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">La Salle</span> now resolved to leave the Indian camp, and fortify himself for + the winter in a strong position, where his men would be less exposed to + dangerous influence, and where he could hold his ground against an outbreak + of the Illinois or an Iroquois invasion. At the middle of January, a thaw + broke up the ice which had closed the river; and he set out in a canoe, + with Hennepin, to visit the site he had chosen for his projected fort. + It was half a league below the camp, on a low hill or knoll, two hundred + yards from the southern bank. On either side was a deep ravine, and in + front a marshy tract, overflowed at high water. Thither, then, the party + was removed. They dug a ditch behind the hill, connecting the two ravines, + and thus completely isolating it. The hill was nearly square in form. + An embankment of earth was thrown up on every side: its declivities <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg + 181]</a></span> were sloped steeply down to the bottom of the ravines + and the ditch, and further guarded by <i>chevaux-de-frise</i>; while a + palisade, twenty-five feet high, was planted around the whole. The lodgings + of the men, built of musket-proof timber, were at two of the angles; the + house of the friars at the third; the forge and magazine at the fourth; + and the tents of La Salle and Tonty in the area within.</p> +<p>Hennepin laments the failure of wine, which prevented him from saying + mass; but every morning and evening he summoned the men to his cabin to + listen to prayers and preaching, and on Sundays and fête-days they + chanted vespers. Father Zenobe usually spent the day in the Indian camp, + striving, with very indifferent success, to win them to the Faith, and + to overcome the disgust with which their manners and habits inspired him.</p> +<p>Such was the first civilized occupation of the region which now forms + the State of Illinois. La Salle christened his new fort Fort Crèvecœur. + The name tells of disaster and suffering, but does no justice to the iron-hearted + constancy of the sufferer. Up to this time he had clung to the hope that + his vessel, the "Griffin," might still be safe. Her safety was vital to + his enterprise. She had on board articles of the last necessity to him, + including the rigging and anchors of another vessel which he was to build + at Fort Crèvecœur, in order to descend the Mississippi and sail + thence to the West Indies. But now his last hope had well-nigh vanished. + Past all reasonable <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg + 182]</a></span> doubt, the "Griffin" was lost; and in her loss he and + all his plans seemed ruined alike.</p> +<p>Nothing, indeed, was ever heard of her. Indians, fur-traders, and even + Jesuits, have been charged with contriving her destruction. Some say that + the Ottawas boarded and burned her, after murdering those on board; others + accuse the Pottawattamies; others affirm that her own crew scuttled and + sunk her; others, again, that she foundered in a storm.<a name="fnanchor_155" id="fnanchor_155"></a><a href="#footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> As for La + Salle, the belief grew in him to a settled conviction that she had been + treacherously sunk by the pilot and the sailors to whom he had intrusted + her; and he thought he had found evidence that the authors of the crime, + laden with the merchandise they had taken from her, had reached the Mississippi + and ascended it, hoping to join Du Lhut, a famous chief of <i>coureurs + de bois</i>, and enrich themselves by traffic with the northern tribes.<a name="fnanchor_156" id="fnanchor_156"></a><a href="#footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg + 183]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S ANXIETIES.</div> +<p>But whether her lading was swallowed in the depths of the lake, or lost + in the clutches of traitors, the evil was alike past remedy. She was gone, + it mattered little how. The main-stay of the enterprise was broken; yet + its inflexible chief lost neither heart nor hope. One path, beset with + hardships and terrors, still lay open to him. He might return on foot + to Fort Frontenac, and bring thence the needful succors.</p> +<p>La Salle felt deeply the dangers of such a step. His men were uneasy, + discontented, and terrified by the stories with which the jealous Illinois + still constantly filled their ears, of the whirlpools and the monsters + of the Mississippi. He dreaded lest, in his absence, they should follow + the example of their comrades, and desert. In the midst of his anxieties, + a lucky accident gave him the means of disabusing them. He was hunting, + one day, near the fort, when he met a young Illinois on his way home, + half-starved, from a distant war excursion. He had been absent so long + that he knew nothing of what had passed between his countrymen and the + French. La Salle gave him a turkey he had shot, invited him to the fort, + fed him, and made him presents. Having thus warmed his heart, he questioned + him, with apparent carelessness, as to the countries he had visited, and + especially as to the Mississippi,—on which the young warrior, seeing + no reason to disguise the truth, gave him all the information he required. + La Salle now made him the present of a hatchet, to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg + 184]</a></span> engage him to say nothing of what had passed, and, leaving + him in excellent humor, repaired, with some of his followers, to the Illinois + camp. Here he found the chiefs seated at a feast of bear's meat, and he + took his place among them on a mat of rushes. After a pause, he charged + them with having deceived him in regard to the Mississippi; adding that + he knew the river perfectly, having been instructed concerning it by the + Master of Life. He then described it to them with so much accuracy that + his astonished hearers, conceiving that he owed his knowledge to "medicine," or + sorcery, clapped their hands to their mouths in sign of wonder, and confessed + that all they had said was but an artifice, inspired by their earnest + desire that he should remain among them.<a name="fnanchor_157" id="fnanchor_157"></a><a href="#footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> On this, La Salle's men + took heart again; and their courage rose still more when, soon after, + a band of Chickasa, Arkansas, and Osage warriors, from the Mississippi, + came to the camp on a friendly visit, and assured the French not only + that the river was navigable to the sea, but that the tribes along its + banks would give them a warm welcome.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ANOTHER VESSEL.</div> +<p>La Salle had now good reason to hope that his followers would neither + mutiny nor desert in his absence. One chief purpose of his intended journey + was to procure the anchors, cables, and rigging of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg + 185]</a></span> the vessel which he meant to build at Fort Crèvecœur, + and he resolved to see her on the stocks before he set out. This was no + easy matter, for the pit-sawyers had deserted. "Seeing," he writes, "that + I should lose a year if I waited to get others from Montreal, I said one + day, before my people, that I was so vexed to find that the absence of + two sawyers would defeat my plans and make all my trouble useless, that + I was resolved to try to saw the planks myself, if I could find a single + man who would help me with a will." Hereupon, two men stepped forward + and promised to do their best. They were tolerably successful, and, the + rest being roused to emulation, the work went on with such vigor that + within six weeks the hull of the vessel was half finished. She was of + forty tons' burden, and was built with high bulwarks, to protect those + on board from Indian arrows.</p> +<p>La Salle now bethought him that, in his absence, he might get from Hennepin + service of more value than his sermons; and he requested him to descend + the Illinois, and explore it to its mouth. The friar, though hardy and + daring, would fain have excused himself, alleging a troublesome bodily + infirmity; but his venerable colleague Ribourde, himself too old for the + journey, urged him to go, telling him that if he died by the way, his + apostolic labors would redound to the glory of God. Membré had + been living for some time in the Indian camp, and was thoroughly out of + humor with the objects of his missionary <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg + 186]</a></span> efforts, of whose obduracy and filth he bitterly complained. + Hennepin proposed to take his place, while he should assume the Mississippi + adventure; but this Membré declined, preferring to remain where + he was. Hennepin now reluctantly accepted the proposed task. "Anybody + but me," he says, with his usual modesty, "would have been very much frightened + at the dangers of such a journey; and, in fact, if I had not placed all + my trust in God, I should not have been the dupe of the Sieur de la Salle, + who exposed my life rashly."<a name="fnanchor_158" id="fnanchor_158"></a><a href="#footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p> +<p>On the last day of February, Hennepin's canoe lay at the water's edge; + and the party gathered on the bank to bid him farewell. He had two companions,—Michel + Accau, and a man known as the Picard du Gay,<a name="fnanchor_159" id="fnanchor_159"></a><a href="#footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> though his real name + was Antoine Auguel. The canoe was well laden with gifts for the Indians,—tobacco, + knives, beads, awls, and other goods, to a very considerable value, supplied + at La Salle's cost; "and, in fact," observes Hennepin, "he is liberal + enough towards his friends."<a name="fnanchor_160" id="fnanchor_160"></a><a href="#footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg + 187]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">DEPARTURE OF HENNEPIN.</div> +<p>The friar bade farewell to La Salle, and embraced all the rest in turn. + Father Ribourde gave him his benediction. "Be of good courage and let + your heart be comforted," said the excellent old missionary, as he spread + his hands in benediction over the shaven crown of the reverend traveller. + Du Gay and Accau plied their paddles; the canoe receded, and vanished + at length behind the forest. We will follow Hennepin hereafter on his + adventures, imaginary and real. Meanwhile, we will trace the footsteps + of his chief, urging his way, in the storms of winter, through those vast + and gloomy wilds,—those realms of famine, treachery, and death,—that + lay betwixt him and his far-distant goal of Fort Frontenac.</p> +<p>On the first of March,<a name="fnanchor_161" id="fnanchor_161"></a><a href="#footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> before the frost was yet out of the ground, + when the forest was still leafless, and the oozy prairies still patched + with snow, a band of discontented men were again gathered on the shore + for another leave-taking. Hard by, the unfinished ship lay on the stocks, + white and fresh from the saw and axe, ceaselessly reminding them of the + hardship and peril that was in store. Here you would have seen the calm, + impenetrable face of La Salle, and with him the Mohegan hunter, who seems + to have felt towards him that admiring attachment which he could always + inspire in his Indian retainers. Besides the Mohegan, four Frenchmen were + to accompany him,—Hunaut, La Violette, Collin, and Dautray.[<a name="fnanchor_162" id="fnanchor_162"></a><a href="#footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg + 188]</a></span> His parting with Tonty was an anxious one, for each well + knew the risks that environed both. Embarking with his followers in two + canoes, he made his way upward amid the drifting ice; while the faithful + Italian, with two or three honest men and twelve or thirteen knaves, remained + to hold Fort Crèvecœur in his absence.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_155" id="footnote_155"></a><a href="#fnanchor_155"> <span class="label">[155]</span></a> Charlevoix, i. 459; La Potherie, ii. 140; La Hontan, <i>Memoir + on the Fur-Trade of Canada</i>. I am indebted for a copy of this + paper to Winthrop Sargent, Esq., who purchased the original at the + sale of the library of the poet Southey. Like Hennepin, La Hontan + went over to the English; and this memoir is written in their interest.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_156" id="footnote_156"></a><a href="#fnanchor_156"> <span class="label">[156]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle à La Barre, Chicagou, 4 Juin, 1683.</i> This + is a long letter, addressed to the successor of Frontenac in the government + of Canada. La Salle says that a young Indian belonging to him told + him that three years before he saw a white man, answering the description + of the pilot, a prisoner among a tribe beyond the Mississippi. He had + been captured with four others on that river, while making his way + with canoes, laden with goods, towards the Sioux. His companions had + been killed. Other circumstances, which La Salle details at great length, + convinced him that the white prisoner was no other than the pilot of + the "Griffin." The evidence, however, is not conclusive.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_157" id="footnote_157"></a><a href="#fnanchor_157"> <span class="label">[157]</span></a> <i>Relation des Découvertes et des Voyages du S<sup>r.</sup> de + la Salle, Seigneur et Gouverneur du Fort de Frontenac, au delà des + grands Lacs de la Nouvelle France, faits par ordre de Monseigneur + Colbert</i>, 1679, 80 et 81. Hennepin gives a story which is not + essentially different, except that he makes himself a conspicuous + actor in it.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_158" id="footnote_158"></a><a href="#fnanchor_158"> <span class="label">[158]</span></a> All the above is from Hennepin; and it seems to be marked by + his characteristic egotism. It appears, from La Salle's letters, that + Accau was the real chief of the party; that their orders were to explore + not only the Illinois, but also a part of the Mississippi; and that + Hennepin volunteered to go with the others. Accau was chosen because + he spoke several Indian languages.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_159" id="footnote_159"></a><a href="#fnanchor_159"> <span class="label">[159]</span></a> An eminent writer has mistaken "Picard" for a personal name. + Du Gay was called "Le Picard," because he came from the province of + Picardy.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_160" id="footnote_160"></a><a href="#fnanchor_160"> <span class="label">[160]</span></a> (1683), 188. This commendation is suppressed in the later editions.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_161" id="footnote_161"></a><a href="#fnanchor_161"> <span class="label">[161]</span></a> Tonty erroneously places their departure on the twenty-second.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_162" id="footnote_162"></a><a href="#fnanchor_162"> <span class="label">[162]</span></a> <i>Déclaration faite par Moyse Hillaret, charpentier de + barque.</i></p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg + 189]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2> +<p class="center">1680.</p> +<p class="center">HARDIHOOD OF LA SALLE.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The Winter Journey.—The +Deserted Town.—Starved Rock.—Lake Michigan.—The Wilderness.—War +Parties.—La Salle's Men give out.—Ill Tidings.—Mutiny.—Chastisement +of the Mutineers.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">La Salle</span> well knew what was before him, and nothing but necessity spurred + him to this desperate journey. He says that he could trust nobody else + to go in his stead, and that unless the articles lost in the "Griffin" were + replaced without delay, the expedition would be retarded a full year, + and he and his associates consumed by its expenses. "Therefore," he writes + to one of them, "though the thaws of approaching spring greatly increased + the difficulty of the way, interrupted as it was everywhere by marshes + and rivers, to say nothing of the length of the journey, which is about + five hundred leagues in a direct line, and the danger of meeting Indians + of four or five different nations through whose country we were to pass, + as well as an Iroquois army which we knew was coming that way; though + we must suffer all the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg + 190]</a></span> time from hunger; sleep on the open ground, and often + without food; watch by night and march by day, loaded with baggage, such + as blanket, clothing, kettle, hatchet, gun, powder, lead, and skins to + make moccasins; sometimes pushing through thickets, sometimes climbing + rocks covered with ice and snow, sometimes wading whole days through marshes + where the water was waist-deep or even more, at a season when the snow + was not entirely melted,—though I knew all this, it did not prevent + me from resolving to go on foot to Fort Frontenac, to learn for myself + what had become of my vessel, and bring back the things we needed."<a name="fnanchor_163" id="fnanchor_163"></a><a href="#footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a></p> +<p>The winter had been a severe one; and when, an hour after leaving the + fort, he and his companions reached the still water of Peoria Lake, they + found it sheeted with ice from shore to shore. They carried their canoes + up the bank, made two rude sledges, placed the light vessels upon them, + and dragged them to the upper end of the lake, where they encamped. In + the morning they found the river still covered with ice, too weak to bear + them and too strong to permit them to break a way for the canoes. They + spent the whole day in carrying them through the woods, toiling knee-deep + in saturated snow. Rain fell in floods, and they took shelter at night + in a deserted Indian hut.</p> +<p>In the morning, the third of March, they dragged <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg + 191]</a></span> their canoes half a league farther; then launched + them, and, breaking the ice with clubs and hatchets, forced their + way slowly up the stream. Again their progress was barred, and again + they took to the woods, toiling onward till a tempest of moist, + half-liquid snow forced them to bivouac for the night. A sharp frost + followed, and in the morning the white waste around them was glazed + with a dazzling crust. Now, for the first time, they could use their + snow-shoes. Bending to their work, dragging their canoes, which + glided smoothly over the polished surface, they journeyed on hour + after hour and league after league, till they reached at length + the great town of the Illinois, still void of its inhabitants.<a name="fnanchor_164" id="fnanchor_164"></a><a href="#footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE DESERTED TOWN.</div> +<p>It was a desolate and lonely scene,—the river gliding dark and cold + between its banks of rushes; the empty lodges, covered with crusted snow; + the vast white meadows; the distant cliffs, bearded with shining icicles; + and the hills wrapped in forests, which glittered from afar with the icy + incrustations that cased each frozen twig. Yet there was life in the savage + landscape. The men saw buffalo wading in the snow, and they killed one + of them. More than this: they discovered the tracks of moccasins. They + cut rushes by the edge of the river, piled them on the bank, and set them + on fire, that the smoke might attract the eyes of savages roaming near.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg + 192]</a></span></p> +<p>On the following day, while the hunters were smoking the meat of the buffalo, + La Salle went out to reconnoitre, and presently met three Indians, one + of whom proved to be Chassagoac, the principal chief of the Illinois.<a name="fnanchor_165" id="fnanchor_165"></a><a href="#footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> + La Salle brought them to his bivouac, feasted them, gave them a red blanket, + a kettle, and some knives and hatchets, made friends with them, promised + to restrain the Iroquois from attacking them, told them that he was on + his way to the settlements to bring arms and ammunition to defend them + against their enemies, and, as the result of these advances, gained from + the chief a promise that he would send provisions to Tonty's party at + Fort Crèvecœur.</p> +<p>After several days spent at the deserted town, La Salle prepared to resume + his journey. Before his departure, his attention was attracted to the + remarkable cliff of yellow sandstone, now called Starved Rock, a mile + or more above the village,—a natural fortress, which a score of + resolute white men might make good against a host of savages; and he soon + afterwards sent Tonty an order to examine it, and make it his stronghold + in case of need.<a name="fnanchor_166" id="fnanchor_166"></a><a href="#footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a></p> +<p>On the fifteenth the party set out again, carried <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg + 193]</a></span> their canoes along the bank of the river as far + as the rapids above Ottawa, then launched them and pushed their + way upward, battling with the floating ice, which, loosened by a + warm rain, drove down the swollen current in sheets. On the eighteenth + they reached a point some miles below the site of Joliet, and here + found the river once more completely closed. Despairing of farther + progress by water, they hid their canoes on an island, and struck + across the country for Lake Michigan.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S JOURNEY.</div> +<p>It was the worst of all seasons for such a journey. The nights were cold, + but the sun was warm at noon, and the half-thawed prairie was one vast + tract of mud, water, and discolored, half-liquid snow. On the twenty-second + they crossed marshes and inundated meadows, wading to the knee, till at + noon they were stopped by a river, perhaps the Calumet. They made a raft + of hard-wood timber, for there was no other, and shoved themselves across. + On the next day they could see Lake Michigan dimly glimmering beyond the + waste of woods; and, after crossing three swollen streams, they reached + it at evening. On the twenty-fourth they followed its shore, till, at + nightfall, they arrived at the fort which they had built in the autumn + at the mouth of the St. Joseph. Here La Salle found Chapelle and Leblanc, + the two men whom he had sent from hence to Michilimackinac, in search + of the "Griffin."<a name="fnanchor_167" id="fnanchor_167"></a><a href="#footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> They reported that they had made the circuit of + the lake, and had neither <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg + 194]</a></span> seen her nor heard tidings of her. Assured of her fate, + he ordered them to rejoin Tonty at Fort Crèvecœur; while he + pushed onward with his party through the unknown wild of Southern Michigan.</p> +<p>"The rain," says La Salle, "which lasted all day, and the raft we were + obliged to make to cross the river, stopped us till noon of the twenty-fifth, + when we continued our march through the woods, which was so interlaced + with thorns and brambles that in two days and a half our clothes were + all torn, and our faces so covered with blood that we hardly knew each + other. On the twenty-eighth we found the woods more open, and began to + fare better, meeting a good deal of game, which after this rarely failed + us; so that we no longer carried provisions with us, but made a meal of + roast meat wherever we happened to kill a deer, bear, or turkey. These + are the choicest feasts on a journey like this; and till now we had generally + gone without them, so that we had often walked all day without breakfast.</p> +<div class="sidenote">INDIAN ALARMS.</div> +<p>"The Indians do not hunt in this region, which is debatable ground between + five or six nations who are at war, and, being afraid of each other, do + not venture into these parts except to surprise each other, and always + with the greatest precaution and all possible secrecy. The reports of + our guns and the carcasses of the animals we killed soon led some of them + to find our trail. In fact, on the evening of the twenty-eighth, having + made our fire by the edge of a prairie, we were surrounded by them; but + as the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span> man + on guard waked us, and we posted ourselves behind trees with our guns, + these savages, who are called Wapoos, took us for Iroquois, and thinking + that there must be a great many of us because we did not travel secretly, + as they do when in small bands, they ran off without shooting their arrows, + and gave the alarm to their comrades, so that we were two days without + meeting anybody."</p> +<p>La Salle guessed the cause of their fright; and, in order to confirm their + delusion, he drew with charcoal, on the trunks of trees from which he + had stripped the bark, the usual marks of an Iroquois war-party, with + signs for prisoners and for scalps, after the custom of those dreaded + warriors. This ingenious artifice, as will soon appear, was near proving + the destruction of the whole party. He also set fire to the dry grass + of the prairies over which he and his men had just passed, thus destroying + the traces of their passage. "We practised this device every night, and + it answered very well so long as we were passing over an open country; + but on the thirtieth we got into great marshes, flooded by the thaws, + and were obliged to cross them in mud or water up to the waist; so that + our tracks betrayed us to a band of Mascoutins who were out after Iroquois. + They followed us through these marshes during the three days we were crossing + them; but we made no fire at night, contenting ourselves with taking off + our wet clothes and wrapping ourselves in our blankets on some dry knoll, + where we slept till morning. At <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg + 196]</a></span> last, on the night of the second of April, there came + a hard frost, and our clothes, which were drenched when we took them off, + froze stiff as sticks, so that we could not put them on in the morning + without making a fire to thaw them. The fire betrayed us to the Indians, + who were encamped across the marsh; and they ran towards us with loud + cries, till they were stopped halfway by a stream so deep that they could + not get over, the ice which had formed in the night not being strong enough + to bear them. We went to meet them, within gun-shot; and whether our fire-arms + frightened them, or whether they thought us more numerous than we were, + or whether they really meant us no harm, they called out, in the Illinois + language, that they had taken us for Iroquois, but now saw that we were + friends and brothers; whereupon, they went off as they came, and we kept + on our way till the fourth, when two of my men fell ill and could not + walk."</p> +<p>In this emergency, La Salle went in search of some watercourse by which + they might reach Lake Erie, and soon came upon a small river, which was + probably the Huron. Here, while the sick men rested, their companions + made a canoe. There were no birch-trees; and they were forced to use elm-bark, + which at that early season would not slip freely from the wood until they + loosened it with hot water. Their canoe being made, they embarked in it, + and for a time floated prosperously down the stream, when at length the + way was barred by a matted <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg + 197]</a></span> barricade of trees fallen across the water. The sick men + could now walk again, and, pushing eastward through the forest, the party + soon reached the banks of the Detroit.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE JOURNEY'S END.</div> +<p>La Salle directed two of the men to make a canoe, and go to Michilimackinac, + the nearest harborage. With the remaining two, he crossed the Detroit + on a raft, and, striking a direct line across the country, reached Lake + Erie not far from Point Pelée. Snow, sleet, and rain pelted them + with little intermission: and when, after a walk of about thirty miles, + they gained the lake, the Mohegan and one of the Frenchmen were attacked + with fever and spitting of blood. Only one man now remained in health. + With his aid, La Salle made another canoe, and, embarking the invalids, + pushed for Niagara. It was Easter Monday when they landed at a cabin of + logs above the cataract, probably on the spot where the "Griffin" was + built. Here several of La Salle's men had been left the year before, and + here they still remained. They told him woful news. Not only had he lost + the "Griffin," and her lading of ten thousand crowns in value, but a ship + from France, freighted with his goods, valued at more than twenty-two + thousand livres, had been totally wrecked at the mouth of the St. Lawrence; + and of twenty hired men on their way from Europe to join him, some had + been detained by his enemy, the Intendant Duchesneau, while all but four + of the remainder, being told that he was dead, had found means to return + home.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p> +<p>His three followers were all unfit for travel: he alone retained his strength + and spirit. Taking with him three fresh men at Niagara, he resumed his + journey, and on the sixth of May descried, looming through floods of rain, + the familiar shores of his seigniory and the bastioned walls of Fort Frontenac. + During sixty-five days he had toiled almost incessantly, travelling, by + the course he took, about a thousand miles through a country beset with + every form of peril and obstruction,—"the most arduous journey," says + the chronicler, "ever made by Frenchmen in America."</p> +<p>Such was Cavelier de la Salle. In him, an unconquerable mind held at its + service a frame of iron, and tasked it to the utmost of its endurance. + The pioneer of western pioneers was no rude son of toil, but a man of + thought, trained amid arts and letters.<a name="fnanchor_168" id="fnanchor_168"></a><a href="#footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> He had reached his goal; + but for him there was neither rest nor peace. Man and Nature seemed in + arms against him. His agents had plundered him; his creditors had seized + his property; and several of his canoes, richly laden, had been lost in + the rapids of the St. Lawrence.<a name="fnanchor_169" id="fnanchor_169"></a><a href="#footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> He hastened to Montreal, where <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg + 199]</a></span> his sudden advent caused great astonishment; and where, + despite his crippled resources and damaged credit, he succeeded, within + a week, in gaining the supplies which he required and the needful succors + for the forlorn band on the Illinois. He had returned to Fort Frontenac, + and was on the point of embarking for their relief, when a blow fell upon + him more disheartening than any that had preceded.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE MUTINEERS.</div> +<p>On the twenty-second of July, two <i>voyageurs</i>, Messier and Laurent, + came to him with a letter from Tonty, who wrote that soon after La Salle's + departure nearly all the men had deserted, after destroying Fort Crèvecœur, + plundering the magazine, and throwing into the river all the arms, goods, + and stores which they could not carry off. The messengers who brought + this letter were speedily followed by two of the <i>habitants</i> of Fort + Frontenac, who had been trading on the lakes, and who, with a fidelity + which the unhappy La Salle rarely knew how to inspire, had travelled day + and night to bring him their tidings. They reported that they had met + the deserters, and that, having been reinforced by recruits gained at + Michilimackinac and Niagara, they now numbered twenty men.<a name="fnanchor_170" id="fnanchor_170"></a><a href="#footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> They had + destroyed the fort on the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg + 200]</a></span> St. Joseph, seized a quantity of furs belonging to La + Salle at Michilimackinac, and plundered the magazine at Niagara. Here + they had separated, eight of them coasting the south side of Lake Ontario + to find harborage at Albany, a common refuge at that time of this class + of scoundrels; while the remaining twelve, in three canoes, made for Fort + Frontenac along the north shore, intending to kill La Salle as the surest + means of escaping punishment.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CHASTISEMENT.</div> +<p>He lost no time in lamentation. Of the few men at his command he chose + nine of the trustiest, embarked with them in canoes, and went to meet + the marauders. After passing the Bay of Quinté, he took his station + with five of his party at a point of land suited to his purpose, and detached + the remaining four to keep watch. In the morning, two canoes were discovered + approaching without suspicion, one of them far in advance of the other. + As the foremost drew near, La Salle's canoe darted out from under the + leafy shore,—two of the men handling the paddles, while he, with + the remaining two, levelled their guns at the deserters, and called on + them to surrender. Astonished and dismayed, they yielded at once; while + two more, who were in the second canoe, hastened to follow their example. + La Salle now returned to the fort with his prisoners, placed <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg + 201]</a></span> them in custody, and again set forth. He met the third + canoe upon the lake at about six o'clock in the evening. His men vainly + plied their paddles in pursuit. The mutineers reached the shore, took + post among rocks and trees, levelled their guns, and showed fight. Four + of La Salle's men made a circuit to gain their rear and dislodge them, + on which they stole back to their canoe and tried to escape in the darkness. + They were pursued, and summoned to yield; but they replied by aiming their + guns at their pursuers, who instantly gave them a volley, killed two of + them, and captured the remaining three. Like their companions, they were + placed in custody at the fort, to await the arrival of Count Frontenac.<a name="fnanchor_171" id="fnanchor_171"></a><a href="#footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_163" id="footnote_163"></a><a href="#fnanchor_163"> <span class="label">[163]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle à un de ses associés</i> (Thouret?), <i>29 + Sept., 1680</i> (Margry, ii. 50).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_164" id="footnote_164"></a><a href="#fnanchor_164"> <span class="label">[164]</span></a> Membré says that he was in the town at the time; but this + could hardly have been the case. He was, in all probability, among + the Illinois, in their camp near Fort Crèvecœur.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_165" id="footnote_165"></a><a href="#fnanchor_165"> <span class="label">[165]</span></a> The same whom Hennepin calls Chassagouasse. He was brother of + the chief, Nicanopé, who, in his absence, had feasted the French + on the day after the nocturnal council with Monso. Chassagoac was afterwards + baptized by Membré or Ribourde, but soon relapsed into the superstitions + of his people, and died, as the former tells us, "doubly a child of + perdition." See Le Clerc, ii. 181.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_166" id="footnote_166"></a><a href="#fnanchor_166"> <span class="label">[166]</span></a> Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>. The order was sent by two Frenchmen, + whom La Salle met on Lake Michigan.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_167" id="footnote_167"></a><a href="#fnanchor_167"> <span class="label">[167]</span></a> <i>Déclaration de Moyse Hillaret; Relation des Découvertes.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_168" id="footnote_168"></a><a href="#fnanchor_168"> <span class="label">[168]</span></a> A Rocky Mountain trapper, being complimented on the hardihood + of himself and his companions, once said to the writer, "That's so; + but a gentleman of the right sort will stand hardship better than anybody + else." The history of Arctic and African travel and the military records + of all time are a standing evidence that a trained and developed mind + is not the enemy, but the active and powerful ally, of constitutional + hardihood. The culture that enervates instead of strengthening is always + a false or a partial one.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_169" id="footnote_169"></a><a href="#fnanchor_169"> <span class="label">[169]</span></a> Zenobe Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 202.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_170" id="footnote_170"></a><a href="#fnanchor_170"> <span class="label">[170]</span></a> When La Salle was at Niagara, in April, he had ordered Dautray, + the best of the men who had accompanied him from the Illinois, to return + thither as soon as he was able. Four men from Niagara were to go with + him and he was to rejoin Tonty with such supplies as that post could + furnish. Dautray set out accordingly, but was met on the lakes by the + deserters, who told him that Tonty was dead, and seduced his men. (<i>Relation + des Découvertes.</i>) Dautray himself seems to have remained + true; at least, he was in La Salle's service immediately after, and + was one of his most trusted followers. He was of good birth, being + the son of Jean Bourdon, a conspicuous personage in the early period + of the colony; and his name appears on official records as Jean Bourdon, + Sieur d'Autray.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_171" id="footnote_171"></a><a href="#fnanchor_171"> <span class="label">[171]</span></a> La Salle's long letter, written apparently to his associate Thouret, + and dated 29 Sept., 1680, is the chief authority for the above. The + greater part of this letter is incorporated, almost verbatim, in the + official narrative called <i>Relation des Découvertes</i>. Hennepin, + Membré, and Tonty also speak of the journey from Fort Crèvecœur. + The death of the two mutineers was used by La Salle's enemies as the + basis of a charge of murder.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg + 202]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2> +<p class="center">1680.</p> +<p class="center">INDIAN CONQUERORS.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The Enterprise renewed.—Attempt +to rescue Tonty.—Buffalo.—A Frightful Discovery.—Iroquois Fury.—The +Ruined Town.—A Night of Horror.—Traces of the Invaders.—No +News of Tonty.</div> +<div class="sidenote">ANOTHER EFFORT.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">And</span> now La Salle's work must be begun afresh. He had staked all, and all + had seemingly been lost. In stern, relentless effort he had touched the + limits of human endurance; and the harvest of his toil was disappointment, + disaster, and impending ruin. The shattered fabric of his enterprise was + prostrate in the dust. His friends desponded; his foes were blatant and + exultant. Did he bend before the storm? No human eye could pierce the + depths of his reserved and haughty nature; but the surface was calm, and + no sign betrayed a shaken resolve or an altered purpose. Where weaker + men would have abandoned all in despairing apathy, he turned anew to his + work with the same vigor and the same apparent confidence as if borne + on the full tide of success.</p> +<p>His best hope was in Tonty. Could that brave and true-hearted officer + and the three or four faithful <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg + 203]</a></span> men who had remained with him make good their foothold + on the Illinois, and save from destruction the vessel on the stocks and + the forge and tools so laboriously carried thither, then a basis was left + on which the ruined enterprise might be built up once more. There was + no time to lose. Tonty must be succored soon, or succor would come too + late. La Salle had already provided the necessary material, and a few + days sufficed to complete his preparations. On the tenth of August he + embarked again for the Illinois. With him went his lieutenant La Forest, + who held of him in fief an island, then called Belle Isle, opposite Fort + Frontenac.<a name="fnanchor_172" id="fnanchor_172"></a><a href="#footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> A surgeon, ship-carpenters, joiners, masons, soldiers, <i>voyageurs</i> and + laborers completed his company, twenty-five men in all, with everything + needful for the outfit of the vessel.</p> +<p>His route, though difficult, was not so long as that which he had followed + the year before. He ascended the river Humber; crossed to Lake Simcoe, + and thence descended the Severn to the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron; followed + its eastern shore, coasted the Manitoulin Islands, and at length reached + Michilimackinac. Here, as usual, all was hostile; and he had great difficulty + in inducing the Indians, who had been excited against him, to sell him + provisions. Anxious to reach his destination, he pushed forward with twelve + men, leaving La Forest to bring on the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg + 204]</a></span> rest. On the fourth of November<a name="fnanchor_173" id="fnanchor_173"></a><a href="#footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> he reached the ruined + fort at the mouth of the St. Joseph, and left five of his party, with + the heavy stores, to wait till La Forest should come up, while he himself + hastened forward with six Frenchmen and an Indian. A deep anxiety possessed + him. The rumor, current for months past, that the Iroquois, bent on destroying + the Illinois, were on the point of invading their country had constantly + gained strength. Here was a new disaster, which, if realized, might involve + him and his enterprise in irretrievable wreck.</p> +<p>He ascended the St. Joseph, crossed the portage to the Kankakee, and followed + its course downward till it joined the northern branch of the Illinois. + He had heard nothing of Tonty on the way, and neither here nor elsewhere + could he discover the smallest sign of the passage of white men. His friend, + therefore, if alive, was probably still at his post; and he pursued his + course with a mind lightened, in some small measure, of its load of anxiety.</p> +<div class="sidenote">BUFFALO.</div> +<p>When last he had passed here, all was solitude; but now the scene was + changed. The boundless waste was thronged with life. He beheld that wondrous + spectacle, still to be seen at times on the plains of the remotest West, + and the memory of which can quicken the pulse and stir the blood after <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg + 205]</a></span> the lapse of years: far and near, the prairie was alive + with buffalo; now like black specks dotting the distant swells; now trampling + by in ponderous columns, or filing in long lines, morning, noon, and night, + to drink at the river,—wading, plunging, and snorting in the water; + climbing the muddy shores, and staring with wild eyes at the passing canoes. + It was an opportunity not to be lost. The party landed, and encamped for + a hunt. Sometimes they hid under the shelving bank, and shot them as they + came to drink; sometimes, flat on their faces, they dragged themselves + through the long dead grass, till the savage bulls, guardians of the herd, + ceased their grazing, raised their huge heads, and glared through tangled + hair at the dangerous intruders. The hunt was successful. In three days + the hunters killed twelve buffalo, besides deer, geese, and swans. They + cut the meat into thin flakes, and dried it in the sun or in the smoke + of their fires. The men were in high spirits,—delighting in the + sport, and rejoicing in the prospect of relieving Tonty and his hungry + followers with a plentiful supply.</p> +<p>They embarked again, and soon approached the great town of the Illinois. + The buffalo were far behind; and once more the canoes glided on their + way through a voiceless solitude. No hunters were seen; no saluting whoop + greeted their ears. They passed the cliff afterwards called the Rock of + St. Louis, where La Salle had ordered Tonty to build his stronghold; but + as he scanned its lofty top he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg + 206]</a></span> saw no palisades, no cabins, no sign of human hand, and + still its primeval crest of forests overhung the gliding river. Now the + meadow opened before them where the great town had stood. They gazed, + astonished and confounded: all was desolation. The town had vanished, + and the meadow was black with fire. They plied their paddles, hastened + to the spot, landed; and as they looked around their cheeks grew white, + and the blood was frozen in their veins.</p> +<div class="sidenote">A NIGHT OF HORROR.</div> +<p>Before them lay a plain once swarming with wild human life and covered + with Indian dwellings, now a waste of devastation and death, strewn with + heaps of ashes, and bristling with the charred poles and stakes which + had formed the framework of the lodges. At the points of most of them + were stuck human skulls, half picked by birds of prey.<a name="fnanchor_174" id="fnanchor_174"></a><a href="#footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> Near at hand + was the burial-ground of the village. The travellers sickened with horror + as they entered its revolting precincts. Wolves in multitudes fled at + their approach; while clouds of crows or buzzards, rising from the hideous + repast, wheeled above their heads, or settled on the naked branches of + the neighboring forest. Every grave had been rifled, and the bodies flung + down from the scaffolds where, after the Illinois custom, many of them + had been placed. The field was strewn with broken bones and torn and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg + 207]</a></span> mangled corpses. A hyena warfare had been waged against + the dead. La Salle knew the handiwork of the Iroquois. The threatened + blow had fallen, and the wolfish hordes of the five cantons had fleshed + their rabid fangs in a new victim.<a name="fnanchor_175" id="fnanchor_175"></a><a href="#footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a></p> +<p>Not far distant, the conquerors had made a rude fort of trunks, boughs, + and roots of trees laid together to form a circular enclosure; and this, + too, was garnished with skulls, stuck on the broken branches and protruding + sticks. The <i>caches</i>, or subterranean store-houses of the villagers, + had been broken open and the contents scattered. The cornfields were laid + waste, and much of the corn thrown into heaps and half burned. As La Salle + surveyed this scene of havoc, one thought engrossed him: where were Tonty + and his men? He searched the Iroquois fort: there were abundant traces + of its savage occupants, and, among them, a few fragments of French clothing. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg + 208]</a></span> He examined the skulls; but the hair, portions of which + clung to nearly all of them, was in every case that of an Indian. Evening + came on before he had finished the search. The sun set, and the wilderness + sank to its savage rest. Night and silence brooded over the waste, where, + far as the raven could wing his flight, stretched the dark domain of solitude + and horror.</p> +<p>Yet there was no silence at the spot where La Salle and his companions + made their bivouac. The howling of the wolves filled the air with fierce + and dreary dissonance. More dangerous foes were not far off, for before + nightfall they had seen fresh Indian tracks; "but, as it was very cold," says + La Salle, "this did not prevent us from making a fire and lying down by + it, each of us keeping watch in turn. I spent the night in a distress + which you can imagine better than I can write it; and I did not sleep + a moment with trying to make up my mind as to what I ought to do. My ignorance + as to the position of those I was looking after, and my uncertainty as + to what would become of the men who were to follow me with La Forest if + they arrived at the ruined village and did not find me there, made me + apprehend every sort of trouble and disaster. At last, I decided to keep + on my way down the river, leaving some of my men behind in charge of the + goods, which it was not only useless but dangerous to carry with me, because + we should be forced to abandon them when the winter fairly set in, which + would be very soon."</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg + 209]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">FEARS FOR TONTY.</div> +<p>This resolution was due to a discovery he had made the evening before, + which offered, as he thought, a possible clew to the fate of Tonty and + the men with him. He thus describes it: "Near the garden of the Indians, + which was on the meadows, a league from the village and not far from the + river, I found six pointed stakes set in the ground and painted red. On + each of them was the figure of a man with bandaged eyes, drawn in black. + As the savages often set stakes of this sort where they have killed people, + I thought, by their number and position, that when the Iroquois came, + the Illinois, finding our men alone in the hut near their garden, had + either killed them or made them prisoners. And I was confirmed in this, + because, seeing no signs of a battle, I supposed that on hearing of the + approach of the Iroquois, the old men and other non-combatants had fled, + and that the young warriors had remained behind to cover their flight, + and afterwards followed, taking the French with them; while the Iroquois, + finding nobody to kill, had vented their fury on the corpses in the graveyard."</p> +<p>Uncertain as was the basis of this conjecture, and feeble as was the hope + it afforded, it determined him to push forward, in order to learn more. + When daylight returned, he told his purpose to his followers, and directed + three of them to await his return near the ruined village. They were to + hide themselves on an island, conceal their fire at night, make no smoke + by day, fire no guns, and keep a close <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg + 210]</a></span> watch. Should the rest of the party arrive, they, too, + were to wait with similar precautions. The baggage was placed in a hollow + of the rocks, at a place difficult of access; and, these arrangements + made, La Salle set out on his perilous journey with the four remaining + men, Dautray, Hunaut, You, and the Indian. Each was armed with two guns, + a pistol, and a sword; and a number of hatchets and other goods were placed + in the canoe, as presents for Indians whom they might meet.</p> +<p>Several leagues below the village they found, on their right hand close + to the river, a sort of island, made inaccessible by the marshes and water + which surrounded it. Here the flying Illinois had sought refuge with their + women and children, and the place was full of their deserted huts. On + the left bank, exactly opposite, was an abandoned camp of the Iroquois. + On the level meadow stood a hundred and thirteen huts, and on the forest + trees which covered the hills behind were carved the totems, or insignia, + of the chiefs, together with marks to show the number of followers which + each had led to the war. La Salle counted five hundred and eighty-two + warriors. He found marks, too, for the Illinois killed or captured, but + none to indicate that any of the Frenchmen had shared their fate.</p> +<div class="sidenote">SEARCH FOR TONTY.</div> +<p>As they descended the river, they passed, on the same day, six abandoned + camps of the Illinois; and opposite to each was a camp of the invaders. + The former, it was clear, had retreated in a body; while <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg + 211]</a></span> the Iroquois had followed their march, day by day, along + the other bank. La Salle and his men pushed rapidly onward, passed Peoria + Lake, and soon reached Fort Crèvecœur, which they found, as + they expected, demolished by the deserters. The vessel on the stocks was + still left entire, though the Iroquois had found means to draw out the + iron nails and spikes. On one of the planks were written the words: "<i>Nous + sommes tous sauvages: ce 15, 1680</i>,"—the work, no doubt, of the + knaves who had pillaged and destroyed the fort.</p> +<p>La Salle and his companions hastened on, and during the following day + passed four opposing camps of the savage armies. The silence of death + now reigned along the deserted river, whose lonely borders, wrapped deep + in forests, seemed lifeless as the grave. As they drew near the mouth + of the stream they saw a meadow on their right, and on its farthest verge + several human figures, erect, yet motionless. They landed, and cautiously + examined the place. The long grass was trampled down, and all around were + strewn the relics of the hideous orgies which formed the ordinary sequel + of an Iroquois victory. The figures they had seen were the half-consumed + bodies of women, still bound to the stakes where they had been tortured. + Other sights there were, too revolting for record.<a name="fnanchor_176" id="fnanchor_176"></a><a href="#footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> All the remains + were those <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span> of + women and children. The men, it seemed, had fled, and left them to their + fate.</p> +<p>Here, again, La Salle sought long and anxiously, without finding the smallest + sign that could indicate the presence of Frenchmen. Once more descending + the river, they soon reached its mouth. Before them, a broad eddying current + rolled swiftly on its way; and La Salle beheld the Mississippi,—the + object of his day-dreams, the destined avenue of his ambition and his + hopes. It was no time for reflections. The moment was too engrossing, + too heavily charged with anxieties and cares. From a rock on the shore, + he saw a tree stretched forward above the stream; and stripping off its + bark to make it more conspicuous, he hung upon it a board on which he + had drawn the figures of himself and his men, seated in their canoe, and + bearing a pipe of peace. To this he tied a letter for Tonty, informing + him that he had returned up the river to the ruined village.</p> +<p>His four men had behaved admirably throughout, and they now offered to + continue the journey if he saw fit, and follow him to the sea; but he + thought it useless to go farther, and was unwilling to abandon the three + men whom he had ordered to await his return. Accordingly, they retraced + their course, and, paddling at times both day and night, urged their canoe + so swiftly that they reached the village in the incredibly short space + of four days.<a name="fnanchor_177" id="fnanchor_177"></a><a href="#footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg + 213]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE COMET.</div> +<p>The sky was clear, and as night came on the travellers saw a prodigious + comet blazing above this scene of desolation. On that night, it was chilling + with a superstitious awe the hamlets of New England and the gilded chambers + of Versailles; but it is characteristic of La Salle, that, beset as he + was with perils and surrounded with ghastly images of death, he coolly + notes down the phenomenon, not as a portentous messenger of war and woe, + but rather as an object of scientific curiosity.<a name="fnanchor_178" id="fnanchor_178"></a><a href="#footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a></p> +<p>He found his three men safely ensconced upon their island, where they + were anxiously looking for his return. After collecting a store of half-burnt + corn from the ravaged granaries of the Illinois, the whole party began + to ascend the river, and on the sixth of January reached the junction + of the Kankakee with the northern branch. On their way downward they had + descended the former stream; they now chose the latter, and soon discovered, + by the margin <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg + 214]</a></span> of the water, a rude cabin of bark. La Salle landed and + examined the spot, when an object met his eye which cheered him with a + bright gleam of hope. It was but a piece of wood; but the wood had been + cut with a saw. Tonty and his party, then, had passed this way, escaping + from the carnage behind them. Unhappily, they had left no token of their + passage at the fork of the two streams; and thus La Salle, on his voyage + downward, had believed them to be still on the river below.</p> +<p>With rekindled hope, the travellers pursued their journey, leaving their + canoes, and making their way overland towards the fort on the St. Joseph.</p> +<p>"Snow fell in extraordinary quantities all day," writes La Salle, "and + it kept on falling for nineteen days in succession, with cold so severe + that I never knew so hard a winter, even in Canada. We were obliged to + cross forty leagues of open country, where we could hardly find wood to + warm ourselves at evening, and could get no bark whatever to make a hut, + so that we had to spend the night exposed to the furious winds which blow + over these plains. I never suffered so much from cold, or had more trouble + in getting forward; for the snow was so light, resting suspended as it + were among the tall grass, that we could not use snow-shoes. Sometimes + it was waist deep; and as I walked before my men, as usual, to encourage + them by breaking the path, I often had much ado, though I am rather tall, + to lift my legs above the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg + 215]</a></span> drifts, through which I pushed by the weight of my body."</p> +<div class="sidenote">FORT MIAMI.</div> +<p>At length they reached their goal, and found shelter and safety within + the walls of Fort Miami. Here was the party left in charge of La Forest; + but, to his surprise and grief, La Salle heard no tidings of Tonty. He + found some amends for the disappointment in the fidelity and zeal of La + Forest's men, who had restored the fort, cleared ground for planting, + and even sawed the planks and timber for a new vessel on the lake.</p> +<p>And now, while La Salle rests at Fort Miami, let us trace the adventures + which befell Tonty and his followers, after their chief's departure from + Fort Crèvecœur.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_172" id="footnote_172"></a><a href="#fnanchor_172"> <span class="label">[172]</span></a> <i>Robert Cavelier, S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle, à François + Daupin, S<sup>r.</sup> de la Forest, 10 Juin, 1679.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_173" id="footnote_173"></a><a href="#fnanchor_173"> <span class="label">[173]</span></a> This date is from the <i>Relation</i>. Membré says the + twenty-eighth; but he is wrong, by his own showing, as he says that + the party reached the Illinois village on the first of December, which + would be an impossibility.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_174" id="footnote_174"></a><a href="#fnanchor_174"> <span class="label">[174]</span></a> "Il ne restoit que quelques bouts de perches brulées qui + montroient quelle avoit été l'étendue du village, + et sur la plupart desquelles il y avoit des têtes de morts plantées + et mangées des corbeaux."—<i>Relation des Découvertes + du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_175" id="footnote_175"></a><a href="#fnanchor_175"> <span class="label">[175]</span></a> "Beaucoup de carcasses à demi rongées par les loups, + les sépulchres démolis, les os tirés de leurs + fosses et épars par la campagne; ... enfin les loups et les + corbeaux augmentoient encore par leurs hurlemens et par leurs cris + l'horreur de ce spectacle."—<i>Relation des Découvertes + du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle.</i></p> + <p>The above may seem exaggerated; but it accords perfectly with what + is well established concerning the ferocious character of the Iroquois + and the nature of their warfare. Many other tribes have frequently + made war upon the dead. I have myself known an instance in which five + corpses of Sioux Indians placed in trees, after the practice of the + Western bands of that people, were thrown down and kicked into fragments + by a war party of the Crows, who then held the muzzles of their guns + against the skulls, and blew them to pieces. This happened near the + head of the Platte, in the summer of 1846. Yet the Crows are much less + ferocious than were the Iroquois in La Salle's time.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_176" id="footnote_176"></a><a href="#fnanchor_176"> <span class="label">[176]</span></a> "On ne sçauroit exprimer la rage de ces furieux ni les + tourmens qu'ils avoient fait souffrir aux misérables Tamaroa + [<i>a tribe of the Illinois</i>]. Il y en avoit encore dans des chaudières + qu'ils avoient laissées pleines sur les feux, qui depuis s'étoient éteints," etc., + etc.—<i>Relation des Découvertes.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_177" id="footnote_177"></a><a href="#fnanchor_177"> <span class="label">[177]</span></a> The distance is about two hundred and fifty miles. The letters + of La Salle, as well as the official narrative compiled from them, + say that they left the village on the second of December, and returned + to it on the eleventh, having left the mouth of the river on the seventh.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_178" id="footnote_178"></a><a href="#fnanchor_178"> <span class="label">[178]</span></a> This was the "Great Comet of 1680." Dr. B. A. Gould writes me: "It + appeared in December, 1680, and was visible until the latter part of + February, 1681, being especially brilliant in January." It was said + to be the largest ever seen. By observations upon it, Newton demonstrated + the regular revolutions of comets around the sun. "No comet," it is + said, "has threatened the earth with a nearer approach than that of + 1680." (<i>Winthrop on Comets, Lecture II</i>. p. 44.) Increase Mather, + in his <i>Discourse concerning Comets</i>, printed at Boston in 1683, + says of this one: "Its appearance was very terrible; the Blaze ascended + above 60 Degrees almost to its Zenith." Mather thought it fraught with + terrific portent to the nations of the earth.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2> +<p class="center">1680.</p> +<p class="center">TONTY AND THE IROQUOIS.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The Deserters.—The +Iroquois War.—The Great Town of the Illinois.—The Alarm.—Onset of +the Iroquois.—Peril of Tonty.—A Treacherous Truce.—Intrepidity +of Tonty.—Murder of Ribourde.—War upon the Dead.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">When</span> La Salle set out on his rugged journey to Fort Frontenac, he left, + as we have seen, fifteen men at Fort Crèvecœur,—smiths, + ship-carpenters, house-wrights, and soldiers, besides his servant L'Espérance + and the two friars Membré and Ribourde. Most of the men were ripe + for mutiny. They had no interest in the enterprise, and no love for its + chief. They were disgusted with the present, and terrified at the future. + La Salle, too, was for the most part a stern commander, impenetrable and + cold; and when he tried to soothe, conciliate, and encourage, his success + rarely answered to the excellence of his rhetoric. He could always, however, + inspire respect, if not love; but now the restraint of his presence was + removed. He had not been long absent, when a fire-brand was thrown into + the midst of the discontented and restless crew.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg + 217]</a></span></p> +<p>It may be remembered that La Salle had met two of his men, La Chapelle + and Leblanc, at his fort on the St. Joseph, and ordered them to rejoin + Tonty. Unfortunately, they obeyed. On arriving, they told their comrades + that the "Griffin" was lost, that Fort Frontenac was seized by the creditors + of La Salle, that he was ruined past recovery, and that they, the men, + would never receive their pay. Their wages were in arrears for more than + two years; and, indeed, it would have been folly to pay them before their + return to the settlements, as to do so would have been a temptation to + desert. Now, however, the effect on their minds was still worse, believing, + as many of them did, that they would never be paid at all.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE DESERTERS.</div> +<p>La Chapelle and his companion had brought a letter from La Salle to Tonty, + directing him to examine and fortify the cliff so often mentioned, which + overhung the river above the great Illinois village. Tonty, accordingly, + set out on his errand with some of the men. In his absence, the malcontents + destroyed the fort, stole powder, lead, furs, and provisions, and deserted, + after writing on the side of the unfinished vessel the words seen by La + Salle, "<i>Nous sommes tous sauvages</i>."<a name="fnanchor_179" id="fnanchor_179"></a><a href="#footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> The brave <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg + 218]</a></span> young Sieur de Boisrondet and the servant L'Espérance + hastened to carry the news to Tonty, who at once despatched four of those + with him, by two different routes, to inform La Salle of the disaster.<a name="fnanchor_180" id="fnanchor_180"></a><a href="#footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a> + Besides the two just named, there now remained with him only one hired + man and the Récollet friars. With this feeble band, he was left + among a horde of treacherous savages, who had been taught to regard him + as a secret enemy. Resolved, apparently, to disarm their jealousy by a + show of confidence, he took up his abode in the midst of them, making + his quarters in the great village, whither, as spring opened, its inhabitants + returned, to the number, according to Membré, of seven or eight + thousand. Hither he conveyed the forge and such tools as he could recover, + and here he hoped to maintain himself till La Salle should reappear. The + spring and the summer were past, and he looked anxiously for his coming, + unconscious that a storm was gathering in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg + 219]</a></span> the east, soon to burst with devastation over the fertile + wilderness of the Illinois.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE IROQUOIS WAR.</div> +<p>I have recounted the ferocious triumphs of the Iroquois in another volume.<a name="fnanchor_181" id="fnanchor_181"></a><a href="#footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> + Throughout a wide semi-circle around their cantons, they had made the + forest a solitude; destroyed the Hurons, exterminated the Neutrals and + the Eries, reduced the formidable Andastes to helpless insignificance, + swept the borders of the St. Lawrence with fire, spread terror and desolation + among the Algonquins of Canada; and now, tired of peace, they were seeking, + to borrow their own savage metaphor, new nations to devour. Yet it was + not alone their homicidal fury that now impelled them to another war. + Strange as it may seem, this war was in no small measure one of commercial + advantage. They had long traded with the Dutch and English of New York, + who gave them, in exchange for their furs, the guns, ammunition, knives, + hatchets, kettles, beads, and brandy which had become indispensable to + them. Game was scarce in their country. They must seek their beaver and + other skins in the vacant territories of the tribes they had destroyed; + but this did not content them. The French of Canada were seeking to secure + a monopoly of the furs of the north and west; and, of late, the enterprises + of La Salle on the tributaries of the Mississippi had especially roused + the jealousy of the Iroquois, fomented, moreover, by Dutch and English + traders.<a name="fnanchor_182" id="fnanchor_182"></a><a href="#footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> These crafty savages would fain <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg + 220]</a></span> reduce all these regions to subjection, and draw thence + an exhaustless supply of furs, to be bartered for English goods with the + traders of Albany. They turned their eyes first towards the Illinois, + the most important, as well as one of the most accessible, of the western + Algonquin tribes; and among La Salle's enemies were some in whom jealousy + of a hated rival could so far override all the best interests of the colony + that they did not scruple to urge on the Iroquois to an invasion which + they hoped would prove his ruin. The chiefs convened, war was decreed, + the war-dance was danced, the war-song sung, and five hundred warriors + began their march. In their path lay the town of the Miamis, neighbors + and kindred of the Illinois. It was always their policy to divide and + conquer; and these forest Machiavels had intrigued so well among the Miamis, + working craftily on their jealousy, that they induced them to join in + the invasion, though there is every reason to believe that they had marked + these infatuated allies as their next victims.<a name="fnanchor_183" id="fnanchor_183"></a><a href="#footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE ILLINOIS TOWN.</div> +<p>Go to the banks of the Illinois where it flows by the village of Utica, + and stand on the meadow that borders it on the north. In front glides + the river, a musket-shot in width; and from the farther bank rises, with + gradual slope, a range of wooded hills <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg + 221]</a></span> that hide from sight the vast prairie behind them. A mile + or more on your left these gentle acclivities end abruptly in the lofty + front of the great cliff, called by the French the Rock of St. Louis, + looking boldly out from the forests that environ it; and, three miles + distant on your right, you discern a gap in the steep bluffs that here + bound the valley, marking the mouth of the river Vermilion, called Aramoni + by the French.<a name="fnanchor_184" id="fnanchor_184"></a><a href="#footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> Now stand in fancy on this same spot in the early + autumn of the year 1680. You are in the midst of the great town of the + Illinois,—hundreds of mat-covered lodges, and thousands of congregated + savages. Enter one of their dwellings: they will not think you an intruder. + Some friendly squaw will lay a mat for you by the fire; you may seat yourself + upon it, smoke your pipe, and study the lodge and its inmates by the light + that streams through the holes at the top. Three or four fires smoke and + smoulder on the ground down the middle <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg + 222]</a></span> of the long arched structure; and, as to each fire there + are two families, the place is somewhat crowded when all are present. + But now there is breathing room, for many are in the fields. A squaw sits + weaving a mat of rushes; a warrior, naked except his moccasins, and tattooed + with fantastic devices, binds a stone arrow-head to its shaft, with the + fresh sinews of a buffalo. Some lie asleep, some sit staring in vacancy, + some are eating, some are squatted in lazy chat around a fire. The smoke + brings water to your eyes; the fleas annoy you; small unkempt children, + naked as young puppies, crawl about your knees and will not be repelled. + You have seen enough; you rise and go out again into the sunlight. It + is, if not a peaceful, at least a languid scene. A few voices break the + stillness, mingled with the joyous chirping of crickets from the grass. + Young men lie flat on their faces, basking in the sun; a group of their + elders are smoking around a buffalo-skin on which they have just been + playing a game of chance with cherry-stones. A lover and his mistress, + perhaps, sit together under a shed of bark, without uttering a word. Not + far off is the graveyard, where lie the dead of the village, some buried + in the earth, some wrapped in skins and laid aloft on scaffolds, above + the reach of wolves. In the cornfields around, you see squaws at their + labor, and children driving off intruding birds; and your eye ranges over + the meadows beyond, spangled with the yellow blossoms of the resin-weed + and the Rudbeckia, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg + 223]</a></span> or over the bordering hills still green with the foliage + of summer.<a name="fnanchor_185" id="fnanchor_185"></a><a href="#footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a></p> +<p>This, or something like it, one may safely affirm, was the aspect of the + Illinois village at noon of the tenth of September.<a name="fnanchor_186" id="fnanchor_186"></a><a href="#footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> In a hut apart + from the rest, you would probably have found the Frenchmen. Among them + was a man, not strong in person, and disabled, moreover, by the loss of + a hand, yet in this den of barbarism betraying the language and bearing + of one formed in the most polished civilization of Europe. This was Henri + de Tonty. The others were young Boisrondet, the servant L'Espérance, + and a Parisian youth named Étienne Renault. The <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg + 224]</a></span> friars, Membré and Ribourde, were not in the village, + but at a hut a league distant, whither they had gone to make a "retreat" for + prayer and meditation. Their missionary labors had not been fruitful; + they had made no converts, and were in despair at the intractable character + of the objects of their zeal. As for the other Frenchmen, time, doubtless, + hung heavy on their hands; for nothing can surpass the vacant monotony + of an Indian town when there is neither hunting, nor war, nor feasts, + nor dances, nor gambling, to beguile the lagging hours.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE ALARM.</div> +<p>Suddenly the village was wakened from its lethargy as by the crash of + a thunderbolt. A Shawanoe, lately here on a visit, had left his Illinois + friends to return home. He now reappeared, crossing the river in hot haste, + with the announcement that he had met, on his way, an army of Iroquois + approaching to attack them. All was panic and confusion. The lodges disgorged + their frightened inmates; women and children screamed, startled warriors + snatched their weapons. There were less than five hundred of them, for + the greater part of the young men had gone to war. A crowd of excited + savages thronged about Tonty and his Frenchmen, already objects of their + suspicion, charging them, with furious gesticulation, with having stirred + up their enemies to invade them. Tonty defended himself in broken Illinois, + but the naked mob were but half convinced. They seized the forge and tools + and flung them into the river, with all the goods that had <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg + 225]</a></span> been saved from the deserters; then, distrusting their + power to defend themselves, they manned the wooden canoes which lay in + multitudes by the bank, embarked their women and children, and paddled + down the stream to that island of dry land in the midst of marshes which + La Salle afterwards found filled with their deserted huts. Sixty warriors + remained here to guard them, and the rest returned to the village. All + night long fires blazed along the shore. The excited warriors greased + their bodies, painted their faces, befeathered their heads, sang their + war-songs, danced, stamped, yelled, and brandished their hatchets, to + work up their courage to face the crisis. The morning came, and with it + came the Iroquois.</p> +<p>Young warriors had gone out as scouts, and now they returned. They had + seen the enemy in the line of forest that bordered the river Aramoni, + or Vermilion, and had stealthily reconnoitred them. They were very numerous,<a name="fnanchor_187" id="fnanchor_187"></a><a href="#footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> + and armed for the most part with guns, pistols, and swords. Some had bucklers + of wood or raw-hide, and some wore those corselets of tough twigs interwoven + with cordage which their fathers had used when fire-arms were unknown. + The scouts added more, for they declared that they had seen a Jesuit among + the Iroquois; nay, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg + 226]</a></span> that La Salle himself was there, whence it must follow + that Tonty and his men were enemies and traitors. The supposed Jesuit + was but an Iroquois chief arrayed in a black hat, doublet, and stockings; + while another, equipped after a somewhat similar fashion, passed in the + distance for La Salle. But the Illinois were furious. Tonty's life hung + by a hair. A crowd of savages surrounded him, mad with rage and terror. + He had come lately from Europe, and knew little of Indians, but, as the + friar Membré says of him, "he was full of intelligence and courage," and + when they heard him declare that he and his Frenchmen would go with them + to fight the Iroquois, their threats grew less clamorous and their eyes + glittered with a less deadly lustre.</p> +<div class="sidenote">TONTY'S MEDIATION.</div> +<p>Whooping and screeching, they ran to their canoes, crossed the river, + climbed the woody hill, and swarmed down upon the plain beyond. About + a hundred of them had guns; the rest were armed with bows and arrows. + They were now face to face with the enemy, who had emerged from the woods + of the Vermilion, and were advancing on the open prairie. With unwonted + spirit, for their repute as warriors was by no means high, the Illinois + began, after their fashion, to charge; that is, they leaped, yelled, and + shot off bullets and arrows, advancing as they did so; while the Iroquois + replied with gymnastics no less agile and howlings no less terrific, mingled + with the rapid clatter of their guns. Tonty saw that it would go hard + with his allies. It was of the last <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg + 227]</a></span> moment to stop the fight, if possible. The Iroquois were, + or professed to be, at peace with the French; and, taking counsel of his + courage, he resolved on an attempt to mediate, which may well be called + a desperate one. He laid aside his gun, took in his hand a wampum belt + as a flag of truce, and walked forward to meet the savage multitude, attended + by Boisrondet, another Frenchman, and a young Illinois who had the hardihood + to accompany him. The guns of the Iroquois still flashed thick and fast. + Some of them were aimed at him, on which he sent back the two Frenchmen + and the Illinois, and advanced alone, holding out the wampum belt.<a name="fnanchor_188" id="fnanchor_188"></a><a href="#footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> + A moment more, and he was among the infuriated warriors. It was a frightful + spectacle,—the contorted forms, bounding, crouching, twisting, to + deal or dodge the shot; the small keen eyes that shone like an angry snake's; + the parted lips pealing their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg + 228]</a></span> fiendish yells; the painted features writhing with fear + and fury, and every passion of an Indian fight,—man, wolf, and devil, + all in one.<a name="fnanchor_189" id="fnanchor_189"></a><a href="#footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> With his swarthy complexion and his half-savage dress, + they thought he was an Indian, and thronged about him, glaring murder. + A young warrior stabbed at his heart with a knife, but the point glanced + aside against a rib, inflicting only a deep gash. A chief called out that, + as his ears were not pierced, he must be a Frenchman. On this, some of + them tried to stop the bleeding, and led him to the rear, where an angry + parley ensued, while the yells and firing still resounded in the front. + Tonty, breathless, and bleeding at the mouth with the force of the blow + he had received, found words to declare that the Illinois were under the + protection of the King and the governor of Canada, and to demand that + they should be left in peace.<a name="fnanchor_190" id="fnanchor_190"></a><a href="#footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">PERIL OF TONTY.</div> +<p>A young Iroquois snatched Tonty's hat, placed it on the end of his gun, + and displayed it to the Illinois, who, thereupon thinking he was killed, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg + 229]</a></span> renewed the fight; and the firing in front clattered more + angrily than before. A warrior ran in, crying out that the Iroquois were + giving ground, and that there were Frenchmen among the Illinois, who fired + at them. On this, the clamor around Tonty was redoubled. Some wished to + kill him at once; others resisted. "I was never," he writes, "in such + perplexity; for at that moment there was an Iroquois behind me, with a + knife in his hand, lifting my hair as if he were going to scalp me. I + thought it was all over with me, and that my best hope was that they would + knock me in the head instead of burning me, as I believed they would do." In + fact, a Seneca chief demanded that he should be burned; while an Onondaga + chief, a friend of La Salle, was for setting him free. The dispute grew + fierce and hot. Tonty told them that the Illinois were twelve hundred + strong, and that sixty Frenchmen were at the village, ready to back them. + This invention, though not fully believed, had no little effect. The friendly + Onondaga carried his point; and the Iroquois, having failed to surprise + their enemies, as they had hoped, now saw an opportunity to delude them + by a truce. They sent back Tonty with a belt of peace: he held it aloft + in sight of the Illinois; chiefs and old warriors ran to stop the fight; + the yells and the firing ceased; and Tonty, like one waked from a hideous + nightmare, dizzy, almost fainting with loss of blood, staggered across + the intervening prairie, to rejoin his friends. He was met by the two + friars, Ribourde <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg + 230]</a></span> and Membré, who in their secluded hut, a league + from the village, had but lately heard of what was passing, and who now, + with benedictions and thanksgiving, ran to embrace him as a man escaped + from the jaws of death.</p> +<p>The Illinois now withdrew, re-embarking in their canoes, and crossing + again to their lodges; but scarcely had they reached them, when their + enemies appeared at the edge of the forest on the opposite bank. Many + found means to cross, and, under the pretext of seeking for provisions, + began to hover in bands about the skirts of the town, constantly increasing + in numbers. Had the Illinois dared to remain, a massacre would doubtless + have ensued; but they knew their foe too well, set fire to their lodges, + embarked in haste, and paddled down the stream to rejoin their women and + children at the sanctuary among the morasses. The whole body of the Iroquois + now crossed the river, took possession of the abandoned town, building + for themselves a rude redoubt or fort of the trunks of trees and of the + posts and poles forming the framework of the lodges which escaped the + fire. Here they ensconced themselves, and finished the work of havoc at + their leisure.</p> +<p>Tonty and his companions still occupied their hut; but the Iroquois, becoming + suspicious of them, forced them to remove to the fort, crowded as it was + with the savage crew. On the second day, there was an alarm. The Illinois + appeared in numbers on the low hills, half a mile behind the town; and + the Iroquois, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg + 231]</a></span> who had felt their courage, and who had been told by Tonty + that they were twice as numerous as themselves, showed symptoms of no + little uneasiness. They proposed that he should act as mediator, to which + he gladly assented, and crossed the meadow towards the Illinois, accompanied + by Membré, and by an Iroquois who was sent as a hostage. The Illinois + hailed the overtures with delight, gave the ambassadors some refreshment, + which they sorely needed, and sent back with them a young man of their + nation as a hostage on their part. This indiscreet youth nearly proved + the ruin of the negotiation; for he was no sooner among the Iroquois than + he showed such an eagerness to close the treaty, made such promises, professed + such gratitude, and betrayed so rashly the numerical weakness of the Illinois, + that he revived all the insolence of the invaders. They turned furiously + upon Tonty, and charged him with having robbed them of the glory and the + spoils of victory. "Where are all your Illinois warriors, and where are + the sixty Frenchmen that you said were among them?" It needed all Tonty's + tact and coolness to extricate himself from this new danger.</p> +<div class="sidenote">IROQUOIS TREACHERY.</div> +<p>The treaty was at length concluded; but scarcely was it made, when the + Iroquois prepared to break it, and set about constructing canoes of elm-bark, + in which to attack the Illinois women and children in their island sanctuary. + Tonty warned his allies that the pretended peace was but a snare for their + destruction. The Iroquois, on their part, grew hourly more <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg + 232]</a></span> jealous of him, and would certainly have killed him, had + it not been their policy to keep the peace with Frontenac and the French.</p> +<p>Several days after, they summoned him and Membré to a council. + Six packs of beaver-skins were brought in; and the savage orator presented + them to Tonty in turn, explaining their meaning as he did so. The first + two were to declare that the children of Count Frontenac—that is, + the Illinois—should not be eaten; the next was a plaster to heal + Tonty's wound; the next was oil wherewith to anoint him and Membré, + that they might not be fatigued in travelling; the next proclaimed that + the sun was bright; and the sixth and last required them to decamp and + go home.<a name="fnanchor_191" id="fnanchor_191"></a><a href="#footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> Tonty thanked them for their gifts, but demanded when they + themselves meant to go and leave the Illinois in peace. At this, the conclave + grew angry; and, despite their late pledge, some of them said that before + they went they would eat Illinois flesh. Tonty instantly kicked away the + packs of beaver-skins, the Indian symbol of the scornful rejection of + a proposal, telling them that since they meant to eat the governor's children + he would have none of their presents. The chiefs, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg + 233]</a></span> in a rage, rose and drove him from the lodge. The French + withdrew to their hut, where they stood all night on the watch, expecting + an attack, and resolved to sell their lives dearly. At daybreak, the chiefs + ordered them to begone.</p> +<div class="sidenote">MURDER OF RIBOURDE.</div> +<p>Tonty, with admirable fidelity and courage, had done all in the power + of man to protect the allies of Canada against their ferocious assailants; + and he thought it unwise to persist further in a course which could lead + to no good, and which would probably end in the destruction of the whole + party. He embarked in a leaky canoe with Membré, Ribourde, Boisrondet, + and the remaining two men, and began to ascend the river. After paddling + about five leagues, they landed to dry their baggage and repair their + crazy vessel; when Father Ribourde, breviary in hand, strolled across + the sunny meadows for an hour of meditation among the neighboring groves. + Evening approached, and he did not return. Tonty, with one of the men, + went to look for him, and, following his tracks, presently discovered + those of a band of Indians, who had apparently seized or murdered him. + Still, they did not despair. They fired their guns to guide him, should + he still be alive; built a huge fire by the bank, and then, crossing the + river, lay watching it from the other side. At midnight, they saw the + figure of a man hovering around the blaze; then many more appeared, but + Ribourde was not among them. In truth, a band of Kickapoos, enemies of + the Iroquois, about whose camp they had <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg + 234]</a></span> been prowling in quest of scalps, had met and wantonly + murdered the inoffensive old man. They carried his scalp to their village, + and danced round it in triumph, pretending to have taken it from an enemy. + Thus, in his sixty-fifth year, the only heir of a wealthy Burgundian house + perished under the war-clubs of the savages for whose salvation he had + renounced station, ease, and affluence.<a name="fnanchor_192" id="fnanchor_192"></a><a href="#footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">ATTACK OF THE IROQUOIS.</div> +<p>Meanwhile, a hideous scene was enacted at the ruined village of the Illinois. + Their savage foes, balked of a living prey, wreaked their fury on the + dead. They dug up the graves; they threw down the scaffolds. Some of the + bodies they burned; some they threw to the dogs; some, it is affirmed, + they ate.<a name="fnanchor_193" id="fnanchor_193"></a><a href="#footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> Placing the skulls on stakes as trophies, they turned to + pursue the Illinois, who, when the French withdrew, had abandoned their + asylum and retreated down the river. The Iroquois, still, it seems, in + awe of them, followed them along the opposite bank, each night encamping + face to face <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg + 235]</a></span> with them; and thus the adverse bands moved slowly southward, + till they were near the mouth of the river. Hitherto, the compact array + of the Illinois had held their enemies in check; but now, suffering from + hunger, and lulled into security by the assurances of the Iroquois that + their object was not to destroy them, but only to drive them from the + country, they rashly separated into their several tribes. Some descended + the Mississippi; some, more prudent, crossed to the western side. One + of their principal tribes, the Tamaroas, more credulous than the rest, + had the fatuity to remain near the mouth of the Illinois, where they were + speedily assailed by all the force of the Iroquois. The men fled, and + very few of them were killed; but the women and children were captured + to the number, it is said, of seven hundred.<a name="fnanchor_194" id="fnanchor_194"></a><a href="#footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> Then followed that scene + of torture of which, some two weeks later, La Salle saw the revolting + traces.<a name="fnanchor_195" id="fnanchor_195"></a><a href="#footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> Sated, at length, with horrors, the conquerors withdrew, + leading with them a host of captives, and exulting in their triumphs over + women, children, and the dead.</p> +<p>After the death of Father Ribourde, Tonty and his companions remained + searching for him till noon <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg + 236]</a></span> of the next day, and then in despair of again seeing him, + resumed their journey. They ascended the river, leaving no token of their + passage at the junction of its northern and southern branches. For food, + they gathered acorns and dug roots in the meadows. Their canoe proved + utterly worthless; and, feeble as they were, they set out on foot for + Lake Michigan. Boisrondet wandered off, and was lost. He had dropped the + flint of his gun, and he had no bullets; but he cut a pewter porringer + into slugs, with which he shot wild turkeys by discharging his piece with + a fire-brand, and after several days he had the good fortune to rejoin + the party. Their object was to reach the Pottawattamies of Green Bay. + Had they aimed at Michilimackinac, they would have found an asylum with + La Forest at the fort on the St. Joseph; but unhappily they passed westward + of that post, and, by way of Chicago, followed the borders of Lake Michigan + northward. The cold was intense; and it was no easy task to grub up wild + onions from the frozen ground to save themselves from starving. Tonty + fell ill of a fever and a swelling of the limbs, which disabled him from + travelling, and hence ensued a long delay. At length they neared Green + Bay, where they would have starved, had they not gleaned a few ears of + corn and frozen squashes in the fields of an empty Indian town.</p> +<div class="sidenote">FRIENDS IN NEED.</div> +<p>This enabled them to reach the bay, and having patched an old canoe which + they had the good luck to find, they embarked in it; whereupon, says Tonty, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg + 237]</a></span> "there rose a northwest wind, which lasted five days, + with driving snow. We consumed all our food; and not knowing what to do + next, we resolved to go back to the deserted town, and die by a warm fire + in one of the wigwams. On our way, we saw a smoke; but our joy was short, + for when we reached the fire we found nobody there. We spent the night + by it; and before morning the bay froze. We tried to break a way for our + canoe through the ice, but could not; and therefore we determined to stay + there another night, and make moccasins in order to reach the town. We + made some out of Father Gabriel's cloak. I was angry with Étienne + Renault for not finishing his; but he excused himself on account of illness, + because he had a great oppression of the stomach, caused by eating a piece + of an Indian shield of raw-hide, which he could not digest. His delay + proved our salvation; for the next day, December fourth, as I was urging + him to finish the moccasins, and he was still excusing himself on the + score of his malady, a party of Kiskakon Ottawas, who were on their way + to the Pottawattamies, saw the smoke of our fire, and came to us. We gave + them such a welcome as was never seen before. They took us into their + canoes, and carried us to an Indian village, only two leagues off. There + we found five Frenchmen, who received us kindly, and all the Indians seemed + to take pleasure in sending us food; so that, after thirty-four days of + starvation, we found our famine turned to abundance."</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg + 238]</a></span></p> +<p>This hospitable village belonged to the Pottawattamies, and was under + the sway of the chief who had befriended La Salle the year before, and + who was wont to say that he knew but three great captains in the world,—Frontenac, + La Salle, and himself.<a name="fnanchor_196" id="fnanchor_196"></a><a href="#footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg + 239]</a></span></p> +<p class="center">THE ILLINOIS TOWN.</p> +<p class="blockquot"><span class="smcap">The Site of the Great +Illinois Town</span>.—This has not till now been determined, though there have been various +conjectures concerning it. From a study of the contemporary documents +and maps, I became satisfied, first, that the branch of the +river Illinois, called the "Big Vermilion," was the <i>Aramoni</i> of +the French explorers; and, secondly, that the cliff called "Starved +Rock" was that known to the French as <i>Le Rocher</i>, or the +Rock of St. Louis. If I was right in this conclusion, then the position of +the Great Village was established; for there is abundant proof +that it was on the north side of the river, above the Aramoni, and +below Le Rocher. I accordingly went to the village of Utica, +which, as I judged by the map, was very near the point in question, +and mounted to the top of one of the hills immediately behind it, +whence I could see the valley of the Illinois for miles, bounded +on the farther side by a range of hills, in some parts rocky and +precipitous, and in others covered with forests. Far on the right +was a gap in these hills, through which the Big Vermilion flowed +to join the Illinois; and somewhat towards the left, at the distance +of a mile and a half, was a huge cliff, rising perpendicularly +from the opposite margin of the river. This I assumed to be <i>Le +Rocher</i> of the French, though from where I stood I was unable +to discern the distinctive features which I was prepared to find in +it. In every other respect, the scene before me was precisely +what I had expected to see. There was a meadow on the hither side +of the river, on which stood a farmhouse; and this, as it seemed +to me, by its relations with surrounding objects, might be supposed +to stand in the midst of the space once occupied by the Illinois +town.</p> + +<p class="blockquot">On the way down from the hill I met Mr. +James Clark, the principal inhabitant of Utica, and one of the earliest +settlers of this region. I accosted him, told him my objects, +and requested + <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> a half hour's conversation with him, at +his leisure. He seemed interested in the inquiry, and said he +would visit me early in the evening at the inn, where, accordingly, +he soon appeared. The conversation took place in the porch, where +a number of farmers and others were gathered. I asked Mr. Clark +if any Indian remains were found in the neighborhood. "Yes," he replied, "plenty +of them." I then inquired if there was any one spot +where they were more numerous than elsewhere. "Yes," he answered +again, pointing towards the farmhouse on the meadow; "on my farm +down yonder by the river, my tenant ploughs up teeth and bones by +the peck every spring, besides arrow-heads, beads, stone hatchets, +and other things of that sort." I replied that this was precisely +what I had expected, as I had been led to believe that the principal +town of the Illinois Indians once covered that very +spot. "If," I added, "I am right in this belief, the great rock beyond +the river is the one which the first explorers occupied as a +fort; and I can describe it to you from their accounts of it, though +I have never seen it, except from the top of the hill where the +trees on and around it prevented me from seeing any part but the +front." The men present now gathered around to listen. "The rock," I +continued, "is nearly a hundred and fifty feet high, and rises +directly from the water. The front and two sides are perpendicular +and inaccessible; but there is one place where it is possible +for a man to climb up, though with difficulty. The top is large +enough and level enough for houses and fortifications." Here several +of the men exclaimed: "That's just it." "You've hit it exactly." I +then asked if there was any other rock on that side of the +river which could answer to the description. They all agreed that there +was no such rock on either side, along the whole length of +the river. I then said: "If the Indian town was in the place where +I suppose it to have been, I can tell you the nature of the country +which lies behind the hills on the farther side of the river, though +I know nothing about it except what I have learned from writings +nearly two centuries old. From the top of the hills, you look out +upon a great prairie reaching as far as you can see, except +that it is crossed by a belt of woods, following the course of a stream <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> which enters the main river a few miles +below." (See <i>ante</i>, p. 221, <i>note</i>.) "You are exactly right +again," replied Mr. Clark; "we call that belt of timber the 'Vermilion +Woods,' and the stream is the Big Vermilion." "Then," I said, "the +Big Vermilion is the river which the French called the Aramoni; 'Starved +Rock' is the same on which they built a fort called St. Louis, +in the year 1682; and your farm is on the site of the great town +of the Illinois."</p> + +<p class="blockquot">I spent the next day in examining these localities, and was fully confirmed + in my conclusions. Mr. Clark's tenant showed me the spot where the human + bones were ploughed up. It was no doubt the graveyard violated by the + Iroquois. The Illinois returned to the village after their defeat, and + long continued to occupy it. The scattered bones were probably collected + and restored to their place of burial.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_179" id="footnote_179"></a><a href="#fnanchor_179"> <span class="label">[179]</span></a> For the particulars of this desertion, Membré in Le Clerc, + ii. 171, <i>Relation des Découvertes</i>; Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>, + 1684, 1693; <i>Déclaration faite par devant le S<sup>r.</sup> Duchesneau, + Intendant en Canada, par Moyse Hillaret, charpentier de barque cy-devant + au service du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle, Aoust, 1680</i>.</p> + <p>Moyse Hillaret, the "Maître Moyse" of Hennepin, was a ring-leader + of the deserters, and seems to have been one of those captured by La + Salle near Fort Frontenac. Twelve days after, Hillaret was examined + by La Salle's enemy, the intendant; and this paper is the formal statement + made by him. It gives the names of most of the men, and furnishes incidental + confirmation of many statements of Hennepin, Tonty, Membré, + and the <i>Relation des Découvertes</i>. Hillaret, Leblanc, + and Le Meilleur, the blacksmith nicknamed La Forge, went off together, + and the rest seem to have followed afterwards. Hillaret does not admit + that any goods were wantonly destroyed.</p> + <p>There is before me a schedule of the debts of La Salle, made after + his death. It includes a claim of this man for wages to the amount + of 2,500 livres.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_180" id="footnote_180"></a><a href="#fnanchor_180"> <span class="label">[180]</span></a> Two of the messengers, Laurent and Messier, arrived safely. The + others seem to have deserted.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_181" id="footnote_181"></a><a href="#fnanchor_181"> <span class="label">[181]</span></a> The Jesuits in North America.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_182" id="footnote_182"></a><a href="#fnanchor_182"> <span class="label">[182]</span></a> Duchesneau, in <i>Paris Docs.</i>, ix. 163.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_183" id="footnote_183"></a><a href="#fnanchor_183"> <span class="label">[183]</span></a> There had long been a rankling jealousy between the Miamis and + the Illinois. According to Membré, La Salle's enemies had intrigued + successfully among the former, as well as among the Iroquois, to induce + them to take arms against the Illinois.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_184" id="footnote_184"></a><a href="#fnanchor_184"> <span class="label">[184]</span></a> The above is from notes made on the spot. The following is La + Salle's description of the locality in the <i>Relation des Découvertes</i>, + written in 1681: "La rive gauche de la rivière, du coté du + sud, est occupée par un long rocher, fort étroit et escarpé presque + partout, à la réserve d'un endroit de plus d'une lieue + de longueur, situé vis-à-vis du village, ou le terrain, + tout couvert de beaux chênes, s'étend par une pente douce + jusqu'au bord de la rivière. Au delà de cette hauteur + est une vaste plaine, qui s'étend bien loin du coté du + sud, et qui est traversée par la rivière Aramoni, dont + les bords sont couverts d'une lisière de bois peu large."</p> + <p>The Aramoni is laid down on the great manuscript map of Franquelin, + 1684, and on the map of Coronelli, 1688. It is, without doubt, the + Big Vermilion. <i>Aramoni</i> is the Illinois word for "red," or "vermilion." Starved + Rock, or the Rock of St. Louis, is the highest and steepest escarpment + of the <i>long rocher</i> above mentioned.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_185" id="footnote_185"></a><a href="#fnanchor_185"> <span class="label">[185]</span></a> The Illinois were an aggregation of distinct though kindred tribes,—the + Kaskaskias, the Peorias, the Kahokias, the Tamaroas, the Moingona, + and others. Their general character and habits were those of other + Indian tribes; but they were reputed somewhat cowardly and slothful. + In their manners, they were more licentious than many of their neighbors, + and addicted to practices which are sometimes supposed to be the result + of a perverted civilization. Young men enacting the part of women were + frequently to be seen among them. These were held in great contempt. + Some of the early travellers, both among the Illinois and among other + tribes, where the same practice prevailed, mistook them for hermaphrodites. + According to Charlevoix (<i>Journal Historique</i>, 303), this abuse + was due in part to a superstition. The Miamis and Piankishaws were + in close affinities of language and habits with the Illinois. All these + tribes belonged to the great Algonquin family. The first impressions + which the French received of them, as recorded in the <i>Relation</i> of + 1671, were singularly favorable; but a closer acquaintance did not + confirm them. The Illinois traded with the lake tribes, to whom they + carried slaves taken in war, receiving in exchange guns, hatchets, + and other French goods. Marquette in <i>Relation</i>, 1670, 91.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_186" id="footnote_186"></a><a href="#fnanchor_186"> <span class="label">[186]</span></a> This is Membré's date. The narratives differ as to the + day, though all agree as to the month.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_187" id="footnote_187"></a><a href="#fnanchor_187"> <span class="label">[187]</span></a> The <i>Relation des Découvertes</i> says, five hundred + Iroquois and one hundred Shawanoes. Membré says that the allies + were Miamis. He is no doubt right, as the Miamis had promised their + aid, and the Shawanoes were at peace with the Illinois. Tonty is silent + on the point.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_188" id="footnote_188"></a><a href="#fnanchor_188"> <span class="label">[188]</span></a> Membré says that he went with Tonty: "J'étois aussi à côté du + Sieur de Tonty." This is an invention of the friar's vanity. "Les deux + pères Récollets étoient alors dans une cabane à une + lieue du village, où ils s'étoient retirés pour + faire une espèce de retraite, et ils ne furent avertis de l'arrivée + des Iroquois que dans le temps du combat."—<i>Relation des Découvertes</i>. "Je + rencontrai en chemin les pères Gabriel et Zenobe Membré, + qui cherchoient de mes nouvelles."—Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>, + 1693. This was on his return from the Iroquois. The <i>Relation</i> confirms + the statement, as far as concerns Membré: "II rencontra le Père + Zenobe [<i>Membré</i>], qui venoit pour le secourir, aiant été averti + du combat et de sa blessure."</p> + <p>The perverted <i>Dernières Découvertes</i>, published + without authority, under Tonty's name, says that he was attended by + a slave, whom the Illinois sent with him as interpreter. In his narrative + of 1684, Tonty speaks of a Sokokis (Saco) Indian who was with the Iroquois + and who spoke French enough to serve as interpreter.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_189" id="footnote_189"></a><a href="#fnanchor_189"> <span class="label">[189]</span></a> Being once in an encampment of Sioux when a quarrel broke out, + and the adverse factions raised the war-whoop and began to fire at + each other, I had a good, though for the moment a rather dangerous, + opportunity of seeing the demeanor of Indians at the beginning of a + fight. The fray was quelled before much mischief was done, by the vigorous + intervention of the elder warriors, who ran between the combatants.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_190" id="footnote_190"></a><a href="#fnanchor_190"> <span class="label">[190]</span></a> "Je leur fis connoistre que les Islinois étoient sous + la protection du roy de France et du gouverneur du pays, que j'estois + surpris qu'ils voulussent rompre avec les François et qu'ils + voulussent <i>attendre</i> [<i>sic</i>] à une paix."—Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>, + 1693.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_191" id="footnote_191"></a><a href="#fnanchor_191"> <span class="label">[191]</span></a> An Indian speech, it will be remembered, is without validity + if not confirmed by presents, each of which has its special interpretation. + The meaning of the fifth pack of beaver, informing Tonty that the sun + was bright,—"que le soleil étoit beau," that is, that + the weather was favorable for travelling,—is curiously misconceived + by the editor of the <i>Dernières Découvertes</i>, who + improves upon his original by substituting the words "par le cinquième + paquet <i>ils nous exhortoient à adorer le Soleil</i>."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_192" id="footnote_192"></a><a href="#fnanchor_192"> <span class="label">[192]</span></a> Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>; Membré in Le Clerc, ii. + 191. Hennepin, who hated Tonty, unjustly charges him with having abandoned + the search too soon, admitting, however, that it would have been useless + to continue it. This part of his narrative is a perversion of Membré's + account.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_193" id="footnote_193"></a><a href="#fnanchor_193"> <span class="label">[193]</span></a> "Cependant les Iroquois, aussitôt après le départ + du S<sup>r.</sup> de Tonty, exercèrent leur rage sur les corps + morts des Ilinois, qu'ils déterrèrent ou abbattèrent + de dessus les échafauds où les Ilinois les laissent longtemps + exposés avant que de les mettre en terre. Ils en brûlèrent + la plus grande partie, ils en mangèrent même quelques + uns, et jettèrent le reste aux chiens. Ils plantèrent + les têtes de ces cadavres à demi décharnés + sur des pieux," etc.—<i>Relation des Découvertes</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_194" id="footnote_194"></a><a href="#fnanchor_194"> <span class="label">[194]</span></a> <i>Relation des Découvertes</i>; Frontenac to the King, <i>N. + Y. Col. Docs.</i>, ix. 147. A memoir of Duchesneau makes the number + twelve hundred.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_195" id="footnote_195"></a><a href="#fnanchor_195"> <span class="label">[195]</span></a> "Ils [<i>les Illinois</i>] trouvèrent dans leur campement + des carcasses de leurs enfans que ces anthropophages avoient mangez, + ne voulant même d'autre nourriture que la chair de ces infortunez."—<i>La + Potherie</i>, ii. 145, 146. Compare <i>note, ante</i>, p. 211.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_196" id="footnote_196"></a><a href="#fnanchor_196"> <span class="label">[196]</span></a> Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 199. The other authorities for + the foregoing chapter are the letters of La Salle, the <i>Relation + des Découvertes</i>, in which portions of them are embodied, + and the two narratives of Tonty, of 1684 and 1693. They all agree in + essential points.</p> + <p>In his letters of this period, La Salle dwells at great length on the + devices by which, as he believed, his enemies tried to ruin him and + his enterprise. He is particularly severe against the Jesuit Allouez, + whom he charges with intriguing "pour commencer la guerre entre les + Iroquois et les Illinois par le moyen des Miamis qu'on engageoit dans + cette négociation afin ou de me faire massacrer avec mes gens + par quelqu'une de ces nations ou de me brouiller avec les Iroquois."—<i>Lettre + (à Thouret?), 22 Août, 1682</i>. He gives in detail the + circumstances on which this suspicion rests, but which are not convincing. + He says, further, that the Jesuits gave out that Tonty was dead in + order to discourage the men going to his relief, and that Allouez encouraged + the deserters, "leur servoit de conseil, bénit mesme leurs balles, + et les asseura plusieurs fois que M. de Tonty auroit la teste cassée." He + also affirms that great pains were taken to spread the report that + he was himself dead. A Kiskakon Indian, he says, was sent to Tonty + with a story to this effect; while a Huron named Scortas was sent to + him (La Salle) with false news of the death of Tonty. The latter confirms + this statement, and adds that the Illinois had been told "que M. de + la Salle estoit venu en leur pays pour les donner à manger aux + Iroquois."</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2> +<p class="center">1680.</p> +<p class="center">THE ADVENTURES OF HENNEPIN.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Hennepin an Impostor: +his Pretended Discovery; his Actual Discovery; Captured by the Sioux.—The +Upper Mississippi.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was on the last day of the winter that preceded the invasion of the + Iroquois that Father Hennepin, with his two companions, Accau and Du Gay, + had set out from Fort Crèvecœur to explore the Illinois to its + mouth. It appears from his own later statements, as well as from those + of Tonty, that more than this was expected of him, and that La Salle had + instructed him to explore, not alone the Illinois, but also the Upper + Mississippi. That he actually did so, there is no reasonable doubt; and + could he have contented himself with telling the truth, his name would + have stood high as a bold and vigorous discoverer. But his vicious attempts + to malign his commander and plunder him of his laurels have wrapped his + genuine merit in a cloud.</p> +<p>Hennepin's first book was published soon after his return from his travels, + and while La Salle was still alive. In it he relates the accomplishment + of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> instructions + given him, without the smallest intimation that he did more.<a name="fnanchor_197" id="fnanchor_197"></a><a href="#footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> Fourteen + years after, when La Salle was dead, he published another edition of his + travels,<a name="fnanchor_198" id="fnanchor_198"></a><a href="#footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> in which he advanced a new and surprising pretension. Reasons + connected with his personal safety, he declares, before compelled him + to remain silent; but a time at length had come when the truth must be + revealed. And he proceeds to affirm, that, before ascending the Mississippi, + he, with his two men, explored its whole course from the Illinois to the + sea,—thus anticipating the discovery which forms the crowning laurel + of La Salle.</p> +<div class="sidenote">HENNEPIN'S RESOLUTION.</div> +<p>"I am resolved," he says, "to make known here to the whole world the mystery + of this discovery, which I have hitherto concealed, that I might not offend + the Sieur de la Salle, who wished to keep all the glory and all the knowledge + of it to himself. It is for this that he sacrificed many persons whose + lives he exposed, to prevent them from making known what they had seen, + and thereby crossing his secret plans.... I was certain that if I went + down the Mississippi, he would not fail to traduce me to my superiors + for not taking the northern route, which I was to have followed in accordance + with his desire and the plan we had made together. But I saw myself on + the point of dying of hunger, and knew not what to do; because the two + men who were with <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg + 244]</a></span> me threatened openly to leave me in the night, and carry + off the canoe and everything in it, if I prevented them from going down + the river to the nations below. Finding myself in this dilemma, I thought + that I ought not to hesitate, and that I ought to prefer my own safety + to the violent passion which possessed the Sieur de la Salle of enjoying + alone the glory of this discovery. The two men, seeing that I had made + up my mind to follow them, promised me entire fidelity; so, after we had + shaken hands together as a mutual pledge, we set out on our voyage."<a name="fnanchor_199" id="fnanchor_199"></a><a href="#footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a></p> +<p>He then proceeds to recount at length the particulars of his alleged exploration. + The story was distrusted from the first.<a name="fnanchor_200" id="fnanchor_200"></a><a href="#footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> Why had he not told it before? + An excess of modesty, a lack of self-assertion, or a too sensitive reluctance + to wound the susceptibilities of others, had never been found among his + foibles. Yet some, perhaps, might have believed him, had he not in the + first edition of his book gratuitously and distinctly declared that he + did not make the voyage in question. "We had some designs," he says, "of + going down the river Colbert [Mississippi] as far as its mouth; but the + tribes that took us prisoners gave us no time to navigate this river both + up and down."<a name="fnanchor_201" id="fnanchor_201"></a><a href="#footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a>]</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg + 245]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">HENNEPIN AN IMPOSTOR.</div> +<p>In declaring to the world the achievement which he had so long concealed + and so explicitly denied, the worthy missionary found himself in serious + embarrassment. In his first book, he had stated that on the twelfth of + March he left the mouth of the Illinois on his way northward, and that + on the eleventh of April he was captured by the Sioux near the mouth of + the Wisconsin, five hundred miles above. This would give him only a month + to make his alleged canoe-voyage from the Illinois to the Gulf of Mexico, + and again upward to the place of his capture,—a distance of three + thousand two hundred and sixty miles. With his means of transportation, + three months would have been insufficient.<a name="fnanchor_202" id="fnanchor_202"></a><a href="#footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> He saw the difficulty; + but, on the other hand, he saw that he could not greatly change either + date without confusing the parts of his narrative which preceded and which + followed. In this perplexity he chose a middle course, which only involved + him in additional contradictions. Having, as he affirms, gone down to + the Gulf and returned to the mouth of the Illinois, he set out thence + to explore the river above; and he assigns the twenty-fourth of April + as the date of this departure. This gives him forty-three days for <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg + 246]</a></span> his voyage to the mouth of the river and back. Looking + further, we find that having left the Illinois on the twenty-fourth he + paddled his canoe two hundred leagues northward, and was then captured + by the Sioux on the twelfth of the same month. In short, he ensnares himself + in a hopeless confusion of dates.<a name="fnanchor_203" id="fnanchor_203"></a><a href="#footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a></p> +<p>Here, one would think, is sufficient reason for rejecting his story; and + yet the general truth of the descriptions, and a certain verisimilitude + which marks it, might easily deceive a careless reader and perplex a critical + one. These, however, are easily explained. Six years before Hennepin published + his pretended discovery, his brother friar, Father Chrétien Le + Clerc, published an account of the Récollet missions among the + Indians, under the title of "Établissement de la Foi." This book, + offensive to the Jesuits, is said to have been suppressed by order of + government; but a few copies fortunately survive.<a name="fnanchor_204" id="fnanchor_204"></a><a href="#footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> One of these is + now before me. It contains the journal of Father Zenobe Membré, + on his descent of the Mississippi in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg + 247]</a></span> 1681, in company with La Salle. The slightest comparison + of his narrative with that of Hennepin is sufficient to show that the + latter framed his own story out of incidents and descriptions furnished + by his brother missionary, often using his very words, and sometimes copying + entire pages, with no other alterations than such as were necessary to + make himself, instead of La Salle and his companions, the hero of the + exploit. The records of literary piracy may be searched in vain for an + act of depredation more recklessly impudent.<a name="fnanchor_205" id="fnanchor_205"></a><a href="#footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a></p> +<p>Such being the case, what faith can we put in the rest of Hennepin's story? + Fortunately, there are tests by which the earlier parts of his book can + be <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> tried; + and, on the whole, they square exceedingly well with contemporary records + of undoubted authenticity. Bating his exaggerations respecting the Falls + of Niagara, his local descriptions, and even his estimates of distance, + are generally accurate. He constantly, it is true, magnifies his own acts, + and thrusts himself forward as one of the chiefs of an enterprise to the + costs of which he had contributed nothing, and to which he was merely + an appendage; and yet, till he reaches the Mississippi, there can be no + doubt that in the main he tells the truth. As for his ascent of that river + to the country of the Sioux, the general statement is fully confirmed + by La Salle, Tonty, and other contemporary writers.<a name="fnanchor_206" id="fnanchor_206"></a><a href="#footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> For the details + of the journey we must rest on Hennepin alone, whose account of the country + and of the peculiar traits of its Indian occupants afford, as far as they + go, good evidence of truth. Indeed, this part of his narrative could only + have been written by one well versed in the savage life of this northwestern + region.<a name="fnanchor_207" id="fnanchor_207"></a><a href="#footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> Trusting, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg + 249]</a></span> then, to his own guidance in the absence of better, let + us follow in the wake of his adventurous canoe.</p> +<div class="sidenote">HIS VOYAGE NORTHWARD.</div> +<p>It was laden deeply with goods belonging to La Salle, and meant by him + as presents to Indians on the way, though the travellers, it appears, + proposed to use them in trading on their own account. The friar was still + wrapped in his gray capote and hood, shod with sandals, and decorated + with the cord of St. Francis. As for his two companions, Accau<a name="fnanchor_208" id="fnanchor_208"></a><a href="#footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg + 250]</a></span> Du Gay, it is tolerably clear that the former was the + real leader of the party, though Hennepin, after his custom, thrusts himself + into the foremost place. Both were somewhat above the station of ordinary + hired hands; and Du Gay had an uncle who was an ecclesiastic of good credit + at Amiens, his native place.</p> +<p>In the forests that overhung the river the buds were feebly swelling with + advancing spring. There was game enough. They killed buffalo, deer, beavers, + wild turkeys, and now and then a bear swimming in the river. With these, + and the fish which they caught in abundance, they fared sumptuously, though + it was the season of Lent. They were exemplary, however, at their devotions. + Hennepin said prayers at morning and night, and the <i>angelus</i> at + noon, adding a petition to Saint Anthony of Padua that he would save them + from the peril that beset their way. In truth, there was a lion in the + path. The ferocious character of the Sioux, or Dacotah, who occupied the + region of the Upper Mississippi, was already known to the French; and + Hennepin, with excellent reason, prayed that it might be his fortune to + meet them, not by night, but by day.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CAPTURED BY THE SIOUX.</div> +<p>On the eleventh or twelfth of April, they stopped in the afternoon to + repair their canoe; and Hennepin busied himself in daubing it with pitch, + while the others cooked a turkey. Suddenly, a fleet of Sioux canoes swept + into sight, bearing a war-party of a hundred and twenty naked savages, + who on seeing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg + 251]</a></span> the travellers raised a hideous clamor; and, some leaping + ashore and others into the water, they surrounded the astonished Frenchmen + in an instant.<a name="fnanchor_209" id="fnanchor_209"></a><a href="#footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> Hennepin held out the peace-pipe; but one of them + snatched it from him. Next, he hastened to proffer a gift of Martinique + tobacco, which was better received. Some of the old warriors repeated + the name <i>Miamiha</i>, giving him to understand that they were a war-party, + on the way to attack the Miamis; on which, Hennepin, with the help of + signs and of marks which he drew on the sand with a stick, explained that + the Miamis had gone across the Mississippi, beyond their reach. Hereupon, + he says that three or four old men placed their hands on his head, and + began a dismal wailing; while he with his handkerchief wiped away their + tears, in order to evince sympathy with their affliction, from whatever + cause arising. Notwithstanding this demonstration of tenderness, they + refused to smoke with him in his peace-pipe, and forced him and his companions + to embark and paddle across the river; while they all followed behind, + uttering yells and howlings which froze the missionary's blood.</p> +<p>On reaching the farther side, they made their camp-fires, and allowed + their prisoners to do the same. Accau and Du Gay slung their kettle; while <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg + 252]</a></span> Hennepin, to propitiate the Sioux, carried to them two + turkeys, of which there were several in the canoe. The warriors had seated + themselves in a ring, to debate on the fate of the Frenchmen; and two + chiefs presently explained to the friar, by significant signs, that it + had been resolved that his head should be split with a war-club. This + produced the effect which was no doubt intended. Hennepin ran to the canoe, + and quickly returned with one of the men, both loaded with presents, which + he threw into the midst of the assembly; and then, bowing his head, offered + them at the same time a hatchet with which to kill him, if they wished + to do so. His gifts and his submission seemed to appease them. They gave + him and his companions a dish of beaver's flesh; but, to his great concern, + they returned his peace-pipe,—an act which he interpreted as a sign + of danger. That night the Frenchmen slept little, expecting to be murdered + before morning. There was, in fact, a great division of opinion among + the Sioux. Some were for killing them and taking their goods; while others, + eager above all things that French traders should come among them with + the knives, hatchets, and guns of which they had heard the value, contended + that it would be impolitic to discourage the trade by putting to death + its pioneers.</p> +<p>Scarcely had morning dawned on the anxious captives, when a young chief, + naked, and painted from head to foot, appeared before them and asked for + the pipe, which the friar gladly gave him. He filled it, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg + 253]</a></span> smoked it, made the warriors do the same, and, having + given this hopeful pledge of amity, told the Frenchmen that, since the + Miamis were out of reach, the war-party would return home, and that they + must accompany them. To this Hennepin gladly agreed, having, as he declares, + his great work of exploration so much at heart that he rejoiced in the + prospect of achieving it even in their company.</p> +<div class="sidenote">SUSPECTED OF SORCERY.</div> +<p>He soon, however, had a foretaste of the affliction in store for him; + for when he opened his breviary and began to mutter his morning devotion, + his new companions gathered about him with faces that betrayed their superstitious + terror, and gave him to understand that his book was a bad spirit with + which he must hold no more converse. They thought, indeed, that he was + muttering a charm for their destruction. Accau and Du Gay, conscious of + the danger, begged the friar to dispense with his devotions, lest he and + they alike should be tomahawked; but Hennepin says that his sense of duty + rose superior to his fears, and that he was resolved to repeat his office + at all hazards, though not until he had asked pardon of his two friends + for thus imperilling their lives. Fortunately, he presently discovered + a device by which his devotion and his prudence were completely reconciled. + He ceased the muttering which had alarmed the Indians, and, with the breviary + open on his knees, sang the service in loud and cheerful tones. As this + had no savor of sorcery, and as they now imagined that the book was teaching + its owner <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> to + sing for their amusement, they conceived a favorable opinion of both alike.</p> +<p>These Sioux, it may be observed, were the ancestors of those who committed + the horrible but not unprovoked massacres of 1862, in the valley of the + St. Peter. Hennepin complains bitterly of their treatment of him, which, + however, seems to have been tolerably good. Afraid that he would lag behind, + as his canoe was heavy and slow,<a name="fnanchor_210" id="fnanchor_210"></a><a href="#footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> they placed several warriors in + it to aid him and his men in paddling. They kept on their way from morning + till night, building huts for their bivouac when it rained, and sleeping + on the open ground when the weather was fair,—which, says Hennepin, "gave + us a good opportunity to contemplate the moon and stars." The three Frenchmen + took the precaution of sleeping at the side of the young chief who had + been the first to smoke the peace-pipe, and who seemed inclined to befriend + them; but there was another chief, one Aquipaguetin, a crafty old savage, + who having lost a son in war with the Miamis, was angry that the party + had abandoned their expedition, and thus deprived him of his revenge. + He therefore kept up a dismal lament through half the night; while other + old men, crouching over Hennepin as he lay trying to sleep, stroked him + with their hands, and uttered wailings so lugubrious that he was forced + to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> the + belief that he had been doomed to death, and that they were charitably + bemoaning his fate.<a name="fnanchor_211" id="fnanchor_211"></a><a href="#footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE CAPTIVE FRIAR.</div> +<p>One night, the captives were, for some reason, unable to bivouac near + their protector, and were forced to make their fire at the end of the + camp. Here they were soon beset by a crowd of Indians, who told them that + Aquipaguetin had at length resolved to tomahawk them. The malcontents + were gathered in a knot at a little distance, and Hennepin hastened to + appease them by another gift of knives and tobacco. This was but one of + the devices of the old chief to deprive them of their goods without robbing + them outright. He had with him the bones of a deceased relative, which + he was carrying home wrapped in skins prepared with smoke after the Indian + fashion, and gayly decorated with bands of dyed porcupine quills. He would + summon his warriors, and placing these relics in the midst of the assembly, + call on all present to smoke in their honor; after which, Hennepin was + required to offer a more substantial tribute in the shape of cloth, beads, + hatchets, tobacco, and the like, to be laid upon the bundle of bones. + The gifts thus acquired were then, in the name of the deceased, distributed + among the persons present.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg + 256]</a></span></p> +<p>On one occasion, Aquipaguetin killed a bear, and invited the chiefs and + warriors to feast upon it. They accordingly assembled on a prairie, west + of the river, where, after the banquet, they danced a "medicine-dance." They + were all painted from head to foot, with their hair oiled, garnished with + red and white feathers, and powdered with the down of birds. In this guise + they set their arms akimbo, and fell to stamping with such fury that the + hard prairie was dented with the prints of their moccasins; while the + chief's son, crying at the top of his throat, gave to each in turn the + pipe of war. Meanwhile, the chief himself, singing in a loud and rueful + voice, placed his hands on the heads of the three Frenchmen, and from + time to time interrupted his music to utter a vehement harangue. Hennepin + could not understand the words, but his heart sank as the conviction grew + strong within him that these ceremonies tended to his destruction. It + seems, however, that, after all the chief's efforts, his party was in + the minority, the greater part being adverse to either killing or robbing + the three strangers.</p> +<p>Every morning, at daybreak, an old warrior shouted the signal of departure; + and the recumbent savages leaped up, manned their birchen fleet, and plied + their paddles against the current, often without waiting to break their + fast. Sometimes they stopped for a buffalo-hunt on the neighboring prairies; + and there was no lack of provisions. They passed Lake Pepin, which Hennepin + called the Lake of Tears, by reason <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg + 257]</a></span> of the howlings and lamentations here uttered over him + by Aquipaguetin, and nineteen days after his capture landed near the site + of St. Paul. The father's sorrows now began in earnest. The Indians broke + his canoe to pieces, having first hidden their own among the alder-bushes. + As they belonged to different bands and different villages, their mutual + jealousy now overcame all their prudence; and each proceeded to claim + his share of the captives and the booty. Happily, they made an amicable + distribution, or it would have fared ill with the three Frenchmen; and + each taking his share, not forgetting the priestly vestments of Hennepin, + the splendor of which they could not sufficiently admire, they set out + across the country for their villages, which lay towards the north in + the neighborhood of Lake Buade, now called Mille Lac.</p> +<div class="sidenote">A HARD JOURNEY.</div> +<p>Being, says Hennepin, exceedingly tall and active, they walked at a prodigious + speed, insomuch that no European could long keep pace with them. Though + the month of May had begun, there were frosts at night; and the marshes + and ponds were glazed with ice, which cut the missionary's legs as he + waded through. They swam the larger streams, and Hennepin nearly perished + with cold as he emerged from the icy current. His two companions, who + were smaller than he, and who could not swim, were carried over on the + backs of the Indians. They showed, however, no little endurance; and he + declares that he should have dropped by the way, but for their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg + 258]</a></span> support. Seeing him disposed to lag, the Indians, to spur + him on, set fire to the dry grass behind him, and then, taking him by + the hands, ran forward with him to escape the flames. To add to his misery, + he was nearly famished, as they gave him only a small piece of smoked + meat once a day, though it does not appear that they themselves fared + better. On the fifth day, being by this time in extremity, he saw a crowd + of squaws and children approaching over the prairie, and presently descried + the bark lodges of an Indian town. The goal was reached. He was among + the homes of the Sioux.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_197" id="footnote_197"></a><a href="#fnanchor_197"> <span class="label">[197]</span></a> <i>Description de la Louisiane, nouvellement découverte</i>, + Paris, 1683.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_198" id="footnote_198"></a><a href="#fnanchor_198"> <span class="label">[198]</span></a> <i>Nouvelle Découverte d'un très grand Pays situé dans + l'Amérique</i>, Utrecht, 1697.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_199" id="footnote_199"></a><a href="#fnanchor_199"> <span class="label">[199]</span></a> <i>Nouvelle Découverte</i>, 248, 250, 251.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_200" id="footnote_200"></a><a href="#fnanchor_200"> <span class="label">[200]</span></a> See the preface of the Spanish translation by Don Sebastian Fernandez + de Medrano, 1699, and also the letter of Gravier, dated 1701, in Shea's <i>Early + Voyages on the Mississippi</i>. Barcia, Charlevoix, Kalm, and other + early writers put a low value on Hennepin's veracity.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_201" id="footnote_201"></a><a href="#fnanchor_201"> <span class="label">[201]</span></a> <i>Description de la Louisiane</i>, 218.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_202" id="footnote_202"></a><a href="#fnanchor_202"> <span class="label">[202]</span></a> La Salle, in the following year, with a far better equipment, + was more than three months and a half in making the journey. A Mississippi + trading-boat of the last generation, with sails and oars, ascending + against the current, was thought to do remarkably well if it could + make twenty miles a day. Hennepin, if we believe his own statements, + must have ascended at an average rate of sixty miles, though his canoe + was large and heavily laden.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_203" id="footnote_203"></a><a href="#fnanchor_203"> <span class="label">[203]</span></a> Hennepin here falls into gratuitous inconsistencies. In the edition + of 1697, in order to gain a little time, he says that he left the Illinois + on his voyage southward on the eighth of March, 1680; and yet in the + preceding chapter he repeats the statement of the first edition, that + he was detained at the Illinois by floating ice till the twelfth. Again, + he says in the first edition that he was captured by the Sioux on the + eleventh of April; and in the edition of 1697 he changes this date + to the twelfth, without gaining any advantage by doing so.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_204" id="footnote_204"></a><a href="#fnanchor_204"> <span class="label">[204]</span></a> Le Clerc's book had been made the text of an attack on the Jesuits. + See <i>Reflexions sur un Livre intitulé Premier Établissement + de la Foi</i>. This piece is printed in the <i>Morale Pratique des + Jésuites</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_205" id="footnote_205"></a><a href="#fnanchor_205"> <span class="label">[205]</span></a> Hennepin may have copied from the unpublished journal of Membré, + which the latter had placed in the hands of his Superior; or he may + have compiled from Le Clerc's book, relying on the suppression of the + edition to prevent detection. He certainly saw and used it; for he + elsewhere borrows the exact words of the editor. He is so careless + that he steals from Membré passages which he might easily have + written for himself; as, for example, a description of the opossum + and another of the cougar,—animals with which he was acquainted. + Compare the following pages of the <i>Nouvelle Découverte</i> with + the corresponding pages of Le Clerc: Hennepin, 252, Le Clerc, ii. 217; + H. 253, Le C. ii. 218; H. 257, Le C. ii. 221; H. 259, Le C. ii. 224; + H. 262, Le C. ii. 226; H. 265, Le C. ii. 229; H. 267, Le C. ii. 233; + H. 270, Le C. ii. 235; H. 280, Le C. ii. 240; H. 295, Le C. ii. 249; + H. 296, Le C. ii. 250; H. 297, Le C. ii. 253; H. 299, Le C. ii. 254; + H. 301, Le C. ii. 257. Some of these parallel passages will be found + in Sparks's <i>Life of La Salle</i>, where this remarkable fraud was + first fully exposed. In Shea's <i>Discovery of the Mississippi</i>, + there is an excellent critical examination of Hennepin's works. His + plagiarisms from Le Clerc are not confined to the passages cited above; + for in his later editions he stole largely from other parts of the + suppressed <i>Établissement de la Foi</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_206" id="footnote_206"></a><a href="#fnanchor_206"> <span class="label">[206]</span></a> It is certain that persons having the best means of information + believed at the time in Hennepin's story of his journeys on the Upper + Mississippi. The compiler of the <i>Relation des Découvertes</i>, + who was in close relations with La Salle and those who acted with him, + does not intimate a doubt of the truth of the report which Hennepin + on his return gave to the Provincial Commissary of his Order, and which + is in substance the same which he published two years later. The <i>Relation</i>, + it is to be observed, was written only a few months after the return + of Hennepin, and embodies the pith of his narrative of the Upper Mississippi, + no part of which had then been published.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_207" id="footnote_207"></a><a href="#fnanchor_207"> <span class="label">[207]</span></a> In this connection, it is well to examine the various Sioux words + which Hennepin uses incidentally, and which he must have acquired by + personal intercourse with the tribe, as no Frenchman then understood + the language. These words, as far as my information reaches, are in + every instance correct. Thus, he says that the Sioux called his breviary + a "bad spirit,"—<i>Ouackanché</i>. <i>Wakanshe</i>, or <i>Wakanshecha</i>, + would express the same meaning in modern English spelling. He says + elsewhere that they called the guns of his companions <i>Manzaouackanché</i>, + which he translates, "iron possessed with a bad spirit." The western + Sioux to this day call a gun <i>Manzawakan</i>, "metal possessed with + a spirit." <i>Chonga (shonka)</i>, "a dog," <i>Ouasi (wahsee)</i>, "a + pine-tree," <i>Chinnen (shinnan)</i>, "a robe," or "garment," and other + words, are given correctly, with their interpretations. The word <i>Louis</i>, + affirmed by Hennepin to mean "the sun," seems at first sight a wilful + inaccuracy, as this is not the word used in general by the Sioux. The + Yankton band of this people, however, call the sun <i>oouee</i>, which, + it is evident, represents the French pronunciation of <i>Louis</i>, + omitting the initial letter. This Hennepin would be apt enough to supply, + thereby conferring a compliment alike on himself, Louis Hennepin, and + on the King, Louis XIV., who, to the indignation of his brother monarchs, + had chosen the sun as his emblem.</p> + <p>Various trivial incidents touched upon by Hennepin, while recounting + his life among the Sioux, seem to me to afford a strong presumption + of an actual experience. I speak on this point with the more confidence, + as the Indians in whose lodges I was once domesticated for several + weeks belonged to a western band of the same people.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_208" id="footnote_208"></a><a href="#fnanchor_208"> <span class="label">[208]</span></a> Called Ako by Hennepin. In contemporary documents, it is written + Accau, Acau, D'Accau, Dacau, Dacan, and D'Accault.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_209" id="footnote_209"></a><a href="#fnanchor_209"> <span class="label">[209]</span></a> The edition of 1683 says that there were thirty-three canoes; + that of 1697 raises the number to fifty. The number of Indians is the + same in both. The later narrative is more in detail than the former.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_210" id="footnote_210"></a><a href="#fnanchor_210"> <span class="label">[210]</span></a> And yet it had, by his account, made a distance of thirteen hundred + and eighty miles from the mouth of the Mississippi upward in twenty-four + days!</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_211" id="footnote_211"></a><a href="#fnanchor_211"> <span class="label">[211]</span></a> This weeping and wailing over Hennepin once seemed to me an anomaly + in his account of Sioux manners, as I am not aware that such practices + are to be found among them at present. They are mentioned, however, + by other early writers. Le Sueur, who was among them in 1699-1700, + was wept over no less than Hennepin. See the abstract of his journal + in La Harpe.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg + 259]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2> +<p class="center">1680, 1681.</p> +<p class="center">HENNEPIN AMONG THE SIOUX.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Signs of Danger.—Adoption.—Hennepin +and his Indian Relatives.—The Hunting Party.—The +Sioux Camp.—Falls of St. Anthony.—A Vagabond Friar: his Adventures +on the Mississippi.—Greysolon du Lhut.—Return +to Civilization.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">As</span> Hennepin entered the village, he beheld a sight which caused him to + invoke Saint Anthony of Padua. In front of the lodges were certain stakes, + to which were attached bundles of straw, intended, as he supposed, for + burning him and his friends alive. His concern was redoubled when he saw + the condition of the Picard Du Gay, whose hair and face had been painted + with divers colors, and whose head was decorated with a tuft of white + feathers. In this guise he was entering the village, followed by a crowd + of Sioux, who compelled him to sing and keep time to his own music by + rattling a dried gourd containing a number of pebbles. The omens, indeed, + were exceedingly <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg + 260]</a></span> threatening; for treatment like this was usually followed + by the speedy immolation of the captive. Hennepin ascribes it to the effect + of his invocations, that, being led into one of the lodges, among a throng + of staring squaws and children, he and his companions were seated on the + ground, and presented with large dishes of birch-bark, containing a mess + of wild rice boiled with dried whortleberries,—a repast which he + declares to have been the best that had fallen to his lot since the day + of his captivity.<a name="fnanchor_212" id="fnanchor_212"></a><a href="#footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg + 261]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE SIOUX.</div> +<p>This soothed his fears; but, as he allayed his famished appetite, he listened + with anxious interest to the vehement jargon of the chiefs and warriors, + who were disputing among themselves to whom the three captives should + respectively belong; for it seems that, as far as related to them, the + question of distribution had not yet been definitely settled. The debate + ended in the assigning of Hennepin to his old enemy Aquipaguetin, who, + however, far from persisting in his evil designs, adopted him on the spot + as his son. The three companions must now part company. Du Gay, not yet + quite reassured of his safety, hastened to confess himself to Hennepin; + but Accau proved refractory, and refused the offices of religion, which + did not prevent the friar from embracing them both, as he says, with an + extreme tenderness. Tired as he was, he was forced to set out with his + self-styled father to his village, which was fortunately <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg + 262]</a></span> not far off. An unpleasant walk of a few miles through + woods and marshes brought them to the borders of a sheet of water, apparently + Lake Buade, where five of Aquipaguetin's wives received the party in three + canoes, and ferried them to an island on which the village stood.</p> +<p>At the entrance of the chief's lodge, Hennepin was met by a decrepit old + Indian, withered with age, who offered him the peace-pipe, and placed + him on a bear-skin which was spread by the fire. Here, to relieve his + fatigue,—for he was well-nigh spent,—a small boy anointed + his limbs with the fat of a wild-cat, supposed to be sovereign in these + cases by reason of the great agility of that animal. His new father gave + him a bark-platter of fish, covered him with a buffalo-robe, and showed + him six or seven of his wives, who were thenceforth, he was told, to regard + him as a son. The chief's household was numerous; and his allies and relatives + formed a considerable clan, of which the missionary found himself an involuntary + member. He was scandalized when he saw one of his adopted brothers carrying + on his back the bones of a deceased friend, wrapped in the chasuble of + brocade which they had taken with other vestments from his box.</p> +<div class="sidenote">HENNEPIN AS A MISSIONARY.</div> +<p>Seeing their new relative so enfeebled that he could scarcely stand, the + Indians made for him one of their sweating baths,<a name="fnanchor_213" id="fnanchor_213"></a><a href="#footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> where they immersed + him <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> in + steam three times a week,—a process from which he thinks he derived + great benefit. His strength gradually returned, in spite of his meagre + fare; for there was a dearth of food, and the squaws were less attentive + to his wants than to those of their children. They respected him, however, + as a person endowed with occult powers, and stood in no little awe of + a pocket compass which he had with him, as well as of a small metal pot + with feet moulded after the face of a lion. This last seemed in their + eyes a "medicine" of the most formidable nature, and they would not touch + it without first wrapping it in a beaver-skin. For the rest, Hennepin + made himself useful in various ways. He shaved the heads of the children, + as was the custom of the tribe; bled certain asthmatic persons, and dosed + others with orvietan, the famous panacea of his time, of which he had + brought with him a good supply. With respect to his missionary functions, + he seems to have given himself little trouble, unless his attempt to make + a Sioux vocabulary is to be regarded as preparatory to a future apostleship. "I + could gain nothing over them," he says, "in the way of their salvation, + by reason of their natural stupidity." Nevertheless, on one occasion, + he baptized a sick child, naming it Antoinette in honor of Saint Anthony + of Padua. It seemed to revive after the rite, but soon relapsed and presently <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg + 264]</a></span> died, "which," he writes, "gave me great joy and satisfaction." In + this he was like the Jesuits, who could find nothing but consolation in + the death of a newly baptized infant, since it was thus assured of a paradise + which, had it lived, it would probably have forfeited by sharing in the + superstitions of its parents.</p> +<p>With respect to Hennepin and his Indian father, there seems to have been + little love on either side; but Ouasicoudé, the principal chief + of the Sioux of this region, was the fast friend of the three white men. + He was angry that they had been robbed, which he had been unable to prevent, + as the Sioux had no laws, and their chiefs little power; but he spoke + his mind freely, and told Aquipaguetin and the rest, in full council, + that they were like a dog who steals a piece of meat from a dish and runs + away with it. When Hennepin complained of hunger, the Indians had always + promised him that early in the summer he should go with them on a buffalo + hunt, and have food in abundance. The time at length came, and the inhabitants + of all the neighboring villages prepared for departure. To each band was + assigned its special hunting-ground, and he was expected to accompany + his Indian father. To this he demurred; for he feared lest Aquipaguetin, + angry at the words of the great chief, might take this opportunity to + revenge the insult put upon him. He therefore gave out that he expected + a party of "Spirits"—that is to say, Frenchmen—to meet him <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg + 265]</a></span> at the mouth of the Wisconsin, bringing a supply of goods + for the Indians; and he declares that La Salle had in fact promised to + send traders to that place. Be this as it may, the Indians believed him; + and, true or false, the assertion, as will be seen, answered the purpose + for which it was made.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CAMP OF SAVAGES.</div> +<p>The Indians set out in a body to the number of two hundred and fifty warriors, + with their women and children. The three Frenchmen, who though in different + villages had occasionally met during the two months of their captivity, + were all of the party. They descended Rum River, which forms the outlet + of Mille Lac, and which is called the St. Francis by Hennepin. None of + the Indians had offered to give him passage; and, fearing lest he should + be abandoned, he stood on the bank, hailing the passing canoes and begging + to be taken in. Accau and Du Gay presently appeared, paddling a small + canoe which the Indians had given them; but they would not listen to the + missionary's call, and Accau, who had no love for him, cried out that + he had paddled him long enough already. Two Indians, however, took pity + on him, and brought him to the place of encampment, where Du Gay tried + to excuse himself for his conduct; but Accau was sullen, and kept aloof.</p> +<p>After reaching the Mississippi, the whole party encamped together opposite + to the mouth of Rum River, pitching their tents of skin, or building their + bark-huts, on the slope of a hill by the side of the water. It was a wild + scene, this camp of savages <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg + 266]</a></span> among whom as yet no traders had come and no handiwork + of civilization had found its way,—the tall warriors, some nearly + naked, some wrapped in buffalo-robes, and some in shirts of dressed deer-skin + fringed with hair and embroidered with dyed porcupine quills, war-clubs + of stone in their hands, and quivers at their backs filled with stone-headed + arrows; the squaws, cutting smoke-dried meat with knives of flint, and + boiling it in rude earthen pots of their own making, driving away, meanwhile, + with shrill cries, the troops of lean dogs, which disputed the meal with + a crew of hungry children. The whole camp, indeed, was threatened with + starvation. The three white men could get no food but unripe berries,—from + the effects of which Hennepin thinks they might all have died, but for + timely doses of his orvietan.</p> +<div class="sidenote">FALLS OF ST. ANTHONY.</div> +<p>Being tired of the Indians, he became anxious to set out for the Wisconsin + to find the party of Frenchmen, real or imaginary, who were to meet him + at that place. That he was permitted to do so was due to the influence + of the great chief Ouasicoudé, who always befriended him, and who + had soundly berated his two companions for refusing him a seat in their + canoe. Du Gay wished to go with him; but Accau, who liked the Indian life + as much as he disliked Hennepin, preferred to remain with the hunters. + A small birch-canoe was given to the two adventurers, together with an + earthen pot; and they had also between them a gun, a knife, and a robe + of beaver-skin. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg + 267]</a></span> Thus equipped, they began their journey, and soon approached + the Falls of St. Anthony, so named by Hennepin in honor of the inevitable + Saint Anthony of Padua.<a name="fnanchor_214" id="fnanchor_214"></a><a href="#footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a> As they were carrying their canoe by the + cataract, they saw five or six Indians, who had gone before, and one of + whom had climbed into an oak-tree beside the principal fall, whence in + a loud and lamentable voice he was haranguing the spirit of the waters, + as a sacrifice to whom he had just hung a robe of beaver-skin among the + branches.<a name="fnanchor_215" id="fnanchor_215"></a><a href="#footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> Their attention was soon engrossed by another object. Looking + over the edge of the cliff which overhung the river below the falls, Hennepin + saw a snake, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg + 268]</a></span> which, as he avers, was six feet long,<a name="fnanchor_216" id="fnanchor_216"></a><a href="#footnote_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> writhing upward + towards the holes of the swallows in the face of the precipice, in order + to devour their young. He pointed him out to Du Gay, and they pelted him + with stones till he fell into the river, but not before his contortions + and the darting of his forked tongue had so affected the Picard's imagination + that he was haunted that night with a terrific incubus.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ADVENTURES.</div> +<p>They paddled sixty leagues down the river in the heats of July, and killed + no large game but a single deer, the meat of which soon spoiled. Their + main resource was the turtles, whose shyness and watchfulness caused them + frequent disappointments and many involuntary fasts. They once captured + one of more than common size; and, as they were endeavoring to cut off + his head, he was near avenging himself by snapping off Hennepin's finger. + There was a herd of buffalo in sight on the neighboring prairie; and Du + Gay went with his gun in pursuit of them, leaving the turtle in Hennepin's + custody. Scarcely was he gone when the friar, raising his eyes, saw that + their canoe, which they had left at the edge of the water, had floated + out into the current. Hastily turning the turtle on his back, he covered + him with his habit of St. Francis, on which, for greater security, he + laid a number of stones, and then, being a good swimmer, struck out in + pursuit of the canoe, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg + 269]</a></span> which he at length overtook. Finding that it would overset + if he tried to climb into it, he pushed it before him to the shore, and + then paddled towards the place, at some distance above, where he had left + the turtle. He had no sooner reached it than he heard a strange sound, + and beheld a long file of buffalo—bulls, cows, and calves—entering + the water not far off, to cross to the western bank. Having no gun, as + became his apostolic vocation, he shouted to Du Gay, who presently appeared, + running in all haste, and they both paddled in pursuit of the game. Du + Gay aimed at a young cow, and shot her in the head. She fell in shallow + water near an island, where some of the herd had landed; and being unable + to drag her out, they waded into the water and butchered her where she + lay. It was forty-eight hours since they had tasted food. Hennepin made + a fire, while Du Gay cut up the meat. They feasted so bountifully that + they both fell ill, and were forced to remain two days on the island, + taking doses of orvietan, before they were able to resume their journey.</p> +<p>Apparently they were not sufficiently versed in woodcraft to smoke the + meat of the cow; and the hot sun soon robbed them of it. They had a few + fishhooks, but were not always successful in the use of them. On one occasion, + being nearly famished, they set their line, and lay watching it, uttering + prayers in turn. Suddenly, there was a great turmoil in the water. Du + Gay ran to the line, and, with the help <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg + 270]</a></span> of Hennepin, drew in two large cat-fish.<a name="fnanchor_217" id="fnanchor_217"></a><a href="#footnote_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> The eagles, + or fish-hawks, now and then dropped a newly caught fish, of which they + gladly took possession; and once they found a purveyor in an otter which + they saw by the bank, devouring some object of an appearance so wonderful + that Du Gay cried out that he had a devil between his paws. They scared + him from his prey, which proved to be a spade-fish, or, as Hennepin correctly + describes it, a species of sturgeon, with a bony projection from his snout + in the shape of a paddle. They broke their fast upon him, undeterred by + this eccentric appendage.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI.</div> +<p>If Hennepin had had an eye for scenery, he would have found in these his + vagabond rovings wherewith to console himself in some measure for his + frequent fasts. The young Mississippi, fresh from its northern springs, + unstained as yet by unhallowed union with the riotous Missouri, flowed + calmly on its way amid strange and unique beauties,—a wilderness, + clothed with velvet grass; forest-shadowed valleys; lofty heights, whose + smooth slopes seemed levelled with the scythe; domes and pinnacles, ramparts + and ruined towers, the work of no human hand. The canoe of the voyagers, + borne on the tranquil current, glided in the shade of gray crags festooned + with honeysuckles; by trees mantled with wild grape-vines; <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg + 271]</a></span> dells bright with the flowers of the white euphorbia, + the blue gentian, and the purple balm; and matted forests, where the red + squirrels leaped and chattered. They passed the great cliff whence the + Indian maiden threw herself in her despair;<a name="fnanchor_218" id="fnanchor_218"></a><a href="#footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> and Lake Pepin lay before + them, slumbering in the July sun,—the far-reaching sheets of sparkling + water, the woody slopes, the tower-like crags, the grassy heights basking + in sunlight or shadowed by the passing cloud; all the fair outline of + its graceful scenery, the finished and polished master-work of Nature. + And when at evening they made their bivouac fire and drew up their canoe, + while dim, sultry clouds veiled the west, and the flashes of the silent + heat-lightning gleamed on the leaden water, they could listen, as they + smoked their pipes, to the mournful cry of the whippoorwills and the quavering + scream of the owls.</p> +<p>Other thoughts than the study of the picturesque occupied the mind of + Hennepin when one day he saw his Indian father, Aquipaguetin, whom he + had supposed five hundred miles distant, descending the river with ten + warriors in canoes. He was eager to be the first to meet the traders, + who, as Hennepin had given out, were to come with their goods to the mouth + of the Wisconsin. The two travellers trembled <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg + 272]</a></span> for the consequences of this encounter; but the chief, + after a short colloquy, passed on his way. In three days he returned in + ill-humor, having found no traders at the appointed spot. The Picard was + absent at the time, looking for game; and Hennepin was sitting under the + shade of his blanket, which he had stretched on forked sticks to protect + him from the sun, when he saw his adopted father approaching with a threatening + look, and a war-club in his hand. He attempted no violence, however, but + suffered his wrath to exhale in a severe scolding, after which he resumed + his course up the river with his warriors.</p> +<p>If Hennepin, as he avers, really expected a party of traders at the Wisconsin, + the course he now took is sufficiently explicable. If he did not expect + them, his obvious course was to rejoin Tonty on the Illinois, for which + he seems to have had no inclination; or to return to Canada by way of + the Wisconsin,—an attempt which involved the risk of starvation, + as the two travellers had but ten charges of powder left. Assuming, then, + his hope of the traders to have been real, he and Du Gay resolved, in + the mean time, to join a large body of Sioux hunters, who, as Aquipaguetin + had told them, were on a stream which he calls Bull River, now the Chippeway, + entering the Mississippi near Lake Pepin. By so doing, they would gain + a supply of food, and save themselves from the danger of encountering + parties of roving warriors.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg + 273]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">HE REJOINS THE INDIANS.</div> +<p>They found this band, among whom was their companion Accau, and followed + them on a grand hunt along the borders of the Mississippi. Du Gay was + separated for a time from Hennepin, who was placed in a canoe with a withered + squaw more than eighty years old. In spite of her age, she handled her + paddle with great address, and used it vigorously, as occasion required, + to repress the gambols of three children, who, to Hennepin's annoyance, + occupied the middle of the canoe. The hunt was successful. The Sioux warriors, + active as deer, chased the buffalo on foot with their stone-headed arrows, + on the plains behind the heights that bordered the river; while the old + men stood sentinels at the top, watching for the approach of enemies. + One day an alarm was given. The warriors rushed towards the supposed point + of danger, but found nothing more formidable than two squaws of their + own nation, who brought strange news. A war-party of Sioux, they said, + had gone towards Lake Superior, and had met by the way five "Spirits;" that + is to say, five Europeans. Hennepin was full of curiosity to learn who + the strangers might be; and they, on their part, were said to have shown + great anxiety to know the nationality of the three white men who, as they + were told, were on the river. The hunt was over; and the hunters, with + Hennepin and his companion, were on their way northward to their towns, + when they met the five "Spirits" at some distance below the Falls of St. + Anthony. They proved to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg + 274]</a></span> be Daniel Greysolon du Lhut, with four well-armed Frenchmen.</p> +<div class="sidenote">DE LHUT'S EXPLORATIONS.</div> +<p>This bold and enterprising man, stigmatized by the Intendant Duchesneau + as a leader of <i>coureurs de bois</i>, was a cousin of Tonty, born at + Lyons. He belonged to that caste of the lesser nobles whose name was legion, + and whose admirable military qualities shone forth so conspicuously in + the wars of Louis XIV. Though his enterprises were independent of those + of La Salle, they were at this time carried on in connection with Count + Frontenac and certain merchants in his interest, of whom Du Lhut's uncle, + Patron, was one; while Louvigny, his brother-in-law, was in alliance with + the governor, and was an officer of his guard. Here, then, was a kind + of family league, countenanced by Frontenac, and acting conjointly with + him, in order, if the angry letters of the intendant are to be believed, + to reap a clandestine profit under the shadow of the governor's authority, + and in violation of the royal ordinances. The rudest part of the work + fell to the share of Du Lhut, who with a persistent hardihood, not surpassed + perhaps even by La Salle, was continually in the forest, in the Indian + towns, or in remote wilderness outposts planted by himself, exploring, + trading, fighting, ruling lawless savages and whites scarcely less ungovernable, + and on one or more occasions varying his life by crossing the ocean to + gain interviews with the colonial minister Seignelay, amid the splendid + vanities of Versailles. Strange to say, this man of hardy enterprise was + a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> martyr + to the gout, which for more than a quarter of a century grievously tormented + him; though for a time he thought himself cured by the intercession of + the Iroquois saint, Catharine Tegahkouita, to whom he had made a vow to + that end. He was, without doubt, an habitual breaker of the royal ordinances + regulating the fur-trade; yet his services were great to the colony and + to the crown, and his name deserves a place of honor among the pioneers + of American civilization.<a name="fnanchor_219" id="fnanchor_219"></a><a href="#footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg + 276]</a></span></p> +<p>When Hennepin met him, he had been about two years in the wilderness. + In September, 1678, he left Quebec for the purpose of exploring the region + of the Upper Mississippi, and establishing relations of friendship with + the Sioux and their kindred the Assiniboins. In the summer of 1679 he + visited three large towns of the eastern division of the Sioux, including + those visited by Hennepin in the following year, and planted the King's + arms in all of them. Early in the autumn he was at the head of Lake Superior, + holding a council with the Assiniboins and the lake tribes, and inducing + them to live at peace with the Sioux. In all this, he acted in a public <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg + 277]</a></span> capacity, under the authority of the governor; but it + is not to be supposed that he forgot his own interests or those of his + associates. The intendant angrily complains that he aided and abetted + the <i>coureurs de bois</i> in their lawless courses, and sent down in + their canoes great quantities of beaver-skins consigned to the merchants + in league with him, under cover of whose names the governor reaped his + share of the profits.</p> +<p>In June, 1680, while Hennepin was in the Sioux villages, Du Lhut set out + from the head of Lake Superior, with two canoes, four Frenchmen, and an + Indian, to continue his explorations.<a name="fnanchor_220" id="fnanchor_220"></a><a href="#footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> He ascended a river, apparently + the Burnt Wood, and reached from thence a branch of the Mississippi, which + seems to have been the St. Croix. It was now that, to his surprise, he + learned that there were three Europeans on the main river below; and fearing + that they might be Englishmen or Spaniards encroaching on the territories + of the King, he eagerly pressed forward to solve his doubts. When he saw + Hennepin, his mind was set at rest; and the travellers met with mutual + cordiality. They followed the Indians to their villages of Mille Lac, + where Hennepin had now no reason to complain of their treatment of him. + The Sioux gave him and Du Lhut a grand feast of honor, at which were seated + a hundred and twenty naked guests; and the great chief Ouasicoudé, + with his <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span> own + hands, placed before Hennepin a bark dish containing a mess of smoked + meat and wild rice.</p> +<p>Autumn had come, and the travellers bethought them of going home. The + Sioux, consoled by their promises to return with goods for trade, did + not oppose their departure; and they set out together, eight white men + in all. As they passed St. Anthony's Falls, two of the men stole two buffalo-robes + which were hung on trees as offerings to the spirit of the cataract. When + Du Lhut heard of it he was very angry, telling the men that they had endangered + the lives of the whole party. Hennepin admitted that in the view of human + prudence he was right, but urged that the act was good and praiseworthy, + inasmuch as the offerings were made to a false god; while the men, on + their part, proved mutinous, declaring that they wanted the robes and + meant to keep them. The travellers continued their journey in great ill-humor, + but were presently soothed by the excellent hunting which they found on + the way. As they approached the Wisconsin, they stopped to dry the meat + of the buffalo they had killed, when to their amazement they saw a war-party + of Sioux approaching in a fleet of canoes. Hennepin represents himself + as showing on this occasion an extraordinary courage, going to meet the + Indians with a peace-pipe, and instructing Du Lhut, who knew more of these + matters than he, how he ought to behave. The Sioux proved not unfriendly, + and said nothing of the theft of the buffalo-robes. They soon went on + their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span> way + to attack the Illinois and Missouris, leaving the Frenchmen to ascend + the Wisconsin unmolested.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE RETURN.</div> +<p>After various adventures, they reached the station of the Jesuits at Green + Bay; but its existence is wholly ignored by Hennepin, whose zeal for his + own Order will not permit him to allude to this establishment of the rival + missionaries.<a name="fnanchor_221" id="fnanchor_221"></a><a href="#footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> He is equally reticent with regard to the Jesuit mission + at Michilimackinac, where the party soon after arrived, and where they + spent the winter. The only intimation which he gives of its existence + consists in the mention of the Jesuit Pierson, who was a Fleming like + himself, and who often skated with him on the frozen lake, or kept him + company in fishing through a hole in the ice.<a name="fnanchor_222" id="fnanchor_222"></a><a href="#footnote_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> When the spring opened, + Hennepin descended Lake Huron, followed the Detroit to Lake Erie, and + proceeded thence to Niagara. Here he spent some time in making a fresh + examination of the cataract, and then resumed his voyage on Lake Ontario. + He stopped, however, at the great town of the Senecas, near the Genesee, + where, with his usual spirit of meddling, he took upon him the functions + of the civil and military <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg + 280]</a></span> authorities, convoked the chiefs to a council, and urged + them to set at liberty certain Ottawa prisoners whom they had captured + in violation of treaties. Having settled this affair to his satisfaction, + he went to Fort Frontenac, where his brother missionary, Buisset, received + him with a welcome rendered the warmer by a story which had reached him + that the Indians had hanged Hennepin with his own cord of St. Francis.</p> +<p>From Fort Frontenac he went to Montreal; and leaving his two men on a + neighboring island, that they might escape the payment of duties on a + quantity of furs which they had with them, he paddled alone towards the + town. Count Frontenac chanced to be here, and, looking from the window + of a house near the river, he saw approaching in a canoe a Récollet + father, whose appearance indicated the extremity of hard service; for + his face was worn and sunburnt, and his tattered habit of St. Francis + was abundantly patched with scraps of buffalo-skin. When at length he + recognized the long-lost Hennepin, he received him, as the father writes, "with + all the tenderness which a missionary could expect from a person of his + rank and quality." He kept him for twelve days in his own house, and listened + with interest to such of his adventures as the friar saw fit to divulge.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S LETTERS.</div> +<p>And here we bid farewell to Father Hennepin. "Providence," he writes, "preserved + my life that I might make known my great discoveries to the world." He + soon after went to Europe, where the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg + 281]</a></span> story of his travels found a host of readers, but where + he died at last in a deserved obscurity.<a name="fnanchor_223" id="fnanchor_223"></a><a href="#footnote_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_212" id="footnote_212"></a><a href="#fnanchor_212"> <span class="label">[212]</span></a> The Sioux, or Dacotah, as they call themselves, were a numerous + people, separated into three great divisions, which were again subdivided + into bands. Those among whom Hennepin was a prisoner belonged to the + division known as the Issanti, Issanyati, or, as he writes it, <i>Issati</i>, + of which the principal band was the Meddewakantonwan. The other great + divisions, the Yanktons and the Tintonwans, or Tetons, lived west of + the Mississippi, extending beyond the Missouri, and ranging as far + as the Rocky Mountains. The Issanti cultivated the soil; but the extreme + western bands subsisted on the buffalo alone. The former had two kinds + of dwelling,—the <i>teepee</i>, or skin-lodge, and the bark-lodge. + The teepee, which was used by all the Sioux, consists of a covering + of dressed buffalo-hide, stretched on a conical stack of poles. The + bark-lodge was peculiar to the Eastern Sioux; and examples of it might + be seen, until within a few years, among the bands on the St. Peter's. + In its general character, it was like the Huron and Iroquois houses, + but was inferior in construction. It had a ridge roof, framed of poles, + extending from the posts which formed the sides; and the whole was + covered with elm-bark. The lodges in the villages to which Hennepin + was conducted were probably of this kind.</p> + <p>The name Sioux is an abbreviation of <i>Nadouessioux</i>, an Ojibwa + word, meaning "enemies." The Ojibwas used it to designate this people, + and occasionally also the Iroquois, being at deadly war with both.</p> + <p>Rev. Stephen B. Riggs, for many years a missionary among the Issanti + Sioux, says that this division consists of four distinct bands. They + ceded all their lands east of the Mississippi to the United States + in 1837, and lived on the St. Peter's till driven thence in consequence + of the massacres of 1862, 1863. The Yankton Sioux consist of two bands, + which are again subdivided. The Assiniboins, or Hohays, are an offshoot + from the Yanktons, with whom they are now at war. The Tintonwan, or + Teton Sioux, forming the most western division and the largest, comprise + seven bands, and are among the bravest and fiercest tenants of the + prairie.</p> + <p>The earliest French writers estimate the total number of the Sioux + at forty thousand; but this is little better than conjecture. Mr. Riggs, + in 1852, placed it at about twenty-five thousand.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_213" id="footnote_213"></a><a href="#fnanchor_213"> <span class="label">[213]</span></a> These baths consist of a small hut, covered closely with buffalo-skins, + into which the patient and his friends enter, carefully closing every + aperture. A pile of heated stones is placed in the middle, and water + is poured upon them, raising a dense vapor. They are still (1868) in + use among the Sioux and some other tribes.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_214" id="footnote_214"></a><a href="#fnanchor_214"> <span class="label">[214]</span></a> Hennepin's notice of the falls of St. Anthony, though brief, + is sufficiently accurate. He says, in his first edition, that they + are forty or fifty feet high, but adds ten feet more in the edition + of 1697. In 1821, according to Schoolcraft, the perpendicular fall + measured forty feet. Great changes, however, have taken place here, + and are still in progress. The rock is a very soft, friable sandstone, + overlaid by a stratum of limestone; and it is crumbling with such rapidity + under the action of the water that the cataract will soon be little + more than a rapid. Other changes equally disastrous, in an artistic + point of view, are going on even more quickly. Beside the falls stands + a city, which, by an ingenious combination of the Greek and Sioux languages, + has received the name of Minneapolis, or City of the Waters, and which + in 1867 contained ten thousand inhabitants, two national banks, and + an opera-house; while its rival city of St. Anthony, immediately opposite, + boasted a gigantic water-cure and a State university. In short, the + great natural beauty of the place is utterly spoiled.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_215" id="footnote_215"></a><a href="#fnanchor_215"> <span class="label">[215]</span></a> Oanktayhee, the principal deity of the Sioux, was supposed to + live under these falls, though he manifested himself in the form of + a buffalo. It was he who created the earth, like the Algonquin Manabozho, + from mud brought to him in the paws of a musk-rat. Carver, in 1766, + saw an Indian throw everything he had about him into the cataract as + an offering to this deity.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_216" id="footnote_216"></a><a href="#fnanchor_216"> <span class="label">[216]</span></a> In the edition of 1683. In that of 1697 he had grown to seven + or eight feet. The bank-swallows still make their nests in these cliffs, + boring easily into the soft sandstone.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_217" id="footnote_217"></a><a href="#fnanchor_217"> <span class="label">[217]</span></a> Hennepin speaks of their size with astonishment, and says that + the two together would weigh twenty-five pounds. Cat-fish have been + taken in the Mississippi, weighing more than a hundred and fifty pounds.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_218" id="footnote_218"></a><a href="#fnanchor_218"> <span class="label">[218]</span></a> The "Lover's Leap," or "Maiden's Rock" from which a Sioux girl, + Winona, or the "Eldest Born," is said to have thrown herself, in the + despair of disappointed affection. The story, which seems founded in + truth, will be found, not without embellishments, in Mrs. Eastman's <i>Legends + of the Sioux</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_219" id="footnote_219"></a><a href="#fnanchor_219"> <span class="label">[219]</span></a> The facts concerning Du Lhut have been gleaned from a variety + of contemporary documents, chiefly the letters of his enemy Duchesneau, + who always puts him in the worst light, especially in his despatch + to Seignelay of 10 Nov., 1679, where he charges both him and the governor + with carrying on an illicit trade with the English of New York. Du + Lhut himself, in a memoir dated 1685 (see Harrisse, <i>Bibliographie</i>, + 176), strongly denies these charges. Du Lhut built a trading fort on + Lake Superior, called Cananistigoyan (La Hontan), or Kamalastigouia + (Perrot). It was on the north side, at the mouth of a river entering + Thunder Bay, where Fort William now stands. In 1684 he caused two Indians, + who had murdered several Frenchmen on Lake Superior, to be shot. He + displayed in this affair great courage and coolness, undaunted by the + crowd of excited savages who surrounded him and his little band of + Frenchmen. The long letter, in which he recounts the capture and execution + of the murderers, is before me. Duchesneau makes his conduct on this + occasion the ground of a charge of rashness. In 1686 Denonville, then + governor of the colony, ordered him to fortify the Detroit; that is, + the strait between Lakes Erie and Huron. He went thither with fifty + men and built a palisade fort, which he occupied for some time. In + 1687 he, together with Tonty and Durantaye, joined Denonville against + the Senecas, with a body of Indians from the Upper Lakes. In 1689, + during the panic that followed the Iroquois invasion of Montreal, Du + Lhut, with twenty-eight Canadians, attacked twenty-two Iroquois in + canoes, received their fire without returning it, bore down upon them, + killed eighteen of them, and captured three, only one escaping. In + 1695 he was in command at Fort Frontenac. In 1697 he succeeded to the + command of a company of infantry, but was suffering wretchedly from + the gout at Fort Frontenac. In 1710 Vaudreuil, in a despatch to the + minister Ponchartrain, announced his death as occurring in the previous + winter, and added the brief comment, "c'était un très-honnête + homme." Other contemporaries speak to the same effect. "M<sup>r.</sup> Dulhut, + Gentilhomme Lionnois, qui a beaucoup de mérite et de capacité."—<i>La + Hontan</i>, i. 103 (1703). "Le Sieur du Lut, homme d'esprit et d'expérience."—<i>Le + Clerc</i>, ii. 137. Charlevoix calls him "one of the bravest officers + the King has ever had in this colony." His name is variously spelled + Du Luc, Du Lud, Du Lude, Du Lut, Du Luth, Du Lhut. For an account of + the Iroquois virgin, Tegahkouita, whose intercession is said to have + cured him of the gout, see Charlevoix, i. 572.</p> + <p>On a contemporary manuscript map by the Jesuit Raffeix, representing + the routes of Marquette, La Salle, and Du Lhut, are the following words, + referring to the last-named discoverer, and interesting in connection + with Hennepin's statements: "M<sup>r.</sup> du Lude le premier a esté chez + les Sioux en 1678, et a esté proche la source du Mississippi, + et ensuite vint retirer le P. Louis [<i>Hennepin</i>] qui avoit esté fait + prisonnier chez les Sioux." Du Lhut here appears as the deliverer of + Hennepin. One of his men was named Pepin; hence, no doubt, the name + of Lake Pepin.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_220" id="footnote_220"></a><a href="#fnanchor_220"> <span class="label">[220]</span></a> <i>Memoir on the French Dominion in Canada, N. Y. Col. Docs.</i>, + ix. 781.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_221" id="footnote_221"></a><a href="#fnanchor_221"> <span class="label">[221]</span></a> On the other hand, he sets down on his map of 1683 a mission + of the Récollets at a point north of the farthest sources of + the Mississippi, to which no white man had ever penetrated.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_222" id="footnote_222"></a><a href="#fnanchor_222"> <span class="label">[222]</span></a> He says that Pierson had come among the Indians to learn their + language; that he "retained the frankness and rectitude of our country" and "a + disposition always on the side of candor and sincerity. In a word, + he seemed to me to be all that a Christian ought to be" (1697), 433.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_223" id="footnote_223"></a><a href="#fnanchor_223"> <span class="label">[223]</span></a> Since the two preceding chapters were written, the letters of + La Salle have been brought to light by the researches of M. Margry. + They confirm, in nearly all points, the conclusions given above; though, + as before observed (<i>note</i>, 186), they show misstatements on the + part of Hennepin concerning his position at the outset of the expedition. + La Salle writes: "J'ay fait remonter le fleuve Colbert, nommé par + les Iroquois Gastacha, par les Outaouais Mississipy par un canot conduit + par deux de mes gens, l'un nommé Michel Accault et l'autre Picard, + auxquels le R. P. Hennepin se joignit pour ne perdre pas l'occasion + de prescher l'Évangile aux peuples qui habitent dessus et qui + n'en avoient jamais oui parler." In the same letter he recounts their + voyage on the Upper Mississippi, and their capture by the Sioux in + accordance with the story of Hennepin himself. Hennepin's assertion, + that La Salle had promised to send a number of men to meet him at the + mouth of the Wisconsin, turns out to be true. "Estans tous revenus + en chasse avec les Nadouessioux [<i>Sioux</i>] vers Ouisconsing [<i>Wisconsin</i>], + le R. P. Louis Hempin [<i>Hennepin</i>] et Picard prirent résolution + de venir jusqu'à l'emboucheure de la rivière où j'avois + promis d'envoyer de mes nouvelles, comme j'avois fait par six hommes + que les Jésuistes desbauchèrent en leur disant que le + R. P. Louis et ses compagnons de voyage avoient esté tuez."</p> + <p>It is clear that La Salle understood Hennepin; for, after speaking + of his journey, he adds: "J'ai cru qu'il estoit à propos de + vous faire le narré des aventures de ce canot parce que je ne + doute pas qu'on en parle; et si vous souhaitez en conférer avec + le P. Louis Hempin, Récollect, qui est repassé en France, + il faut un peu le connoistre, car il ne manquera pas d'exagérer + toutes choses, c'est son caractère, et à moy mesme il + m'a escrit comme s'il eust esté tout près d'estre bruslé, + quoiqu'il n'en ait pas esté seulement en danger; mais il croit + qu'il luy est honorable de le faire de la sorte, et <i>il parle plus + conformément à ce qu'il veut qu'à ce qu'il scait</i>."—<i>Lettre + de la Salle, 22 Août, 1682</i> (1681?), Margry, ii. 259.</p> + <p>On his return to France, Hennepin got hold of the manuscript, <i>Relation + des Découvertes</i>, compiled for the government from La + Salle's letters, and, as already observed, made very free use of + it in the first edition of his book, printed in 1683. In 1699 he + wished to return to Canada; but, in a letter of that year, Louis + XIV. orders the governor <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg + 282]</a></span> to seize him, should he appear, and send + him prisoner to Rochefort. This seems to have been in consequence + of his renouncing the service of the French crown, and dedicating + his edition of 1697 to William III. of England.</p> + <p>More than twenty editions of Hennepin's travels appeared, in French, + English, Dutch, German, Italian, and Spanish. Most of them include + the mendacious narrative of the pretended descent of the Mississippi. + For a list of them, see <i>Hist. Mag.</i>, i. 346; ii. 24.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2> +<p class="center">1681.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE BEGINS ANEW.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">His Constancy; his Plans; +his Savage Allies; he becomes Snow-blind.—Negotiations.—Grand +Council.—La Salle's Oratory.—Meeting with Tonty.—Preparation.—Departure.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">In</span> tracing the adventures of Tonty and the rovings of Hennepin, we have + lost sight of La Salle, the pivot of the enterprise. Returning from the + desolation and horror in the valley of the Illinois, he had spent the + winter at Fort Miami, on the St. Joseph, by the borders of Lake Michigan. + Here he might have brooded on the redoubled ruin that had befallen him,—the + desponding friends, the exulting foes; the wasted energies, the crushing + load of debt, the stormy past, the black and lowering future. But his + mind was of a different temper. He had no thought but to grapple with + adversity, and out of the fragments of his ruin to build up the fabric + of success.</p> +<p>He would not recoil; but he modified his plans to meet the new contingency. + His white enemies had found, or rather perhaps had made, a savage ally + in the Iroquois. Their incursions must be stopped, or <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg + 284]</a></span> his enterprise would come to nought; and he thought he + saw the means by which this new danger could be converted into a source + of strength. The tribes of the West, threatened by the common enemy, might + be taught to forget their mutual animosities and join in a defensive league, + with La Salle at its head. They might be colonized around his fort in + the valley of the Illinois, where in the shadow of the French flag, and + with the aid of French allies, they could hold the Iroquois in check, + and acquire in some measure the arts of a settled life. The Franciscan + friars could teach them the Faith; and La Salle and his associates could + supply them with goods, in exchange for the vast harvest of furs which + their hunters could gather in these boundless wilds. Meanwhile, he would + seek out the mouth of the Mississippi; and the furs gathered at his colony + in the Illinois would then find a ready passage to the markets of the + world. Thus might this ancient slaughter-field of warring savages be redeemed + to civilization and Christianity; and a stable settlement, half-feudal, + half-commercial, grow up in the heart of the western wilderness. This + plan was but a part of the original scheme of his enterprise, adapted + to new and unexpected circumstances; and he now set himself to its execution + with his usual vigor, joined to an address which, when dealing with Indians, + never failed him.</p> +<div class="sidenote">INDIAN FRIENDS.</div> +<p>There were allies close at hand. Near Fort Miami were the huts of twenty-five + or thirty savages, exiles <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg + 285]</a></span> from their homes, and strangers in this western world. + Several of the English colonies, from Virginia to Maine, had of late years + been harassed by Indian wars; and the Puritans of New England, above all, + had been scourged by the deadly outbreak of King Philip's war. Those engaged + in it had paid a bitter price for their brief triumphs. A band of refugees, + chiefly Abenakis and Mohegans, driven from their native seats, had roamed + into these distant wilds, and were wintering in the friendly neighborhood + of the French. La Salle soon won them over to his interests. One of their + number was the Mohegan hunter, who for two years had faithfully followed + his fortunes, and who had been four years in the West. He is described + as a prudent and discreet young man, in whom La Salle had great confidence, + and who could make himself understood in several western languages, belonging, + like his own, to the great Algonquin tongue. This devoted henchman proved + an efficient mediator with his countrymen. The New-England Indians, with + one voice, promised to follow La Salle, asking no recompense but to call + him their chief, and yield to him the love and admiration which he rarely + failed to command from this hero-worshipping race.</p> +<p>New allies soon appeared. A Shawanoe chief from the valley of the Ohio, + whose following embraced a hundred and fifty warriors, came to ask the + protection of the French against the all-destroying Iroquois. "The Shawanoes + are too distant," was La Salle's <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg + 286]</a></span> reply; "but let them come to me at the Illinois, and they + shall be safe." The chief promised to join him in the autumn, at Fort + Miami, with all his band. But, more important than all, the consent and + co-operation of the Illinois must be gained; and the Miamis, their neighbors + and of late their enemies, must be taught the folly of their league with + the Iroquois, and the necessity of joining in the new confederation. Of + late, they had been made to see the perfidy of their dangerous allies. + A band of the Iroquois, returning from the slaughter of the Tamaroa Illinois, + had met and murdered a band of Miamis on the Ohio, and had not only refused + satisfaction, but had intrenched themselves in three rude forts of trees + and brushwood in the heart of the Miami country. The moment was favorable + for negotiating; but, first, La Salle wished to open a communication with + the Illinois, some of whom had begun to return to the country they had + abandoned. With this view, and also, it seems, to procure provisions, + he set out on the first of March, with his lieutenant La Forest, and fifteen + men.</p> +<p>The country was sheeted in snow, and the party journeyed on snow-shoes; + but when they reached the open prairies, the white expanse glared in the + sun with so dazzling a brightness that La Salle and several of the men + became snow-blind. They stopped and encamped under the edge of a forest; + and here La Salle remained in darkness for three days, suffering extreme + pain. Meanwhile, he sent forward La <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg + 287]</a></span> Forest and most of the men, keeping with him his old attendant + Hunaut. Going out in quest of pine-leaves,—a decoction of which + was supposed to be useful in cases of snow-blindness,—this man discovered + the fresh tracks of Indians, followed them, and found a camp of Outagamies, + or Foxes, from the neighborhood of Green Bay. From them he heard welcome + news. They told him that Tonty was safe among the Pottawattamies, and + that Hennepin had passed through their country on his return from among + the Sioux.<a name="fnanchor_224" id="fnanchor_224"></a><a href="#footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">ILLINOIS ALLIES.</div> +<p>A thaw took place; the snow melted rapidly; the rivers were opened; the + blind men began to recover; and launching the canoes which they had dragged + after them, the party pursued their way by water. They soon met a band + of Illinois. La Salle gave them presents, condoled with them on their + losses, and urged them to make peace and alliance with the Miamis. Thus, + he said, they could set the Iroquois at defiance; for he himself, with + his Frenchmen and his Indian friends, would make his abode among them, + supply them with goods, and aid them to defend themselves. They listened, + well pleased, promised to carry his message to their countrymen, and furnished + him with a large supply of corn.<a name="fnanchor_225" id="fnanchor_225"></a><a href="#footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> Meanwhile he had rejoined La Forest, + whom he now <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg + 288]</a></span> sent to Michilimackinac to await Tonty, and tell him to + remain there till he, La Salle, should arrive.</p> +<p>Having thus accomplished the objects of his journey, he returned to Fort + Miami, whence he soon after ascended the St. Joseph to the village of + the Miami Indians, on the portage, at the head of the Kankakee. Here he + found unwelcome guests. These were three Iroquois warriors, who had been + for some time in the place, and who, as he was told, had demeaned themselves + with the insolence of conquerors, and spoken of the French with the utmost + contempt. He hastened to confront them, rebuked and menaced them, and + told them that now, when he was present, they dared not repeat the calumnies + which they had uttered in his absence. They stood abashed and confounded, + and during the following night secretly left the town and fled. The effect + was prodigious on the minds of the Miamis, when they saw that La Salle, + backed by ten Frenchmen, could command from their arrogant visitors a + respect which they, with their hundreds of warriors, had wholly failed + to inspire. Here, at the outset, was an augury full of promise for the + approaching negotiations.</p> +<p>There were other strangers in the town,—a band of eastern Indians, + more numerous than those who had wintered at the fort. The greater number + were from Rhode Island, including, probably, some of King Philip's warriors; + others were from New York, and others again from Virginia. La Salle called <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg + 289]</a></span> them to a council, promised them a new home in the West + under the protection of the Great King, with rich lands, an abundance + of game, and French traders to supply them with the goods which they had + once received from the English. Let them but help him to make peace between + the Miamis and the Illinois, and he would insure for them a future of + prosperity and safety. They listened with open ears, and promised their + aid in the work of peace.</p> +<div class="sidenote">GRAND COUNCIL.</div> +<p>On the next morning, the Miamis were called to a grand council. It was + held in the lodge of their chief, from which the mats were removed, that + the crowd without might hear what was said. La Salle rose and harangued + the concourse. Few men were so skilled in the arts of forest rhetoric + and diplomacy. After the Indian mode, he was, to follow his chroniclers, "the + greatest orator in North America."<a name="fnanchor_226" id="fnanchor_226"></a><a href="#footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> He began with a gift of tobacco, + to clear the brains of his auditory; next, for he had brought a canoe-load + of presents to support his eloquence, he gave them cloth to cover their + dead, coats to dress them, hatchets to build a grand scaffold in their + honor, and beads, bells, and trinkets of all sorts, to decorate their + relatives at a grand funeral feast. All this was mere metaphor. The living, + while appropriating the gifts to their own use, were pleased at the compliment + offered to their dead; and their delight redoubled as the orator proceeded. + One of their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg + 290]</a></span> great chiefs had lately been killed; and La Salle, after + a eulogy of the departed, declared that he would now raise him to life + again; that is, that he would assume his name and give support to his + squaws and children. This flattering announcement drew forth an outburst + of applause; and when, to confirm his words, his attendants placed before + them a huge pile of coats, shirts, and hunting-knives, the whole assembly + exploded in yelps of admiration.</p> +<p>Now came the climax of the harangue, introduced by a further present of + six guns:—</p> +<p>"He who is my master, and the master of all this country, is a mighty + chief, feared by the whole world; but he loves peace, and the words of + his lips are for good alone. He is called the King of France, and he is + the mightiest among the chiefs beyond the great water. His goodness reaches + even to your dead, and his subjects come among you to raise them up to + life. But it is his will to preserve the life he has given; it is his + will that you should obey his laws, and make no war without the leave + of Onontio, who commands in his name at Quebec, and who loves all the + nations alike, because such is the will of the Great King. You ought, + then, to live at peace with your neighbors, and above all with the Illinois. + You have had causes of quarrel with them; but their defeat has avenged + you. Though they are still strong, they wish to make peace with you. Be + content with the glory of having obliged them to ask for it. You have + an interest in preserving them; since, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg + 291]</a></span> if the Iroquois destroy them, they will next destroy you. + Let us all obey the Great King, and live together in peace, under his + protection. Be of my mind, and use these guns that I have given you, not + to make war, but only to hunt and to defend yourselves."<a name="fnanchor_227" id="fnanchor_227"></a><a href="#footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE CHIEFS REPLY.</div> +<p>So saying, he gave two belts of wampum to confirm his words; and the assembly + dissolved. On the following day, the chiefs again convoked it, and made + their reply in form. It was all that La Salle could have wished. "The + Illinois is our brother, because he is the son of our Father, the Great + King." "We make you the master of our beaver and our lands, of our minds + and our bodies." "We cannot wonder that our brothers from the East wish + to live with you. We should have wished so too, if we had known what a + blessing it is to be the children of the Great King." The rest of this + auspicious day was passed in feasts and dances, in which La Salle and + his Frenchmen all bore part. His new scheme was hopefully begun. It remained + to achieve the enterprise, twice defeated, of the discovery of the mouth + of the Mississippi,—that vital condition of his triumph, without + which all other success was meaningless and vain.</p> +<p>To this end he must return to Canada, appease his creditors, and collect + his scattered resources. Towards the end of May he set out in canoes from <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg + 292]</a></span> Fort Miami, and reached Michilimackinac after a prosperous + voyage. Here, to his great joy, he found Tonty and Zenobe Membré, + who had lately arrived from Green Bay. The meeting was one at which even + his stoic nature must have melted. Each had for the other a tale of disaster; + but when La Salle recounted the long succession of his reverses, it was + with the tranquil tone and cheerful look of one who relates the incidents + of an ordinary journey. Membré looked on him with admiration. "Any + one else," he says, "would have thrown up his hand and abandoned the enterprise; + but, far from this, with a firmness and constancy that never had its equal, + I saw him more resolved than ever to continue his work and push forward + his discovery."<a name="fnanchor_228" id="fnanchor_228"></a><a href="#footnote_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a></p> +<p>Without loss of time they embarked together for Fort Frontenac, paddled + their canoes a thousand miles, and safely reached their destination. Here, + in this third beginning of his enterprise, La Salle found himself beset + with embarrassments. Not only was he burdened with the fruitless costs + of his two former efforts, but the heavy debts which he had incurred in + building and maintaining Fort Frontenac had not been wholly paid. The + fort and the seigniory were already deeply mortgaged; yet through the + influence of Count Frontenac, the assistance of his <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg + 293]</a></span> secretary Barrois, a consummate man of business, and the + support of a wealthy relative, he found means to appease his creditors + and even to gain fresh advances. To this end, however, he was forced to + part with a portion of his monopolies. Having first made his will at Montreal, + in favor of a cousin who had befriended him,<a name="fnanchor_229" id="fnanchor_229"></a><a href="#footnote_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> he mustered his men, + and once more set forth, resolved to trust no more to agents, but to lead + on his followers, in a united body, under his own personal command.<a name="fnanchor_230" id="fnanchor_230"></a><a href="#footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE TORONTO PORTAGE.</div> +<p>At the beginning of autumn he was at Toronto, where the long and difficult + portage to Lake Simcoe detained him a fortnight. He spent a part of it + in writing an account of what had lately occurred to a correspondent in + France, and he closes his letter thus: "This is all I can tell you this + year. I have a hundred things to write, but you could not believe how + hard it is to do it among Indians. The canoes and their lading must be + got over the portage, and I must speak to them continually and bear all + their importunity, or else they will do nothing I want. I hope to write + more at leisure next year, and tell you <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg + 294]</a></span> the end of this business, which I hope will turn out well: + for I have M. de Tonty, who is full of zeal; thirty Frenchmen, all good + men, without reckoning such as I cannot trust; and more than a hundred + Indians, some of them Shawanoes, and others from New England, all of whom + know how to use guns."</p> +<p>It was October before he reached Lake Huron. Day after day and week after + week the heavy-laden canoes crept on along the lonely wilderness shores, + by the monotonous ranks of bristling moss-bearded firs; lake and forest, + forest and lake; a dreary scene haunted with yet more dreary memories,—disasters, + sorrows, and deferred hopes; time, strength, and wealth spent in vain; + a ruinous past and a doubtful future; slander, obloquy, and hate. With + unmoved heart, the patient voyager held his course, and drew up his canoes + at last on the beach at Fort Miami.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_224" id="footnote_224"></a><a href="#fnanchor_224"> <span class="label">[224]</span></a> <i>Relation des Découvertes.</i> Compare <i>Lettre de + La Salle</i> (Margry, ii. 144).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_225" id="footnote_225"></a><a href="#fnanchor_225"> <span class="label">[225]</span></a> This seems to have been taken from the secret repositories, or <i>caches</i>, + of the ruined town of the Illinois.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_226" id="footnote_226"></a><a href="#fnanchor_226"> <span class="label">[226]</span></a> "En ce genre, il étoit le plus grand orateur de l'Amérique + Septentrionale."—<i>Relation des Découvertes.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_227" id="footnote_227"></a><a href="#fnanchor_227"> <span class="label">[227]</span></a> Translated from the <i>Relation</i>, where these councils are + reported at great length.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_228" id="footnote_228"></a><a href="#fnanchor_228"> <span class="label">[228]</span></a> Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 208. Tonty, in his memoir of 1693, + speaks of the joy of La Salle at the meeting. The <i>Relation</i>, + usually very accurate, says, erroneously, that Tonty had gone to Fort + Frontenac. La Forest had gone thither, not long before La Salle's arrival.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_229" id="footnote_229"></a><a href="#fnanchor_229"> <span class="label">[229]</span></a> <i>Copie du Testament du deffunt S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle, + 11 Août, 1681.</i> The relative was François Plet, + to whom he was deeply in debt.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_230" id="footnote_230"></a><a href="#fnanchor_230"> <span class="label">[230]</span></a> "On apprendra à la fin de cette année, 1682, le + succès de la découverte qu'il étoit résolu + d'achever, au plus tard le printemps dernier ou de périr en + y travaillant. Tant de traverses et de malheurs toujours arrivés + en son absence l'ont fait résoudre à ne se fier plus à personne + et à conduire lui-même tout son monde, tout son équipage, + et toute son entreprise, de laquelle il espéroit une heureuse + conclusion."</p> + <p>The above is a part of the closing paragraph of the <i>Relation des + Découvertes</i>, so often cited.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h2> +<p class="center">1681-1682.</p> +<p class="center">SUCCESS OF LA SALLE.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">His Followers.—The +Chicago Portage.—Descent of the Mississippi.—The Lost Hunter.—The +Arkansas.—The Taensas.—The Natchez.—Hostility.—The +Mouth of the Mississippi.—Louis XIV. proclaimed +Sovereign of the Great West.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> season was far advanced. On the bare limbs of the forest hung a few + withered remnants of its gay autumnal livery; and the smoke crept upward + through the sullen November air from the squalid wigwams of La Salle's + Abenaki and Mohegan allies. These, his new friends, were savages whose + midnight yells had startled the border hamlets of New England; who had + danced around Puritan scalps, and whom Puritan imaginations painted as + incarnate fiends. La Salle chose eighteen of them, whom he added to the + twenty-three Frenchmen who remained with him, some of the rest having + deserted and others lagged behind. The Indians insisted on taking their + squaws with them. These were ten in number, besides three children; and + thus the expedition included fifty-four persons, of whom some were useless, + and others a burden.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg + 296]</a></span></p> +<p>On the 21st of December, Tonty and Membré set out from Fort Miami + with some of the party in six canoes, and crossed to the little river + Chicago.<a name="fnanchor_231" id="fnanchor_231"></a><a href="#footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> La Salle, with the rest of the men, joined them a few days + later. It was the dead of winter, and the streams were frozen. They made + sledges, placed on them the canoes, the baggage, and a disabled Frenchman; + crossed from the Chicago to the northern branch of the Illinois, and filed + in a long procession down its frozen course. They reached the site of + the great Illinois village, found it tenantless, and continued their journey, + still dragging their canoes, till at length they reached open water below + Lake Peoria.</p> +<div class="sidenote">PRUDHOMME.</div> +<p>La Salle had abandoned for a time his original plan of building a vessel + for the navigation of the Mississippi. Bitter experience had taught him + the difficulty of the attempt, and he resolved to trust to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg + 297]</a></span> his canoes alone. They embarked again, floating prosperously + down between the leafless forests that flanked the tranquil river; till, + on the sixth of February, they issued upon the majestic bosom of the Mississippi. + Here, for the time, their progress was stopped; for the river was full + of floating ice. La Salle's Indians, too, had lagged behind; but within + a week all had arrived, the navigation was once more free, and they resumed + their course. Towards evening they saw on their right the mouth of a great + river; and the clear current was invaded by the headlong torrent of the + Missouri, opaque with mud. They built their camp-fires in the neighboring + forest; and at daylight, embarking anew on the dark and mighty stream, + drifted swiftly down towards unknown destinies. They passed a deserted + town of the Tamaroas; saw, three days after, the mouth of the Ohio;<a name="fnanchor_232" id="fnanchor_232"></a><a href="#footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> + and, gliding by the wastes of bordering swamp, landed on the twenty-fourth + of February near the Third Chickasaw Bluffs.<a name="fnanchor_233" id="fnanchor_233"></a><a href="#footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> They encamped, and the + hunters went out for game. All returned, excepting Pierre Prudhomme; and + as the others had seen fresh tracks of Indians, La Salle feared that he + was killed. While some of his followers built a small stockade fort on + a high bluff<a name="fnanchor_234" id="fnanchor_234"></a><a href="#footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> by the river, others <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg + 298]</a></span> ranged the woods in pursuit of the missing hunter. After + six days of ceaseless and fruitless search, they met two Chickasaw Indians + in the forest; and through them La Salle sent presents and peace-messages + to that warlike people, whose villages were a few days' journey distant. + Several days later Prudhomme was found, and brought into the camp, half-dead. + He had lost his way while hunting; and to console him for his woes La + Salle christened the newly built fort with his name, and left him, with + a few others, in charge of it.</p> +<p>Again they embarked; and with every stage of their adventurous progress + the mystery of this vast New World was more and more unveiled. More and + more they entered the realms of spring. The hazy sunlight, the warm and + drowsy air, the tender foliage, the opening flowers, betokened the reviving + life of Nature. For several days more they followed the writhings of the + great river on its tortuous course through wastes of swamp and cane-brake, + till on the thirteenth of March<a name="fnanchor_235" id="fnanchor_235"></a><a href="#footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> they found themselves wrapped in + a thick fog. Neither shore was visible; but they heard on the right the + booming of an Indian drum and the shrill outcries of the war-dance. La + Salle at once crossed to the opposite side, where, in less than an hour, + his men threw up a rude fort of felled trees. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg + 299]</a></span> Meanwhile the fog cleared; and from the farther bank the + astonished Indians saw the strange visitors at their work. Some of the + French advanced to the edge of the water, and beckoned them to come over. + Several of them approached, in a wooden canoe, to within the distance + of a gun-shot. La Salle displayed the calumet, and sent a Frenchman to + meet them. He was well received; and the friendly mood of the Indians + being now apparent, the whole party crossed the river.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE ARKANSAS.</div> +<p>On landing, they found themselves at a town of the Kappa band of the Arkansas, + a people dwelling near the mouth of the river which bears their name. "The + whole village," writes Membré to his superior, "came down to the + shore to meet us, except the women, who had run off. I cannot tell you + the civility and kindness we received from these barbarians, who brought + us poles to make huts, supplied us with firewood during the three days + we were among them, and took turns in feasting us. But, my Reverend Father, + this gives no idea of the good qualities of these savages, who are gay, + civil, and free-hearted. The young men, though the most alert and spirited + we had seen, are nevertheless so modest that not one of them would take + the liberty to enter our hut, but all stood quietly at the door. They + are so well formed that we were in admiration at their beauty. We did + not lose the value of a pin while we were among them."</p> +<p>Various were the dances and ceremonies with which <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg + 300]</a></span> they entertained the strangers, who, on their part, + responded with a solemnity which their hosts would have liked less + if they had understood it better. La Salle and Tonty, at the head + of their followers, marched to the open area in the midst of the + village. Here, to the admiration of the gazing crowd of warriors, + women, and children, a cross was raised bearing the arms of France. + Membré, in canonicals, sang a hymn; the men shouted <i>Vive + le Roi</i>; and La Salle, in the King's name, took formal possession + of the country.<a name="fnanchor_236" id="fnanchor_236"></a><a href="#footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> The friar, not, he flatters himself, without + success, labored to expound by signs the mysteries of the Faith; + while La Salle, by methods equally satisfactory, drew from the chief + an acknowledgement of fealty to Louis XIV.<a name="fnanchor_237" id="fnanchor_237"></a><a href="#footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE TAENSAS.</div> +<p>After touching at several other towns of this people, the voyagers resumed + their course, guided by two of the Arkansas; passed the sites, since become + historic, of Vicksburg and Grand Gulf; and, about three hundred miles + below the Arkansas, stopped by the edge of a swamp on the western side + of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span> river.<a name="fnanchor_238" id="fnanchor_238"></a><a href="#footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> + Here, as their two guides told them, was the path to the great town of + the Taensas. Tonty and Membré were sent to visit it. They and their + men shouldered their birch canoe through the swamp, and launched it on + a lake which had once formed a portion of the channel of the river. In + two hours, they reached the town; and Tonty gazed at it with astonishment. + He had seen nothing like it in America,—large square dwellings, + built of sun-baked mud mixed with straw, arched over with a dome-shaped + roof of canes, and placed in regular order around an open area. Two of + them were larger and better than the rest. One was the lodge of the chief; + the other was the temple, or house of the Sun. They entered the former, + and found a single room, forty feet square, where, in the dim light,—for + there was no opening but the door,—the chief sat awaiting them on + a sort of bedstead, three of his wives at his side; while sixty old men, + wrapped in white cloaks woven of mulberry-bark, formed his divan. When + he spoke, his wives howled to do him honor; and the assembled councillors + listened with the reverence due to a potentate for whom, at his death, + a hundred victims were to be sacrificed. He received the visitors graciously, + and joyfully <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg + 302]</a></span> accepted the gifts which Tonty laid before him.<a name="fnanchor_239" id="fnanchor_239"></a><a href="#footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> This + interview over, the Frenchmen repaired to the temple, wherein were kept + the bones of the departed chiefs. In construction, it was much like the + royal dwelling. Over it were rude wooden figures, representing three eagles + turned towards the east. A strong mud wall surrounded it, planted with + stakes, on which were stuck the skulls of enemies sacrificed to the Sun; + while before the door was a block of wood, on which lay a large shell + surrounded with the braided hair of the victims. The interior was rude + as a barn, dimly lighted from the doorway, and full of smoke. There was + a structure in the middle which Membré thinks was a kind of altar; + and before it burned a perpetual fire, fed with three logs laid end to + end, and watched by two old men devoted to this sacred office. There was + a mysterious recess, too, which the strangers were forbidden to explore, + but which, as Tonty was told, contained the riches of the nation, consisting + of pearls from the Gulf, and trinkets obtained, probably through other + tribes, from the Spaniards and other Europeans.</p> +<p>The chief condescended to visit La Salle at his camp,—a favor which + he would by no means have granted, had the visitors been Indians. A master + of ceremonies and six attendants preceded him, to clear <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg + 303]</a></span> the path and prepare the place of meeting. When all was + ready, he was seen advancing, clothed in a white robe and preceded by + two men bearing white fans, while a third displayed a disk of burnished + copper,—doubtless to represent the Sun, his ancestor, or, as others + will have it, his elder brother. His aspect was marvellously grave, and + he and La Salle met with gestures of ceremonious courtesy. The interview + was very friendly; and the chief returned well pleased with the gifts + which his entertainer bestowed on him, and which, indeed, had been the + principal motive of his visit.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE NATCHEZ.</div> +<p>On the next morning, as they descended the river, they saw a wooden canoe + full of Indians; and Tonty gave chase. He had nearly overtaken it, when + more than a hundred men appeared suddenly on the shore, with bows bent + to defend their countrymen. La Salle called out to Tonty to withdraw. + He obeyed; and the whole party encamped on the opposite bank. Tonty offered + to cross the river with a peace-pipe, and set out accordingly with a small + party of men. When he landed, the Indians made signs of friendship by + joining their hands,—a proceeding by which Tonty, having but one + hand, was somewhat embarrassed; but he directed his men to respond in + his stead. La Salle and Membré now joined him, and went with the + Indians to their village, three leagues distant. Here they spent the night. "The + Sieur de la Salle," writes Membré, "whose very air, engaging manners, + tact, and address attract love and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg + 304]</a></span> respect alike, produced such an effect on the hearts of + these people that they did not know how to treat us well enough."<a name="fnanchor_240" id="fnanchor_240"></a><a href="#footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a></p> +<p>The Indians of this village were the Natchez; and their chief was brother + of the great chief, or Sun, of the whole nation. His town was several + leagues distant, near the site of the city of Natchez; and thither the + French repaired to visit him. They saw what they had already seen among + the Taensas,—a religious and political despotism, a privileged caste + descended from the sun, a temple, and a sacred fire.<a name="fnanchor_241" id="fnanchor_241"></a><a href="#footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg + 305]</a></span> La Salle planted a large cross, with the arms of France + attached, in the midst of the town; while the inhabitants looked on with + a satisfaction which they would hardly have displayed had they understood + the meaning of the act.</p> +<div class="sidenote">HOSTILITY.</div> +<p>The French next visited the Coroas, at their village two leagues below; + and here they found a reception no less auspicious. On the thirty-first + of March, as they approached Red River, they passed in the fog a town + of the Oumas, and three days later discovered a party of fishermen, in + wooden canoes, among the canes along the margin of the water. They fled + at sight of the Frenchmen. La Salle sent men to reconnoitre, who, as they + struggled through the marsh, were greeted with a shower of arrows; while + from the neighboring village of the Quinipissas,<a name="fnanchor_242" id="fnanchor_242"></a><a href="#footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a> invisible behind + the cane-brake, they heard the sound of an Indian drum and the whoops + of the mustering warriors. La Salle, anxious to keep the peace with all + the tribes along the river, recalled his men, and pursued his voyage. + A few leagues below they saw a cluster of Indian lodges on the left bank, + apparently void of inhabitants. They landed, and found three of them filled + with corpses. It was a village of the Tangibao, sacked by their enemies + only a few days before.<a name="fnanchor_243" id="fnanchor_243"></a><a href="#footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg + 306]</a></span></p> +<p>And now they neared their journey's end. On the sixth of April the river + divided itself into three broad channels. La Salle followed that of the + west, and Dautray that of the east; while Tonty took the middle passage. + As he drifted down the turbid current, between the low and marshy shores, + the brackish water changed to brine, and the breeze grew fresh with the + salt breath of the sea. Then the broad bosom of the great Gulf opened + on his sight, tossing its restless billows, limitless, voiceless, lonely + as when born of chaos, without a sail, without a sign of life.</p> +<p>La Salle, in a canoe, coasted the marshy borders of the sea; and then + the reunited parties assembled on a spot of dry ground, a short distance + above the mouth of the river. Here a column was made ready, bearing the + arms of France, and inscribed with the words, "<span class="smcap">Louis + Le Grand, Roy De France Et De Navarre, Règne; Le Neuvième + Avril, 1682</span>."</p> +<p>The Frenchmen were mustered under arms; and while the New England Indians + and their squaws looked on in wondering silence, they chanted the <i>Te + Deum</i>, the <i>Exaudiat</i>, and the <i>Domine salvum fac Regem</i>. + Then, amid volleys of musketry and shouts of <i>Vive le Roi</i>, La Salle + planted the column in its place, and, standing near it, proclaimed in + a loud voice,—</p> +<div class="sidenote">POSSESSION TAKEN.</div> +<p>"In the name of the most high, mighty, invincible, and victorious Prince, + Louis the Great, by the grace of God King of France and of Navarre, Fourteenth + of that name, I, this ninth day of April, one thousand six hundred and + eighty-two, in virtue of the commission <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg + 307]</a></span> of his Majesty, which I hold in my hand, and which may + be seen by all whom it may concern, have taken, and do now take, in the + name of his Majesty and of his successors to the crown, possession of + this country of Louisiana, the seas, harbors, ports, bays, adjacent straits, + and all the nations, peoples, provinces, cities, towns, villages, mines, + minerals, fisheries, streams, and rivers, within the extent of the said + Louisiana, from the mouth of the great river St. Louis, otherwise called + the Ohio, ... as also along the river Colbert, or Mississippi, and the + rivers which discharge themselves thereinto, from its source beyond the + country of the Nadouessioux ... as far as its mouth at the sea, or Gulf + of Mexico, and also to the mouth of the River of Palms, upon the assurance + we have had from the natives of these countries that we are the first + Europeans who have descended or ascended the said river Colbert; hereby + protesting against all who may hereafter undertake to invade any or all + of these aforesaid countries, peoples, or lands, to the prejudice of the + rights of his Majesty, acquired by the consent of the nations dwelling + herein. Of which, and of all else that is needful, I hereby take to witness + those who hear me, and demand an act of the notary here present."<a name="fnanchor_244" id="fnanchor_244"></a><a href="#footnote_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg + 308]</a></span></p> +<p>Shouts of <i>Vive le Roi</i> and volleys of musketry responded to his + words. Then a cross was planted beside the column, and a leaden plate + buried near it, bearing the arms of France, with a Latin inscription, <i>Ludovicus + Magnus regnat</i>. The weather-beaten voyagers joined their voices in + the grand hymn of the <i>Vexilla Regis</i>:—<br /><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The banners of Heaven's King advance,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The mystery of the Cross shines forth;"</span><br /><br /> +and renewed shouts of <i>Vive le Roi</i> closed the ceremony.</p> +<p>On that day, the realm of France received on parchment a stupendous accession. + The fertile plains of Texas; the vast basin of the Mississippi, from its + frozen northern springs to the sultry borders of the Gulf; from the woody + ridges of the Alleghanies to the bare peaks of the Rocky Mountains,—a + region of savannas and forests, sun-cracked deserts, and grassy prairies, + watered by a thousand rivers, ranged by a thousand warlike tribes, passed + beneath the sceptre of the Sultan of Versailles; and all by virtue of + a feeble human voice, inaudible at half a mile.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_231" id="footnote_231"></a><a href="#fnanchor_231"> <span class="label">[231]</span></a> La Salle, <i>Relation de la Découverte</i>, 1682, in Thomassy, <i>Géologie + Pratique de la Louisiane 9; Lettre du Père Zenobe Membré, + 3 Juin, 1682; Ibid., 14 Août, 1682</i>; Membré in Le + Clerc, ii. 214; Tonty, 1684, 1693; <i>Procès Verbal de la + Prise de Possession de la Louisiane, Feuilles détachées + d'une Lettre de La Salle</i> (Margry, ii. 164); <i>Récit + de Nicolas de la Salle</i> (Ibid., i. 547).</p> + <p>The narrative ascribed to Membré and published by Le Clerc is + based on the document preserved in the Archives Scientifiques de la + Marine, entitled <i>Relation de la Découverte de l'Embouchure + de la Rivière Mississippi faite par le Sieur de la Salle, l'année + passée</i>, 1682. The writer of the narrative has used it very + freely, copying the greater part verbatim, with occasional additions + of a kind which seem to indicate that he had taken part in the expedition. + The <i>Relation de la Découverte</i>, though written in the + third person, is the official report of the discovery made by La Salle, + or perhaps for him by Membré.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_232" id="footnote_232"></a><a href="#fnanchor_232"> <span class="label">[232]</span></a> Called by Membré the Ouabache (Wabash).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_233" id="footnote_233"></a><a href="#fnanchor_233"> <span class="label">[233]</span></a> La Salle, <i>Relation de la Découverte de l'Embouchure, + etc.</i>; Thomassy, 10. Membré gives the same date; but the <i>Procès + Verbal</i> makes it the twenty-sixth.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_234" id="footnote_234"></a><a href="#fnanchor_234"> <span class="label">[234]</span></a> Gravier, in his letter of 16 Feb., 1701, says that he encamped + near a "great bluff of stone, called Fort Prudhomme, because M. de + La Salle, going on his discovery, intrenched himself here with his + party, fearing that Prudhomme, who had lost himself in the woods, had + been killed by the Indians, and that he himself would be attacked."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_235" id="footnote_235"></a><a href="#fnanchor_235"> <span class="label">[235]</span></a> La Salle, <i>Relation</i>; Thomassy, 11.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_236" id="footnote_236"></a><a href="#fnanchor_236"> <span class="label">[236]</span></a> <i>Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession du Pays des + Arkansas, 14 Mars, 1682.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_237" id="footnote_237"></a><a href="#fnanchor_237"> <span class="label">[237]</span></a>The nation of the Akanseas, Alkansas, or Arkansas, dwelt on the + west bank of the Mississippi, near the mouth of the Arkansas. They + were divided into four tribes, living for the most part in separate + villages. Those first visited by La Salle were the Kappas, or Quapaws, + a remnant of whom still subsists. The others were the Topingas, or + Tongengas; the Torimans; and the Osotouoy, or Sauthouis. According + to Charlevoix, who saw them in 1721, they were regarded as the tallest + and best-formed Indians in America, and were known as <i>les Beaux + Hommes</i>. Gravier says that they once lived on the Ohio.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_238" id="footnote_238"></a><a href="#fnanchor_238"> <span class="label">[238]</span></a> In Tensas County, Louisiana. Tonty's estimates of distance are + here much too low. They seem to be founded on observations of latitude, + without reckoning the windings of the river. It may interest sportsmen + to know that the party killed several large alligators, on their way. + Membré is much astonished that such monsters should be born + of eggs like chickens.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_239" id="footnote_239"></a><a href="#fnanchor_239"> <span class="label">[239]</span></a> Tonty, 1684, 1693. In the spurious narrative, published in Tonty's + name, the account is embellished and exaggerated. Compare Membré in + Le Clerc, ii. 227. La Salle's statements in the <i>Relation</i> of + 1682 (Thomassy, 12) sustain those of Tonty.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_240" id="footnote_240"></a><a href="#fnanchor_240"> <span class="label">[240]</span></a> Membré in Le Clerc, ii. 232.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_241" id="footnote_241"></a><a href="#fnanchor_241"> <span class="label">[241]</span></a> The Natchez and the Taensas, whose habits and customs were similar, + did not, in their social organization, differ radically from other + Indians. The same principle of clanship, or <i>totemship</i>, so widely + spread, existed in full force among them, combined with their religious + ideas, and developed into forms of which no other example, equally + distinct, is to be found. (For Indian clanship, see "The Jesuits in + North America," <i>Introduction</i>.) Among the Natchez and Taensas, + the principal clan formed a ruling caste; and its chiefs had the attributes + of demi-gods. As descent was through the female, the chief's son never + succeeded him, but the son of one of his sisters; and as she, by the + usual totemic law, was forced to marry in another clan,—that + is, to marry a common mortal,—her husband, though the destined + father of a demi-god, was treated by her as little better than a slave. + She might kill him, if he proved unfaithful; but he was forced to submit + to her infidelities in silence.</p> + <p>The customs of the Natchez have been described by Du Pratz, Le Petit, + Penecaut, and others. Charlevoix visited their temple in 1721, and + found it in a somewhat shabby condition. At this time, the Taensas + were extinct. In 1729 the Natchez, enraged by the arbitrary conduct + of a French commandant, massacred the neighboring settlers, and were + in consequence expelled from their country and nearly destroyed. A + few still survive, incorporated with the Creeks; but they have lost + their peculiar customs.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_242" id="footnote_242"></a><a href="#fnanchor_242"> <span class="label">[242]</span></a> In St. Charles County, on the left bank, not far above New Orleans.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_243" id="footnote_243"></a><a href="#fnanchor_243"> <span class="label">[243]</span></a> Hennepin uses this incident, as well as most of those which have + preceded it, in making up the story of his pretended voyage to the + Gulf.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_244" id="footnote_244"></a><a href="#fnanchor_244"> <span class="label">[244]</span></a> In the passages omitted above, for the sake of brevity, the Ohio + is mentioned as being called also the <i>Olighin</i>- (Alleghany) <i>Sipou</i>, + and <i>Chukagoua</i>; and La Salle declares that he takes possession + of the country with the consent of the nations dwelling in it, of whom + he names the Chaouanons (Shawanoes), Kious, or Nadouessious (Sioux), + Chikachas (Chickasaws), Motantees (?), Illinois, Mitchigamias, Arkansas, + Natchez, and Koroas. This alleged consent is, of course, mere farce. + If there could be any doubt as to the meaning of the words of La Salle, + as recorded in the <i>Procès Verbal de la Prise de Possession + de la Louisiane</i>, it would be set at rest by Le Clerc, who says: "Le + Sieur de la Salle prit au nom de sa Majesté possession de ce + fleuve, <i>de toutes les rivières qui y entrent, et de tous + les pays qu'elles arrosent</i>." These words are borrowed from the + report of La Salle (see Thomassy, 14). A copy of the original <i>Procès + Verbal</i> is before me. It bears the name of Jacques de la Metairie, + Notary of Fort Frontenac, who was one of the party.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h2> +<p class="center">1682, 1683.</p> +<p class="center">ST. LOUIS OF THE ILLINOIS.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Louisiana.—Illness +of La Salle: his Colony on the Illinois.—Fort St. Louis.—Recall +of Frontenac.—Le Febvre de la Barre.—Critical Position of la Salle.—Hostility +Of the New Governor.—Triumph of the Adverse Faction.—La +Salle sails for France.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">Louisiana</span> was the name bestowed by La Salle on the new domain of the French + crown. The rule of the Bourbons in the West is a memory of the past, but + the name of the Great King still survives in a narrow corner of their + lost empire. The Louisiana of to-day is but a single State of the American + republic. The Louisiana of La Salle stretched from the Alleghanies to + the Rocky Mountains; from the Rio Grande and the Gulf to the farthest + springs of the Missouri.<a name="fnanchor_245" id="fnanchor_245"></a><a href="#footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg + 310]</a></span></p> +<p>La Salle had written his name in history; but his hard-earned success + was but the prelude of a harder task. Herculean labors lay before him, + if he would realize the schemes with which his brain was pregnant. Bent + on accomplishing them, he retraced his course, and urged his canoes upward + against the muddy current. The party were famished. They had little to + subsist on but the flesh of alligators. When they reached the Quinipissas, + who had proved hostile on their way down, they resolved to risk an interview + with them, in the hope of obtaining food. The treacherous savages dissembled, + brought them corn, and on the following night made an attack upon them, + but met with a bloody repulse. The party next revisited the Coroas, and + found an unfavorable change in their disposition towards them. They feasted + them, indeed, but during the repast surrounded them with an overwhelming + force of warriors. The French, however, kept so well on their guard, that + their entertainers dared not make an attack, and suffered them to depart + unmolested.<a name="fnanchor_246" id="fnanchor_246"></a><a href="#footnote_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">ILLNESS OF LA SALLE.</div> +<p>And now, in a career of unwonted success and anticipated triumph, La Salle + was arrested by a foe against which the boldest heart avails nothing. + As he ascended the Mississippi, he was seized by a dangerous illness. + Unable to proceed, he sent forward <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg + 311]</a></span> Tonty to Michilimackinac, whence, after despatching news + of their discovery to Canada, he was to return to the Illinois. La Salle + himself lay helpless at Fort Prudhomme, the palisade work which his men + had built at the Chickasaw Bluffs on their way down. Father Zenobe Membré attended + him; and at the end of July he was once more in a condition to advance + by slow movements towards Fort Miami, which he reached in about a month.</p> +<p>In September he rejoined Tonty at Michilimackinac, and in the following + month wrote to a friend in France: "Though my discovery is made, and I + have descended the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico, I cannot send you + this year either an account of my journey or a map. On the way back I + was attacked by a deadly disease, which kept me in danger of my life for + forty days, and left me so weak that I could think of nothing for four + months after. I have hardly strength enough now to write my letters, and + the season is so far advanced that I cannot detain a single day this canoe + which I send expressly to carry them. If I had not feared being forced + to winter on the way, I should have tried to get to Quebec to meet the + new governor, if it is true that we are to have one; but in my present + condition this would be an act of suicide, on account of the bad nourishment + I should have all winter in case the snow and ice stopped me on the way. + Besides, my presence is absolutely necessary in the place to which I am <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg + 312]</a></span> going. I pray you, my dear sir, to give me once more all + the help you can. I have great enemies, who have succeeded in all they + have undertaken. I do not pretend to resist them, but only to justify + myself, so that I can pursue by sea the plans I have begun here by land."</p> +<p>This was what he had proposed to himself from the first; that is, to abandon + the difficult access through Canada, beset with enemies, and open a way + to his western domain through the Gulf and the Mississippi. This was the + aim of all his toilsome explorations. Could he have accomplished his first + intention of building a vessel on the Illinois and descending in her to + the Gulf, he would have been able to defray in good measure the costs + of the enterprise by means of the furs and buffalo-hides collected on + the way and carried in her to France. With a fleet of canoes, this was + impossible; and there was nothing to offset the enormous outlay which + he and his associates had made. He meant, as we have seen, to found on + the banks of the Illinois a colony of French and Indians to answer the + double purpose of a bulwark against the Iroquois and a place of storage + for the furs of all the western tribes; and he hoped in the following + year to secure an outlet for this colony and for all the trade of the + valley of the Mississippi, by occupying the mouth of that river with a + fort and another colony. This, too, was an essential part of his original + design.</p> +<p>But for his illness, he would have gone to France <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg + 313]</a></span> to provide for its execution. Meanwhile, he ordered + Tonty to collect as many men as possible, and begin the projected + colony on the banks of the Illinois. A report soon after reached + him that those pests of the wilderness the Iroquois were about to + renew their attacks on the western tribes. This would be fatal to + his plans; and, following Tonty to the Illinois, he rejoined him + near the site of the great town.</p> +<div class="sidenote">"STARVED ROCK."</div> +<p>The cliff called "Starved Rock," now pointed out to travellers as the + chief natural curiosity of the region, rises, steep on three sides as + a castle wall, to the height of a hundred and twenty-five feet above the + river. In front, it overhangs the water that washes its base; its western + brow looks down on the tops of the forest trees below; and on the east + lies a wide gorge or ravine, choked with the mingled foliage of oaks, + walnuts, and elms; while in its rocky depths a little brook creeps down + to mingle with the river. From the trunk of the stunted cedar that leans + forward from the brink, you may drop a plummet into the river below, where + the cat-fish and the turtles may plainly be seen gliding over the wrinkled + sands of the clear and shallow current. The cliff is accessible only from + behind, where a man may climb up, not without difficulty, by a steep and + narrow passage. The top is about an acre in extent. Here, in the month + of December, La Salle and Tonty began to intrench themselves. They cut + away the forest that crowned the rock, built store-houses and dwellings + of its + remains, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg + 314]</a></span>dragged timber up the rugged pathway, and encircled the summit + with a palisade.<a name="fnanchor_247" id="fnanchor_247"></a><a href="#footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a></p> + +<p> </p> +<div class="figcenter bord"><a name="map_347.png" id="map_347.png"></a><img src="images/map_347.png" alt="La Salle's Colony"/></div> + +<p> </p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S COLONY.</div> +<p>Thus the winter passed, and meanwhile the work <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg + 315]</a></span> of negotiation went prosperously on. The minds of + the Indians had been already prepared. In La Salle they saw their + champion against the Iroquois, the standing terror of all this region. + They gathered round his stronghold like the timorous peasantry of + the middle ages around the rock-built castle of their feudal lord. + From the wooden ramparts of St. Louis,—for so he named his + fort,—high and inaccessible as an eagle's nest, a strange + scene lay before his eye. The broad, flat valley of the Illinois + was spread beneath him like a map, bounded in the distance by its + low wall of woody hills. The river wound at his feet in devious + channels among islands bordered with lofty trees; then, far on the + left, flowed calmly westward through the vast meadows, till its + glimmering blue ribbon was lost in hazy distance.</p> +<p>There had been a time, and that not remote, when these fair meadows were + a waste of death and desolation, scathed with fire, and strewn with the + ghastly relics of an Iroquois victory. Now all was changed. La Salle looked + down from his rock on a concourse of wild human life. Lodges of bark and + rushes, or cabins of logs, were clustered on the open plain or along the + edges of the bordering forests. Squaws labored, warriors lounged in the + sun, naked children whooped and gambolled on the grass. Beyond the river, + a mile and a half on the left, the banks were studded once more with the + lodges of the Illinois, who, to the number of six thousand, had returned, + since their defeat, to this their favorite dwelling-place. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg + 316]</a></span> Scattered along the valley, among the adjacent hills, + or over the neighboring prairie, were the cantonments of a half-score + of other tribes and fragments of tribes, gathered under the protecting ægis + of the French,—Shawanoes from the Ohio, Abenakis from Maine, Miamis + from the sources of the Kankakee, with others whose barbarous names are + hardly worth the record.<a name="fnanchor_248" id="fnanchor_248"></a><a href="#footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a> Nor were these La Salle's only dependants. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg + 317]</a></span> By the terms of his patent, he held seigniorial rights + over this wild domain; and he now began to grant it out in parcels to + his followers. These, however, were as yet but a score,—a lawless + band, trained in forest license, and marrying, as their detractors affirm, + a new squaw every day in the week. This was after their lord's departure, + for his presence imposed a check on these eccentricities.</p> +<p>La Salle, in a memoir addressed to the Minister of the Marine, reports + the total number of the Indians around Fort St. Louis at about four thousand + warriors, or twenty thousand souls. His diplomacy had <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg + 318]</a></span> been crowned with a marvellous success,—for which + his thanks were due, first to the Iroquois, and the universal terror they + inspired; next, to his own address and unwearied energy. His colony had + sprung up, as it were, in a night; but might not a night suffice to disperse + it?</p> +<p>The conditions of maintaining it were twofold: first, he must give efficient + aid to his savage colonists against the Iroquois; secondly, he must supply + them with French goods in exchange for their furs. The men, arms, and + ammunition for their defence, and the goods for trading with them, must + be brought from Canada, until a better and surer avenue of supply could + be provided through the entrepôt which he meant to establish at + the mouth of the Mississippi. Canada was full of his enemies; but as long + as Count Frontenac was in power, he was sure of support. Count Frontenac + was in power no longer. He had been recalled to France through the intrigues + of the party adverse to La Salle; and Le Febvre de la Barre reigned in + his stead.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE AND LA BARRE.</div> +<p>La Barre was an old naval officer of rank, advanced to a post for which + he proved himself notably unfit. If he was without the arbitrary passions + which had been the chief occasion of the recall of his predecessor, he + was no less without his energies and his talents. He showed a weakness + and an avarice for which his age may have been in some measure answerable. + He was no whit less unscrupulous than his predecessor in his secret violation + of the royal ordinances <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg + 319]</a></span> regulating the fur-trade, which it was his duty to enforce. + Like Frontenac, he took advantage of his position to carry on an illicit + traffic with the Indians; but it was with different associates. The late + governor's friends were the new governor's enemies; and La Salle, armed + with his monopolies, was the object of his especial jealousy.<a name="fnanchor_249" id="fnanchor_249"></a><a href="#footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a></p> +<p>Meanwhile, La Salle, buried in the western wilderness, remained for the + time ignorant of La Barre's disposition towards him, and made an effort + to secure his good-will and countenance. He wrote to him from his rock + of St. Louis, early in the spring of 1683, expressing the hope that he + should have from him the same support as from Count Frontenac; "although," he + says, "my enemies will try to influence you against me." His attachment + to Frontenac, he pursues, has been the cause of all the late governor's + enemies turning against him. He then recounts his voyage down the Mississippi; + says that, with twenty-two Frenchmen, he caused all the tribes along the + river to ask for peace; and speaks of his right under the royal patent + to build forts anywhere along his route, and grant out lands around them, + as at Fort Frontenac.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg + 320]</a></span></p> +<p>"My losses in my enterprises," he continues, "have exceeded forty thousand + crowns. I am now going four hundred leagues south-southwest of this place, + to induce the Chickasaws to follow the Shawanoes and other tribes, and + settle, like them, at St. Louis. It remained only to settle French colonists + here, and this I have already done. I hope you will not detain them as <i>coureurs + de bois</i>, when they come down to Montreal to make necessary purchases. + I am aware that I have no right to trade with the tribes who descend to + Montreal, and I shall not permit such trade to my men; nor have I ever + issued licenses to that effect, as my enemies say that I have done."<a name="fnanchor_250" id="fnanchor_250"></a><a href="#footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a></p> +<p>Again, on the fourth of June following, he writes to La Barre, from the + Chicago portage, complaining that some of his colonists, going to Montreal + for necessary supplies, have been detained by his enemies, and begging + that they may be allowed to return, that his enterprise may not be ruined. "The + Iroquois," he pursues, "are again invading the country. Last year, the + Miamis were so alarmed by them that they abandoned their town and fled; + but at my return they came back, and have been induced to settle with + the Illinois at my fort of St. Louis. The Iroquois have lately murdered + some families of their nation, and they are all in terror again. I am + afraid they will take flight, and so prevent the Missouris and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg + 321]</a></span> neighboring tribes from coming to settle at St. Louis, + as they are about to do.</p> +<p>"Some of the Hurons and French tell the Miamis that I am keeping them + here for the Iroquois to destroy. I pray that you will let me hear from + you, that I may give these people some assurances of protection before + they are destroyed in my sight. Do not suffer my men who have come down + to the settlements to be longer prevented from returning. There is great + need here of reinforcements. The Iroquois, as I have said, have lately + entered the country; and a great terror prevails. I have postponed going + to Michilimackinac, because, if the Iroquois strike any blow in my absence, + the Miamis will think that I am in league with them; whereas, if I and + the French stay among them, they will regard us as protectors. But, Monsieur, + it is in vain that we risk our lives here, and that I exhaust my means + in order to fulfil the intentions of his Majesty, if all my measures are + crossed in the settlements below, and if those who go down to bring munitions, + without which we cannot defend ourselves, are detained under pretexts + trumped up for the occasion. If I am prevented from bringing up men and + supplies, as I am allowed to do by the permit of Count Frontenac, then + my patent from the King is useless. It would be very hard for us, after + having done what was required, even before the time prescribed, and after + suffering severe losses, to have our efforts frustrated by obstacles got + up designedly.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg + 322]</a></span></p> +<p>"I trust that, as it lies with you alone to prevent or to permit the return + of the men whom I have sent down, you will not so act as to thwart my + plans. A part of the goods which I have sent by them belong not to me, + but to the Sieur de Tonty, and are a part of his pay. Others are to buy + munitions indispensable for our defence. Do not let my creditors seize + them. It is for their advantage that my fort, full as it is of goods, + should be held against the enemy. I have only twenty men, with scarcely + a hundred pounds of powder; and I cannot long hold the country without + more. The Illinois are very capricious and uncertain.... If I had men + enough to send out to reconnoitre the enemy, I would have done so before + this; but I have not enough. I trust you will put it in my power to obtain + more, that this important colony may be saved."<a name="fnanchor_251" id="fnanchor_251"></a><a href="#footnote_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a></p> +<p>While La Salle was thus writing to La Barre, La Barre was writing to Seignelay, + the Marine and Colonial Minister, decrying his correspondent's discoveries, + and pretending to doubt their reality. "The Iroquois," he adds, "have + sworn his [La Salle's] death. The imprudence of this man is about to involve + the colony in war."<a name="fnanchor_252" id="fnanchor_252"></a><a href="#footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> And again he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg + 323]</a></span> writes, in the following spring, to say that La Salle + was with a score of vagabonds at Green Bay, where he set himself up as + a king, pillaged his countrymen, and put them to ransom, exposed the tribes + of the West to the incursions of the Iroquois, and all under pretence + of a patent from his Majesty, the provisions of which he grossly abused; + but, as his privileges would expire on the twelfth of May ensuing, he + would then be forced to come to Quebec, where his creditors, to whom he + owed more than thirty thousand crowns, were anxiously awaiting him.<a name="fnanchor_253" id="fnanchor_253"></a><a href="#footnote_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a></p> +<p>Finally, when La Barre received the two letters from La Salle, of which + the substance is given above, he sent copies of them to the Minister Seignelay, + with the following comment: "By the copies of the Sieur de la Salle's + letters, you will perceive that his head is turned, and that he has been + bold enough to give you intelligence of a false discovery, and that, instead + of returning to the colony to learn what the King wishes him to do, he + does not come near me, but keeps in the backwoods, five hundred leagues + off, with the idea of attracting the inhabitants to him, and building + up an imaginary kingdom for himself, by debauching all the bankrupts and + idlers of this country. If you will look at the two letters I had from + him, you can judge the character of this personage better than I can. + Affairs with the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg + 324]</a></span> Iroquois are in such a state that I cannot allow him to + muster all their enemies together and put himself at their head. All the + men who brought me news from him have abandoned him, and say not a word + about returning, <i>but sell the furs they have brought as if they were + their own</i>; so that he cannot hold his ground much longer."<a name="fnanchor_254" id="fnanchor_254"></a><a href="#footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> Such + calumnies had their effect. The enemies of La Salle had already gained + the ear of the King; and he had written in August, from Fontainebleau, + to his new governor of Canada: "I am convinced, like you, that the discovery + of the Sieur de la Salle is very useless, and that such enterprises ought + to be prevented in future, as they tend only to debauch the inhabitants + by the hope of gain, and to diminish the revenue from beaver-skins."<a name="fnanchor_255" id="fnanchor_255"></a><a href="#footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a></p> +<p>In order to understand the posture of affairs at this time, it must be + remembered that Dutch and English traders of New York were urging on the + Iroquois to attack the western tribes, with the object of gaining, through + their conquest, the control of the fur-trade of the interior, and diverting + it from Montreal to Albany. The scheme was full of danger to Canada, which + the loss of the trade would have ruined. La Barre and his associates were + greatly alarmed at it. Its complete success would have been fatal to their + hopes of profit; but they nevertheless wished it such a measure of success + as would ruin their rival, La Salle. Hence, no little satisfaction mingled + with <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span> their + anxiety when they heard that the Iroquois were again threatening to invade + the Miamis and the Illinois; and thus La Barre, whose duty it was strenuously + to oppose the intrigue of the English, and use every effort to quiet the + ferocious bands whom they were hounding against the Indian allies of the + French, was, in fact, but half-hearted in the work. He cut off La Salle + from all supplies; detained the men whom he sent for succor; and, at a + conference with the Iroquois, told them that they were welcome to plunder + and kill him.<a name="fnanchor_256" id="fnanchor_256"></a><a href="#footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">A NEW ALARM.</div> +<p>The old governor, and the unscrupulous ring with which he was associated, + now took a step to which he was doubtless emboldened by the tone of the + King's letter, in condemnation of La Salle's enterprise. He resolved to + seize Fort Frontenac, the property of La Salle, under the pretext that + the latter had not fulfilled the conditions of the grant, and had not + maintained a sufficient garrison.<a name="fnanchor_257" id="fnanchor_257"></a><a href="#footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> Two of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg + 326]</a></span> his associates, La Chesnaye and Le Ber, armed with an + order from him, went up and took possession, despite the remonstrances + of La Salle's creditors and mortgagees; lived on La Salle's stores, sold + for their own profit, and (it is said) that of La Barre, the provisions + sent by the King, and turned in the cattle to pasture on the growing crops. + La Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, was told that he might retain the command + of the fort if he would join the associates; but he refused, and sailed + in the autumn for France.<a name="fnanchor_258" id="fnanchor_258"></a><a href="#footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a></p> +<p>Meanwhile La Salle remained at the Illinois in extreme embarrassment, + cut off from supplies, robbed of his men who had gone to seek them, and + disabled from fulfilling the pledges he had given to the surrounding Indians. + Such was his position, when reports came to Fort St. Louis that the Iroquois + were at hand. The Indian hamlets were wild with terror, beseeching him + for succor which he had no power to give. Happily, the report proved false. + No Iroquois appeared; the threatened attack was postponed, and the summer + passed away in peace. But La Salle's position, with the governor his declared + enemy, was intolerable and untenable; and there was no resource but in + the protection of the court. Early in the autumn, he left Tonty in command + of the rock, bade farewell to his savage retainers, and descended to Quebec, + intending to sail for France.</p> +<p>On his way, he met the Chevalier de Baugis, an <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg + 327]</a></span> officer of the King's dragoons, commissioned by + La Barre to take possession of Fort St. Louis, and bearing letters + from the governor ordering La Salle to come to Quebec,—a superfluous + command, as he was then on his way thither. He smothered his wrath, + and wrote to Tonty to receive De Baugis well. The chevalier and + his party proceeded to the Illinois, and took possession of the + fort,—De Baugis commanding for the governor, while Tonty remained + as representative of La Salle. The two officers could not live in + harmony; but, with the return of spring, each found himself in sore + need of aid from the other. Towards the end of March the Iroquois + attacked their citadel, and besieged it for six days, but at length + withdrew discomfited, carrying with them a number of Indian prisoners, + most of whom escaped from their clutches.<a name="fnanchor_259" id="fnanchor_259"></a><a href="#footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></p> +<p>Meanwhile, La Salle had sailed for France.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_245" id="footnote_245"></a><a href="#fnanchor_245"> <span class="label">[245]</span></a> The boundaries are laid down on the great map of Franquelin, + made in 1684, and preserved in the Dépôt des Cartes of + the Marine. The line runs along the south shore of Lake Erie, and thence + follows the heads of the streams flowing into Lake Michigan. It then + turns northwest, and is lost in the vast unknown of the now British + Territories. On the south, it is drawn by the heads of the streams + flowing into the Gulf, as far west as Mobile, after which it follows + the shore of the Gulf to a little south of the Rio Grande; then runs + west, northwest, and finally north, along the range of the Rocky Mountains.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_246" id="footnote_246"></a><a href="#fnanchor_246"> <span class="label">[246]</span></a> Tonty, 1684, 1693.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_247" id="footnote_247"></a><a href="#fnanchor_247"> <span class="label">[247]</span></a>"Starved Rock" perfectly answers, in every respect, to the indications + of the contemporary maps and documents concerning "Le Rocher," the + site of La Salle's fort of St. Louis. It is laid down on several contemporary + maps, besides the great map of La Salle's discoveries, made in 1684. + They all place it on the south side of the river; whereas Buffalo Rock, + three miles above, which has been supposed to be the site of the fort, + is on the north. The latter is crowned by a plateau of great extent, + is but sixty feet high, is accessible at many points, and would require + a large force to defend it; whereas La Salle chose "Le Rocher," because + a few men could hold it against a multitude. Charlevoix, in 1721, describes + both rocks, and says that the top of Buffalo Rock had been occupied + by the Miami village, so that it was known as <i>Le Fort des Miamis</i>. + This is confirmed by Joutel, who found the Miamis here in 1687. Charlevoix + then speaks of "Le Rocher," calling it by that name; says that it is + about a league below, on the left or south side, forming a sheer cliff, + very high, and looking like a fortress on the border of the river. + He saw remains of palisades at the top, which, he thinks, were made + by the Illinois (<i>Journal Historique, Let.</i> xxvii.), though his + countrymen had occupied it only three years before. "The French reside + on the rock (Le Rocher), which is very lofty and impregnable." (<i>Memoir + on Western Indians</i>, 1718, <i>in N. Y. Col. Docs.</i>, ix. 890.) + St. Cosme, passing this way in 1699, mentions it as "Le Vieux Fort," and + says that it is "a rock about a hundred feet high at the edge of the + river, where M. de la Salle built a fort, since abandoned." (<i>Journal + de St. Cosme.</i>) Joutel, who was here in 1687, says, "Fort St. Louis + is on a steep rock, about two hundred feet high, with the river running + at its base." He adds that its only defences were palisades. The true + height, as stated above, is about a hundred and twenty-five feet.</p> + <p>A traditional interest also attaches to this rock. It is said that, + in the Indian wars that followed the assassination of Pontiac, a few + years after the cession of Canada, a party of Illinois, assailed by + the Pottawattamies, here took refuge, defying attack. At length they + were all destroyed by starvation, and hence the name of "Starved Rock."</p> + <p>For other proofs concerning this locality, see <i>ante</i>, 239.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_248" id="footnote_248"></a><a href="#fnanchor_248"> <span class="label">[248]</span></a> This singular extemporized colony of La Salle, on the banks of + the Illinois, is laid down in detail on the great map of La Salle's + discoveries, by Jean Baptiste Franquelin, finished in 1684. There can + be no doubt that this part of the work is composed from authentic data. + La Salle himself, besides others of his party, came down from the Illinois + in the autumn of 1683, and undoubtedly supplied the young engineer + with materials. The various Indian villages, or cantonments, are all + indicated, with the number of warriors belonging to each, the aggregate + corresponding very nearly with that of La Salle's report to the minister. + The Illinois, properly so called, are set down at 1,200 warriors; the + Miamis, at 1,300; the Shawanoes, at 200; the Ouiatnoens (Weas), at + 500; the Peanqhichia (Piankishaw) band, at 150; the Pepikokia, at 160; + the Kilatica, at 300; and the Ouabona, at 70,—in all, 3,880 warriors. + A few others, probably Abenakis, lived in the fort.</p> + <p>The Fort St. Louis is placed, on the map, at the exact site of Starved + Rock, and the Illinois village at the place where, as already mentioned + (see 239), Indian remains in great quantities are yearly ploughed up. + The Shawanoe camp, or village, is placed on the south side of the river, + behind the fort. The country is here hilly, broken, and now, as in + La Salle's time, covered with wood, which, however, soon ends in the + open prairie. A short time since, the remains of a low, irregular earthwork + of considerable extent were discovered at the intersection of two ravines, + about twenty-four hundred feet behind, or south of, Starved Rock. The + earthwork follows the line of the ravines on two sides. On the east, + there is an opening, or gateway, leading to the adjacent prairie. The + work is very irregular in form, and shows no trace of the civilized + engineer. In the stump of an oak-tree upon it, Dr. Paul counted a hundred + and sixty rings of annual growth. The village of the Shawanoes (Chaouenons), + on Franquelin's map, corresponds with the position of this earthwork. + I am indebted to the kindness of Dr. John Paul and Col. D. F. Hitt, + the proprietor of Starved Rock, for a plan of these curious remains + and a survey of the neighboring district. I must also express my obligations + to Mr. W. E. Bowman, photographer at Ottawa, for views of Starved Rock + and other features of the neighboring scenery.</p> + <p>An interesting relic of the early explorers of this region was found + a few years ago at Ottawa, six miles above Starved Rock, in the shape + of a small iron gun, buried several feet deep in the drift of the river. + It consists of a welded tube of iron, about an inch and a half in calibre, + strengthened by a series of thick iron rings, cooled on, after the + most ancient as well as the most recent method of making cannon. It + is about fourteen inches long, the part near the muzzle having been + burst off. The construction is very rude. Small field-pieces, on a + similar principle, were used in the fourteenth century. Several of + them may be seen at the Musée d'Artillerie at Paris. In the + time of Louis XIV., the art of casting cannon was carried to a high + degree of perfection. The gun in question may have been made by a French + blacksmith on the spot. A far less probable supposition is, that it + is a relic of some unrecorded visit of the Spaniards; but the pattern + of the piece would have been antiquated, even in the time of De Soto.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_249" id="footnote_249"></a><a href="#fnanchor_249"> <span class="label">[249]</span></a> The royal instructions to La Barre, on his assuming the government, + dated at Versailles, 10 May, 1682, require him to give no further permission + to make journeys of discovery towards the Sioux and the Mississippi, + as his Majesty thinks his subjects better employed in cultivating the + land. The letter adds, however, that La Salle is to be allowed to continue + his discoveries, if they appear to be useful. The same instructions + are repeated in a letter of the Minister of the Marine to the new intendant + of Canada, De Meules.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_250" id="footnote_250"></a><a href="#fnanchor_250"> <span class="label">[250]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle à La Barre, Fort St. Louis, 2 Avril, + 1683.</i> The above is condensed from passages in the original.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_251" id="footnote_251"></a><a href="#fnanchor_251"> <span class="label">[251]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle à La Barre, Portage de Chicagou, + 4 Juin, 1683.</i> The substance of the letter is given above, in + a condensed form. A passage is omitted, in which La Salle expresses + his belief that his vessel, the "Griffin," had been destroyed, not + by Indians, but by the pilot, who, as he thinks, had been induced + to sink her, and then, with some of the crew, attempted to join + Du Lhut with their plunder, but were captured by Indians on the + Mississippi.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_252" id="footnote_252"></a><a href="#fnanchor_252"> <span class="label">[252]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 14 Nov., 1682.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_253" id="footnote_253"></a><a href="#fnanchor_253"> <span class="label">[253]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 30 Avril, 1683.</i> La Salle + had spent the winter, not at Green Bay, as this slanderous letter declares, + but in the Illinois country.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_254" id="footnote_254"></a><a href="#fnanchor_254"> <span class="label">[254]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 4 Nov., 1683.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_255" id="footnote_255"></a><a href="#fnanchor_255"> <span class="label">[255]</span></a> <i>Lettre du Roy à La Barre, 5 Août, 1683.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_256" id="footnote_256"></a><a href="#fnanchor_256"> <span class="label">[256]</span></a> <i>Mémoire pour rendre compte à Monseigneur le + Marquis de Seignelay de l'État où le Sieur de Lasalle + a laissé le Fort Frontenac pendant le temps de sa découverte.</i> On + La Barre's conduct, see "Count Frontenac and New France under Louis + XIV.," chap. v.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_257" id="footnote_257"></a><a href="#fnanchor_257"> <span class="label">[257]</span></a> La Salle, when at Mackinaw, on his way to Quebec, in 1682, had + been recalled to the Illinois, as we have seen, by a threatened Iroquois + invasion. There is before me a copy of a letter which he then wrote + to Count Frontenac, begging him to send up more soldiers to the fort, + at his (La Salle's) expense. Frontenac, being about to sail for France, + gave this letter to his newly arrived successor, La Barre, who, far + from complying with the request, withdrew La Salle's soldiers already + at the fort, and then made its defenceless state a pretext for seizing + it. This statement is made in the memoir addressed to Seignelay, before + cited.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_258" id="footnote_258"></a><a href="#fnanchor_258"> <span class="label">[258]</span></a> These are the statements of the memorial addressed in La Salle's + behalf to the minister, Seignelay.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_259" id="footnote_259"></a><a href="#fnanchor_259"> <span class="label">[259]</span></a> Tonty, 1684, 1693; <i>Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 5 Juin, + 1684; Ibid., 9 Juillet, 1684</i>.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h2> +<p class="center">1680-1683.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE PAINTED BY HIMSELF.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Difficulty of knowing +him: his Detractors; his Letters; vexations of his Position; his Unfitness for Trade; +risks of Correspondence; his Reported Marriage; alleged +Ostentation; motives of Action; charges of Harshness; +intrigues against him; unpopular Manners; a Strange Confession; +his Strength and his Weakness; contrasts of his Character.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have seen La Salle in his acts. While he crosses the sea, let us look + at him in himself. Few men knew him, even of those who saw him most. Reserved + and self-contained as he was, with little vivacity or gayety or love of + pleasure, he was a sealed book to those about him. His daring energy and + endurance were patent to all; but the motive forces that urged him, and + the influences that wrought beneath the surface of his character, were + hidden where few eyes could pierce. His enemies were free to make their + own interpretations, and they did not fail to use the opportunity.</p> +<p>The interests arrayed against him were incessantly at work. His men were + persuaded to desert and rob him; the Iroquois were told that he was arming <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg + 329]</a></span> the western tribes against them; the western tribes were + told that he was betraying them to the Iroquois; his proceedings were + denounced to the court; and continual efforts were made to alienate his + associates. They, on their part, sore as they were from disappointment + and loss, were in a mood to listen to the aspersions cast upon him; and + they pestered him with letters, asking questions, demanding explanations, + and dunning him for money. It is through his answers that we are best + able to judge him; and at times, by those touches of nature which make + the whole world kin, they teach us to know him and to feel for him.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CHARGES AGAINST LA SALLE.</div> +<p>The main charges against him were that he was a crack-brained schemer, + that he was harsh to his men, that he traded where he had no right to + trade, and that his discoveries were nothing but a pretence for making + money. No accusations appear that touch his integrity or his honor.</p> +<p>It was hard to convince those who were always losing by him. A remittance + of good dividends would have been his best answer, and would have made + any other answer needless; but, instead of bills of exchange, he had nothing + to give but excuses and explanations. In the autumn of 1680, he wrote + to an associate who had demanded the long-deferred profits: "I have had + many misfortunes in the last two years. In the autumn of '78, I lost a + vessel by the fault of the pilot; in the next summer, the deserters I + told you about robbed me of eight or ten <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg + 330]</a></span> thousand livres' worth of goods. In the autumn of '79, + I lost a vessel worth more than ten thousand crowns; in the next spring, + five or six rascals stole the value of five or six thousand livres in + goods and beaver-skins, at the Illinois, when I was absent. Two other + men of mine, carrying furs worth four or five thousand livres, were killed + or drowned in the St. Lawrence, and the furs were lost. Another robbed + me of three thousand livres in beaver-skins stored at Michilimackinac. + This last spring, I lost about seventeen hundred livres' worth of goods + by the upsetting of a canoe. Last winter, the fort and buildings at Niagara + were burned by the fault of the commander; and in the spring the deserters, + who passed that way, seized a part of the property that remained, and + escaped to New York. All this does not discourage me in the least, and + will only defer for a year or two the returns of profit which you ask + for this year. These losses are no more my fault than the loss of the + ship 'St. Joseph' was yours. I cannot be everywhere, and cannot help making + use of the people of the country."</p> +<p>He begs his correspondent to send out an agent of his own. "He need not + be very <i>savant</i>, but he must be faithful, patient of labor, and + fond neither of gambling, women, nor good cheer; for he will find none + of these with me. Trusting in what he will write you, you may close your + ears to what priests and Jesuits tell you.</p> +<div class="sidenote">VEXATIONS OF HIS POSITION.</div> +<p>"After having put matters in good trim for trade I <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg + 331]</a></span> mean to withdraw, though I think it will be very + profitable; for I am disgusted to find that I must always be making + excuses, which is a part I cannot play successfully. I am utterly + tired of this business; for I see that it is not enough to put property + and life in constant peril, but that it requires more pains to answer + envy and detraction than to overcome the difficulties inseparable + from my undertaking."</p> +<p>And he makes a variety of proposals, by which he hopes to get rid of a + part of his responsibility to his correspondent. He begs him again to + send out a confidential agent, saying that for his part he does not want + to have any account to render, except that which he owes to the court, + of his discoveries. He adds, strangely enough for a man burdened with + such liabilities, "I have neither the habit nor the inclination to keep + books, nor have I anybody with me who knows how." He says to another correspondent, "I + think, like you, that partnerships in business are dangerous, on account + of the little practice I have in these matters." It is not surprising + that he wanted to leave his associates to manage business for themselves: "You + know that this trade is good; and with a trusty agent to conduct it for + you, you run no risk. As for me, I will keep the charge of the forts, + the command of posts and of men, the management of Indians and Frenchmen, + and the establishment of the colony, which will remain my property, leaving + your agent and mine to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg + 332]</a></span> look after our interests, and drawing my half without + having any hand in what belongs to you."</p> +<p>La Salle was a very indifferent trader; and his heart was not in the commercial + part of his enterprise. He aimed at achievement, and thirsted after greatness. + His ambition was to found another France in the West; and if he meant + to govern it also,—as without doubt he did,—it is not a matter + of wonder or of blame. His misfortune was, that, in the pursuit of a great + design, he was drawn into complications of business with which he was + ill fitted to grapple. He had not the instinct of the successful merchant. + He dared too much, and often dared unwisely; attempted more than he could + grasp, and forgot, in his sanguine anticipations, to reckon with enormous + and incalculable risks.</p> +<p>Except in the narrative parts, his letters are rambling and unconnected,—which + is natural enough, written, as they were, at odd moments, by camp-fires + and among Indians. The style is crude; and being well aware of this, he + disliked writing, especially as the risk was extreme that his letters + would miss their destination. "There is too little good faith in this + country, and too many people on the watch, for me to trust anybody with + what I wish to send you. Even sealed letters are not too safe. Not only + are they liable to be lost or stopped by the way, but even such as escape + the curiosity of spies lie at Montreal, waiting a long time to be forwarded."</p> +<div class="sidenote">HIS LETTERS INTERCEPTED.</div> +<p>Again, he writes: "I cannot pardon myself for the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg + 333]</a></span> stoppage of my letters, though I made every effort + to make them reach you. I wrote to you in '79 (in August), and sent + my letters to M. de la Forest, who gave them in good faith to my + brother. I don't know what he has done with them. I wrote you another, + by the vessel that was lost last year. I sent two canoes, by two + different routes; but the wind and the rain were so furious that + they wintered on the way, and I found my letters at the fort on + my return. I now send you one of them, which I wrote last year to + M. Thouret, in which you will find a full account of what passed, + from the time when we left the outlet of Lake Erie down to the sixteenth + of August, 1680. What preceded was told at full length in the letters + my brother has seen fit to intercept."</p> +<p>This brother was the Sulpitian priest, Jean Cavelier, who had been persuaded + that La Salle's enterprise would be ruinous, and therefore set himself + sometimes to stop it altogether, and sometimes to manage it in his own + way. "His conduct towards me," says La Salle, "has always been so strange, + through the small love he bears me, that it was clear gain for me when + he went away; since while he stayed he did nothing but cross all my plans, + which I was forced to change every moment to suit his caprice."</p> +<p>There was one point on which the interference of his brother and of his + correspondents was peculiarly annoying. They thought it for their interest + that he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span> should + remain a single man; whereas, it seems that his devotion to his purpose + was not so engrossing as to exclude more tender subjects. He writes:—</p> +<p>"I am told that you have been uneasy about my pretended marriage. I had + not thought about it at that time; and I shall not make any engagement + of the sort till I have given you reason to be satisfied with me. It is + a little extraordinary that I must render account of a matter which is + free to all the world.</p> +<p>"In fine, Monsieur, it is only as an earnest of something more substantial + that I write to you so much at length. I do not doubt that you will hereafter + change the ideas about me which some persons wish to give you, and that + you will be relieved of the anxiety which all that has happened reasonably + causes you. I have written this letter at more than twenty different times; + and I am more than a hundred and fifty leagues from where I began it. + I have still two hundred more to get over, before reaching the Illinois. + I am taking with me twenty-five men to the relief of the six or seven + who remain with the Sieur de Tonty."</p> +<p>This was the journey which ended in that scene of horror at the ruined + town of the Illinois.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CHARGED WITH OSTENTATION.</div> +<p>To the same correspondent, pressing him for dividends, he says: "You repeat + continually that you will not be satisfied unless I make you large returns + of profit. Though I have reason to thank you for what you have done for + this enterprise, it seems to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg + 335]</a></span> me that I have done still more, since I have put everything + at stake; and it would be hard to reproach me either with foolish outlays + or with the ostentation which is falsely imputed to me. Let my accusers + explain what they mean. Since I have been in this country, I have had + neither servants nor clothes nor fare which did not savor more of meanness + than of ostentation; and the moment I see that there is anything with + which either you or the court find fault, I assure you that I will give + it up,—for the life I am leading has no other attraction for me + than that of honor; and the more danger and difficulty there is in undertakings + of this sort, the more worthy of honor I think they are."</p> +<p>His career attests the sincerity of these words. They are a momentary + betrayal of the deep enthusiasm of character which may be read in his + life, but to which he rarely allowed the faintest expression.</p> +<p>"Above all," he continues, "if you want me to keep on, do not compel me + to reply to all the questions and fancies of priests and Jesuits. They + have more leisure than I; and I am not subtle enough to anticipate all + their empty stories. I could easily give you the information you ask; + but I have a right to expect that you will not believe all you hear, nor + require me to prove to you that I am not a madman. That is the first point + to which you should have attended, before having business with me; and + in our long acquaintance, either you must have found me out, or else I + must have had long intervals of sanity."</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg + 336]</a></span></p> +<p>To another correspondent he defends himself against the charge of harshness + to his men: "The facility I am said to want is out of place with this + sort of people, who are libertines for the most part; and to indulge them + means to tolerate blasphemy, drunkenness, lewdness, and a license incompatible + with any kind of order. It will not be found that I have in any case whatever + treated any man harshly, except for blasphemies and other such crimes + openly committed. These I cannot tolerate: first, because such compliance + would give grounds for another accusation, much more just; secondly, because, + if I allowed such disorders to become habitual, it would be hard to keep + the men in subordination and obedience, as regards executing the work + I am commissioned to do; thirdly, because the debaucheries, too common + with this rabble, are the source of endless delays and frequent thieving; + and, finally, because I am a Christian, and do not want to bear the burden + of their crimes.</p> +<div class="sidenote">INTRIGUES AGAINST HIM.</div> +<p>"What is said about my servants has not even a show of truth; for I use + no servants here, and all my men are on the same footing. I grant that + as those who have lived with me are steadier and give me no reason to + complain of their behavior, I treat them as gently as I should treat the + others if they resembled them, and as those who were formerly my servants + are the only ones I can trust, I speak more openly to them than to the + rest, who are generally spies of my enemies. The twenty-two men who deserted + and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span> robbed + me are not to be believed on their word, deserters and thieves as they + are. They are ready enough to find some pretext for their crime; and it + needs as unjust a judge as the intendant to prompt such rascals to enter + complaints against a person to whom he had given a warrant to arrest them. + But, to show the falsity of these charges, Martin Chartier, who was one + of those who excited the rest to do as they did, was never with me at + all; and the rest had made their plot before seeing me." And he proceeds + to relate, in great detail, a variety of circumstances to prove that his + men had been instigated first to desert, and then to slander him; adding, "Those + who remain with me are the first I had, and they have not left me for + six years."</p> +<p>"I have a hundred other proofs of the bad counsel given to these deserters, + and will produce them when wanted; but as they themselves are the only + witnesses of the severity they complain of, while the witnesses of their + crimes are unimpeachable, why am I refused the justice I demand, and why + is their secret escape connived at?</p> +<p>"I do not know what you mean by having popular manners. There is nothing + special in my food, clothing, or lodging, which are all the same for me + as for my men. How can it be that I do not talk with them? I have no other + company. M. de Tonty has often found fault with me because I stopped too + often to talk with them. You do not know the men one must employ here, + when you <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span> exhort + me to make merry with them. They are incapable of that; for they are never + pleased, unless one gives free rein to their drunkenness and other vices. + If that is what you call having popular manners, neither honor nor inclination + would let me stoop to gain their favor in a way so disreputable: and, + besides, the consequences would be dangerous, and they would have the + same contempt for me that they have for all who treat them in this fashion.</p> +<p>"You write me that even my friends say that I am not a man of popular + manners. I do not know what friends they are. I know of none in this country. + To all appearance they are enemies, more subtle and secret than the rest. + I make no exceptions; for I know that those who seem to give me support + do not do it out of love for me, but because they are in some sort bound + in honor, and that in their hearts they think I have dealt ill with them. + M. Plet will tell you what he has heard about it himself, and the reasons + they have to give.<a name="fnanchor_260" id="fnanchor_260"></a><a href="#footnote_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> I have seen it for a long time; and these secret + stabs they give me show it very plainly. After that, it is not surprising + that I open my mind to nobody, and distrust everybody. I have reasons + that I cannot write.</p> +<p>"For the rest, Monsieur, pray be well assured that the information you + are so good as to give me is <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg + 339]</a></span> received with a gratitude equal to the genuine friendship + from which it proceeds; and, however unjust are the charges made against + me, I should be much more unjust myself if I did not feel that I have + as much reason to thank you for telling me of them as I have to complain + of others for inventing them.</p> +<div class="sidenote">HIS MANNERS.</div> +<p>"As for what you say about my look and manner, I myself confess that you + are not far from right. But <i>naturam expellas</i>; and if I am wanting + in expansiveness and show of feeling towards those with whom I associate, <i>it + is only through a timidity which is natural to me, and which has made + me leave various employments, where without it I could have succeeded</i>. + But as I judged myself ill-fitted for them on account of this defect, + I have chosen a life more suited to my solitary disposition; which, nevertheless, + does not make me harsh to my people, though, joined to a life among savages, + it makes me, perhaps, less polished and complaisant than the atmosphere + of Paris requires. I well believe that there is self-love in this; and + that, knowing how little I am accustomed to a more polite life, the fear + of making mistakes makes me more reserved than I like to be. So I rarely + expose myself to conversation with those in whose company I am afraid + of making blunders, and can hardly help making them. Abbé Renaudot + knows with what repugnance I had the honor to appear before Monseigneur + de Conti; and sometimes it took me a week to make up my mind to go to + the audience,—that is, when I had time to think about <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg + 340]</a></span> myself, and was not driven by pressing business. It is + much the same with letters, which I never write except when pushed to + it, and for the same reason. It is a defect of which I shall never rid + myself as long as I live, often as it spites me against myself, and often + as I quarrel with myself about it."</p> +<div class="sidenote">HIS STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS.</div> +<p>Here is a strange confession for a man like La Salle. Without doubt, the + timidity of which he accuses himself had some of its roots in pride; but + not the less was his pride vexed and humbled by it. It is surprising that, + being what he was, he could have brought himself to such an avowal under + any circumstances or any pressure of distress. Shyness; a morbid fear + of committing himself; and incapacity to express, and much more to simulate, + feeling,—a trait sometimes seen in those with whom feeling is most + deep,—are strange ingredients in the character of a man who had + grappled so dauntlessly with life on its harshest and rudest side. They + were deplorable defects for one in his position. He lacked that sympathetic + power, the inestimable gift of the true leader of men, in which lies the + difference between a willing and a constrained obedience. This solitary + being, hiding his shyness under a cold reserve, could rouse no enthusiasm + in his followers. He lived in the purpose which he had made a part of + himself, nursed his plans in secret, and seldom asked or accepted advice. + He trusted himself, and learned more and more to trust no others. One + may fairly infer that distrust was natural to him; but the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg + 341]</a></span> inference may possibly be wrong. Bitter experience had + schooled him to it; for he lived among snares, pitfalls, and intriguing + enemies. He began to doubt even the associates who, under representations + he had made them in perfect good faith, had staked their money on his + enterprise, and lost it, or were likely to lose it. They pursued him with + advice and complaint, and half believed that he was what his maligners + called him,—a visionary or a madman. It galled him that they had + suffered for their trust in him, and that they had repented their trust. + His lonely and shadowed nature needed the mellowing sunshine of success, + and his whole life was a fight with adversity.</p> +<p>All that appears to the eye is his intrepid conflict with obstacles without; + but this, perhaps, was no more arduous than the invisible and silent strife + of a nature at war with itself,—the pride, aspiration, and bold + energy that lay at the base of his character battling against the superficial + weakness that mortified and angered him. In such a man, the effect of + such an infirmity is to concentrate and intensify the force within. In + one form or another, discordant natures are common enough; but very rarely + is the antagonism so irreconcilable as it was in him. And the greater + the antagonism, the greater the pain. There are those in whom the sort + of timidity from which he suffered is matched with no quality that strongly + revolts against it. These gentle natures may at least have peace, but + for him there was no peace.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg + 342]</a></span></p> +<p>Cavelier de La Salle stands in history like a statue cast in iron; but + his own unwilling pen betrays the man, and reveals in the stern, sad figure + an object of human interest and pity.<a name="fnanchor_261" id="fnanchor_261"></a><a href="#footnote_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_260" id="footnote_260"></a><a href="#fnanchor_260"> <span class="label">[260]</span></a> His cousin, François Plet, was in Canada in 1680, where, + with La Salle's approval, he carried on the trade of Fort Frontenac, + in order to indemnify himself for money advanced. La Salle always speaks + of him with esteem and gratitude.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_261" id="footnote_261"></a><a href="#fnanchor_261"> <span class="label">[261]</span></a> The following is the character of La Salle, as drawn by his friend, + Abbé Bernou, in a memorial to the minister Seignelay: "Il est + irréprochable dans ses mœurs, réglé dans sa + conduite, et qui veut de l'ordre parmy ses gens. Il est savant, judicieux, + politique, vigilant, infatigable, sobre, et intrépide. Il entend + suffisament l'architecture civile, militaire, et navale ainsy que l'agriculture; + il parle ou entend quatre ou cinq langues des Sauvages, et a beaucoup + de facilité pour apprendre les autres. Il sçait toutes + leurs manières et obtient d'eux tout ce qu'il veut par son adresse, + par son éloquence, et parce qu'il est beaucoup estimé d'eux. + Dans ses voyages il ne fait pas meilleure chère que le moindre + de ses gens et se donne plus de peine que pas un pour les encourager, + et il y a lieu de croire qu'avec la protection de Monseigneur il fondera + des colonies plus considérables que toutes celles que les François + ont établies jusqu'à présent."—<i>Mémoire + pour Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay</i>, 1682 (Margry, ii. 277).</p> + <p>The extracts given in the foregoing chapter are from La Salle's long + letters of 29 Sept., 1680, and 22 Aug., 1682 (1681?). Both are printed + in the second volume of the Margry collection, and the originals of + both are in the Bibliothèque Nationale. The latter seems to + have been written to La Salle's friend, Abbé Bernou; and the + former, to a certain M. Thouret.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2> +<p class="center">1684.</p> +<p class="center">A NEW ENTERPRISE.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">La Salle at Court: his +Proposals.—Occupation of Louisiana.—Invasion of Mexico.—Royal +Favor.—Preparation.—A Divided Command.—Beaujeu and La Salle.—Mental +Condition of La Salle: his Farewell to his Mother.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">When</span> La Salle reached Paris, he went to his old lodgings in Rue de la + Truanderie, and, it is likely enough, thought for an instant of the adventures + and vicissitudes he had passed since he occupied them before. Another + ordeal awaited him. He must confront, not painted savages with tomahawk + and knife, but—what he shrank from more—the courtly throngs + that still live and move in the pages of Sévigné and Saint-Simon.</p> +<p>The news of his discovery and the rumor of his schemes were the talk of + a moment among the courtiers, and then were forgotten. It was not so with + their master. La Salle's friends and patrons did not fail him. A student + and a recluse in his youth, and a backwoodsman in his manhood, he had + what was to him the formidable honor of an interview with royalty itself, + and stood with such philosophy <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg + 344]</a></span> as he could command before the gilded arm-chair, where, + majestic and awful, the power of France sat embodied. The King listened + to all he said; but the results of the interview were kept so secret that + it was rumored in the ante-chambers that his proposals had been rejected.<a name="fnanchor_262" id="fnanchor_262"></a><a href="#footnote_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a></p> +<p>On the contrary, they had met with more than favor. The moment was opportune + for La Salle. The King had long been irritated against the Spaniards, + because they not only excluded his subjects from their American ports, + but forbade them to enter the Gulf of Mexico. Certain Frenchmen who had + sailed on this forbidden sea had been seized and imprisoned; and more + recently a small vessel of the royal navy had been captured for the same + offence. This had drawn from the King a declaration that every sea should + be free to all his subjects; and Count d'Estrées was sent with + a squadron to the Gulf, to exact satisfaction of the Spaniards, or fight + them if they refused it.<a name="fnanchor_263" id="fnanchor_263"></a><a href="#footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> This was in time of peace. War had since + arisen between the two crowns, and brought with it the opportunity of + settling the question forever. In order to do so, the minister Seignelay, + like his father Colbert, proposed to establish a French port on the Gulf, + as a permanent menace to the Spaniards and a basis of future <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg + 345]</a></span> conquest. It was in view of this plan that La Salle's + past enterprises had been favored; and the proposals he now made were + in perfect accord with it.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S PROPOSALS.</div> +<p>These proposals were set forth in two memorials. The first of them states + that the late Monseigneur Colbert deemed it important for the service + of his Majesty to discover a port in the Gulf of Mexico; that to this + end the memorialist, La Salle, made five journeys of upwards of five thousand + leagues, in great part on foot; and traversed more than six hundred leagues + of unknown country, among savages and cannibals, at the cost of a hundred + and fifty thousand francs. He now proposes to return by way of the Gulf + of Mexico and the mouth of the Mississippi to the countries he has discovered, + whence great benefits may be expected: first, the cause of God may be + advanced by the preaching of the gospel to many Indian tribes; and, secondly, + great conquests may be effected for the glory of the King, by the seizure + of provinces rich in silver mines, and defended only by a few indolent + and effeminate Spaniards. The Sieur de la Salle, pursues the memorial, + binds himself to be ready for the accomplishment of this enterprise within + one year after his arrival on the spot; and he asks for this purpose only + one vessel and two hundred men, with their arms, munitions, pay, and maintenance. + When Monseigneur shall direct him, he will give the details of what he + proposes. The memorial then describes the boundless extent, the fertility + and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span> resources + of the country watered by the river Colbert, or Mississippi; the necessity + of guarding it against foreigners, who will be eager to seize it now that + La Salle's discovery has made it known; and the ease with which it may + be defended by one or two forts at a proper distance above its mouth, + which would form the key to an interior region eight hundred leagues in + extent. "Should foreigners anticipate us," he adds, "they will complete + the ruin of New France, which they already hem in by their establishments + of Virginia, Pennsylvania, New England, and Hudson's Bay."<a name="fnanchor_264" id="fnanchor_264"></a><a href="#footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a></p> +<p>The second memorial is more explicit. The place, it says, which the Sieur + de la Salle proposes to fortify, is on the river Colbert, or Mississippi, + sixty leagues above its mouth, where the soil is very fertile, the climate + very mild, and whence we, the French, may control the continent,—since, + the river being narrow, we could defend ourselves by means of fire-ships + against a hostile fleet, while the position is excellent both for attacking + an enemy or retreating in case of need. The neighboring Indians detest + the Spaniards, but love the French, having been won over by the kindness + of the Sieur de la Salle. We could form of them an army of more than fifteen + thousand savages, who, supported by the French and Abenakis, followers + of the Sieur de la Salle, could easily subdue the province of New Biscay + (the most northern province of Mexico), where there are but <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg + 347]</a></span> four hundred Spaniards, more fit to work the mines than + to fight. On the north of New Biscay lie vast forests, extending to the + river Seignelay<a name="fnanchor_265" id="fnanchor_265"></a><a href="#footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> (Red River), which is but forty or fifty leagues + from the Spanish province. This river affords the means of attacking it + to great advantage.</p> +<p>In view of these facts, pursues the memorial, the Sieur de la Salle offers, + if the war with Spain continues, to undertake this conquest with two hundred + men from France. He will take on his way fifty buccaneers at St. Domingo, + and direct the four thousand Indian warriors at Fort St. Louis of the + Illinois to descend the river and join him. He will separate his force + into three divisions, and attack at the same time the centre and the two + extremities of the province. To accomplish this great design, he asks + only for a vessel of thirty guns, a few cannon for the forts, and power + to raise in France two hundred such men as he shall think fit, to be armed, + paid, and maintained six months at the King's charge. And the Sieur de + la Salle binds himself, if the execution of this plan is prevented for + more than three years, by peace with Spain, to refund to his Majesty all + the costs of the enterprise, on pain of forfeiting the government of the + ports he will have established.<a name="fnanchor_266" id="fnanchor_266"></a><a href="#footnote_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg + 348]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLES'S PLANS.</div> +<p>Such, in brief, was the substance of this singular proposition. And, first, + it is to be observed that it is based on a geographical blunder, the nature + of which is explained by the map of La Salle's discoveries made in this + very year. Here the river Seignelay, or Red River, is represented as running + parallel to the northern border of Mexico, and at no great distance from + it,—the region now called Texas being almost entirely suppressed. + According to the map, New Biscay might be reached from this river in a + few days; and, after crossing the intervening forests, the coveted mines + of Ste. Barbe, or Santa Barbara, would be within striking distance.<a name="fnanchor_267" id="fnanchor_267"></a><a href="#footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> + That La Salle believed in the possibility of invading the Spanish province + of New Biscay from Red River there can be no doubt; neither can it reasonably + be doubted that he hoped at some future day to make the attempt; and yet + it is incredible that a man in his sober senses could have proposed this + scheme with the intention of attempting to execute it at the time and + in the manner which he indicates.<a name="fnanchor_268" id="fnanchor_268"></a><a href="#footnote_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> This memorial bears <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg + 349]</a></span> some indications of being drawn up in order to produce + a certain effect on the minds of the King and his minister. La Salle's + immediate necessity was to obtain from them the means for establishing + a fort and a colony within the mouth of the Mississippi. This was essential + to his own plans; nor did he in the least exaggerate the value of such + an establishment to the French nation, and the importance of anticipating + other powers in the possession of it. But he thought that he needed a + more glittering lure to attract the eyes of Louis and Seignelay; and thus, + it may be, he held before them, in a definite and tangible form, the project + of Spanish conquest which had haunted his imagination from youth,—trusting + that the speedy conclusion of peace, which actually took place, would + absolve him from the immediate execution of the scheme, and give him time, + with the means placed at his disposal, to mature his plans and prepare + for eventual action. Such a procedure may be charged with indirectness; + but there is a different explanation, which we shall suggest hereafter, + and which implies no such reproach.<a name="fnanchor_269" id="fnanchor_269"></a><a href="#footnote_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg + 350]</a></span></p> +<p>Even with this madcap enterprise lopped off, La Salle's scheme of Mississippi + trade and colonization, perfectly sound in itself, was too vast for an + individual,—above all, for one crippled and crushed with debt. While + he grasped one link of the great chain, another, no less essential, escaped + from his hand; while he built up a colony on the Mississippi, it was reasonably + certain that evil would befall his distant colony of the Illinois.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA BARRE REBUKED.</div> +<p>The glittering project which he now unfolded found favor in the eyes of + the King and his minister; for both were in the flush of an unparalleled + success, and looked in the future, as in the past, for nothing but triumphs. + They granted more than the petitioner asked, as indeed they well might, + if they expected the accomplishment of all that he proposed <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg + 351]</a></span> to attempt. La Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, ejected + from Fort Frontenac by La Barre, was now at Paris; and he was despatched + to Canada, empowered to reoccupy, in La Salle's name, both Fort Frontenac + and Fort St. Louis of the Illinois. The King himself wrote to La Barre + in a strain that must have sent a cold thrill through the veins of that + official. "I hear," he says, "that you have taken possession of Fort Frontenac, + the property of the Sieur de la Salle, driven away his men, suffered his + land to run to waste, and even told the Iroquois that they might seize + him as an enemy of the colony." He adds, that, if this is true, La Barre + must make reparation for the wrong, and place all La Salle's property, + as well as his men, in the hands of the Sieur de la Forest, "as I am satisfied + that Fort Frontenac was not abandoned, as you wrote to me that it had + been."<a name="fnanchor_270" id="fnanchor_270"></a><a href="#footnote_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> Four days later, he wrote to the intendant of Canada, De Meules, + to the effect that the bearer, La Forest, is to suffer no impediment, + and that La Barre is to surrender to him without reserve all that belongs + to La Salle.<a name="fnanchor_271" id="fnanchor_271"></a><a href="#footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> Armed with this letter, La Forest sailed for Canada.<a name="fnanchor_272" id="fnanchor_272"></a><a href="#footnote_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg + 352]</a></span></p> +<p>A chief object of his mission, as it was represented to Seignelay, was, + not only to save the colony at the Illinois from being broken up by La + Barre, but also to collect La Salle's scattered followers, muster the + savage warriors around the rock of St. Louis, and lead the whole down + the Mississippi, to co-operate in the attack on New Biscay. If La Salle + meant that La Forest should seriously attempt to execute such a scheme, + then the charges of his enemies that his brain was turned were better + founded than he would have us think.<a name="fnanchor_273" id="fnanchor_273"></a><a href="#footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">PREPARATION.</div> +<p>He had asked for two vessels,<a name="fnanchor_274" id="fnanchor_274"></a><a href="#footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a> and four were given to him. Agents + were sent to Rochelle and Rochefort to gather recruits. A hundred soldiers + were enrolled, besides mechanics and laborers; and thirty volunteers, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg + 353]</a></span> including gentlemen and burghers of condition, joined + the expedition. And, as the plan was one no less of colonization than + of war, several families embarked for the new land of promise, as well + as a number of girls, lured by the prospect of almost certain matrimony. + Nor were missionaries wanting. Among them was La Salle's brother, Cavelier, + and two other priests of St. Sulpice. Three Récollets were added,—Zenobe + Membré, who was then in France, Anastase Douay, and Maxime Le Clerc. + The principal vessel was the "Joly," belonging to the royal navy, and + carrying thirty-six guns. Another armed vessel of six guns was added, + together with a store-ship and a ketch.</p> +<p>La Salle had asked for sole command of the expedition, with a subaltern + officer, and one or two pilots to sail the vessels as he should direct. + Instead of complying, Seignelay gave the command of the vessels to Beaujeu, + a captain of the royal navy,—whose authority was restricted to their + management at sea, while La Salle was to prescribe the route they were + to take, and have entire control of the troops and colonists on land.<a name="fnanchor_275" id="fnanchor_275"></a><a href="#footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a> + This arrangement displeased both parties. Beaujeu, an old and experienced + officer, was galled that a civilian should be set over him,—and + he, too, a burgher lately ennobled; nor was La Salle the man to soothe + his ruffled spirit. Detesting a divided command, cold, reserved, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg + 354]</a></span> impenetrable, he would have tried the patience of a less + excitable colleague. Beaujeu, on his part, though set to a task which + he disliked, seems to have meant to do his duty, and to have been willing + at the outset to make the relations between himself and his unwelcome + associate as agreeable as possible. Unluckily, La Salle discovered that + the wife of Beaujeu was devoted to the Jesuits. We have seen the extreme + distrust with which he regarded these guides of his youth, and he seems + now to have fancied that Beaujeu was their secret ally. Possibly, he suspected + that information of his movements would be given to the Spaniards; more + probably, he had undefined fears of adverse machinations. Granting that + such existed, it was not his interest to stimulate them by needlessly + exasperating the naval commander. His deportment, however, was not conciliating; + and Beaujeu, prepared to dislike him, presently lost temper. While the + vessels still lay at Rochelle; while all was bustle and preparation; while + stores, arms, and munitions were embarking; while boys and vagabonds were + enlisting as soldiers for the expedition,—Beaujeu was venting his + disgust in long letters to the minister.</p> +<div class="sidenote">BEAUJEU AND LA SALLE.</div> +<p>"You have ordered me, Monseigneur, to give all possible aid to this undertaking, + and I shall do so to the best of my power; but permit me to take great + credit to myself, for I find it very hard to submit to the orders of the + Sieur de la Salle, whom I believe to be a man of merit, but who has no + experience of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg + 355]</a></span> war except with savages, and who has no rank, while I + have been captain of a ship thirteen years, and have served thirty by + sea and land. Besides, Monseigneur, he has told me that in case of his + death you have directed that the Sieur de Tonty shall succeed him. This, + indeed, is very hard; for, though I am not acquainted with that country, + I should be very dull, if, being on the spot, I did not know at the end + of a month as much of it as they do. I beg, Monseigneur, that I may at + least share the command with them; and that, as regards war, nothing may + be done without my knowledge and concurrence,—for, as to their commerce, + I neither intend nor desire to know anything about it."</p> +<p>Seignelay answered by a rebuff, and told him to make no trouble about + the command. This increased his irritation, and he wrote: "In my last + letter, Monseigneur, I represented to you the hardship of compelling me + to obey M. de la Salle, who has no rank, and <i>never commanded anybody + but school-boys</i>; and I begged you at least to divide the command between + us. I now, Monseigneur, take the liberty to say that I will obey without + repugnance, if you order me to do so, having reflected that there can + be no competition between the said Sieur de la Salle and me.</p> +<p>"Thus far, he has not told me his plan; and he changes his mind every + moment. He is a man so suspicious, and so afraid that one will penetrate + his secrets, that I dare not ask him anything. He says <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg + 356]</a></span> that M. de Parassy, commissary's clerk, with whom he has + often quarrelled, is paid by his enemies to defeat his undertaking; and + many other things with which I will not trouble you....</p> +<p>"He pretends that I am only to command the sailors, and have no authority + over the volunteer officers and the hundred soldiers who are to take passage + in the 'Joly;' and that they are not to recognize or obey me in any way + during the voyage....</p> +<p>"He has covered the decks with boxes and chests of such prodigious size + that neither the cannon nor the capstan can be worked."</p> +<p>La Salle drew up a long list of articles, defining the respective rights + and functions of himself and Beaujeu, to whom he presented it for signature. + Beaujeu demurred at certain military honors demanded by La Salle, saying + that if a marshal of France should come on board his ship, he would have + none left to offer him. The point was referred to the naval intendant; + and the articles of the treaty having been slightly modified, Beaujeu + set his name to it. "By this," he says, "you can judge better of the character + of M. de la Salle than by all I can say. He is a man who wants smoke [form + and ceremony]. I will give him his fill of it, and, perhaps, more than + he likes.</p> +<p>"I am bound to an unknown country, to seek what is about as hard to find + as the philosopher's stone. It vexes me, Monseigneur, that you should <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg + 357]</a></span> have been involved in a business the success of which + is very uncertain. M. de la Salle begins to doubt it himself."</p> +<p>While Beaujeu wrote thus to the minister, he was also writing to Cabart + de Villermont, one of his friends at Paris, with whom La Salle was also + on friendly terms. These letters are lively and entertaining, and by no + means suggestive of any secret conspiracy. He might, it is true, have + been more reserved in his communications; but he betrays no confidence, + for none was placed in him. It is the familiar correspondence of an irritable + but not ill-natured veteran, who is placed in an annoying position, and + thinks he is making the best of it.</p> +<p>La Salle thought that the minister had been too free in communicating + the secrets of the expedition to the naval intendant at Rochefort, and + through him to Beaujeu. It is hard to see how Beaujeu was to blame for + this; but La Salle nevertheless fell into a dispute with him. "He could + hardly keep his temper, and used expressions which obliged me to tell + him that I cared very little about his affairs, and that the King himself + would not speak as he did. He retracted, made excuses, and we parted good + friends....</p> +<p>"I do not like his suspiciousness. I think him a good, honest Norman; + but Normans are out of fashion. It is one thing to-day, another to-morrow. + It seems to me that he is not so sure about his undertaking as he was + at Paris. This morning he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg + 358]</a></span> came to see me, and told me he had changed his mind, and + meant to give a new turn to the business, and go to another coast. He + gave very poor reasons, to which I assented, to avoid a quarrel. I thought, + by what he said, that he wanted to find a scapegoat to bear the blame, + in case his plan does not succeed as he hopes. For the rest, I think him + a brave man and a true; and I am persuaded that if this business fails, + it will be because he does not know enough, and will not trust us of the + profession. As for me, I shall do my best to help him, as I have told + you before; and I am delighted to have him keep his secret, so that I + shall not have to answer for the result. Pray do not show my letters, + for fear of committing me with him. He is too suspicious already; and + never was Norman so Norman as he, which is a great hinderance to business."</p> +<p>Beaujeu came from the same province and calls himself jocularly <i>un + bon gros Normand</i>. His good-nature, however, rapidly gave way as + time went on. "Yesterday," he writes, "this Monsieur told me that he + meant to go to the Gulf of Mexico. A little while ago, as I said before, + he talked about going to Canada. I see nothing certain in it. It is + not that I do not believe that all he says is true; but not being of + the profession, and not liking to betray his ignorance, he is puzzled + what to do.</p> +<p>"I shall go straight forward, without regarding a thousand whims and <i>bagatelles</i>. + His continual suspicion would drive anybody mad except a Norman <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg + 359]</a></span> like me; but I shall humor him, as I have always done, + even to sailing my ship on dry land, if he likes."</p> +<div class="sidenote">AN OPEN QUARREL.</div> +<p>A few days later, there was an open quarrel. "M. de la Salle came to me, + and said, rather haughtily and in a tone of command, that I must put provisions + for three months more on board my vessel. I told him it was impossible, + as she had more lading already than anybody ever dared to put in her before. + He would not hear reason, but got angry and abused me in good French, + and found fault with me because the vessel would not hold his three months' + provisions. He said I ought to have told him of it before. 'And how would + you have me tell you,' said I, 'when you never tell me what you mean to + do?' We had still another quarrel. He asked me where his officers should + take their meals. I told him that they might take them where he pleased; + for I gave myself no trouble in the matter, having no orders. He answered + that they should not mess on bacon, while the rest ate fowls and mutton. + I said that if he would send fowls and mutton on board, his people should + eat them; but, as for bacon, I had often ate it myself. At this, he went + off and complained to M. Dugué that I refused to embark his provisions, + and told him that he must live on bacon. I excused him as not knowing + how to behave himself, having spent his life among school-boy brats and + savages. Nevertheless, I offered to him, his brother, and two of his friends, + seats at my table and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg + 360]</a></span> the same fare as myself. He answered my civility by an + impertinence, saying that he distrusted people who offered so much and + seemed so obliging. I could not help telling him that I saw he was brought + up in the provinces."</p> +<p>This was touching La Salle on a sensitive point. Beaujeu continues: "In + fact, you knew him better than I; for I always took him for a gentleman + (<i>honnête homme</i>). I see now that he is anything but that. + Pray set Abbé Renaudot and M. Morel right about this man, and tell + them he is not what they take him for. Adieu. It has struck twelve: the + postman is just going."</p> +<p>Bad as was the state of things, it soon grew worse. Renaudot wrote to + La Salle that Beaujeu was writing to Villermont everything that happened, + and that Villermont showed the letters to all his acquaintance. Villermont + was a relative of the Jesuit Beschefer; and this was sufficient to suggest + some secret machination to the mind of La Salle. Villermont's fault, however, + seems to have been simple indiscretion, for which Beaujeu took him sharply + to task. "I asked you to burn my letters; and I cannot help saying that + I am angry with you, not because you make known my secrets, but because + you show letters scrawled in haste, and sent off without being even read + over. M. de la Salle not having told me his secret, though M. de Seignelay + ordered him to tell me, I am not obliged to keep it, and have as good + a right as anybody to make my <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg + 361]</a></span> conjectures on what I read about it in the <i>Gazette + de Hollande</i>. Let Abbé Renaudot glorify M. de la Salle as much + as he likes, and make him a Cortez, a Pizarro, or an Almagro,—that + is nothing to me; but do not let him speak of me as an obstacle in his + hero's way. Let him understand that I know how to execute the orders of + the court as well as he....</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S INDISCRETION.</div> +<p>"You ask how I get on with M. de la Salle. Don't you know that this man + is impenetrable, and that there is no knowing what he thinks of one? He + told a person of note whom I will not name that he had suspicions about + our correspondence, as well as about Madame de Beaujeu's devotion to the + Jesuits. His distrust is incredible. If he sees one of his people speak + to the rest, he suspects something, and is gruff with them. He told me + himself that he wanted to get rid of M. de Tonty, who is in America."</p> +<p>La Salle's claim to exclusive command of the soldiers on board the "Joly" was + a source of endless trouble. Beaujeu declared that he would not set sail + till officers, soldiers, and volunteers had all sworn to obey him when + at sea; at which La Salle had the indiscretion to say, "If I am not master + of my soldiers, how can I make him [Beaujeu] do his duty in case he does + not want to do it?"</p> +<p>Beaujeu says that this affair made a great noise among the officers at + Rochefort, and adds: "<i>There are very few people who do not think that + his brain is touched.</i> I have spoken to some who have known <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg + 362]</a></span> him twenty years. They all say that he was always rather + visionary."</p> +<p>It is difficult not to suspect that the current belief at Rochefort had + some foundation; and that the deadly strain of extreme hardship, prolonged + anxiety, and alternation of disaster and success, joined to the fever + which nearly killed him, had unsettled his judgment and given a morbid + development to his natural defects. His universal suspicion, which included + even the stanch and faithful Henri de Tonty; his needless provocation + of persons whose good-will was necessary to him; his doubts whether he + should sail for the Gulf or for Canada, when to sail to Canada would have + been to renounce, or expose to almost certain defeat, an enterprise long + cherished and definitely planned,—all point to one conclusion. It + may be thought that his doubts were feigned, in order to hide his destination + to the last moment; but if so, he attempted to blind not only his ill + wishers, but his mother, whom he also left in uncertainty as to his route.</p> +<div class="sidenote">AN OVERWROUGHT BRAIN.</div> +<p>Unless we assume that his scheme of invading Mexico was thrown out as + a bait to the King, it is hard to reconcile it with the supposition of + mental soundness. To base so critical an attempt on a geographical conjecture, + which rested on the slightest possible information, and was in fact a + total error; to postpone the perfectly sound plan of securing the mouth + of the Mississippi, to a wild project of leading fifteen thousand savages + for an unknown distance <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg + 363]</a></span> through an unknown country to attack an unknown enemy,—was + something more than Quixotic daring. The King and the minister saw nothing + impracticable in it, for they did not know the country or its inhabitants. + They saw no insuperable difficulty in mustering and keeping together fifteen + thousand of the most wayward and unstable savages on earth, split into + a score and more of tribes, some hostile to each other and some to the + French; nor in the problem of feeding such a mob, on a march of hundreds + of miles; nor in the plan of drawing four thousand of them from the Illinois, + nearly two thousand miles distant, though some of these intended allies + had no canoes or other means of transportation, and though, travelling + in such numbers, they would infallibly starve on the way to the rendezvous. + It is difficult not to see in all this the chimera of an overwrought brain, + no longer able to distinguish between the possible and the impossible.</p> +<p>Preparation dragged slowly on; the season was growing late; the King grew + impatient, and found fault with the naval intendant. Meanwhile, the various + members of the expedition had all gathered at Rochelle. Joutel, a fellow-townsman + of La Salle, returning to his native Rouen, after sixteen years in the + army, found all astir with the new project. His father had been gardener + to Henri Cavelier, La Salle's uncle; and being of an adventurous spirit + he volunteered for the enterprise, of which he was to become the historian. + With La Salle's brother the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg + 364]</a></span> priest, and two of his nephews, one of whom was a boy + of fourteen, Joutel set out for Rochelle, where all were to embark together + for their promised land.<a name="fnanchor_276" id="fnanchor_276"></a><a href="#footnote_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">A PARTING LETTER</div> +<p>La Salle wrote a parting letter to his mother at Rouen:—</p> +<p> </p> +<p class="blockquot"><span style="margin-left: 60%;"><span class="smcap">Rochelle</span>, 18 +July, 1684.</span><br /> +<span class="smcap">Madame my Most Honored Mother</span>,—</p> +<p class="blockquot">At last, after having waited a long time +for a favourable wind, and having had a great many difficulties to +overcome, we are setting sail with four vessels, and nearly four +hundred men on board. Everybody is well, including little Colin +and my nephew. We all have good hope of a happy success. We are +not going by way of Canada, but by the Gulf of Mexico. I passionately +wish, and so do we all, that the success of this voyage +may contribute to your repose and comfort. Assuredly, I shall +spare no effort that it may; and I beg you, on your part, to preserve +yourself for the love of us.</p> +<p class="blockquot">You need not be troubled by the news from +Canada, which are nothing but the continuation of the artifices of +my enemies. I hope to be as successful against them as I have been +thus far, and to embrace you a year hence with all the pleasure +that the most grateful of children can feel with so good a mother +as you have always been. Pray let this hope, which shall not disappoint +you, support you through whatever trials may happen, and +be sure that you will always find me with a heart full of the +feelings which are due to you. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span> +Madame my Most Honored Mother, from your +most humble and most obedient servant and son,<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 60%;"><span class="smcap">De la Salle</span>.</span><br /><br /> +My brother, my nephews, and all the others +greet you, and take their leave of you.</p> +<p>This memorable last farewell has lain for two hundred years among the + family papers of the Caveliers.<a name="fnanchor_277" id="fnanchor_277"></a><a href="#footnote_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_262" id="footnote_262"></a><a href="#fnanchor_262"> <span class="label">[262]</span></a> <i>Lettres de l'Abbé Tronson, 8 Avril, 10 Avril, 1684</i> (Margry, + ii. 354).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_263" id="footnote_263"></a><a href="#fnanchor_263"> <span class="label">[263]</span></a> <i>Lettres du Roy et du Ministre sur la Navigation du Golfe du + Mexique, 1669-1682</i> (Margry, iii. 3-14).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_264" id="footnote_264"></a><a href="#fnanchor_264"> <span class="label">[264]</span></a> <i>Mémoire du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle, pour rendre + compte à Monseigneur de Seignelay de la découverte + qu'il a faite par l'ordre de sa Majesté.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_265" id="footnote_265"></a><a href="#fnanchor_265"> <span class="label">[265]</span></a> This name, also given to the Illinois, is used to designate Red + River on the map of Franquelin, where the forests above mentioned are + represented.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_266" id="footnote_266"></a><a href="#fnanchor_266"> <span class="label">[266]</span></a> ] <i>Mémoire du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle sur l'Entreprise + qu'il a proposé à Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay + sur une des provinces de Mexique.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_267" id="footnote_267"></a><a href="#fnanchor_267"> <span class="label">[267]</span></a> Both the memorial and the map represent the banks of Red River + as inhabited by Indians, called Terliquiquimechi, and known to the + Spaniards as <i>Indios bravos</i>, or <i>Indios de guerra</i>. The + Spaniards, it is added, were in great fear of them, as they made frequent + inroads into Mexico. La Salle's Mexican geography was in all respects + confused and erroneous; nor was Seignelay better informed. Indeed, + Spanish jealousy placed correct information beyond their reach.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_268" id="footnote_268"></a><a href="#fnanchor_268"> <span class="label">[268]</span></a> While the plan, as proposed in the memorial, was clearly impracticable, + the subsequent experience of the French in Texas tended to prove that + the tribes of that region could be used with advantage in attacking + the Spaniards of Mexico, and that an inroad on a comparatively small + scale might have been successfully made with their help. In 1689, Tonty + actually made the attempt, as we shall see, but failed, from the desertion + of his men. In 1697, the Sieur de Louvigny wrote to the Minister of + the Marine, asking to complete La Salle's discoveries, and invade Mexico + from Texas. (<i>Lettre de M. de Louvigny, 14 Oct., 1697.</i>) In an + unpublished memoir of the year 1700, the seizure of the Mexican mines + is given as one of the motives of the colonization of Louisiana.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_269" id="footnote_269"></a><a href="#fnanchor_269"> <span class="label">[269]</span></a> Another scheme, with similar aims, but much more practicable, + was at this very time before the court. Count Peñalossa, a Spanish + Creole, born in Peru, had been governor of New Mexico, where he fell + into a dispute with the Inquisition, which involved him in the loss + of property, and for a time of liberty. Failing to obtain redress in + Spain, he renounced his allegiance in disgust, and sought refuge in + France, where, in 1682, he first proposed to the King the establishment + of a colony of French buccaneers at the mouth of Rio Bravo, on the + Gulf of Mexico. In January, 1684, after the war had broken out, he + proposed to attack the Spanish town of Panuco, with twelve hundred + buccaneers from St. Domingo; then march into the interior, seize the + mines, conquer Durango, and occupy New Mexico. It was proposed to combine + his plan with that of La Salle; but the latter, who had an interview + with him, expressed distrust, and showed characteristic reluctance + to accept a colleague. It is extremely probable, however, that his + knowledge of Peñalossa's original proposal had some influence + in stimulating him to lay before the court proposals of his own, equally + attractive. Peace was concluded before the plans of the Spanish adventurer + could be carried into effect.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_270" id="footnote_270"></a><a href="#fnanchor_270"> <span class="label">[270]</span></a> <i>Lettre du Roy à La Barre, Versailles, 10 Avril, 1684.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_271" id="footnote_271"></a><a href="#fnanchor_271"> <span class="label">[271]</span></a> <i>Lettre du Roy à De Meules, Versailles, 14 Avril, 1684.</i> Seignelay + wrote to De Meules to the same effect.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_272" id="footnote_272"></a><a href="#fnanchor_272"> <span class="label">[272]</span></a> On La Forest's mission,—<i>Mémoire pour representer à Monseigneur + le Marquis de Seignelay la nécessité d'envoyer le + S<sup>r.</sup> de la Forest en diligence à la Nouvelle France; + Lettre du Roy à La Barre, 14 Avril, 1684; Ibid., 31 Oct., + 1684.</i></p> + <p>There is before me a promissory note of La Salle to La Forest, of 5,200 + livres, dated at Rochelle, 17 July, 1684. This seems to be pay due + to La Forest, who had served as La Salle's officer for nine years. + A memorandum is attached, signed by La Salle, to the effect that it + is his wish that La Forest reimburse himself, "<i>par préférence</i>," out + of any property of his (La Salle's) in France or Canada.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_273" id="footnote_273"></a><a href="#fnanchor_273"> <span class="label">[273]</span></a> The attitude of La Salle, in this matter, is incomprehensible. + In July, La Forest was at Rochefort, complaining because La Salle had + ordered him to stay in garrison at Fort Frontenac. <i>Beaujeu à Villermont, + 10 July, 1684</i>. This means an abandonment of the scheme of leading + the warriors at the rock of St. Louis down the Mississippi; but, in + the next month, La Salle writes to Seignelay that he is afraid La Barre + will use the Iroquois war as a pretext to prevent La Forest from making + his journey (to the Illinois), and that in this case he will himself + try to go up the Mississippi, and meet the Illinois warriors; so that, + in five or six months from the date of the letter, the minister will + hear of his departure to attack the Spaniards. (<i>La Salle à Seignelay, + Août, 1684.</i>) Either this is sheer folly, or else it is meant + to delude the minister.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_274" id="footnote_274"></a><a href="#fnanchor_274"> <span class="label">[274]</span></a> <i>Mémoire de ce qui aura esté accordé au + Sieur de la Salle.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_275" id="footnote_275"></a><a href="#fnanchor_275"> <span class="label">[275]</span></a> <i>Lettre au Roy à La Salle, 12 Avril, 1684; Mémoire + pour servir d'Instruction au Sieur de Beaujeu, 14 Avril, 1684.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_276" id="footnote_276"></a><a href="#fnanchor_276"> <span class="label">[276]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 12.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_277" id="footnote_277"></a><a href="#fnanchor_277"> <span class="label">[277]</span></a> The letters of Beaujeu to Seignelay and to Cabart de Villermont, + with most of the other papers on which this chapter rests, will be + found in Margry, ii. 354-471. This indefatigable investigator has also + brought to light a number of letters from a brother officer of Beaujeu, + Machaut-Rougemont, written at Rochefort, just after the departure of + the expedition from Rochelle, and giving some idea of the views there + entertained concerning it. He says: "L'on ne peut pas faire plus d'extravagances + que le Sieur de la Salle n'en a fait sur toutes ses prétentions + de commandement. Je plains beaucoup le pauvre Beaujeu d'avoir affaire à une + humeur si saturnienne.... Je le croy beaucoup visionnaire ... Beaujeu + a une sotte commission."</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg +366]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2> +<p class="center">1684, 1685.</p> +<p class="center">THE VOYAGE.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Disputes with Beaujeu.—St. +Domingo.—La Salle Attacked with Fever: his Desperate Condition.—The +Gulf Of Mexico.—A Vain Search and a Fatal Error.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> four ships sailed from Rochelle on the twenty-fourth of July. Four + days after, the "Joly" broke her bowsprit, by design as La Salle fancied. + They all put back to Rochefort, where the mischief was quickly repaired; + and they put to sea again. La Salle, and the chief persons of the expedition, + with a crowd of soldiers, artisans, and women, the destined mothers of + Louisiana, were all on board the "Joly." Beaujeu wished to touch at Madeira, + to replenish his water-casks. La Salle refused, lest by doing so the secret + of the enterprise might reach the Spaniards. One Paget, a Huguenot, took + up the word in support of Beaujeu. La Salle told him that the affair was + none of his; and as Paget persisted with increased warmth and freedom, + he demanded of Beaujeu if it was with his consent that a man of no rank + spoke to him in that manner. Beaujeu sustained <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg + 367]</a></span> the Huguenot. "That is enough," returned La Salle, and + withdrew into his cabin.<a name="fnanchor_278" id="fnanchor_278"></a><a href="#footnote_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a></p> +<p>This was not the first misunderstanding; nor was it the last. There was + incessant chafing between the two commanders; and the sailors of the "Joly" were + soon of one mind with their captain. When the ship crossed the tropic, + they made ready a tub on deck to baptize the passengers, after the villanous + practice of the time; but La Salle refused to permit it, at which they + were highly exasperated, having promised themselves a bountiful ransom, + in money or liquor, from their victims. "Assuredly," says Joutel, "they + would gladly have killed us all."</p> +<div class="sidenote">ST. DOMINGO.</div> +<p>When, after a wretched voyage of two months the ships reached St. Domingo, + a fresh dispute occurred. It had been resolved at a council of officers + to stop at Port de Paix; but Beaujeu, on pretext of a fair wind, ran by + that place in the night, and cast anchor at Petit Goave, on the other + side of the island. La Salle was extremely vexed; for he expected to meet + at Port de Paix the Marquis de Saint-Laurent, lieutenant-general of the + islands, Bégon the intendant, and De Cussy, governor of La Tortue, + who had orders to supply him with provisions and give him all possible + aid.</p> +<p>The "Joly" was alone: the other vessels had lagged behind. She had more + than fifty sick men on <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg + 368]</a></span> board, and La Salle was of the number. He sent a messenger + to Saint-Laurent, Bégon, and Cussy, begging them to come to him; + ordered Joutel to get the sick ashore, suffocating as they were in the + hot and crowded ship; and caused the soldiers to be landed on a small + island in the harbor. Scarcely had the voyagers sung <i>Te Deum</i> for + their safe arrival, when two of the lagging vessels appeared, bringing + tidings that the third, the ketch "St. François," had been taken + by Spanish buccaneers. She was laden with provisions, tools, and other + necessaries for the colony; and the loss was irreparable. Beaujeu was + answerable for it; for had he anchored at Port de Paix, it would not have + occurred. The lieutenant-general, with Bégon and Cussy, who presently + arrived, plainly spoke their minds to him.<a name="fnanchor_279" id="fnanchor_279"></a><a href="#footnote_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">ILLNESS OF LA SALLE.</div> +<p>La Salle's illness increased. "I was walking with him one day," writes + Joutel, "when he was seized of a sudden with such a weakness that he could + not stand, and was obliged to lie down on the ground. When he was a little + better, I led him to a chamber of a house that the brothers Duhaut had + hired. Here we put him to bed, and in the morning he was attacked by a + violent fever."<a name="fnanchor_280" id="fnanchor_280"></a><a href="#footnote_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a> "It was so violent that," says another of his shipmates, "his + imagination pictured to him things equally terrible and amazing."<a name="fnanchor_281" id="fnanchor_281"></a><a href="#footnote_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> + He lay delirious in the wretched garret, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg + 369]</a></span> attended by his brother, and one or two others who stood + faithful to him. A goldsmith of the neighborhood, moved at his deplorable + condition, offered the use of his house; and Abbé Cavelier had + him removed thither. But there was a tavern hard by, and the patient was + tormented with daily and nightly riot. At the height of the fever, a party + of Beaujeu's sailors spent a night in singing and dancing before the house; + and, says Cavelier, "The more we begged them to be quiet, the more noise + they made." La Salle lost reason and well-nigh life; but at length his + mind resumed its balance, and the violence of the disease abated. A friendly + Capucin friar offered him the shelter of his roof; and two of his men + supported him thither on foot, giddy with exhaustion and hot with fever. + Here he found repose, and was slowly recovering, when some of his attendants + rashly told him the loss of the ketch "St. François;" and the consequence + was a critical return of the disease.<a name="fnanchor_282" id="fnanchor_282"></a><a href="#footnote_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a></p> +<p>There was no one to fill his place. Beaujeu would not; Cavelier could + not. Joutel, the gardener's son, was apparently the most trusty man of + the company; but the expedition was virtually without a head. The men + roamed on shore, and plunged into every excess of debauchery, contracting + diseases which eventually killed them.</p> +<div class="sidenote">COMPLAINTS OF BEAUJEU.</div> +<p>Beaujeu, in the extremity of ill-humor, resumed <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg + 370]</a></span> his correspondence with Seignelay. "But for the + illness of the Sieur de la Salle," he writes, "I could not venture + to report to you the progress of our voyage, as I am charged only + with the navigation, and he with the secrets; but as his malady + has deprived him of the use of his faculties, both of body and mind, + I have thought myself obliged to acquaint you with what is passing, + and of the condition in which we are."</p> +<p>He then declares that the ships freighted by La Salle were so slow that + the "Joly" had continually been forced to wait for them, thus doubling + the length of the voyage; that he had not had water enough for the passengers, + as La Salle had not told him that there were to be any such till the day + they came on board; that great numbers were sick, and that he had told + La Salle there would be trouble if he filled all the space between decks + with his goods, and forced the soldiers and sailors to sleep on deck; + that he had told him he would get no provisions at St. Domingo, but that + he insisted on stopping; that it had always been so,—that whatever + he proposed La Salle would refuse, alleging orders from the King; "and + now," pursues the ruffled commander, "everybody is ill; and he himself + has a violent fever, as dangerous, the surgeon tells me, to the mind as + to the body."</p> +<p>The rest of the letter is in the same strain. He says that a day or two + after La Salle's illness began, his brother Cavelier came to ask him to + take charge <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg + 371]</a></span> of his affairs; but that he did not wish to meddle with + them, especially as nobody knows anything about them, and as La Salle + has sold some of the ammunition and provisions; that Cavelier tells him + that he thinks his brother keeps no accounts, wishing to hide his affairs + from everybody; that he learns from buccaneers that the entrance of the + Mississippi is very shallow and difficult, and that this is the worst + season for navigating the Gulf; that the Spaniards have in these seas + six vessels of from thirty to sixty guns each, besides row-galleys; but + that he is not afraid, and will perish, or bring back an account of the + Mississippi. "Nevertheless," he adds, "if the Sieur de la Salle dies, + I shall pursue a course different from that which he has marked out; for + I do not approve his plans."</p> +<p>"If," he continues, "you permit me to speak my mind, M. de la Salle ought + to have been satisfied with discovering his river, without undertaking + to conduct three vessels with troops two thousand leagues through so many + different climates, and across seas entirely unknown to him. I grant that + he is a man of knowledge, that he has reading, and even some tincture + of navigation; but there is so much difference between theory and practice, + that a man who has only the former will always be at fault. There is also + a great difference between conducting canoes on lakes and along a river, + and navigating ships with troops on distant oceans."<a name="fnanchor_283" id="fnanchor_283"></a><a href="#footnote_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg + 372]</a></span></p> +<p>While Beaujeu was complaining of La Salle, his followers were deserting + him. It was necessary to send them on board ship, and keep them there; + for there were French buccaneers at Petit Goave, who painted the promised + land in such dismal colors that many of the adventurers completely lost + heart. Some, too, were dying. "The air of this place is bad," says Joutel; "so + are the fruits; and there are plenty of women worse than either."<a name="fnanchor_284" id="fnanchor_284"></a><a href="#footnote_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a></p> +<p>It was near the end of November before La Salle could resume the voyage. + He was told that Beaujeu had said that he would not wait longer for the + store-ship "Aimable," and that she might follow as she could.<a name="fnanchor_285" id="fnanchor_285"></a><a href="#footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a> Moreover, + La Salle was on ill terms with Aigron, her captain, who had declared that + he would have nothing more to do with him.<a name="fnanchor_286" id="fnanchor_286"></a><a href="#footnote_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a> Fearing, therefore, that + some mishap might befall her, he resolved to embark in her himself, with + his brother Cavelier, Membré, Douay, and others, the trustiest + of his followers. On the twenty-fifth they set sail; the "Joly" and the + little frigate "Belle" following. They coasted the shore of Cuba, and + landed at the Isle of Pines, where La Salle shot an alligator, which the + soldiers ate; and the hunter brought in a wild pig, half of which he sent + to Beaujeu. Then they advanced to Cape St. Antoine, where bad weather + and contrary winds long detained them. A load of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg + 373]</a></span> cares oppressed the mind of La Salle, pale and haggard + with recent illness, wrapped within his own thoughts, and seeking sympathy + from none.</p> +<div class="sidenote">A VAIN SEARCH.</div> +<p>At length they entered the Gulf of Mexico, that forbidden sea whence by + a Spanish decree, dating from the reign of Philip II., all foreigners + were excluded on pain of extermination.<a name="fnanchor_287" id="fnanchor_287"></a><a href="#footnote_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a> Not a man on board knew the + secrets of its perilous navigation. Cautiously feeling their way, they + held a north-westerly course, till on the twenty-eighth of December a + sailor at the mast-head of the "Aimable" saw land. La Salle and all the + pilots had been led to form an exaggerated idea of the force of the easterly + currents; and they therefore supposed themselves near the Bay of Appalache, + when, in fact, they were much farther westward.</p> +<p>On New Year's Day they anchored three leagues from the shore. La Salle, + with the engineer Minet, went to explore it, and found nothing but a vast + marshy plain, studded with clumps of rushes. Two days after there was + a thick fog, and when at length it cleared, the "Joly" was nowhere to + be seen. La Salle in the "Aimable," followed closely by the little frigate "Belle," stood + westward along the coast. When at the mouth of the Mississippi in 1682, + he had taken its latitude, but unhappily could not determine its longitude; + and now every eye on board was strained to detect in the monotonous lines <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg + 374]</a></span> of the low shore some tokens of the great river. In fact, + they had already passed it. On the sixth of January, a wide opening was + descried between two low points of land; and the adjacent sea was discolored + with mud. "La Salle," writes his brother Cavelier, "has always thought + that this was the Mississippi." To all appearance, it was the entrance + of Galveston Bay.<a name="fnanchor_288" id="fnanchor_288"></a><a href="#footnote_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a> But why did he not examine it? Joutel says that + his attempts to do so were frustrated by the objections of the pilot of + the "Aimable," to which, with a facility very unusual with him, he suffered + himself to yield. Cavelier declares, on the other hand, that he would + not enter the opening because he was afraid of missing the "Joly." But + he might have entered with one of his two vessels, while the other watched + outside for the absent ship. From whatever cause, he lay here five or + six days, waiting in vain for Beaujeu;<a name="fnanchor_289" id="fnanchor_289"></a><a href="#footnote_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a> till, at last, thinking that + he must have passed westward, he resolved to follow. The "Aimable" and + the "Belle" again spread their sails, and coasted the shores of Texas. + Joutel, with a boat's crew, tried to land; but the sand-bars and breakers + repelled him. A party of Indians swam out through the surf, and were taken + on board; but La Salle could learn nothing from them, as their language + was unknown to him. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg + 375]</a></span> Again Joutel tried to land, and again the breakers repelled + him. He approached as near as he dared, and saw vast plains and a dim + expanse of forest, buffalo running with their heavy gallop along the shore, + and deer grazing on the marshy meadows.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE SHORES OF TEXAS.</div> +<p>Soon after, he succeeded in landing at a point somewhere between Matagorda + Island and Corpus Christi Bay. The aspect of the country was not cheering, + with its barren plains, its reedy marshes, its interminable oyster-beds, + and broad flats of mud bare at low tide. Joutel and his men sought in + vain for fresh water, and after shooting some geese and ducks returned + to the "Aimable." Nothing had been seen of Beaujeu and the "Joly;" the + coast was trending southward; and La Salle, convinced that he must have + passed the missing ship, turned to retrace his course. He had sailed but + a few miles when the wind failed, a fog covered the sea, and he was forced + to anchor opposite one of the openings into the lagoons north of Mustang + Island. At length, on the nineteenth, there came a faint breeze; the mists + rolled away before it, and to his great joy he saw the "Joly" approaching.</p> +<p>"His joy," says Joutel, "was short." Beaujeu's lieutenant, Aire, came + on board to charge him with having caused the separation, and La Salle + retorted by throwing the blame on Beaujeu. Then came a debate as to their + position. The priest Esmanville was present, and reports that La Salle + seemed greatly perplexed. He had more cause for perplexity than <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg + 376]</a></span> he knew; for in his ignorance of the longitude of the + Mississippi, he had sailed more than four hundred miles beyond it.</p> +<p>Of this he had not the faintest suspicion. In full sight from his ship + lay a reach of those vast lagoons which, separated from the sea by narrow + strips of land, line this coast with little interruption from Galveston + Bay to the Rio Grande. The idea took possession of him that the Mississippi + discharged itself into these lagoons, and thence made its way to the sea + through the various openings he had seen along the coast, chief among + which was that he had discovered on the sixth, about fifty leagues from + the place where he now was.<a name="fnanchor_290" id="fnanchor_290"></a><a href="#footnote_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">PERPLEXITY OF LA SALLE.</div> +<p>Yet he was full of doubt as to what he should do. Four days after rejoining + Beaujeu, he wrote him the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg + 377]</a></span> strange request to land the troops, that he "might fulfil + his commission;" that is, that he might set out against the Spaniards.<a name="fnanchor_291" id="fnanchor_291"></a><a href="#footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> + More than a week passed, a gale had set in, and nothing was done. Then + La Salle wrote again, intimating some doubt as to whether he was really + at one of the mouths of the Mississippi, and saying that, being sure that + he had passed the principal mouth, he was determined to go back to look + for it.<a name="fnanchor_292" id="fnanchor_292"></a><a href="#footnote_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a> Meanwhile, Beaujeu was in a state of great irritation. The + weather was stormy, and the coast was dangerous. Supplies were scanty; + and La Salle's soldiers, still crowded in the "Joly," were consuming the + provisions of the ship. Beaujeu gave vent to his annoyance, and La Salle + retorted in the same strain.</p> +<p>According to Joutel, he urged the naval commander to sail back in search + of the river; and Beaujeu refused, unless La Salle should give the soldiers + provisions. La Salle, he adds, offered to supply them with rations for + fifteen days; and Beaujeu declared this insufficient. There is reason, + however, to believe that the request was neither made by the one nor refused + by the other so positively as here appears.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_278" id="footnote_278"></a><a href="#fnanchor_278"> <span class="label">[278]</span></a> <i>Lettre (sans nom d'auteur) écrite de St. Domingue, + 14 Nov., 1684</i> (Margry, ii. 492); <i>Mémoire autographe + de l'Abbé Jean Cavelier sur le Voyage de 1684</i>. Compare + Joutel.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_279" id="footnote_279"></a><a href="#fnanchor_279"> <span class="label">[279]</span></a> <i>Mémoire de MM. de Saint-Laurens et Bégon</i> (Margry, + ii. 499); Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 28.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_280" id="footnote_280"></a><a href="#fnanchor_280"> <span class="label">[280]</span></a> <i>Relation de Henri Joutel</i> (Margry, iii. 98).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_281" id="footnote_281"></a><a href="#fnanchor_281"> <span class="label">[281]</span></a> <i>Lettre (sans nom d'auteur), 14 Nov., 1684</i> (Margry, ii. + 496).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_282" id="footnote_282"></a><a href="#fnanchor_282"> <span class="label">[282]</span></a> The above particulars are from the memoir of La Salle's brother, + Abbé Cavelier, already cited.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_283" id="footnote_283"></a><a href="#fnanchor_283"> <span class="label">[283]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Beaujeu au Ministre, 20 Oct., 1684.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_284" id="footnote_284"></a><a href="#fnanchor_284"> <span class="label">[284]</span></a> <i>Relation de Henri Joutel</i> (Margry, iii. 105).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_285" id="footnote_285"></a><a href="#fnanchor_285"> <span class="label">[285]</span></a> <i>Mémoire autographe de l'Abbé Jean Cavelier.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_286" id="footnote_286"></a><a href="#fnanchor_286"> <span class="label">[286]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Beaujeu au Ministre, 20 Oct., 1684.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_287" id="footnote_287"></a><a href="#fnanchor_287"> <span class="label">[287]</span></a> <i>Letter of Don Luis de Onis to the Secretary of State</i> (American + State Papers, xii, 27-31).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_288" id="footnote_288"></a><a href="#fnanchor_288"> <span class="label">[288]</span></a> "La hauteur nous a fait remarquer ... que ce que nous avions + vu le sixième janvier estoit en effet la principale entrée + de la rivière que nous cherchions."—<i>Lettre de La Salle + au Ministre, 4 Mars, 1687.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_289" id="footnote_289"></a><a href="#fnanchor_289"> <span class="label">[289]</span></a> <i>Mémoire autographe de l'Abbé Cavelier.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_290" id="footnote_290"></a><a href="#fnanchor_290"> <span class="label">[290]</span></a> "Depuis que nous avions quitté cette rivière qu'il + croyoit infailliblement estre le fleuve Colbert <i>[Mississippi]</i> nous + avions fait environ 45 lieues ou 50 au plus." (Cavelier, <i>Mémoire</i>.) + This, taken in connection with the statement of La Salle that this "principale + entrée de la rivière que nous cherchions" was twenty-five + or thirty leagues northeast from the entrance of the Bay of St. Louis + (Matagorda Bay), shows that it can have been no other than the entrance + of Galveston Bay, mistaken by him for the chief outlet of the Mississippi. + It is evident that he imagined Galveston Bay to form a part of the + chain of lagoons from which it is in fact separated. He speaks of these + lagoons as "une espèce de baye fort longue et fort large, <i>dans + laquelle le fleuve Colbert se décharge</i>." He adds that on + his descent to the mouth of the river in 1682 he had been deceived + in supposing that this expanse of salt water, where no shore was in + sight, was the open sea. <i>Lettre de La Salle au Ministre, 4 Mars, + 1685.</i> Galveston Bay and the mouth of the Mississippi differ little + in latitude, though separated by about five and a half degrees of longitude.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_291" id="footnote_291"></a><a href="#fnanchor_291"> <span class="label">[291]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle à Beaujeu, 23 Jan., 1685</i> (Margry, + ii. 526).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_292" id="footnote_292"></a><a href="#fnanchor_292"> <span class="label">[292]</span></a> This letter is dated, "De l'emboucheure d'une rivière + que <i>je crois estre</i> une des descharges du Mississipy" (Margry, + ii. 528).</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h2> +<p class="center">1685.</p> +<p class="center">LA SALLE IN TEXAS.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">A Party of Exploration—Wreck +of the "Aimable."—Landing of the Colonists.—A Forlorn Position.—Indian +Neighbors.—Friendly Advances of Beaujeu: his Departure.—A +Fatal Discovery.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">Impatience</span> to rid himself of his colleague and to command alone no doubt + had its influence on the judgment of La Salle. He presently declared that + he would land the soldiers, and send them along shore till they came to + the principal outlet of the river. On this, the engineer Minet took up + the word,—expressed his doubts as to whether the Mississippi discharged + itself into the lagoons at all; represented that even if it did, the soldiers + would be exposed to great risks; and gave as his opinion that all should + reimbark and continue the search in company. The advice was good, but + La Salle resented it as coming from one in whom he recognized no right + to give it. "He treated me," complains the engineer, "as if I were the + meanest of mankind."<a name="fnanchor_293" id="fnanchor_293"></a><a href="#footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg + 379]</a></span></p> +<p>He persisted in his purpose, and sent Joutel and Moranget with a party + of soldiers to explore the coast. They made their way northeastward along + the shore of Matagorda Island, till they were stopped on the third day + by what Joutel calls a river, but which was in fact the entrance of Matagorda + Bay. Here they encamped, and tried to make a raft of drift-wood. "The + difficulty was," says Joutel, "our great number of men, and the few of + them who were fit for anything except eating. As I said before, they had + all been caught by force or surprise, so that our company was like Noah's + ark, which contained animals of all sorts." Before their raft was finished, + they descried to their great joy the ships which had followed them along + the coast.<a name="fnanchor_294" id="fnanchor_294"></a><a href="#footnote_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">LANDING OF LA SALLE.</div> +<p>La Salle landed, and announced that here was the western mouth of the + Mississippi, and the place to which the King had sent him. He said further + that he would land all his men, and bring the "Aimable" and the "Belle" to + the safe harborage within. Beaujeu remonstrated, alleging the shallowness + of the water and the force of the currents; but his remonstrance was vain.<a name="fnanchor_295" id="fnanchor_295"></a><a href="#footnote_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a></p> +<p>The Bay of St. Louis, now Matagorda Bay, forms a broad and sheltered harbor, + accessible from the sea by a narrow passage, obstructed by sand-bars and + by the small island now called Pelican Island. Boats <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg + 380]</a></span> were sent to sound and buoy out the channel, and this + was successfully accomplished on the sixteenth of February. The "Aimable" was + ordered to enter; and, on the twentieth, she weighed anchor. La Salle + was on shore watching her. A party of men, at a little distance, were + cutting down a tree to make a canoe. Suddenly some of them ran towards + him with terrified faces, crying out that they had been set upon by a + troop of Indians, who had seized their companions and carried them off. + La Salle ordered those about him to take their arms, and at once set out + in pursuit. He overtook the Indians, and opened a parley with them; but + when he wished to reclaim his men, he discovered that they had been led + away during the conference to the Indian camp, a league and a half distant. + Among them was one of his lieutenants, the young Marquis de la Sablonnière. + He was deeply vexed, for the moment was critical; but the men must be + recovered, and he led his followers in haste towards the camp. Yet he + could not refrain from turning a moment to watch the "Aimable," as she + neared the shoals; and he remarked with deep anxiety to Joutel, who was + with him, that if she held that course she would soon be aground.</p> +<div class="sidenote">WRECK OF THE "AIMABLE".</div> +<p>They hurried on till they saw the Indian huts. About fifty of them, oven-shaped, + and covered with mats and hides, were clustered on a rising ground, with + their inmates gathered among and around them. As the French entered the + camp, there was the report <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg + 381]</a></span> of a cannon from the seaward. The startled savages dropped + flat with terror. A different fear seized La Salle, for he knew that the + shot was a signal of disaster. Looking back, he saw the "Aimable" furling + her sails, and his heart sank with the conviction that she had struck + upon the reef. Smothering his distress,—she was laden with all the + stores of the colony,—he pressed forward among the filthy wigwams, + whose astonished inmates swarmed about the band of armed strangers, staring + between curiosity and fear. La Salle knew those with whom he was dealing, + and, without ceremony, entered the chief's lodge with his followers. The + crowd closed around them, naked men and half-naked women, described by + Joutel as of singular ugliness. They gave buffalo meat and dried porpoise + to the unexpected guests, but La Salle, racked with anxiety, hastened + to close the interview; and having without difficulty recovered the kidnapped + men, he returned to the beach, leaving with the Indians, as usual, an + impression of good-will and respect.</p> +<p>When he reached the shore, he saw his worst fears realized. The "Aimable" lay + careened over on the reef, hopelessly aground. Little remained but to + endure the calamity with firmness, and to save, as far as might be, the + vessel's cargo. This was no easy task. The boat which hung at her stern + had been stove in,—it is said, by design. Beaujeu sent a boat from + the "Joly," and one or more Indian pirogues were procured. La Salle urged + on his men <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span> with + stern and patient energy, and a quantity of gunpowder and flour was safely + landed. But now the wind blew fresh from the sea; the waves began to rise; + a storm came on; the vessel, rocking to and fro on the sand-bar, opened + along her side, and the ravenous waves were strewn with her treasures. + When the confusion was at its height, a troop of Indians came down to + the shore, greedy for plunder. The drum was beat; the men were called + to arms; La Salle set his trustiest followers to guard the gunpowder, + in fear, not of the Indians alone, but of his own countrymen. On that + lamentable night, the sentinels walked their rounds through the dreary + bivouac among the casks, bales, and boxes which the sea had yielded up; + and here, too, their fate-hunted chief held his drearier vigil, encompassed + with treachery, darkness, and the storm.</p> +<p>Not only La Salle, but Joutel and others of his party, believed that the + wreck of the "Aimable" was intentional. Aigron, who commanded her, had + disobeyed orders and disregarded signals. Though he had been directed + to tow the vessel through the channel, he went in under sail; and though + little else was saved from the wreck, his personal property, including + even some preserved fruits, was all landed safely. He had long been on + ill terms with La Salle.<a name="fnanchor_296" id="fnanchor_296"></a><a href="#footnote_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg + 383]</a></span></p> +<p>All La Salle's company were now encamped on the sands at the left side + of the inlet where the "Aimable" was wrecked.<a name="fnanchor_297" id="fnanchor_297"></a><a href="#footnote_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a> "They were all," says + the engineer Minet, "sick with nausea and dysentery. Five or six died + every day, in consequence of brackish water and bad food. There was no + grass, but plenty of rushes and plenty of oysters. There was nothing to + make ovens, so that they had to eat flour saved from the wreck, boiled + into messes of porridge with this brackish water. Along the shore were + quantities of uprooted trees and rotten logs, thrown up by the sea and + the lagoon." Of these, and fragments of the wreck, they made a sort of + rampart to protect their camp; and here, among tents and hovels, bales, + boxes, casks, spars, dismounted cannon, and pens for fowls and swine, + were gathered the dejected men and homesick women who were to seize New + Biscay, and hold for France a region large as half Europe. The Spaniards, + whom they were to conquer, were they <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg + 384]</a></span> knew not where. They knew not where they were themselves; + and for the fifteen thousand Indian allies who were to have joined them, + they found two hundred squalid savages, more like enemies than friends.</p> +<p>In fact, it was soon made plain that these their neighbors wished them + no good. A few days after the wreck, the prairie was seen on fire. As + the smoke and flame rolled towards them before the wind, La Salle caused + all the grass about the camp to be cut and carried away, and especially + around the spot where the powder was placed. The danger was averted; but + it soon became known that the Indians had stolen a number of blankets + and other articles, and carried them to their wigwams. Unwilling to leave + his camp, La Salle sent his nephew Moranget and several other volunteers, + with a party of men, to reclaim them. They went up the bay in a boat, + landed at the Indian camp, and, with more mettle than discretion, marched + into it, sword in hand. The Indians ran off, and the rash adventurers + seized upon several canoes as an equivalent for the stolen goods. Not + knowing how to manage them, they made slow progress on their way back, + and were overtaken by night before reaching the French camp. They landed, + made a fire, placed a sentinel, and lay down on the dry grass to sleep. + The sentinel followed their example, when suddenly they were awakened + by the war-whoop and a shower of arrows. Two volunteers, Oris and Desloges, + were killed on the spot; a third, named Gayen, was severely <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg + 385]</a></span> wounded; and young Moranget received an arrow through + the arm. He leaped up and fired his gun at the vociferous but invisible + foe. Others of the party did the same, and the Indians fled.</p> +<div class="sidenote">BEAUJEU AND LA SALLE.</div> +<p>It was about this time that Beaujeu prepared to return to France. He had + accomplished his mission, and landed his passengers at what La Salle assured + him to be one of the mouths of the Mississippi. His ship was in danger + on this exposed and perilous coast, and he was anxious to find shelter. + For some time past, his relations with La Salle had been amicable, and + it was agreed between them that Beaujeu should stop at Galveston Bay, + the supposed chief mouth of the Mississippi; or, failing to find harborage + here, that he should proceed to Mobile Bay, and wait there till April, + to hear from his colleague. Two days before the wreck of the "Aimable," he + wrote to La Salle: "I wish with all my heart that you would have more + confidence in me. For my part, I will always make the first advances; + and I will follow your counsel whenever I can do so without risking my + ship. I will come back to this place, if you want to know the results + of the voyage I am going to make. If you wish, I will go to Martinique + for provisions and reinforcements. In fine, there is nothing I am not + ready to do: you have only to speak."</p> +<p>La Salle had begged him to send ashore a number of cannon and a quantity + of iron, stowed in the "Joly," for the use of the colony; and Beaujeu + replies: "I wish very much that I could give you <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg + 386]</a></span> your iron, but it is impossible except in a harbor; for + it is on my ballast, and under your cannon, my spare anchors, and all + my stowage. It would take three days to get it out, which cannot be done + in this place, where the sea runs like mountains when the slightest wind + blows outside. I would rather come back to give it to you, in case you + do not send the 'Belle' to Baye du St. Esprit [Mobile Bay] to get it.... + I beg you once more to consider the offer I make you to go to Martinique + to get provisions for your people. I will ask the intendant for them in + your name; and if they are refused, I will take them on my own account."<a name="fnanchor_298" id="fnanchor_298"></a><a href="#footnote_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a></p> +<p>To this La Salle immediately replied: "I received with singular pleasure + the letter you took the trouble to write me; for I found in it extraordinary + proofs of kindness in the interest you take in the success of an affair + which I have the more at heart, as it involves the glory of the King and + the honor of Monseigneur de Seignelay. I have done my part towards a perfect + understanding between us, and have never been wanting in confidence; but + even if I could be so, the offers you make are so obliging that they would + inspire complete trust." He nevertheless declines them,—assuring + Beaujeu at the same time that he has reached the place he sought, and + is in a fair way of success if he can but have the cannon, cannonballs, + and iron stowed on board the "Joly."<a name="fnanchor_299" id="fnanchor_299"></a><a href="#footnote_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg + 387]</a></span></p> +<p>Directly after he writes again, "I cannot help conjuring you once more + to try to give us the iron." Beaujeu replies: "To show you how ardently + I wish to contribute to the success of your undertaking, I have ordered + your iron to be got out, in spite of my officers and sailors, who tell + me that I endanger my ship by moving everything in the depth of the hold + on a coast like this, where the seas are like mountains. I hesitated to + disturb my stowage, not so much to save trouble as because no ballast + is to be got hereabout; and I have therefore had six cannon, from my lower + deck battery, let down into the hold to take the place of the iron." And + he again urges La Salle to accept his offer to bring provisions to the + colonists from Martinique.</p> +<div class="sidenote">DEPARTURE OF BEAUJEU.</div> +<p>On the next day, the "Aimable" was wrecked. Beaujeu remained a fortnight + longer on the coast, and then told La Salle that being out of wood, water, + and other necessaries, he must go to Mobile Bay to get them. Nevertheless, + he lingered a week more, repeated his offer to bring supplies from Martinique, + which La Salle again refused, and at last set sail on the twelfth of March, + after a leave-taking which was courteous on both sides.<a name="fnanchor_300" id="fnanchor_300"></a><a href="#footnote_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a></p> +<p>La Salle and his colonists were left alone. Several of them had lost heart, + and embarked for home with Beaujeu. Among these was Minet the engineer, + who had fallen out with La Salle, and who when he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg + 388]</a></span> reached France was imprisoned for deserting him. Even + his brother, the priest Jean Cavelier, had a mind to abandon the enterprise, + but was persuaded at last to remain, along with his nephew the hot-headed + Moranget, and the younger Cavelier, a mere school-boy. The two Récollet + friars, Zenobe Membré and Anastase Douay, the trusty Joutel, a + man of sense and observation, and the Marquis de la Sablonnière, + a debauched noble whose patrimony was his sword, were now the chief persons + of the forlorn company. The rest were soldiers, raw and undisciplined, + and artisans, most of whom knew nothing of their vocation. Add to these + the miserable families and the infatuated young women who had come to + tempt fortune in the swamps and cane-brakes of the Mississippi.</p> +<p>La Salle set out to explore the neighborhood. Joutel remained in command + of the so-called fort. He was beset with wily enemies, and often at night + the Indians would crawl in the grass around his feeble stockade, howling + like wolves; but a few shots would put them to flight. A strict guard + was kept; and a wooden horse was set in the enclosure, to punish the sentinel + who should sleep at his post. They stood in daily fear of a more formidable + foe, and once they saw a sail, which they doubted not was Spanish; but + she happily passed without discovering them. They hunted on the prairies, + and speared fish in the neighboring pools. On Easter Day, the Sieur le + Gros, one of the chief men of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg + 389]</a></span> company, went out after the service to shoot snipes; but + as he walked barefoot through the marsh, a snake bit him, and he soon + after died. Two men deserted, to starve on the prairie, or to become savages + among savages. Others tried to escape, but were caught; and one of them + was hung. A knot of desperadoes conspired to kill Joutel; but one of them + betrayed the secret, and the plot was crushed.</p> +<p>La Salle returned from his exploration, but his return brought no cheer. + He had been forced to renounce the illusion to which he had clung so long, + and was convinced at last that he was not at the mouth of the Mississippi. + The wreck of the "Aimable" itself was not pregnant with consequences so + disastrous.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CONDUCT OF BEAUJEU.</div> +<p class="blockquot"><span class="smcap">Note.</span>—The +conduct of Beaujeu, hitherto judged chiefly by the printed narrative of Joutel, is set in +a new and more favorable light by his correspondence with La Salle. +Whatever may have been their mutual irritation, it is clear that +the naval commander was anxious to discharge his duty in a manner +to satisfy Seignelay, and that he may be wholly acquitted of any +sinister design. When he left La Salle on the twelfth of March, +he meant to sail in search of the Bay of Mobile (Baye du St. Esprit),—partly +because he hoped to find it a safe harbor, where he could +get La Salle's cannon out of the hold and find ballast to take their +place; and partly to get a supply of wood and water, of which he +was in extreme need. He told La Salle that he would wait there +till the middle of April, in order that he (La Salle) might send the "Belle" to +receive the cannon; but on this point there was no +definite agreement between them. Beaujeu was ignorant of the position +of the bay, which he thought much nearer than it actually was. +After trying two days to reach it, the strong head-winds and the +discontent of his crew induced him to bear away for Cuba; and +after an encounter with pirates and various adventures, he reached +France about the first of July. He was coldly received by Seignelay, +who wrote to the + <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span> +intendant at Rochelle: "His Majesty has +seen what you wrote about the idea of the Sieur de Beaujeu, that +the Sieur de la Salle is not at the mouth of the Mississippi. He seems +to found this belief on such weak conjectures that no great attention +need be given to his account, especially as <i>this man</i> has +been prejudiced from the first against La Salle's enterprise." (<i>Lettre +de Seignelay à Arnoul, 22 Juillet,</i> 1685. Margry, +ii. 604.) The minister at the same time warns Beaujeu to say nothing +in disparagement of the enterprise, under pain of the King's +displeasure. The narrative of the engineer, Minet, +sufficiently explains a curious map, made by him, as he says, +not on the spot, but on the voyage homeward, and still preserved +in the Archives Scientifiques de la Marine. This map includes two +distinct sketches of the mouth of the Mississippi. The first, which +corresponds to that made by Franquelin in 1684, is entitled "Embouchure +de la Rivière comme M. de la Salle la marque dans sa Carte." The +second bears the words, "Costes et Lacs par la Hauteur de sa +Rivière, comme nous les avons trouvés." These "Costes et Lacs" are +a rude representation of the lagoons of Matagorda Bay and its neighborhood, +into which the Mississippi is made to discharge, in +accordance with the belief of La Salle. A portion of the coast-line +is drawn from actual, though superficial observation. The rest is +merely conjectural.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_293" id="footnote_293"></a><a href="#fnanchor_293"> <span class="label">[293]</span></a> <i>Relation de Minet; Lettre de Minet à Seignelay, 6 July, + 1685</i> (Margry, ii. 591, 602).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_294" id="footnote_294"></a><a href="#fnanchor_294"> <span class="label">[294]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 68; <i>Relation</i> (Margry, + iii. 143-146) Compare <i>Journal d'Esmanville</i> (Margry, ii. 510).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_295" id="footnote_295"></a><a href="#fnanchor_295"> <span class="label">[295]</span></a> <i>Relation de Minet</i> (Margry, ii. 591).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_296" id="footnote_296"></a><a href="#fnanchor_296"> <span class="label">[296]</span></a> <i>Procès Verbal du Sieur de la Salle sur le Naufrage + de la Flûte l'Aimable</i>; <i>Lettre de La Salle à Seignelay, + 4 Mars, 1685</i>; <i>Lettre de Beaujeu à Seignelay, sans + date</i>. Beaujeu did his best to save the cargo. The loss included + nearly all the provisions, 60 barrels of wine, 4 cannon, 1,620 balls, + 400 grenades, 4,000 pounds of iron, 5,000 pounds of lead, most of + the tools, a forge, a mill, cordage, boxes of arms, nearly all the + medicines, and most of the baggage of the soldiers and colonists. + Aigron returned to France in the "Joly," and was thrown into prison, "comme + il paroist clairement que cet accident est arrivé par sa + faute."—<i>Seignelay au Sieur Arnoul, 22 Juillet, 1685</i> (Margry, + ii. 604).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_297" id="footnote_297"></a><a href="#fnanchor_297"> <span class="label">[297]</span></a> A map, entitled <i>Entrée du Lac où on a laisse + le S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle</i>, made by the engineer Minet, and + preserved in the Archives de la Marine, represents the entrance + of Matagorda Bay, the camp of La Salle on the left, Indian camps + on the borders of the bay, the "Belle" at anchor within, the "Aimable" stranded + at the entrance, and the "Joly" anchored in the open sea.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_298" id="footnote_298"></a><a href="#fnanchor_298"> <span class="label">[298]</span></a> <i>Lettre de Beaujeu à La Salle, 18 Fév., 1685</i> (Margry, + ii. 542).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_299" id="footnote_299"></a><a href="#fnanchor_299"> <span class="label">[299]</span></a> <i>Lettre de La Salle à Beaujeu, 18 Fév., 1685</i> (Margry, + ii. 546).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_300" id="footnote_300"></a><a href="#fnanchor_300"> <span class="label">[300]</span></a> The whole of this correspondence between Beaujeu and La Salle + will be found in Margry, ii.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg + 391]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2> +<p class="center">1685-1687.</p> +<p class="center">ST. LOUIS OF TEXAS.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">The Fort.—Misery +and Dejection.—Energy of La Salle: his Journey of Exploration.—Adventures and Accidents.—The Buffalo.—Duhaut.—Indian Massacre.—Return +Of La Salle.—A New Calamity.—A Desperate Resolution.—Departure +for Canada.—Wreck of the "Belle."—Marriage.—Sedition.—Adventures +Of la Salle's Party.—The Cenis.—The Camanches.—The +Only Hope.—The Last Farewell.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">Of</span> what avail to plant a colony by the mouth of a petty Texan river? The + Mississippi was the life of the enterprise, the condition of its growth + and of its existence. Without it, all was futile and meaningless,—a + folly and a ruin. Cost what it might, the Mississippi must be found.</p> +<p>But the demands of the hour were imperative. The hapless colony, cast + ashore like a wreck on the sands of Matagorda Bay, must gather up its + shattered resources and recruit its exhausted strength, before it essayed + anew its pilgrimage to the "fatal river." La Salle during his explorations + had found a spot which he thought well fitted for a temporary establishment. + It was on the river which he named the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg + 392]</a></span> La Vache,<a name="fnanchor_301" id="fnanchor_301"></a><a href="#footnote_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> now the Lavaca, which enters the head of + Matagorda Bay; and thither he ordered all the women and children, and + most of the men, to remove; while the rest, thirty in number, remained + with Joutel at the fort near the mouth of the bay. Here they spent their + time in hunting, fishing, and squaring the logs of drift-wood which the + sea washed up in abundance, and which La Salle proposed to use in building + his new station on the Lavaca. Thus the time passed till midsummer, when + Joutel received orders to abandon his post, and rejoin the main body of + the colonists. To this end, the little frigate "Belle" was sent down the + bay. She was a gift from the King to La Salle, who had brought her safely + over the bar, and regarded her as a main-stay of his hopes. She now took + on board the stores and some of the men, while Joutel with the rest followed + along shore to the post on the Lavaca. Here he found a state of things + that was far from cheering. Crops had been sown, but the drought and the + cattle had nearly destroyed them. The colonists were lodged under tents + and hovels; and the only solid structure was a small square enclosure + of pickets, in which the gunpowder and the brandy were stored. The site + was good, a rising ground by the river; but there was no wood within the + distance of a league, and no horses or oxen to drag it. Their work must + be done by men. Some felled and squared the timber; and others dragged + it by main force over the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg + 393]</a></span> matted grass of the prairie, under the scorching Texan + sun. The gun-carriages served to make the task somewhat easier; yet the + strongest men soon gave out under it. Joutel went down to the first fort, + made a raft and brought up the timber collected there, which proved a + most seasonable and useful supply. Palisades and buildings began to rise. + The men labored without spirit, yet strenuously; for they labored under + the eye of La Salle. The carpenters brought from Rochelle proved worthless; + and he himself made the plans of the work, marked out the tenons and mortises, + and directed the whole.<a name="fnanchor_302" id="fnanchor_302"></a><a href="#footnote_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">MISERY AND DEJECTION.</div> +<p>Death, meanwhile, made withering havoc among his followers; and under + the sheds and hovels that shielded them from the sun lay a score of wretches + slowly wasting away with the diseases contracted at St. Domingo. Of the + soldiers enlisted for the expedition by La Salle's agents, many are affirmed + to have spent their lives in begging at the church doors of Rochefort, + and were consequently incapable of discipline. It was impossible to prevent + either them or the sailors from devouring persimmons and other wild fruits + to a destructive excess. Nearly all fell ill; and before the summer had + passed, the graveyard had more than thirty tenants.<a name="fnanchor_303" id="fnanchor_303"></a><a href="#footnote_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a> The bearing of + La Salle did not aid to raise the drooping spirits of his <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg + 394]</a></span> followers. The results of the enterprise had been far + different from his hopes; and, after a season of flattering promise, he + had entered again on those dark and obstructed paths which seemed his + destined way of life. The present was beset with trouble; the future, + thick with storms. The consciousness quickened his energies; but it made + him stern, harsh, and often unjust to those beneath him.</p> +<p>Joutel was returning to camp one afternoon with the master-carpenter, + when they saw game; and the carpenter went after it. He was never seen + again. Perhaps he was lost on the prairie, perhaps killed by Indians. + He knew little of his trade, but they nevertheless had need of him. Le + Gros, a man of character and intelligence, suffered more and more from + the bite of the snake received in the marsh on Easter Day. The injured + limb was amputated, and he died. La Salle's brother, the priest, lay ill; + and several others among the chief persons of the colony were in the same + condition.</p> +<p>Meanwhile, the work was urged on. A large building was finished, constructed + of timber, roofed with boards and raw hides, and divided into apartments + for lodging and other uses. La Salle gave the new establishment his favorite + name of Fort St. Louis, and the neighboring bay was also christened after + the royal saint.<a name="fnanchor_304" id="fnanchor_304"></a><a href="#footnote_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a> The scene was not without <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg + 395]</a></span> its charms. Towards the southeast stretched the bay with + its bordering meadows; and on the northeast the Lavaca ran along the base + of green declivities. Around, far and near, rolled a sea of prairie, with + distant forests, dim in the summer haze. At times, it was dotted with + the browsing buffalo, not yet scared from their wonted pastures; and the + grassy swells were spangled with the flowers for which Texas is renowned, + and which now form the gay ornaments of our gardens.</p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S EXPLORATIONS.</div> +<p>And now, the needful work accomplished, and the colony in some measure + housed and fortified, its indefatigable chief prepared to renew his quest + of the "fatal river," as Joutel repeatedly calls it. Before his departure + he made some preliminary explorations, in the course of which, according + to the report of his brother the priest, he found evidence that the Spaniards + had long before had a transient establishment at a spot about fifteen + leagues from Fort St. Louis.<a name="fnanchor_305" id="fnanchor_305"></a><a href="#footnote_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg + 396]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">LIFE AT THE FORT.</div> +<p>It was the last day of October when La Salle set out on his great journey + of exploration. His brother Cavelier, who had now recovered, accompanied + him with fifty men; and five cannon-shot from the fort saluted them as + they departed. They were lightly equipped; but some of them wore corselets + made of staves, to ward off arrows. Descending the Lavaca, they pursued + their course eastward on foot along the margin of the bay, while Joutel + remained in command of the fort. It was two leagues above the mouth of + the river; and in it were thirty-four persons, including three Récollet + friars, a number of women and girls from Paris, and two young orphan daughters + of one Talon, a Canadian, who had lately died. Their live-stock consisted + of some hogs and a litter of eight pigs, which, as Joutel does not forget + to inform us, passed their time in wallowing in the ditch of the palisade; + a cock and hen, with a young family; and a pair of goats, which, in a + temporary dearth of fresh meat, were sacrificed to the needs of the invalid + Abbé Cavelier. Joutel suffered no man to lie idle. The blacksmith, + having no anvil, was supplied with a cannon as a substitute. Lodgings + were built for the women and girls, and separate lodgings for the men. + A small chapel was afterwards added, and the whole was fenced with a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg + 397]</a></span> palisade. At the four corners of the house were mounted + eight pieces of cannon, which, in the absence of balls, were loaded with + bags of bullets.<a name="fnanchor_306" id="fnanchor_306"></a><a href="#footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> Between the palisades and the stream lay a narrow + strip of marsh, the haunt of countless birds; and at a little distance + it deepened into pools full of fish. All the surrounding prairies swarmed + with game,—buffalo, deer, hares, turkeys, ducks, geese, swans, plover, + snipe, and grouse. The river supplied the colonists with turtles, and + the bay with oysters. Of these last, they often found more than they wanted; + for when in their excursions they shoved their log canoes into the water, + wading shoeless through the deep, tenacious mud, the sharp shells would + cut their feet like knives; "and what was worse," says Joutel, "the salt + water came into the gashes, and made them smart atrociously."</p> +<p>He sometimes amused himself with shooting alligators. "I never spared + them when I met them near the house. One day I killed an extremely large + one, which was nearly four feet and a half in girth, and about twenty + feet long." He describes with accuracy that curious native of the southwestern + plains, the "horned frog," which, deceived by its uninviting appearance, + he erroneously supposed to be venomous. "We had some of our animals bitten + by snakes; among the others, a bitch that had belonged to the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg + 398]</a></span> deceased Sieur le Gros. She was bitten in the jaw when + she was with me, as I was fishing by the shore of the bay. I gave her + a little theriac [an antidote then in vogue], which cured her, as it did + one of our sows, which came home one day with her head so swelled that + she could hardly hold it up. Thinking it must be some snake that had bitten + her, I gave her a dose of the theriac mixed with meal and water." The + patient began to mend at once. "I killed a good many rattle-snakes by + means of the aforesaid bitch, for when she saw one she would bark around + him, sometimes for a half hour together, till I took my gun and shot him. + I often found them in the bushes, making a noise with their tails. When + I had killed them, our hogs ate them." He devotes many pages to the plants + and animals of the neighborhood, most of which may easily be recognized + from his description.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE BUFFALO.</div> +<p>With the buffalo, which he calls "our daily bread," his experiences were + many and strange. Being, like the rest of the party, a novice in the art + of shooting them, he met with many disappointments. Once, having mounted + to the roof of the large house in the fort, he saw a dark moving object + on a swell of the prairie three miles off; and rightly thinking that it + was a herd of buffalo, he set out with six or seven men to try to kill + some of them. After a while, he discovered two bulls lying in a hollow; + and signing to the rest of his party to keep quiet, he made his approach, + gun in hand. The bulls presently jumped <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg + 399]</a></span> up, and stared through their manes at the intruder. Joutel + fired. It was a close shot; but the bulls merely shook their shaggy heads, + wheeled about, and galloped heavily away. The same luck attended him the + next day. "We saw plenty of buffalo. I approached several bands of them, + and fired again and again, but could not make one of them fall." He had + not yet learned that a buffalo rarely falls at once, unless hit in the + spine. He continues: "I was not discouraged; and after approaching several + more bands,—which was hard work, because I had to crawl on the ground, + so as not to be seen,—I found myself in a herd of five or six thousand, + but, to my great vexation, I could not bring one of them down. They all + ran off to the right and left. It was near night, and I had killed nothing. + Though I was very tired, I tried again, approached another band, and fired + a number of shots; but not a buffalo would fall. The skin was off my knees + with crawling. At last, as I was going back to rejoin our men, I saw a + buffalo lying on the ground. I went towards it, and saw that it was dead. + I examined it, and found that the bullet had gone in near the shoulder. + Then I found others dead like the first. I beckoned the men to come on, + and we set to work to cut up the meat,—a task which was new to us + all." It would be impossible to write a more true and characteristic sketch + of the experience of a novice in shooting buffalo on foot. A few days + after, he went out again, with Father Anastase Douay; approached a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg + 400]</a></span> bull, fired, and broke his shoulder. The bull hobbled + off on three legs. Douay ran in his cassock to head him back, while Joutel + reloaded his gun; upon which the enraged beast butted at the missionary, + and knocked him down. He very narrowly escaped with his life. "There was + another missionary," pursues Joutel, "named Father Maxime Le Clerc, who + was very well fitted for such an undertaking as ours, because he was equal + to anything, even to butchering a buffalo; and as I said before that every + one of us must lend a hand, because we were too few for anybody to be + waited upon, I made the women, girls, and children do their part, as well + as him; for as they all wanted to eat, it was fair that they all should + work." He had a scaffolding built near the fort, and set them to smoking + buffalo meat, against a day of scarcity.<a name="fnanchor_307" id="fnanchor_307"></a><a href="#footnote_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">RETURN OF DUHAUT.</div> +<p>Thus the time passed till the middle of January; when late one evening, + as all were gathered in the principal building, conversing perhaps, or + smoking, or playing at cards, or dozing by the fire in homesick dreams + of France, a man on guard came in to report that he had heard a voice + from the river. They all went down to the bank, and descried a man in + a canoe, who called out, "Dominic!" This was the name of the younger of + the two brothers Duhaut, who was one of Joutel's followers. As the canoe <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg + 401]</a></span> approached, they recognized the elder, who had gone with + La Salle on his journey of discovery, and who was perhaps the greatest + villain of the company. Joutel was much perplexed. La Salle had ordered + him to admit nobody into the fort without a pass and a watchword. Duhaut, + when questioned, said that he had none, but told at the same time so plausible + a story that Joutel no longer hesitated to receive him. As La Salle and + his men were pursuing their march along the prairie, Duhaut, who was in + the rear, had stopped to mend his moccasins, and when he tried to overtake + the party, had lost his way, mistaking a buffalo-path for the trail of + his companions. At night he fired his gun as a signal, but there was no + answering shot. Seeing no hope of rejoining them, he turned back for the + fort, found one of the canoes which La Salle had hidden at the shore, + paddled by night and lay close by day, shot turkeys, deer, and buffalo + for food, and, having no knife, cut the meat with a sharp flint, till + after a month of excessive hardship he reached his destination. As the + inmates of Fort St. Louis gathered about the weather-beaten wanderer, + he told them dreary tidings. The pilot of the "Belle," such was his story, + had gone with five men to sound along the shore, by order of La Salle, + who was then encamped in the neighborhood with his party of explorers. + The boat's crew, being overtaken by the night, had rashly bivouacked on + the beach without setting a guard; and as they slept, a band of Indians + had rushed in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg + 402]</a></span> upon them, and butchered them all. La Salle, alarmed by + their long absence, had searched along the shore, and at length found + their bodies scattered about the sands and half-devoured by wolves.<a name="fnanchor_308" id="fnanchor_308"></a><a href="#footnote_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> + Well would it have been, if Duhaut had shared their fate.</p> +<p>Weeks and months dragged on, when, at the end of March, Joutel, chancing + to mount on the roof of one of the buildings, saw seven or eight men approaching + over the prairie. He went out to meet them with an equal number, well + armed; and as he drew near recognized, with mixed joy and anxiety, La + Salle and some of those who had gone with him. His brother Cavelier was + at his side, with his cassock so tattered that, says Joutel, "there was + hardly a piece left large enough to wrap a farthing's worth of salt. He + had an old cap on his head, having lost his hat by the way. The rest were + in no better plight, for their shirts were all in rags. Some of them carried + loads of meat, because M. de la Salle was afraid that we might not have + killed any buffalo. We met with great joy and many embraces. After our + greetings were over, M. de la Salle, seeing Duhaut, asked me in an angry + tone how it was that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg + 403]</a></span> I had received this man who had abandoned him. I told + him how it had happened, and repeated Duhaut's story. Duhaut defended + himself, and M. de la Salle's anger was soon over. We went into the house, + and refreshed ourselves with some bread and brandy, as there was no wine + left."<a name="fnanchor_309" id="fnanchor_309"></a><a href="#footnote_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S ADVENTURES.</div> +<p>La Salle and his companions told their story. They had wandered on through + various savage tribes, with whom they had more than one encounter, scattering + them like chaff by the terror of their fire-arms. At length they found + a more friendly band, and learned much touching the Spaniards, who, they + were told, were universally hated by the tribes of that country. It would + be easy, said their informants, to gather a host of warriors and lead + them over the Rio Grande; but La Salle was in no condition for attempting + conquests, and the tribes in whose alliance he had trusted had, a few + days before, been at blows with him. The invasion of New Biscay must be + postponed to a more propitious day. Still advancing, he came to a large + river, which he at first mistook for the Mississippi; and building a fort + of palisades, he left here several of his men.<a name="fnanchor_310" id="fnanchor_310"></a><a href="#footnote_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a> The fate of these + unfortunates does not appear. He <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg + 404]</a></span> now retraced his steps towards Fort St. Louis, and, as + he approached it, detached some of his men to look for his vessel, the "Belle," for + whose safety, since the loss of her pilot, he had become very anxious.</p> +<p>On the next day these men appeared at the fort, with downcast looks. They + had not found the "Belle" at the place where she had been ordered to remain, + nor were any tidings to be heard of her. From that hour, the conviction + that she was lost possessed the mind of La Salle. Surrounded as he was, + and had always been, with traitors, the belief now possessed him that + her crew had abandoned the colony, and made sail for the West Indies or + for France. The loss was incalculable. He had relied on this vessel to + transport the colonists to the Mississippi, as soon as its exact position + could be ascertained; and thinking her a safer place of deposit than the + fort, he had put on board of her all his papers and personal baggage, + besides a great quantity of stores, ammunition, and tools.<a name="fnanchor_311" id="fnanchor_311"></a><a href="#footnote_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> In truth, + she was of the last necessity to the unhappy exiles, and their only resource + for escape from a position which was fast becoming desperate.</p> +<p>La Salle, as his brother tells us, now fell dangerously ill,—the + fatigues of his journey, joined to the effects upon his mind of this last + disaster, having overcome his strength, though not his fortitude. "In + truth," writes the priest, "after the loss of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg + 405]</a></span> vessel which deprived us of our only means of returning + to France, we had no resource but in the firm guidance of my brother, + whose death each of us would have regarded as his own."<a name="fnanchor_312" id="fnanchor_312"></a><a href="#footnote_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">DEPARTURE FOR CANADA.</div> +<p>La Salle no sooner recovered than he embraced a resolution which could + be the offspring only of a desperate necessity. He determined to make + his way by the Mississippi and the Illinois to Canada, whence he might + bring succor to the colonists, and send a report of their condition to + France. The attempt was beset with uncertainties and dangers. The Mississippi + was first to be found, then followed through all the perilous monotony + of its interminable windings to a goal which was to be but the starting-point + of a new and not less arduous journey. Cavelier his brother, Moranget + his nephew, the friar Anastase Douay, and others to the number of twenty, + were chosen to accompany him. Every corner of the magazine was ransacked + for an outfit. Joutel generously gave up the better part of his wardrobe + to La Salle and his two relatives. Duhaut, who had saved his baggage from + the wreck of the "Aimable," was required to contribute to the necessities + of the party; and the scantily-furnished chests of those who had died + were used to supply the wants of the living. Each man labored with needle + and awl to patch his failing garments, or supply their place with buffalo + or deer skins. On the twenty-second of April, after <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg + 406]</a></span> mass and prayers in the chapel, they issued from the gate, + each bearing his pack and his weapons, some with kettles slung at their + backs, some with axes, some with gifts for Indians. In this guise, they + held their way in silence across the prairie; while anxious eyes followed + them from the palisades of St. Louis, whose inmates, not excepting Joutel + himself, seem to have been ignorant of the extent and difficulty of the + undertaking.<a name="fnanchor_313" id="fnanchor_313"></a><a href="#footnote_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">WRECK OF THE "BELLE."</div> +<p>"On May Day," he writes, "at about two in the afternoon, as I was walking + near the house, I heard a voice from the river below, crying out several + times, <i>Qui vive?</i> Knowing that the Sieur Barbier had gone that way + with two canoes to hunt buffalo, I thought that it might be one of these + canoes coming back with meat, and did not think much of the matter till + I heard the same voice again. I answered, <i>Versailles</i>, which was + the password I had given the Sieur Barbier, in case he should come back + in the night. But, as I was going towards the bank, I heard other voices + which I had not heard for a long time. I recognized among the rest that + of M. Chefdeville, which made me fear that some disaster had happened. + I ran down to the bank, and my first greeting was to ask what had become + of the 'Belle.' <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg + 407]</a></span> They answered that she was wrecked on the other side of + the bay, and that all on board were drowned except the six who were in + the canoe; namely, the Sieur Chefdeville, the Marquis de la Sablonnière, + the man named Teissier, a soldier, a girl, and a little boy."<a name="fnanchor_314" id="fnanchor_314"></a><a href="#footnote_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a></p> +<p>From the young priest Chefdeville, Joutel learned the particulars of the + disaster. Water had failed on board the "Belle"; a boat's crew of five + men had gone in quest of it; the wind rose, their boat was swamped, and + they were all drowned. Those who remained had now no means of going ashore; + but if they had no water, they had wine and brandy in abundance, and Teissier, + the master of the vessel, was drunk every day. After a while they left + their moorings, and tried to reach the fort; but they were few, weak, + and unskilful. A violent north wind drove them on a sand-bar. Some of + them were drowned in trying to reach land on a raft. Others were more + successful; and, after a long delay, they found a stranded canoe, in which + they made their way to St. Louis, bringing with them some of La Salle's + papers and baggage saved from the wreck.</p> +<p>These multiplied disasters bore hard on the spirits of the colonists; + and Joutel, like a good commander as he was, spared no pains to cheer + them. "We did what we could to amuse ourselves and drive away care. I + encouraged our people to dance and sing in the evenings; for when M. de + la Salle was among <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg + 408]</a></span> us, pleasure was often banished. Now, there is no use + in being melancholy on such occasions. It is true that M. de la Salle + had no great cause for merry-making, after all his losses and disappointments; + but his troubles made others suffer also. Though he had ordered me to + allow to each person only a certain quantity of meat at every meal, I + observed this rule only when meat was rare. The air here is very keen, + and one has a great appetite. One must eat and act, if he wants good health + and spirits. I speak from experience; for once, when I had ague chills, + and was obliged to keep the house with nothing to do, I was dreary and + down-hearted. On the contrary, if I was busy with hunting or anything + else, I was not so dull by half. So I tried to keep the people as busy + as possible. I set them to making a small cellar to keep meat fresh in + hot weather; but when M. de la Salle came back, he said it was too small. + As he always wanted to do everything on a grand scale, he prepared to + make a large one, and marked out the plan." This plan of the large cellar, + like more important undertakings of its unhappy projector, proved too + extensive for execution, the colonists being engrossed by the daily care + of keeping themselves alive.</p> +<div class="sidenote">MATRIMONY.</div> +<p>A gleam of hilarity shot for an instant out of the clouds. The young Canadian, + Barbier, usually conducted the hunting-parties; and some of the women + and girls often went out with them, to aid in cutting up the meat. Barbier + became enamoured of one of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg + 409]</a></span> the girls; and as his devotion to her was the subject + of comment, he asked Joutel for leave to marry her. The commandant, after + due counsel with the priests and friars, vouchsafed his consent, and the + rite was duly solemnized; whereupon, fired by the example, the Marquis + de la Sablonnière begged leave to marry another of the girls. Joutel, + the gardener's son, concerned that a marquis should so abase himself, + and anxious at the same time for the morals of the fort, which La Salle + had especially commended to his care, not only flatly refused, but, in + the plenitude of his authority, forbade the lovers all further intercourse.</p> +<p>Father Zenobe Membré, superior of the mission, gave unwilling occasion + for further merriment. These worthy friars were singularly unhappy in + their dealings with the buffalo, one of which, it may be remembered, had + already knocked down Father Anastase. Undeterred by his example, Father + Zenobe one day went out with the hunters, carrying a gun like the rest. + Joutel shot a buffalo, which was making off, badly wounded, when a second + shot stopped it, and it presently lay down. The father superior thought + it was dead; and, without heeding the warning shout of Joutel, he approached, + and pushed it with the butt of his gun. The bull sprang up with an effort + of expiring fury, and, in the words of Joutel, "trampled on the father, + took the skin off his face in several places, and broke his gun, so that + he could hardly manage to get away, and remained <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg + 410]</a></span> in an almost helpless state for more than three months. + Bad as the accident was, he was laughed at nevertheless for his rashness."</p> +<p>The mishaps of the friars did not end here. Father Maxime Le Clerc was + set upon by a boar belonging to the colony. "I do not know," says Joutel, "what + spite the beast had against him, whether for a beating or some other offence; + but, however this may be, I saw the father running and crying for help, + and the boar running after him. I went to the rescue, but could not come + up in time. The father stooped as he ran, to gather up his cassock from + about his legs; and the boar, which ran faster than he, struck him in + the arm with his tusks, so that some of the nerves were torn. Thus, all + three of our good Récollet fathers were near being the victims + of animals."<a name="fnanchor_315" id="fnanchor_315"></a><a href="#footnote_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a></p> +<p>In spite of his efforts to encourage them, the followers of Joutel were + fast losing heart. Father Maxime Le Clerc kept a journal, in which he + set down various charges against La Salle. Joutel got possession of the + paper, and burned it on the urgent entreaty of the friars, who dreaded + what might ensue, should the absent commander become aware of the aspersions + cast upon him. The elder Duhaut fomented the rising discontent of the + colonists, played the demagogue, told them that La Salle would never return, + and tried to make himself their leader. Joutel detected the mischief, + and, with a lenity which he afterwards deeply regretted, contented <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg + 411]</a></span> himself with a rebuke to the offender, and words of reproof + and encouragement to the dejected band.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ADVENTURES OF THE TRAVELLERS.</div> +<p>He had caused the grass to be cut near the fort, so as to form a sort + of playground; and here, one evening, he and some of the party were trying + to amuse themselves, when they heard shouts from beyond the river, and + Joutel recognized the voice of La Salle. Hastening to meet him in a wooden + canoe, he brought him and his party to the fort. Twenty men had gone out + with him, and eight had returned. Of the rest, four had deserted, one + had been lost, one had been devoured by an alligator; and the others, + giving out on the march, had probably perished in attempting to regain + the fort. The travellers told of a rich country, a wild and beautiful + landscape,—woods, rivers, groves, and prairies; but all availed + nothing, and the acquisition of five horses was but an indifferent return + for the loss of twelve men.</p> +<p>After leaving the fort, they had journeyed towards the northeast, over + plains green as an emerald with the young verdure of April, till at length + they saw, far as the eye could reach, the boundless prairie alive with + herds of buffalo. The animals were in one of their tame or stupid moods; + and they killed nine or ten of them without the least difficulty, drying + the best parts of the meat. They crossed the Colorado on a raft, and reached + the banks of another river, where one of the party, named Hiens, a German + of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span> Würtemberg, + and an old buccaneer, was mired and nearly suffocated in a mud-hole. Unfortunately, + as will soon appear, he managed to crawl out; and, to console him, the + river was christened with his name. The party made a bridge of felled + trees, on which they crossed in safety. La Salle now changed their course, + and journeyed eastward, when the travellers soon found themselves in the + midst of a numerous Indian population, where they were feasted and caressed + without measure. At another village they were less fortunate. The inhabitants + were friendly by day and hostile by night. They came to attack the French + in their camp, but withdrew, daunted by the menacing voice of La Salle, + who had heard them approaching through the cane-brake.</p> +<p>La Salle's favorite Shawanoe hunter, Nika, who had followed him from Canada + to France, and from France to Texas, was bitten by a rattlesnake; and, + though he recovered, the accident detained the party for several days. + At length they resumed their journey, but were stopped by a river, called + by Douay, "La Rivière des Malheurs." La Salle and Cavelier, with + a few others, tried to cross on a raft, which, as it reached the channel, + was caught by a current of marvellous swiftness. Douay and Moranget, watching + the transit from the edge of the cane-brake, beheld their commander swept + down the stream, and vanishing, as it were, in an instant. All that day + they remained with their companions on the bank, lamenting in despair + for the loss of their guardian <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg + 413]</a></span> angel, for so Douay calls La Salle.<a name="fnanchor_316" id="fnanchor_316"></a><a href="#footnote_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a> It was fast growing + dark, when, to their unspeakable relief, they saw him advancing with his + party along the opposite bank, having succeeded, after great exertion, + in guiding the raft to land. How to rejoin him was now the question. Douay + and his companions, who had tasted no food that day, broke their fast + on two young eagles which they knocked out of their nest, and then spent + the night in rueful consultation as to the means of crossing the river. + In the morning they waded into the marsh, the friar with his breviary + in his hood to keep it dry, and hacked among the canes till they had gathered + enough to make another raft; on which, profiting by La Salle's experience, + they safely crossed, and rejoined him.</p> +<p>Next, they became entangled in a cane-brake, where La Salle, as usual + with him in such cases, took the lead, a hatchet in each hand, and hewed + out a path for his followers. They soon reached the villages of the Cenis + Indians, on and near the river Trinity,—a tribe then powerful, but + long since extinct. Nothing could surpass the friendliness of their welcome. + The chiefs came to meet them, bearing the calumet, and followed by warriors + in shirts of embroidered deer-skin. Then the whole village swarmed out + like bees, gathering around the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg + 414]</a></span> visitors with offerings of food and all that was precious + in their eyes. La Salle was lodged with the great chief; but he compelled + his men to encamp at a distance, lest the ardor of their gallantry might + give occasion of offence. The lodges of the Cenis, forty or fifty feet + high, and covered with a thatch of meadow-grass, looked like huge bee-hives. + Each held several families, whose fire was in the middle, and their beds + around the circumference. The spoil of the Spaniards was to be seen on + all sides,—silver lamps and spoons, swords, old muskets, money, + clothing, and a bull of the Pope dispensing the Spanish colonists of New + Mexico from fasting during summer.<a name="fnanchor_317" id="fnanchor_317"></a><a href="#footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> These treasures, as well as their + numerous horses, were obtained by the Cenis from their neighbors and allies + the Camanches, that fierce prairie banditti who then, as now, scourged + the Mexican border with their bloody forays. A party of these wild horsemen + was in the village. Douay was edified at seeing them make the sign of + the cross in imitation of the neophytes of one of the Spanish missions. + They enacted, too, the ceremony of the mass; and one of them, in his rude + way, drew a sketch of a picture he had seen in some church which he had + pillaged, wherein the friar plainly recognized the Virgin weeping at the + foot of the cross. They invited the French to join them on a raid into + New Mexico; and they spoke with contempt, as their tribesmen will speak + to this day, of the Spanish <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg + 415]</a></span> creoles, saying that it would be easy to conquer a nation + of cowards who make people walk before them with fans to cool them in + hot weather.<a name="fnanchor_318" id="fnanchor_318"></a><a href="#footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a></p> +<p>Soon after leaving the Cenis villages, both La Salle and his nephew Moranget + were attacked by fever. This caused a delay of more than two months, during + which the party seem to have remained encamped on the Neches, or possibly + the Sabine. When at length the invalids had recovered sufficient strength + to travel, the stock of ammunition was nearly spent, some of the men had + deserted, and the condition of the travellers was such that there seemed + no alternative but to return to Fort St. Louis. This they accordingly + did, greatly aided in their march by the horses bought from the Cenis, + and suffering no very serious accident by the way,—excepting the + loss of La Salle's servant, Dumesnil, who was seized by an alligator while + attempting to cross the Colorado.</p> +<div class="sidenote">DEJECTION.</div> +<p>The temporary excitement caused among the colonists by their return soon + gave place to a dejection bordering on despair. "This pleasant land," writes + Cavelier, "seemed to us an abode of weariness and a perpetual prison." Flattering + themselves with the delusion, common to exiles of every kind, that they + were objects of solicitude at home, they watched daily, with straining + eyes, for an approaching sail. Ships, indeed, had ranged the coast to + seek them, but with no friendly intent. Their thoughts dwelt, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg + 416]</a></span> with unspeakable yearning, on the France they had left + behind, which, to their longing fancy, was pictured as an unattainable + Eden. Well might they despond; for of a hundred and eighty colonists, + besides the crew of the "Belle," less than forty-five remained. The weary + precincts of Fort St. Louis, with its fence of rigid palisades, its area + of trampled earth, its buildings of weather-stained timber, and its well-peopled + graveyard without, were hateful to their sight. La Salle had a heavy task + to save them from despair. His composure, his unfailing equanimity, his + words of encouragement and cheer, were the breath of life to this forlorn + company; for though he could not impart to minds of less adamantine temper + the audacity of hope with which he still clung to the final accomplishment + of his purposes, the contagion of his hardihood touched, nevertheless, + the drooping spirits of his followers.<a name="fnanchor_319" id="fnanchor_319"></a><a href="#footnote_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">TWELFTH NIGHT.</div> +<p>The journey to Canada was clearly their only hope; and, after a brief + rest, La Salle prepared to renew the attempt. He proposed that Joutel + should this time be of the party; and should proceed from Quebec to France, + with his brother Cavelier, to solicit succors for the colony, while he + himself <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a></span> returned + to Texas. A new obstacle was presently interposed. La Salle, whose constitution + seems to have suffered from his long course of hardships, was attacked + in November with hernia. Joutel offered to conduct the party in his stead; + but La Salle replied that his own presence was indispensable at the Illinois. + He had the good fortune to recover, within four or five weeks, sufficiently + to undertake the journey; and all in the fort busied themselves in preparing + an outfit. In such straits were they for clothing, that the sails of the "Belle" were + cut up to make coats for the adventurers. Christmas came, and was solemnly + observed. There was a midnight mass in the chapel, where Membré, + Cavelier, Douay, and their priestly brethren stood before the altar, in + vestments strangely contrasting with the rude temple and the ruder garb + of the worshippers. And as Membré elevated the consecrated wafer, + and the lamps burned dim through the clouds of incense, the kneeling group + drew from the daily miracle such consolation as true Catholics alone can + know. When Twelfth Night came, all gathered in the hall, and cried, after + the jovial old custom, "The King drinks," with hearts, perhaps, as cheerless + as their cups, which were filled with cold water.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE LAST FAREWELL.</div> +<p>On the morrow, the band of adventurers mustered for the fatal journey.<a name="fnanchor_320" id="fnanchor_320"></a><a href="#footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a> + The five horses, bought by <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[Pg + 418]</a></span> La Salle of the Indians, stood in the area of the fort, + packed for the march; and here was gathered the wretched remnant of the + colony,—those who were to go, and those who were to stay behind. + These latter were about twenty in all,—Barbier, who was to command + in the place of Joutel; Sablonnière, who, despite his title of + marquis, was held in great contempt;<a name="fnanchor_321" id="fnanchor_321"></a><a href="#footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a> the friars, Membré and + Le Clerc,<a name="fnanchor_322" id="fnanchor_322"></a><a href="#footnote_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a> and the priest Chefdeville, besides a surgeon, soldiers, + laborers, seven women and girls, and several children, doomed, in this + deadly exile, to wait the issues of the journey, and the possible arrival + of a tardy succor. La Salle had made them a last address, delivered, we + are told, with that winning air which, though alien from his usual bearing, + seems to have been at times a natural expression of this unhappy man.<a name="fnanchor_323" id="fnanchor_323"></a><a href="#footnote_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> + It was a bitter parting, one of sighs, tears, and embracings,—the + farewell of those on whose souls had sunk a heavy boding that they would + never <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a></span> meet + again.<a name="fnanchor_324" id="fnanchor_324"></a><a href="#footnote_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a> Equipped and weaponed for the journey, the adventurers filed + from the gate, crossed the river, and held their slow march over the prairies + beyond, till intervening woods and hills shut Fort St. Louis forever from + their sight.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_301" id="footnote_301"></a><a href="#fnanchor_301"> <span class="label">[301]</span></a> Called by Joutel, Rivière aux Bœufs.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_302" id="footnote_302"></a><a href="#fnanchor_302"> <span class="label">[302]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 108; <i>Relation</i> (Margry, + iii. 174); <i>Procès Verbal fait au poste de St. Louis, le 18 + Avril, 1686</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_303" id="footnote_303"></a><a href="#fnanchor_303"> <span class="label">[303]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 109. Le Clerc, who was not + present, says a hundred.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_304" id="footnote_304"></a><a href="#fnanchor_304"> <span class="label">[304]</span></a> The Bay of St. Louis, St. Bernard's Bay, or Matagorda Bay,—for + it has borne all these names,—was also called Espiritu Santo + Bay by the Spaniards, in common with several other bays in the Gulf + of Mexico. An adjoining bay still retains the name.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_305" id="footnote_305"></a><a href="#fnanchor_305"> <span class="label">[305]</span></a> Cavelier, in his report to the minister, says: "We reached a + large village, enclosed with a kind of wall made of clay and sand, + and fortified with little towers at intervals, where we found the arms + of Spain engraved on a plate of copper, with the date of 1588, attached + to a stake. The inhabitants gave us a kind welcome, and showed us some + hammers and an anvil, two small pieces of iron cannon, a small brass + culverin, some pike-heads, some old sword-blades, and some books of + Spanish comedy; and thence they guided us to a little hamlet of fishermen, + about two leagues distant, where they showed us a second stake, also + with the arms of Spain, and a few old chimneys. All this convinced + us that the Spaniards had formerly been here." (Cavelier, <i>Relation + du Voyage que mon frère entreprit pour découvrir l'embouchure + du fleuve de Missisipy</i>.) The above is translated from the original + draft of Cavelier, which is in my possession. It was addressed to the + colonial minister, after the death of La Salle. The statement concerning + the Spaniards needs confirmation.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_306" id="footnote_306"></a><a href="#fnanchor_306"> <span class="label">[306]</span></a> Compare Joutel with the Spanish account in <i>Carta en que se + da noticia de un viaje hecho á la Bahia de Espíritu + Santo y de la poblacion que tenian ahi los Franceses; Coleccion + de Varios Documentos</i>, 25.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_307" id="footnote_307"></a><a href="#fnanchor_307"> <span class="label">[307]</span></a> For the above incidents of life at Fort St. Louis, see Joutel, <i>Relation</i> (Margry, + iii. 185-218, <i>passim</i>). The printed condensation of the narrative + omits most of these particulars.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_308" id="footnote_308"></a><a href="#fnanchor_308"> <span class="label">[308]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Relation</i> (Margry, iii. 206). Compare Le Clerc, + ii. 296. Cavelier, always disposed to exaggerate, says that ten men + were killed. La Salle had previously had encounters with the Indians, + and punished them severely for the trouble they had given his men. + Le Clerc says of the principal fight: "Several Indians were wounded, + a few were killed, and others made prisoners,—one of whom, a + girl of three or four years, was baptized, and died a few days after, + as the first-fruit of this mission, and a sure conquest sent to heaven."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_309" id="footnote_309"></a><a href="#fnanchor_309"> <span class="label">[309]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Relation</i> (Margry, iii. 219).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_310" id="footnote_310"></a><a href="#fnanchor_310"> <span class="label">[310]</span></a> Cavelier says that he actually reached the Mississippi; but, + on the one hand, the abbé did not know whether the river in + question was the Mississippi or not; and, on the other, he is somewhat + inclined to mendacity. Le Clerc says that La Salle thought he had found + the river. According to the <i>Procès Verbal</i> of 18 April, + 1686, "il y arriva le 13 Février." Joutel says that La Salle + told him "qu'il n'avoit point trouvé sa rivière."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_311" id="footnote_311"></a><a href="#fnanchor_311"> <span class="label">[311]</span></a> <i>Procès Verbal fait au poste de St. Louis, le 18 Avril, + 1686.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_312" id="footnote_312"></a><a href="#fnanchor_312"> <span class="label">[312]</span></a> Cavelier, <i>Relation du Voyage pour découvrir l'Embouchure + du Fleuve de Missisipy</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_313" id="footnote_313"></a><a href="#fnanchor_313"> <span class="label">[313]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 140; Anastase Douay in Le + Clerc, ii. 303; Cavelier, <i>Relation</i>. The date is from Douay. + It does not appear, from his narrative, that they meant to go farther + than the Illinois. Cavelier says that after resting here they were + to go to Canada. Joutel supposed that they would go only to the Illinois. + La Salle seems to have been even more reticent than usual.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_314" id="footnote_314"></a><a href="#fnanchor_314"> <span class="label">[314]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Relation</i> (Margry, iii. 226).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_315" id="footnote_315"></a><a href="#fnanchor_315"> <span class="label">[315]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Relation</i> (Margry, iii. 244, 246.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_316" id="footnote_316"></a><a href="#fnanchor_316"> <span class="label">[316]</span></a> "Ce fût une desolation extrême pour nous tous qui + desesperions de revoir jamais nostre Ange tutélaire, le Sieur + de la Salle.... Tout le jour se passa en pleurs et en larmes."—<i>Douay + in Le Clerc</i>, ii. 315.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_317" id="footnote_317"></a><a href="#fnanchor_317"> <span class="label">[317]</span></a> Douay in Le Clerc, ii. 321; Cavelier, <i>Relation</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_318" id="footnote_318"></a><a href="#fnanchor_318"> <span class="label">[318]</span></a> Douay in Le Clerc, ii. 324, 325.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_319" id="footnote_319"></a><a href="#fnanchor_319"> <span class="label">[319]</span></a> "L'égalité d'humeur du Chef rassuroit tout le monde; + et il trouvoit des resources à tout par son esprit qui relevoit + les espérances les plus abatues."—Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, + 152.</p> + <p>"Il seroit difficile de trouver dans l'Histoire un courage plus intrepide + et plus invincible que celuy du Sieur de la Salle dans les évenemens + contraires; il ne fût jamais abatu, et il espéroit toujours + avec le secours du Ciel de venir à bout de son entreprise malgré tous + les obstacles qui se présentoient."—<i>Douay in Le Clerc</i>, + ii. 327.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_320" id="footnote_320"></a><a href="#fnanchor_320"> <span class="label">[320]</span></a> I follow Douay's date, who makes the day of departure the seventh + of January, or the day after Twelfth Night. Joutel thinks it was the + twelfth of January, but professes uncertainty as to all his dates at + this time, as he lost his notes.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_321" id="footnote_321"></a><a href="#fnanchor_321"> <span class="label">[321]</span></a> He had to be kept on short allowance, because he was in the habit + of bargaining away everything given to him. He had squandered the little + that belonged to him at St. Domingo, in amusements "indignes de sa + naissance," and in consequence was suffering from diseases which disabled + him from walking. (<i>Procès Verbal, 18 Avril, 1686.</i>)</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_322" id="footnote_322"></a><a href="#fnanchor_322"> <span class="label">[322]</span></a> Maxime le Clerc was a relative of the author of <i>L'Établissement + de la Foi</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_323" id="footnote_323"></a><a href="#fnanchor_323"> <span class="label">[323]</span></a> "Il fit une Harangue pleine d'éloquence et de cet air + engageant qui luy estoit si naturel: toute la petite Colonie y estoit + presente et en fût touchée jusques aux larmes, persuadée + de la nécessité de son voyage et de la droiture de ses + intentions."—<i>Douay in Le Clerc</i>, ii, 330.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_324" id="footnote_324"></a><a href="#fnanchor_324"> <span class="label">[324]</span></a> "Nous nous separâmes les uns des autres, d'une manière + si tendre et si triste qu'il sembloit que nous avions tous le secret + pressentiment que nous ne nous reverrions jamais."—Joutel, <i>Journal + Historique</i>, 158.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2> +<p class="center">1687.</p> +<p class="center">ASSASSINATION OF LA SALLE.</p> +<div class="smcap" style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">His Followers.—Prairie +Travelling—A Hunters' Quarrel—The Murder of Moranget.—The Conspiracy.—Death +of La Salle: his Character.</div> +<div class="sidenote">LA SALLE'S FOLLOWERS.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">The</span> travellers were crossing a marshy prairie towards a distant belt of + woods that followed the course of a little river. They led with them their + five horses, laden with their scanty baggage, and, with what was of no + less importance, their stock of presents for Indians. Some wore the remains + of the clothing they had worn from France, eked out with deer-skins, dressed + in the Indian manner; and some had coats of old sail-cloth. Here was La + Salle, in whom one would have known, at a glance, the chief of the party; + and the priest, Cavelier, who seems to have shared not one of the high + traits of his younger brother. Here, too, were their nephews, Moranget + and the boy Cavelier, now about seventeen years old; the trusty soldier + Joutel; and the friar Anastase Douay. Duhaut followed, a man of respectable + birth and education; and Liotot, the surgeon of the party. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg + 421]</a></span> At home, they might perhaps have lived and died with a + fair repute; but the wilderness is a rude touchstone, which often reveals + traits that would have lain buried and unsuspected in civilized life. + The German Hiens, the ex-buccaneer, was also of the number. He had probably + sailed with an English crew; for he was sometimes known as <i>Gemme Anglais</i>, + or "English Jem."<a name="fnanchor_325" id="fnanchor_325"></a><a href="#footnote_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a> The Sieur de Marie; Teissier, a pilot; L'Archevêque, + a servant of Duhaut; and others, to the number in all of seventeen,—made + up the party; to which is to be added Nika, La Salle's Shawanoe hunter, + who, as well as another Indian, had twice crossed the ocean with him, + and still followed his fortunes with an admiring though undemonstrative + fidelity.</p> +<p>They passed the prairie, and neared the forest. Here they saw buffalo; + and the hunters approached, and killed several of them. Then they traversed + the woods; found and forded the shallow and rushy stream, and pushed through + the forest beyond, till they again reached the open prairie. Heavy clouds + gathered over them, and it rained all night; but they sheltered themselves + under the fresh hides of the buffalo they had killed.</p> +<div class="sidenote">PRAIRIE TRAVELLING.</div> +<p>It is impossible, as it would be needless, to follow the detail of their + daily march.<a name="fnanchor_326" id="fnanchor_326"></a><a href="#footnote_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> It was such an one, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg + 422]</a></span> though with unwonted hardship, as is familiar to the memory + of many a prairie traveller of our own time. They suffered greatly from + the want of shoes, and found for a while no better substitute than a casing + of raw buffalo-hide, which they were forced to keep always wet, as, when + dry, it hardened about the foot like iron. At length they bought dressed + deer-skin from the Indians, of which they made tolerable moccasins. The + rivers, streams, and gullies filled with water were without number; and + to cross them they made a boat of bull-hide, like the "bull boat" still + used on the Upper Missouri. This did good service, as, with the help of + their horses, they could carry it with them. Two or three men could cross + in it at once, and the horses swam after them like dogs. Sometimes they + traversed the sunny prairie; sometimes dived into the dark recesses of + the forest, where the buffalo, descending daily from their pastures in + long files to drink at the river, often made a broad and easy path for + the travellers. When foul weather arrested them, they built huts of bark + and long meadow-grass; and safely sheltered lounged away the day, while + their horses, picketed near by, stood steaming in the rain. At night, + they usually set a rude stockade about their camp; and here, by <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg + 423]</a></span> the grassy border of a brook, or at the edge of a grove + where a spring bubbled up through the sands, they lay asleep around the + embers of their fire, while the man on guard listened to the deep breathing + of the slumbering horses, and the howling of the wolves that saluted the + rising moon as it flooded the waste of prairie with pale mystic radiance.</p> +<p>They met Indians almost daily,—sometimes a band of hunters, mounted + or on foot, chasing buffalo on the plains; sometimes a party of fishermen; + sometimes a winter camp, on the slope of a hill or under the sheltering + border of a forest. They held intercourse with them in the distance by + signs; often they disarmed their distrust, and attracted them into their + camp; and often they visited them in their lodges, where, seated on buffalo-robes, + they smoked with their entertainers, passing the pipe from hand to hand, + after the custom still in use among the prairie tribes. Cavelier says + that they once saw a band of a hundred and fifty mounted Indians attacking + a herd of buffalo with lances pointed with sharpened bone. The old priest + was delighted with the sport, which he pronounces "the most diverting + thing in the world." On another occasion, when the party were encamped + near the village of a tribe which Cavelier calls Sassory, he saw them + catch an alligator about twelve feet long, which they proceeded to torture + as if he were a human enemy,—first putting out his eyes, and then + leading him to the neighboring prairie, where, having confined him by + a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</a></span> number + of stakes, they spent the entire day in tormenting him.<a name="fnanchor_327" id="fnanchor_327"></a><a href="#footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a></p> +<p>Holding a northerly course, the travellers crossed the Brazos, and reached + the waters of the Trinity. The weather was unfavorable, and on one occasion + they encamped in the rain during four or five days together. It was not + an harmonious company. La Salle's cold and haughty reserve had returned, + at least for those of his followers to whom he was not partial. Duhaut + and the surgeon Liotot, both of whom were men of some property, had a + large pecuniary stake in the enterprise, and were disappointed and incensed + at its ruinous result. They had a quarrel with young Moranget, whose hot + and hasty temper was as little fitted to conciliate as was the harsh reserve + of his uncle. Already at Fort St. Louis, Duhaut had intrigued among the + men; and the mild admonition of Joutel had not, it seems, sufficed to + divert him from his sinister purposes. Liotot, it is said, had secretly + sworn vengeance against La Salle, whom he charged with having caused the + death of his brother, or, as some will have it, his nephew. On one of + the former journeys this young man's strength had failed; and, La Salle + having ordered him to return to the fort, he had been killed by Indians + on the way.</p> +<div class="sidenote">MURDER OF MORANGET.</div> +<p>The party moved again as the weather improved, and on the fifteenth of + March encamped within a few miles of a spot which La Salle had passed + on his <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</a></span> preceding + journey, and where he had left a quantity of Indian corn and beans in <i>cache</i>; + that is to say, hidden in the ground or in a hollow tree. As provisions + were falling short, he sent a party from the camp to find it. These men + were Duhaut, Liotot,<a name="fnanchor_328" id="fnanchor_328"></a><a href="#footnote_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> Hiens the buccaneer, Teissier, L'Archevêque, + Nika the hunter, and La Salle's servant Saget. They opened the <i>cache</i>, + and found the contents spoiled; but as they returned from their bootless + errand they saw buffalo, and Nika shot two of them. They now encamped + on the spot, and sent the servant to inform La Salle, in order that he + might send horses to bring in the meat. Accordingly, on the next day, + he directed Moranget and De Marle, with the necessary horses, to go with + Saget to the hunters' camp. When they arrived, they found that Duhaut + and his companions had already cut up the meat, and laid it upon scaffolds + for smoking, though it was not yet so dry as, it seems, this process required. + Duhaut and the others had also put by, for themselves, the marrow-bones + and certain portions of the meat, to which, by woodland custom, they had + a perfect right. Moranget, whose rashness and violence had once before + caused a fatal catastrophe, fell into a most unreasonable fit of rage, + berated and menaced Duhaut and his party, and ended by seizing upon the + whole of the meat, including the reserved portions. This added fuel to + the fire of Duhaut's old grudge against Moranget and his uncle. There + is reason to think <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[Pg + 426]</a></span> that he had harbored deadly designs, the execution of + which was only hastened by the present outbreak. The surgeon also bore + hatred against Moranget, whom he had nursed with constant attention when + wounded by an Indian arrow, and who had since repaid him with abuse. These + two now took counsel apart with Hiens, Teissier, and L'Archevêque; + and it was resolved to kill Moranget that night. Nika, La Salle's devoted + follower, and Saget, his faithful servant, must die with him. All of the + five were of one mind except the pilot Teissier, who neither aided nor + opposed the plot.</p> +<p>Night came: the woods grew dark; the evening meal was finished, and the + evening pipes were smoked. The order of the guard was arranged; and, doubtless + by design, the first hour of the night was assigned to Moranget, the second + to Saget, and the third to Nika. Gun in hand, each stood watch in turn + over the silent but not sleeping forms around him, till, his time expiring, + he called the man who was to relieve him, wrapped himself in his blanket, + and was soon buried in a slumber that was to be his last. Now the assassins + rose. Duhaut and Hiens stood with their guns cocked, ready to shoot down + any one of the destined victims who should resist or fly. The surgeon, + with an axe, stole towards the three sleepers, and struck a rapid blow + at each in turn. Saget and Nika died with little movement; but Moranget + started spasmodically into a sitting posture, gasping and unable to speak; + and the murderers <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[Pg + 427]</a></span> compelled De Marle, who was not in their plot, to compromise + himself by despatching him.</p> +<p>The floodgates of murder were open, and the torrent must have its way. + Vengeance and safety alike demanded the death of La Salle. Hiens, or "English + Jem," alone seems to have hesitated; for he was one of those to whom that + stern commander had always been partial. Meanwhile, the intended victim + was still at his camp, about six miles distant. It is easy to picture, + with sufficient accuracy, the features of the scene,—the sheds of + bark and branches, beneath which, among blankets and buffalo-robes, camp-utensils, + pack-saddles, rude harness, guns, powder-horns, and bullet-pouches, the + men lounged away the hour, sleeping or smoking, or talking among themselves; + the blackened kettles that hung from tripods of poles over the fires; + the Indians strolling about the place or lying, like dogs in the sun, + with eyes half-shut, yet all observant; and, in the neighboring meadow, + the horses grazing under the eye of a watchman.</p> +<div class="sidenote">SUSPENSE.</div> +<p>It was the eighteenth of March. Moranget and his companions had been expected + to return the night before; but the whole day passed, and they did not + appear. La Salle became very anxious. He resolved to go and look for them; + but not well knowing the way, he told the Indians who were about the camp + that he would give them a hatchet if they would guide him. One of them + accepted the offer; and La Salle prepared to set out in the morning, at <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg + 428]</a></span> the same time directing Joutel to be ready to go with + him. Joutel says: "That evening, while we were talking about what could + have happened to the absent men, he seemed to have a presentiment of what + was to take place. He asked me if I had heard of any machinations against + them, or if I had noticed any bad design on the part of Duhaut and the + rest. I answered that I had heard nothing, except that they sometimes + complained of being found fault with so often; and that this was all I + knew; besides which, as they were persuaded that I was in his interest, + they would not have told me of any bad design they might have. We were + very uneasy all the rest of the evening."</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE FATAL SHOT.</div> +<p>In the morning, La Salle set out with his Indian guide. He had changed + his mind with regard to Joutel, whom he now directed to remain in charge + of the camp and to keep a careful watch. He told the friar Anastase Douay + to come with him instead of Joutel, whose gun, which was the best in the + party, he borrowed for the occasion, as well as his pistol. The three + proceeded on their way,—La Salle, the friar, and the Indian. "All + the way," writes the friar, "he spoke to me of nothing but matters of + piety, grace, and predestination; enlarging on the debt he owed to God, + who had saved him from so many perils during more than twenty years of + travel in America. Suddenly, I saw him overwhelmed with a profound sadness, + for which he himself could not account. He was so much moved <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg + 429]</a></span> that I scarcely knew him." He soon recovered his usual + calmness; and they walked on till they approached the camp of Duhaut, + which was on the farther side of a small river. Looking about him with + the eye of a woodsman, La Salle saw two eagles circling in the air nearly + over him, as if attracted by carcasses of beasts or men. He fired his + gun and his pistol, as a summons to any of his followers who might be + within hearing. The shots reached the ears of the conspirators. Rightly + conjecturing by whom they were fired, several of them, led by Duhaut, + crossed the river at a little distance above, where trees or other intervening + objects hid them from sight. Duhaut and the surgeon crouched like Indians + in the long, dry, reed-like grass of the last summer's growth, while L'Archevêque + stood in sight near the bank. La Salle, continuing to advance, soon saw + him, and, calling to him, demanded where was Moranget. The man, without + lifting his hat, or any show of respect, replied in an agitated and broken + voice, but with a tone of studied insolence, that Moranget was strolling + about somewhere. La Salle rebuked and menaced him. He rejoined with increased + insolence, drawing back, as he spoke, towards the ambuscade, while the + incensed commander advanced to chastise him. At that moment a shot was + fired from the grass, instantly followed by another; and, pierced through + the brain, La Salle dropped dead.</p> +<p>The friar at his side stood terror-stricken, unable <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg + 430]</a></span> to advance or to fly; when Duhaut, rising from the + ambuscade, called out to him to take courage, for he had nothing + to fear. The murderers now came forward, and with wild looks gathered + about their victim. "There thou liest, great Bashaw! There thou + liest!"<a name="fnanchor_329" id="fnanchor_329"></a><a href="#footnote_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a> exclaimed the surgeon Liotot, in base exultation over + the unconscious corpse. With mockery and insult, they stripped it + naked, dragged it into the bushes, and left it there, a prey to + the buzzards and the wolves.</p> +<p>Thus in the vigor of his manhood, at the age of forty-three, died Robert + Cavelier de la Salle, "one of the greatest men," writes Tonty, "of this + age;" without question one of the most remarkable explorers whose names + live in history. His faithful officer Joutel thus sketches his portrait: "His + firmness, his courage, his great knowledge of the arts and sciences, which + made him equal to every undertaking, and his untiring energy, which enabled + him to surmount every obstacle, would have won at last a glorious success + for his grand enterprise, had not all his fine qualities been counterbalanced + by a haughtiness of manner which often made him insupportable, and by + a harshness towards those under his command which drew upon him an implacable + hatred, and was at last the cause of his death."<a name="fnanchor_330" id="fnanchor_330"></a><a href="#footnote_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">HIS CHARACTER.</div> +<p>The enthusiasm of the disinterested and chivalrous <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg + 431]</a></span> Champlain was not the enthusiasm of La Salle; nor + had he any part in the self-devoted zeal of the early Jesuit explorers. + He belonged not to the age of the knight-errant and the saint, but + to the modern world of practical study and practical action. He + was the hero not of a principle nor of a faith, but simply of a + fixed idea and a determined purpose. As often happens with concentred + and energetic natures, his purpose was to him a passion and an inspiration; + and he clung to it with a certain fanaticism of devotion. It was + the offspring of an ambition vast and comprehensive, yet acting + in the interest both of France and of civilization.</p> +<p>Serious in all things, incapable of the lighter pleasures, incapable of + repose, finding no joy but in the pursuit of great designs, too shy for + society and too reserved for popularity, often unsympathetic and always + seeming so, smothering emotions which he could not utter, schooled to + universal distrust, stern to his followers and pitiless to himself, bearing + the brunt of every hardship and every danger, demanding of others an equal + constancy joined to an implicit deference, heeding no counsel but his + own, attempting the impossible and grasping at what was too vast to hold,—he + contained in his own complex and painful nature the chief springs of his + triumphs, his failures, and his death.</p> +<p>It is easy to reckon up his defects, but it is not easy to hide from sight + the Roman virtues that redeemed them. Beset by a throng of enemies, he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg + 432]</a></span> stands, like the King of Israel, head and shoulders above + them all. He was a tower of adamant, against whose impregnable front hardship + and danger, the rage of man and of the elements, the southern sun, the + northern blast, fatigue, famine, disease, delay, disappointment, and deferred + hope emptied their quivers in vain. That very pride which, Coriolanus-like, + declared itself most sternly in the thickest press of foes, has in it + something to challenge admiration. Never, under the impenetrable mail + of paladin or crusader, beat a heart of more intrepid mettle than within + the stoic panoply that armed the breast of La Salle. To estimate aright + the marvels of his patient fortitude, one must follow on his track through + the vast scene of his interminable journeyings,—those thousands + of weary miles of forest, marsh, and river, where, again and again, in + the bitterness of baffled striving, the untiring pilgrim pushed onward + towards the goal which he was never to attain. America owes him an enduring + memory; for in this masculine figure she sees the pioneer who guided her + to the possession of her richest heritage.<a name="fnanchor_331" id="fnanchor_331"></a><a href="#footnote_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a></p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_325" id="footnote_325"></a><a href="#fnanchor_325"> <span class="label">[325]</span></a> Tonty also speaks of him as "un flibustier anglois." In another + document, he is called "James."</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_326" id="footnote_326"></a><a href="#fnanchor_326"> <span class="label">[326]</span></a> Of the three narratives of this journey, those of Joutel, Cavelier, + and Anastase Douay, the first is by far the best. That of Cavelier + seems the work of a man of confused brain and indifferent memory. Some + of his statements are irreconcilable with those of Joutel and Douay; + and known facts of his history justify the suspicion of a wilful inaccuracy. + Joutel's account is of a very different character, and seems to be + the work of an honest and intelligent man. Douay's account if brief; + but it agrees with that of Joutel, in most essential points.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_327" id="footnote_327"></a><a href="#fnanchor_327"> <span class="label">[327]</span></a> Cavelier, <i>Relation</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_328" id="footnote_328"></a><a href="#fnanchor_328"> <span class="label">[328]</span></a> Called Lanquetot by Tonty.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_329" id="footnote_329"></a><a href="#fnanchor_329"> <span class="label">[329]</span></a> "Te voilà, grand Bacha, te voilà!"—Joutel, <i>Journal + Historique</i>, 203.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_330" id="footnote_330"></a><a href="#fnanchor_330"> <span class="label">[330]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_331" id="footnote_331"></a><a href="#fnanchor_331"> <span class="label">[331]</span></a> On the assassination of La Salle, the evidence is fourfold: 1. + The narrative of Douay, who was with him at the time. 2. That of Joutel, + who learned the facts, immediately after they took place, from Douay + and others, and who parted from La Salle an hour or more before his + death. 3. A document preserved in the Archives de la Marine, entitled <i>Relation + de la Mort du Sr. de la Salle, suivant le rapport d'un nommé Couture à qui + M. Cavelier l'apprit en passant au pays des Akansa, avec toutes les + circonstances que le dit Couture a apprises d'un François que + M. Cavelier avoit laissé aux dits pays des Akansa, crainte qu'il + ne gardât pas le secret</i>. 4. The authentic <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg + 433]</a></span>memoir of Tonty, + of which a copy from the original is before me, and which has recently + been printed by Margry.</p> + <p>The narrative of Cavelier unfortunately fails us several weeks before + the death of his brother, the remainder being lost. On a study of these + various documents, it is impossible to resist the conclusion that neither + Cavelier nor Douay always wrote honestly. Joutel, on the contrary, + gives the impression of sense, intelligence, and candor throughout. + Charlevoix, who knew him long after, says that he was "un fort honnête + homme, et le seul de la troupe de M. de la Salle, sur qui ce célèbre + voyageur pût compter." Tonty derived his information from the + survivors of La Salle's party. Couture, whose statements are embodied + in the <i>Relation de la Mort de M. de la Salle</i>, was one of Tonty's + men, who, as will be seen hereafter, were left by him at the mouth + of the Arkansas, and to whom Cavelier told the story of his brother's + death. Couture also repeats the statements of one of La Salle's followers, + undoubtedly a Parisian boy, named Barthelemy, who was violently prejudiced + against his chief, whom he slanders to the utmost of his skill, saying + that he was so enraged at his failures that he did not approach the + sacraments for two years; that he nearly starved his brother Cavelier, + allowing him only a handful of meal a day; that he killed with his + own hand "quantité de personnes," who did not work to his liking; + and that he killed the sick in their beds, without mercy, under the + pretence that they were counterfeiting sickness in order to escape + work. These assertions certainly have no other foundation than the + undeniable rigor of La Salle's command. Douay says that he confessed + and made his devotions on the morning of his death, while Cavelier + always speaks of him as the hope and the staff of the colony.</p> + <p>Douay declares that La Salle lived an hour after the fatal shot; that + he gave him absolution, buried his body, and planted a cross on his + grave. At the time, he told Joutel a different story; and the latter, + with the best means of learning the facts, explicitly denies the friar's + printed statement. Couture, on the authority of Cavelier himself, also + says that neither he nor Douay was permitted to take any step for burying + the body. Tonty says that Cavelier begged leave to do so, but was refused. + Douay, unwilling to place upon record facts from which the inference + might easily be drawn that he had been terrified from discharging his + duty, no doubt invented the story of the burial, as well as that of + the edifying behavior of Moranget, after he had been struck in the + head with an axe.</p> + <p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg + 434]</a></span></p> + <p>The locality of La Salle's assassination is sufficiently clear, from + a comparison of the several narratives; and it is also indicated on + a contemporary manuscript map, made on the return of the survivors + of the party to France. The scene of the catastrophe is here placed + on a southern branch of the Trinity.</p> + <p>La Salle's debts, at the time of his death, according to a schedule + presented in 1701 to Champigny, intendant of Canada, amounted to 106,831 + livres, without reckoning interest. This cannot be meant to include + all, as items are given which raise the amount much higher. In 1678 + and 1679 alone, he contracted debts to the amount of 97,184 livres, + of which 46,000 were furnished by Branssac, fiscal attorney of the + Seminary of Montreal. This was to be paid in beaver-skins. Frontenac, + at the same time, became his surety for 13,623 livres. In 1684, he + borrowed 34,825 livres from the Sieur Pen, at Paris. These sums do + not include the losses incurred by his family, which, in the memorial + presented by them to the King, are set down at 500,000 livres for the + expeditions between 1678 and 1683, and 300,000 livres for the fatal + Texan expedition of 1684 These last figures are certainly exaggerated.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg + 435]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2> +<p class="center">1687, 1688.</p> +<p class="center">THE INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY.</p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"><span class="smcap">Triumph of the Murderers.—Danger +of Joutel.—Joutel among the Cenis.—White Savages.—Insolence +of Duhaut and his Accomplices.—Murder of Duhaut and +Liotot.—Hiens, the Buccaneer.—Joutel and his Party: +their Escape; they reach the Arkansas.—Bravery and Devotion of +Tonty.—The Fugitives reach the Illinois.—Unworthy Conduct of +Cavelier.—He and his Companions return to France.</span></div> +<p><span class="smcap">Father Anastase Douay</span> returned to the camp, and, aghast with grief and + terror, rushed into the hut of Cavelier. "My poor brother is dead!" cried + the priest, instantly divining the catastrophe from the horror-stricken + face of the messenger. Close behind came the murderers, Duhaut at their + head. Cavelier, his young nephew, and Douay himself, all fell on their + knees, expecting instant death. The priest begged piteously for half an + hour to prepare for his end; but terror and submission sufficed, and no + more blood was shed. The camp yielded without resistance; and Duhaut was + lord of all. In truth, there were none to oppose him; for, except the + assassins themselves, the party was now reduced to six <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[Pg + 436]</a></span> persons,—Joutel, Douay, the elder Cavelier, his + young nephew, and two other boys, the orphan Talon and a lad called Barthelemy.</p> +<div class="sidenote">DOUBT AND ANXIETY.</div> +<p>Joutel, for the moment, was absent; and L'Archevêque, who had a + kindness for him, went quietly to seek him. He found him on a hillock, + making a fire of dried grass in order that the smoke might guide La Salle + on his return, and watching the horses grazing in the meadow below. "I + was very much surprised," writes Joutel, "when I saw him approaching. + When he came up to me he seemed all in confusion, or, rather, out of his + wits. He began with saying that there was very bad news. I asked what + it was. He answered that the Sieur de la Salle was dead, and also his + nephew the Sieur de Moranget, his Indian hunter, and his servant. I was + petrified, and did not know what to say; for I saw that they had been + murdered. The man added that, at first, the murderers had sworn to kill + me too. I easily believed it, for I had always been in the interest of + M. de la Salle, and had commanded in his place; and it is hard to please + everybody, or prevent some from being dissatisfied. I was greatly perplexed + as to what I ought to do, and whether I had not better escape to the woods, + whithersoever God should guide me; but, by bad or good luck, I had no + gun and only one pistol, without balls or powder except what was in my + powder-horn. To whatever side I turned, my life was in great peril. It + is true that L'Archevêque assured me that they <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[Pg + 437]</a></span> had changed their minds, and had agreed to murder nobody + else, unless they met with resistance. So, being in no condition, as I + just said, to go far, having neither arms nor powder, I abandoned myself + to Providence, and went back to the camp, where I found that these wretched + murderers had seized everything belonging to M. de la Salle, and even + my personal effects. They had also taken possession of all the arms. The + first words that Duhaut said to me were, that each should command in turn; + to which I made no answer. I saw M. Cavelier praying in a corner, and + Father Anastase in another. He did not dare to speak to me, nor did I + dare to go towards him till I had seen the designs of the assassins. They + were in furious excitement, but, nevertheless, very uneasy and embarrassed. + I was some time without speaking, and, as it were, without moving, for + fear of giving umbrage to our enemies.</p> +<p>"They had cooked some meat, and when it was supper-time they distributed + it as they saw fit, saying that formerly their share had been served out + to them, but that it was they who would serve it out in future. They, + no doubt, wanted me to say something that would give them a chance to + make a noise; but I managed always to keep my mouth closed. When night + came and it was time to stand guard, they were in perplexity, as they + could not do it alone; therefore they said to M. Cavelier, Father Anastase, + me, and the others who were not in the plot with them, that all we had + to do was to stand <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[Pg + 438]</a></span> guard as usual; that there was no use in thinking about + what had happened,—that what was done was done; that they had been + driven to it by despair, and that they were sorry for it, and meant no + more harm to anybody. M. Cavelier took up the word, and told them that + when they killed M. de la Salle they killed themselves, for there was + nobody but him who could get us out of this country. At last, after a + good deal of talk on both sides, they gave us our arms. So we stood guard; + during which, M. Cavelier told me how they had come to the camp, entered + his hut like so many madmen, and seized everything in it."</p> +<p>Joutel, Douay, and the two Caveliers spent a sleepless night, consulting + as to what they should do. They mutually pledged themselves to stand by + each other to the last, and to escape as soon as they could from the company + of the assassins. In the morning, Duhaut and his accomplices, after much + discussion, resolved to go to the Cenis villages; and, accordingly, the + whole party broke up their camp, packed their horses, and began their + march. They went five leagues, and encamped at the edge of a grove. On + the following day they advanced again till noon, when heavy rains began, + and they were forced to stop by the banks of a river. "We passed the night + and the next day there," says Joutel; "and during that time my mind was + possessed with dark thoughts. It was hard to prevent ourselves from being + in constant fear among such men, and we could not look at <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[Pg + 439]</a></span> them without horror. When I thought of the cruel deeds + they had committed, and the danger we were in from them, I longed to revenge + the evil they had done us. This would have been easy while they were asleep; + but M. Cavelier dissuaded us, saying that we ought to leave vengeance + to God, and that he himself had more to revenge than we, having lost his + brother and his nephew."</p> +<div class="sidenote">JOURNEY TO THE CENIS.</div> +<p>The comic alternated with the tragic. On the twenty-third, they reached + the bank of a river too deep to ford. Those who knew how to swim crossed + without difficulty, but Joutel, Cavelier, and Douay were not of the number. + Accordingly, they launched a log of light, dry wood, embraced it with + one arm, and struck out for the other bank with their legs and the arm + that was left free. But the friar became frightened. "He only clung fast + to the aforesaid log," says Joutel, "and did nothing to help us forward. + While I was trying to swim, my body being stretched at full length, I + hit him in the belly with my feet; on which he thought it was all over + with him, and, I can answer for it, he invoked Saint Francis with might + and main. I could not help laughing, though I was myself in danger of + drowning." Some Indians who had joined the party swam to the rescue, and + pushed the log across.</p> +<p>The path to the Cenis villages was exceedingly faint, and but for the + Indians they would have lost the way. They crossed the main stream of + the Trinity in a boat of raw hides, and then, being short <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[Pg + 440]</a></span> of provisions, held a council to determine what they should + do. It was resolved that Joutel, with Hiens, Liotot, and Teissier, should + go in advance to the villages and buy a supply of corn. Thus, Joutel found + himself doomed to the company of three villains, who, he strongly suspected, + were contriving an opportunity to kill him; but, as he had no choice, + he dissembled his doubts, and set out with his sinister companions, Duhaut + having first supplied him with goods for the intended barter.</p> +<div class="sidenote">JOUTEL AND THE CENIS.</div> +<p>They rode over hills and plains till night, encamped, supped on a wild + turkey, and continued their journey till the afternoon of the next day, + when they saw three men approaching on horseback, one of whom, to Joutel's + alarm, was dressed like a Spaniard. He proved, however, to be a Cenis + Indian, like the others. The three turned their horses' heads, and accompanied + the Frenchmen on their way. At length they neared the Indian town, which, + with its large thatched lodges, looked like a cluster of gigantic haystacks. + Their approach had been made known, and they were received in solemn state. + Twelve of the elders came to meet them in their dress of ceremony, each + with his face daubed red or black, and his head adorned with painted plumes. + From their shoulders hung deer-skins wrought with gay colors. Some carried + war-clubs; some, bows and arrows; some, the blades of Spanish rapiers, + attached to wooden handles decorated with hawk's bells and bunches of + feathers. They stopped <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[Pg + 441]</a></span> before the honored guests, and, raising their hands aloft, + uttered howls so extraordinary that Joutel could hardly preserve the gravity + which the occasion demanded. Having next embraced the Frenchmen, the elders + conducted them into the village, attended by a crowd of warriors and young + men; ushered them into their town-hall, a large lodge, devoted to councils, + feasts, dances, and other public assemblies; seated them on mats, and + squatted in a ring around them. Here they were regaled with sagamite or + Indian porridge, corn-cake, beans, bread made of the meal of parched corn, + and another kind of bread made of the kernels of nuts and the seed of + sunflowers. Then the pipe was lighted, and all smoked together. The four + Frenchmen proposed to open a traffic for provisions, and their entertainers + grunted assent.</p> +<p>Joutel found a Frenchman in the village. He was a young man from Provence, + who had deserted from La Salle on his last journey, and was now, to all + appearance, a savage like his adopted countrymen, being naked like them, + and affecting to have forgotten his native language. He was very friendly, + however, and invited the visitors to a neighboring village, where he lived, + and where, as he told them, they would find a better supply of corn. They + accordingly set out with him, escorted by a crowd of Indians. They saw + lodges and clusters of lodges scattered along their path at intervals, + each with its field of corn, beans, and pumpkins, rudely cultivated <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[Pg + 442]</a></span> with a wooden hoe. Reaching their destination, which was + four or five leagues distant, they were greeted with the same honors as + at the first village, and, the ceremonial of welcome over, were lodged + in the abode of the savage Frenchman. It is not to be supposed, however, + that he and his squaws, of whom he had a considerable number, dwelt here + alone; for these lodges of the Cenis often contained eight or ten families. + They were made by firmly planting in a circle tall, straight young trees, + such as grew in the swamps. The tops were then bent inward and lashed + together; great numbers of cross-pieces were bound on; and the frame thus + constructed was thickly covered with thatch, a hole being left at the + top for the escape of the smoke. The inmates were ranged around the circumference + of the structure, each family in a kind of stall, open in front, but separated + from those adjoining it by partitions of mats. Here they placed their + beds of cane, their painted robes of buffalo and deer-skin, their cooking + utensils of pottery, and other household goods; and here, too, the head + of the family hung his bow, quiver, lance, and shield. There was nothing + in common but the fire, which burned in the middle of the lodge, and was + never suffered to go out. These dwellings were of great size, and Joutel + declares that he has seen some of them sixty feet in diameter.<a name="fnanchor_332" id="fnanchor_332"></a><a href="#footnote_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[Pg + 443]</a></span></p> +<p>It was in one of the largest that the four travellers were now lodged. + A place was assigned them where to bestow their baggage; and they took + possession of their quarters amid the silent stares of the whole community. + They asked their renegade countryman, the Provençal, if they were + safe. He replied that they were; but this did not wholly reassure them, + and they spent a somewhat wakeful night. In the morning, they opened their + budgets, and began a brisk trade in knives, awls, beads, and other trinkets, + which they exchanged for corn and beans. Before evening, they had acquired + a considerable stock; and Joutel's three companions declared their intention + of returning with it to the camp, leaving him to continue the trade. They + went, accordingly, in the morning; and Joutel was left alone. On the one + hand, he was glad to be rid of them; on the other, he found his position + among the Cenis very irksome, and, as he thought, insecure. Besides the + Provençal, who had gone with Liotot and his companions, there were + two other French deserters among this tribe, and Joutel was very desirous + to see them, hoping that they could tell him the way to the Mississippi; <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[Pg + 444]</a></span> for he was resolved to escape, at the first opportunity, + from the company of Duhaut and his accomplices. He therefore made the + present of a knife to a young Indian, whom he sent to find the two Frenchmen + and invite them to come to the village. Meanwhile he continued his barter, + but under many difficulties; for he could only explain himself by signs, + and his customers, though friendly by day, pilfered his goods by night. + This, joined to the fears and troubles which burdened his mind, almost + deprived him of sleep, and, as he confesses, greatly depressed his spirits. + Indeed, he had little cause for cheerfulness as to the past, present, + or future. An old Indian, one of the patriarchs of the tribe, observing + his dejection and anxious to relieve it, one evening brought him a young + wife, saying that he made him a present of her. She seated herself at + his side; "but," says Joutel, "as my head was full of other cares and + anxieties, I said nothing to the poor girl. She waited for a little time; + and then, finding that I did not speak a word, she went away."<a name="fnanchor_333" id="fnanchor_333"></a><a href="#footnote_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">WHITE SAVAGES.</div> +<p>Late one night, he lay between sleeping and waking on the buffalo-robe + that covered his bed of canes. All around the great lodge, its inmates + were buried in sleep; and the fire treasured + scalp-locks, the spear and war-club, and shield of whitened bull-hide—that + hung by each warrior's resting-place. Such was the weird <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[Pg + 445]</a></span> scene that lingered on the dreamy eyes of Joutel, as he + closed them at last in a troubled sleep. The sound of a footstep soon + wakened him; and, turning, he saw at his side the figure of a naked savage, + armed with a bow and arrows. Joutel spoke, but received no answer. Not + knowing what to think, he reached out his hand for his pistols; on which + the intruder withdrew, and seated himself by the fire. Thither Joutel + followed; and as the light fell on his features, he looked at him closely. + His face was tattooed, after the Cenis fashion, in lines drawn from the + top of the forehead and converging to the chin; and his body was decorated + with similar embellishments. Suddenly, this supposed Indian rose and threw + his arms around Joutel's neck, making himself known, at the same time, + as one of the Frenchmen who had deserted from La Salle and taken refuge + among the Cenis. He was a Breton sailor named Ruter. His companion, named + Grollet, also a sailor, had been afraid to come to the village lest he + should meet La Salle. Ruter expressed surprise and regret when he heard + of the death of his late commander. He had deserted him but a few months + before. That brief interval had sufficed to transform him into a savage; + and both he and his companion found their present reckless and ungoverned + way of life greatly to their liking. He could tell nothing of the Mississippi; + and on the next day he went home, carrying with him a present of beads + for his wives, of which last he had made a large collection.</p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[Pg + 446]</a></span></p> +<p>In a few days he reappeared, bringing Grollet with him. Each wore a bunch + of turkey-feathers dangling from his head, and each had wrapped his naked + body in a blanket. Three men soon after arrived from Duhaut's camp, commissioned + to receive the corn which Joutel had purchased. They told him that Duhaut + and Liotot, the tyrants of the party, had resolved to return to Fort St. + Louis, and build a vessel to escape to the West Indies,—"a visionary + scheme," writes Joutel, "for our carpenters were all dead; and even if + they had been alive, they were so ignorant that they would not have known + how to go about the work; besides, we had no tools for it. Nevertheless, + I was obliged to obey, and set out for the camp with the provisions."</p> +<p>On arriving, he found a wretched state of affairs. Douay and the two Caveliers, + who had been treated by Duhaut with great harshness and contempt, had + been told to make their mess apart; and Joutel now joined them. This separation + restored them their freedom of speech, of which they had hitherto been + deprived; but it subjected them to incessant hunger, as they were allowed + only food enough to keep them from famishing. Douay says that quarrels + were rife among the assassins themselves,—the malcontents being + headed by Hiens, who was enraged that Duhaut and Liotot should have engrossed + all the plunder. Joutel was helpless, for he had none to back him but + two priests and a boy.</p> +<div class="sidenote">SCHEMES OF ESCAPE.</div> +<p>He and his companions talked of nothing around <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[Pg + 447]</a></span> their solitary camp-fire but the means of escaping + from the villanous company into which they were thrown. They saw + no resource but to find the Mississippi, and thus make their way + to Canada,—a prodigious undertaking in their forlorn condition; + nor was there any probability that the assassins would permit them + to go. These, on their part, were beset with difficulties. They + could not return to civilization without manifest peril of a halter; + and their only safety was to turn buccaneers or savages. Duhaut, + however, still held to his plan of going back to Fort St. Louis; + and Joutel and his companions, who with good reason stood in daily + fear of him, devised among themselves a simple artifice to escape + from his company. The elder Cavelier was to tell him that they were + too fatigued for the journey, and wished to stay among the Cenis; + and to beg him to allow them a portion of the goods, for which Cavelier + was to give his note of hand. The old priest, whom a sacrifice of + truth even on less important occasions cost no great effort, accordingly + opened the negotiation, and to his own astonishment and that of + his companions, gained the assent of Duhaut. Their joy, however, + was short; for Ruter, the French savage, to whom Joutel had betrayed + his intention, when inquiring the way to the Mississippi, told it + to Duhaut, who on this changed front and made the ominous declaration + that he and his men would also go to Canada. Joutel and his companions + were now filled with alarm; for there was no likelihood that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[Pg + 448]</a></span> the assassins would permit them, the witnesses of + their crime, to reach the settlements alive. In the midst of their + trouble, the sky was cleared as by the crash of a thunderbolt.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE CRISIS.</div> +<p>Hiens and several others had gone, some time before, to the Cenis villages + to purchase horses; and here they had been detained by the charms of the + Indian women. During their stay, Hiens heard of Duhaut's new plan of going + to Canada by the Mississippi; and he declared to those with him that he + would not consent. On a morning early in May he appeared at Duhaut's camp, + with Ruter and Grollet, the French savages, and about twenty Indians. + Duhaut and Liotot, it is said, were passing the time by practising with + bows and arrows in front of their hut. One of them called to Hiens, "Good-morning;" but + the buccaneer returned a sullen answer. He then accosted Duhaut, telling + him that he had no mind to go up the Mississippi with him, and demanding + a share of the goods. Duhaut replied that the goods were his own, since + La Salle had owed him money. "So you will not give them to me?" returned + Hiens. "No," was the answer. "You are a wretch!" exclaimed Hiens; "you + killed my master."<a name="fnanchor_334" id="fnanchor_334"></a><a href="#footnote_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a> And drawing a pistol from his belt he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[Pg + 449]</a></span> fired at Duhaut, who staggered three or four paces and + fell dead. Almost at the same instant Ruter fired his gun at Liotot, shot + three balls into his body, and stretched him on the ground mortally wounded.</p> +<p>Douay and the two Caveliers stood in extreme terror, thinking that their + turn was to come next. Joutel, no less alarmed, snatched his gun to defend + himself; but Hiens called to him to fear nothing, declaring that what + he had done was only to avenge the death of La Salle,—to which, + nevertheless, he had been privy, though not an active sharer in the crime. + Liotot lived long enough to make his confession, after which Ruter killed + him by exploding a pistol loaded with a blank charge of powder against + his head. Duhaut's myrmidon, L'Archevêque, was absent, hunting, + and Hiens was for killing him on his return; but the two priests and Joutel + succeeded in dissuading him.</p> +<p>The Indian spectators beheld these murders with undisguised amazement, + and almost with horror. What manner of men were these who had pierced + the secret places of the wilderness to riot in mutual slaughter? Their + fiercest warriors might learn a lesson in ferocity from these heralds + of civilization. Joutel and his companions, who could not dispense with + the aid of the Cenis, were obliged to explain away, as they best might, + the atrocity of what they had witnessed.<a name="fnanchor_335" id="fnanchor_335"></a><a href="#footnote_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a></p> +<p>Hiens, and others of the French, had before <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[Pg + 450]</a></span> promised to join the Cenis on an expedition against + a neighboring tribe with whom they were at war; and the whole party + having removed to the Indian village, the warriors and their allies + prepared to depart. Six Frenchmen went with Hiens; and the rest, + including Joutel, Douay, and the Caveliers, remained behind, in + the lodge where Joutel had been domesticated, and where none were + now left but women, children, and old men. Here they remained a + week or more, watched closely by the Cenis, who would not let them + leave the village; when news at length arrived of a great victory, + and the warriors soon after returned with forty-eight scalps. It + was the French guns that won the battle, but not the less did they + glory in their prowess; and several days were spent in ceremonies + and feasts of triumph.<a name="fnanchor_336" id="fnanchor_336"></a><a href="#footnote_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a></p> +<p>When all this hubbub of rejoicing had subsided, Joutel and his companions + broke to Hiens their plan of attempting to reach home by way of the Mississippi. + As they had expected, he opposed it vehemently, declaring that for his + own part he would not run such a risk of losing his head; but at length + he consented to their departure, on condition that the elder Cavelier + should give him a certificate of his entire innocence of the murder of + La Salle, which the priest did not hesitate to do. For the rest, Hiens + treated his departing fellow-travellers with the generosity of a successful + free-booter; for he gave them a good <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[Pg + 451]</a></span> share of the plunder he had won by his late crime, supplying + them with hatchets, knives, beads, and other articles of trade, besides + several horses. Meanwhile, adds Joutel, "we had the mortification and + chagrin of seeing this scoundrel walking about the camp in a scarlet coat + laced with gold which had belonged to the late Monsieur de la Salle, and + which he had seized upon, as also upon all the rest of his property." A + well-aimed shot would have avenged the wrong, but Joutel was clearly a + mild and moderate person; and the elder Cavelier had constantly opposed + all plans of violence. Therefore they stifled their emotions, and armed + themselves with patience.</p> +<div class="sidenote">JOUTEL AND HIS PARTY.</div> +<p>Joutel's party consisted, besides himself, of the Caveliers (uncle and + nephew), Anastase Douay, De Marle, Teissier, and a young Parisian named + Barthelemy. Teissier, an accomplice in the murders of Moranget and La + Salle, had obtained a pardon, in form, from the elder Cavelier. They had + six horses and three Cenis guides. Hiens embraced them at parting, as + did the ruffians who remained with him. Their course was northeast, toward + the mouth of the Arkansas,—a distant goal, the way to which was + beset with so many dangers that their chance of reaching it seemed small. + It was early in June, and the forests and prairies were green with the + verdure of opening summer.</p> +<p>They soon reached the Assonis, a tribe near the Sabine, who received them + well, and gave them guides to the nations dwelling towards Red River. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[Pg + 452]</a></span> On the twenty-third, they approached a village, the inhabitants + of which, regarding them as curiosities of the first order, came out in + a body to see them; and, eager to do them honor, they required them to + mount on their backs, and thus make their entrance in procession. Joutel, + being large and heavy, weighed down his bearer, insomuch that two of his + countrymen were forced to sustain him, one on each side. On arriving, + an old chief washed their faces with warm water from an earthen pan, and + then invited them to mount on a scaffold of canes, where they sat in the + hot sun listening to four successive speeches of welcome, of which they + understood not a word.<a name="fnanchor_337" id="fnanchor_337"></a><a href="#footnote_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a></p> +<p>At the village of another tribe, farther on their way, they met with a + welcome still more oppressive. Cavelier, the unworthy successor of his + brother, being represented as the chief of the party, became the principal + victim of their attentions. They danced the calumet before him; while + an Indian, taking him, with an air of great respect, by the shoulders + as he sat, shook him in cadence with the thumping of the drum. They then + placed two girls close beside him, as his wives; while, at the same time, + an old chief tied a painted feather in his hair. These proceedings so + scandalized him that, pretending <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[Pg + 453]</a></span> to be ill, he broke off the ceremony; but they continued + to sing all night, with so much zeal that several of them were reduced + to a state of complete exhaustion.</p> +<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT THE ARKANSAS.</div> +<p>At length, after a journey of about two months, during which they lost + one of their number,—De Marle, accidentally drowned while bathing,—the + travellers approached the river Arkansas, at a point not far above its + junction with the Mississippi. Led by their Indian guides, they traversed + a rich district of plains and woods, and stood at length on the borders + of the stream. Nestled beneath the forests of the farther shore, they + saw the lodges of a large Indian town; and here, as they gazed across + the broad current, they presently descried an object which nerved their + spent limbs, and thrilled their homesick hearts with joy. It was a tall, + wooden cross; and near it was a small house, built evidently by Christian + hands. With one accord they fell on their knees, and raised their hands + to Heaven in thanksgiving. Two men, in European dress, issued from the + door of the house and fired their guns to salute the excited travellers, + who on their part replied with a volley. Canoes put out from the farther + shore and ferried them to the town, where they were welcomed by Couture + and De Launay, two followers of Henri de Tonty.<a name="fnanchor_338" id="fnanchor_338"></a><a href="#footnote_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a></p> +<p>That brave, loyal, and generous man, always vigilant and always active, + beloved and feared alike by <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[Pg + 454]</a></span> white men and by red,<a name="fnanchor_339" id="fnanchor_339"></a><a href="#footnote_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> had been ejected, as we have + seen, by the agent of the governor, La Barre, from the command of Fort + St. Louis of the Illinois. An order from the King had reinstated him; + and he no sooner heard the news of La Salle's landing on the shores of + the Gulf, and of the disastrous beginnings of his colony,<a name="fnanchor_340" id="fnanchor_340"></a><a href="#footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> than he + prepared, on his own responsibility and at his own cost, to go to his + assistance. He collected twenty-five Frenchmen and eleven Indians, and + set out from his fortified rock on the thirteenth of February, 1686;<a name="fnanchor_341" id="fnanchor_341"></a><a href="#footnote_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> + descended the Mississippi, and reached its mouth in Holy Week. All was + solitude, a voiceless desolation of river, marsh, and sea. He despatched + canoes to the east and to the west, searching the coast for some thirty + leagues on either side. Finding no trace of his friend, who at that moment + was ranging the prairies of Texas in no less fruitless search of his "fatal + river," Tonty wrote for him a letter, which he left <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[Pg + 455]</a></span> in the charge of an Indian chief, who preserved it with + reverential care, and gave it, fourteen years after, to Iberville, the + founder of Louisiana.<a name="fnanchor_342" id="fnanchor_342"></a><a href="#footnote_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a> Deeply disappointed at his failure, Tonty retraced + his course, and ascended the Mississippi to the villages of the Arkansas, + where some of his men volunteered to remain. He left six of them; and + of this number were Couture and De Launay.<a name="fnanchor_343" id="fnanchor_343"></a><a href="#footnote_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">A HOSPITABLE RECEPTION.</div> +<p>Cavelier and his companions, followed by a crowd of Indians, some carrying + their baggage, some struggling for a view of the white strangers, entered + the log cabin of their two hosts. Rude as it was, they found in it an + earnest of peace and safety, and a foretaste of home. Couture and De Launay + were moved even to tears by the story of their disasters, and of the catastrophe + that crowned them. La Salle's death was carefully concealed from the Indians, + many of whom had seen him on his descent of the Mississippi, and who regarded + him with prodigious respect. They lavished all their hospitality on his + followers; feasted them on corn-bread, dried buffalo meat, and watermelons, + and danced the calumet before them, the most august of all their ceremonies. + On this occasion, Cavelier's patience <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[Pg + 456]</a></span> failed him again; and pretending, as before, to be ill, + he called on his nephew to take his place. There were solemn dances, too, + in which the warriors—some bedaubed with white clay, some with red, + and some with both; some wearing feathers, and some the horns of buffalo; + some naked, and some in painted shirts of deer-skin, fringed with scalp-locks, + insomuch, says Joutel, that they looked like a troop of devils—leaped, + stamped, and howled from sunset till dawn. All this was partly to do the + travellers honor, and partly to extort presents. They made objections, + however, when asked to furnish guides; and it was only by dint of great + offers that four were at length procured.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE MISSISSIPPI.</div> +<p>With these, the travellers resumed their journey in a wooden canoe, about + the first of August,<a name="fnanchor_344" id="fnanchor_344"></a><a href="#footnote_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> descended the Arkansas, and soon reached the + dark and inexorable river, so long the object of their search, rolling, + like a destiny, through its realms of solitude and shade. They launched + their canoe on its turbid bosom, plied their oars against the current, + and slowly won their way upward, following the writhings of this watery + monster through cane-brake, swamp, and fen. It was a hard and toilsome + journey, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[Pg 457]</a></span> under + the sweltering sun of August,—now on the water, now knee-deep in + mud, dragging their canoe through the unwholesome jungle. On the nineteenth, + they passed the mouth of the Ohio; and their Indian guides made it an + offering of buffalo meat. On the first of September, they passed the Missouri, + and soon after saw Marquette's pictured rock, and the line of craggy heights + on the east shore, marked on old French maps as "the Ruined Castles." Then, + with a sense of relief, they turned from the great river into the peaceful + current of the Illinois. They were eleven days in ascending it, in their + large and heavy wooden canoe; when at length, on the afternoon of the + fourteenth of September, they saw, towering above the forest and the river, + the cliff crowned with the palisades of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois. + As they drew near, a troop of Indians, headed by a Frenchman, descended + from the rock, and fired their guns to salute them. They landed, and followed + the forest path that led towards the fort, when they were met by Boisrondet, + Tonty's comrade in the Iroquois war, and two other Frenchmen, who no sooner + saw them than they called out, demanding where was La Salle. Cavelier, + fearing lest he and his party would lose the advantage they might derive + from his character of representative of his brother, was determined to + conceal his death; and Joutel, as he himself confesses, took part in the + deceit. Substituting equivocation for falsehood, they replied that La + Salle had been with them nearly <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[Pg + 458]</a></span> as far as the Cenis villages, and that, when they parted, + he was in good health. This, so far as they were concerned, was, literally + speaking, true; but Douay and Teissier, the one a witness and the other + a sharer in his death, could not have said so much without a square falsehood, + and therefore evaded the inquiry.</p> +<p>Threading the forest path, and circling to the rear of the rock, they + climbed the rugged height, and reached the top. Here they saw an area, + encircled by the palisades that fenced the brink of the cliff, and by + several dwellings, a store-house, and a chapel. There were Indian lodges + too; for some of the red allies of the French made their abode with them.<a name="fnanchor_345" id="fnanchor_345"></a><a href="#footnote_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a> + Tonty was absent, fighting the Iroquois; but his lieutenant, Bellefontaine, + received the travellers, and his little garrison of bush-rangers greeted + them with a salute of musketry, mingled with the whooping of the Indians. + A <i>Te Deum</i> followed at the chapel; "and, with all our hearts," says + Joutel, "we gave thanks to God, who had preserved and guided us." At length, + the tired travellers were among countrymen and friends. Bellefontaine + found a room for the two priests; while Joutel, Teissier, and young Cavelier + were lodged in the store-house.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE JESUIT ALLOUEZ.</div> +<p>The Jesuit Allouez was lying ill at the fort; and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[Pg + 459]</a></span> Joutel, Cavelier, and Douay went to visit him. He + showed great anxiety when told that La Salle was alive, and on his + way to the Illinois; asked many questions, and could not hide his + agitation. When, some time after, he had partially recovered, he + left St. Louis, as if to shun a meeting with the object of his alarm.<a name="fnanchor_346" id="fnanchor_346"></a><a href="#footnote_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a> + Once before, in 1679, Allouez had fled <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[Pg + 460]</a></span> from the Illinois on hearing of the approach of + La Salle.</p> +<p>The season was late, and they were eager to hasten forward that they might + reach Quebec in time to return to France in the autumn ships. There was + not a day to lose. They bade farewell to Bellefontaine, from whom, as + from all others, they had concealed the death of La Salle, and made their + way across the country to Chicago. Here they were detained a week by a + storm; and when at length they embarked in a canoe furnished by Bellefontaine, + the tempest soon forced them to put back. On this, they abandoned their + design, and returned to Fort St. Louis, to the astonishment of its inmates.</p> +<div class="sidenote">CONDUCT OF CAVELIER.</div> +<p>It was October when they arrived; and, meanwhile, Tonty had returned from + the Iroquois war, where he had borne a conspicuous part in the famous + attack on the Senecas by the Marquis de Denonville.<a name="fnanchor_347" id="fnanchor_347"></a><a href="#footnote_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> He listened with + deep interest to the mournful story of his guests. Cavelier knew him well. + He knew, so far as he was capable of knowing, his generous and disinterested + character, his long and faithful <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[Pg + 461]</a></span> attachment to La Salle, and the invaluable services he + had rendered him. Tonty had every claim on his confidence and affection. + Yet he did not hesitate to practise on him the same deceit which he had + practised on Bellefontaine. He told him that he had left his brother in + good health on the Gulf of Mexico, and drew upon him, in La Salle's name, + for an amount stated by Joutel at about four thousand livres, in furs, + besides a canoe and a quantity of other goods, all of which were delivered + to him by the unsuspecting victim.<a name="fnanchor_348" id="fnanchor_348"></a><a href="#footnote_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a></p> +<p>This was at the end of the winter, when the old priest and his companions + had been living for months on Tonty's hospitality. They set out for Canada + on <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[Pg 462]</a></span> the + twenty-first of March, reached Chicago on the twenty-ninth, and thence + proceeded to Michilimackinac. Here Cavelier sold some of Tonty's furs + to a merchant, who gave him in payment a draft on Montreal, thus putting + him in funds for his voyage home. The party continued their journey in + canoes by way of French River and the Ottawa, and safely reached Montreal + on the seventeenth of July. Here they procured the clothing of which they + were wofully in need, and then descended the river to Quebec, where they + took lodging,—some with the Récollet friars, and some with + the priests of the Seminary,—in order to escape the questions of + the curious. At the end of August they embarked for France, and early + in October arrived safely at Rochelle. None of the party were men of especial + energy or force of character; and yet, under the spur of a dire necessity, + they had achieved one of the most adventurous journeys on record.</p> +<div class="sidenote">THE COLONISTS ABANDONED.</div> +<p>Now, at length, they disburdened themselves of their gloomy secret; but + the sole result seems to have been an order from the King for the arrest + of the murderers, should they appear in Canada.<a name="fnanchor_349" id="fnanchor_349"></a><a href="#footnote_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[Pg + 463]</a></span> Joutel was disappointed. It had been his hope throughout + that the King would send a ship to the relief of the wretched band at + Fort St. Louis of Texas. But Louis XIV. hardened his heart, and left them + to their fate.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_332" id="footnote_332"></a><a href="#fnanchor_332"> <span class="label">[332]</span></a> The lodges of the Florida Indians were somewhat similar. The + winter lodges of the now nearly extinct Mandans, though not so high + in proportion to their width, and built of more solid materials, as + the rigor of a northern climate requires, bear a general resemblance + to those of the Cenis.</p> + <p>The Cenis tattooed their faces and some parts of their bodies, by pricking + powdered charcoal into the skin. The women tattooed the breasts; and + this practice was general among them, notwithstanding the pain of the + operation, as it was thought very ornamental. Their dress consisted + of a sort of frock, or wrapper of skin, from the waist to the knees. + The men, in summer, wore nothing but the waist-cloth.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_333" id="footnote_333"></a><a href="#fnanchor_333"> <span class="label">[333]</span></a> <i>Journal Historique</i>, 237.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_334" id="footnote_334"></a><a href="#fnanchor_334"> <span class="label">[334]</span></a> "Tu es un misérable. Tu as tué mon maistre."—Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>. + Tonty derived his information from some of those present. Douay and + Joutel have each left an account of this murder. They agree in essential + points; though Douay says that when it took place, Duhaut had moved + his camp beyond the Cenis villages, which is contrary to Joutel's statement.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_335" id="footnote_335"></a><a href="#fnanchor_335"> <span class="label">[335]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Relation</i> (Margry, iii. 371).</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_336" id="footnote_336"></a><a href="#fnanchor_336"> <span class="label">[336]</span></a> These are described by Joutel. Like nearly all the early observers + of Indian manners, he speaks of the practice of cannibalism.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_337" id="footnote_337"></a><a href="#fnanchor_337"> <span class="label">[337]</span></a> These Indians were a portion of the Cadodaquis, or Caddoes, then + living on Red River. The travellers afterwards visited other villages + of the same people. Tonty was here two years afterwards, and mentions + the curious custom of washing the faces of guests.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_338" id="footnote_338"></a><a href="#fnanchor_338"> <span class="label">[338]</span></a> Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 298.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_339" id="footnote_339"></a><a href="#fnanchor_339"> <span class="label">[339]</span></a> <i>Journal de St. Cosme</i>, 1699. This journal has been printed + by Mr. Shea, from the copy in my possession. St. Cosme, who knew Tonty + well, speaks of him in the warmest terms of praise.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_340" id="footnote_340"></a><a href="#fnanchor_340"> <span class="label">[340]</span></a> In the autumn of 1685, Tonty made a journey from the Illinois + to Michilimackinac, to seek news of La Salle. He there learned, by + a letter of the new governor, Denonville, just arrived from France, + of the landing of La Salle, and the loss of the "Aimable," as recounted + by Beaujeu, on his return. He immediately went back on foot to Fort + St. Louis of the Illinois, and prepared to descend the Mississippi, "dans + l'espérance de lui donner secours." <i>Lettre de Tonty au Ministre, + 24 Aoust, 1686; Ibid., à Cabart de Villermont, même date</i>; <i>Mémoire + de Tonty</i>; <i>Procès Verbal de Tonty, 13 Avril, 1686.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_341" id="footnote_341"></a><a href="#fnanchor_341"> <span class="label">[341]</span></a> The date is from the <i>Procès Verbal</i>. In the <i>Mémoire</i>, + hastily written long after, he falls into errors of date.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_342" id="footnote_342"></a><a href="#fnanchor_342"> <span class="label">[342]</span></a> Iberville sent it to France, and Charlevoix gives a portion of + it. (<i>Histoire de la Nouvelle France</i>, ii. 259.) Singularly enough, + the date, as printed by him, is erroneous, being 20 April, 1685, instead + of 1686. There is no doubt whatever, from its relations with concurrent + events, that this journey was in the latter year.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_343" id="footnote_343"></a><a href="#fnanchor_343"> <span class="label">[343]</span></a> Tonty, <i>Mémoire; Ibid., Lettre à Monseigneur + de Ponchartrain</i>, 1690. Joutel, <i>Journal Historique</i>, 301.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_344" id="footnote_344"></a><a href="#fnanchor_344"> <span class="label">[344]</span></a> Joutel says that the Parisian boy, Barthelemy, was left behind. + It was this youth who afterwards uttered the ridiculous defamation + of La Salle mentioned in a preceding note. The account of the death + of La Salle, taken from the lips of Couture, was received by him from + Cavelier and his companions, during their stay at the Arkansas. Couture + was by trade a carpenter, and was a native of Rouen.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_345" id="footnote_345"></a><a href="#fnanchor_345"> <span class="label">[345]</span></a> The condition of Fort St. Louis, at this time, may be gathered + from several passages of Joutel. The houses, he says, were built at + the brink of the cliff, forming, with the palisades, the circle of + defence. The Indians lived in the area.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_346" id="footnote_346"></a><a href="#fnanchor_346"> <span class="label">[346]</span></a> Joutel adds that this was occasioned by "une espèce de + conspiration qu'on a voulu faire contre les interests de Monsieur de + la Salle."—<i>Journal Historique</i>, 350.</p> + <p>"Ce Père appréhendoit que le dit sieur ne l'y rencontrast, + ... suivant ce que j'en ai pu apprendre, les Pères avoient avancé plusieurs + choses pour contrebarrer l'entreprise et avoient voulu détacher + plusieurs nations de Sauvages, lesquelles s'estoient données à M. + de la Salle. Ils avoient esté mesme jusques à vouloir + destruire le fort Saint-Louis, en ayant construit un à Chicago, + où ils avoient attiré une partie des Sauvages, ne pouvant + en quelque façon s'emparer du dit fort. Pour conclure, le bon + Père ayant eu peur d'y estre trouvé, aima mieux se précautionner + en prenant le devant.... Quoyque M. Cavelier eust dit au Père + qu'il pouvoit rester, il partit quelques sept ou huit jours avant nous."—<i>Relation</i> (Margry, + iii. 500).</p> + <p>La Salle always saw the influence of the Jesuits in the disasters that + befell him. His repeated assertion, that they wished to establish themselves + in the valley of the Mississippi, receives confirmation from a document + entitled <i>Mémoire sur la proposition à faire par les + R. Pères Jésuites pour la découverte des environs + de la rivière du Mississipi et pour voir si elle est navigable + jusqu'à la mer</i>. It is a memorandum of propositions to be + made to the minister Seignelay, and was apparently put forward as a + feeler, before making the propositions in form. It was written after + the return of Beaujeu to France, and before La Salle's death became + known. It intimates that the Jesuits were entitled to precedence in + the valley of the Mississippi, as having first explored it. It affirms + that <i>La Salle had made a blunder, and landed his colony, not at + the mouth of the river, but at another place</i>; and it asks permission + to continue the work in which he has failed. To this end, it petitions + for means to build a vessel at St. Louis of the Illinois, together + with canoes, arms, tents, tools, provisions, and merchandise for the + Indians; and it also asks for La Salle's maps and papers, and for those + of Beaujeu. On their part, it pursues, the Jesuits will engage to make + a complete survey of the river, and return an exact account of its + inhabitants, its plants, and its other productions.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_347" id="footnote_347"></a><a href="#fnanchor_347"> <span class="label">[347]</span></a> Tonty, Du Lhut, and Durantaye came to the aid of Denonville with + a hundred and eighty Frenchmen, chiefly <i>coureurs de bois</i>, and + four hundred Indians from the upper country. Their services were highly + appreciated; and Tonty especially is mentioned in the despatches of + Denonville with great praise.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_348" id="footnote_348"></a><a href="#fnanchor_348"> <span class="label">[348]</span></a> "Monsieur Tonty, croyant M. de la Salle vivant, ne fit pas de + difficulté de luy donner pour environ quatre mille liv. de pelleterie, + de castors, loutres, un canot, et autres effets."—Joutel, <i>Journal + Historique</i>, 349.</p> + <p>Tonty himself does not make the amount so great: "Sur ce qu'ils m'assuroient + qu'il étoit resté au Golfe de Mexique en bonne santé, + je les reçus comme si ç'avoit esté lui mesme et + luy prestay [<i>à Cavelier</i>] plus de 700 francs."—Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>.</p> + <p>Cavelier must have known that La Salle was insolvent. Tonty had long + served without pay. Douay says that he made the stay of the party at + the fort very agreeable, and speaks of him, with some apparent compunction, + as "ce brave gentilhomme, toujours inséparablement attaché aux + intérêts du Sieur de la Salle, dont nous luy avons caché la + déplorable destinée."</p> + <p>Couture, from the Arkansas, brought word to Tonty, several months after, + of La Salle's death, adding that Cavelier had concealed it, with no + other purpose than that of gaining money or supplies from him (Tonty), + in his brother's name. Cavelier had a letter from La Salle, desiring + Tonty to give him supplies, and pay him 2,652 livres in beaver. If + Cavelier is to be believed, this beaver belonged to La Salle.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_349" id="footnote_349"></a><a href="#fnanchor_349"> <span class="label">[349]</span></a> <i>Lettre du Roy à Denonville, 1 Mai, 1689.</i> Joutel + must have been a young man at the time of the Mississippi expedition; + for Charlevoix saw him at Rouen, thirty-five years after. He speaks + of him with emphatic praise; but it must be admitted that his connivance + in the deception practised by Cavelier on Tonty leaves a shade on his + character, as well as on that of Douay. In other respects, everything + that appears concerning him is highly favorable, which is not the case + with Douay, who, on one or two occasions, makes wilful misstatements.</p> + <p>Douay says that the elder Cavelier made a report of the expedition + to the minister Seignelay. This report remained unknown in an English + collection of autographs and old manuscripts, whence I obtained it + by purchase, in 1854, both the buyer and seller being at the time ignorant + of its exact character. It proved, on examination, to be a portion + of the first draft of Cavelier's report to Seignelay. It consists of + twenty-six small folio pages, closely written in a clear hand, though + in a few places obscured by the fading of the ink, as well as by occasional + erasures and interlineations of the writer. It is, as already stated, + confused and unsatisfactory in its statements; and all the latter part + has been lost. On reaching France, he had the impudence to tell Abbé Tronson, + Superior of St. Sulpice, "qu'il avait laissé M. de la Salle + dans un très-beau pays avec M. de Chefdeville en bonne santé."—<i>Lettre + de Tronson à Mad. Fauvel-Cavelier, 29 Nov., 1688.</i></p> + <p>Cavelier addressed to the King a memorial on the importance of keeping + possession of the Illinois. It closes with an earnest petition for + money in compensation for his losses, as, according to his own statement, + he was completely <i>épuisé</i>. It is affirmed in a + memorial of the heirs of his cousin, François Plet, that he + concealed the death of La Salle some time after his return to France, + in order to get possession of property which would otherwise have been + seized by the creditors of the deceased. The prudent abbé died + rich and very old, at the house of a relative, having inherited a large + estate after his return from America. Apparently, this did not satisfy + him; for there is before me the copy of a petition, written about 1717, + in which he asks, jointly with one of his nephews, to be given possession + of the seigniorial property held by La Salle in America. The petition + was refused.</p> + <p>Young Cavelier, La Salle's nephew, died some years after, an officer + in a regiment. He has been erroneously supposed to be the same with + one De la Salle, whose name is appended to a letter giving an account + of Louisiana, and dated at Toulon, 3 Sept., 1698. This person was the + son of a naval official at Toulon, and was not related to the Caveliers.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[Pg + 464]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2> +<p class="center">1688-1689.</p> +<p class="center">FATE OF THE TEXAN COLONY.</p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"><span class="smcap">Tonty attempts to +rescue the Colonists: his Difficulties and Hardships.—Spanish Hostility.—Expedition +of Alonzo de Leon: he reaches Fort St. Louis.—A Scene +of Havoc.—Destruction of the French.—The End.</span></div> +<div class="sidenote">COURAGE OF TONTY.</div> +<p><span class="smcap">Henri De Tonty</span>, on his rock of St. Louis, was visited in September by + Couture and two Indians from the Arkansas. Then, for the first time, he + heard with grief and indignation of the death of La Salle, and the deceit + practised by Cavelier. The chief whom he had served so well was beyond + his help; but might not the unhappy colonists left on the shores of Texas + still be rescued from destruction? Couture had confirmed what Cavelier + and his party had already told him, that the tribes south of the Arkansas + were eager to join the French in an invasion of northern Mexico; and he + soon after received from the governor, Denonville, a letter informing + him that war had again been declared against Spain. As bold and enterprising + as La Salle himself, Tonty resolved on an effort to learn the condition + of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[Pg 465]</a></span> few + Frenchmen left on the borders of the Gulf, relieve their necessities, + and, should it prove practicable, make them the nucleus of a war-party + to cross the Rio Grande, and add a new province to the domain of France. + It was the revival, on a small scale, of La Salle's scheme of Mexican + invasion; and there is no doubt that, with a score of French musketeers, + he could have gathered a formidable party of savage allies from the tribes + of Red River, the Sabine, and the Trinity. This daring adventure and the + rescue of his suffering countrymen divided his thoughts, and he prepared + at once to execute the double purpose.<a name="fnanchor_350" id="fnanchor_350"></a><a href="#footnote_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a></p> +<div class="sidenote">TONTY MISREPRESENTED.</div> +<p>He left Fort St. Louis of the Illinois early in December, in a pirogue, + or wooden canoe, with five Frenchmen, a Shawanoe warrior, and two Indian + slaves; and, after a long and painful journey, he reached the villages + of the Caddoes on Red River on the twenty-eighth of March. Here he was + told that Hiens and his companions were at a village eighty leagues distant; + and thither he was preparing to go in search of them, when all his men, + excepting the Shawanoe and one Frenchman, declared themselves disgusted + with the journey, and refused to follow him. Persuasion was useless, and + there was no means of enforcing obedience. He found himself abandoned; + but he still pushed on, with the two who remained faithful. A few days + after, they lost nearly all their ammunition in crossing a river. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[Pg + 466]</a></span> Undeterred by this accident, Tonty made his way to the + village where Hiens and those who had remained with him were said to be; + but no trace of them appeared, and the demeanor of the Indians, when he + inquired for them, convinced him that they had been put to death. He charged + them with having killed the Frenchmen, whereupon the women of the village + raised a wail of lamentation; "and I saw," he says, "that what I had said + to them was true." They refused to give him guides; and this, with the + loss of his ammunition, compelled him to forego his purpose of making + his way to the colonists on the Bay of St. Louis. With bitter disappointment, + he and his two companions retraced their course, and at length approached + Red River. Here they found the whole country flooded. Sometimes they waded + to the knees, sometimes to the neck, sometimes pushed their slow way on + rafts. Night and day it rained without ceasing. They slept on logs placed + side by side to raise them above the mud and water, and fought their way + with hatchets through the inundated cane-brakes. They found no game but + a bear, which had taken refuge on an island in the flood; and they were + forced to eat their dogs. "I never in my life," writes Tonty, "suffered + so much." In judging these intrepid exertions, it is to be remembered + that he was not, at least in appearance, of a robust constitution, and + that he had but one hand. They reached the Mississippi on the eleventh + of July, and the Arkansas villages on the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[Pg + 467]</a></span> thirty-first. Here Tonty was detained by an attack of + fever. He resumed his journey when it began to abate, and reached his + fort of the Illinois in September.<a name="fnanchor_351" id="fnanchor_351"></a><a href="#footnote_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[Pg + 468]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">A SCENE OF HAVOC.</div> +<p>While the King of France abandoned the exiles of Texas to their fate, + a power dark, ruthless, and terrible was hovering around the feeble colony + on the Bay of St. Louis, searching with pitiless eye to discover and tear + out that dying germ of civilization from the bosom of the wilderness in + whose savage immensity it lay hidden. Spain claimed the Gulf of Mexico + and all its coasts as her own of unanswerable right, and the viceroys + of Mexico were strenuous to enforce her claim. The capture of one of La + Salle's four vessels at St. Domingo had made known his designs, and in + the course of the three succeeding years no less than four expeditions + were sent out from Vera Cruz to find and destroy him. They scoured the + whole extent of the coast, and found the wrecks of the "Aimable" and the "Belle;" but + the colony of St. Louis,<a name="fnanchor_352" id="fnanchor_352"></a><a href="#footnote_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a> inland and secluded, escaped their search. + For a time, the jealousy of the Spaniards was lulled to sleep. They rested + in the assurance that the intruders had perished, when fresh advices from + the frontier province of New Leon <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[Pg + 469]</a></span> caused the Viceroy, Galve, to order a strong force, under + Alonzo de Leon, to march from Coahuila, and cross the Rio Grande. Guided + by a French prisoner, probably one of the deserters from La Salle, they + pushed their way across wild and arid plains, rivers, prairies, and forests, + till at length they approached the Bay of St. Louis, and descried, far + off, the harboring-place of the French.<a name="fnanchor_353" id="fnanchor_353"></a><a href="#footnote_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a> As they drew near, no banner + was displayed, no sentry challenged; and the silence of death reigned + over the shattered palisades and neglected dwellings. The Spaniards spurred + their reluctant horses through the gateway, and a scene of desolation + met their sight. No living thing was stirring. Doors were torn from their + hinges; broken boxes, staved barrels, and rusty kettles, mingled with + a great number of stocks of arquebuses and muskets, were scattered about + in confusion. Here, too, trampled in mud and soaked with rain, they saw + more than two hundred books, many of which still retained the traces of + costly bindings. On the adjacent prairie lay three dead bodies, one of + which, from fragments of dress still clinging to the wasted remains, they + saw to be that of a woman. It was in vain to question the imperturbable <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[Pg + 470]</a></span> savages, who, wrapped to the throat in their buffalo-robes, + stood gazing on the scene with looks of wooden immobility. Two strangers, + however, at length arrived.<a name="fnanchor_354" id="fnanchor_354"></a><a href="#footnote_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a> Their faces were smeared with paint, + and they were wrapped in buffalo-robes like the rest; yet these seeming + Indians were L'Archevêque, the tool of La Salle's murderer Duhaut, + and Grollet, the companion of the white savage Ruter. The Spanish commander, + learning that these two men were in the district of the tribe called Texas,<a name="fnanchor_355" id="fnanchor_355"></a><a href="#footnote_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a> + had sent to invite them to his camp under a pledge of good treatment; + and they had resolved to trust Spanish clemency rather than endure longer + a life that had become intolerable. From them the Spaniards learned nearly + all that is known of the fate of Barbier, Zenobe Membré, and their + companions. Three months before, a large band of Indians had approached + the fort, the inmates of which had suffered severely from the ravages + of the small-pox. From fear of treachery, they refused to admit their + visitors, but received them at a cabin without the palisades. Here the + French began a trade with them; when suddenly a band of warriors, yelling <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[Pg + 471]</a></span> the war-whoop, rushed from an ambuscade under the bank + of the river, and butchered the greater number. The children of one Talon, + together with an Italian and a young man from Paris named Breman, were + saved by the Indian women, who carried them off on their backs. L'Archevêque + and Grollet, who with others of their stamp were domesticated in the Indian + villages, came to the scene of slaughter, and, as they affirmed, buried + fourteen dead bodies.<a name="fnanchor_356" id="fnanchor_356"></a><a href="#footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a></p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[Pg + 472]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">THE SURVIVORS.</div> +<p>L'Archevêque and Grollet were sent to Spain, where, in spite of + the pledge given them, they were thrown into prison, with the intention + of sending them back to labor in the mines. The Indians, some time after + De Leon's expedition, gave up their captives to the Spaniards. The Italian + was imprisoned at Vera Cruz. Breman's fate is unknown. Pierre and Jean + Baptiste Talon, who were now old enough to bear arms, were enrolled in + the Spanish navy, and, being captured in 1696 by a French ship of war, + regained their liberty; while their younger brothers and their sister + were carried to Spain by the Viceroy.<a name="fnanchor_357" id="fnanchor_357"></a><a href="#footnote_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a> With respect to the ruffian + companions of Hiens, the conviction of Tonty that they had been put to + death by the Indians may have been well founded; but the buccaneer himself + is said to have been killed in a quarrel with his accomplice Ruter, the + white savage; and thus in ignominy and darkness died the last embers of + the doomed colony of La Salle.</p> +<div class="sidenote">FRUIT OF EXPLORATIONS.</div> +<p>Here ends the wild and mournful story of the explorers of the Mississippi. + Of all their toil and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[Pg + 473]</a></span> sacrifice, no fruit remained but a great geographical + discovery, and a grand type of incarnate energy and will. Where La Salle + had ploughed, others were to sow the seed; and on the path which the undespairing + Norman had hewn out, the Canadian D'Iberville was to win for France a + vast though a transient dominion.</p> +<div class="footnotes"> + <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_350" id="footnote_350"></a><a href="#fnanchor_350"> <span class="label">[350]</span></a> Tonty, <i>Mémoire</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_351" id="footnote_351"></a><a href="#fnanchor_351"> <span class="label">[351]</span></a> Two causes have contributed to detract, most unjustly, from Tonty's + reputation,—the publication, under his name, but without his + authority, of a perverted account of the enterprises in which he took + part; and the confounding him with his brother, Alphonse de Tonty, + who long commanded at Detroit, where charges of peculation were brought + against him. There are very few names in French-American history mentioned + with such unanimity of praise as that of Henri de Tonty. Hennepin finds + some fault with him; but his censure is commendation. The despatches + of the governor, Denonville, speak in strong terms of his services + in the Iroquois war, praise his character, and declare that he is fit + for any bold enterprise, adding that he deserves reward from the King. + The missionary, St. Cosme, who travelled under his escort in 1699, + says of him: "He is beloved by all the <i>voyageurs</i>.... It was + with deep regret that we parted from him: ... he is the man who best + knows the country; ... he is loved and feared everywhere.... Your grace + will, I doubt not, take pleasure in acknowledging the obligations we + owe him."</p> + <p>Tonty held the commission of captain; but, by a memoir which he addressed + to Ponchartrain in 1690, it appears that he had never received any + pay. Count Frontenac certifies the truth of the statement, and adds + a recommendation of the writer. In consequence, probably, of this, + the proprietorship of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois was granted in + the same year to Tonty, jointly with La Forest, formerly La Salle's + lieutenant. Here they carried on a trade in furs. In 1699, a royal + declaration was launched against the <i>coureurs de bois</i>; but an + express provision was added in favor of Tonty and La Forest, who were + empowered to send up the country yearly two canoes, with twelve men, + for the maintenance of this fort. With such a limitation, this fort + and the trade carried on at it must have been very small. In 1702, + we find a royal order, to the effect that La Forest is henceforth to + reside in Canada, and Tonty on the Mississippi; and that the establishment + at the Illinois is to be discontinued. In the same year, Tonty joined + D'Iberville in Lower Louisiana, and was sent by that officer from Mobile + to secure the Chickasaws in the French interest. His subsequent career + and the time of his death do not appear. He seems never to have received + the reward which his great merit deserved. Those intimate with the + late lamented Dr. Sparks will remember his often-expressed wish that + justice should be done to the memory of Tonty.</p> + <p>Fort St. Louis of the Illinois was afterwards reoccupied by the French. + In 1718, a number of them, chiefly traders, were living here; but three + years later it was again deserted, and Charlevoix, passing the spot, + saw only the remains of its palisades.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_352" id="footnote_352"></a><a href="#fnanchor_352"> <span class="label">[352]</span></a> Fort St. Louis of Texas is not to be confounded with Fort St. + Louis of the Illinois.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_353" id="footnote_353"></a><a href="#fnanchor_353"> <span class="label">[353]</span></a> After crossing the Del Norte, they crossed in turn the Upper + Nueces, the Hondo (Rio Frio), the De Leon (San Antonio), and the Guadalupe, + and then, turning southward, descended to the Bay of St. Bernard.... + Manuscript map of "Route que firent les Espagnols, pour venir enlever + les Français restez à la Baye St. Bernard ou St. Louis, + après la perte du vaisseau de M<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle en + 1689." (Margry's collection.)</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_354" id="footnote_354"></a><a href="#fnanchor_354"> <span class="label">[354]</span></a> May 1st. The Spaniards reached the fort April 22.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_355" id="footnote_355"></a><a href="#fnanchor_355"> <span class="label">[355]</span></a> This is the first instance in which the name occurs. In a letter + written by a member of De Leon's party, the Texan Indians are mentioned + several times. (See <i>Coleccion de Varios Documentos</i>, 25.) They + are described as an agricultural tribe, and were, to all appearance, + identical with the Cenis. The name Tejas, or Texas, was first applied + as a local designation to a spot on the river Neches, in the Cenis + territory, whence it extended to the whole country. (See Yoakum, <i>History + of Texas</i>, 52.)</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_356" id="footnote_356"></a><a href="#fnanchor_356"> <span class="label">[356]</span></a> <i>Derrotero de la Jornada que hizo el General Alonso de Leon + para el descubrimiento de la Bahia del Espíritu Santo, y + poblacion de Franceses. Ano de 1689.</i>—This is the official + journal of the expedition, signed by Alonzo de Leon. I am indebted + to Colonel Thomas Aspinwall for the opportunity of examining it. + The name of Espiritu Santo was, as before mentioned, given by the + Spaniards to St. Louis, or Matagorda Bay, as well as to two other + bays of the Gulf of Mexico.</p> + <p><i>Carta en que se da noticia de un viaje hecho à la Bahia + de Espíritu Santo y de la poblacion que tenian ahi los Franceses. + Coleccion de Varios Documentos para la Historia de la Florida</i>, + 25.—This is a letter from a person accompanying the expedition + of De Leon. It is dated May 18, 1689, and agrees closely with the journal + cited above, though evidently by another hand. Compare Barcia, <i>Ensayo + Cronologico</i>, 294. Barcia's story has been doubted; but these authentic + documents prove the correctness of his principal statements, though + on minor points he seems to have indulged his fancy.</p> + <p>The Viceroy of New Spain, in a report to the King, 1690, says that, + in order to keep the Texas and other Indians of that region in obedience + to his Majesty, he has resolved to establish eight missions among them. + He adds that he has appointed as governor, or commander, in that province, + Don Domingo Teran de los Rios, who will make a thorough exploration + of it, carry out what De Leon has begun; prevent the further intrusion + of foreigners like La Salle, and go in pursuit of the remnant of the + French, who are said still to remain among the tribes of Red River. + I owe this document to the kindness of Mr. Buckingham Smith.</p> +<p class="footnote"> <a name="footnote_357" id="footnote_357"></a><a href="#fnanchor_357"> <span class="label">[357]</span></a> <i>Mémoire sur lequel on a interrogé les deux Canadiens + [Pierre et Jean Baptiste Talon] qui sont soldats dans la Compagnie + de Feuguerolles. A Brest, 14 Février, 1698.</i></p> + <p><i>Interrogations faites à Pierre et Jean Baptiste Talon à leur + arrivée de la Veracrux.</i>—This paper, which differs + in some of its details from the preceding, was sent by D'Iberville, + the founder of Louisiana, to Abbé Cavelier. Appended to it + is a letter from D'Iberville, written in May, 1704, in which he + confirms the chief statements of the Talons, by information obtained + by him from a Spanish officer at Pensacola.</p> +</div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<h2><a name="APPENDIX" id="APPENDIX"></a>APPENDIX.</h2> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[Pg 475]</a></span></p> +<h3><a name="APPENDIX_I" id="APPENDIX_I"></a>I.</h3> +<p class="center">EARLY UNPUBLISHED MAPS OF THE MISSISSIPPI AND THE GREAT LAKES.</p> +<p class="blockquot"><span class="smcap">Most</span> of the maps described below are to +be found in the Dépôt des Cartes de la Marine et des Colonies, at +Paris. Taken together, they exhibit the progress of western discovery, +and illustrate the records of the explorers.</p> +<p>1. The map of Galinée, 1670, has a double title,—<i>Carte + du Canada et des Terres découvertes vers le lac Derié, + and Carte du Lac Ontario et des habitations qui l'environnent ensemble + le pays que Mess<sup>rs.</sup> Dolier et Galinée, missionnaires + du seminaire de St. Sulpice, ont parcouru</i>. It professes to represent + only the country actually visited by the two missionaries. Beginning + with Montreal, it gives the course of the Upper St. Lawrence and the + shores of Lake Ontario, the river Niagara, the north shore of Lake + Erie, the Strait of Detroit, and the eastern and northern shores of + Lake Huron. Galinée did not know the existence of the peninsula + of Michigan, and merges Lakes Huron and Michigan into one, under the + name of "Michigané, ou Mer Douce des Hurons." He was also entirely + ignorant of the south shore of Lake Erie. He represents the outlet + of Lake Superior as far as the Saut Ste. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[Pg + 476]</a></span> Marie, and lays down the river Ottawa in great detail, + having descended it on his return. The Falls of the Genesee are indicated, + as also the Falls of Niagara, with the inscription, "Sault qui tombe + au rapport des sauvages de plus de 200 pieds de haut." Had the Jesuits + been disposed to aid him, they could have given him much additional + information, and corrected his most serious errors; as, for example, + the omission of the peninsula of Michigan. The first attempt to map + out the Great Lakes was that of Champlain, in 1632. This of Galinée + may be called the second.</p> +<p>2. The map of Lake Superior, published in the Jesuit Relation of 1670, + 1671, was made at about the same time with Galinée's map. Lake + Superior is here styled "Lac Tracy, ou Supérieur." Though not so + exact as it has been represented, this map indicates that the Jesuits + had explored every part of this fresh-water ocean, and that they had a + thorough knowledge of the straits connecting the three Upper Lakes, and + of the adjacent bays, inlets, and shores. The peninsula of Michigan, ignored + by Galinée, is represented in its proper place.</p> +<p>3. Three years or more after Galinée made the map mentioned above, + another, indicating a greatly increased knowledge of the country, was + made by some person whose name does not appear. This map, which is somewhat + more than four feet long and about two feet and a half wide, has no title. + All the Great Lakes, through their entire extent, are laid down on it + with considerable accuracy. Lake Ontario is called "Lac Ontario, ou de + Frontenac." Fort Frontenac is indicated, as well as the Iroquois colonies + of the north shore. Niagara is "Chute haute de 120 toises par où le + Lac Erié tombe dans le Lac Frontenac." Lake Erie is "Lac Teiocha-rontiong, + dit communément Lac Erié." Lake St. Clair is "Tsiketo, ou + Lac de la Chaudière." Lake Huron is "Lac Huron, ou Mer Douce des + Hurons." <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[Pg 477]</a></span> Lake + Superior is "Lac Supérieur." Lake Michigan is "Lac Mitchiganong, + ou des Illinois." On Lake Michigan, immediately opposite the site of Chicago, + are written the words, of which the following is the literal translation: "The + largest vessels can come to this place from the outlet of Lake Erie, where + it discharges into Lake Frontenac [Ontario]; and from this marsh into + which they can enter there is only a distance of a thousand paces to the + River La Divine [Des Plaines], which can lead them to the River Colbert + [Mississippi], and thence to the Gulf of Mexico." This map was evidently + made after that voyage of La Salle in which he discovered the Illinois, + or at least the Des Plaines branch of it. The Ohio is laid down with the + inscription, "River Ohio, so called by the Iroquois on account of its + beauty, which the Sieur de la Salle descended." (<i>Ante</i>, 32, <i>note</i>.)</p> +<p>4. We now come to the map of Marquette, which is a rude sketch of a portion + of Lakes Superior and Michigan, and of the route pursued by him and Joliet + up the Fox River of Green Bay, down the Wisconsin, and thence down the + Mississippi as far as the Arkansas. The river Illinois is also laid down, + as it was by this course that he returned to Lake Michigan after his memorable + voyage. He gives no name to the Wisconsin. The Mississippi is called "Rivière + de la Conception;" the Missouri, the Pekitanoui; and the Ohio, the Ouabouskiaou, + though La Salle, its discoverer, had previously given it its present name, + borrowed from the Iroquois. The Illinois is nameless, like the Wisconsin. + At the mouth of a river, perhaps the Des Moines, Marquette places the + three villages of the Peoria Indians visited by him. These, with the Kaskaskias, + Maroas, and others, on the map, were merely sub-tribes of the aggregation + of savages known as the Illinois. On or near the Missouri he places the + Ouchage (Osages), the Oumessourit <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[Pg + 478]</a></span> (Missouris), the Kansa (Kanzas), the Paniassa (Pawnees), + the Maha (Omahas), and the Pahoutet (Pah-Utahs?). The names of many other + tribes, "esloignées dans les terres," are also given along the + course of the Arkansas, a river which is nameless on the map. Most of + these tribes are now indistinguishable. This map has recently been engraved + and published.</p> +<p>5. Not long after Marquette's return from the Mississippi, another map + was made by the Jesuits, with the following title: <i>Carte de la nouvelle + decouverte que les peres Iesuites ont fait en l'année 1672, et + continuée par le P. Iacques Marquette de la mesme Compagnie accompagné de + quelques françois en l'année 1673, qu'on pourra nommer en + françois la Manitoumie</i>. This title is very elaborately decorated + with figures drawn with a pen, and representing Jesuits instructing Indians. + The map is the same published by Thevenot, not without considerable variations, + in 1681. It represents the Mississippi from a little above the Wisconsin + to the Gulf of Mexico, the part below the Arkansas being drawn from conjecture. + The river is named "Mitchisipi, ou grande Rivière." The Wisconsin, + the Illinois, the Ohio, the Des Moines(?), the Missouri, and the Arkansas + are all represented, but in a very rude manner. Marquette's route, in + going and returning, is marked by lines; but the return route is incorrect. + The whole map is so crude and careless, and based on information so inexact, + that it is of little interest.</p> +<p>6. The Jesuits made also another map, without title, of the four Upper + Lakes and the Mississippi to a little below the Arkansas. The Mississippi + is called "Riuiere Colbert." The map is remarkable as including the earliest + representation of the Upper Mississippi, based, perhaps, on the reports + of Indians. The Falls of St. Anthony are indicated by the word "Saut." It + is possible that the map <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[Pg + 479]</a></span> may be of later date than at first appears, and that it + may have been drawn in the interval between the return of Hennepin from + the Upper Mississippi and that of La Salle from his discovery of the mouth + of the river. The various temporary and permanent stations of the Jesuits + are marked by crosses.</p> +<p>7. Of far greater interest is the small map of Louis Joliet made and presented + to Count Frontenac after the discoverer's return from the Mississippi. + It is entitled <i>Carte de la decouverte du S<sup>r.</sup> Jolliet ou + l'on voit La Communication du fleuve St. Laurens avec les lacs frontenac, + Erié, Lac des Hurons et Ilinois</i>. Then succeeds the following, + written in the same antiquated French, as if it were a part of the title: "Lake + Frontenac [Ontario] is separated by a fall of half a league from Lake + Erié, from which one enters that of the Hurons, and by the same + navigation, into that of the Illinois [Michigan], from the head of which + one crosses to the Divine River [Rivière Divine; <i>i. e.</i>, + the Des Plaines branch of the river Illinois], by a portage of a thousand + paces. This river falls into the river Colbert [Mississippi], which discharges + itself into the Gulf of Mexico." A part of this map is based on the Jesuit + map of Lake Superior, the legends being here for the most part identical, + though the shape of the lake is better given by Joliet. The Mississippi, + or "Riuiere Colbert," is made to flow from three lakes in latitude 47°; + and it ends in latitude 37°, a little below the mouth of the Ohio, + the rest being apparently cut off to make room for Joliet's letter to + Frontenac (<i>ante</i>, 76), which is written on the lower part of the + map. The valley of the Mississippi is called on the map "Colbertie, ou + Amerique Occidentale." The Missouri is represented without name, and against + it is a legend, of which the following is the literal translation: "By + one of these great rivers which come from the west and discharge themselves + into the river Colbert, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[Pg + 480]</a></span> one will find a way to enter the Vermilion Sea (Gulf of + California). I have seen a village which was not more than twenty days' + journey by land from a nation which has commerce with those of California. + If I had come two days sooner, I should have spoken with those who had + come from thence, and had brought four hatchets as a present." The Ohio + has no name, but a legend over it states that La Salle had descended it. + (See <i>ante</i>, 32, <i>note</i>).</p> +<p>8. Joliet, at about the same time, made another map, larger than that + just mentioned, but not essentially different. The letter to Frontenac + is written upon both. There is a third map, of which the following is + the title: <i>Carte generalle de la France septentrionale contenant la + descouuerte du pays des Illinois, faite par le S<sup>r</sup>. Jolliet</i>. + This map, which is inscribed with a dedication by the Intendant Duchesneau + to the minister Colbert, was made some time after the voyage of Joliet + and Marquette. It is an elaborate piece of work, but very inaccurate. + It represents the continent from Hudson's Strait to Mexico and California, + with the whole of the Atlantic and a part of the Pacific coast. An open + sea is made to extend from Hudson's Strait westward to the Pacific. The + St. Lawrence and all the Great Lakes are laid down with tolerable correctness, + as also is the Gulf of Mexico. The Mississippi, called "Messasipi," flows + into the Gulf, from which it extends northward nearly to the "Mer du Nord." Along + its course, above the Wisconsin, which is called "Miskous," is a long + list of Indian tribes, most of which cannot now be recognized, though + several are clearly sub-tribes of the Sioux. The Ohio is called "Ouaboustikou." The + whole map is decorated with numerous figures of animals, natives of the + country, or supposed to be so. Among them are camels, ostriches, and a + giraffe, which are placed on the plains west <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[Pg + 481]</a></span> of the Mississippi. But the most curious figure is that + which represents one of the monsters seen by Joliet and Marquette, painted + on a rock by the Indians. It corresponds with Marquette's description + (<i>ante</i>, 68). This map, which is an early effort of the engineer + Franquelin, does more credit to his skill as a designer than to his geographical + knowledge, which appears in some respects behind his time.</p> +<p>9. <i>Carte de l'Amérique Septentrionale depuis l'embouchure de + la Rivière St. Laurens jusques au Sein Mexique.</i> On this + curious little map, the Mississippi is called "Riuiere Buade" (the + family name of Frontenac); and the neighboring country is "La Frontenacie." The + Illinois is "Riuiere de la Diuine ou Loutrelaise," and the Arkansas + is "Riuiere Bazire." The Mississippi is made to head in three lakes, + and to discharge itself into "B. du S. Esprit" (Mobile Bay). Some of + the legends and the orthography of various Indian names are clearly + borrowed from Marquette. This map appears to be the work of Raudin, + Frontenac's engineer. I owe a tracing of it to the kindness of Henry + Harrisse, Esq.</p> +<p>10. <i>Carte des Parties les plus occidentales du Canada, par le Père + Pierre Raffeix</i>, S. J. This rude map shows the course of Du Lhut + from the head of Lake Superior to the Mississippi, and partly confirms + the story of Hennepin, who, Raffeix says in a note, was rescued by + Du Lhut. The course of Joliet and Marquette is given, with the legend "Voyage + et première descouverte du Mississipy faite par le P. Marquette + et M<sup>r.</sup> Joliet en 1672." The route of La Salle in 1679, 1680, + is also laid down.</p> +<p>11. In the Dépôt des Cartes de la Marine is another map of + the Upper Mississippi, which seems to have been made by or for Du Lhut. + Lac Buade, the "Issatis," the "Tintons," the "Houelbatons," the "Poualacs," and + other tribes <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[Pg + 482]</a></span> of this region appear upon it. This is the map numbered + 208 in the <i>Cartographie</i> of Harrisse.</p> +<p>12. Another map deserving mention is a large and fine one, entitled <i>Carte + de l'Amérique Septentrionale et partie de la Meridionale ... + avec les nouvelles découvertes de la Rivière Missisipi, + ou Colbert</i>. It appears to have been made in 1682 or 1683, before + the descent of La Salle to the mouth of the Mississippi was known to + the maker, who seems to have been Franquelin. The lower Mississippi + is omitted, but its upper portions are elaborately laid down; and the + name <i>La Louisiane</i> appears in large gold letters along its west + side. The Falls of St. Anthony are shown, and above them is written "Armes + du Roy gravées sur cet arbre l'an 1679." This refers to the <i>acte + de prise de possession</i> of Du Lhut in July of that year, and this + part of the map seems made from data supplied by him.</p> +<p>13. We now come to the great map of Franquelin, the most remarkable of + all the early maps of the interior of North America, though hitherto completely + ignored by both American and Canadian writers. It is entitled <i>Carte + de la Louisiane ou des Voyages du S<sup>r.</sup> de la Salle et des pays + qu'il a découverts depuis la Nouvelle France jusqu'au Golfe Mexique + les années 1679, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, 81, et 82, par Jean Baptiste Louis Franquelin, + l'an 1684. Paris.</i> Franquelin was a young engineer, who held the post + of hydrographer to the King, at Quebec, in which Joliet succeeded him. + Several of his maps are preserved, including one made in 1681, in which + he lays down the course of the Mississippi,—the lower part from + conjecture,—making it discharge itself into Mobile Bay. It appears + from a letter of the governor, La Barre, that Franquelin was at Quebec + in 1683, engaged on a map which was probably that of which the title is + given above, though had La Barre known that it was to be called a map + of the journeys of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[Pg + 483]</a></span> his victim La Salle, he would have been more sparing of + his praises. "He" (Franquelin), writes the governor, "is as skilful as + any in France, but extremely poor and in need of a little aid from his + Majesty as an Engineer; he is at work on a very correct map of the country, + which I shall send you next year in his name; meanwhile, I shall support + him with some little assistance."—<i>Colonial Documents of New York</i>, + IX. 205.</p> +<p>The map is very elaborately executed, and is six feet long and four and + a half wide. It exhibits the political divisions of the continent, as + the French then understood them; that is to say, all the regions drained + by streams flowing into the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi are claimed + as belonging to France, and this vast domain is separated into two grand + divisions, La Nouvelle France and La Louisiane. The boundary line of the + former, New France, is drawn from the Penobscot to the southern extremity + of Lake Champlain, and thence to the Mohawk, which it crosses a little + above Schenectady, in order to make French subjects of the Mohawk Indians. + Thence it passes by the sources of the Susquehanna and the Alleghany, + along the southern shore of Lake Erie, across Southern Michigan, and by + the head of Lake Michigan, whence it sweeps northwestward to the sources + of the Mississippi. Louisiana includes the entire valley of the Mississippi + and the Ohio, besides the whole of Texas. The Spanish province of Florida + comprises the peninsula and the country east of the Bay of Mobile, drained + by streams flowing into the Gulf; while Carolina, Virginia, and the other + English provinces, form a narrow strip between the Alleghanies and the + Atlantic.</p> +<p>The Mississippi is called "Missisipi, ou Rivière Colbert;" the + Missouri, "Grande Rivière des Emissourittes, ou Missourits;" the + Illinois, "Rivière des Ilinois, ou Macopins;" the Ohio, which La + Salle had before called by its <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[Pg + 484]</a></span> present name, "Fleuve St. Louis, ou Chucagoa, ou Casquinampogamou;" one + of its principal branches is "Ohio, ou Olighin" (Alleghany); the Arkansas, "Rivière + des Acansea;" the Red River, "Rivière Seignelay," a name which + had once been given to the Illinois. Many smaller streams are designated + by names which have been entirely forgotten.</p> +<p>The nomenclature differs materially from that of Coronelli's map, published + four years later. Here the whole of the French territory is laid down + as "Canada, ou La Nouvelle France," of which "La Louisiane" forms an integral + part. The map of Homannus, like that of Franquelin, makes two distinct + provinces, of which one is styled "Canada" and the other "La Louisiane," the + latter including Michigan and the greater part of New York. Franquelin + gives the shape of Hudson's Bay, and of all the Great Lakes, with remarkable + accuracy. He makes the Mississippi bend much too far to the West. The + peculiar sinuosities of its course are indicated; and some of its bends—as, + for example, that at New Orleans—are easily recognized. Its mouths + are represented with great minuteness; and it may be inferred from the + map that, since La Salle's time, they have advanced considerably into + the sea.</p> +<p>Perhaps the most interesting feature in Franquelin's map is his sketch + of La Salle's evanescent colony on the Illinois, engraved for this volume. + He reproduced the map in 1688, for presentation to the King, with the + title <i>Carte de l'Amérique Septentrionale, depuis le 25 jusq'au + 65 degré de latitude et environ 140 et 235 degrés de longitude, + etc.</i> In this map, Franquelin corrects various errors in that which + preceded. One of these corrections consists in the removal of a branch + of the river Illinois which he had marked on his first map,—as will + be seen by referring to the portion of it in this book,—but which + does not in fact exist. On this <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[Pg + 485]</a></span> second map, La Salle's colony appears in much diminished + proportions, his Indian settlements having in good measure dispersed.</p> +<p>Two later maps of New France and Louisiana, both bearing Franquelin's + name, are preserved in the Dépôt des Cartes de la Marine, + as well as a number of smaller maps and sketches, also by him. They all + have more or less of the features of the great map of 1684, which surpasses + them all in interest and completeness.</p> +<p>The remarkable manuscript map of the Upper Mississippi by Le Sueur belongs + to a period later than the close of this narrative.</p> +<p>These various maps, joined to contemporary documents, show that the Valley + of the Mississippi received, at an early date, the several names of Manitoumie, + Frontenacie, Colbertie, and La Louisiane. This last name, which it long + retained, is due to La Salle. The first use of it which I have observed + is in a conveyance of the Island of Belleisle made by him to his lieutenant, + La Forest, in 1679.</p> +<h3><a name="APPENDIX_II" id="APPENDIX_II"></a>II.</h3> +<p class="center">THE ELDORADO OF MATHIEU SÂGEAN.</p> +<p><span class="smcap">Father Hennepin</span> had among his contemporaries two rivals in the fabrication + of new discoveries. The first was the noted La Hontan, whose book, like + his own, had a wide circulation and proved a great success. La Hontan + had seen much, and portions of his story have a substantial value; but + his account of his pretended voyage up the "Long River" is a sheer fabrication. + His "Long River" <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[Pg + 486]</a></span> corresponds in position with the St. Peter, but it corresponds + in nothing else; and the populous nations whom he found on it—the + Eokoros, the Esanapes, and the Gnacsitares, no less than their neighbors + the Mozeemlek and the Tahuglauk—are as real as the nations visited + by Captain Gulliver. But La Hontan did not, like Hennepin, add slander + and plagiarism to mendacity, or seek to appropriate to himself the credit + of genuine discoveries made by others.</p> +<p>Mathieu Sâgean is a personage less known than Hennepin or La Hontan; + for though he surpassed them both in fertility of invention, he was illiterate, + and never made a book. In 1701, being then a soldier in a company of marines + at Brest, he revealed a secret which he declared that he had locked within + his breast for twenty years, having been unwilling to impart it to the + Dutch and English, in whose service he had been during the whole period. + His story was written down from his dictation, and sent to the minister + Ponchartrain. It is preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale, and + in 1863 it was printed by Mr. Shea.</p> +<p>He was born, he declares, at La Chine in Canada, and engaged in the service + of La Salle about twenty years before the revelation of his secret; that + is, in 1681. Hence, he would have been, at the utmost, only fourteen years + old, as La Chine did not exist before 1667. He was with La Salle at the + building of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, and was left here as one of + a hundred men under command of Tonty. Tonty, it is to be observed, had + but a small fraction of this number; and Sâgean describes the fort + in a manner which shows that he never saw it. Being desirous of making + some new discovery, he obtained leave from Tonty, and set out with eleven + other Frenchmen and two Mohegan Indians. They ascended the Mississippi + a hundred and fifty leagues, carried their canoes by a cataract, went + forty leagues farther, and stopped a month to hunt. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[Pg + 487]</a></span> While thus employed, they found another river, fourteen + leagues distant, flowing south-southwest. They carried their canoes thither, + meeting on the way many lions, leopards, and tigers, which did them no + harm; then they embarked, paddled a hundred and fifty leagues farther, + and found themselves in the midst of the great nation of the Acanibas, + dwelling in many fortified towns, and governed by King Hagaren, who claimed + descent from Montezuma. The King, like his subjects, was clothed with + the skins of men. Nevertheless, he and they were civilized and polished + in their manners. They worshipped certain frightful idols of gold in the + royal palace. One of them represented the ancestor of their monarch armed + with lance, bow, and quiver, and in the act of mounting his horse; while + in his mouth he held a jewel as large as a goose's egg, which shone like + fire, and which, in the opinion of Sâgean, was a carbuncle. Another + of these images was that of a woman mounted on a golden unicorn, with + a horn more than a fathom long. After passing, pursues the story, between + these idols, which stand on platforms of gold, each thirty feet square, + one enters a magnificent vestibule, conducting to the apartment of the + King. At the four corners of this vestibule are stationed bands of music, + which, to the taste of Sâgean, was of very poor quality. The palace + is of vast extent, and the private apartment of the King is twenty-eight + or thirty feet square; the walls, to the height of eighteen feet, being + of bricks of solid gold, and the pavement of the same. Here the King dwells + alone, served only by his wives, of whom he takes a new one every day. + The Frenchmen alone had the privilege of entering, and were graciously + received.</p> +<p>These people carry on a great trade in gold with a nation, believed by + Sâgean to be the Japanese, as the journey to them lasts six months. + He saw the departure of one of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[Pg + 488]</a></span> caravans, which consisted of more than three thousand + oxen, laden with gold, and an equal number of horsemen, armed with lances, + bows, and daggers. They receive iron and steel in exchange for their gold. + The King has an army of a hundred thousand men, of whom three fourths + are cavalry. They have golden trumpets, with which they make very indifferent + music; and also golden drums, which, as well as the drummer, are carried + on the backs of oxen. The troops are practised once a week in shooting + at a target with arrows; and the King rewards the victor with one of his + wives, or with some honorable employment.</p> +<p>These people are of a dark complexion and hideous to look upon, because + their faces are made long and narrow by pressing their heads between two + boards in infancy. The women, however, are as fair as in Europe; though, + in common with the men, their ears are enormously large. All persons of + distinction among the Acanibas wear their fingernails very long. They + are polygamists, and each man takes as many wives as he wants. They are + of a joyous disposition, moderate drinkers, but great smokers. They entertained + Sâgean and his followers during five months with the fat of the + land; and any woman who refused a Frenchman was ordered to be killed. + Six girls were put to death with daggers for this breach of hospitality. + The King, being anxious to retain his visitors in his service, offered + Sâgean one of his daughters, aged fourteen years, in marriage; and + when he saw him resolved to depart, promised to keep her for him till + he should return.</p> +<p>The climate is delightful, and summer reigns throughout the year. The + plains are full of birds and animals of all kinds, among which are many + parrots and monkeys, besides the wild cattle, with humps like camels, + which these people use as beasts of burden.</p> +<p>King Hagaren would not let the Frenchmen go till they <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[Pg + 489]</a></span> had sworn by the sky, which is the customary oath + of the Acanibas, that they would return in thirty-six moons, and + bring him a supply of beads and other trinkets from Canada. As gold + was to be had for the asking, each of the eleven Frenchmen took + away with him sixty small bars, weighing about four pounds each. + The King ordered two hundred horsemen to escort them, and carry + the gold to their canoes; which they did, and then bade them farewell + with terrific howlings, meant, doubtless, to do them honor.</p> +<p>After many adventures, wherein nearly all his companions came to a bloody + end, Sâgean, and the few others who survived, had the ill luck to + be captured by English pirates, at the mouth of the St. Lawrence. He spent + many years among them in the East and West Indies, but would not reveal + the secret of his Eldorado to these heretical foreigners.</p> +<p>Such was the story, which so far imposed on the credulity of the minister + Ponchartrain as to persuade him that the matter was worth serious examination. + Accordingly, Sâgean was sent to Louisiana, then in its earliest + infancy as a French colony. Here he met various persons who had known + him in Canada, who denied that he had ever been on the Mississippi, and + contradicted his account of his parentage. Nevertheless, he held fast + to his story, and declared that the gold mines of the Acanibas could be + reached without difficulty by the river Missouri. But Sauvolle and Bienville, + chiefs of the colony, were obstinate in their unbelief; and Sâgean + and his King Hagaren lapsed alike into oblivion.</p> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[Pg 493]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX.</h2> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-A-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Abenakis</span>, the, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346.</a></div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Acanibas, the, great nation of,<br/> +description of, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>-<a href="#Page_489">489</a>;<br/> +gold mines of, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Acansea" (Arkansas) River, the, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Accau, Michel, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">African travel, history of, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Agniers (Mohawks), the, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Aigron, Captain,<br /> +on ill-terms with La Salle, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Ailleboust, Madame d', <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Aimable," La Salle's store-ship, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Aire, Beaujeu's lieutenant, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Akanseas, nation of the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>. See also <i>Arkansas Indians, the</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Albanel,<br /> +prominent among the Jesuit explorers, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>;<br /> +his journey up the Saguenay to Hudson's Bay, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Albany, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Algonquin Indians, the,<br /> +Jean Nicollet among, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +at Ste. Marie du Saut, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;<br /> +the Iroquois spread desolation among, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Alkansas, nation of the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.<br /> +See also <i>Arkansas Indians, the</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Alleghany Mountains, the, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Alleghany River, the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Allouez, Father Claude,<br /> +explores a part of Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;<br /> +name of Lake Michigan, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;<br /> +sent to Green Bay to found a mission, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +joined by Dablon, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +among the Mascoutins and the Miamis, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;<br /> +among the Foxes, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +addresses the Indians at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;<br /> +population of the Illinois Valley, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;<br /> +intrigues against La Salle, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;<br /> +at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>;<br /> +his fear of La Salle, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Allumette Island, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Alton, city of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">America,<br /> +debt due La Salle from, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Amerique Occidentale" (Mississippi Valley), <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Amikoués, the, at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Andastes,<br /> +reduced to helpless insignificance by the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">André, Louis,<br /> +mission of the Manitoulin Island assigned to, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +makes a missionary tour among the Nipissings, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +his experiences among them, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[Pg 494]</a></span></p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Anthony, St., of Padua,<br /> +the patron of La Salle's great enterprise, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Anticosti, great island of,<br /> +granted to Joliet, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Appalache, Bay of, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Aquipaguetin, Chief, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>;<br /> +plots against Hennepin, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, +<a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Aramoni River, the, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Arctic travel, history of, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Arkansas Indians, the,<br /> +Joliet and Marquette among, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;<br /> +La Salle among, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;<br /> +various names of, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;<br /> +tallest and best-formed Indians in America, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>;<br /> +villages of, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Arkansas River, the, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;<br /> +Joutel's arrival at, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>;<br /> +Joutel descends, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Arnoul, Sieur, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Arouet, François Marie, see <i>Voltaire</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Aspinwall, Col. Thomas, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Assiniboins, the,<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;<br /> +Du Lhut among, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Assonis, the,<br /> +Joutel among, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>;<br /> +Tonty among, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Atlantic coast, the, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Atlantic Ocean, the, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</div> +<div> </div><div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Auguel, Antoine, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.<br />See also <i>Du Gay, Picard</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Autray, Sieur d', <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-B-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"><span class="smcap">Bancroft</span>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Barbier, Sieur, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>;<br /> +marriage of, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>;<br /> +fate of, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Barcia, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Barrois, secretary of Count Frontenac, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</div> +<div> </div><div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Barthelemy, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>.</div> +<div> </div><div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Baugis, Chevalier de, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bazire, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Beauharnois, forest of, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Beaujeu, Madame de,<br /> +devotion to the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Beaujeu, Sieur de,<br /> +divides with La Salle the command of the new enterprise, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>;<br /> +lack of harmony between La Salle and, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>-<a href="#Page_361">361</a>;<br /> +letters to Seignelay, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>-<a href="#Page_356">356</a>;<br /> +letters to Cabart de Villermont, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;<br /> +sails from Rochelle, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>;<br /> +disputes with La Salle, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>;<br /> +the voyage, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;<br /> +complaints of, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;<br /> +La Salle waiting for, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>;<br /> +meeting with La Salle, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>;<br /> +in Texas, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>;<br /> +makes friendly advances to La Salle, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>;<br /> +departure of, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>;<br /> +conduct of, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;<br /> +coldly received by Seignelay, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Beautiful River" (Ohio), the, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bégon, the intendant, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Belle," La Salle's frigate, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bellefontaine, Tonty's lieutenant, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Belle Isle, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Belleisle, Island of, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bellinzani, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bernon, Abbé,<br /> +on the character of La Salle, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bibliothèque Mazarine, the, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bienville, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Big Vermilion River, the, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bissot, Claire,<br /> +her marriage to Louis Joliet, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Black Rock, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bœufs, Rivière aux, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bois Blanc, Island of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Boisrondet, Sieur de, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Boisseau, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">[Pg 495]</a></span></p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bolton, Captain,<br /> +reaches the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Boston, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;<br /> +rumored that the Dutch fleet had captured, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Boughton Hill, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bourbon, Louis Armand de, see, <i>Conti, Prince de</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bourdon, the engineer, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bourdon, Jean, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.<br /> +See also <i>Dautray</i>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bourdon, Madame, superior of the Sainte Famille, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bowman, W. E., <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Branssac,<br /> +loans merchandise to La Salle, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Brazos River, the, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Breman,<br /> +fate of, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Brest, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Brinvilliers,<br /> +burned alive, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">British territories, the, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Brodhead, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bruyas, the Jesuit, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +among the Onondagas and the Mohawks, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;<br /> +the "Racines Agnières" of, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Buade, Lake, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Buade, Louis de, see <i>Frontenac, Count</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Buade, Rivière (Mississippi), <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Buffalo, the, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Buffalo Rock, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +occupied by the Miami village, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +described by Charlevoix, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Buisset, Luc, the Récollet, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;<br /> +at Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Bull River, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Burnt Wood River, the, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-C-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"><span class="smcap">Caddoes</span>, the, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>;<br /> +villages of, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cadodaquis, the, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">California, Gulf of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">California, State of, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Camanches, the, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cambray, Archbishop of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Canada, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;<br /> +Frontenac's treaty with the Indians confers +an inestimable +blessing on all, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;<br /> +no longer merely a mission, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Canadian Parliament, Library of, the, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cananistigoyan, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Carignan, regiment of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Carolina, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Carver, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Casquinampogamou" (St. Louis) River, the, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Casson, Dollier de, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;<br /> +among the Nipissings, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +leads an expedition of conversion, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +combines his expedition with that of La +Salle, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;<br /> +journey of, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;<br /> +<i>belles paroles</i> of La Salle, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;<br /> +discoveries of La Salle, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cataraqui Bridge, the, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cataraqui River, the, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;<br /> +Frontenac at, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;<br /> +fort built on the banks of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cavelier, nephew of La Salle, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cavelier, Henri, uncle of La Salle, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cavelier, Jean, father of La Salle, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cavelier, Abbé Jean, brother of La Salle, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;<br /> +at Montreal, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>;<br /> +La Salle defamed to, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;<br /> +causes La Salle no little annoyance, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, +<a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, +<a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, +<a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>, +<a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>;<br /> +unreliable in his writings, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, +<a href="#Page_436">436</a>;<br /> +doubt and anxiety, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +plans to escape, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>;<br /> +the murder of Duhaut, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>;<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">[Pg 496]</a></span> +sets out for home, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>;<br /> +among the Assonis, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>;<br /> +on the Arkansas, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;<br /> +at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;<br /> +visit to Father Allouez, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>;<br /> +conceals La Salle's death, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>;<br /> +reaches Montreal, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>;<br /> +embarks for France, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>;<br /> +his report to Seignelay, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>;<br /> +his memorial to the King, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cavelier, Madeleine, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cavelier, René Robert, see <i>La Salle, Sieur de</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cayuga Creek, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cayugas, the,<br /> +Frontenac's address to, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cenis, the,<br /> +La Salle among, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;<br /> +villages of, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>;<br /> +Duhaut's journey to, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>;<br /> +Joutel among, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>-<a href="#Page_445">445</a>;<br /> +customs of, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>;<br /> +joined by Hiens on a war-expedition, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Champigny, Intendant of Canada, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Champlain, Lake, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Champlain, Samuel de,<br /> +dreams of the South Sea, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;<br /> +map of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;<br /> +his enthusiasm compared with that of La +Salle, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>;<br /> +first to map out the Great Lakes, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chaouanons (Shawanoes), the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Charlevoix, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +death of Marquette, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>; <a href="#Page_103">103</a>;<br /> +the names of the Illinois River, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;<br /> +the loss of the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;<br /> +the Illinois Indians, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;<br /> +doubted veracity of Hennepin, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;<br /> +the Iroquois virgin, Tegahkouita, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;<br /> +the Arkansas nation, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;<br /> +visits the Natchez Indians, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>;<br /> +describes "Starved Rock" and Buffalo Rock, +<a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +speaks of "Le Rocher," <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +character of La Salle, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;<br /> +the remains of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, +<a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Charon, creditor of La Salle, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Charron, Madame, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chartier, Martin, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chassagoac, chief of the Illinois,<br /> +meeting with La Salle, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chassagouasse, Chief, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chateauguay, forest of, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Chaudière, Lac de la" (Lake St. Clair), <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chaumonot, the Jesuit,<br /> +founds the association of the Sainte Famille, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chefdeville, M. de, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cheruel, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chicago, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chicago Portage, the, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chicago River, the, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +Marquette on, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chickasaw Bluffs, the, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chickasaw Indians, the, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chikachas (Chickasaws), the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">China, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">China, Sea of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chippewa Creek, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chippeway River, the, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Chucagoa" (St. Louis) River, the, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Chukagoua (Ohio) River, the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Clark, James, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>;<br /> +the site of the Great Illinois Town, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Coahuila, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Colbert, the minister,<br /> +Joliet's discovery of the Mississippi announced to, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;<br /> +Frontenac's despatch, recommending La +Salle, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;<br /> +La Salle defamed to, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>;<br /> +a memorial of La Salle laid before, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, +<a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">[Pg 497]</a></span></p> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Colbert River (Mississippi), the,<br /> + <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Colbertie­" (Mississippi Valley), <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Collin, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Colorado River, the, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Comet of 1680, the Great, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">"Conception, Rivière de la" (Mississippi River), <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Conti, Fort, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Conti, Lac de (Lake Erie), <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Conti, Prince de (second),<br /> +patron of La Salle, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;<br /> +letter from La Salle, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Copper mines of Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +Joliet attempts to discover, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits labor to explore, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +Indian legends concerning, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;<br /> +Saint-Lusson sets out to discover, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Coroas, the,<br /> +visited by the French, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Coronelli, +map made by, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Corpus Christi Bay, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cosme, St., <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;<br /> +commendation of Tonty, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Courcelle, Governor, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;<br /> +quarrel with Talon, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +schemes to protect French trade in Canada, + <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Couture,<br /> +the assassination of La Salle, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>;<br /> +welcomes Joutel, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Creeks, the, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Crees, the,<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Crèvecœur, Fort, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;<br /> +built by La Salle, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;<br /> +La Salle at, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-<a href="#Page_188">188</a>;<br /> +destroyed by the mutineers, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;<br /> +La Salle finds the ruins of, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Crow Indians, the,<br /> +make war upon the dead, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cuba, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Cussy, De, governor of La Tortue, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-D-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em"><span class="smcap">Dablon</span>, Father Claude the Jesuit,<br /> +at Ste. Marie du Saut, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +reports the discovery of copper, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +the location of the Illinois Indians, +<a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +the name of Lake Michigan, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;<br /> +joins Father Allouez at the Green Bay +Mission, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +among the Mascoutins and the Miamis, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;<br /> +the Cross among the Foxes, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;<br /> +the authority and state of the Miami chief, + <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +Allouez's harangue at Saut Ste. Marie, +<a href="#Page_55">55</a>;<br /> +rumors of the Dutch fleet, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Dacotah (Sioux) Indians, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Dauphin, Fort, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Dauphin, Lac (Lake Michigan), <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Daupin, François, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Dautray, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">De Launay, see <i>Launay, De</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">De Leon, see <i>Leon, Alonzo de</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">De Leon (San Antonio), the, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Del Norte, the, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">De Marle, see <i>Marle, De</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Denonville, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;<br /> +in the Iroquois War, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>;<br /> +announces war against Spain, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>;<br /> +commendation of Tonty, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Des Groseilliers, Médard Chouart,<br /> +reaches the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Deslauriers, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Desloges, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Des Moines, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Des Moines River, the, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">De Soto, Hernando,<br /> +buried in the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Des Plaines River, the, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Detroit, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Detroit River, the, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em">Detroit, the Strait of,<br /> +first recorded passage of white men through, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">[Pg 498]</a></span> +the "Griffin" in, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;<br /> +Du Lhut ordered to fortify; <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Divine, the Rivière de la, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Dollier, see <i>Casson, Dollier de</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Douay, Anastase, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;<br /> +joins La Salle's new enterprise, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, +<a href="#Page_372">372</a>;<br /> +in Texas, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>;<br /> +at Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, +<a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>, +<a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>;<br /> +the assassination of La Salle, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>;<br /> +unreliable in his writings, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>;<br /> +doubt and anxiety, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +the murder of Duhaut, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>;<br /> +sets out for home, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>;<br /> +visit to Father Allouez, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>;<br /> +character of, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Druilletes, Gabriel,<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +teaches Marquette the Montagnais language, +<a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Duchesneau, the intendant, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, +<a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, +<a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Du Gay, Picard, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;<br /> +among the Sioux, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, +<a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Duhaut, the brothers, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Duhaut, the elder,<br /> +return of, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>;<br /> +at Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>;<br /> +plots against La Salle, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>;<br /> +quarrel with Moranget, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>;<br /> +assassinates La Salle, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>;<br /> +triumph of, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>;<br /> +journey to the Cenis villages, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>;<br /> +resolves to return to Fort St. Louis, +<a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +quarrel with Hiens, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +plans to go to Canada, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>;<br /> +murder of, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Du Lhut, Daniel Greysolon, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;<br /> +meeting with Hennepin, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>;<br /> +sketch of, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;<br /> +exploits of, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;<br /> +route of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;<br /> +explorations of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-<a href="#Page_278">278</a>;<br /> +among the Assiniboins and the Sioux, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;<br /> +joined by Hennepin, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;<br /> +reaches the Green Bay Mission, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>;<br /> +in the Iroquois War, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Dumesnil, La Salle's servant, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Dumont,<br /> +La Salle borrows money from, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Duplessis,<br /> +attempts to murder La Salle, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Dupont, Nicolas, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Du Pratz,<br /> +customs of the Natchez, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Durango, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Durantaye, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;<br /> +in the Iroquois War, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Dutch, the,<br /> +trade with the Indians, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +encourage the Iroquois to fight, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Dutch fleet, the,<br /> +rumored to have captured Boston, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-E-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">East +Indies</span>, the, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Eastman, Mrs., legend of Winona, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Emissourites, Rivière des" (Missouri), <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">English, the,<br /> +hold out great inducements to Joliet to join them, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +French company formed to compete at Hudson's +Bay with, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +trade with the Indians, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +encourage the Iroquois to fight, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"English Jem," <a href="#Page_421">421</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Eokoros, the, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Erie, Lake, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, +<a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Eries, the,<br /> +exterminated by the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Esanapes, the, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> + +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">[Pg 499]</a></span>Esmanville, the priest, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Espiritu Santo Bay, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Estrées, Count d', <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-F-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"> +<span class="smcap">Faillon</span>, Abbé,<br /> +connection of La Salle +with the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;<br /> +the seigniory of La Salle, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;<br /> +detailed plan of Montreal, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;<br /> +La Salle's discoveries, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;<br /> +La Salle in need of money, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +throws much light on the life of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>;<br /> +on the establishment of the association of the Sainte Famille, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;<br /> +plan of Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Fauvel-Cavelier, Mme., <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Fénelon, Abbé, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +attempts to mediate between Frontenac +and Perrot, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;<br /> +preaches against Frontenac at Montreal, + <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ferland,<br /> +throws much light on the life of Joliet, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Fire Nation, the, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Five Nations, the, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Florida, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Florida Indians, the,<br /> +lodges of, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Folles-Avoines, Nation des, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Forked River (Mississippi), the, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Fox River, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Foxes, the,<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +Father Allouez among, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;<br /> +incensed against the French, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;<br /> +the Cross among, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">France,<br /> +takes possession of the West, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;<br /> +receives on parchment a stupendous accession, +<a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Francheville, Pierre, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Francis, St., <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Franciscans, the, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Franquelin, Jean Baptiste Louis,<br /> +manuscript map made by, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, +<a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, +<a href="#Page_484">484</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Fremin, the Jesuit, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">French, the,<br /> +Hurons the allies of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br /> +in western New York, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-<a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +the Iroquois felt the power of, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;<br /> +the Foxes incensed against, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits seek to embroil the Iroquois +with, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +seeking to secure a monopoly of the furs +of the north and west, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +in Texas, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;<br /> +reoccupy Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, +<a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">French River, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Frontenac, Count, La Salle,<br /> +addresses a memorial to, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;<br /> +announces Joliet's discovery of the Mississippi +to Colbert, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;<br /> +speaks slightingly of Joliet, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;<br /> +succeeds Courcelle as governor, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, +<a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;<br /> +letter from Joliet to, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +favorably disposed to La Salle, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;<br /> +comes to Canada a ruined man, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;<br /> +schemes of, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;<br /> +at Montreal, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;<br /> +his journey to Lake Ontario, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;<br /> +faculty for managing the Indians, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;<br /> +reaches Lake Ontario, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;<br /> +at Cataraqui, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;<br /> +addresses the Indians, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;<br /> +admirable dealing with the Indians, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, +<a href="#Page_93">93</a>;<br /> +his enterprise a complete success, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;<br /> +confers an inestimable benefit on all +Canada, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;<br /> +his plan to command the Upper Lakes, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +quarrel with Perrot, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +arrests Perrot, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +has Montreal well in hand, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +the Abbé Fénelon attempts +to mediate between Perrot and, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;<br /> +the Abbé Fénelon preaches +against, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>;<br /> +championed by La Salle, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;<br /> +recommends La Salle to Colbert, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;<br /> +expects to share in profits of La Salle's +new post, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;<br /> + <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">[Pg 500]</a></span> +hatred of the Jesuits <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;<br /> +protects the Récollets, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>;<br /> +intrigues of the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, + <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;<br /> +entertains Father Hennepin, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;<br /> +recalled to France, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;<br /> +obligations of La Salle to, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>;<br /> +commendation of Tonty, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, +<a href="#Page_481">481</a>;<br /> +Frontenac, Fort, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;<br /> +granted to La Salle, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;<br /> +rebuilt by La Salle, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;<br /> +La Salle at, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;<br /> +plan of, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;<br /> +not established for commercial gain alone, +<a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;<br /> +La Barre takes possession of, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;<br /> +restored to La Salle by the King, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, +<a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Frontenac (Ontario), Lake, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Frontenac, Madame de, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Frontenacie, La," <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Fur-trade, the,<br /> +the Jesuits accused of taking part in, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits seek to establish a monopoly +in, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-G-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Gabriel</span>, Father, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Gaeta, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Galinée, Father, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;<br /> +recounts the journey of La Salle and the +Sulpitians, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;<br /> +cruelty of the Senecas, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;<br /> +the work of the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;<br /> +makes the earliest map of the Upper Lakes, +<a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>. </div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Galve, Viceroy, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Galveston Bay, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Garakontié, Chief, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Garnier, Julien, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +among the Senecas, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>. </div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Gayen, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Geest, Catherine,<br /> +mother of La Salle, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;<br /> +La Salle's farewell to, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>. </div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Geest, Nicolas, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Gendron, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Genesee,<br /> +the Falls of the, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Genesee River, the, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Georgian Bay of Lake Huron, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Giton,<br /> +La Salle borrows money from, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Gnacsitares, the, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Gould, Dr. B. A.,<br /> +on the "Great Comet of 1680," <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Grandfontaine, Chevalier de, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Grand Gulf, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Grand River, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Gravier, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>;<br /> +the Arkansas nation, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>. </div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Great Lakes, the, + <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br />Joliet makes a map of the region of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;<br /> +early unpublished maps of, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>-<a href="#Page_485">485</a>;<br /> +Champlain makes the first attempt to map +out, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>. </div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Great Manitoulin Island, the, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Great Mountain," the Indian name for the governor of Canada, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Green Bay of Lake Michigan, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +La Salle at, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>; <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Green Bay Mission, the,<br /> +Father Allouez sent to found, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +Marquette at, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +Father Hennepin and Du Lhut reach, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>. </div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Griffin," the,<br /> +building of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a>;<br /> +finished, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;<br /> +voyage of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>-<a href="#Page_153">153</a>;<br /> +at St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;<br /> +set sail for Niagara laden with furs, +<a href="#Page_156">156</a>;<br /> +La Salle's forebodings concerning, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;<br /> +loss of, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Grollet, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>;<br /> +sent to Spain, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>. </div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Guadalupe, the, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Gulliver, Captain, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><p> </p> +<p> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">[Pg 501]</a></span></p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-H-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Hagaren</span>, King of the Acanibas, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>-<a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hamilton, town of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Harrisse, Henry, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Haukiki (Marest) River, the, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hennepin, Louis,<br /> +connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;<br /> +at Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;<br /> +meets La Salle on his return to Canada, +<a href="#Page_130">130</a>;<br /> +receives permission to join La Salle, + <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;<br /> +his journey to Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;<br /> +sets out with La Motte for Niagara, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;<br /> +portrait of, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;<br /> +his past life, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;<br /> +sails for Canada, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>;<br /> +relations with La Salle, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;<br /> +work among the Indians, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;<br /> +the most impudent of liars, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>;<br /> +daring of, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;<br /> +embarks on the journey, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;<br /> +reaches the Niagara, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;<br /> +account of the falls and river of Niagara, + <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;<br /> +among the Senecas, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;<br /> +at the Niagara Portage, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>-<a href="#Page_147">147</a>;<br /> +the launch of the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;<br /> +on board the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;<br /> +St. Anthony of Padua the patron saint +of La Salle's great +enterprise, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;<br /> +the departure of the "Griffin" for Niagara, + <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;<br /> +La Salle's encounter with the Outagamies, +<a href="#Page_161">161</a>;<br /> +La Salle rejoined by Tonty, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;<br /> +La Salle's forebodings concerning the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;<br /> +population of the Illinois Valley, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;<br /> +among the Illinois, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;<br /> +the story of Monso, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;<br /> +La Salle's men desert him, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;<br /> +at Fort Crèvecœur, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;<br /> +sent to the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;<br /> +the journey from Fort Crèvecœur, +<a href="#Page_201">201</a>;<br /> +the mutineers at Fort Crèvecœur, +<a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;<br /> +sets out to explore the Illinois River, +<a href="#Page_242">242</a>;<br /> +his claims to the discovery of the Mississippi, +<a href="#Page_243">243</a>;<br /> +doubted veracity of, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;<br /> +captured by the Sioux, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;<br /> +proved an impostor, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;<br /> +steals passages from Membré and +Le Clerc, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;<br /> +his journey northward, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>;<br /> +suspected of sorcery, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;<br /> +plots against, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;<br /> +a hard journey, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>;<br /> +among the Sioux, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-<a href="#Page_282">282</a>;<br /> +adopted as a son by the Sioux, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;<br /> +sets out for the Wisconsin, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;<br /> +notice of the Falls of St. Anthony, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;<br /> +rejoins the Indians, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>;<br /> +meeting with Du Lhut, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>;<br /> +joins Du Lhut, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;<br /> +reaches the Green Bay Mission, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;<br /> +reaches Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;<br /> +goes to Montreal, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;<br /> +entertained by Frontenac, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;<br /> +returns to Europe, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;<br /> +dies in obscurity, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>;<br /> +Louis XIV. orders the arrest of, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;<br /> +various editions of the travels of, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;<br /> +finds fault with Tonty, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>;<br /> +rivals of, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.<br /> +Hiens, the German, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>;<br /> +quarrel with Duhaut and Liotot, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +murders Duhaut, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>;<br /> +joins the Cenis on a war expedition, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, +<a href="#Page_465">465</a>;<br /> +fate of, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>. </div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hillaret Moïse, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hitt, Col. D. F., <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hohays, the, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Homannus,<br /> +map made by, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hondo (Rio Frio), the, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Horse Shoe Fall, the, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hôtel-Dieu at Montreal, the, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hudson's Bay,<br /> +Joliet's voyage to, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +Albanel's journey to, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">[Pg 502]</a></span>Hudson's Strait, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Humber River, the, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hunaut, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Hundred Associates, Company of the, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Huron Indians, the,<br /> +quarrel with the Winnebagoes, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br /> +allies of the French, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +Marquette among, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +terrified by the Sioux, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +destroyed by the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Huron, Lake, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits on, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +Saint-Lusson takes possession for France +of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;<br /> +La Salle on, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Huron Mission, the, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Huron River, the, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Hyacinth, confection of," <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</div><p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-I-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"> +<span class="smcap">Iberville</span>, the founder of Louisiana, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;<br /> +joined by Tonty, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ignatius, Saint, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Illinois, +Great Town of the, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>;<br /> +deserted, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;<br /> +La Salle at, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;<br /> +description of, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;<br /> +Tonty in, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;<br /> +abandoned to the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;<br /> +site of, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Illinois Indians, the,<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;<br /> +Joliet and Marquette among, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, +<a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>;<br /> +La Salle among, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>-<a href="#Page_173">173</a>;<br /> +hospitality of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;<br /> +deep-rooted jealousy of the Osages, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, +<a href="#Page_203">203</a>;<br /> +war with the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;<br /> +the Miamis join the Iroquois against, +<a href="#Page_220">220</a>;<br /> +rankling jealousy between the Miamis and, +<a href="#Page_220">220</a>;<br /> +an aggregation of kindred tribes, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;<br /> +characteristics of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;<br /> +Tonty intercedes for, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;<br /> +treaty made with the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;<br /> +attacked by the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;<br /> +become allies of La Salle, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;<br /> +at "Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;<br /> +very capricious and uncertain, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Illinois, Lake of the (Lake Michigan), <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Illinois River, the, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;<br /> +discovered by La Salle, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;<br /> +Joliet and Marquette on, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;<br /> +La Salle on, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;<br /> +various names of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;<br /> +ravaged granaries of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;<br /> +Father Hennepin sets out to explore, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, +<a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>;<br /> +La Salle's projected colony on the banks +of, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>;<br /> +Joutel on, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Illinois, State of,<br /> +first civilized occupation of, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Illinois, Valley of the, population of, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Immaculate Conception, the,<br /> +doctrine of, a favorite tenet of the +Jesuits, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Immaculate Conception, Mission of the,<br /> +Marquette sets out to found, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Incarnation, Marie de l', <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Indians, the,<br /> +Father Jogues and Raymbault preach among, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;<br /> +ferocity of, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;<br /> +manitous of, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;<br /> +their game of la crosse, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +the tribes meet at Saut Ste. Marie to +confer with +Saint-Lusson, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>-<a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +reception to Joliet and Marquette, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;<br /> +lodges of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +reception to Frontenac, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;<br /> +Frontenac's admirable dealing with, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, +<a href="#Page_93">93</a>;<br /> +Alphabetical list of tribes referred to:—<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Abenakis,</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">[Pg 503]</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Acanibas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Agniers,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Akanseas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Algonquins,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Alkansas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Amikoués,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Andastes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Arkansas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Assiniboins,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Assonis,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Caddoes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cadodaquis,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Camanches,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cenis,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Chaouanons,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Chickasaws,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Chikachas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Coroas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Creeks,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Crees,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Crows,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dacotah,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Eries,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fire Nation,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Five Nations,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Floridas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Foxes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hohays,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hurons,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illinois,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Iroquois,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Issanti,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Issanyati,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Issati,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kahokias,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kanzas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kappas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kaskaskias,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kickapoos,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kilatica,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kious,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kiskakon Ottawas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Knisteneaux,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Koroas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Malhoumines,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Malouminek,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mandans,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Maroas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mascoutins,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Meddewakantonwan,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Menomonies,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Miamis,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mitchigamias,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mohawks,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mohegans,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Moingona,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Monsonis,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Motantees,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nadouessioux,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Natchez,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nation des Folles-Avoines,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nation of the Prairie,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Neutrals,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nipissings,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ojibwas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Omahas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oneidas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Onondagas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Osages,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Osotouoy,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ottawas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ouabona,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ouiatenons,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oumalouminek,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oumas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Outagamies,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pah-Utahs,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pawnees,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Peanqhichia,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Peorias,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pepikokia,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Piankishaws,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pottawattamies,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Quapaws,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Quinipissas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sacs,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sauteurs,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sauthouis,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Senecas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shawanoes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sioux,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sokokis,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Taensas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tamaroas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tangibao,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Terliquiquimechi,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tetons,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Texas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tintonwans,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tongengas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Topingas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Torimans,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Wapoos,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Weas,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Wild-rice,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Winnebagoes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Yankton Sioux.</span></div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Irondequoit Bay, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Iroquois Indians, the, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;<br /> +alone remain, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;<br /> +felt the power of the French, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;<br /> +the "Beautiful River," <a href="#Page_70">70</a>;<br /> +Onondaga the political centre of, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits seek to embroil them with +the French, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +ferocious character of, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;<br /> +war with the Illinois, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;<br /> +ferocious triumphs of, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +break into war, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +trade with the Dutch and the English, +<a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +jealous of La Salle, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +joined by the Miamis against the Illinois, +<a href="#Page_220">220</a>;<br /> +attack on the Illinois village, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;<br /> +grant a truce to Tonty, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;<br /> +take possession of the Illinois village, +<a href="#Page_230">230</a>;<br /> +make a treaty with the Illinois, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;<br /> +treachery of, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;<br /> +Tonty departs from, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;<br /> +attack on the dead, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;<br /> +attack on the Illinois, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>;<br /> +encouraged to fight by the Dutch and English +traders, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>;<br /> +attack Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Iroquois War, the,<br /> +havoc and desolation of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +a war of commercial advantage, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br /> +the French in, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Isle of Pines, the, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Issanti, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Issanyati, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Issati, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Issatis," the, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-J-</div><div> </div> + +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Jacques</span>, companion of Marquette, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Jansenists, the, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Japan, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Japanese, the, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">[Pg 504].</a></span>Jesuitism,<br /> +no diminution in the vital force of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Jesuits, the,<br /> +their thoughts dwell on the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;<br /> +La Salle's connection with, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;<br /> +La Salle parts with, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;<br /> +influence exercised by, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +want no help from the Sulpitians, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +a change of spirit, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;<br /> +their best hopes in the North and West, +<a href="#Page_37">37</a>;<br /> +on the Lakes, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;<br /> +labor to explore the copper mines of Lake +Superior, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +a mixture of fanaticism, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +claimed a monopoly of conversion, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +make a map of Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +the missionary stations, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;<br /> +trading with the Indians, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;<br /> +doctrine of the Immaculate Conception +a favorite tenet of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;<br /> +greatly opposed to the establishment of +forts and trading-posts<br /> +in the upper country, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;<br /> +opposition to Frontenac and La Salle, + <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;<br /> +Frontenac's hatred of, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;<br /> +turn their eyes towards the Valley of +the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>;<br /> +no longer supreme in Canada, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;<br /> +La Salle their most dangerous rival for +the control of the West, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;<br /> +masters at Quebec, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;<br /> +accused of selling brandy to the Indians, +<a href="#Page_109">109</a>;<br /> +accused of carrying on a fur-trade, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, +<a href="#Page_230">230</a>;<br /> +comparison between the Récollets +and Sulpitians and, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;<br /> +seek to establish a monopoly in the fur-trade, +<a href="#Page_114">114</a>;<br /> +intrigues against La Salle, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +seek to embroil the Iroquois with the +French, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +exculpated by La Salle from the attempt +to poison him, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;<br /> +induce men to desert from La Salle, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;<br /> +have a mission among the Mohawks, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;<br /> +plan against La Salle, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>;<br /> +maps made by, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Jesus, Order of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Jesus, Society of, see <i>Society of Jesus</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Jogues, Father Isaac,<br /> +preaches among the Indians, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Joliet, Louis,<br /> +destined to hold a conspicuous place in history of western discovery, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +early life of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +sent to discover the copper mines of Lake +Superior, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;<br /> +his failure, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +meeting with La Salle and the Sulpitians, +<a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +passage through the Strait of Detroit, +<a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +makes maps of the region of the Mississippi +and the Great Lakes, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;<br /> +claims the discovery of the Mississippi, +<a href="#Page_33">33</a>;<br /> +Frontenac speaks slightingly of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +sent by Talon to discover the Mississippi, +<a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +early history of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;<br /> +characteristics of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;<br /> +Shea first to discover history of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;<br /> +Ferland, Faillon, and Margry throw much +light on the life of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;<br /> +Marquette chosen to accompany him on his +search for the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +the departure, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;<br /> +the Mississippi at last, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;<br /> +on the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;<br /> +meeting with the Illinois, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;<br /> +at the mouth of the Missouri, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;<br /> +on the lower Mississippi, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;<br /> +among the Arkansas Indians, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;<br /> +determines that the Mississippi discharges +into the Gulf of Mexico, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;<br /> +resolves to return to Canada, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;<br /> +serious accident to, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +letter to Frontenac, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +smaller map of his discoveries, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +marriage <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">[Pg 505]</a></span> +to Claire Bissot, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +journey to Hudson's Bay, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +the English hold out great inducements +to, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +receives grants of land, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +engages in fisheries, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +makes a chart of the St. Lawrence, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +Sir William Phips makes a descent on the +establishment of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +explores the coast of Labrador, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +made royal pilot for the St. Lawrence +by Frontenac, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +appointed hydrographer at Quebec, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +death of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +said to be an impostor, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;<br /> +refused permission to plant a trading +station in the Valley of the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>;<br /> +maps made by, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Joliet, town of, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Joly," the vessel, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, +<a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Jolycœur (Nicolas Perrot), <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Joutel, Henri, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, +<a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>, +<a href="#Page_397">397</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, +<a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, +<a href="#Page_418">418</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>;<br /> +sketches the portrait of La Salle, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>;<br /> +the assassination of La Salle, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>;<br /> +danger of, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;<br /> +friendship of L'Archevêque +for, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;<br /> +doubt and anxiety, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>;<br /> +among the Cenis Indians, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>-<a href="#Page_445">445</a>;<br /> +plans to escape, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>-<a href="#Page_447">447</a>;<br /> +the murder of Duhaut, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>;<br /> +sets out for home, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>;<br /> +his party, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>;<br /> +among the Assonis, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>-<a href="#Page_453">453</a>;<br /> +arrival at the Arkansas, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>;<br /> +friendly reception, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;<br /> +descends the Arkansas, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>;<br /> +on the Illinois, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;<br /> +at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;<br /> +visit to Father Allouez, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>;<br /> +reaches Montreal, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>;<br /> +embarks for France, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>;<br /> +character of, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>.</div><p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-K-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Kahokias</span>, the, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kalm, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kamalastigouia, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kankakee,<br /> +the sources of, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kansa (Kanzas), the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kanzas, the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kappa band, the, of the Arkansas, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Kaskaskia,"<br /> +Illinois village of, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;<br /> +the mission at, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kaskaskias, the, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kiakiki River, the, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kickapoos, the,<br /> +location of <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +join the Mascoutins and Miamis, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +murder Father Ribourde, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kilatica, the,<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">King Philip's War, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kingston, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kious (Sioux), the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Kiskakon Ottawas, the, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Knisteneaux, the,<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Koroas, the, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</div><p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-L-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">La + Barre</span>, Le Febvre de, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;<br /> +succeeds Frontenac as governor, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;<br /> +weakness and avarice of, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;<br /> +royal instructions to, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;<br /> +letters from La Salle, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>-<a href="#Page_322">322</a>;<br /> +defames La Salle to Seignelay, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>-<a href="#Page_324">324</a>;<br /> +plots against La Salle, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;<br /> +takes possession of Fort Frontenac and +Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>-<a href="#Page_327">327</a>;<br /> +ordered by the King to make restitution, +<a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.<br /> +Labrador, coasts of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;<br /> +explored by Joliet, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.<br /> +La Chapelle, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;<br /> +takes false +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">[Pg 506]</a></span> +reports of La Salle to Fort Crèvecœur, +<a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Chesnaye, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Chine,<br /> +the seigniory of La Salle at, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;<br /> +La Salle lays the rude beginnings of a +settlement at, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;<br /> +La Salle and the Sulpitians set out from, +<a href="#Page_19">19</a>;<br /> +origin of the name, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Chine Rapids, the, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Crosse, Indian game of, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Divine River, the (Des Plaines River), <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, +<a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, +<a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Forge, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Harpe, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Hontan, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;<br /> +loss of the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, +<a href="#Page_485">485</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Lakes, Upper, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +Galinée, makes the earliest map +of, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +Jesuit missions on, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;<br /> +Marquette on, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;<br /> +Frontenac's plan to command, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +first vessel on, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;<br /> +La Salle on, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>-<a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Lalemant, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Metairie, Jacques de, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Motte, see <i>Lussière, La Motte de</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Lanquetot, see <i>Liotot</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Laon, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Pointe, Jesuit mission of St. Esprit at, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Potherie, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +reception of Saint-Lusson by the Miamis, +<a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +Henri de Tonty's iron hand, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;<br /> +loss of the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;<br /> +the Iroquois attack on the Illinois, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.<br /> +L'Archevêque, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>;<br /> +the assassination of La Salle, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>;<br /> +friendship for Joutel, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;<br /> +danger of, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>;<br /> +sent to Spain, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Sablonnière, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Salle, Sieur de,<br /> +birth of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;<br /> +origin of his name, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;<br /> +connection with the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;<br /> +characteristics of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;<br /> +parts with the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;<br /> +sails for Canada, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;<br /> +at Montreal, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;<br /> +schemes of, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;<br /> +his seigniory at La Chine, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;<br /> +begins to study Indian languages, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;<br /> +plans of discovery, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;<br /> +sells his seigniory, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +joins his expedition to that of the seminary +priests, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;<br /> +sets out from La Chine, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;<br /> +journey of, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;<br /> +hospitality of the Senecas, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;<br /> +fears for his safety, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;<br /> +meeting with Joliet, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +<i>belles paroles</i> of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;<br /> +parts with the Sulpitians, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;<br /> +obscurity of his subsequent work, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;<br /> +goes to Onondaga, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;<br /> +deserted by his men, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;<br /> +meeting with Perrot, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;<br /> +reported movements of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +Talon claims to have sent him to explore, +<a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +affirms that he discovered the Ohio, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;<br /> +discovery of the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;<br /> +discovered the Illinois River, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;<br /> +pays the expenses of his expeditions, + <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +in great need of money, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +borrows merchandise from the Seminary, + <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +contrasted with Marquette, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;<br /> +called a visionary, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;<br /> +projects of, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;<br /> +Frontenac favorably disposed towards, +<a href="#Page_85">85</a>;<br /> +faculty for managing the Indians, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;<br /> +at Montreal, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;<br /> +champions Frontenac, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;<br /> +goes to France, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;<br /> +recommended +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">[Pg 507]</a></span> +to Colbert by Frontenac, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;<br /> +petitions for a patent of nobility and +a grant of Fort +Frontenac, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;<br /> +his petition granted, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;<br /> +returns to Canada, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;<br /> +oppressed by the merchants of Canada, + <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;<br /> +Le Ber becomes the bitter enemy of, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;<br /> +aims at the control of the valleys of +the Ohio and the +Mississippi, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;<br /> +opposed by the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;<br /> +the most dangerous rival of the Jesuits +for the control of +the West, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;<br /> +the Prince de Conti the patron of, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;<br /> +the Abbé Renaudot's memoir of, +<a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;<br /> +account of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;<br /> +not well inclined towards the Récollets, +<a href="#Page_108">108</a>;<br /> +plots against, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;<br /> +caused no little annoyance by his brother, +<a href="#Page_114">114</a>;<br /> +Jesuit intrigues against, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +attempt to poison, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;<br /> +exculpates the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;<br /> +letter to the Prince de Conti, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits induce men to desert from, +<a href="#Page_118">118</a>;<br /> +defamed to Colbert, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>;<br /> +at Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;<br /> +sails again for France, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;<br /> +his memorial laid before Colbert, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;<br /> +urges the planting of colonies in the +West, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;<br /> +receives a patent from Louis XIV., <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;<br /> +forbidden to trade with the Ottawas, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;<br /> +given the monopoly of buffalo-hides, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;<br /> +makes plans to carry out his designs, +<a href="#Page_126">126</a>;<br /> +assistance received from his friends, +<a href="#Page_127">127</a>;<br /> +invaluable aid received from Henri de +Tonty, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;<br /> +joined by La Motte de Lussière, +<a href="#Page_129">129</a>;<br /> +sails for Canada, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;<br /> +makes a league with the Canadian merchants, +<a href="#Page_129">129</a>;<br /> +met by Father Hennepin on his return to +Canada, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;<br /> +joined by Father Hennepin, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;<br /> +relations with Father Hennepin, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;<br /> +sets out to join La Motte, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;<br /> +almost wrecked, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;<br /> +treachery of his pilot, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;<br /> +pacifies the Senecas, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;<br /> +delayed by jealousies, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;<br /> +returns to Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;<br /> +unfortunate in the choice of subordinates, +<a href="#Page_143">143</a>;<br /> +builds a vessel above the Niagara cataract, +<a href="#Page_144">144</a>;<br /> +jealousy and discontent, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;<br /> +lays foundation for blockhouses at Niagara, +<a href="#Page_148">148</a>;<br /> +the launch of the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;<br /> +his property attached by his creditors, +<a href="#Page_150">150</a>;<br /> +on Lake Huron, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;<br /> +commends his great enterprise to St. Anthony +of Padua, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;<br /> +at St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;<br /> +rivals and enemies, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;<br /> +on Lake Michigan, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;<br /> +at Green Bay, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;<br /> +finds the Pottawattamies friendly, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;<br /> +sends the "Griffin" back to Niagara laden +with furs, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>;<br /> +trades with the Ottawas, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>;<br /> +hardships, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;<br /> +encounter with the Outagamies, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>;<br /> +rejoined by Tonty, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;<br /> +forebodings concerning the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;<br /> +on the St. Joseph, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;<br /> +lost in the forest, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;<br /> +on the Illinois, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;<br /> +Duplessis attempts to murder, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;<br /> +the Illinois town, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>;<br /> +hunger relieved, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;<br /> +Illinois hospitality, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;<br /> +still followed by the intrigues of his +enemies, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;<br /> +harangues the Indians, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;<br /> +deserted by his men, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;<br /> +another attempt to poison, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;<br /> +builds Fort Crèvecœur, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;<br /> +loss of the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;<br /> +anxieties of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;<br /> +a happy artifice, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;<br /> +builds another vessel, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">[Pg 508]</a></span> +sends Hennepin to the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;<br /> +parting with Tonty, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;<br /> +hardihood of, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>-<a href="#Page_201">201</a>;<br /> +his winter journey to Fort Frontenac, +<a href="#Page_189">189</a>;<br /> +the deserted town of the Illinois, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;<br /> +meeting with Chief Chassagoac, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;<br /> +"Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;<br /> +Lake Michigan, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;<br /> +the wilderness, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;<br /> +Indian alarms, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;<br /> +reaches Niagara, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;<br /> +man and nature in arms against, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;<br /> +mutineers at Fort Crèvecœur, +<a href="#Page_199">199</a>;<br /> +chastisement of the mutineers, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;<br /> +strength in the face of adversity, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;<br /> +his best hope in Tonty, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;<br /> +sets out to succor Tonty, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;<br /> +kills buffalo, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;<br /> +a night of horror, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;<br /> +fears for Tonty, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;<br /> +finds the ruins of Fort Crèvecœur, +<a href="#Page_211">211</a>;<br /> +beholds the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;<br /> +beholds the "Great Comet of 1680," <a href="#Page_213">213</a>;<br /> +returns to Fort Miami, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>;<br /> +jealousy of the Iroquois of, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;<br /> +route of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;<br /> +Margry brings to light the letters of, +<a href="#Page_281">281</a>;<br /> +begins anew, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;<br /> +plans for a defensive league, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;<br /> +Indian friends, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>;<br /> +hears good news of Tonty, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;<br /> +Illinois allies, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;<br /> +calls the Indians to a grand council, +<a href="#Page_289">289</a>;<br /> +his power of oratory, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;<br /> +his harangue, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;<br /> +the reply of the chiefs, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>;<br /> +finds Tonty, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;<br /> +parts with a portion of his monopolies, +<a href="#Page_293">293</a>;<br /> +at Toronto, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>;<br /> +reaches Lake Huron, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;<br /> +at Fort Miami, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;<br /> +on the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>;<br /> +among the Arkansas Indians, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;<br /> +takes formal possession of the Arkansas +country, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;<br /> +visited by the chief of the Taensas, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;<br /> +visits the Coroas, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>;<br /> +hostility, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>;<br /> +the mouth of the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;<br /> +takes possession of the Great West for +France, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;<br /> +bestows the name of "Louisiana" on the +new domain, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;<br /> +attacked by the Quinipissas, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;<br /> +revisits the Coroas, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;<br /> +seized by a dangerous illness, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;<br /> +rejoins Tonty at Michilimackinac, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>;<br /> +his projected colony on the banks of the +Illinois, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;<br /> +intrenches himself at "Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;<br /> +gathers his Indian allies at Fort St. +Louis, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;<br /> +his colony on the Illinois, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;<br /> +success of his colony, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;<br /> +letters to La Barre, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>-<a href="#Page_322">322</a>;<br /> +defamed by La Barre to Seignelay, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>-<a href="#Page_324">324</a>;<br /> +La Barre plots against, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;<br /> +La Barre takes possession of Fort Frontenac +and Fort +St. Louis, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>-<a href="#Page_327">327</a>;<br /> +sails for France, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;<br /> +painted by himself, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>-<a href="#Page_342">342</a>;<br /> +difficulty of knowing him, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;<br /> +his detractors, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>;<br /> +his letters, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>-<a href="#Page_331">331</a>;<br /> +vexations of his position, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;<br /> +his unfitness for trade, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>;<br /> +risks of correspondence, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>;<br /> +his reported marriage, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>;<br /> +alleged ostentation, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;<br /> +motives of actions, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;<br /> +charges of harshness, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>;<br /> +intrigues against him, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>;<br /> +unpopular manners, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;<br /> +a strange confession, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;<br /> +his strength and his weakness, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>;<br /> +contrasts of his character, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>;<br /> +at court, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>;<br /> +received by the King, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;<br /> +new proposals of, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>-<a href="#Page_347">347</a>;<br /> +small knowledge of Mexican geography, +<a href="#Page_348">348</a>;<br /> +plans of, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>;<br /> +his petitions granted, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>;<br /> +Forts Frontenac and St. + <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">[Pg 509]</a></span> +Louis restored by the King to, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>;<br /> +preparations for his new enterprise, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>;<br /> +divides his command with Beaujeu, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>;<br /> +lack of harmony between Beaujeu and, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>-<a href="#Page_361">361</a>;<br /> +indiscretion of, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>;<br /> +overwrought brain of, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>;<br /> +farewell to his mother, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>;<br /> +sails from Rochelle, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>;<br /> +disputes with Beaujeu, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>;<br /> +the voyage, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;<br /> +his illness, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;<br /> +Beaujeu's complaints of, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;<br /> +resumes his journey, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>;<br /> +enters the Gulf of Mexico, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>;<br /> +waiting for Beaujeu, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>;<br /> +coasts the shores of Texas, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>;<br /> +meeting with Beaujeu, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>;<br /> +perplexity of, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>-<a href="#Page_377">377</a>;<br /> +lands in Texas, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>;<br /> +attacked by the Indians, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>;<br /> +wreck of the "Aimable," <a href="#Page_381">381</a>;<br /> +forlorn position of, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>;<br /> +Indian neighbors, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>;<br /> +Beaujeu makes friendly advances to, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>;<br /> +departure of Beaujeu, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>;<br /> +at Matagorda Bay, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>;<br /> +misery and dejection, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>;<br /> +the new Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>;<br /> +explorations of, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>;<br /> +adventures of, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>;<br /> +again falls ill, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>;<br /> +departure for Canada, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>;<br /> +wreck of the "Belle," <a href="#Page_407">407</a>;<br /> +Maxime Le Clerc makes charges against, +<a href="#Page_410">410</a>;<br /> +Duhaut plots against, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;<br /> +return to Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>;<br /> +account of his adventures, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>-<a href="#Page_413">413</a>;<br /> +among the Cenis Indians, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;<br /> +attacked with hernia, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>;<br /> +Twelfth Night at Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>;<br /> +his last farewell, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>;<br /> +followers of, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>;<br /> +prairie travelling, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>;<br /> +Liotot swears vengeance against, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>;<br /> +the murder of Moranget, Saget, and Nika, +<a href="#Page_426">426</a>;<br /> +his premonition of disaster, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>;<br /> +murdered by Duhaut, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>;<br /> +character of, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>;<br /> +his enthusiasm compared with that of Champlain, +<a href="#Page_431">431</a>;<br /> +his defects, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>;<br /> +America owes him an enduring memory, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>;<br /> +the marvels of his patient fortitude, +<a href="#Page_432">432</a>;<br /> +evidences of his assassination, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>;<br /> +undeniable rigor of his command, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>;<br /> +locality of his assassination, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>;<br /> +his debts, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>;<br /> +Tonty's plan to assist, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>-<a href="#Page_455">455</a>;<br /> +fear of Father Allouez for, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>;<br /> +Jesuit plans against, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, +<a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, +<a href="#Page_485">485</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Salle, village of, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Taupine (Pierre Moreau), <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Tortue, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Launay, De, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Laurent, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Lavaca River, the, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Vache River, the, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Laval-Montmorency, François Xavier de,<br /> first bishop of Quebec, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>;<br /> +accused of harshness and intolerance, +<a href="#Page_110">110</a>;<br /> +encourages the establishment of the association +of +the Sainte Famille, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Violette, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">La Voisin,<br /> +burned alive at Paris, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Baillif, M., <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Ber, Jacques, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;<br /> +becomes La Salle's bitter enemy, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, +<a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Leblanc, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;<br /> +takes false reports of La Salle to Fort +Crèvecœur, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Clerc, Father Chrétien, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;<br /> +his account of the Récollet missions +among the Indians, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;<br /> +Hennepin steals passages from, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;<br /> +character of Du Lhut, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">[Pg 510]</a></span> +energy of La Salle, 292, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>;</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Clerc, Maxime,<br />joins + La Salle's new enterprise, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>;<br /> +in Texas, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>;<br /> +adventure with a boar, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;<br /> +makes charges against La Salle, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Fèvre, Father, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Gros, Simon, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Meilleur, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Moyne, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Lenox, Mr.,<br />the Journal of Marquette, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +death of Marquette, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Leon, Alonzo de, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Petit,<br /> +customs of the Natchez, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">L'Espérance, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Sueur,<br /> +map made by, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Le Tardieu, Charles, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Lewiston,<br /> +mountain ridge of, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;<br /> +rapids at, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Liotot,<br />La Salle's + surgeon, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>;<br /> +swears vengeance against La Salle, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, +<a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>;<br /> +the assassination of La Salle, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>;<br /> +resolves to return to Fort St. Louis, +<a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +quarrels with Hiens, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +murder of, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Long Point, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;<br /> +the Sulpitians spend the winter at, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Long River," the, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Long Saut, the, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Louis XIV.<br /> +becomes the sovereign of the +Great West, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>;<br /> +misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, +<a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>, +<a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Louis XIV., of France, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +grants a patent to La Salle, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;<br /> +orders the arrest of Hennepin, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;<br /> +proclaimed by La Salle the sovereign of +the Great West, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;<br /> +receives La Salle, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;<br /> +irritated against the Spaniards, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;<br /> +grants La Salle's petitions, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>;<br /> +abandons the colonists, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>;<br /> +Cavelier's memorial to, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Louisiana, country of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;<br /> +name bestowed by La Salle, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;<br /> +vast extent of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;<br /> +boundaries of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;<br /> +Iberville the founder of, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, +<a href="#Page_485">485</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Louisville, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Louvigny, Sieur de, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Lover's leap," the, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Loyola, Disciples of,<br /> +losing ground in Canada, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Lussière, La Motte de,<br />joins La Salle, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;<br /> +embarks on the journey, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;<br /> +reaches the Niagara, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;<br /> +begins to build fortifications, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;<br /> +jealousy of the Senecas, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;<br /> +seeks to conciliate the Senecas, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, +<a href="#Page_141">141</a>;<br /> +fidelity to La Salle doubtful, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</div><p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-M-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Machaut-Rougemont</span>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mackinaw, La Salle at, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mackinaw, Island of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Macopins, Rivière des (Illinois River), <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Madeira, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Maha (Omahas), the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Maiden's Rock," the, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Malheurs, La Rivière des," <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Malhoumines, the, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Malouminek, the, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Manabozho, the Algonquin deity, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mance, Mlle., <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mandans, the,<br /> +winter lodges of, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Manitoulin Island,<br /> +Mission of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +assigned to André, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Manitoulin Islands,<br /> +Saint-Lusson winters at, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +Saint-Lusson +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">[Pg 511]</a></span> +takes possession for France of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, +<a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Manitoulins, the, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Manitoumie (Mississippi Valley), <a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Manitous, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Maps,<br /> +Champlain's map (the first) of the Great Lakes, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>;<br /> +Coronelli's map, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>;<br /> +manuscript map of Franquelin, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, +<a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, +<a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>;<br /> +map of Galinée, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>;<br /> +map of Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>;<br /> +map of the Great Lakes, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>;<br /> +map of Marquette, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>;<br /> +maps of the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>;<br /> +small maps of Joliet, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>;<br /> +Raudin's map, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>;<br /> +rude map of Father Raffeix, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>;<br /> +Franquelin's map of Louisiana, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>;<br /> +the great map of Franquelin, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>;<br /> +map of Le Sueur, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>;<br /> +map of Homannus, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Margry,<br /> +birth of La + Salle, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;<br /> + La Salle's connection with the Jesuits, +<a href="#Page_8">8</a>;<br /> +La Salle sells his seigniory, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +La Salle's claims to the discovery of +the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;<br /> +throws much light on the life of Joliet, +<a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +La Salle's marriage prevented by his brother, +<a href="#Page_114">114</a>;<br /> +La Salle at Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;<br /> +assistance given to La Salle, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;<br /> +Henri de Tonty, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;<br /> +La Motte at Niagara, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;<br /> +La Salle pacifies the Senecas, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;<br /> +La Salle at Niagara, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;<br /> +La Salle attached by his creditors, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;<br /> +the names of the Illinois, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;<br /> +intrigues against La Salle, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;<br /> +brings to light the letters of La Salle, +<a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>;<br /> +letters of Beaujeu to Seignelay and to +Cabart de Villermont, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>;<br /> +La Salle's disputes with Beaujeu, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>;<br /> +illness of La Salle, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;<br /> +La Salle resumes his voyage, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>;<br /> +La Salle lands in Texas, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>;<br /> +Beaujeu makes friendly advances to La +Salle, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>;<br /> +misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, +<a href="#Page_393">393</a>;<br /> +life at Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>;<br /> +the murder of Duhaut and Liotot, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>;<br /> +Allouez's fear of La Salle, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>.<br /> +Marle, Sieur de, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>;<br /> +murders Moranget, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>;<br /> +sets out for home, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>;<br /> +drowned, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Maroas, the, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Marquette, Jacques, the Jesuit,<br /> +at Ste. Marie du Saut, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +voyage of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;<br /> +discovery of the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;<br /> +among the Hurons and the Ottawas, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +the mission of Michilimackinac assigned +to, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +chosen to accompany Joliet in his search +for the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +early life of, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +on the Upper Lakes, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +great talents as a linguist, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +traits of character, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +journal of his voyage to the Mississippi, +<a href="#Page_60">60</a>;<br /> +especially devoted to the doctrine of +the Immaculate Conception, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;<br /> +at the Green Bay Mission, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +among the Mascoutins and Miamis, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +on the Wisconsin River, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;<br /> +the Mississippi at last, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;<br /> +on the Mississippi, +<a href="#Page_65">65</a>;<br /> +map drawn by, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;<br /> +meeting with the Illinois, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;<br /> +affrighted by the Indian manitous, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;<br /> +at the mouth of the Missouri, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;<br /> +on the lower Mississippi, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;<br /> +among the Arkansas Indians, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;<br /> +determines that the Mississippi discharges +into the Gulf of Mexico, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;<br /> +resolves to return to Canada, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>; +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">[Pg 512]</a></span><br /> +illness of, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;<br /> +remains at Green Bay, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +journal of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +true map of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +sets out to found the mission of the Immaculate +Conception, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +gives the name of "Immaculate Conception" to +the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +on the Chicago River, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>;<br /> +return of his illness, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>;<br /> +founds the mission at the village "Kaskaskia," <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;<br /> +peaceful death of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>;<br /> +burial of, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br /> +his bones removed to St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, +<a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br /> +miracle at the burial of, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br /> +tradition of the death of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;<br /> +contrasted with La Salle, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;<br /> +route of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;<br /> +pictured rock of, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;<br /> +maps made by, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Marshall, O. H., <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Martin, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +death of Marquette, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Martin, Father Felix, connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Martinique, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mascoutins, the,<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +Fathers Allouez and Dablon among, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;<br /> +joined by the Kickapoos, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +visited by Marquette, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +La Salle falls in with, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Matagorda Bay, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.<br /> +See also <i>St. Louis, Bay of</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Matagorda Island, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mather, Increase, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mazarin, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Meddewakantonwan, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Medrano, Sebastian Fernandez de, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Membré, Father Zenobe, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, +<a href="#Page_216">216</a>;<br /> +the mutineers at Fort Crèvecœur, +<a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;<br /> +intrigues of La Salle's enemies, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, +<a href="#Page_224">224</a>;<br /> +the Iroquois attack on the Illinois village, +<a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;<br /> +the Iroquois attack on the dead, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;<br /> +his journal on his descent of the Mississippi +with La Salle, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;<br /> +Hennepin steals passages from, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;<br /> +meeting with La Salle, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;<br /> +sets out from Fort Miami, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>;<br /> +among the Arkansas Indians, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;<br /> +visits the Taensas, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;<br /> +attends La Salle during his illness, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>;<br /> +joins La Salle's new enterprise, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>;<br /> +on the "Joly," <a href="#Page_372">372</a>;<br /> +in Texas, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>;<br /> +adventure with a buffalo, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>;<br /> +fate of, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ménard, the Jesuit,<br /> +attempts to plant a mission on southern shore +of Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Menomonie River, the, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Menomonies, the,<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +village of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Mer Douce des Hurons" (Lake Huron), <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Mer du Nord," the, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Messasipi" (Mississippi River), the, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Messier, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Messipi" River, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Meules, De, the Intendant of Canada, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mexico, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;<br /> +Spaniards in, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>; <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mexico, Gulf of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, +<a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>;<br /> +claimed by Spain, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, +<a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mexican mines, the, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Miami, Fort, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>; <br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">[Pg 513]</a></span> +La Salle returns to, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, +<a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Miami River, the, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Miamis, the,<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;<br /> +Fathers Allouez and Dablon among, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;<br /> +receive Saint-Lusson, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +authority and state of the chief of, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +joined by the Kickapoos, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +visited by Marquette, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;<br /> +join the Iroquois against the Illinois, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;<br /> +rankling jealousy between the Illinois and, +<a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;<br /> +village of, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;<br /> +called by La Salle to a grand council, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;<br /> +at Buffalo Rock, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;<br /> +afraid of the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Miamis, Le Fort des (Buffalo Rock), <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Miamis River (St. Joseph), <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Michigan, Lake, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits on, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;<br /> +the name of, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;<br /> +La Salle on, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, +<a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Michigan,<br /> +shores of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +forest wastes of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;<br /> +peninsula of, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Michilimackinac,<br /> +mission of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +assigned to Marquette, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Michilimackinac, Straits of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, +<a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_292">392</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Migeon, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mignan, islands of, granted to Joliet, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mille Lac, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Milot, Jean, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Milwaukee, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Minet, La Salle's engineer, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Minneapolis, city of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Minong, Isle, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Miskous" (Wisconsin), the, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Missions, early,<br /> +decline in the religious exaltation of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mississaquenk, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mississippi River, the,<br /> +discovered by the Spaniards, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +De Soto buried in, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +Jean Nicollet reaches, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +Colonel Wood reaches, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;<br /> +Captain Bolton reaches, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;<br /> +Radisson and Des Groseilliers reach, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;<br /> +the thoughts of the Jesuits dwell on, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;<br /> +speculations concerning, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>; <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +Joliet makes a map of the region of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, +<a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;<br /> +Talon resolves to find, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +Joliet selected to find, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +Marquette chosen to accompany Joliet, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +the discovery by Joliet and Marquette, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;<br /> +its outlet into the Gulf of Mexico determined +by Joliet and +Marquette, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;<br /> +Marquette gives the name of "Immaculate Conception" to, + <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +La Salle's plans to control, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;<br /> +Hennepin sent to, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;<br /> +La Salle beholds, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;<br /> +claims of Hennepin to the discovery of, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>;<br /> +Membré's journal on his descent of, +<a href="#Page_246">246</a>;<br /> +La Salle on, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, +<a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, +<a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>, +<a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>;<br /> +early unpublished maps of, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>-<a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mississippi, Valley of the,<br /> +La Salle aims at the control of, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits turn their eyes towards, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>; +<a href="#Page_479">479</a>;<br /> +various names given to, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Missouri River, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;<br /> +Joliet and Marquette at the mouth of, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, +<a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, +<a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Missouris, the, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Mitchigamea," village of, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mitchigamias, the, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">[Pg 514]</a></span>"Mitchiganong, Lac" (Lake Michigan), <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mobile Bay, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mobile, city of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mohawk River, the, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mohawks, the, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;<br /> +Bruyas among, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +Jesuit mission among, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;<br /> +Father Hennepin among, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mohegan Indians, the, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Moingona, the, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Moingouena (Peoria), <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Monso, the Mascoutin chief,<br /> +plots against La Salle, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Monsonis, the, at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Montagnais, the, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Montezuma, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Montreal,<br /> +La Salle at, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;<br /> +the most dangerous place in Canada, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;<br /> +detailed plan of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;<br /> +Frontenac at, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;<br /> +Frontenac has it well in hand, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +Joutel and Cavelier reach, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Montreal, Historical Society of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Moranget,<br /> +La Salle's nephew, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>;<br /> +quarrel with Duhaut, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +murder of, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Moreau, Pierre, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Morel, M., <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Morice, Marguerite, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Motantees (?), the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Moyse, Maître, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mozeemlek, the, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Mustang Island, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-N-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Nadouessious</span> (Sioux), the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Nadouessioux, the country of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Natchez, the,<br /> +village of, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>;<br /> +differ from other Indians, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>;<br /> +customs of, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Natchez, city of, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Neches River, the, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Neenah (Fox) River, the, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Neutrals, the,<br /> +exterminated by the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New Biscay, province of, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New England, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New England Indians, the, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New France, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New Leon, province of, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New Mexico, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>;<br /> +Spanish colonists of, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New Orleans, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">New York,<br /> +the French in western, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-<a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Niagara,<br /> +name of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;<br /> +the key to the four great lakes above, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, +<a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Niagara Falls, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +Father Hennepin's account of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;<br /> +Hennepin's exaggerations respecting, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, +<a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Niagara, Fort, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Niagara Portage, the, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Niagara River, the, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +Father Hennepin's account of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Nicanopé, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Nicollet, Jean,<br /> +reaches the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +among the Indians, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +sent to make peace between the Winnebagoes +and the Hurons, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br /> +descends the Wisconsin, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Nika,<br /> +La Salle's favorite Shawanoe hunter, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +murder of, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Nipissing, Lake, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Nipissings, the,<br /> +Jean Nicollet among, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +Dollier de Casson among, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +André makes a missionary tour among, + <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Noiseux, M., Grand Vicar of Quebec, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">[Pg 515]</a></span>North Sea, the, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Nueces, the upper, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-O-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Oanktayhee</span>, principal deity of the Sioux, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">O'Callaghan, Dr., <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ohio River, the, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;<br /> +La Salle affirms that he discovered, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;<br /> +the "Beautiful River," <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>, +<a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, +<a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ohio, Valley of the,<br /> +La Salle aims at the control of, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ojibwas, the, at Ste. Marie du Saut, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Olighin (Alleghany) River, the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Olighin" (Alleghany) River, the, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Omahas, the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Omawha, Chief, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Oneida Indians, the, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ongiara (Niagara), <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Onguiaahra (Niagara), <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Onis, Luis de, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Onondaga,<br />La Salle goes to, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;<br /> +the political centre of the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;<br /> +Hennepin reaches, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Onondaga Indians, the, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;<br /> +Bruyas among, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Onontio," the governor of Canada, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ontario, Lake, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +discovered, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;<br /> +Frontenac reaches, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, +<a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ontonagan River, the, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Orange, settlement of (Albany), <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Oris, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Osages, the, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;<br /> +deep-rooted jealousy of the Illinois for, +<a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Osages, Rivière des" (Missouri), <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Osotouoy, the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Otinawatawa, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ottawa, town of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ottawa River, the, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ottawas, the, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +Marquette among, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +terrified by the Sioux, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +La Salle forbidden to trade with, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;<br /> +La Salle trades with, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Ouabache" (Wabash), River, the, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ouabona, the, join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Ouabouskiaou" (Ohio) River, the, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Ouaboustikou" (Ohio), the, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ouasicoudé, principal chief of the Sioux, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;<br /> +friendship for Hennepin, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ouchage (Osages), the, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ouiatnoens (Weas), the,<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Oumalouminek, the, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Oumas, the, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Oumessourit (Missouris), the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Oumessourits, Rivière des" (Missouri), <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Outagamies (Foxes), the,<br />location of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Outagamies, the,<br /> +encounter with La Salle, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Outrelaise, Mademoiselle d', <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Outrelaise, the Rivière del', <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-P-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Pacific</span> coast, the, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pacific Ocean, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Paget, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pahoutet (Pah-Utahs?), the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pah-Utahs (?), the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Palluau, Count of, see <i>Frontenac, Count</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Palms, the River of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Paniassa (Pawnees), the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Panuco, Spanish town of, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">[Pg 516]</a></span> +Paraguay, the old and the new, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Parassy, M. de, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Patron, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Paul, Dr. John, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pawnees, the, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peanqhichia (Piankishaw), the,<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Pekitanouï" River (Missouri), the, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pelée, Point, 26, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pelican Island, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peloquin, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pen, Sieur,<br /> +obligations of La Salle to, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peñalossa, Count, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Penicaut,<br /> +customs of the Natchez, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pennsylvania, State of, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Penobscot River, the, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pensacola, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peoria, city of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peoria Indians, the,<br /> +villages of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peoria Lake, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peouaria (Peoria), <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pepikokia, the,<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pepin, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pepin Lake, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Péré, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Perrot, the curé, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pérrot, Nicolas,<br /> +meeting with La Salle, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;<br /> +accompanies Saint-Lusson in search of copper +mines on Lake +Superior, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +conspicuous among Canadian voyageurs, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +characteristics of, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +marvellous account of the authority and state +of the Miami chief, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +local governor of Montreal, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;<br /> +quarrel with Frontenac, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +arrested by Frontenac, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;<br /> +the Abbé Fénelon attempts to +mediate between Frontenac and, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;<br /> +attempts to poison La Salle, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Peru, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Petit Goave, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Philip, King, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Philip II. of Spain, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Phips, Sir William,<br /> +makes a descent on Joliet's establishment, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Piankishaws, the, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Picard, Le" (Du Gay), <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pierre, companion of Marquette, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pierron, the Jesuit, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +among the Senecas, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pierson, the Jesuit, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pimitoui River, the, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Platte, the, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Plet, François, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Poisoning, the epoch of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ponchartrain, the minister, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pontiac, assassination of, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Port de Paix, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Pottawattamies, the,<br /> +in grievous need of spiritual succor, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;<br /> +the Sulpitians determine to visit, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;<br /> +friendly to La Salle, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, +<a href="#Page_238">238</a>;<br /> +Tonty among, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;<br /> +at "Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Poualacs," the, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Prairie du Chien, Fort, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Prairie, Nation of the, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Provence, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Prudhomme, Fort, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>;<br /> +La Salle ill at, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Prudhomme, Pierre, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Puants, les (Winnebagoes), <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Puants, La Baye des (Green Bay), <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</div><p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-Q-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">[Pg 517]</a></span> +<span class="smcap">Quapaws</span>, the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Quebec, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits masters at, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, +<a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Queenstown Heights, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Queylus, Superior of the Seminary of St. Sulpice, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Quinipissas, the, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>;<br /> +attack La Salle, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Quinté, Jesuit Mission at, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Quinté, Bay of, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-R-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Radisson</span>, Pierre Esprit, reaches the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Raffeix, Father Pierre, the Jesuit,<br /> + manuscript map of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +among the Senecas, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>. +</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Raoul, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rasle, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Raudin,<br /> +Frontenac's engineer, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Raymbault, ——,<br /> +preaches among the Indians, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Récollet Missions,<br /> +Le Clerc's account of, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Récollets, the,<br /> +La Salle not well inclined towards, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;<br /> +protected by Frontenac, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>;<br /> +comparison between the Sulpitians and the +Jesuits and, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Red River, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Renaudot, Abbé,<br /> +memoir of La Salle, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;<br /> +assists La Salle, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Renault, Étienne, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rhode Island, State of, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ribourde, Gabriel,<br /> +at Fort Frontenac, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;<br /> +at Niagara, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;<br /> +at Fort Crèvecœur, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, +<a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;<br /> +murder of, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Riggs, Rev. Stephen R.,<br /> +divisions of the Sioux, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rio Bravo,<br /> +French colony proposed at the mouth of, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rio Frio, the, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rio Grande River, the, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rios, Domingo Teran de los, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Robertson, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rochefort, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rochelle, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Rocher, Le," <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +Charlevoix speaks of, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rochester, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rocky Mountains, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rouen, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Royale, Isle, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Ruined Castles," the, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Rum River, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ruter, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>;<br /> +murders Liotot, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-S-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Sabine River</span>, the, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Saco Indians, the, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sacs, the,<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sâgean, Mathieu,<br /> +the Eldorado of, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>-<a href="#Page_489">489</a>;<br /> +sketch of, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Saget, La Salle's servant, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +murder of, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Saguenay River, the, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br /> +Albanel's journey up, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Anthony, city of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Anthony,<br /> +the falls of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;<br /> +Hennepin's notice of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Antoine Cape, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Bernard's Bay, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Clair, Lake, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Claire, Lake, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Croix River, the, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Domingo, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Esprit, Bay of (Mobile Bay), <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Esprit,<br /> +Jesuit mission of, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +Indians at, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Francis, Order of, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Francis River, the, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">[Pg 518]</a></span></div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"St. François," the ketch, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;<br /> +loss of, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. François Xavier,<br /> +council of congregated tribes held at, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Ignace, Point, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br /> +Jesuit chapel at, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br /> +La Salle reaches, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;<br /> +inhabitants of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"St. Joseph," the ship, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Joseph, Lac (Lake Michigan), <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Joseph River, the, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;<br /> +La Salle on, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;<br /> +La Forest on, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Saint-Laurent, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Lawrence River, the, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, +<a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Louis, city of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Louis, Bay of (Matagorda Bay), <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Louis, Castle of, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Louis, Fort, of the Illinois, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +La Salle's Indian allies gather at, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;<br /> +total number of Indians around, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>;<br /> +the Indians protected at, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>;<br /> +La Barre takes possession of, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;<br /> +attacked by the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>;<br /> +restored to La Salle by the King, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>;<br /> +Tonty returns to, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;<br /> +Joutel at, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;<br /> +condition of, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>;<br /> +Joutel's return to, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>;<br /> +Tonty leaves, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>;<br /> +reoccupied by the French, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.<br /> +St. Louis, Fort, of Texas, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>;<br /> +life at, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>;<br /> +La Salle returns to, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>;<br /> +Twelfth Night at, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>;<br /> +Duhaut resolves to return to, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;<br /> +abandoned by Louis XIV., <a href="#Page_463">463</a>;<br /> +the Spaniards at, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>;<br /> +desolation of, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Louis, Lake of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Louis, Rock of, see <i>"Starved Rock."</i></div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Louis River, the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Saint-Lusson, Daumont de,<br /> +sent out by Talon to discover copper mines on Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +winters at the Manitoulin Islands, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +received by the Miamis, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br /> +takes possession of the West for France, +<a href="#Page_52">52</a>;<br /> +proceeds to Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +returns to Quebec, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Malo, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Paul, site of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Peter, the Valley of the,<br /> +unprovoked massacre by the Sioux +in, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Peter River, the, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Saint-Simon, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Simon, mission of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">St. Sulpice,<br /> +Seminary of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;<br /> +buys back a part of La Salle's seigniory, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +plan an expedition of discovery, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ste. Barbe, mines of, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sainte Claire, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sainte-Famille, the, association of,<br /> +a sort of female inquisition, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;<br /> +founded by Chaumonot, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;<br /> +encouraged by Laval, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ste. Marie, Falls of, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ste. Marie du Saut,<br /> +the Sulpitians arrive at, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +Jesuit mission at, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;<br /> +a noted fishing-place, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;<br /> +Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">San Antonio, the, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sanson, map of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Santa Barbara, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sargent, Winthrop, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sassory tribe, the, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sauteurs, the, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>; +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">[Pg 519]</a></span><br /> +the village of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sauthouis, the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Saut Ste. Marie, the, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +a noted fishing-place, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;<br /> +gathering of the tribes at, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sauvolle, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Schenectady, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Schoolcraft, the Falls of St. Anthony, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Scioto River, the, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Scortas, the Huron, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Seignelay, Marquis de,<br /> +memorials presented to, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>;<br /> +La Barre defames La Salle to, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;<br /> +object of La Salle's mission, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>;<br /> +letters of Beaujeu to, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>-<a href="#Page_356">356</a>;<br /> +complaints of Beaujeu, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;<br /> +complaint of Minet, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>;<br /> +receives Beaujeu coldly, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;<br /> +Jesuit petitions to, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>;<br /> +Cavelier's report to, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Seignelay River (Red River), the, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Seneca Indians, the, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;<br /> +villages of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;<br /> +their hospitality to La Salle, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;<br /> +cruelty of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;<br /> +Pierron among, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +village of, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;<br /> +jealous of La Motte, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;<br /> +La Motte seeks to conciliate, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;<br /> +pacified by La Salle, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;<br /> +the great town of, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;<br /> +Denonville's attack on, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Seneff, bloody fight of, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Severn River, the, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sévigné, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sévigné, Madame de,<br /> +letters of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Shawanoes, the, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Shea, J. G.,<br /> +first to discover the history of Joliet, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;<br /> +the journal of Marquette, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +death of Marquette, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;<br /> +the "Racines Agnières" of Bruyas, +<a href="#Page_136">136</a>;<br /> +the veracity of Hennepin, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;<br /> +critical examination of Hennepin's works, +<a href="#Page_247">247</a>;<br /> +Tonty and La Barre, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;<br /> +story of Mathieu Sâgean, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Silhouette, the minister, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Simcoe, Lake, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Simon, St., memoirs of, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Simonnet, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sioux Indians, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;<br /> +at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br /> +break into open war, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits trade with, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;<br /> +capture Father Hennepin, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;<br /> +suspect Father Hennepin of sorcery, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;<br /> +unprovoked massacres in the valley of the +St. Peter, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>;<br /> +Hennepin among, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-<a href="#Page_282">282</a>;<br /> +divisions of, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;<br /> +meaning of the word, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;<br /> +total number of, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;<br /> +use of the sweating-bath among, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;<br /> +Du Lhut among, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sipou (Ohio) River, the, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Sleeping Bear," the,<br /> +promontory of, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Smith, Buckingham, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Society of Jesus, the,<br /> +a powerful attraction for La Salle, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;<br /> +an image of regulated power, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sokokis Indians, the, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Soto, De, Hernando, see, <i>De Soto, Hernando</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">South Bend, village of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Southey, the poet, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">South Sea, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Spain,<br /> +war declared against, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>;<br /> +claims the Gulf of Mexico, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Spaniards, the,<br /> +discover the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;<br /> +Talon's plans to keep them in check, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;<br /> +Louis XIV. irritated against, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;<br /> +in Mexico, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>; +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">[Pg 520]</a></span><br /> + +at Fort St. Louis of Texas, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Spanish Inquisition, the, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Spanish missions, the, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sparks,<br /> +exposes the plagiarism of Hennepin, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;<br /> +attracts the attention of La Salle, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;<br /> +Tonty sent to examine, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, +<a href="#Page_239">239</a>;<br /> +description of, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;<br /> +La Salle and Tonty intrench themselves at, +<a href="#Page_313">313</a>;<br /> +described by Charlevoix, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;<br /> +origin of the name, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Sturgeon Cove," <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sulpice, St., <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sulpitians, the,<br /> +plan an expedition of discovery, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br /> +join forces with La Salle, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;<br /> +set out from La Chine, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;<br /> +journey of, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;<br /> +meeting with Joliet, <a href="#Page_22">23</a>;<br /> +determine to visit the Pottawattamies, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;<br /> +La Salle parts with, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;<br /> +spends the winter at Long Point, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br /> +resume their voyage, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;<br /> +the storm, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;<br /> +decide to return to Montreal, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;<br /> +pass through the Strait of Detroit, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;<br /> +arrive at Ste. Marie du Saut, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits want no help from, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +comparison between the Récollets and, +<a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Superior, Lake, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;<br /> +Ménard attempts to plant a mission +on southern shore of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;<br /> +Allouez explores a part of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;<br /> +Joliet attempts to discover the copper mines +of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits on, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;<br /> +the Jesuits make a map of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br /> +Saint-Lusson sets out to find the copper +mines of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +Saint-Lusson takes possession for France +of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>;<br /> +map of, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Susquehanna River, the, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Sweating-baths, Indian, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</div> +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-T-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Table Rock</span>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</div> +<div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tadoussac, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Taensas, the,<br /> +great town of, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;<br /> +visited by Membrè and Tonty, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;<br /> +differ from other Indians, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tahuglauk, the, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Taiaiagon, Indian town of, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tailhan, Father, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Talon, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Talon,<br /> +among the Texan colonists, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Talon, Jean, Intendant of Canada,<br /> +sends Joliet to discover the copper-mines of Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br /> +claims to have sent La Salle to explore, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;<br /> +full of projects for the colony, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;<br /> +his singular economy of the King's purse, +<a href="#Page_48">48</a>;<br /> +sends Saint-Lusson to discover copper mines +on Lake Superior, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;<br /> +resolves to find the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +makes choice of Joliet, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +quarrels with Courcelle, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;<br /> +returns to France, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Talon, Jean Baptiste, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Talon, Pierre, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tamaroas, the, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tangibao, the, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tears, the Lake of, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tegahkouita, Catharine, the Iroquois saint, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Teiocha-rontiong, Lac" (Lake Erie), <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Teissier, a pilot, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tejas (Texas), <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Terliquiquimechi, the, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tetons, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Texan colony, the,<br /> +fate of, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>-<a href="#Page_473">473</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Texan expedition, La Salle's, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>-<a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">[Pg 521]</a></span></div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Texan Indians, the, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Texas,<br /> +fertile plains of, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>;<br /> +French in, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;<br /> +shores of, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>;<br /> +La Salle lands in, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>;<br /> +application of the name, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Theakiki, the, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Thevenot,<br /> +on the journal of Marquette, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br /> +map made by, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Third Chickasaw Bluffs, the, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Thomassy, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Thouret, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Thousand Islands, the, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Three Rivers, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Thunder Bay, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tilly, Sieur de, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Tintons," the, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tintonwans, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tongengas, the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tonty, Alphonse de, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tonty, Henri de, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;<br /> +renders assistance to La Salle, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;<br /> +in Canada, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;<br /> +La Motte at Niagara, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;<br /> +sets out to join La Motte, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;<br /> +almost wrecked, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;<br /> +at the Niagara Portage, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-<a href="#Page_147">147</a>;<br /> +the building of the "Griffin," <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a>;<br /> +the launch, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;<br /> +rejoins La Salle, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;<br /> +among the Illinois, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>;<br /> +the attempt to poison La Salle, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;<br /> +Hennepin sent to the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>;<br /> +La Salle's parting with, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;<br /> +sent to examine "Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;<br /> +deserted by his men, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;<br /> +the journey from Fort Crèvecœur, +<a href="#Page_201">201</a>;<br /> +La Salle's best hope in, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;<br /> +La Salle sets out to succor, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;<br /> +La Salle has fears for the safety of, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;<br /> +sets out to examine "Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;<br /> +in the Illinois village, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;<br /> +attacked by the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;<br /> +intercedes for the Illinois, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;<br /> +peril of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;<br /> +a truce granted to, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;<br /> +departs from the Iroquois, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;<br /> +falls ill, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;<br /> +friends in need, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;<br /> +La Salle hears good news of, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;<br /> +meeting with La Salle, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;<br /> +sets out from Fort Miami, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>;<br /> +among the Arkansas Indians, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;<br /> +visits the Taensas, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;<br /> +illness of La Salle, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;<br /> +sent to Michilimackinac, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>;<br /> +intrenches himself at "Starved Rock," <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;<br /> +left in charge of Fort St. Louis, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, +<a href="#Page_337">337</a>;<br /> +attempts to attack the Spaniards of Mexico, +<a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;<br /> +the assassination of La Salle, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>;<br /> +the murder of Duhaut, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>;<br /> +among the Assonis, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>;<br /> +plans to assist La Salle, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>-<a href="#Page_455">455</a>;<br /> +his journey, seeking news of La Salle, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>, +<a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>;<br /> +in the Iroquois War, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>;<br /> +Cavelier conceals La Salle's death from, +<a href="#Page_461">461</a>;<br /> +learns of La Salle's death, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>;<br /> +revives La Salle's scheme of Mexican invasion, +<a href="#Page_465">465</a>;<br /> +sets out from Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, +<a href="#Page_465">465</a>;<br /> +deserted by his men, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>;<br /> +courage of, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>;<br /> +difficulties and hardships, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>;<br /> +attacked by fever, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>;<br /> +misrepresented, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>;<br /> +praises of, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>;<br /> +joins Iberville in Lower Louisiana, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, +<a href="#Page_486">486</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Topingas, the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Torimans, the, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Toronto, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Toronto Portage, the, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Toulon, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Tracy, Lac" (Lake Superior), <a href="#Page_476">476</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">[Pg 522]</a></span></div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Trinity River, the, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Tronson, Abbé, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Tsiketo, Lac" (Lake St. Clair), <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Turenne, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Two Mountains, Lake of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</div> + +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-U-</div><div> </div> + +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Upper Lakes</span>, the, see <i>Lakes, Upper</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Ursulines, the, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Utica, village of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</div> + +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-V-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Vaudreuil</span>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Vera Cruz, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Vermilion River, the, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.<br /> +See also <i>Big Vermilion River, the</i>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Vermilion Sea" (Gulf of California), the, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Vermilion Woods," the, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Verreau, H., <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Vicksburg, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Victor, town of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Vieux, Fort Le," <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Villermont, Cabart de,<br /> +letters of Beaujeu to, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>-<a href="#Page_360">360</a>;<br /> +letter of Tonty to, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Virginia, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">"Virginia, Sea of," <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Voltaire, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</div> + +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-W-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Watteau</span>, Melithon, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Weas, the,<br /> +join La Salle's colony, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">West Indies, the, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Wild Rice Indians (Menomonies), the, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">William, Fort, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">William III. of England, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Winnebago Lake, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Winnebagoes, the,<br /> +Jean Nicollet sent to, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br /> +quarrel with the Hurons, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br /> +location of, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;<br /> +at Saut Ste. Marie, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Winona, legend of, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Winthrop, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Wisconsin, shores of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Wisconsin River, the, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Wood, Colonel,<br /> +reaches the Mississippi, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</div> + +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-Y-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Yanktons</span>, the, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">Yoakum, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">You, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</div> + +<p> </p> +<div class="font3" style="padding-left:5em;">-Z-</div><div> </div> +<div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><span class="smcap">Zenobe</span> (Membré), Father, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>. +</div><div> </div><div> </div> +<div class="figcenter"><a name="i_557a.png" id="i_557a.png"></a><img src="images/i_557a.png" style="border:0px" alt="LBC mark"/></div> +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p> </p> +<h2><a name="FRANCIS_PARKMANS_WORKS_2" id="FRANCIS_PARKMANS_WORKS_2"></a>FRANCIS + PARKMAN'S WORKS.</h2> +<h3>NEW LIBRARY EDITION.</h3> +<p>Printed from entirely new plates, in clear and beautiful type, upon a + choice laid paper. Illustrated with twenty-six photogravure plates executed + by Goupil from historical portraits, and from original drawings and paintings + by Howard Pyle, De Cost Smith, Thule de Thulstrup, Frederic Remington, + Orson Lowell, Adrien Moreau, and other artists.</p> +<p style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;"><i>Thirteen volumes, medium octavo, cloth, gilt top, price, $26.00; half +calf, extra, gilt top, $58.50; half crushed Levant morocco, extra, gilt top, $78.00; +half morocco, gilt top, $58.50. Any work separately in cloth, $2.00 per volume.</i></p> +<div> </div> + +<table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" summary="List of Vols."> + <tr> + <td><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" summary="Titles"> + <tr> + <td class="center"> <a name="LIST_OF_VOLS" id="LIST_OF_VOLS"></a>LIST OF VOLUMES.</td> + </tr> + <tr><td> </td></tr> + <tr> + <td><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" summary="Vol. nos."> + <tr> + <td style="width:88%" class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">PIONEERS OF FRANCE IN THE NEW WORLD</div></td> + <td style="width:12%" class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">THE JESUITS IN NORTH AMERICA</div></td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">LA SALLE AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST</div></td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">THE OLD RÉGIME IN CANADA</div></td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">COUNT FRONTENAC AND NEW FRANCE UNDER LOUIS XIV.</div></td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">A HALF CENTURY OF CONFLICT</div></td> + <td class="c1">2 vols.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">MONTCALM AND WOLFE</div></td> + <td class="c1">2 vols.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">THE CONSPIRACY OF PONTIAC AND THE INDIAN WAR AFTER + THE CONQUEST OF CANADA</div></td> + <td class="c1">2 vols.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">THE OREGON TRAIL</div></td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="c1"><div style="padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">LIFE OF PARKMAN. By Charles Haight Farnham</div></td> + <td class="c1">1 vol.</td> + </tr> + </table></td> + </tr> + </table></td> + </tr> +</table> + + <p> </p> + +<p class="center">ILLUSTRATIONS</p> + + +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">1. <span class="smcap">Portrait of Francis Parkman.</span></div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">2. <span class="smcap">Jacques Cartier.</span> From the painting at St. Malo.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">3. <span class="smcap">Madame de la Peltrie.</span> From the painting in the Convent des Ursulines.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">4. <span class="smcap">Father Jogues Haranguing the Mohawks.</span> From the picture by Thule de Thulstrup.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">5. <span class="smcap">Father Hennepin +Celebrating Mass.</span> From the picture by Howard Pyle.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">6. <span class="smcap">La Salle Presenting +a Petition to Louis XIV.</span> From the painting by Adrien Moreau.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">7. <span class="smcap">Jean Baptiste Colbert.</span> From +a painting by Claude Lefèvbre at Versailles.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">8. <span class="smcap">Jean Guyon before Bouillé.</span> From a + picture by Orson Lowell.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">9. <span class="smcap">Madame de Frontenac.</span> From the painting at + Versailles.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">10. <span class="smcap">Entry of Sir William Phips into the Quebec Basin.</span> From +a picture by L. Rossi.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">11. <span class="smcap">The Sacs and Foxes.</span> From the picture by + Charles Bodmer.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">12. <span class="smcap">The Return from Deerfield.</span> From the painting + by Howard Pyle.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">13. <span class="smcap">Sir William Pepperrell.</span> From the painting + by Smibert.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">14. <span class="smcap">Marquis de Beauharnois, Governor of Canada.</span> From +the painting by Tonnières in the Musée de Grenoble.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">15. <span class="smcap">Marquis de Montcalm.</span> From the original painting +in the possession of the present Marquis de Montcalm.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">16. <span class="smcap">Marquis de Vaudreuil.</span> From the painting in +the possession of the Countess de Clermont Tonnerre.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">17. <span class="smcap">General Wolfe.</span> From the original painting + by Highmore.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">18. <span class="smcap">The Fall of Montcalm.</span> From the painting + by Howard Pyle.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">19. <span class="smcap">View of the Taking of Quebec.</span> From the early +engraving of a drawing made on the spot by Captain Hervey Smyth, Wolfe's aid-de-camp.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">20. <span class="smcap">Col. Henry Bouquet.</span> From the original painting +by Benjamin West.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">21. <span class="smcap">The Death of Pontiac.</span> From the picture + by De Cost Smith.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">22. <span class="smcap">Sir William Johnson.</span> From a Mezzotint engraving.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">23. <span class="smcap">Half Sliding, Half Plunging.</span> From a drawing +by Frederic Remington.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">24. <span class="smcap">The Thunder Fighters.</span> From the picture + by Frederic Remington.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">25. <span class="smcap">Francis Parkman.</span> From a miniature taken + about 1844.</div> +<div style="text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1.5em;">26. <span class="smcap">Francis Parkman.</span> From a photograph taken + in 1882.</div> + +<p>It is hardly necessary to quote here from the innumerable tributes to + so famous an American author as Francis Parkman. Among writers who have + bestowed the highest praise upon his writings are such names as James + Russell Lowell, Dr. John Fisk, President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard University, + George William Curtis, Edward Eggleston, W. D. Howells, James Schouler, + and Dr. Conan Doyle, as well as many prominent critics in the United States, + in Canada, and in England.</p> +<p>In two respects Francis Parkman was exceptionally fortunate. He chose + a theme of the closest interest to his countrymen,—the colonization + of the American Continent and the wars for its possession,—and he + lived through fifty years of toil to complete his great historical series.</p> +<p>The text of the New Library Edition is that of the latest issue of each + work prepared for the press by the distinguished author. He carefully + revised and added to several of his works, not through change of views, + but in the light of new documentary evidence which his patient research + and untiring zeal extracted from the hidden archives of the past. Thus + he rewrote and enlarged "The Conspiracy of Pontiac"; the new edition of "La + Salle and the Discovery of the Great West" (1878), and the 1885 edition + of "Pioneers of France" included very important additions; and a short + time before his death he added to "The Old Régime" fifty pages, + under the title of "The Feudal Chiefs of Acadia." The New Library Edition + therefore includes each work in its final state as perfected by the historian. + The indexes have been entirely remade.</p> +<div class="center">LITTLE, BROWN, & CO., <span class="smcap">Publishers,</span><br /> + <span class="smcap">254 Washington Street. Boston.</span></div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of La Salle and the Discovery of the +Great West, by Francis Parkman + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LA SALLE *** + +***** This file should be named 40143-h.htm or 40143-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/1/4/40143/ + +Produced by Sharon Joiner, Christian Boissonnas, Charles +Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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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: La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West + France and England in North America + +Author: Francis Parkman + +Release Date: July 4, 2012 [EBook #40143] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LA SALLE *** + + + + +Produced by Sharon Joiner, Christian Boissonnas, Charles +Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + + +----------------------------------------------------------------+ + | Transcriber's Note: | + | | + | * Obvious punctuation and spelling errors repaired. | + | Original spelling and its variations were not harmonized. | + | | + | * Footnotes were moved to the ends of the chapters in which | + | they belonged and numbered in one continuous sequence. | + | The pagination in index entries which referred to these | + | footnotes was not changed to match their new locations | + + and is therefore incorrect. | + +----------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + +Francis Parkman's Works. + +NEW LIBRARY EDITION. + +Vol. III. + + + + + FRANCIS PARKMAN'S WORKS. + + New Library Edition. + + Pioneers of France in the New World 1 vol. + + The Jesuits in North America 1 vol. + + La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West 1 vol. + + The Old Regime in Canada 1 vol. + + Count Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV. 1 vol. + + A Half Century of Conflict 2 vols. + + Montcalm and Wolfe 2 vols. + + The Conspiracy of Pontiac and the Indian War after + the Conquest of Canada 2 vols. + + The Oregon Trail 1 vol. + + + + +[Illustration] + +_La Salle Presenting a Petition to Louis XIV._ + +Drawn by Adrien Moreau. + +La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, _Frontispiece_ + + + + + LA SALLE + AND THE + DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST. + + FRANCE AND ENGLAND IN + NORTH AMERICA. + + Part Third. + + BY + FRANCIS PARKMAN. + + BOSTON: + LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. + 1908. + + + Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1869, by + Francis Parkman, + In the Clerk's Office + of the + District Court of the District of Massachusetts. + + Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1879, by + Francis Parkman, + In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. + + _Copyright, 1897,_ + By Little, Brown, and Company. + + _Copyright, 1897,_ + By Grace P. Coffin and Katharine S. Coolidge. + + _Copyright, 1907,_ + By Grace P. Coffin. + + Printers + S. J. Parkhill & Co., Boston, U. S. A. + + +TO + +THE CLASS OF 1844, + +Harvard College, + +THIS BOOK IS CORDIALLY DEDICATED + +BY ONE OF THEIR NUMBER. + + + + +PREFACE OF THE ELEVENTH EDITION. + + +When the earlier editions of this book were +published, I was aware of the existence of a collection +of documents relating to La Salle, and +containing important material to which I had +not succeeded in gaining access. This collection +was in possession of M. Pierre Margry, director +of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies at +Paris, and was the result of more than thirty +years of research. With rare assiduity and zeal, +M. Margry had explored not only the vast depository +with which he has been officially connected +from youth, and of which he is now the +chief, but also the other public archives of +France, and many private collections in Paris +and the provinces. The object of his search +was to throw light on the career and achievements +of French explorers, and, above all, of La +Salle. A collection of extraordinary richness +grew gradually upon his hands. In the course +of my own inquiries, I owed much to his friendly +aid; but his collections, as a whole, remained +inaccessible, since he naturally wished to be the +first to make known the results of his labors. +An attempt to induce Congress to furnish him +with the means of printing documents so interesting +to American history was made in 1870 +and 1871, by Henry Harrisse, Esq., aided by the +American minister at Paris; but it unfortunately +failed. + +In the summer and autumn of 1872, I had +numerous interviews with M. Margry, and at his +desire undertook to try to induce some American +bookseller to publish the collection. On returning +to the United States, I accordingly made +an arrangement with Messrs. Little, Brown & +Co., of Boston, by which they agreed to print +the papers if a certain number of subscriptions +should first be obtained. The condition proved +very difficult; and it became clear that the best +hope of success lay in another appeal to Congress. +This was made in the following winter, +in conjunction with Hon. E. B. Washburne; +Colonel Charles Whittlesey, of Cleveland; O. H. +Marshall, Esq., of Buffalo; and other gentlemen +interested in early American history. The attempt +succeeded. Congress made an appropriation +for the purchase of five hundred copies of +the work, to be printed at Paris, under direction +of M. Margry; and the three volumes devoted +to La Salle are at length before the public. + +Of the papers contained in them which I had +not before examined, the most interesting are +the letters of La Salle, found in the original by +M. Margry, among the immense accumulations +of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies and +the Bibliotheque Nationale. The narrative of +La Salle's companion, Joutel, far more copious +than the abstract printed in 1713, under the +title of "Journal Historique," also deserves +special mention. These, with other fresh material +in these three volumes, while they add new +facts and throw new light on the character of +La Salle, confirm nearly every statement made +in the first edition of the Discovery of the Great +West. The only exception of consequence relates +to the causes of La Salle's failure to find +the mouth of the Mississippi in 1684, and to the +conduct, on that occasion, of the naval commander, +Beaujeu. + +This edition is revised throughout, and in part +rewritten with large additions. A map of the +country traversed by the explorers is also added. +The name of La Salle is placed on the titlepage, +as seems to be demanded by his increased prominence +in the narrative of which he is the central +figure. + +Boston, 10 December, 1878. + + * * * * * + +Note.--The title of M. Margry's printed collection is "Decouvertes +et Etablissements des Francais dans l'Ouest et dans le Sud +de l'Amerique Septentrionale (1614-1754), Memoires et Documents +originaux." I., II., III. Besides the three volumes relating to La +Salle, there will be two others, relating to other explorers. In +accordance with the agreement with Congress, an independent edition +will appear in France, with an introduction setting forth the +circumstances of the publication. + + + + +PREFACE OF THE FIRST EDITION. + + +The discovery of the "Great West," or the +valleys of the Mississippi and the Lakes, is a +portion of our history hitherto very obscure. +Those magnificent regions were revealed to the +world through a series of daring enterprises, +of which the motives and even the incidents +have been but partially and superficially known. +The chief actor in them wrote much, but printed +nothing; and the published writings of his associates +stand wofully in need of interpretation +from the unpublished documents which exist, +but which have not heretofore been used as +material for history. + +This volume attempts to supply the defect. +Of the large amount of wholly new material +employed in it, by far the greater part is drawn +from the various public archives of France, and +the rest from private sources. The discovery of +many of these documents is due to the indefatigable +research of M. Pierre Margry, assistant +director of the Archives of the Marine and Colonies +at Paris, whose labors as an investigator of +the maritime and colonial history of France can +be appreciated only by those who have seen their +results. In the department of American colonial +history, these results have been invaluable; +for, besides several private collections made by +him, he rendered important service in the collection +of the French portion of the Brodhead documents, +selected and arranged the two great +series of colonial papers ordered by the Canadian +government, and prepared with vast labor analytical +indexes of these and of supplementary +documents in the French archives, as well as a +copious index of the mass of papers relating to +Louisiana. It is to be hoped that the valuable +publications on the maritime history of France +which have appeared from his pen are an earnest +of more extended contributions in future. + +The late President Sparks, some time after the +publication of his Life of La Salle, caused a +collection to be made of documents relating to +that explorer, with the intention of incorporating +them in a future edition. This intention +was never carried into effect, and the documents +were never used. With the liberality which +always distinguished him, he placed them at my +disposal, and this privilege has been kindly continued +by Mrs. Sparks. + +Abbe Faillon, the learned author of "La Colonie +Francaise en Canada," has sent me copies +of various documents found by him, including +family papers of La Salle. Among others who +in various ways have aided my inquiries are Dr. +John Paul, of Ottawa, Ill.; Count Adolphe de +Circourt, and M. Jules Marcou, of Paris; M. A. +Gerin Lajoie, Assistant Librarian of the Canadian +Parliament; M. J. M. Le Moine, of Quebec; +General Dix, Minister of the United States +at the Court of France; O. H. Marshall, of Buffalo; +J. G. Shea, of New York; Buckingham +Smith, of St. Augustine; and Colonel Thomas +Aspinwall, of Boston. + +The smaller map contained in the book is a +portion of the manuscript map of Franquelin, of +which an account will be found in the Appendix. + +The next volume of the series will be devoted +to the efforts of Monarchy and Feudalism under +Louis XIV. to establish a permanent power on +this continent, and to the stormy career of Louis +de Buade, Count of Frontenac. + +Boston, 16 September, 1869. + + + + + CONTENTS. + + + Page + + INTRODUCTION 3 + + + CHAPTER I. + + 1643-1669. + + CAVELIER DE LA SALLE. + + The Youth of La Salle: his Connection with the Jesuits; he goes to + Canada; his Character; his Schemes; his Seigniory at La Chine; his + Expedition in Search of a Western Passage to India. 7 + + + CHAPTER II. + + 1669-1671. + + LA SALLE AND THE SULPITIANS. + + The French in Western New York.--Louis Joliet.--The Sulpitians on Lake + Erie; at Detroit; at Saut Ste. Marie.--The Mystery of La Salle: he + discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he reach the 19 + Mississippi? + + + CHAPTER III. + + 1670-1672. + + THE JESUITS ON THE LAKES. + + The Old Missions and the New.--A Change of Spirit.--Lake Superior and + the Copper-mines.--Ste. Marie.--La Pointe.--Michilimackinac.--Jesuits + on Lake Michigan.--Allouez and Dablon.--The Jesuit Fur-trade. 36 + + + CHAPTER IV. + + 1667-1672. + + FRANCE TAKES POSSESSION OF THE WEST. + + Talon.--Saint-Lusson.--Perrot.--The Ceremony at Saut Ste. Marie.--The + Speech of Allouez.--Count Frontenac. 48 + + + CHAPTER V. + + 1672-1675. + + THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI. + + Joliet sent to find the Mississippi.--Jacques + Marquette.--Departure.--Green Bay.--The Wisconsin.--The + Mississippi.--Indians.--Manitous.--The Arkansas.--The + Illinois.--Joliet's Misfortune.--Marquette at Chicago: his Illness; + his Death. 57 + + + CHAPTER VI. + + 1673-1678. + + LA SALLE AND FRONTENAC. + + Objects of La Salle.--Frontenac favors him.--Projects of + Frontenac.--Cataraqui.--Frontenac on Lake Ontario.--Fort + Frontenac.--La Salle and Fenelon.--Success of La Salle: + his Enemies. 83 + + + CHAPTER VII. + + 1678. + + PARTY STRIFE. + + La Salle and his Reporter.--Jesuit Ascendency.--The Missions and the + Fur-trade.--Female Inquisitors.--Plots against La Salle: his Brother + the Priest.--Intrigues of the Jesuits.--La Salle poisoned: he + exculpates the Jesuits.--Renewed Intrigues. 106 + + + CHAPTER VIII. + + 1677, 1678. + + THE GRAND ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Fort Frontenac.--La Salle at Court: his + Memorial.--Approval of the King.--Money and Means.--Henri de + Tonty.--Return to Canada. 120 + + + CHAPTER IX. + + 1678-1679. + + LA SALLE AT NIAGARA. + + Father Louis Hennepin: his Past Life; his + Character.--Embarkation.--Niagara Falls.--Indian Jealousy.--La Motte + and the Senecas.--A Disaster.--La Salle and his Followers. 131 + + + CHAPTER X. + + 1679. + + THE LAUNCH OF THE "GRIFFIN." + + The Niagara Portage.--A Vessel on the Stocks.--Suffering and + Discontent.--La Salle's Winter Journey.--The Vessel launched.--Fresh + Disasters. 144 + + + CHAPTER XI. + + 1679. + + LA SALLE ON THE UPPER LAKES. + + The Voyage of the "Griffin."--Detroit.--A Storm.--St. Ignace of + Michilimackinac.--Rivals and Enemies.--Lake Michigan.--Hardships.--A + Threatened Fight.--Fort Miami.--Tonty's Misfortunes.--Forebodings. 151 + + + CHAPTER XII. + + 1679, 1680. + + LA SALLE ON THE ILLINOIS. + + The St. Joseph.--Adventure of La Salle.--The Prairies.--Famine.--The + Great Town of the Illinois.--Indians.--Intrigues.--Difficulties.-- + Policy of La Salle.--Desertion.--Another Attempt to poison + La Salle. 164 + + + CHAPTER XIII. + + 1680. + + FORT CREVECOE]UR. + + Building of the Fort.--Loss of the "Griffin."--A Bold + Resolution.--Another Vessel.--Hennepin sent to the + Mississippi.--Departure of La Salle. 180 + + + CHAPTER XIV. + + 1680. + + HARDIHOOD OF LA SALLE. + + The Winter Journey.--The Deserted Town.--Starved Rock.--Lake + Michigan.--The Wilderness.--War Parties.--La Salle's Men give + out.--Ill Tidings.--Mutiny.--Chastisement of the Mutineers. 189 + + + CHAPTER XV. + + 1680. + + INDIAN CONQUERORS. + + The Enterprise renewed.--Attempt to rescue Tonty.--Buffalo.--A + Frightful Discovery.--Iroquois Fury.--The Ruined Town.--A Night + of Horror.--Traces of the Invaders.--No News of Tonty. 202 + + + CHAPTER XVI. + + 1680. + + TONTY AND THE IROQUOIS. + + The Deserters.--The Iroquois War.--The Great Town of the + Illinois.--The Alarm.--Onset of the Iroquois.--Peril of + Tonty.--A Treacherous Truce.--Intrepidity of Tonty.--Murder + of Ribourde.--War upon the Dead. 216 + + + CHAPTER XVII. + + 1680. + + THE ADVENTURES OF HENNEPIN. + + Hennepin an Impostor: his Pretended Discovery; his Actual Discovery; + captured by the Sioux.--The Upper Mississippi. 242 + + + CHAPTER XVIII. + + 1680, 1681. + + HENNEPIN AMONG THE SIOUX. + + Signs of Danger.--Adoption.--Hennepin and his Indian Relatives.--The + Hunting Party.--The Sioux Camp.--Falls of St. Anthony.--A Vagabond + Friar: his Adventures on the Mississippi.--Greysolon Du Lhut.--Return + to Civilization. 259 + + + CHAPTER XIX. + + 1681. + + LA SALLE BEGINS ANEW. + + His Constancy; his Plans; his Savage Allies; he becomes + Snow-blind.--Negotiations.--Grand Council.--La Salle's + Oratory.--Meeting with Tonty.--Preparation.--Departure. 283 + + + CHAPTER XX. + + 1681-1682. + + SUCCESS OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--The Chicago Portage.--Descent of the Mississippi.--The + Lost Hunter.--The Arkansas.--The Taensas.--The Natchez.--Hostility.--The + Mouth of the Mississippi.--Louis XIV. proclaimed Sovereign of the Great + West. 295 + + + CHAPTER XXI. + + 1682, 1683. + + ST. LOUIS OF THE ILLINOIS. + + Louisiana.--Illness of La Salle: his Colony on the Illinois.--Fort + St. Louis.--Recall of Frontenac.--Le Febvre de la Barre.--Critical + Position of La Salle.--Hostility of the New Governor.--Triumph of + the Adverse Faction.--La Salle sails for France. 309 + + + CHAPTER XXII. + + 1680-1683. + + LA SALLE PAINTED BY HIMSELF. + + Difficulty of knowing him; his Detractors; his Letters; vexations of + his Position; his Unfitness for Trade; risks of Correspondence; his + Reported Marriage; alleged Ostentation; motives of Action; charges + of Harshness; intrigues against him; unpopular Manners; a Strange + Confession; his Strength and his Weakness; contrasts of his + Character. 328 + + + CHAPTER XXIII. + + 1684. + + A NEW ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Court: his Proposals.--Occupation of Louisiana.--Invasion + of Mexico.--Royal Favor.--Preparation.--A Divided Command.--Beaujeu + and La Salle.--Mental Condition of La Salle: his Farewell to his + Mother. 343 + + + CHAPTER XXIV. + + 1684, 1685. + + THE VOYAGE. + + Disputes with Beaujeu.--St. Domingo.--La Salle attacked with + Fever: his Desperate Condition.--The Gulf of Mexico.--A Vain Search + and a Fatal Error. 366 + + + CHAPTER XXV. + + 1685. + + LA SALLE IN TEXAS. + + A Party of Exploration.--Wreck of the "Aimable."--Landing of the + Colonists.--A Forlorn Position.--Indian Neighbors.--Friendly Advances + of Beaujeu: his Departure.--A Fatal Discovery. 378 + + + CHAPTER XXVI. + + 1685-1687. + + ST. LOUIS OF TEXAS. + + The Fort.--Misery and Dejection.--Energy of La Salle: his Journey of + Exploration.--Adventures and Accidents.--The Buffalo.--Duhaut.--Indian + Massacre.--Return of La Salle.--A New Calamity.--A Desperate + Resolution.--Departure for Canada.--Wreck of the + "Belle."--Marriage.--Sedition.--Adventures of La Salle's Party.--The + Cenis.--The Camanches.--The Only Hope.--The Last Farewell. 391 + + + CHAPTER XXVII. + + 1687. + + ASSASSINATION OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--Prairie Travelling.--A Hunters' Quarrel.--The Murder + of Moranget.--The Conspiracy.--Death of La Salle: his Character. 420 + + + CHAPTER XXVIII. + + 1687, 1688. + + THE INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY. + + Triumph of the Murderers.--Danger of Joutel.--Joutel among the + Cenis.--White Savages.--Insolence of Duhaut and his + Accomplices.--Murder of Duhaut and Liotot.--Hiens, the + Buccaneer.--Joutel and his Party: their Escape; they reach the + Arkansas.--Bravery and Devotion of Tonty.--The Fugitives reach + the Illinois.--Unworthy Conduct of Cavelier.--He and his Companions + return to France. 435 + + + CHAPTER XXIX. + + 1688-1689. + + FATE OF THE TEXAN COLONY. + + Tonty attempts to rescue the Colonists: his Difficulties and + Hardships.--Spanish Hostility.--Expedition of Alonzo de Leon: he + reaches Fort St. Louis.--A Scene of Havoc.--Destruction of the + French.--The End. 464 + + + + + APPENDIX. + + I. Early Unpublished Maps of the Mississippi and the Great + Lakes 475 + + + II. The Eldorado of Mathieu Sagean 485 + + + + + INDEX 491 + +[Illustration: + +COUNTRIES +traversed by +MARQUETTE, HENNEPIN +AND +LA SALLE. + +G.W. Boynton, Sc.] + + + + +LA SALLE +AND THE +DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST. + + + + +INTRODUCTION. + + +The Spaniards discovered the Mississippi. De +Soto was buried beneath its waters; and it was down +its muddy current that his followers fled from the +Eldorado of their dreams, transformed to a wilderness +of misery and death. The discovery was never used, +and was well-nigh forgotten. On early Spanish +maps, the Mississippi is often indistinguishable from +other affluents of the Gulf. A century passed after +De Soto's journeyings in the South, before a French +explorer reached a northern tributary of the great +river. + +This was Jean Nicollet, interpreter at Three Rivers on the St. Lawrence. +He had been some twenty years in Canada, had lived among the savage +Algonquins of Allumette Island, and spent eight or nine years among the +Nipissings, on the lake which bears their name. Here he became an Indian +in all his habits, but remained, nevertheless, a zealous Catholic, and +returned to civilization at last because he could not live without the +sacraments. Strange stories were current among the Nipissings of a +people without hair or beard, who came from the West to trade with a +tribe beyond the Great Lakes. Who could doubt that these strangers were +Chinese or Japanese? Such tales may well have excited Nicollet's +curiosity; and when, in 1635, or possibly in 1638, he was sent as an +ambassador to the tribe in question, he would not have been surprised if +on arriving he had found a party of mandarins among them. Perhaps it was +with a view to such a contingency that he provided himself, as a dress +of ceremony, with a robe of Chinese damask embroidered with birds and +flowers. The tribe to which he was sent was that of the Winnebagoes, +living near the head of the Green Bay of Lake Michigan. They had come to +blows with the Hurons, allies of the French; and Nicollet was charged to +negotiate a peace. When he approached the Winnebago town, he sent one of +his Indian attendants to announce his coming, put on his robe of damask, +and advanced to meet the expectant crowd with a pistol in each hand. The +squaws and children fled, screaming that it was a manito, or spirit, +armed with thunder and lightning; but the chiefs and warriors regaled +him with so bountiful a hospitality that a hundred and twenty beavers +were devoured at a single feast. From the Winnebagoes, he passed +westward, ascended Fox River, crossed to the Wisconsin, and descended +it so far that, as he reported on his return, in three days more he +would have reached the sea. The truth seems to be that he mistook the +meaning of his Indian guides, and that the "great water" to which he was +so near was not the sea, but the Mississippi. + +It has been affirmed that one Colonel Wood, of Virginia, reached a +branch of the Mississippi as early as the year 1654, and that about 1670 +a certain Captain Bolton penetrated to the river itself. Neither +statement is sustained by sufficient evidence. It is further affirmed +that, in 1678, a party from New England crossed the Mississippi, reached +New Mexico, and, returning, reported their discoveries to the +authorities of Boston,--a story without proof or probability. Meanwhile, +French Jesuits and fur-traders pushed deeper and deeper into the +wilderness of the northern lakes. In 1641, Jogues and Raymbault preached +the Faith to a concourse of Indians at the outlet of Lake Superior. Then +came the havoc and desolation of the Iroquois war, and for years farther +exploration was arrested. In 1658-59 Pierre Esprit Radisson, a Frenchman +of St. Malo, and his brother-in-law, Medard Chouart des Groseilliers, +penetrated the regions beyond Lake Superior, and roamed westward till, +as Radisson declares, they reached what was called the Forked River, +"because it has two branches, the one towards the west, the other +towards the south, which, we believe, runs towards Mexico,"--which seems +to point to the Mississippi and its great confluent the Missouri. Two +years later, the aged Jesuit Menard attempted to plant a mission on the +southern shore of Lake Superior, but perished in the forest by famine or +the tomahawk. Allouez succeeded him, explored a part of Lake Superior, +and heard, in his turn, of the Sioux and their great river the +"Messipi." More and more, the thoughts of the Jesuits--and not of the +Jesuits alone--dwelt on this mysterious stream. Through what regions did +it flow; and whither would it lead them,--to the South Sea or the "Sea +of Virginia;" to Mexico, Japan, or China? The problem was soon to be +solved, and the mystery revealed. + + + + +CHAPTER I + +1643-1669. + +CAVELIER DE LA SALLE. + + The Youth of La Salle: his Connection with the Jesuits; he goes to + Canada; his Character; his Schemes; his Seigniory at La Chine; his + Expedition in Search of a Western Passage to India. + + +Among the burghers of Rouen was the old and rich family of the +Caveliers. Though citizens and not nobles, some of their connections +held high diplomatic posts and honorable employments at Court. They were +destined to find a better claim to distinction. In 1643 was born at +Rouen Robert Cavelier, better known by the designation of La Salle.[1] +His father Jean and his uncle Henri were wealthy merchants, living more +like nobles than like burghers; and the boy received an education +answering to the marked traits of intellect and character which he soon +began to display. He showed an inclination for the exact sciences, and +especially for the mathematics, in which he made great proficiency. At +an early age, it is said, he became connected with the Jesuits; and, +though doubt has been expressed of the statement, it is probably +true.[2] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND THE JESUITS.] + +La Salle was always an earnest Catholic; and yet, judging by the +qualities which his after-life evinced, he was not very liable to +religious enthusiasm. It is nevertheless clear that the Society of Jesus +may have had a powerful attraction for his youthful imagination. This +great organization, so complicated yet so harmonious, a mighty machine +moved from the centre by a single hand, was an image of regulated power, +full of fascination for a mind like his. But if it was likely that he +would be drawn into it, it was no less likely that he would soon wish to +escape. To find himself not at the centre of power, but at the +circumference; not the mover, but the moved; the passive instrument of +another's will, taught to walk in prescribed paths, to renounce his +individuality and become a component atom of a vast whole,--would have +been intolerable to him. Nature had shaped him for other uses than to +teach a class of boys on the benches of a Jesuit school. Nor, on his +part, was he likely to please his directors; for, self-controlled and +self-contained as he was, he was far too intractable a subject to serve +their turn. A youth whose calm exterior hid an inexhaustible fund of +pride; whose inflexible purposes, nursed in secret, the confessional and +the "manifestation of conscience" could hardly drag to the light; whose +strong personality would not yield to the shaping hand; and who, by a +necessity of his nature, could obey no initiative but his own,--was not +after the model that Loyola had commended to his followers. + +La Salle left the Jesuits, parting with them, it is said, on good terms, +and with a reputation of excellent acquirements and unimpeachable +morals. This last is very credible. The cravings of a deep ambition, the +hunger of an insatiable intellect, the intense longing for action and +achievement, subdued in him all other passions; and in his faults the +love of pleasure had no part. He had an elder brother in Canada, the +Abbe Jean Cavelier, a priest of St. Sulpice. Apparently, it was this +that shaped his destinies. His connection with the Jesuits had deprived +him, under the French law, of the inheritance of his father, who had +died not long before. An allowance was made to him of three or (as is +elsewhere stated) four hundred livres a year, the capital of which was +paid over to him; and with this pittance he sailed for Canada, to seek +his fortune, in the spring of 1666.[3] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AT MONTREAL.] + +Next, we find him at Montreal. In another volume, we have seen how an +association of enthusiastic devotees had made a settlement at this +place.[4] Having in some measure accomplished its work, it was now +dissolved; and the corporation of priests, styled the Seminary of St. +Sulpice, which had taken a prominent part in the enterprise, and, +indeed, had been created with a view to it, was now the proprietor and +the feudal lord of Montreal. It was destined to retain its seignorial +rights until the abolition of the feudal tenures of Canada in our own +day, and it still holds vast possessions in the city and island. These +worthy ecclesiastics, models of a discreet and sober conservatism, were +holding a post with which a band of veteran soldiers or warlike +frontiersmen would have been better matched. Montreal was perhaps the +most dangerous place in Canada. In time of war, which might have been +called the normal condition of the colony, it was exposed by its +position to incessant inroads of the Iroquois, or Five Nations, of New +York; and no man could venture into the forests or the fields without +bearing his life in his hand. The savage confederates had just received +a sharp chastisement at the hands of Courcelle, the governor; and the +result was a treaty of peace which might at any moment be broken, but +which was an inexpressible relief while it lasted. + +The priests of St. Sulpice were granting out their lands, on very easy +terms, to settlers. They wished to extend a thin line of settlements +along the front of their island, to form a sort of outpost, from which +an alarm could be given on any descent of the Iroquois. La Salle was the +man for such a purpose. Had the priests understood him,--which they +evidently did not, for some of them suspected him of levity, the last +foible with which he could be charged,--had they understood him, they +would have seen in him a young man in whom the fire of youth glowed not +the less ardently for the veil of reserve that covered it; who would +shrink from no danger, but would not court it in bravado; and who would +cling with an invincible tenacity of gripe to any purpose which he might +espouse. There is good reason to think that he had come to Canada with +purposes already conceived, and that he was ready to avail himself of +any stepping-stone which might help to realize them. Queylus, Superior +of the Seminary, made him a generous offer; and he accepted it. This +was the gratuitous grant of a large tract of land at the place now +called La Chine, above the great rapids of the same name, and eight or +nine miles from Montreal. On one hand, the place was greatly exposed to +attack; and, on the other, it was favorably situated for the fur-trade. +La Salle and his successors became its feudal proprietors, on the sole +condition of delivering to the Seminary, on every change of ownership, a +medal of fine silver, weighing one mark.[5] He entered on the +improvement of his new domain with what means he could command, and +began to grant out his land to such settlers as would join him. + +Approaching the shore where the city of Montreal now stands, one would +have seen a row of small compact dwellings, extending along a narrow +street, parallel to the river, and then, as now, called St. Paul Street. +On a hill at the right stood the windmill of the seigniors, built of +stone, and pierced with loopholes to serve, in time of need, as a place +of defence. On the left, in an angle formed by the junction of a rivulet +with the St. Lawrence, was a square bastioned fort of stone. Here lived +the military governor, appointed by the Seminary, and commanding a few +soldiers of the regiment of Carignan. In front, on the line of the +street, were the enclosure and buildings of the Seminary, and, nearly +adjoining them, those of the Hotel-Dieu, or Hospital, both provided for +defence in case of an Indian attack. In the hospital enclosure was a +small church, opening on the street, and, in the absence of any other, +serving for the whole settlement.[6] + +Landing, passing the fort, and walking southward along the shore, one +would soon have left the rough clearings, and entered the primeval +forest. Here, mile after mile, he would have journeyed on in solitude, +when the hoarse roar of the rapids, foaming in fury on his left, would +have reached his listening ear; and at length, after a walk of some +three hours, he would have found the rude beginnings of a settlement. It +was where the St. Lawrence widens into the broad expanse called the Lake +of St. Louis. Here, La Salle had traced out the circuit of a palisaded +village, and assigned to each settler half an arpent, or about the third +of an acre, within the enclosure, for which he was to render to the +young seignior a yearly acknowledgment of three capons, besides six +deniers--that is, half a sou--in money. To each was assigned, moreover, +sixty arpents of land beyond the limits of the village, with the +perpetual rent of half a sou for each arpent. He also set apart a +common, two hundred arpents in extent, for the use of the settlers, on +condition of the payment by each of five sous a year. He reserved four +hundred and twenty arpents for his own personal domain, and on this he +began to clear the ground and erect buildings. Similar to this were the +beginnings of all the Canadian seigniories formed at this troubled +period.[7] + +[Sidenote: LA CHINE.] + +That La Salle came to Canada with objects distinctly in view, is +probable from the fact that he at once began to study the Indian +languages,--and with such success that he is said, within two or three +years, to have mastered the Iroquois and seven or eight other languages +and dialects.[8] From the shore of his seigniory, he could gaze westward +over the broad breast of the Lake of St. Louis, bounded by the dim +forests of Chateauguay and Beauharnois; but his thoughts flew far +beyond, across the wild and lonely world that stretched towards the +sunset. Like Champlain, and all the early explorers, he dreamed of a +passage to the South Sea, and a new road for commerce to the riches of +China and Japan. Indians often came to his secluded settlement; and, on +one occasion, he was visited by a band of the Seneca Iroquois, not long +before the scourge of the colony, but now, in virtue of the treaty, +wearing the semblance of friendship. The visitors spent the winter with +him, and told him of a river called the Ohio, rising in their country, +and flowing into the sea, but at such a distance that its mouth could +only be reached after a journey of eight or nine months. Evidently, the +Ohio and the Mississippi are here merged into one.[9] In accordance with +geographical views then prevalent, he conceived that this great river +must needs flow into the "Vermilion Sea;" that is, the Gulf of +California. If so, it would give him what he sought, a western passage +to China; while, in any case, the populous Indian tribes said to inhabit +its banks might be made a source of great commercial profit. + +[Sidenote: SCHEMES OF DISCOVERY.] + +La Salle's imagination took fire. His resolution was soon formed; and he +descended the St. Lawrence to Quebec, to gain the countenance of the +governor for his intended exploration. Few men were more skilled than he +in the art of clear and plausible statement. Both the governor Courcelle +and the intendant Talon were readily won over to his plan; for which, +however, they seem to have given him no more substantial aid than that +of the governor's letters patent authorizing the enterprise.[10] The +cost was to be his own; and he had no money, having spent it all on his +seigniory. He therefore proposed that the Seminary, which had given it +to him, should buy it back again, with such improvements as he had made. +Queylus, the Superior, being favorably disposed towards him, consented, +and bought of him the greater part; while La Salle sold the remainder, +including the clearings, to one Jean Milot, an iron-monger, for +twenty-eight hundred livres.[11] With this he bought four canoes, with +the necessary supplies, and hired fourteen men. + +Meanwhile, the Seminary itself was preparing a similar enterprise. The +Jesuits at this time not only held an ascendency over the other +ecclesiastics in Canada, but exercised an inordinate influence on the +civil government. The Seminary priests of Montreal were jealous of these +powerful rivals, and eager to emulate their zeal in the saving of souls +and the conquering of new domains for the Faith. Under this impulse, +they had, three years before, established a mission at Quinte, on the +north shore of Lake Ontario, in charge of two of their number, one of +whom was the Abbe Fenelon, elder brother of the celebrated Archbishop of +Cambray. Another of them, Dollier de Casson, had spent the winter in a +hunting-camp of the Nipissings, where an Indian prisoner, captured in +the Northwest, told him of populous tribes of that quarter living in +heathenish darkness. On this, the Seminary priests resolved to essay +their conversion; and an expedition, to be directed by Dollier, was +fitted out to this end. + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE.] + +He was not ill suited to the purpose. He had been a soldier in his +youth, and had fought valiantly as an officer of cavalry under Turenne. +He was a man of great courage; of a tall, commanding person; and of +uncommon bodily strength, which he had notably proved in the campaign of +Courcelle against the Iroquois, three years before.[12] On going to +Quebec to procure the necessary outfit, he was urged by Courcelle to +modify his plans so far as to act in concert with La Salle in exploring +the mystery of the great unknown river of the West. Dollier and his +brother priests consented. One of them, Galinee, was joined with him as +a colleague, because he was skilled in surveying, and could make a map +of their route. Three canoes were procured, and seven hired men +completed the party. It was determined that La Salle's expedition and +that of the Seminary should be combined in one,--an arrangement ill +suited to the character of the young explorer, who was unfit for any +enterprise of which he was not the undisputed chief. + +Midsummer was near, and there was no time to lose. Yet the moment was +most unpropitious, for a Seneca chief had lately been murdered by three +scoundrel soldiers of the fort of Montreal; and, while they were +undergoing their trial, it became known that three other Frenchmen had +treacherously put to death several Iroquois of the Oneida tribe, in +order to get possession of their furs. The whole colony trembled in +expectation of a new outbreak of the war. Happily, the event proved +otherwise. The authors of the last murder escaped; but the three +soldiers were shot at Montreal, in presence of a considerable number of +the Iroquois, who declared themselves satisfied with the atonement; and +on this same day, the sixth of July, the adventurers began their voyage. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] The following is the _acte de naissance_, discovered by Margry in +the _registres de l'etat civil_, Paroisse St. Herbland, Rouen: "Le +vingt-deuxieme jour de novembre, 1643, a ete baptise Robert Cavelier, +fils de honorable homme Jean Cavelier et de Catherine Geest; ses parrain +et marraine honorables personnes Nicolas Geest et Marguerite Morice." + +La Salle's name in full was Rene-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle. La +Salle was the name of an estate near Rouen, belonging to the Caveliers. +The wealthy French burghers often distinguished the various members of +their families by designations borrowed from landed estates. Thus, +Francois Marie Arouet, son of an ex-notary, received the name of +Voltaire, which he made famous. + +[2] Margry, after investigations at Rouen, is satisfied of its truth +(_Journal General de l'Instruction Publique_, xxxi. 571.) Family papers +of the Caveliers, examined by the Abbe Faillon, and copies of some of +which he has sent to me, lead to the same conclusion. We shall find +several allusions hereafter to La Salle's having in his youth taught in +a school, which, in his position, could only have been in connection +with some religious community. The doubts alluded to have proceeded from +the failure of Father Felix Martin, S. J., to find the name of La Salle +on the list of novices. If he had looked for the name of Robert +Cavelier, he would probably have found it. The companion of La Salle, +Hennepin, is very explicit with regard to this connection with the +Jesuits, a point on which he had no motive for falsehood. + +[3] It does not appear what vows La Salle had taken. By a recent +ordinance (1666), persons entering religious orders could not take the +final vows before the age of twenty-five. By the family papers above +mentioned, it appears, however, that he had brought himself under the +operation of the law, which debarred those who, having entered religious +orders, afterwards withdrew, from claiming the inheritance of relatives +who had died after their entrance. + +[4] The Jesuits in North America, chap. xv. + +[5] _Transport de la Seigneurie de St. Sulpice_, cited by Faillon. La +Salle called his new domain as above. Two or three years later, it +received the name of La Chine, for a reason which will appear. + +[6] A detailed plan of Montreal at this time is preserved in the +Archives de l'Empire, and has been reproduced by Faillon. There is +another, a few years later, and still more minute, of which a fac-simile +will be found in the Library of the Canadian Parliament. + +[7] The above particulars have been unearthed by the indefatigable Abbe +Faillon. Some of La Salle's grants are still preserved in the ancient +records of Montreal. + +[8] _Papiers de Famille._ He is said to have made several journeys into +the forests, towards the North, in the years 1667 and 1668, and to have +satisfied himself that little could be hoped from explorations in that +direction. + +[9] According to Dollier de Casson, who had good opportunities of +knowing, the Iroquois always called the Mississippi the Ohio, while the +Algonquins gave it its present name. + +[10] _Patoulet a Colbert, 11 Nov., 1669._ + +[11] _Cession de la Seigneurie; Contrat de Vente_ (Margry, i. 103, 104). + +[12] He was the author of the very curious and valuable _Histoire de +Montreal_, preserved in the Bibliotheque Mazarine, of which a copy is in +my possession. The Historical Society of Montreal has recently resolved +to print it. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +1669-1671. + +LA SALLE AND THE SULPITIANS. + + The French in Western New York.--Louis Joliet.--The Sulpitians on + Lake Erie; at Detroit; at Saut Ste. Marie.--The Mystery of La + Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he + reach the Mississippi? + + +La Chine was the starting-point; and the combined parties, in all +twenty-four men with seven canoes, embarked on the Lake of St. Louis. +With them were two other canoes, bearing the party of Senecas who had +wintered at La Salle's settlement, and who were now to act as guides. +Father Galinee recounts the journey. He was no woodsman: the river, the +forests, the rapids, were all new to him, and he dilates on them with +the minuteness of a novice. Above all, he admired the Indian birch +canoes. "If God," he says, "grants me the grace of returning to France, +I shall try to carry one with me." Then he describes the bivouac: "Your +lodging is as extraordinary as your vessels; for, after paddling or +carrying the canoes all day, you find mother earth ready to receive your +wearied body. If the weather is fair, you make a fire and lie down to +sleep without further trouble; but if it rains, you must peel bark from +the trees, and make a shed by laying it on a frame of sticks. As for +your food, it is enough to make you burn all the cookery books that ever +were written; for in the woods of Canada one finds means to live well +without bread, wine, salt, pepper, or spice. The ordinary food is Indian +corn, or Turkey wheat as they call it in France, which is crushed +between two stones and boiled, seasoning it with meat or fish, when you +can get them. This sort of life seemed so strange to us that we all felt +the effects of it; and before we were a hundred leagues from Montreal, +not one of us was free from some malady or other. At last, after all our +misery, on the second of August, we discovered Lake Ontario, like a +great sea with no land beyond it." + +[Sidenote: THE SENECA VILLAGES.] + +Thirty-five days after leaving La Chine, they reached Irondequoit Bay, +on the south side of the lake. Here they were met by a number of Seneca +Indians, who professed friendship and invited them to their villages, +fifteen or twenty miles distant. As this was on their way to the upper +waters of the Ohio, and as they hoped to find guides at the villages to +conduct them, they accepted the invitation. Dollier, with most of the +men, remained to guard the canoes; while La Salle, with Galinee and +eight other Frenchmen, accompanied by a troop of Indians, set out on the +morning of the twelfth, and reached the principal village before +evening. It stood on a hill, in the midst of a clearing nearly two +leagues in compass.[13] A rude stockade surrounded it; and as the +visitors drew near they saw a band of old men seated on the grass, +waiting to receive them. One of these veterans, so feeble with age that +he could hardly stand, made them an harangue, in which he declared that +the Senecas were their brothers, and invited them to enter the village. +They did so, surrounded by a crowd of savages, and presently found +themselves in the midst of a disorderly cluster of large but filthy +abodes of bark, about a hundred and fifty in number, the most capacious +of which was assigned to their use. Here they made their quarters, and +were soon overwhelmed by Seneca hospitality. Children brought them +pumpkins and berries from the woods; and boy messengers came to summon +them to endless feasts, where they were regaled with the flesh of dogs +and with boiled maize seasoned with oil pressed from nuts and the seed +of sunflowers. + +La Salle had flattered himself that he knew enough Iroquois to hold +communication with the Senecas; but he failed completely in the attempt. +The priests had a Dutch interpreter, who spoke Iroquois fluently, but +knew so little French, and was withal so obstinate, that he proved +useless; so that it was necessary to employ a man in the service of the +Jesuit Fremin, whose mission was at this village. What the party needed +was a guide to conduct them to the Ohio; and soon after their arrival a +party of warriors appeared, with a young prisoner belonging to one of +the tribes of that region. Galinee wanted to beg or buy him from his +captors; but the Senecas had other intentions. "I saw," writes the +priest, "the most miserable spectacle I ever beheld in my life." It was +the prisoner tied to a stake and tortured for six hours with diabolical +ingenuity, while the crowd danced and yelled with delight, and the +chiefs and elders sat in a row smoking their pipes and watching the +contortions of the victim with an air of serene enjoyment. The body was +at last cut up and eaten, and in the evening the whole population +occupied themselves in scaring away the angry ghost by beating with +sticks against the bark sides of the lodges. + +La Salle and his companions began to fear for their own safety. Some of +their hosts wished to kill them in revenge for the chief murdered near +Montreal; and as these and others were at times in a frenzy of +drunkenness, the position of the French became critical. They suspected +that means had been used to prejudice the Senecas against them. Not only +could they get no guides, but they were told that if they went to the +Ohio the tribes of those parts would infallibly kill them. Their Dutch +interpreter became disheartened and unmanageable, and, after staying a +month at the village, the hope of getting farther on their way seemed +less than ever. Their plan, it was clear, must be changed; and an Indian +from Otinawatawa, a kind of Iroquois colony at the head of Lake +Ontario, offered to guide them to his village and show them a better way +to the Ohio. They left the Senecas, coasted the south shore of the lake, +passed the mouth of the Niagara, where they heard the distant roar of +the cataract, and on the twenty-fourth of September reached Otinawatawa, +which was a few miles north of the present town of Hamilton. The +inhabitants proved friendly, and La Salle received the welcome present +of a Shawanoe prisoner, who told them that the Ohio could be reached in +six weeks, and that he would guide them to it. Delighted at this good +fortune, they were about to set out; when they heard, to their +astonishment, of the arrival of two other Frenchmen at a neighboring +village. + +[Sidenote: LOUIS JOLIET.] + +One of the strangers was destined to hold a conspicuous place in the +history of western discovery. This was Louis Joliet, a young man of +about the age of La Salle. Like him, he had studied for the priesthood; +but the world and the wilderness had conquered his early inclinations, +and changed him to an active and adventurous fur-trader. Talon had sent +him to discover and explore the copper-mines of Lake Superior. He had +failed in the attempt, and was now returning. His Indian guide, afraid +of passing the Niagara portage lest he should meet enemies, had led him +from Lake Erie, by way of Grand River, towards the head of Lake Ontario; +and thus it was that he met La Salle and the Sulpitians. + +This meeting caused a change of plan. Joliet showed the priests a map +which he had made of such parts of the Upper Lakes as he had visited, +and gave them a copy of it; telling them, at the same time, of the +Pottawattamies and other tribes of that region in grievous need of +spiritual succor. The result was a determination on their part to follow +the route which he suggested, notwithstanding the remonstrances of La +Salle, who in vain reminded them that the Jesuits had preoccupied the +field, and would regard them as intruders. They resolved that the +Pottawattamies should no longer sit in darkness; while, as for the +Mississippi, it could be reached, as they conceived, with less risk by +this northern route than by that of the south. + +La Salle was of a different mind. His goal was the Ohio, and not the +northern lakes. A few days before, while hunting, he had been attacked +by a fever, sarcastically ascribed by Galinee to his having seen three +large rattle-snakes crawling up a rock. He now told his two colleagues +that he was in no condition to go forward, and should be forced to part +with them. The staple of La Salle's character, as his life will attest, +was an invincible determination of purpose, which set at naught all +risks and all sufferings. He had cast himself with all his resources +into this enterprise; and, while his faculties remained, he was not a +man to recoil from it. On the other hand, the masculine fibre of which +he was made did not always withhold him from the practice of the arts of +address, and the use of what Dollier de Casson styles _belles paroles_. +He respected the priesthood, with the exception, it seems, of the +Jesuits; and he was under obligations to the Sulpitians of Montreal. +Hence there can be no doubt that he used his illness as a pretext for +escaping from their company without ungraciousness, and following his +own path in his own way. + +[Sidenote: SEPARATION.] + +On the last day of September, the priests made an altar, supported by +the paddles of the canoes laid on forked sticks. Dollier said mass; La +Salle and his followers received the sacrament, as did also those of his +late colleagues; and thus they parted, the Sulpitians and their party +descending the Grand River towards Lake Erie, while La Salle, as they +supposed, began his return to Montreal. What course he actually took we +shall soon inquire; and meanwhile, for a few moments, we will follow the +priests. When they reached Lake Erie, they saw it tossing like an angry +ocean. They had no mind to tempt the dangerous and unknown navigation, +and encamped for the winter in the forest near the peninsula called the +Long Point. Here they gathered a good store of chestnuts, hickory-nuts, +plums, and grapes, and built themselves a log cabin, with a recess at +the end for an altar. They passed the winter unmolested, shooting game +in abundance, and saying mass three times a week. Early in spring, they +planted a large cross, attached to it the arms of France, and took +formal possession of the country in the name of Louis XIV. This done, +they resumed their voyage, and, after many troubles, landed one evening +in a state of exhaustion on or near Point Pelee, towards the western +extremity of Lake Erie. A storm rose as they lay asleep, and swept off a +great part of their baggage, which, in their fatigue, they had left at +the edge of the water. Their altar-service was lost with the rest,--a +misfortune which they ascribed to the jealousy and malice of the Devil. +Debarred henceforth from saying mass, they resolved to return to +Montreal and leave the Pottawattamies uninstructed. They presently +entered the strait by which Lake Huron joins Lake Erie, and landing near +where Detroit now stands, found a large stone, somewhat suggestive of +the human figure, which the Indians had bedaubed with paint, and which +they worshipped as a manito. In view of their late misfortune, this +device of the arch-enemy excited their utmost resentment. "After the +loss of our altar-service," writes Galinee, "and the hunger we had +suffered, there was not a man of us who was not filled with hatred +against this false deity. I devoted one of my axes to breaking him in +pieces; and then, having fastened our canoes side by side, we carried +the largest piece to the middle of the river, and threw it, with all the +rest, into the water, that he might never be heard of again. God +rewarded us immediately for this good action, for we killed a deer and a +bear that same day." + +[Sidenote: AT STE. MARIE DU SAUT.] + +This is the first recorded passage of white men through the Strait of +Detroit; though Joliet had, no doubt, passed this way on his return from +the Upper Lakes.[14] The two missionaries took this course, with the +intention of proceeding to the Saut Ste. Marie, and there joining the +Ottawas, and other tribes of that region, in their yearly descent to +Montreal. They issued upon Lake Huron; followed its eastern shores till +they reached the Georgian Bay, near the head of which the Jesuits had +established their great mission of the Hurons, destroyed, twenty years +before, by the Iroquois;[15] and, ignoring or slighting the labors of +the rival missionaries, held their way northward along the rocky +archipelago that edged those lonely coasts. They passed the Manitoulins, +and, ascending the strait by which Lake Superior discharges its waters, +arrived on the twenty-fifth of May at Ste. Marie du Saut. Here they +found the two Jesuits, Dablon and Marquette, in a square fort of cedar +pickets, built by their men within the past year, and enclosing a chapel +and a house. Near by, they had cleared a large tract of land, and sown +it with wheat, Indian corn, peas, and other crops. The new-comers were +graciously received, and invited to vespers in the chapel; but they very +soon found La Salle's prediction made good, and saw that the Jesuit +fathers wanted no help from St. Sulpice. Galinee, on his part, takes +occasion to remark, that, though the Jesuits had baptized a few Indians +at the Saut, not one of them was a good enough Christian to receive the +Eucharist; and he intimates that the case, by their own showing, was +still worse at their mission of St. Esprit. The two Sulpitians did not +care to prolong their stay; and, three days after their arrival, they +left the Saut,--not, as they expected, with the Indians, but with a +French guide, furnished by the Jesuits. Ascending French River to Lake +Nipissing, they crossed to the waters of the Ottawa, and descended to +Montreal, which they reached on the eighteenth of June. They had made no +discoveries and no converts; but Galinee, after his arrival, made the +earliest map of the Upper Lakes known to exist.[16] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S DISCOVERIES.] + +We return now to La Salle, only to find ourselves involved in mist and +obscurity. What did he do after he left the two priests? Unfortunately, +a definite answer is not possible; and the next two years of his life +remain in some measure an enigma. That he was busied in active +exploration, and that he made important discoveries, is certain; but the +extent and character of these discoveries remain wrapped in doubt. He is +known to have kept journals and made maps; and these were in existence, +and in possession of his niece, Madeleine Cavelier, then in advanced +age, as late as the year 1756; beyond which time the most diligent +inquiry has failed to trace them. Abbe Faillon affirms that some of La +Salle's men, refusing to follow him, returned to La Chine, and that the +place then received its name, in derision of the young adventurer's +dream of a westward passage to China.[17] As for himself, the only +distinct record of his movements is that contained in a paper, entitled +"Histoire de Monsieur de la Salle." It is an account of his +explorations, and of the state of parties in Canada previous to the year +1678,--taken from the lips of La Salle himself, by a person whose name +does not appear, but who declares that he had ten or twelve +conversations with him at Paris, whither he had come with a petition to +the Court. The writer himself had never been in America, and was +ignorant of its geography; hence blunders on his part might reasonably +be expected. His statements, however, are in some measure intelligible; +and the following is the substance of them. + +After leaving the priests, La Salle went to Onondaga, where we are left +to infer that he succeeded better in getting a guide than he had before +done among the Senecas. Thence he made his way to a point six or seven +leagues distant from Lake Erie, where he reached a branch of the Ohio, +and, descending it, followed the river as far as the rapids at +Louisville,--or, as has been maintained, beyond its confluence with the +Mississippi. His men now refused to go farther, and abandoned him, +escaping to the English and the Dutch; whereupon he retraced his steps +alone.[18] This must have been in the winter of 1669-70, or in the +following spring; unless there is an error of date in the statement of +Nicolas Perrot, the famous _voyageur_, who says that he met him in the +summer of 1670, hunting on the Ottawa with a party of Iroquois.[19] + +[Sidenote: THE RIVER ILLINOIS.] + +But how was La Salle employed in the following year? The same memoir has +its solution to the problem. By this it appears that the indefatigable +explorer embarked on Lake Erie, ascended the Detroit to Lake Huron, +coasted the unknown shores of Michigan, passed the Straits of +Michilimackinac, and, leaving Green Bay behind him, entered what is +described as an incomparably larger bay, but which was evidently the +southern portion of Lake Michigan. Thence he crossed to a river flowing +westward,--evidently the Illinois,--and followed it until it was joined +by another river flowing from the northwest to the southeast. By this, +the Mississippi only can be meant; and he is reported to have said that +he descended it to the thirty-sixth degree of latitude; where he +stopped, assured that it discharged itself not into the Gulf of +California, but into the Gulf of Mexico, and resolved to follow it +thither at a future day, when better provided with men and supplies.[20] + +[Sidenote: THE MISSISSIPPI.] + +The first of these statements,--that relating to the Ohio,--confused, +vague, and in great part incorrect, as it certainly is, is nevertheless +well sustained as regards one essential point. La Salle himself, in a +memorial addressed to Count Frontenac in 1677, affirms that he +discovered the Ohio, and descended it as far as to a fall which +obstructed it.[21] Again, his rival, Louis Joliet, whose testimony on +this point cannot be suspected, made two maps of the region of the +Mississippi and the Great Lakes. The Ohio is laid down on both of them, +with an inscription to the effect that it had been explored by La +Salle.[22] That he discovered the Ohio may then be regarded as +established. That he descended it to the Mississippi, he himself does +not pretend; nor is there reason to believe that he did so. + +With regard to his alleged voyage down the Illinois, the case is +different. Here, he is reported to have made a statement which admits +but one interpretation,--that of the discovery by him of the Mississippi +prior to its discovery by Joliet and Marquette. This statement is +attributed to a man not prone to vaunt his own exploits, who never +proclaimed them in print, and whose testimony, even in his own case, +must therefore have weight. But it comes to us through the medium of a +person strongly biassed in favor of La Salle, and against Marquette and +the Jesuits. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S DISCOVERIES.] + +Seven years had passed since the alleged discovery, and La Salle had not +before laid claim to it; although it was matter of notoriety that during +five years it had been claimed by Joliet, and that his claim was +generally admitted. The correspondence of the governor and the intendant +is silent as to La Salle's having penetrated to the Mississippi, though +the attempt was made under the auspices of the latter, as his own +letters declare; while both had the discovery of the great river +earnestly at heart. The governor, Frontenac, La Salle's ardent supporter +and ally, believed in 1672, as his letters show, that the Mississippi +flowed into the Gulf of California; and, two years later, he announces +to the minister Colbert its discovery by Joliet.[23] After La Salle's +death, his brother, his nephew, and his niece addressed a memorial to +the king, petitioning for certain grants in consideration of the +discoveries of their relative, which they specify at some length; but +they do not pretend that he reached the Mississippi before his +expeditions of 1679 to 1682.[24] This silence is the more significant, +as it is this very niece who had possession of the papers in which La +Salle recounts the journeys of which the issues are in question.[25] +Had they led him to the Mississippi, it is reasonably certain that she +would have made it known in her memorial. La Salle discovered the Ohio, +and in all probability the Illinois also; but that he discovered the +Mississippi has not been proved, nor, in the light of the evidence we +have, is it likely. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[13] This village seems to have been that attacked by Denonville in +1687. It stood on Boughton Hill, near the present town of Victor. + +[14] The Jesuits and fur-traders, on their way to the Upper Lakes, had +followed the route of the Ottawa, or, more recently, that of Toronto and +the Georgian Bay. Iroquois hostility had long closed the Niagara portage +and Lake Erie against them. + +[15] The Jesuits in North America. + +[16] See Appendix. The above narrative is from _Recit de ce qui s'est +passe de plus remarquable dans le Voyage de MM. Dollier et Galinee_. +(Bibliotheque Nationale.) + +[17] Dollier de Casson alludes to this as "cette transmigration celebre +qui se fit de la Chine dans ces quartiers." + +[18] The following is the passage relating to this journey in the +remarkable paper above mentioned. After recounting La Salle's visit with +the Sulpitians to the Seneca village, and stating that the intrigues of +the Jesuit missionary prevented them from obtaining a guide, it speaks +of the separation of the travellers and the journey of Galinee and his +party to the Saut Ste. Marie, where "les Jesuites les congedierent." It +then proceeds as follows: "Cependant Mr. de la Salle continua son +chemin par une riviere qui va de l'est a l'ouest; et passe a Onontaque +[_Onondaga_], puis a six ou sept lieues au-dessous du Lac Erie; et +estant parvenu jusqu'au 280me ou 83me degre de longitude, et +jusqu'au 41me degre de latitude, trouva un sault qui tombe vers +l'ouest dans un pays bas, marescageux, tout couvert de vielles souches, +dont il y en a quelques-unes qui sont encore sur pied. Il fut donc +contraint de prendre terre, et suivant une hauteur qui le pouvoit mener +loin, il trouva quelques sauvages qui luy dirent que fort loin de la le +mesme fleuve qui se perdoit dans cette terre basse et vaste se +reunnissoit en un lit. Il continua donc son chemin, mais comme la +fatigue estoit grande, 23 ou 24 hommes qu'il avoit menez jusques la le +quitterent tous en une nuit, regagnerent le fleuve, et se sauverent, les +uns a la Nouvelle Hollande et les autres a la Nouvelle Angleterre. Il se +vit donc seul a 400 lieues de chez luy, ou il ne laisse pas de revenir, +remontant la riviere et vivant de chasse, d'herbes, et de ce que luy +donnerent les sauvages qu'il rencontra en son chemin." + +[19] Perrot, _Memoires_, 119, 120. + +[20] The memoir--after stating, as above, that he entered Lake Huron, +doubled the peninsula of Michigan, and passed La Baye des Puants (_Green +Bay_)--says: "Il reconnut une baye incomparablement plus large; au fond +de laquelle vers l'ouest il trouva un tres-beau havre et au fond de ce +havre un fleuve qui va de l'est a l'ouest. Il suivit ce fleuve, et +estant parvenu jusqu'environ le 280me degre de longitude et le +39me de latitude, il trouva un autre fleuve qui se joignant au +premier coulait du nordouest au sudest, et il suivit ce fleuve jusqu'au +36me degre de latitude." + +The "tres-beau havre" may have been the entrance of the river Chicago, +whence, by an easy portage, he might have reached the Des Plaines branch +of the Illinois. We shall see that he took this course in his famous +exploration of 1682. + +The intendant Talon announces, in his despatches of this year that he +had sent La Salle southward and westward to explore. + +[21] The following are his words (he speaks of himself in the third +person): "L'annee 1667, et les suivantes, il fit divers voyages avec +beaucoup de depenses, dans lesquels il decouvrit le premier beaucoup de +pays au sud des grands lacs, et _entre autres la grande riviere d'Ohio_; +il la suivit jusqu'a un endroit ou elle tombe de fort haut dans de +vastes marais, a la hauteur de 37 degres, apres avoir ete grossie par +une autre riviere fort large qui vient du nord; et toutes ces eaux se +dechargent selon toutes les apparences dans le Golfe du Mexique." + +This "autre riviere," which, it seems, was above the fall, may have been +the Miami or the Scioto. There is but one fall on the river, that of +Louisville, which is not so high as to deserve to be described as "fort +haut," being only a strong rapid. The latitude, as will be seen, is +different in the two accounts, and incorrect in both. + +[22] One of these maps is entitled _Carte de la decouverte du Sieur +Joliet_, 1674. Over the lines representing the Ohio are the words, +"Route du sieur de la Salle pour aller dans le Mexique." The other map +of Joliet bears, also written over the Ohio, the words, "Riviere par ou +descendit le sieur de la Salle au sortir du lac Erie pour aller dans le +Mexique." I have also another manuscript map, made before the voyage of +Joliet and Marquette, and apparently in the year 1673, on which the Ohio +is represented as far as to a point a little below Louisville, and over +it is written, "Riviere Ohio, ainsy appellee par les Iroquois a cause de +sa beaute, par ou le sieur de la Salle est descendu." The Mississippi is +not represented on this map; but--and this is very significant, as +indicating the extent of La Salle's exploration of the following year--a +small part of the upper Illinois is laid down. + +[23] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 14 Nov., 1674._ He here speaks of +"la grande riviere qu'il [_Joliet_] a trouvee, qui va du nord au sud, et +qui est aussi large que celle du Saint-Laurent vis-a-vis de Quebec." +Four years later, Frontenac speaks slightingly of Joliet, but neither +denies his discovery of the Mississippi, nor claims it for La Salle, in +whose interest he writes. + +[24] _Papiers de Famille; Memoire presente au Roi._ The following is an +extract: "Il parvient ... jusqu'a la riviere des Illinois. Il y +construisit un fort situe a 350 lieues au-dela du fort de Frontenac, et +suivant ensuite le cours de cette riviere, il trouva qu'elle se jettoit +dans un grand fleuve appelle par ceux du pays Mississippi, c'est a dire +_grande eau_, environ cent lieues au-dessous du fort qu'il venoit de +construire." This fort was Fort Crevecoeur, built in 1680, near the +site of Peoria. The memoir goes on to relate the descent of La Salle to +the Gulf, which concluded this expedition of 1679-82. + +[25] The following is an extract, given by Margry, from a letter of the +aged Madeleine Cavelier, dated 21 Fevrier, 1756, and addressed to her +nephew, M. Le Baillif, who had applied for the papers in behalf of the +minister, Silhouette: "J'ay cherche une occasion sure pour vous anvoye +les papiers de M. de la Salle. Il y a des cartes que j'ay jointe a ces +papiers, qui doivent prouver que, en 1675, M. de Lasalle avet deja fet +deux voyages en ces decouverte, puisqu'il y avet une carte, que je vous +envoye, par laquelle il est fait mention de l'androit auquel M. de +Lasalle aborda pres le fleuve de Mississipi; un autre androit qu'il +nomme le fleuve Colbert; en un autre il prans possession de ce pais au +nom du roy et fait planter une crois." + +The words of the aged and illiterate writer are obscure, but her +expression "aborda pres" seems to indicate that La Salle had not reached +the Mississippi prior to 1675, but only approached it. Finally, a +memorial presented to Seignelay, along with the official narrative of +1679-81, by a friend of La Salle, whose object was to place the +discoverer and his achievements in the most favorable light, contains +the following: "Il [_La Salle_] a este le premier a former le dessein de +ces descouvertes, qu'il communiqua, il y a plus de quinze ans, a M. de +Courcelles, gouverneur, et a M. Talon, intendant du Canada, qui +l'approuverent. Il a fait ensuite plusieurs voyages de ce coste-la, et +un entr'autres en 1669 avec MM. Dolier et Galinee, prestres du Seminaire +de St. Sulpice. _Il est vray que le sieur Jolliet, pour le prevenir, fit +un voyage in 1673, a la riviere Colbert_; mais ce fut uniquement pour y +faire commerce." See Margry, ii. 285. This passage is a virtual +admission that Joliet reached the Mississippi (_Colbert_) before La +Salle. + +Margry, in a series of papers in the _Journal General de l'Instruction +Publique_ for 1862, first took the position that La Salle reached the +Mississippi in 1670 and 1671, and has brought forward in defence of it +all the documents which his unwearied research enabled him to discover. +Father Tailhan, S.J., has replied at length, in the copious notes to his +edition of Nicolas Perrot, but without having seen the principal +document cited by Margry, and of which extracts have been given in the +notes to this chapter. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +1670-1672. + +THE JESUITS ON THE LAKES. + + The Old Missions and the New.--A Change of Spirit.--Lake Superior + and the Copper-mines.--Ste. Marie.--La + Pointe.--Michilimackinac.--Jesuits on Lake Michigan.--Allouez and + Dablon.--The Jesuit Fur-trade. + + +What were the Jesuits doing? Since the ruin of their great mission of +the Hurons, a perceptible change had taken place in them. They had put +forth exertions almost superhuman, set at naught famine, disease, and +death, lived with the self-abnegation of saints and died with the +devotion of martyrs; and the result of all had been a disastrous +failure. From no short-coming on their part, but from the force of +events beyond the sphere of their influence, a very demon of havoc had +crushed their incipient churches, slaughtered their converts, uprooted +the populous communities on which their hopes had rested, and scattered +them in bands of wretched fugitives far and wide through the +wilderness.[26] They had devoted themselves in the fulness of faith to +the building up of a Christian and Jesuit empire on the conversion of +the great stationary tribes of the lakes; and of these none remained but +the Iroquois, the destroyers of the rest,--among whom, indeed, was a +field which might stimulate their zeal by an abundant promise of +sufferings and martyrdoms, but which, from its geographical position, +was too much exposed to Dutch and English influence to promise great and +decisive results. Their best hopes were now in the North and the West; +and thither, in great part, they had turned their energies. + +[Sidenote: REPORTS OF THE JESUITS.] + +We find them on Lake Huron, Lake Superior, and Lake Michigan, laboring +vigorously as of old, but in a spirit not quite the same. Now, as +before, two objects inspired their zeal,--the "greater glory of God," +and the influence and credit of the Order of Jesus. If the one motive +had somewhat lost in power, the other had gained. The epoch of the +saints and martyrs was passing away; and henceforth we find the Canadian +Jesuit less and less an apostle, more and more an explorer, a man of +science, and a politician. The yearly reports of the missions are still, +for the edification of the pious reader, filled with intolerably tedious +stories of baptisms, conversions, and the exemplary deportment of +neophytes,--for these have become a part of the formula; but they are +relieved abundantly by more mundane topics. One finds observations on +the winds, currents, and tides of the Great Lakes; speculations on a +subterranean outlet of Lake Superior; accounts of its copper-mines, and +how we, the Jesuit fathers, are laboring to explore them for the profit +of the colony; surmises touching the North Sea, the South Sea, the Sea +of China, which we hope ere long to discover; and reports of that great +mysterious river of which the Indians tell us,--flowing southward, +perhaps to the Gulf of Mexico, perhaps to the Vermilion Sea,--and the +secrets whereof, with the help of the Virgin, we will soon reveal to the +world. + +The Jesuit was as often a fanatic for his Order as for his faith; and +oftener yet the two fanaticisms mingled in him inextricably. Ardently as +he burned for the saving of souls, he would have none saved on the Upper +Lakes except by his brethren and himself. He claimed a monopoly of +conversion, with its attendant monopoly of toil, hardship, and +martyrdom. Often disinterested for himself, he was inordinately +ambitious for the great corporate power in which he had merged his own +personality; and here lies one cause, among many, of the seeming +contradictions which abound in the annals of the Order. + +Prefixed to the _Relation_ of 1671 is that monument of Jesuit hardihood +and enterprise, the map of Lake Superior,--a work of which, however, the +exactness has been exaggerated, as compared with other Canadian maps of +the day. While making surveys, the priests were diligently looking for +copper. Father Dablon reports that they had found it in greatest +abundance on Isle Minong, now Isle Royale. "A day's journey from the +head of the lake, on the south side, there is," he says, "a rock of +copper weighing from six hundred to eight hundred pounds, lying on the +shore where any who pass may see it;" and he further speaks of great +copper boulders in the bed of the river Ontonagan.[27] + +[Sidenote: STE. MARIE DU SAUT.] + +There were two principal missions on the Upper Lakes, which were, in a +certain sense, the parents of the rest. One of these was Ste. Marie du +Saut,--the same visited by Dollier and Galinee,--at the outlet of Lake +Superior. This was a noted fishing-place; for the rapids were full of +white-fish, and Indians came thither in crowds. The permanent residents +were an Ojibwa band, whom the French called Sauteurs, and whose bark +lodges were clustered at the foot of the rapids, near the fort of the +Jesuits. Besides these, a host of Algonquins, of various tribes, +resorted thither in the spring and summer,--living in abundance on the +fishery, and dispersing in winter to wander and starve in scattered +hunting-parties far and wide through the forests. + +The other chief mission was that of St. Esprit, at La Pointe, near the +western extremity of Lake Superior. Here were the Hurons, fugitives +twenty years before from the slaughter of their countrymen; and the +Ottawas, who, like them, had sought an asylum from the rage of the +Iroquois. Many other tribes--Illinois, Pottawattamies, Foxes, +Menomonies, Sioux, Assiniboins, Knisteneaux, and a multitude +besides--came hither yearly to trade with the French. Here was a young +Jesuit, Jacques Marquette, lately arrived from the Saut Ste. Marie. His +savage flock disheartened him by its backslidings; and the best that he +could report of the Hurons, after all the toil and all the blood +lavished in their conversion, was, that they "still retain a little +Christianity;" while the Ottawas are "far removed from the kingdom of +God, and addicted beyond all other tribes to foulness, incantations, and +sacrifices to evil spirits."[28] + +[Sidenote: MARQUETTE AND ANDRE.] + +Marquette heard from the Illinois--yearly visitors at La Pointe--of the +great river which they had crossed on their way,[29] and which, as he +conjectured, flowed into the Gulf of California. He heard marvels of it +also from the Sioux, who lived on its banks; and a strong desire +possessed him to explore the mystery of its course. A sudden calamity +dashed his hopes. The Sioux--the Iroquois of the West, as the Jesuits +call them--had hitherto kept the peace with the expatriated tribes of La +Pointe; but now, from some cause not worth inquiry, they broke into open +war, and so terrified the Hurons and Ottawas that they abandoned their +settlements and fled. Marquette followed his panic-stricken flock, who, +passing the Saut Ste. Marie, and descending to Lake Huron, stopped at +length,--the Hurons at Michilimackinac, and the Ottawas at the Great +Manitoulin Island. Two missions were now necessary to minister to the +divided bands. That of Michilimackinac was assigned to Marquette, and +that of the Manitoulin Island to Louis Andre. The former took post at +Point St. Ignace, on the north shore of the Straits of Michilimackinac, +while the latter began the mission of St. Simon at the new abode of the +Ottawas. When winter came, scattering his flock to their +hunting-grounds, Andre made a missionary tour among the Nipissings and +other neighboring tribes. The shores of Lake Huron had long been an +utter solitude, swept of their denizens by the terror of the +all-conquering Iroquois; but now that these tigers had felt the power of +the French, and learned for a time to leave their Indian allies in +peace, the fugitive hordes were returning to their ancient abodes. +Andre's experience among them was of the roughest. The staple of his +diet was acorns and _tripe de roche_,--a species of lichen, which, being +boiled, resolved itself into a black glue, nauseous, but not void of +nourishment. At times, he was reduced to moss, the bark of trees, or +moccasins and old moose-skins cut into strips and boiled. His hosts +treated him very ill, and the worst of their fare was always his +portion. When spring came to his relief, he returned to his post of St. +Simon, with impaired digestion and unabated zeal. + +[Sidenote: THE GREEN BAY MISSION.] + +Besides the Saut Ste. Marie and Michilimackinac, both noted +fishing-places, there was another spot, no less famous for game and +fish, and therefore a favorite resort of Indians. This was the head of +the Green Bay of Lake Michigan.[30] Here and in adjacent districts +several distinct tribes had made their abode. The Menomonies were on the +river which bears their name; the Pottawattamies and Winnebagoes were +near the borders of the bay; the Sacs, on Fox River; the Mascoutins, +Miamis, and Kickapoos, on the same river, above Lake Winnebago; and the +Outagamies, or Foxes, on a tributary of it flowing from the north. Green +Bay was manifestly suited for a mission; and, as early as the autumn of +1669, Father Claude Allouez was sent thither to found one. After nearly +perishing by the way, he set out to explore the destined field of his +labors, and went as far as the town of the Mascoutins. Early in the +autumn of 1670, having been joined by Dablon, Superior of the missions +on the Upper Lakes, he made another journey, but not until the two +fathers had held a council with the congregated tribes at St. Francois +Xavier; for so they named their mission of Green Bay. Here, as they +harangued their naked audience, their gravity was put to the proof; for +a band of warriors, anxious to do them honor, walked incessantly up and +down, aping the movements of the soldiers on guard before the governor's +tent at Montreal. "We could hardly keep from laughing," writes Dablon, +"though, we were discoursing on very important subjects; namely, the +mysteries of our religion, and the things necessary to escaping from +eternal fire."[31] + +The fathers were delighted with the country, which Dablon calls an +earthly paradise; but he adds that the way to it is as hard as the path +to heaven. He alludes especially to the rapids of Fox River, which gave +the two travellers great trouble. Having safely passed them, they saw +an Indian idol on the bank, similar to that which Dollier and Galinee +found at Detroit,--being merely a rock, bearing some resemblance to a +man, and hideously painted. With the help of their attendants, they +threw it into the river. Dablon expatiates on the buffalo, which he +describes apparently on the report of others, as his description is not +very accurate. Crossing Winnebago Lake, the two priests followed the +river leading to the town of the Mascoutins and Miamis, which they +reached on the fifteenth of September.[32] These two tribes lived +together within the compass of the same enclosure of palisades,--to the +number, it is said, of more than three thousand souls. The missionaries, +who had brought a highly colored picture of the Last Judgment, called +the Indians to council and displayed it before them; while Allouez, who +spoke Algonquin, harangued them on hell, demons, and eternal flames. +They listened with open ears, beset him night and day with questions, +and invited him and his companion to unceasing feasts. They were +welcomed in every lodge, and followed everywhere with eyes of curiosity, +wonder, and awe. Dablon overflows with praises of the Miami chief, who +was honored by his subjects like a king, and whose demeanor towards his +guests had no savor of the savage. + +Their hosts told them of the great river Mississippi, rising far in the +north and flowing southward,--they knew not whither,--and of many tribes +that dwelt along its banks. When at length they took their departure, +they left behind them a reputation as medicine-men of transcendent +power. + +[Sidenote: THE CROSS AMONG THE FOXES.] + +In the winter following, Allouez visited the Foxes, whom he found in +extreme ill-humor. They were incensed against the French by the +ill-usage which some of their tribe had lately met when on a trading +visit to Montreal; and they received the Faith with shouts of derision. +The priest was horror-stricken at what he saw. Their lodges, each +containing from five to ten families, seemed in his eyes like seraglios; +for some of the chiefs had eight wives. He armed himself with patience, +and at length gained a hearing. Nay, he succeeded so well, that when he +showed them his crucifix they would throw tobacco on it as an offering; +and, on another visit which he made them soon after, he taught the whole +village to make the sign of the cross. A war-party was going out against +their enemies, and he bethought him of telling them the story of the +Cross and the Emperor Constantine. This so wrought upon them that they +all daubed the figure of a cross on their shields of bull-hide, set out +for the war, and came back victorious, extolling the sacred symbol as a +great war-medicine. + +"Thus it is," writes Dablon, who chronicles the incident, "that our holy +faith is established among these people; and we have good hope that we +shall soon carry it to the famous river called the Mississippi, and +perhaps even to the South Sea."[33] Most things human have their phases +of the ludicrous; and the heroism of these untiring priests is no +exception to the rule. + +[Sidenote: TRADING WITH INDIANS.] + +The various missionary stations were much alike. They consisted of a +chapel (commonly of logs) and one or more houses, with perhaps a +store-house and a workshop; the whole fenced with palisades, and +forming, in fact, a stockade fort, surrounded with clearings and +cultivated fields. It is evident that the priests had need of other +hands than their own and those of the few lay brothers attached to the +mission. They required men inured to labor, accustomed to the forest +life, able to guide canoes and handle tools and weapons. In the earlier +epoch of the missions, when enthusiasm was at its height, they were +served in great measure by volunteers, who joined them through devotion +or penitence, and who were known as _donnes_ or "given men." Of late, +the number of these had much diminished; and they now relied chiefly on +hired men, or _engages_. These were employed in building, hunting, +fishing, clearing, and tilling the ground, guiding canoes, and (if faith +is to be placed in reports current throughout the colony) in trading +with the Indians for the profit of the missions. This charge of +trading--which, if the results were applied exclusively to the support +of the missions, does not of necessity involve much censure--is +vehemently reiterated in many quarters, including the official +despatches of the governor of Canada; while, so far as I can discover, +the Jesuits never distinctly denied it, and on several occasions they +partially admitted its truth.[34] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[26] See "The Jesuits in North America." + +[27] He complains that the Indians were very averse to giving +information on the subject, so that the Jesuits had not as yet +discovered the metal _in situ_, though they hoped soon to do so. The +Indians told him that the copper had first been found by four hunters, +who had landed on a certain island, near the north shore of the lake. +Wishing to boil their food in a vessel of bark, they gathered stones on +the shore, heated them red hot, and threw them in, but presently +discovered them to be pure copper. Their repast over, they hastened to +re-embark, being afraid of the lynxes and the hares, which, on this +island, were as large as dogs, and which would have devoured their +provisions, and perhaps their canoe. They took with them some of the +wonderful stones; but scarcely had they left the island, when a deep +voice, like thunder, sounded in their ears, "Who are these thieves who +steal the toys of my children?" It was the God of the Waters, or some +other powerful manito. The four adventurers retreated in great terror; +but three of them soon died, and the fourth survived only long enough to +reach his village, and tell the story. The island has no foundation, but +floats with the movement of the wind; and no Indian dares land on its +shores, dreading the wrath of the manito. Dablon, _Relation_, 1670, 84. + +[28] _Lettre du Pere Jacques Marquette au R. P. Superieur des Missions;_ +in _Relation_, 1670, 87. + +[29] The Illinois lived at this time beyond the Mississippi, thirty +days' journey from La Pointe; whither they had been driven by the +Iroquois, from their former abode near Lake Michigan. Dablon +(_Relation_, 1671, 24, 25) says that they lived seven days' journey +beyond the Mississippi, in eight villages. A few years later, most of +them returned to the east side, and made their abode on the river +Illinois. + +[30] The Baye des Puants of the early writers; or, more correctly, La +Baye des Eaux Puantes. The Winnebago Indians, living near it, were +called Les Puans, apparently for no other reason than because some +portion of the bay was said to have an odor like the sea. + +Lake Michigan, the "Lac des Illinois" of the French, was, according to a +letter of Father Allouez, called "Machihiganing" by the Indians. Dablon +writes the name "Mitchiganon." + +[31] _Relation_, 1671, 43. + +[32] This town was on the Neenah or Fox River, above Lake Winnebago. The +Mascoutins, Fire Nation, or Nation of the Prairie, are extinct or merged +in other tribes. See "The Jesuits in North America." The Miamis soon +removed to the banks of the river St. Joseph, near Lake Michigan. + +[33] _Relation_, 1672, 42. + +[34] This charge was made from the first establishment of the missions. +For remarks on it, see "The Jesuits in North America" and "The Old +Regime in Canada." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +1667-1672. + +FRANCE TAKES POSSESSION OF THE WEST. + + Talon.--Saint-Lusson.--Perrot.--The Ceremony at Saut Ste. + Marie.--The Speech of Allouez.--Count Frontenac. + + +Jean Talon, intendant of Canada, was full of projects for the good of +the colony. On the one hand, he set himself to the development of its +industries, and, on the other, to the extension of its domain. He meant +to occupy the interior of the continent, control the rivers, which were +its only highways, and hold it for France against every other nation. On +the east, England was to be hemmed within a narrow strip of seaboard; +while, on the south, Talon aimed at securing a port on the Gulf of +Mexico, to keep the Spaniards in check, and dispute with them the +possession of the vast regions which they claimed as their own. But the +interior of the continent was still an unknown world. It behooved him to +explore it; and to that end he availed himself of Jesuits, officers, +fur-traders, and enterprising schemers like La Salle. His efforts at +discovery seem to have been conducted with a singular economy of the +King's purse. La Salle paid all the expenses of his first expedition +made under Talon's auspices; and apparently of the second also, though +the intendant announces it in his despatches as an expedition sent out +by himself.[35] When, in 1670, he ordered Daumont de Saint-Lusson to +search for copper mines on Lake Superior, and at the same time to take +formal possession of the whole interior for the King, it was arranged +that he should pay the costs of the journey by trading with the +Indians.[36] + +[Sidenote: SAINT-LUSSON AND PERROT.] + +Saint-Lusson set out with a small party of men, and Nicolas Perrot as +his interpreter. Among Canadian _voyageurs_, few names are so +conspicuous as that of Perrot; not because there were not others who +matched him in achievement, but because he could write, and left behind +him a tolerable account of what he had seen.[37] He was at this time +twenty-six years old, and had formerly been an _engage_ of the Jesuits. +He was a man of enterprise, courage, and address,--the last being +especially shown in his dealings with Indians, over whom he had great +influence. He spoke Algonquin fluently, and was favorably known to many +tribes of that family. + +Saint-Lusson wintered at the Manitoulin Islands; while Perrot, having +first sent messages to the tribes of the north, inviting them to meet +the deputy of the governor at the Saut Ste. Marie in the following +spring, proceeded to Green Bay, to urge the same invitation upon the +tribes of that quarter. They knew him well, and greeted him with clamors +of welcome. The Miamis, it is said, received him with a sham battle, +which was designed to do him honor, but by which nerves more susceptible +would have been severely shaken.[38] They entertained him also with a +grand game of _la crosse_, the Indian ball-play. Perrot gives a +marvellous account of the authority and state of the Miami chief, who, +he says, was attended day and night by a guard of warriors,--an +assertion which would be incredible, were it not sustained by the +account of the same chief given by the Jesuit Dablon. Of the tribes of +the Bay, the greater part promised to send delegates to the Saut; but +the Pottawattamies dissuaded the Miami potentate from attempting so long +a journey, lest the fatigue incident to it might injure his health; and +he therefore deputed them to represent him and his tribesmen at the +great meeting. Their principal chiefs, with those of the Sacs, +Winnebagoes, and Menomonies, embarked, and paddled for the place of +rendezvous, where they and Perrot arrived on the fifth of May.[39] + +Saint-Lusson was here with his men, fifteen in number, among whom was +Louis Joliet;[40] and Indians were fast thronging in from their +wintering grounds, attracted, as usual, by the fishery of the rapids or +moved by the messages sent by Perrot,--Crees, Monsonis, Amikoues, +Nipissings, and many more. When fourteen tribes, or their +representatives, had arrived, Saint-Lusson prepared to execute the +commission with which he was charged. + +[Sidenote: CEREMONY AT THE SAUT.] + +At the foot of the rapids was the village of the Sauteurs, above the +village was a hill, and hard by stood the fort of the Jesuits. On the +morning of the fourteenth of June, Saint-Lusson led his followers to the +top of the hill, all fully equipped and under arms. Here, too, in the +vestments of their priestly office, were four Jesuits,--Claude Dablon, +Superior of the Missions of the lakes, Gabriel Druilletes, Claude +Allouez, and Louis Andre.[41] All around the great throng of Indians +stood, or crouched, or reclined at length, with eyes and ears intent. A +large cross of wood had been made ready. Dablon, in solemn form, +pronounced his blessing on it; and then it was reared and planted in the +ground, while the Frenchmen, uncovered, sang the _Vexilla Regis_. Then a +post of cedar was planted beside it, with a metal plate attached, +engraven with the royal arms; while Saint-Lusson's followers sang the +_Exaudiat_, and one of the Jesuits uttered a prayer for the King. +Saint-Lusson now advanced, and, holding his sword in one hand, and +raising with the other a sod of earth, proclaimed in a loud voice,-- + +"In the name of the Most High, Mighty, and Redoubted Monarch, Louis, +Fourteenth of that name, Most Christian King of France and of Navarre, I +take possession of this place, Sainte Marie du Saut, as also of Lakes +Huron and Superior, the Island of Manitoulin, and all countries, rivers, +lakes, and streams contiguous and adjacent thereunto,--both those which +have been discovered and those which may be discovered hereafter, in all +their length and breadth, bounded on the one side by the seas of the +North and of the West, and on the other by the South Sea: declaring to +the nations thereof that from this time forth they are vassals of his +Majesty, bound to obey his laws and follow his customs; promising them +on his part all succor and protection against the incursions and +invasions of their enemies: declaring to all other potentates, princes, +sovereigns, states, and republics,--to them and to their subjects,--that +they cannot and are not to seize or settle upon any parts of the +aforesaid countries, save only under the good pleasure of His Most +Christian Majesty, and of him who will govern in his behalf; and this on +pain of incurring his resentment and the efforts of his arms. _Vive le +Roi_."[42] + +The Frenchmen fired their guns and shouted "Vive le Roi," and the yelps +of the astonished Indians mingled with the din. + +What now remains of the sovereignty thus pompously proclaimed? Now and +then the accents of France on the lips of some straggling boatman or +vagabond half-breed,--this, and nothing more. + +[Sidenote: ALLOUEZ'S HARANGUE.] + +When the uproar was over, Father Allouez addressed the Indians in a +solemn harangue; and these were his words: "It is a good work, my +brothers, an important work, a great work, that brings us together in +council to-day. Look up at the cross which rises so high above your +heads. It was there that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, after making +himself a man for the love of men, was nailed and died, to satisfy his +Eternal Father for our sins. He is the master of our lives; the ruler of +Heaven, Earth, and Hell. It is he of whom I am continually speaking to +you, and whose name and word I have borne through all your country. But +look at this post to which are fixed the arms of the great chief of +France, whom we call King. He lives across the sea. He is the chief of +the greatest chiefs, and has no equal on earth. All the chiefs whom you +have ever seen are but children beside him. He is like a great tree, +and they are but the little herbs that one walks over and tramples under +foot. You know Onontio,[43] that famous chief at Quebec; you know and +you have seen that he is the terror of the Iroquois, and that his very +name makes them tremble, since he has laid their country waste and +burned their towns with fire. Across the sea there are ten thousand +Onontios like him, who are but the warriors of our great King, of whom I +have told you. When he says, 'I am going to war,' everybody obeys his +orders; and each of these ten thousand chiefs raises a troop of a +hundred warriors, some on sea and some on land. Some embark in great +ships, such as you have seen at Quebec. Your canoes carry only four or +five men, or, at the most, ten or twelve; but our ships carry four or +five hundred, and sometimes a thousand. Others go to war by land, and in +such numbers that if they stood in a double file they would reach from +here to Mississaquenk, which is more than twenty leagues off. When our +King attacks his enemies, he is more terrible than the thunder: the +earth trembles; the air and the sea are all on fire with the blaze of +his cannon: he is seen in the midst of his warriors, covered over with +the blood of his enemies, whom he kills in such numbers that he does not +reckon them by the scalps, but by the streams of blood which he causes +to flow. He takes so many prisoners that he holds them in no account, +but lets them go where they will, to show that he is not afraid of +them. But now nobody dares make war on him. All the nations beyond the +sea have submitted to him and begged humbly for peace. Men come from +every quarter of the earth to listen to him and admire him. All that is +done in the world is decided by him alone. + +"But what shall I say of his riches? You think yourselves rich when you +have ten or twelve sacks of corn, a few hatchets, beads, kettles, and +other things of that sort. He has cities of his own, more than there are +of men in all this country for five hundred leagues around. In each city +there are store-houses where there are hatchets enough to cut down all +your forests, kettles enough to cook all your moose, and beads enough to +fill all your lodges. His house is longer than from here to the top of +the Saut,--that is to say, more than half a league,--and higher than +your tallest trees; and it holds more families than the largest of your +towns."[44] The father added more in a similar strain; but the +peroration of his harangue is not on record. + +Whatever impression this curious effort of Jesuit rhetoric may have +produced upon the hearers, it did not prevent them from stripping the +royal arms from the post to which they were nailed, as soon as +Saint-Lusson and his men had left the Saut; probably, not because they +understood the import of the symbol, but because they feared it as a +charm. Saint-Lusson proceeded to Lake Superior, where, however, he +accomplished nothing, except, perhaps, a traffic with the Indians on his +own account; and he soon after returned to Quebec. Talon was resolved to +find the Mississippi, the most interesting object of search, and +seemingly the most attainable, in the wild and vague domain which he had +just claimed for the King. The Indians had described it; the Jesuits +were eager to discover it; and La Salle, if he had not reached it, had +explored two several avenues by which it might be approached. Talon +looked about him for a fit agent of the enterprise, and made choice of +Louis Joliet, who had returned from Lake Superior.[45] But the intendant +was not to see the fulfilment of his design. His busy and useful career +in Canada was drawing to an end. A misunderstanding had arisen between +him and the governor, Courcelle. Both were faithful servants of the +King; but the relations between the two chiefs of the colony were of a +nature necessarily so critical, that a conflict of authority was +scarcely to be avoided. Each thought his functions encroached upon, and +both asked for recall. Another governor succeeded; one who was to stamp +his mark, broad, bold, and ineffaceable, on the most memorable page of +French-American History,--Louis de Buade, Count of Palluau and +Frontenac. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[35] At least, La Salle was in great need of money, about the time of +his second journey. On the sixth of August, 1671, he had received on +credit, "dans son grand besoin et necessite," from Branssac, fiscal +attorney of the Seminary, merchandise to the amount of four hundred and +fifty livres; and on the eighteenth of December of the following year he +gave his promise to pay the same sum, in money or furs, in the August +following. Faillon found the papers in the ancient records of Montreal. + +[36] In his despatch of 2d Nov., 1671, Talon writes to the King that +"Saint-Lusson's expedition will cost nothing, as he has received beaver +enough from the Indians to pay him." + +[37] _Moeurs, Coustumes, et Relligion des Sauvages de l'Amerique +Septentrionale._ This work of Perrot, hitherto unpublished, appeared in +1864, under the editorship of Father Tailhan, S.J. A great part of it is +incorporated in La Potherie. + +[38] See La Potherie, ii. 125. Perrot himself does not mention it. +Charlevoix erroneously places this interview at Chicago. Perrot's +narrative shows that he did not go farther than the tribes of Green Bay; +and the Miamis were then, as we have seen, on the upper part of Fox +River. + +[39] Perrot, _Memoires_, 127. + +[40] _Proces Verbal de la Prise de Possession, etc., 14 Juin, 1671._ The +names are attached to this instrument. + +[41] Marquette is said to have been present; but the official act just +cited, proves the contrary. He was still at St. Esprit. + +[42] _Proces Verbal de la Prise de Possession._ + +[43] The Indian name of the governor of Canada. + +[44] A close translation of Dablon's report of the speech. See +_Relation_, 1671, 27. + +[45] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 2 Nov., 1672._ In the Brodhead +Collection, by a copyist's error, the name of the Chevalier de +Grandfontaine is substituted for that of Talon. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +1672-1675. + +THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI. + + Joliet sent to find the Mississippi.--Jacques + Marquette.--Departure.--Green Bay.--The Wisconsin.--The + Mississippi.--Indians.--Manitous.--The Arkansas.--The + Illinois.--Joliet's Misfortune.--Marquette at Chicago: his Illness; + his Death. + + +If Talon had remained in the colony, Frontenac would infallibly have +quarrelled with him; but he was too clear-sighted not to approve his +plans for the discovery and occupation of the interior. Before sailing +for France, Talon recommended Joliet as a suitable agent for the +discovery of the Mississippi, and the governor accepted his counsel.[46] + +Louis Joliet was the son of a wagon-maker in the service of the Company +of the Hundred Associates,[47] then owners of Canada. He was born at +Quebec in 1645, and was educated by the Jesuits. When still very young, +he resolved to be a priest. He received the tonsure and the minor orders +at the age of seventeen. Four years after, he is mentioned with +especial honor for the part he bore in the disputes in philosophy, at +which the dignitaries of the colony were present, and in which the +intendant himself took part.[48] Not long after, he renounced his +clerical vocation, and turned fur-trader. Talon sent him, with one Pere, +to explore the copper-mines of Lake Superior; and it was on his return +from this expedition that he met La Salle and the Sulpitians near the +head of Lake Ontario.[49] + +In what we know of Joliet, there is nothing that reveals any salient or +distinctive trait of character, any especial breadth of view or boldness +of design. He appears to have been simply a merchant, intelligent, well +educated, courageous, hardy, and enterprising. Though he had renounced +the priesthood, he retained his partiality for the Jesuits; and it is +more than probable that their influence had aided not a little to +determine Talon's choice. One of their number, Jacques Marquette, was +chosen to accompany him. + +[Sidenote: MARQUETTE.] + +He passed up the lakes to Michilimackinac, and found his destined +companion at Point St. Ignace, on the north side of the strait, where, +in his palisaded mission-house and chapel, he had labored for two years +past to instruct the Huron refugees from St. Esprit, and a band of +Ottawas who had joined them. Marquette was born in 1637, of an old and +honorable family at Laon, in the north of France, and was now +thirty-five years of age. When about seventeen, he had joined the +Jesuits, evidently from motives purely religious; and in 1666 he was +sent to the missions of Canada. At first, he was destined to the station +of Tadoussac; and to prepare himself for it, he studied the Montagnais +language under Gabriel Druilletes. But his destination was changed, and +he was sent to the Upper Lakes in 1668, where he had since remained. His +talents as a linguist must have been great; for within a few years he +learned to speak with ease six Indian languages. The traits of his +character are unmistakable. He was of the brotherhood of the early +Canadian missionaries, and the true counterpart of Garnier or Jogues. He +was a devout votary of the Virgin Mary, who, imaged to his mind in +shapes of the most transcendent loveliness with which the pencil of +human genius has ever informed the canvas, was to him the object of an +adoration not unmingled with a sentiment of chivalrous devotion. The +longings of a sensitive heart, divorced from earth, sought solace in +the skies. A subtile element of romance was blended with the fervor of +his worship, and hung like an illumined cloud over the harsh and hard +realities of his daily lot. Kindled by the smile of his celestial +mistress, his gentle and noble nature knew no fear. For her he burned to +dare and to suffer, discover new lands and conquer new realms to her +sway. + +He begins the journal of his voyage thus: "The day of the Immaculate +Conception of the Holy Virgin; whom I had continually invoked since I +came to this country of the Ottawas to obtain from God the favor of +being enabled to visit the nations on the river Mississippi,--this very +day was precisely that on which M. Joliet arrived with orders from Count +Frontenac, our governor, and from M. Talon, our intendant, to go with me +on this discovery. I was all the more delighted at this good news, +because I saw my plans about to be accomplished, and found myself in the +happy necessity of exposing my life for the salvation of all these +tribes,--and especially of the Illinois, who, when I was at Point St. +Esprit, had begged me very earnestly to bring the word of God among +them." + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE.] + +The outfit of the travellers was very simple. They provided themselves +with two birch canoes, and a supply of smoked meat and Indian corn; +embarked with five men, and began their voyage on the seventeenth of +May. They had obtained all possible information from the Indians, and +had made, by means of it, a species of map of their intended route. +"Above all," writes Marquette, "I placed our voyage under the protection +of the Holy Virgin Immaculate, promising that if she granted us the +favor of discovering the great river, I would give it the name of the +Conception."[50] Their course was westward; and, plying their paddles, +they passed the Straits of Michilimackinac, and coasted the northern +shores of Lake Michigan, landing at evening to build their camp-fire at +the edge of the forest, and draw up their canoes on the strand. They +soon reached the river Menomonie, and ascended it to the village of the +Menomonies, or Wild-rice Indians.[51] When they told them the object of +their voyage, they were filled with astonishment, and used their best +ingenuity to dissuade them. The banks of the Mississippi, they said, +were inhabited by ferocious tribes, who put every stranger to death, +tomahawking all new-comers without cause or provocation. They added that +there was a demon in a certain part of the river, whose roar could be +heard at a great distance, and who would engulf them in the abyss where +he dwelt; that its waters were full of frightful monsters, who would +devour them and their canoe; and, finally, that the heat was so great +that they would perish inevitably. Marquette set their counsel at +naught, gave them a few words of instruction in the mysteries of the +Faith, taught them a prayer, and bade them farewell. + +The travellers next reached the mission at the head of Green Bay; +entered Fox River; with difficulty and labor dragged their canoes up the +long and tumultuous rapids; crossed Lake Winnebago; and followed the +quiet windings of the river beyond, where they glided through an endless +growth of wild rice, and scared the innumerable birds that fed upon it. +On either hand rolled the prairie, dotted with groves and trees, +browsing elk and deer.[52] On the seventh of June, they reached the +Mascoutins and Miamis, who, since the visit of Dablon and Allouez, had +been joined by the Kickapoos. Marquette, who had an eye for natural +beauty, was delighted with the situation of the town, which he describes +as standing on the crown of a hill; while, all around, the prairie +stretched beyond the sight, interspersed with groves and belts of tall +forest. But he was still more delighted when he saw a cross planted in +the midst of the place. The Indians had decorated it with a number of +dressed deer-skins, red girdles, and bows and arrows, which they had +hung upon it as an offering to the Great Manitou of the French; a sight +by which Marquette says he was "extremely consoled." + +[Sidenote: THE WISCONSIN RIVER.] + +The travellers had no sooner reached the town than they called the +chiefs and elders to a council. Joliet told them that the governor of +Canada had sent him to discover new countries, and that God had sent his +companion to teach the true faith to the inhabitants; and he prayed for +guides to show them the way to the waters of the Wisconsin. The council +readily consented; and on the tenth of June the Frenchmen embarked +again, with two Indians to conduct them. All the town came down to the +shore to see their departure. Here were the Miamis, with long locks of +hair dangling over each ear, after a fashion which Marquette thought +very becoming; and here, too, the Mascoutins and the Kickapoos, whom he +describes as mere boors in comparison with their Miami townsmen. All +stared alike at the seven adventurers, marvelling that men could be +found to risk an enterprise so hazardous. + +The river twisted among lakes and marshes choked with wild rice; and, +but for their guides, they could scarcely have followed the perplexed +and narrow channel. It brought them at last to the portage, where, after +carrying their canoes a mile and a half over the prairie and through the +marsh, they launched them on the Wisconsin, bade farewell to the waters +that flowed to the St. Lawrence, and committed themselves to the current +that was to bear them they knew not whither,--perhaps to the Gulf of +Mexico, perhaps to the South Sea or the Gulf of California. They glided +calmly down the tranquil stream, by islands choked with trees and +matted with entangling grape-vines; by forests, groves, and prairies, +the parks and pleasure-grounds of a prodigal Nature; by thickets and +marshes and broad bare sand-bars; under the shadowing trees, between +whose tops looked down from afar the bold brow of some woody bluff. At +night, the bivouac,--the canoes inverted on the bank, the flickering +fire, the meal of bison-flesh or venison, the evening pipes, and slumber +beneath the stars; and when in the morning they embarked again, the mist +hung on the river like a bridal veil, then melted before the sun, till +the glassy water and the languid woods basked breathless in the sultry +glare.[53] + +[Sidenote: THE MISSISSIPPI.] + +On the seventeenth of June they saw on their right the broad meadows, +bounded in the distance by rugged hills, where now stand the town and +fort of Prairie du Chien. Before them a wide and rapid current coursed +athwart their way, by the foot of lofty heights wrapped thick in +forests. They had found what they sought, and "with a joy," writes +Marquette, "which I cannot express," they steered forth their canoes on +the eddies of the Mississippi. + +Turning southward, they paddled down the stream, through a solitude +unrelieved by the faintest trace of man. A large fish, apparently one of +the huge cat-fish of the Mississippi, blundered against Marquette's +canoe, with a force which seems to have startled him; and once, as they +drew in their net, they caught a "spade-fish," whose eccentric +appearance greatly astonished them. At length the buffalo began to +appear, grazing in herds on the great prairies which then bordered the +river; and Marquette describes the fierce and stupid look of the old +bulls, as they stared at the intruders through the tangled mane which +nearly blinded them. + +[Sidenote: THE ILLINOIS INDIANS.] + +They advanced with extreme caution, landed at night, and made a fire to +cook their evening meal; then extinguished it, embarked again, paddled +some way farther, and anchored in the stream, keeping a man on the watch +till morning. They had journeyed more than a fortnight without meeting a +human being, when, on the twenty-fifth, they discovered footprints of +men in the mud of the western bank, and a well-trodden path that led to +the adjacent prairie. Joliet and Marquette resolved to follow it; and +leaving the canoes in charge of their men, they set out on their +hazardous adventure. The day was fair, and they walked two leagues in +silence, following the path through the forest and across the sunny +prairie, till they discovered an Indian village on the banks of a river, +and two others on a hill half a league distant.[54] Now, with beating +hearts, they invoked the aid of Heaven, and, again advancing, came so +near, without being seen, that they could hear the voices of the +Indians among the wigwams. Then they stood forth in full view, and +shouted to attract attention. There was great commotion in the village. +The inmates swarmed out of their huts, and four of their chief men +presently came forward to meet the strangers, advancing very +deliberately, and holding up toward the sun two calumets, or +peace-pipes, decorated with feathers. They stopped abruptly before the +two Frenchmen, and stood gazing at them without speaking a word. +Marquette was much relieved on seeing that they wore French cloth, +whence he judged that they must be friends and allies. He broke the +silence, and asked them who they were; whereupon they answered that they +were Illinois, and offered the pipe; which having been duly smoked, they +all went together to the village. Here the chief received the travellers +after a singular fashion, meant to do them honor. He stood stark naked +at the door of a large wigwam, holding up both hands as if to shield his +eyes. "Frenchmen, how bright the sun shines when you come to visit us! +All our village awaits you; and you shall enter our wigwams in peace." +So saying, he led them into his own, which was crowded to suffocation +with savages, staring at their guests in silence. Having smoked with the +chiefs and old men, they were invited to visit the great chief of all +the Illinois, at one of the villages they had seen in the distance; and +thither they proceeded, followed by a throng of warriors, squaws, and +children. On arriving, they were forced to smoke again, and listen to a +speech of welcome from the great chief, who delivered it standing +between two old men, naked like himself. His lodge was crowded with the +dignitaries of the tribe, whom Marquette addressed in Algonquin, +announcing himself as a messenger sent by the God who had made them, and +whom it behooves them to recognize and obey. He added a few words +touching the power and glory of Count Frontenac, and concluded by asking +information concerning the Mississippi, and the tribes along its banks, +whom he was on his way to visit. The chief replied with a speech of +compliment; assuring his guests that their presence added flavor to his +tobacco, made the river more calm, the sky more serene, and the earth +more beautiful. In conclusion, he gave them a young slave and a calumet, +begging them at the same time to abandon their purpose of descending the +Mississippi. + +A feast of four courses now followed. First, a wooden bowl full of a +porridge of Indian meal boiled with grease was set before the guests; +and the master of ceremonies fed them in turn, like infants, with a +large spoon. Then appeared a platter of fish; and the same functionary, +carefully removing the bones with his fingers, and blowing on the +morsels to cool them, placed them in the mouths of the two Frenchmen. A +large dog, killed and cooked for the occasion, was next placed before +them; but, failing to tempt their fastidious appetites, was supplanted +by a dish of fat buffalo-meat, which concluded the entertainment. The +crowd having dispersed, buffalo-robes were spread on the ground, and +Marquette and Joliet spent the night on the scene of the late festivity. +In the morning, the chief, with some six hundred of his tribesmen, +escorted them to their canoes, and bade them, after their stolid +fashion, a friendly farewell. + +[Sidenote: A REAL DANGER.] + +Again they were on their way, slowly drifting down the great river. They +passed the mouth of the Illinois, and glided beneath that line of rocks +on the eastern side, cut into fantastic forms by the elements, and +marked as "The Ruined Castles" on some of the early French maps. +Presently they beheld a sight which reminded them that the Devil was +still lord paramount of this wilderness. On the flat face of a high rock +were painted, in red, black, and green, a pair of monsters, each "as +large as a calf, with horns like a deer, red eyes, a beard like a tiger, +and a frightful expression of countenance. The face is something like +that of a man, the body covered with scales; and the tail so long that +it passes entirely round the body, over the head and between the legs, +ending like that of a fish." Such is the account which the worthy Jesuit +gives of these manitous, or Indian gods.[55] He confesses that at first +they frightened him; and his imagination and that of his credulous +companions was so wrought upon by these unhallowed efforts of Indian +art, that they continued for a long time to talk of them as they plied +their paddles. They were thus engaged, when they were suddenly aroused +by a real danger. A torrent of yellow mud rushed furiously athwart the +calm blue current of the Mississippi, boiling and surging, and sweeping +in its course logs, branches, and uprooted trees. They had reached the +mouth of the Missouri, where that savage river, descending from its mad +career through a vast unknown of barbarism, poured its turbid floods +into the bosom of its gentler sister. Their light canoes whirled on the +miry vortex like dry leaves on an angry brook. "I never," writes +Marquette, "saw anything more terrific;" but they escaped with their +fright, and held their way down the turbulent and swollen current of the +now united rivers.[56] They passed the lonely forest that covered the +site of the destined city of St. Louis, and, a few days later, saw on +their left the mouth of the stream to which the Iroquois had given the +well-merited name of Ohio, or the "Beautiful River."[57] Soon they began +to see the marshy shores buried in a dense growth of the cane, with its +tall straight stems and feathery light-green foliage. The sun glowed +through the hazy air with a languid stifling heat, and by day and night +mosquitoes in myriads left them no peace. They floated slowly down the +current, crouched in the shade of the sails which they had spread as +awnings, when suddenly they saw Indians on the east bank. The surprise +was mutual, and each party was as much frightened as the other. +Marquette hastened to display the calumet which the Illinois had given +him by way of passport; and the Indians, recognizing the pacific symbol, +replied with an invitation to land. Evidently, they were in +communication with Europeans, for they were armed with guns, knives, and +hatchets, wore garments of cloth, and carried their gunpowder in small +bottles of thick glass. They feasted the Frenchmen with buffalo-meat, +bear's oil, and white plums; and gave them a variety of doubtful +information, including the agreeable but delusive assurance that they +would reach the mouth of the river in ten days. It was, in fact, more +than a thousand miles distant. + +[Sidenote: THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI.] + +They resumed their course, and again floated down the interminable +monotony of river, marsh, and forest. Day after day passed on in +solitude, and they had paddled some three hundred miles since their +meeting with the Indians, when, as they neared the mouth of the +Arkansas, they saw a cluster of wigwams on the west bank. Their inmates +were all astir, yelling the war-whoop, snatching their weapons, and +running to the shore to meet the strangers, who, on their part, called +for succor to the Virgin. In truth, they had need of her aid; for +several large wooden canoes, filled with savages, were putting out from +the shore, above and below them, to cut off their retreat, while a swarm +of headlong young warriors waded into the water to attack them. The +current proved too strong; and, failing to reach the canoes of the +Frenchmen, one of them threw his war-club, which flew over the heads of +the startled travellers. Meanwhile, Marquette had not ceased to hold up +his calumet, to which the excited crowd gave no heed, but strung their +bows and notched their arrows for immediate action; when at length the +elders of the village arrived, saw the peace-pipe, restrained the ardor +of the youth, and urged the Frenchmen to come ashore. Marquette and his +companions complied, trembling, and found a better reception than they +had reason to expect. One of the Indians spoke a little Illinois, and +served as interpreter; a friendly conference was followed by a feast of +sagamite and fish; and the travellers, not without sore misgivings, +spent the night in the lodges of their entertainers.[58] + +[Sidenote: THE ARKANSAS.] + +Early in the morning, they embarked again, and proceeded to a village of +the Arkansas tribe, about eight leagues below. Notice of their coming +was sent before them by their late hosts; and as they drew near they +were met by a canoe, in the prow of which stood a naked personage, +holding a calumet, singing, and making gestures of friendship. On +reaching the village, which was on the east side,[59] opposite the mouth +of the river Arkansas, they were conducted to a sort of scaffold, before +the lodge of the war-chief. The space beneath had been prepared for +their reception, the ground being neatly covered with rush mats. On +these they were seated; the warriors sat around them in a semi-circle; +then the elders of the tribe; and then the promiscuous crowd of +villagers, standing, and staring over the heads of the more dignified +members of the assembly. All the men were naked; but, to compensate for +the lack of clothing, they wore strings of beads in their noses and +ears. The women were clothed in shabby skins, and wore their hair +clumped in a mass behind each ear. By good luck, there was a young +Indian in the village, who had an excellent knowledge of Illinois; and +through him Marquette endeavored to explain the mysteries of +Christianity, and to gain information concerning the river below. To +this end he gave his auditors the presents indispensable on such +occasions, but received very little in return. They told him that the +Mississippi was infested by hostile Indians, armed with guns procured +from white men; and that they, the Arkansas, stood in such fear of them +that they dared not hunt the buffalo, but were forced to live on Indian +corn, of which they raised three crops a year. + +During the speeches on either side, food was brought in without +ceasing,--sometimes a platter of sagamite or mush; sometimes of corn +boiled whole; sometimes a roasted dog. The villagers had large earthen +pots and platters, made by themselves with tolerable skill, as well as +hatchets, knives, and beads, gained by traffic with the Illinois and +other tribes in contact with the French or Spaniards. All day there was +feasting without respite, after the merciless practice of Indian +hospitality; but at night some of their entertainers proposed to kill +and plunder them,--a scheme which was defeated by the vigilance of the +chief, who visited their quarters, and danced the calumet dance to +reassure his guests. + +The travellers now held counsel as to what course they should take. They +had gone far enough, as they thought, to establish one important +point,--that the Mississippi discharged its waters, not into the +Atlantic or sea of Virginia, nor into the Gulf of California or +Vermilion Sea, but into the Gulf of Mexico. They thought themselves +nearer to its mouth than they actually were, the distance being still +about seven hundred miles; and they feared that if they went farther +they might be killed by Indians or captured by Spaniards, whereby the +results of their discovery would be lost. Therefore they resolved to +return to Canada, and report what they had seen. + +They left the Arkansas village, and began their homeward voyage on the +seventeenth of July. It was no easy task to urge their way upward, in +the heat of midsummer, against the current of the dark and gloomy +stream, toiling all day under the parching sun, and sleeping at night in +the exhalations of the unwholesome shore, or in the narrow confines of +their birchen vessels, anchored on the river. Marquette was attacked +with dysentery. Languid and well-nigh spent, he invoked his celestial +mistress, as day after day, and week after week, they won their slow way +northward. At length, they reached the Illinois, and, entering its +mouth, followed its course, charmed, as they went, with its placid +waters, its shady forests, and its rich plains, grazed by the bison and +the deer. They stopped at a spot soon to be made famous in the annals of +western discovery. This was a village of the Illinois, then called +"Kaskaskia;" a name afterwards transferred to another locality.[60] A +chief, with a band of young warriors, offered to guide them to the Lake +of the Illinois; that is to say, Lake Michigan. Thither they repaired; +and, coasting its shores, reached Green Bay at the end of September, +after an absence of about four months, during which they had paddled +their canoes somewhat more than two thousand five hundred miles.[61] + +[Sidenote: RETURN TO CANADA.] + +Marquette remained to recruit his exhausted strength; but Joliet +descended to Quebec, to bear the report of his discovery to Count +Frontenac. Fortune had wonderfully favored him on his long and perilous +journey; but now she abandoned him on the very threshold of home. At the +foot of the rapids of La Chine, and immediately above Montreal, his +canoe was overset, two of his men and an Indian boy were drowned, all +his papers were lost, and he himself narrowly escaped.[62] In a letter +to Frontenac, he speaks of the accident as follows: "I had escaped every +peril from the Indians; I had passed forty-two rapids; and was on the +point of disembarking, full of joy at the success of so long and +difficult an enterprise, when my canoe capsized, after all the danger +seemed over. I lost two men and my box of papers, within sight of the +first French settlements, which I had left almost two years before. +Nothing remains to me but my life, and the ardent desire to employ it on +any service which you may please to direct."[63] + +[Sidenote: MARQUETTE'S MISSION.] + +Marquette spent the winter and the following summer at the mission of +Green Bay, still suffering from his malady. In the autumn, however, it +abated; and he was permitted by his Superior to attempt the execution of +a plan to which he was devotedly attached,--the founding, at the +principal town of the Illinois, of a mission to be called the +"Immaculate Conception," a name which he had already given to the river +Mississippi. He set out on this errand on the twenty-fifth of October, +accompanied by two men, named Pierre and Jacques, one of whom had been +with him on his great journey of discovery. A band of Pottawattamies and +another band of Illinois also joined him. The united parties--ten canoes +in all--followed the east shore of Green Bay as far as the inlet then +called "Sturgeon Cove," from the head of which they crossed by a +difficult portage through the forest to the shore of Lake Michigan. +November had come. The bright hues of the autumn foliage were changed to +rusty brown. The shore was desolate, and the lake was stormy. They were +more than a month in coasting its western border, when at length they +reached the river Chicago, entered it, and ascended about two leagues. +Marquette's disease had lately returned, and hemorrhage now ensued. He +told his two companions that this journey would be his last. In the +condition in which he was, it was impossible to go farther. The two men +built a log hut by the river, and here they prepared to spend the +winter; while Marquette, feeble as he was, began the spiritual exercises +of Saint Ignatius, and confessed his two companions twice a week. + +Meadow, marsh, and forest were sheeted with snow, but game was abundant. +Pierre and Jacques killed buffalo and deer, and shot wild turkeys close +to their hut. There was an encampment of Illinois within two days' +journey; and other Indians, passing by this well-known thoroughfare, +occasionally visited them, treating the exiles kindly, and sometimes +bringing them game and Indian corn. Eighteen leagues distant was the +camp of two adventurous French traders,--one of them, a noted _coureur +de bois_, nicknamed La Taupine;[64] and the other, a self-styled +surgeon. They also visited Marquette, and befriended him to the best of +their power. + +[Sidenote: THE MISSION AT KASKASKIA.] + +Urged by a burning desire to lay, before he died, the foundation of his +new mission of the Immaculate Conception, Marquette begged his two +followers to join him in a _novena_, or nine days' devotion to the +Virgin. In consequence of this, as he believed, his disease relented; he +began to regain strength, and in March was able to resume the journey. +On the thirtieth of the month, they left their hut, which had been +inundated by a sudden rise of the river, and carried their canoe through +mud and water over the portage which led to the Des Plaines. Marquette +knew the way, for he had passed by this route on his return from the +Mississippi. Amid the rains of opening spring, they floated down the +swollen current of the Des Plaines, by naked woods and spongy, saturated +prairies, till they reached its junction with the main stream of the +Illinois, which they descended to their destination, the Indian town +which Marquette calls "Kaskaskia." Here, as we are told, he was received +"like an angel from Heaven." He passed from wigwam to wigwam, telling +the listening crowds of God and the Virgin, Paradise and Hell, angels +and demons; and, when he thought their minds prepared, he summoned them +all to a grand council. + +It took place near the town, on the great meadow which lies between the +river and the modern village of Utica. Here five hundred chiefs and old +men were seated in a ring; behind stood fifteen hundred youths and +warriors, and behind these again all the women and children of the +village. Marquette, standing in the midst, displayed four large pictures +of the Virgin; harangued the assembly on the mysteries of the Faith, and +exhorted them to adopt it. The temper of his auditory met his utmost +wishes. They begged him to stay among them and continue his +instructions; but his life was fast ebbing away, and it behooved him to +depart. + +[Sidenote: BURIAL OF MARQUETTE.] + +A few days after Easter he left the village, escorted by a crowd of +Indians, who followed him as far as Lake Michigan. Here he embarked with +his two companions. Their destination was Michilimackinac, and their +course lay along the eastern borders of the lake. As, in the freshness +of advancing spring, Pierre and Jacques urged their canoe along that +lonely and savage shore, the priest lay with dimmed sight and prostrated +strength, communing with the Virgin and the angels. On the nineteenth of +May, he felt that his hour was near; and, as they passed the mouth of a +small river, he requested his companions to land. They complied, built a +shed of bark on a rising ground near the bank, and carried thither the +dying Jesuit. With perfect cheerfulness and composure, he gave +directions for his burial, asked their forgiveness for the trouble he +had caused them, administered to them the sacrament of penitence, and +thanked God that he was permitted to die in the wilderness, a missionary +of the Faith and a member of the Jesuit brotherhood. At night, seeing +that they were fatigued, he told them to take rest, saying that he would +call them when he felt his time approaching. Two or three hours after, +they heard a feeble voice, and, hastening to his side, found him at the +point of death. He expired calmly, murmuring the names of Jesus and +Mary, with his eyes fixed on the crucifix which one of his followers +held before him. They dug a grave beside the hut, and here they buried +him according to the directions which he had given them; then, +re-embarking, they made their way to Michilimackinac, to bear the +tidings to the priests at the mission of St. Ignace.[65] + +In the winter of 1676, a party of Kiskakon Ottawas were hunting on Lake +Michigan; and when, in the following spring, they prepared to return +home, they bethought them, in accordance with an Indian custom, of +taking with them the bones of Marquette, who had been their instructor +at the mission of St. Esprit. They repaired to the spot, found the +grave, opened it, washed and dried the bones and placed them carefully +in a box of birch-bark. Then, in a procession of thirty canoes, they +bore it, singing their funeral songs, to St. Ignace of Michilimackinac. +As they approached, priests, Indians, and traders all thronged to the +shore. The relics of Marquette were received with solemn ceremony, and +buried beneath the floor of the little chapel of the mission.[66] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[46] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 2 Nov., 1672; Ibid., 14 Nov., +1674_. + +[47] See "The Jesuits in North America." + +[48] "Le 2 Juillet (1666) les premieres disputes de philosophie se font +dans la congregation avec succes. Toutes les puissances s'y trouvent; M. +l'Intendant entr'autres y a argumente tres-bien. M. Jolliet et Pierre +Francheville y ont tres-bien repondu de toute la logique."--_Journal des +Jesuites._ + +[49] Nothing was known of Joliet till Shea investigated his history. +Ferland, in his _Notes sur les Registres de Notre-Dame de Quebec_; +Faillon, in his _Colonie Francaise en Canada_; and Margry, in a series +of papers in the _Journal General de l'Instruction Publique_,--have +thrown much new light on his life. From journals of a voyage made by him +at a later period to the coast of Labrador, given in substance by +Margry, he seems to have been a man of close and intelligent +observation. His mathematical acquirements appear to have been very +considerable. + +[50] The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, sanctioned in our own +time by the Pope, was always a favorite tenet of the Jesuits; and +Marquette was especially devoted to it. + +[51] The Malhoumines, Malouminek, Oumalouminek, or Nation des +Folles-Avoines, of early French writers. The _folle-avoine_, wild oats +or "wild rice" (_Zizania aquatica_), was their ordinary food, as also of +other tribes of this region. + +[52] Dablon, on his journey with Allouez in 1670, was delighted with the +aspect of the country and the abundance of game along this river. +Carver, a century later, speaks to the same effect, saying that the +birds rose up in clouds from the wild-rice marshes. + +[53] The above traits of the scenery of the Wisconsin are taken from +personal observation of the river during midsummer. + +[54] The Indian villages, under the names of Peouaria (_Peoria_) and +Moingouena, are represented in Marquette's map upon a river +corresponding in position with the Des Moines; though the distance from +the Wisconsin, as given by him, would indicate a river farther north. + +[55] The rock where these figures were painted is immediately above the +city of Alton. The tradition of their existence remains, though they are +entirely effaced by time. In 1867, when I passed the place, a part of +the rock had been quarried away, and, instead of Marquette's monsters, +it bore a huge advertisement of "Plantation Bitters." Some years ago, +certain persons, with more zeal than knowledge, proposed to restore the +figures, after conceptions of their own; but the idea was abandoned. + +Marquette made a drawing of the two monsters, but it is lost. I have, +however, a fac-simile of a map made a few years later, by order of the +Intendant Duchesneau, which is decorated with the portrait of one of +them, answering to Marquette's description, and probably copied from his +drawing. St. Cosme, who saw them in 1699, says that they were even then +almost effaced. Douay and Joutel also speak of them,--the former, +bitterly hostile to his Jesuit contemporaries, charging Marquette with +exaggeration in his account of them. Joutel could see nothing terrifying +in their appearance; but he says that his Indians made sacrifices to +them as they passed. + +[56] The Missouri is called "Pekitanoui" by Marquette. It also bears, on +early French maps, the names of "Riviere des Osages," and "Riviere des +Emissourites," or "Oumessourits." On Marquette's map, a tribe of this +name is placed near its banks, just above the Osages. Judging by the +course of the Mississippi that it discharged into the Gulf of Mexico, he +conceived the hope of one day reaching the South Sea by way of the +Missouri. + +[57] Called, on Marquette's map, "Ouabouskiaou." On some of the earliest +maps, it is called "Ouabache" (Wabash). + +[58] This village, called "Mitchigamea," is represented on several +contemporary maps. + +[59] A few years later, the Arkansas were all on the west side. + +[60] Marquette says that it consisted at this time of seventy-four +lodges. These, like the Huron and Iroquois lodges, contained each +several fires and several families. This village was about seven miles +below the site of the present town of Ottawa. + +[61] The journal of Marquette, first published in an imperfect form by +Thevenot, in 1681, has been reprinted by Mr. Lenox, under the direction +of Mr. Shea, from the manuscript preserved in the archives of the +Canadian Jesuits. It will also be found in Shea's _Discovery and +Exploration of the Mississippi Valley_, and the _Relations Inedites_ of +Martin. The true map of Marquette accompanies all these publications. +The map published by Thevenot and reproduced by Bancroft is not +Marquette's. The original of this, of which I have a fac-simile, bears +the title _Carte de la Nouvelle Decouverte que les Peres Jesuites ont +faite en l'annee 1672, et continuee par le Pere Jacques Marquette, etc._ +The return route of the expedition is incorrectly laid down on it. A +manuscript map of the Jesuit Raffeix, preserved in the Bibliotheque +Imperiale, is more accurate in this particular. I have also another +contemporary manuscript map, indicating the various Jesuit stations in +the West at this time, and representing the Mississippi, as discovered +by Marquette. For these and other maps, see Appendix. + +[62] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, Quebec, 14 Nov., 1674._ + +[63] This letter is appended to Joliet's smaller map of his discoveries. +See Appendix. Compare _Details sur le Voyage de Louis Joliet_ and +_Relation de la Descouverte de plusieurs Pays situez au midi de la +Nouvelle France, faite en 1673_ (Margry, i. 259). These are oral +accounts given by Joliet after the loss of his papers. Also, _Lettre de +Joliet, Oct. 10, 1674_ (Harrisse). On the seventh of October, 1675, +Joliet married Claire Bissot, daughter of a wealthy Canadian merchant, +engaged in trade with the northern Indians. This drew Joliet's attention +to Hudson's Bay; and he made a journey thither in 1679, by way of the +Saguenay. He found three English forts on the bay, occupied by about +sixty men, who had also an armed vessel of twelve guns and several small +trading-craft. The English held out great inducements to Joliet to join +them; but he declined, and returned to Quebec, where he reported that +unless these formidable rivals were dispossessed, the trade of Canada +would be ruined. In consequence of this report, some of the principal +merchants of the colony formed a company to compete with the English in +the trade of Hudson's Bay. In the year of this journey, Joliet received +a grant of the islands of Mignan; and in the following year, 1680, he +received another grant, of the great island of Anticosti in the lower +St. Lawrence. In 1681 he was established here, with his wife and six +servants. He was engaged in fisheries; and, being a skilful navigator +and surveyor, he made about this time a chart of the St. Lawrence. In +1690, Sir William Phips, on his way with an English fleet to attack +Quebec, made a descent on Joliet's establishment, burnt his buildings, +and took prisoners his wife and his mother-in-law. In 1694 Joliet +explored the coasts of Labrador, under the auspices of a company formed +for the whale and seal fishery. On his return, Frontenac made him royal +pilot for the St. Lawrence; and at about the same time he received the +appointment of hydrographer at Quebec. He died, apparently poor, in 1699 +or 1700, and was buried on one of the islands of Mignan. The discovery +of the above facts is due in great part to the researches of Margry. + +[64] Pierre Moreau, _alias_ La Taupine, was afterwards bitterly +complained of by the Intendant Duchesneau, for acting as the governor's +agent in illicit trade with the Indians. + +[65] The contemporary _Relation_ tells us that a miracle took place at +the burial of Marquette. One of the two Frenchmen, overcome with grief +and colic, bethought him of applying a little earth from the grave to +the seat of pain. This at once restored him to health and cheerfulness. + +[66] For Marquette's death, see the contemporary _Relation_, published +by Shea, Lenox, and Martin, with the accompanying _Lettre et Journal_. +The river where he died is a small stream in the west of Michigan, some +distance south of the promontory called the "Sleeping Bear." It long +bore his name, which is now borne by a larger neighboring stream, +Charlevoix's account of Marquette's death is derived from tradition, and +is not supported by the contemporary narrative. In 1877, human bones, +with fragments of birch-bark, were found buried on the supposed site of +the Jesuit chapel at Point St. Ignace. + +In 1847, the missionary of the Algonquins at the Lake of Two Mountains, +above Montreal, wrote down a tradition of the death of Marquette, from +the lips of an old Indian woman, born in 1777, at Michilimackinac. Her +ancestress had been baptized by the subject of the story. The tradition +has a resemblance to that related as fact by Charlevoix. The old squaw +said that the Jesuit was returning, very ill, to Michilimackinac, when a +storm forced him and his two men to land near a little river. Here he +told them that he should die, and directed them to ring a bell over his +grave and plant a cross. They all remained four days at the spot; and, +though without food, the men felt no hunger. On the night of the fourth +day he died, and the men buried him as he had directed. On waking in the +morning, they saw a sack of Indian corn, a quantity of bacon, and some +biscuit, miraculously sent to them, in accordance with the promise of +Marquette, who had told them that they should have food enough for their +journey to Michilimackinac. At the same instant, the stream began to +rise, and in a few moments encircled the grave of the Jesuit, which +formed, thenceforth, an islet in the waters. The tradition adds, that an +Indian battle afterwards took place on the banks of this stream, between +Christians and infidels; and that the former gained the victory, in +consequence of invoking the name of Marquette. This story bears the +attestation of the priest of the Two Mountains that it is a literal +translation of the tradition, as recounted by the old woman. + +It has been asserted that the Illinois country was visited by two +priests, some time before the visit of Marquette. This assertion was +first made by M. Noiseux, late Grand Vicar of Quebec, who gives no +authority for it. Not the slightest indication of any such visit appears +in any contemporary document or map, thus far discovered. The +contemporary writers, down to the time of Marquette and La Salle, all +speak of the Illinois as an unknown country. The entire groundlessness +of Noiseux's assertion is shown by Shea, in a paper in the "Weekly +Herald," of New York, April 21,1855. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +1673-1678. + +LA SALLE AND FRONTENAC. + + Objects of La Salle.--Frontenac favors him.--Projects of + Frontenac.--Cataraqui.--Frontenac on Lake Ontario.--Fort + Frontenac.--La Salle and Fenelon.--Success of La Salle: his + Enemies. + + +We turn from the humble Marquette, thanking God with his last breath +that he died for his Order and his Faith; and by our side stands the +masculine form of Cavelier de la Salle. Prodigious was the contrast +between the two discoverers: the one, with clasped hands and upturned +eyes, seems a figure evoked from some dim legend of mediaeval saintship; +the other, with feet firm planted on the hard earth, breathes the +self-relying energies of modern practical enterprise. Nevertheless, La +Salle's enemies called him a visionary. His projects perplexed and +startled them. At first, they ridiculed him; and then, as step by step +he advanced towards his purpose, they denounced and maligned him. What +was this purpose? It was not of sudden growth, but developed as years +went on. La Salle at La Chine dreamed of a western passage to China, and +nursed vague schemes of western discovery. Then, when his earlier +journeyings revealed to him the valley of the Ohio and the fertile +plains of Illinois, his imagination took wing over the boundless +prairies and forests drained by the great river of the West. His +ambition had found its field. He would leave barren and frozen Canada +behind, and lead France and civilization into the valley of the +Mississippi. Neither the English nor the Jesuits should conquer that +rich domain: the one must rest content with the country east of the +Alleghanies, and the other with the forests, savages, and beaver-skins +of the northern lakes. It was for him to call into light the latent +riches of the great West. But the way to his land of promise was rough +and long: it lay through Canada, filled with hostile traders and hostile +priests, and barred by ice for half the year. The difficulty was soon +solved. La Salle became convinced that the Mississippi flowed, not into +the Pacific or the Gulf of California, but into the Gulf of Mexico. By a +fortified post at its mouth, he could guard it against both English and +Spaniards, and secure for the trade of the interior an access and an +outlet under his own control, and open at every season. Of this trade, +the hides of the buffalo would at first form the staple, and along with +furs would reward the enterprise till other resources should be +developed. + +Such were the vast projects that unfolded themselves in the mind of La +Salle. Canada must needs be, at the outset, his base of action, and +without the support of its authorities he could do nothing. This +support he found. From the moment when Count Frontenac assumed the +government of the colony, he seems to have looked with favor on the +young discoverer. There were points of likeness between the two men. +Both were ardent, bold, and enterprising. The irascible and fiery pride +of the noble found its match in the reserved and seemingly cold pride of +the ambitious burgher. Each could comprehend the other; and they had, +moreover, strong prejudices and dislikes in common. An understanding, +not to say an alliance, soon grew up between them. + +[Sidenote: PROJECTS OF FRONTENAC.] + +Frontenac had come to Canada a ruined man. He was ostentatious, lavish, +and in no way disposed to let slip an opportunity of mending his +fortune. He presently thought that he had found a plan by which he could +serve both the colony and himself. His predecessor, Courcelle, had urged +upon the King the expediency of building a fort on Lake Ontario, in +order to hold the Iroquois in check and intercept the trade which the +tribes of the Upper Lakes had begun to carry on with the Dutch and +English of New York. Thus a stream of wealth would be turned into +Canada, which would otherwise enrich her enemies. Here, to all +appearance, was a great public good, and from the military point of view +it was so in fact; but it was clear that the trade thus secured might be +made to profit, not the colony at large, but those alone who had control +of the fort, which would then become the instrument of a monopoly. This +the governor understood; and, without doubt, he meant that the projected +establishment should pay him tribute. How far he and La Salle were +acting in concurrence at this time, it is not easy to say; but Frontenac +often took counsel of the explorer, who, on his part, saw in the design +a possible first step towards the accomplishment of his own far-reaching +schemes. + +[Sidenote: EXPEDITION OF FRONTENAC.] + +Such of the Canadian merchants as were not in the governor's confidence +looked on his plan with extreme distrust. Frontenac, therefore, thought +it expedient "to make use," as he expresses it, "of address." He gave +out merely that he intended to make a tour through the upper parts of +the colony with an armed force, in order to inspire the Indians with +respect, and secure a solid peace. He had neither troops, money, +munitions, nor means of transportation; yet there was no time to lose, +for, should he delay the execution of his plan, it might be +countermanded by the King. His only resource, therefore, was in a prompt +and hardy exertion of the royal authority; and he issued an order +requiring the inhabitants of Quebec, Montreal, Three Rivers, and other +settlements to furnish him, at their own cost, as soon as the spring +sowing should be over, with a certain number of armed men, besides the +requisite canoes. At the same time, he invited the officers settled in +the country to join the expedition,--an invitation which, anxious as +they were to gain his good graces, few of them cared to decline. +Regardless of murmurs and discontent, he pushed his preparation +vigorously, and on the third of June left Quebec with his guard, his +staff, a part of the garrison of the Castle of St. Louis, and a number +of volunteers. He had already sent to La Salle, who was then at +Montreal, directing him to repair to Onondaga, the political centre of +the Iroquois, and invite their sachems to meet the governor in council +at the Bay of Quinte on the north of Lake Ontario. La Salle had set out +on his mission, but first sent Frontenac a map, which convinced him that +the best site for his proposed fort was the mouth of the Cataraqui, +where Kingston now stands. Another messenger was accordingly despatched, +to change the rendezvous to this point. + +Meanwhile, the governor proceeded at his leisure towards Montreal, +stopping by the way to visit the officers settled along the bank, who, +eager to pay their homage to the newly risen sun, received him with a +hospitality which under the roof of a log hut was sometimes graced by +the polished courtesies of the salon and the boudoir. Reaching Montreal, +which he had never before seen, he gazed, we may suppose, with some +interest at the long row of humble dwellings which lined the bank, the +massive buildings of the Seminary, and the spire of the church +predominant over all. It was a rude scene, but the greeting that awaited +him savored nothing of the rough simplicity of the wilderness. Perrot, +the local governor, was on the shore with his soldiers and the +inhabitants, drawn up under arms and firing a salute to welcome the +representative of the King. Frontenac was compelled to listen to a long +harangue from the judge of the place, followed by another from the +syndic. Then there was a solemn procession to the church, where he was +forced to undergo a third effort of oratory from one of the priests. _Te +Deum_ followed, in thanks for his arrival; and then he took refuge in +the fort. Here he remained thirteen days, busied with his preparations, +organizing the militia, soothing their mutual jealousies, and settling +knotty questions of rank and precedence. During this time, every means, +as he declares, was used to prevent him from proceeding; and among other +devices a rumor was set on foot that a Dutch fleet, having just captured +Boston, was on its way to attack Quebec.[67] + +[Sidenote: FRONTENAC'S JOURNEY.] + +Having sent men, canoes, and baggage, by land, to La Salle's old +settlement of La Chine, Frontenac himself followed on the twenty-eighth +of June. Including Indians from the missions, he now had with him about +four hundred men and a hundred and twenty canoes, besides two large +flat-boats, which he caused to be painted in red and blue, with strange +devices, intended to dazzle the Iroquois by a display of unwonted +splendor. Now their hard task began. Shouldering canoes through the +forest, dragging the flat-boats along the shore, working like +beavers,--sometimes in water to the knees, sometimes to the armpits, +their feet cut by the sharp stones, and they themselves well-nigh swept +down by the furious current,--they fought their way upward against the +chain of mighty rapids that break the navigation of the St. Lawrence. +The Indians were of the greatest service. Frontenac, like La Salle, +showed from the first a special faculty of managing them; for his keen, +incisive spirit was exactly to their liking, and they worked for him as +they would have worked for no man else. As they approached the Long +Saut, rain fell in torrents; and the governor, without his cloak, and +drenched to the skin, directed in person the amphibious toil of his +followers. Once, it is said, he lay awake all night, in his anxiety lest +the biscuit should be wet, which would have ruined the expedition. No +such mischance took place, and at length the last rapid was passed, and +smooth water awaited them to their journey's end. Soon they reached the +Thousand Islands, and their light flotilla glided in long file among +those watery labyrinths, by rocky islets, where some lonely pine towered +like a mast against the sky; by sun-scorched crags, where the brown +lichens crisped in the parching glare; by deep dells, shady and cool, +rich in rank ferns, and spongy, dark-green mosses; by still coves, where +the water-lilies lay like snow-flakes on their broad, flat leaves,--till +at length they neared their goal, and the glistening bosom of Lake +Ontario opened on their sight. + +Frontenac, to impose respect on the Iroquois, now set his canoes in +order of battle. Four divisions formed the first line, then came the two +flat-boats; he himself, with his guards, his staff, and the gentlemen +volunteers, followed, with the canoes of Three Rivers on his right, and +those of the Indians on his left, while two remaining divisions formed a +rear line. Thus, with measured paddles, they advanced over the still +lake, till they saw a canoe approaching to meet them. It bore several +Iroquois chiefs, who told them that the dignitaries of their nation +awaited them at Cataraqui, and offered to guide them to the spot. They +entered the wide mouth of the river, and passed along the shore, now +covered by the quiet little city of Kingston, till they reached the +point at present occupied by the barracks, at the western end of +Cataraqui bridge. Here they stranded their canoes and disembarked. +Baggage was landed, fires lighted, tents pitched, and guards set. Close +at hand, under the lee of the forest, were the camping sheds of the +Iroquois, who had come to the rendezvous in considerable numbers. + +[Sidenote: FRONTENAC AT CATARAQUI.] + +At daybreak of the next morning, the thirteenth of July, the drums beat, +and the whole party were drawn up under arms. A double line of men +extended from the front of Frontenac's tent to the Indian camp; and, +through the lane thus formed, the savage deputies, sixty in number, +advanced to the place of council. They could not hide their admiration +at the martial array of the French, many of whom were old soldiers of +the regiment of Carignan; and when they reached the tent they ejaculated +their astonishment at the uniforms of the governor's guard who +surrounded it. Here the ground had been carpeted with the sails of the +flat-boats, on which the deputies squatted themselves in a ring and +smoked their pipes for a time with their usual air of deliberate +gravity; while Frontenac, who sat surrounded by his officers, had full +leisure to contemplate the formidable adversaries whose mettle was +hereafter to put his own to so severe a test. A chief named Garakontie, +a noted friend of the French, at length opened the council, in behalf of +all the five Iroquois nations, with expressions of great respect and +deference towards "Onontio;" that is to say, the governor of Canada. +Whereupon Frontenac, whose native arrogance where Indians were concerned +always took a form which imposed respect without exciting anger, replied +in the following strain:-- + +"Children! Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas. I am glad +to see you here, where I have had a fire lighted for you to smoke by, +and for me to talk to you. You have done well, my children, to obey the +command of your Father. Take courage: you will hear his word, which is +full of peace and tenderness. For do not think that I have come for war. +My mind is full of peace, and she walks by my side. Courage, then, +children, and take rest." + +With that, he gave them six fathoms of tobacco, reiterated his +assurances of friendship, promised that he would be a kind father so +long as they should be obedient children, regretted that he was forced +to speak through an interpreter, and ended with a gift of guns to the +men, and prunes and raisins to their wives and children. Here closed +this preliminary meeting, the great council being postponed to another +day. + +During the meeting, Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, was tracing out the +lines of a fort, after a predetermined plan; and the whole party, under +the direction of their officers, now set themselves to construct it. +Some cut down trees, some dug the trenches, some hewed the palisades; +and with such order and alacrity was the work urged on, that the Indians +were lost in astonishment. Meanwhile, Frontenac spared no pains to make +friends of the chiefs, some of whom he had constantly at his table. He +fondled the Iroquois children, and gave them bread and sweetmeats, and +in the evening feasted the squaws to make them dance. The Indians were +delighted with these attentions, and conceived a high opinion of the new +Onontio. + +[Sidenote: FRONTENAC AND THE INDIANS.] + +On the seventeenth, when the construction of the fort was well advanced, +Frontenac called the chiefs to a grand council, which was held with all +possible state and ceremony. His dealing with the Indians on this and +other occasions was truly admirable. Unacquainted as he was with them, +he seems to have had an instinctive perception of the treatment they +required. His predecessors had never ventured to address the Iroquois +as "Children," but had always styled them "Brothers;" and yet the +assumption of paternal authority on the part of Frontenac was not only +taken in good part, but was received with apparent gratitude. The +martial nature of the man, his clear, decisive speech, and his frank and +downright manner, backed as they were by a display of force which in +their eyes was formidable, struck them with admiration, and gave tenfold +effect to his words of kindness. They thanked him for that which from +another they would not have endured. + +Frontenac began by again expressing his satisfaction that they had +obeyed the commands of their Father, and come to Cataraqui to hear what +he had to say. Then he exhorted them to embrace Christianity; and on +this theme he dwelt at length, in words excellently adapted to produce +the desired effect,--words which it would be most superfluous to tax as +insincere, though doubtless they lost nothing in emphasis because in +this instance conscience and policy aimed alike. Then, changing his +tone, he pointed to his officers, his guard, the long files of the +militia, and the two flat-boats, mounted with cannon, which lay in the +river near by. "If," he said, "your Father can come so far, with so +great a force, through such dangerous rapids, merely to make you a visit +of pleasure and friendship, what would he do, if you should awaken his +anger, and make it necessary for him to punish his disobedient children? +He is the arbiter of peace and war. Beware how you offend him!" And he +warned them not to molest the Indian allies of the French, telling them, +sharply, that he would chastise them for the least infraction of the +peace. + +From threats he passed to blandishments, and urged them to confide in +his paternal kindness, saying that, in proof of his affection, he was +building a store-house at Cataraqui, where they could be supplied with +all the goods they needed, without the necessity of a long and dangerous +journey. He warned them against listening to bad men, who might seek to +delude them by misrepresentations and falsehoods; and he urged them to +give heed to none but "men of character, like the Sieur de la Salle." He +expressed a hope that they would suffer their children to learn French +from the missionaries, in order that they and his nephews--meaning the +French colonists--might become one people; and he concluded by +requesting them to give him a number of their children to be educated in +the French manner, at Quebec. + +[Sidenote: TREATY WITH THE INDIANS.] + +This speech, every clause of which was reinforced by abundant presents, +was extremely well received; though one speaker reminded him that he had +forgotten one important point, inasmuch as he had not told them at what +prices they could obtain goods at Cataraqui. Frontenac evaded a precise +answer, but promised them that the goods should be as cheap as possible, +in view of the great difficulty of transportation. As to the request +concerning their children, they said that they could not accede to it +till they had talked the matter over in their villages; but it is a +striking proof of the influence which Frontenac had gained over them, +that, in the following year, they actually sent several of their +children to Quebec to be educated,--the girls among the Ursulines, and +the boys in the household of the governor. + +Three days after the council, the Iroquois set out on their return; and +as the palisades of the fort were now finished, and the barracks nearly +so, Frontenac began to send his party homeward by detachments. He +himself was detained for a time by the arrival of another band of +Iroquois, from the villages on the north side of Lake Ontario. He +repeated to them the speech he had made to the others; and, this final +meeting over, he embarked with his guard, leaving a sufficient number to +hold the fort, which was to be provisioned for a year by means of a +convoy then on its way up the river. Passing the rapids safely, he +reached Montreal on the first of August. + +His enterprise had been a complete success. He had gained every point, +and, in spite of the dangerous navigation, had not lost a single canoe. +Thanks to the enforced and gratuitous assistance of the inhabitants, the +whole had cost the King only about ten thousand francs, which Frontenac +had advanced on his own credit. Though in a commercial point of view the +new establishment was of very questionable benefit to the colony at +large, the governor had, nevertheless, conferred an inestimable blessing +on all Canada by the assurance he had gained of a long respite from the +fearful scourge of Iroquois hostility. "Assuredly," he writes, "I may +boast of having impressed them at once with respect, fear, and +good-will."[68] He adds that the fort at Cataraqui, with the aid of a +vessel now building, will command Lake Ontario, keep the peace with the +Iroquois, and cut off the trade with the English; and he proceeds to say +that by another fort at the mouth of the Niagara, and another vessel on +Lake Erie, we, the French, can command all the Upper Lakes. This plan +was an essential link in the schemes of La Salle; and we shall soon find +him employed in executing it. + +A curious incident occurred soon after the building of the fort on Lake +Ontario. Frontenac, on his way back, quarrelled with Perrot, the +governor of Montreal, whom, in view of his speculations in the +fur-trade, he seems to have regarded as a rival in business; but who, by +his folly and arrogance, would have justified any reasonable measure of +severity. Frontenac, however, was not reasonable. He arrested Perrot, +threw him into prison, and set up a man of his own as governor in his +place; and as the judge of Montreal was not in his interest, he removed +him, and substituted another on whom he could rely. Thus for a time he +had Montreal well in hand. + +The priests of the Seminary, seigniors of the island, regarded these +arbitrary proceedings with extreme uneasiness. They claimed the right of +nominating their own governor; and Perrot, though he held a commission +from the King, owed his place to their appointment. True, he had set +them at nought, and proved a veritable King Stork; yet nevertheless they +regarded his removal as an infringement of their rights. + +During the quarrel with Perrot, La Salle chanced to be at Montreal, +lodged in the house of Jacques Le Ber, who, though one of the principal +merchants and most influential inhabitants of the settlement, was +accustomed to sell goods across his counter in person to white men and +Indians, his wife taking his place when he was absent. Such were the +primitive manners of the secluded little colony. Le Ber, at this time, +was in the interest of Frontenac and La Salle; though he afterwards +became one of their most determined opponents. Amid the excitement and +discussion occasioned by Perrot's arrest, La Salle declared himself an +adherent of the governor, and warned all persons against speaking ill of +him in his hearing. + +[Sidenote: ABBE FENELON.] + +The Abbe Fenelon, already mentioned as half-brother to the famous +Archbishop, had attempted to mediate between Frontenac and Perrot, and +to this end had made a journey to Quebec on the ice, in midwinter. Being +of an ardent temperament, and more courageous than prudent, he had +spoken somewhat indiscreetly, and had been very roughly treated by the +stormy and imperious Count. He returned to Montreal greatly excited, and +not without cause. It fell to his lot to preach the Easter sermon. The +service was held in the little church of the Hotel-Dieu, which was +crowded to the porch, all the chief persons of the settlement being +present. The cure of the parish, whose name also was Perrot, said High +Mass, assisted by La Salle's brother, Cavelier, and two other priests. +Then Fenelon mounted the pulpit. Certain passages of his sermon were +obviously levelled against Frontenac. Speaking of the duties of those +clothed with temporal authority, he said that the magistrate, inspired +with the spirit of Christ, was as ready to pardon offences against +himself as to punish those against his prince; that he was full of +respect for the ministers of the altar, and never maltreated them when +they attempted to reconcile enemies and restore peace; that he never +made favorites of those who flattered him, nor under specious pretexts +oppressed other persons in authority who opposed his enterprises; that +he used his power to serve his king, and not to his own advantage; that +he remained content with his salary, without disturbing the commerce of +the country, or abusing those who refused him a share in their profits; +and that he never troubled the people by inordinate and unjust levies of +men and material, using the name of his prince as a cover to his own +designs.[69] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND FENELON.] + +La Salle sat near the door; but as the preacher proceeded he suddenly +rose to his feet in such a manner as to attract the notice of the +congregation. As they turned their heads, he signed to the principal +persons among them, and by his angry looks and gesticulation called +their attention to the words of Fenelon. Then meeting the eye of the +cure, who sat beside the altar, he made the same signs to him, to which +the cure replied by a deprecating shrug of the shoulders. Fenelon +changed color, but continued his sermon.[70] + +This indecent proceeding of La Salle, and the zeal with which throughout +the quarrel he took the part of the governor, did not go unrewarded. +Henceforth, Frontenac was more than ever his friend; and this plainly +appeared in the disposition made, through his influence, of the new fort +on Lake Ontario. Attempts had been made to induce the king to have it +demolished; but it was resolved at last that, being built, it should be +allowed to stand; and, after long delay, a final arrangement was made +for its maintenance, in the manner following: In the autumn of 1674, La +Salle went to France, with letters of strong recommendation from +Frontenac.[71] He was well received at Court; and he made two petitions +to the King,--the one for a patent of nobility, in consideration of his +services as an explorer; and the other for a grant in seigniory of Fort +Frontenac, for so he called the new post, in honor of his patron. On his +part, he offered to pay back the ten thousand francs which the fort had +cost the King; to maintain it at his own charge, with a garrison equal +to that of Montreal, besides fifteen or twenty laborers; to form a +French colony around it; to build a church, whenever the number of +inhabitants should reach one hundred; and, meanwhile, to support one or +more Recollet friars; and, finally, to form a settlement of domesticated +Indians in the neighborhood. His offers were accepted. He was raised to +the rank of the untitled nobles; received a grant of the fort and lands +adjacent, to the extent of four leagues in front and half a league in +depth, besides the neighboring islands; and was invested with the +government of the fort and settlement, subject to the orders of the +governor-general.[72] + +La Salle returned to Canada, proprietor of a seigniory which, all things +considered, was one of the most valuable in the colony. His friends and +his family, rejoicing in his good fortune and not unwilling to share it, +made him large advances of money, enabling him to pay the stipulated sum +to the King, to rebuild the fort in stone, maintain soldiers and +laborers, and procure in part, at least, the necessary outfit. Had La +Salle been a mere merchant, he was in a fair way to make a fortune, for +he was in a position to control the better part of the Canadian +fur-trade. But he was not a mere merchant; and no commercial profit +could content his ambition. + +Those may believe, who will, that Frontenac did not expect a share in +the profits of the new post. That he did expect it, there is positive +evidence; for a deposition is extant, taken at the instance of his enemy +the Intendant Duchesneau, in which three witnesses attest that the +governor, La Salle, his lieutenant La Forest, and one Boisseau, had +formed a partnership to carry on the trade of Fort Frontenac. + +[Sidenote: ENEMIES OF LA SALLE.] + +No sooner was La Salle installed in his new post than the merchants of +Canada joined hands to oppose him. Le Ber, once his friend, became his +bitter enemy; for he himself had hoped to share the monopoly of Fort +Frontenac, of which he and one Bazire had at first been placed +provisionally in control, and from which he now saw himself ejected. La +Chesnaye, Le Moyne, and others of more or less influence took part in +the league, which, in fact, embraced all the traders in the colony +except the few joined with Frontenac and La Salle. Duchesneau, intendant +of the colony, aided the malcontents. As time went on, their bitterness +grew more bitter; and when at last it was seen that, not satisfied with +the monopoly of Fort Frontenac, La Salle aimed at the control of the +valleys of the Ohio and the Mississippi, and the usufruct of half a +continent, the ire of his opponents redoubled, and Canada became for him +a nest of hornets, buzzing in wrath and watching the moment to sting. +But there was another element of opposition, less noisy, but not less +formidable; and this arose from the Jesuits. Frontenac hated them; and +they, under befitting forms of duty and courtesy, paid him back in the +same coin. Having no love for the governor, they would naturally have +little for his partisan and _protege_; but their opposition had another +and a deeper root, for the plans of the daring young schemer jarred with +their own. + +[Sidenote: PURPOSES OF THE JESUITS.] + +We have seen the Canadian Jesuits in the early apostolic days of their +mission, when the flame of their zeal, fed by an ardent hope, burned +bright and high. This hope was doomed to disappointment. Their avowed +purpose of building another Paraguay on the borders of the Great +Lakes[73] was never accomplished, and their missions and their converts +were swept away in an avalanche of ruin. Still, they would not despair. +From the lakes they turned their eyes to the Valley of the Mississippi, +in the hope to see it one day the seat of their new empire of the Faith. +But what did this new Paraguay mean? It meant a little nation of +converted and domesticated savages, docile as children, under the +paternal and absolute rule of Jesuit fathers, and trained by them in +industrial pursuits, the results of which were to inure, not to the +profit of the producers, but to the building of churches, the founding +of colleges, the establishment of warehouses and magazines, and the +construction of works of defence,--all controlled by Jesuits, and +forming a part of the vast possessions of the Order. Such was the old +Paraguay;[74] and such, we may suppose, would have been the new, had the +plans of those who designed it been realized. + +I have said that since the middle of the century the religious +exaltation of the early missions had sensibly declined. In the nature of +things, that grand enthusiasm was too intense and fervent to be long +sustained. But the vital force of Jesuitism had suffered no diminution. +That marvellous _esprit de corps_, that extinction of self and +absorption of the individual in the Order which has marked the Jesuits +from their first existence as a body, was no whit changed or +lessened,--a principle, which, though different, was no less strong +than the self-devoted patriotism of Sparta or the early Roman Republic. + +The Jesuits were no longer supreme in Canada; or, in other words, Canada +was no longer simply a mission. It had become a colony. Temporal +interests and the civil power were constantly gaining ground; and the +disciples of Loyola felt that relatively, if not absolutely, they were +losing it. They struggled vigorously to maintain the ascendency of their +Order, or, as they would have expressed it, the ascendency of religion; +but in the older and more settled parts of the colony it was clear that +the day of their undivided rule was past. Therefore, they looked with +redoubled solicitude to their missions in the West. They had been among +its first explorers; and they hoped that here the Catholic Faith, as +represented by Jesuits, might reign with undisputed sway. In Paraguay, +it was their constant aim to exclude white men from their missions. It +was the same in North America. They dreaded fur-traders, partly because +they interfered with their teachings and perverted their converts, and +partly for other reasons. But La Salle was a fur-trader, and far worse +than a fur-trader: he aimed at occupation, fortification, and +settlement. The scope and vigor of his enterprises, and the powerful +influence that aided them, made him a stumbling-block in their path. He +was their most dangerous rival for the control of the West, and from +first to last they set themselves against him. + +[Sidenote: SPIRIT OF LA SALLE.] + +What manner of man was he who could conceive designs so vast and defy +enmities so many and so powerful? And in what spirit did he embrace +these designs? We will look hereafter for an answer. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[67] _Lettre de Frontenac a Colbert, 13 Nov., 1673._ This rumor, it +appears, originated with the Jesuit Dablon. _Journal du Voyage du Comte +de Frontenac au lac Ontario_. The Jesuits were greatly opposed to the +establishment of forts and trading-posts in the upper country, for +reasons that will appear hereafter. + +[68] _Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 13 Nov., 1673._ + +[69] Faillon, _Colonie Francaise_, iii. 497, and manuscript authorities +there cited. I have examined the principal of these. Faillon himself is +a priest of St. Sulpice. Compare H. Verreau, _Les Deux Abbes de +Fenelon_, chap. vii. + +[70] _Information faicte par nous, Charles le Tardieu, Sieur de Tilly, +et Nicolas Dupont, etc., etc., contre le Sr. Abbe de Fenelon._ Tilly +and Dupont were sent by Frontenac to inquire into the affair. Among the +deponents is La Salle himself. + +[71] In his despatch to the minister Colbert, of the fourteenth of +November, 1674, Frontenac speaks of La Salle as follows: "I cannot help, +Monseigneur, recommending to you the Sieur de la Salle, who is about to +go to France, and who is a man of intelligence and ability, more capable +than anybody else I know here to accomplish every kind of enterprise and +discovery which may be intrusted to him, as he has the most perfect +knowledge of the state of the country, as you will see, if you are +disposed to give him a few moments of audience." + +[72] _Memoire pour l'entretien du Fort Frontenac, par le Sr. de la +Salle, 1674. Petition du Sr. de la Salle au Roi. Lettres patentes de +concession, du Fort de Frontenac et terres adjacentes au profit du +Sr. de la Salle; donnees a Compiegne le 13 Mai, 1675. Arret qui +accepte les offres faites par Robert Cavelier Sr. de la Salle; a +Compiegne le 13 Mai, 1675. Lettres de noblesse pour le Sr. Cavelier +de la Salle; donnees a Compiegne le 13 Mai, 1675. Papiers de Famille. +Memoire au Roi._ + +[73] This purpose is several times indicated in the _Relations_. For an +instance, see "The Jesuits in North America," 245. + +[74] Compare Charlevoix, _Histoire de Paraguay_, with Robertson, +_Letters on Paraguay_. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +1678. + +PARTY STRIFE. + + La Salle and his Reporter.--Jesuit Ascendency.--The Missions and + the Fur-trade.--Female Inquisitors.--Plots against La Salle: his + Brother the Priest.--Intrigues Of the Jesuits.--La Salle poisoned: + he exculpates the Jesuits.--Renewed Intrigues. + + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S MEMOIR.] + +One of the most curious monuments of La Salle's time is a long memoir, +written by a person who made his acquaintance at Paris in the summer of +1678, when, as we shall soon see, he had returned to France in +prosecution of his plans. The writer knew the Sulpitian Galinee,[75] +who, as he says, had a very high opinion of La Salle; and he was also in +close relations with the discoverer's patron, the Prince de Conti.[76] +He says that he had ten or twelve interviews with La Salle; and, +becoming interested in him and in that which he communicated, he wrote +down the substance of his conversation. The paper is divided into two +parts: the first, called "Memoire sur Mr. de la Salle," is devoted to +the state of affairs in Canada, and chiefly to the Jesuits; the second, +entitled "Histoire de Mr. de la Salle," is an account of the +discoverer's life, or as much of it as the writer had learned from +him.[77] Both parts bear throughout the internal evidence of being what +they profess to be; but they embody the statements of a man of intense +partisan feeling, transmitted through the mind of another person in +sympathy with him, and evidently sharing his prepossessions. In one +respect, however, the paper is of unquestionable historical value; for +it gives us a vivid and not an exaggerated picture of the bitter strife +of parties which then raged in Canada, and which was destined to tax to +the utmost the vast energy and fortitude of La Salle. At times, the +memoir is fully sustained by contemporary evidence; but often, again, it +rests on its own unsupported authority. I give an abstract of its +statements as I find them. + +The following is the writer's account of La Salle: "All those among my +friends who have seen him find him a man of great intelligence and +sense. He rarely speaks of any subject except when questioned about it, +and his words are very few and very precise. He distinguishes perfectly +between that which he knows with certainly and that which he knows with +some mingling of doubt. When he does not know, he does not hesitate to +avow it; and though I have heard him say the same thing more than five +or six times, when persons were present who had not heard it before, he +always said it in the same manner. In short, I never heard anybody speak +whose words carried with them more marks of truth."[78] + +[Sidenote: JESUIT ASCENDENCY.] + +After mentioning that he is thirty-three or thirty-four years old, and +that he has been twelve years in America, the memoir declares that he +made the following statements: that the Jesuits are masters at Quebec; +that the bishop is their creature, and does nothing but in concert with +them;[79] that he is not well inclined towards the Recollets,[80] who +have little credit, but who are protected by Frontenac; that in Canada +the Jesuits think everybody an enemy to religion who is an enemy to +them; that, though they refused absolution to all who sold brandy to the +Indians, they sold it themselves, and that he, La Salle, had himself +detected them in it;[81] that the bishop laughs at the orders of the +King when they do not agree with the wishes of the Jesuits; that the +Jesuits dismissed one of their servants named Robert, because he told of +their trade in brandy; that Albanel,[82] in particular, carried on a +great fur-trade, and that the Jesuits have built their college in part +from the profits of this kind of traffic; that they admitted that they +carried on a trade, but denied that they gained so much by it as was +commonly supposed.[83] + +[Sidenote: FEMALE INQUISITORS.] + +The memoir proceeds to affirm that they trade largely with the Sioux at +Ste. Marie, and with other tribes at Michilimackinac, and that they are +masters of the trade of that region, where the forts are in their +possession.[84] An Indian said, in full council, at Quebec, that he had +prayed and been a Christian as long as the Jesuits would stay and teach +him, but since no more beaver were left in his country, the missionaries +were gone also. The Jesuits, pursues the memoir, will have no priests +but themselves in their missions, and call them all Jansenists, not +excepting the priests of St. Sulpice. + +The bishop is next accused of harshness and intolerance, as well as of +growing rich by tithes, and even by trade, in which it is affirmed he +has a covert interest.[85] It is added that there exists in Quebec, +under the auspices of the Jesuits, an association called the Sainte +Famille, of which Madame Bourdon[86] is superior. They meet in the +cathedral every Thursday, with closed doors, where they relate to each +other--as they are bound by a vow to do--all they have learned, whether +good or evil, concerning other people, during the week. It is a sort of +female inquisition, for the benefit of the Jesuits, the secrets of whose +friends, it is said, are kept, while no such discretion is observed with +regard to persons not of their party.[87] + +Here follow a series of statements which it is needless to repeat, as +they do not concern La Salle. They relate to abuse of the confessional, +hostility to other priests, hostility to civil authorities, and +over-hasty baptisms, in regard to which La Salle is reported to have +made a comparison, unfavorable to the Jesuits, between them and the +Recollets and Sulpitians. + +[Sidenote: PLOTS AGAINST LA SALLE.] + +We now come to the second part of the memoir, entitled "History of +Monsieur de la Salle." After stating that he left France at the age of +twenty-one or twenty-two, with the purpose of attempting some new +discovery, it makes the statements repeated in a former chapter, +concerning his discovery of the Ohio, the Illinois, and possibly the +Mississippi. It then mentions the building of Fort Frontenac, and says +that one object of it was to prevent the Jesuits from becoming +undisputed masters of the fur-trade.[88] Three years ago, it pursues, La +Salle came to France, and obtained a grant of the fort; and it proceeds +to give examples of the means used by the party opposed to him to injure +his good name and bring him within reach of the law. Once, when he was +at Quebec, the farmer of the King's revenue, one of the richest men in +the place, was extremely urgent in his proffers of hospitality, and at +length, though he knew La Salle but slightly, persuaded him to lodge in +his house. He had been here but a few days when his host's wife began to +enact the part of the wife of Potiphar, and this with so much vivacity +that on one occasion La Salle was forced to take an abrupt leave, in +order to avoid an infringement of the laws of hospitality. As he opened +the door, he found the husband on the watch, and saw that it was a plot +to entrap him.[89] + +Another attack, of a different character, though in the same direction, +was soon after made. The remittances which La Salle received from the +various members and connections of his family were sent through the +hands of his brother, Abbe Cavelier, from whom his enemies were, +therefore, very eager to alienate him. To this end, a report was made to +reach the priest's ears that La Salle had seduced a young woman, with +whom he was living in an open and scandalous manner at Fort Frontenac. +The effect of this device exceeded the wishes of its contrivers; for the +priest, aghast at what he had heard, set out for the fort, to administer +his fraternal rebuke, but on arriving, in place of the expected +abomination, found his brother, assisted by two Recollet friars, ruling +with edifying propriety over a most exemplary household. + +Thus far the memoir. From passages in some of La Salle's letters, it may +be gathered that Abbe Cavelier gave him at times no little annoyance. In +his double character of priest and elder brother, he seems to have +constituted himself the counsellor, monitor, and guide of a man who, +though many years his junior, was in all respects incomparably superior +to him, as the sequel will show. This must have been almost insufferable +to a nature like that of La Salle, who, nevertheless, was forced to arm +himself with patience, since his brother held the purse-strings. On one +occasion his forbearance was put to a severe proof, when, wishing to +marry a damsel of good connections in the colony, Abbe Cavelier saw fit +for some reason to interfere, and prevented the alliance.[90] + +[Sidenote: INTRIGUES OF THE JESUITS.] + +To resume the memoir. It declares that the Jesuits procured an ordinance +from the Supreme Council prohibiting traders from going into the Indian +country, in order that they, the Jesuits, being already established +there in their missions, might carry on trade without competition. But +La Salle induced a good number of the Iroquois to settle around his +fort; thus bringing the trade to his own door, without breaking the +ordinance. These Iroquois, he is further reported to have said, were +very fond of him, and aided him in rebuilding the fort with cut stone. +The Jesuits told the Iroquois on the south side of the lake, where they +were established as missionaries, that La Salle was strengthening his +defences with the view of making war on them. They and the intendant, +who was their creature, endeavored to embroil the Iroquois with the +French in order to ruin La Salle; writing to him at the same time that +he was the bulwark of the country, and that he ought to be always on his +guard. They also tried to persuade Frontenac that it was necessary to +raise men and prepare for war. La Salle suspected them; and seeing that +the Iroquois, in consequence of their intrigues, were in an excited +state, he induced the governor to come to Fort Frontenac to pacify them. +He accordingly did so; and a council was held, which ended in a complete +restoration of confidence on the part of the Iroquois.[91] At this +council they accused the two Jesuits, Bruyas and Pierron,[92] of +spreading reports that the French were preparing to attack them. La +Salle thought that the object of the intrigue was to make the Iroquois +jealous of him, and engage Frontenac in expenses which would offend the +King. After La Salle and the governor had lost credit by the rupture, +the Jesuits would come forward as pacificators, in the full assurance +that they could restore quiet, and appear in the attitude of saviors of +the colony. + +La Salle, pursues his reporter, went on to say that about this time a +quantity of hemlock and verdigris was given him in a salad; and that the +guilty person was a man in his employ named Nicolas Perrot, otherwise +called Jolycoeur, who confessed the crime.[93] The memoir adds that La +Salle, who recovered from the effects of the poison, wholly exculpates +the Jesuits. + +This attempt, which was not, as we shall see, the only one of the kind +made against La Salle, is alluded to by him in a letter to a friend at +Paris, written in Canada when he was on the point of departure on his +great expedition to descend the Mississippi. The following is an extract +from it: + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE EXCULPATES THE JESUITS.] + +"I hope to give myself the honor of sending you a more particular +account of this enterprise when it shall have had the success which I +hope for it; but I have need of a strong protection for its support. It +traverses the commercial operations of certain persons, who will find it +hard to endure it. They intended to make a new Paraguay in these parts, +and the route which I close against them gave them facilities for an +advantageous correspondence with Mexico. This check will infallibly be a +mortification to them; and you know how they deal with whatever opposes +them. _Nevertheless, I am bound to render them the justice to say that +the poison which was given me was not at all of their instigation._ The +person who was conscious of the guilt, believing that I was their enemy +because he saw that our sentiments were opposed, thought to exculpate +himself by accusing them, and I confess that at the time I was not sorry +to have this indication of their ill-will; but having afterwards +carefully examined the affair, I clearly discovered the falsity of the +accusation which this rascal had made against them. I nevertheless +pardoned him, in order not to give notoriety to the affair; as the mere +suspicion might sully their reputation, to which I should scrupulously +avoid doing the slightest injury unless I thought it necessary to the +good of the public, and unless the fact were fully proved. Therefore, +Monsieur, if anybody shared the suspicion which I felt, oblige me by +undeceiving him."[94] + +This letter, so honorable to La Salle, explains the statement made in +the memoir, that, notwithstanding his grounds of complaint against the +Jesuits, he continued to live on terms of courtesy with them, +entertained them at his fort, and occasionally corresponded with them. +The writer asserts, however, that they intrigued with his men to induce +them to desert,--employing for this purpose a young man named +Deslauriers, whom they sent to him with letters of recommendation. La +Salle took him into his service; but he soon after escaped, with several +other men, and took refuge in the Jesuit missions.[95] The object of the +intrigue is said to have been the reduction of La Salle's garrison to a +number less than that which he was bound to maintain, thus exposing him +to a forfeiture of his title of possession. + +[Sidenote: RENEWED INTRIGUES.] + +He is also stated to have declared that Louis Joliet was an +impostor,[96] and a _donne_ of the Jesuits,--that is, a man who worked +for them without pay; and, further, that when he, La Salle, came to +court to ask for privileges enabling him to pursue his discoveries, the +Jesuits represented in advance to the minister Colbert that his head was +turned, and that he was fit for nothing but a mad-house. It was only by +the aid of influential friends that he was at length enabled to gain an +audience. + +Here ends this remarkable memoir, which, criticise it as we may, does +not exaggerate the jealousies and enmities that beset the path of the +discoverer. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[75] _Ante_, p. 17. + +[76] Louis-Armand de Bourbon, second Prince de Conti. The author of the +memoir seems to have been Abbe Renaudot, a learned churchman. + +[77] Extracts from this have already been given in connection with La +Salle's supposed discovery of the Mississippi. _Ante_, p. 29. + +[78] "Tous ceux de mes amis qui l'ont vu luy trouve beaucoup d'esprit et +un tres-grand sens; il ne parle guere que des choses sur lesquelles on +l'interroge; il les dit en tres-peu de mots et tres-bien +circonstanciees; il distingue parfaitement ce qu'il scait avec +certitude, de ce qu'il scait avec quelque melange de doute. Il avoue +sans aucune facon ne pas savoir ce qu'il ne scait pas, et quoyque je luy +aye ouy dire plus de cinq ou six fois les mesme choses a l'occasion de +quelques personnes qui ne les avaient point encore entendues, je les luy +ay toujours ouy dire de la mesme maniere. En un mot je n'ay jamais ouy +parler personne dont les paroles portassent plus de marques de verite." + +[79] "Il y a une autre chose qui me deplait, qui est l'entiere +dependence dans laquelle les Pretres du Seminaire de Quebec et le Grand +Vicaire de l'Eveque sont pour les Peres Jesuites, car il ne fait pas la +moindre chose sans leur ordre; ce qui fait qu'indirectement ils sont les +maitres de ce qui regarde le spirituel, qui, comme vous savez, est une +grande machine pour remuer tout le reste."--_Lettre de Frontenac a +Colbert, 2 Nov., 1672._ + +[80] "Ces religieux [_les Recollets_] sont fort proteges partout par le +comte de Frontenac, gouverneur du pays, et a cause de cela assez +maltraites par l'evesque, parceque la doctrine de l'evesque et des +Jesuites est que les affaires de la Religion chrestienne n'iront point +bien dans ce pays-la que quand le gouverneur sera creature des Jesuites, +ou que l'evesque sera gouverneur."--_Memoire sur Mr. de la Salle_. + +[81] "Ils [_les Jesuites_] refusent l'absolution a ceux qui ne veulent +pas promettre de n'en plus vendre [_de l'eau-de-vie_], et s'ils meurent +en cet etat, ils les privent de la sepulture ecclesiastique; au +contraire ils se permettent a eux-memes sans aucune difficulte ce mesme +trafic quoique toute sorte de trafic soit interdite a tous les +ecclesiastiques par les ordonnances du Roy, et par une bulle expresse du +Pape. La Bulle et les ordonnances sont notoires, et quoyqu'ils cachent +le trafic qu'ils font d'eau-de-vie, M. de la Salle pretend qu'il ne +l'est pas moins; qu'outre la notoriete il en a des preuves certaines, et +qu'il les a surpris dans ce trafic, et qu'ils luy ont tendu des pieges +pour l'y surprendre.... Ils ont chasse leur valet Robert a cause qu'il +revela qu'ils en traitaient jour et nuit."--_Ibid._ The writer says that +he makes this last statement, not on the authority of La Salle, but on +that of a memoir made at the time when the intendant, Talon, with whom +he elsewhere says that he was well acquainted, returned to France. A +great number of particulars are added respecting the Jesuit trade in +furs. + +[82] Albanel was prominent among the Jesuit explorers at this time. He +is best known by his journey up the Saguenay to Hudson's Bay in 1672. + +[83] "Pour vous parler franchement, ils [_les Jesuites_] songent autant +a la conversion du Castor qu'a celle des ames."--_Lettre de Frontenac a +Colbert, 2 Nov., 1672_. + +In his despatch of the next year, he says that the Jesuits ought to +content themselves with instructing the Indians in their old missions, +instead of neglecting them to make new ones in countries where there are +"more beaver-skins to gain than souls to save." + +[84] These forts were built by them, and were necessary to the security +of their missions. + +[85] Francois Xavier de Laval-Montmorency, first bishop of Quebec, was a +prelate of austere character. His memory is cherished in Canada by +adherents of the Jesuits and all ultramontane Catholics. + +[86] This Madame Bourdon was the widow of Bourdon, the engineer (see +"The Jesuits in North America," 297). If we may credit the letters of +Marie de l'Incarnation, she had married him from a religious motive, in +order to charge herself with the care of his motherless children; +stipulating in advance that he should live with her, not as a husband, +but as a brother. As may be imagined, she was regarded as a most devout +and saint-like person. + +[87] "Il y a dans Quebec une congregation de femmes et de filles qu'ils +[_les Jesuites_] appellent la sainte famille, dans laquelle on fait +voeu sur les Saints Evangiles de dire tout ce qu'on sait de bien et de +mal des personnes qu'on connoist. La Superieure de cette compagnie +s'appelle Madame Bourdon; une Mde. d'Ailleboust est, je crois, +l'assistante et une Mde. Charron, la Tresoriere. La Compagnie +s'assemble tous les Jeudis dans la Cathedrale, a porte fermee, et la +elles se disent les unes aux autres tout ce qu'elles ont appris. C'est +une espece d'Inquisition contre toutes les personnes qui ne sont pas +unies avec les Jesuites. Ces personnes sont accusees de tenir secret ce +qu'elles apprennent de mal des personnes de leur party et de n'avoir pas +la mesme discretion pour les autres."--_Memoire sur M^r. de la Salle_. + +The Madame d'Ailleboust mentioned above was a devotee like Madame +Bourdon, and, in one respect, her history was similar. See "The Jesuits +in North America," 360. + +The association of the Sainte Famille was founded by the Jesuit +Chaumonot at Montreal in 1663. Laval, Bishop of Quebec, afterwards +encouraged its establishment at that place; and, as Chaumonot himself +writes, caused it to be attached to the cathedral. _Vie de Chaumonot_, +83. For its establishment at Montreal, see Faillon, _Vie de Mlle. +Mance_, i. 233. + +"Ils [_les Jesuites_] ont tous une si grande envie de savoir tout ce qui +se fait dans les familles qu'ils ont des Inspecteurs a gages dans la +Ville, qui leur rapportent tout ce qui se fait dans les maisons," etc., +etc.--_Lettre de Frontenac au Ministre, 13 Nov., 1673._ + +[88] Mention has been made (p. 88, _note_) of the report set on foot by +the Jesuit Dablon, to prevent the building of the fort. + +[89] This story is told at considerable length, and the advances of the +lady particularly described. + +[90] Letter of La Salle, in possession of M. Margry. + +[91] Louis XIV. alludes to this visit, in a letter to Frontenac, dated +28 April, 1677. "I cannot but approve," he writes, "of what you have +done, in your voyage to Fort Frontenac, to reconcile the minds of the +Five Iroquois Nations, and to clear yourself from the suspicions they +had entertained, and from the motives that might induce them to make +war." Frontenac's despatches of this year, as well as of the preceding +and following years, are missing from the archives. + +In a memoir written in November, 1680, La Salle alludes to "le desir que +l'on avoit que Monseigneur le Comte de Frontenac fit la guerre aux +Iroquois." See Thomassy, _Geologie Pratique de la Louisiane_, 203. + +[92] Bruyas was about this time stationed among the Onondagas. Pierron +was among the Senecas. He had lately removed to them from the Mohawk +country. _Relation des Jesuites, 1673-79_, 140 (Shea). Bruyas was also +for a long time among the Mohawks. + +[93] This puts the character of Perrot in a new light; for it is not +likely that any other can be meant than the famous _voyageur_. I have +found no mention elsewhere of the synonyme of Jolycoeur. Poisoning was +the current crime of the day, and persons of the highest rank had +repeatedly been charged with it. The following is the passage:-- + +"Quoiqu'il en soit, Mr. de la Salle se sentit quelque temps apres +empoisonne d'une salade dans laquelle on avoit mesle du cigue, qui est +poison en ce pays la, et du verd de gris. Il en fut malade a +l'extremite, vomissant presque continuellement 40 ou 50 jours apres, et +il ne rechappa que par la force extreme de sa constitution. Celuy qui +luy donna le poison fut un nomme Nicolas Perrot, autrement Jolycoeur, +l'un de ses domestiques.... Il pouvait faire mourir cet homme, qui a +confesse son crime, mais il s'est contente de l'enfermer les fers aux +pieds."--_Histoire de Mr. de la Salle._ + +[94] The following words are underlined in the original: "_Je suis +pourtant oblige de leur rendre une justice, que le poison qu'on m'avoit +donne n'estoit point de leur instigation."--Lettre de La Salle au Prince +de Conti, 31 Oct., 1678._ + +[95] In a letter to the King, Frontenac mentions that several men who +had been induced to desert from La Salle had gone to Albany, where the +English had received them well. _Lettre de Frontenac au Roy, 6 Nov., +1679._ The Jesuits had a mission in the neighboring tribe of the Mohawks +and elsewhere in New York. + +[96] This agrees with expressions used by La Salle in a memoir addressed +by him to Frontenac in November, 1680. In this, he intimates his belief +that Joliet went but little below the mouth of the Illinois, thus doing +flagrant injustice to that brave explorer. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +1677, 1678. + +THE GRAND ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Fort Frontenac.--La Salle at Court: his + Memorial.--Approval of the King.--Money and Means.--Henri de + Tonty.--Return to Canada. + + +"If," writes a friend of La Salle," he had preferred gain to glory, he +had only to stay at his fort, where he was making more than twenty-five +thousand livres a year."[97] He loved solitude and he loved power; and +at Fort Frontenac he had both, so far as each consisted with the other. +The nearest settlement was a week's journey distant, and he was master +of all around him. He had spared no pains to fulfil the conditions on +which his wilderness seigniory had been granted, and within two years he +had demolished the original wooden fort, replacing it by another much +larger, enclosed on the land side by ramparts and bastions of stone, and +on the water side by palisades. It contained a range of barracks of +squared timber, a guard-house, a lodging for officers, a forge, a well, +a mill, and a bakery. Nine small cannon were mounted on the walls. Two +officers and a surgeon, with ten or twelve soldiers, made up the +garrison; and three or four times that number of masons, laborers, and +canoe-men were at one time maintained at the place. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AT FORT FRONTENAC.] + +Along the shore south of the fort was a small village of French +families, to whom La Salle had granted farms, and, farther on, a village +of Iroquois, whom he had persuaded to settle here. Near these villages +were the house and chapel of two Recollet friars, Luc Buisset and Louis +Hennepin. More than a hundred French acres of land had been cleared of +wood, and planted in part with crops; while cattle, fowls, and swine had +been brought up from Montreal. Four vessels, of from twenty-five to +forty tons, had been built for the lake and the river; but canoes served +best for ordinary uses, and La Salle's followers became so skilled in +managing them that they were reputed the best canoe-men in America. +Feudal lord of the forests around him, commander of a garrison raised +and paid by himself, founder of the mission, and patron of the church, +he reigned the autocrat of his lonely little empire.[98] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S MEMORIAL.] + +It was not solely or chiefly for commercial gain that La Salle had +established Fort Frontenac. He regarded it as a first step towards +greater things; and now, at length, his plans were ripe and his time was +come. In the autumn of 1677 he left the fort in charge of his +lieutenant, descended the St. Lawrence to Quebec, and sailed for France. +He had the patronage of Frontenac and the help of strong friends in +Paris. It is said, as we have seen already, that his enemies denounced +him, in advance, as a madman; but a memorial of his, which his friends +laid before the minister Colbert, found a favorable hearing. In it he +set forth his plans, or a portion of them. He first recounted briefly +the discoveries he had made, and then described the country he had seen +south and west of the great lakes. "It is nearly all so beautiful and so +fertile; so free from forests, and so full of meadows, brooks, and +rivers; so abounding in fish, game, and venison, that one can find there +in plenty, and with little trouble, all that is needful for the support +of flourishing colonies. The soil will produce everything that is raised +in France. Flocks and herds can be left out at pasture all winter; and +there are even native wild cattle, which, instead of hair, have a fine +wool that may answer for making cloth and hats. Their hides are better +than those of France, as appears by the sample which the Sieur de la +Salle has brought with him. Hemp and cotton grow here naturally, and may +be manufactured with good results; so there can be no doubt that +colonies planted here would become very prosperous. They would be +increased by a great number of western Indians, who are in the main of a +tractable and social disposition; and as they have the use neither of +our weapons nor of our goods, and are not in intercourse with other +Europeans, they will readily adapt themselves to us and imitate our way +of life as soon as they taste the advantages of our friendship and of +the commodities we bring them, insomuch that these countries will +infallibly furnish, within a few years, a great many new subjects to the +Church and the King. + +"It was the knowledge of these things, joined to the poverty of Canada, +its dense forests, its barren soil, its harsh climate, and the snow that +covers the ground for half the year, that led the Sieur de la Salle to +undertake the planting of colonies in these beautiful countries of the +West." + +Then he recounts the difficulties of the attempt,--the vast distances, +the rapids and cataracts that obstruct the way; the cost of men, +provisions, and munitions; the danger from the Iroquois, and the rivalry +of the English, who covet the western country, and would gladly seize it +for themselves. "But this last reason," says the memorial, "only +animates the Sieur de la Salle the more, and impels him to anticipate +them by the promptness of his action." + +He declares that it was for this that he had asked for the grant of Fort +Frontenac; and he describes what he had done at that post, in order to +make it a secure basis for his enterprise. He says that he has now +overcome the chief difficulties in his way, and that he is ready to +plant a new colony at the outlet of Lake Erie, of which the English, if +not prevented, might easily take possession. Towards the accomplishment +of his plans, he asks the confirmation of his title to Fort Frontenac, +and the permission to establish at his own cost two other posts, with +seigniorial rights over all lands which he may discover and colonize +within twenty years, and the government of all the country in question. +On his part, he proposes to renounce all share in the trade carried on +between the tribes of the Upper Lakes and the people of Canada. + +La Salle seems to have had an interview with the minister, in which the +proposals of his memorial were somewhat modified. He soon received in +reply the following patent from the King:-- + +[Sidenote: THE KING'S APPROVAL.] + +"Louis, by the grace of God King of France and Navarre, to our dear and +well-beloved Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, greeting. We have +received with favor the very humble petition made us in your name, to +permit you to labor at the discovery of the western parts of New France; +and we have the more willingly entertained this proposal, since we have +nothing more at heart than the exploration of this country, through +which, to all appearance, a way may be found to Mexico.... For this and +other causes thereunto moving us, we permit you by these presents, +signed with our hand, to labor at the discovery of the western parts of +our aforesaid country of New France; and, for the execution of this +enterprise, to build forts at such places as you may think necessary, +and enjoy possession thereof under the same clauses and conditions as of +Fort Frontenac, conformably to our letters patent of May thirteenth, +1675, which, so far as needful, we confirm by these presents. And it is +our will that they be executed according to their form and tenor: on +condition, nevertheless, that you finish this enterprise within five +years, failing which, these presents shall be void, and of no effect; +that you carry on no trade with the savages called Ottawas, or with +other tribes who bring their peltries to Montreal; and that you do the +whole at your own cost and that of your associates, to whom we have +granted the sole right of trade in buffalo-hides. And we direct the +Sieur Count Frontenac, our governor and lieutenant-general, and also +Duchesneau, intendant of justice, police, and finance, and the officers +of the supreme council of the aforesaid country, to see to the execution +of these presents; for such is our pleasure. + +"Given at St. Germain en Laye, this 12th day of May, 1678, and of our +reign the 35th year." + +This patent grants both more and less than the memorial had asked. It +authorizes La Salle to build and own, not two forts only, but as many as +he may see fit, provided that he do so within five years; and it gives +him, besides, the monopoly of buffalo-hides, for which at first he had +not petitioned. Nothing is said of colonies. To discover the country, +secure it by forts, and find, if possible, a way to Mexico, are the only +object set forth; for Louis XIV. always discountenanced settlement in +the West, partly as tending to deplete Canada, and partly as removing +his subjects too far from his paternal control. It was but the year +before that he refused to Louis Joliet the permission to plant a trading +station in the Valley of the Mississippi.[99] La Salle, however, still +held to his plan of a commercial and industrial colony, and in +connection with it to another purpose, of which his memorial had made no +mention. This was the building of a vessel on some branch of the +Mississippi, in order to sail down that river to its mouth, and open a +route to commerce through the Gulf of Mexico. It is evident that this +design was already formed; for he had no sooner received his patent, +than he engaged ship-carpenters, and procured iron, cordage, and +anchors, not for one vessel, but for two. + +[Sidenote: MONEY AND MEANS.] + +What he now most needed was money; and having none of his own, he set +himself to raising it from others. A notary named Simonnet lent him four +thousand livres; an advocate named Raoul, twenty-four thousand; and one +Dumont, six thousand. His cousin Francois Plet, a merchant of Rue St. +Martin, lent him about eleven thousand, at the interest of forty per +cent; and when he returned to Canada, Frontenac found means to procure +him another loan of about fourteen thousand, secured by the mortgage of +Fort Frontenac. But his chief helpers were his family, who became +sharers in his undertaking. "His brothers and relations," says a +memorial afterwards addressed by them to the King, "spared nothing to +enable him to respond worthily to the royal goodness;" and the document +adds, that, before his allotted five years were ended, his discoveries +had cost them more than five hundred thousand livres (francs).[100] La +Salle himself believed, and made others believe, that there was more +profit than risk in his schemes. + +Lodged rather obscurely in Rue de la Truanderie, and of a nature +reserved and shy, he nevertheless found countenance and support from +personages no less exalted than Colbert, Seignelay, and the Prince de +Conti. Others, too, in stations less conspicuous, warmly espoused his +cause, and none more so than the learned Abbe Renaudot, who helped him +with tongue and pen, and seems to have been instrumental in introducing +to him a man who afterwards proved invaluable. This was Henri de Tonty, +an Italian officer, a _protege_ of the Prince de Conti, who sent him to +La Salle as a person suited to his purposes, Tonty had but one hand, the +other having been blown off by a grenade in the Sicilian wars.[101] His +father, who had been governor of Gaeta, but who had come to France in +consequence of political disturbances in Naples, had earned no small +reputation as a financier, and had invented the form of life insurance +still called the Tontine. La Salle learned to know his new lieutenant on +the voyage across the Atlantic; and, soon after reaching Canada, he +wrote of him to his patron in the following terms: "His honorable +character and his amiable disposition were well known to you; but +perhaps you would not have thought him capable of doing things for which +a strong constitution, an acquaintance with the country, and the use of +both hands seemed absolutely necessary. Nevertheless, his energy and +address make him equal to anything; and now, at a season when everybody +is in fear of the ice, he is setting out to begin a new fort, two +hundred leagues from this place, and to which I have taken the liberty +to give the name of Fort Conti. It is situated near that great cataract, +more than a hundred and twenty _toises_ in height, by which the lakes of +higher elevation precipitate themselves into Lake Frontenac [Ontario]. +From there one goes by water, five hundred leagues, to the place where +Fort Dauphin is to be begun; from which it only remains to descend the +great river of the Bay of St. Esprit, to reach the Gulf of +Mexico."[102] + +[Sidenote: RETURN TO CANADA.] + +Besides Tonty, La Salle found in France another ally, La Motte de +Lussiere, to whom he offered a share in the enterprise, and who joined +him at Rochelle, the place of embarkation. Here vexatious delays +occurred. Bellinzani, director of trade, who had formerly taken lessons +in rascality in the service of Cardinal Mazarin, abused his official +position to throw obstacles in the way of La Salle, in order to extort +money from him; and he extorted, in fact, a considerable sum, which his +victim afterwards reclaimed. It was not till the fourteenth of July that +La Salle, with Tonty, La Motte, and thirty men, set sail for Canada, and +two months more elapsed before he reached Quebec. Here, to increase his +resources and strengthen his position, he seems to have made a league +with several Canadian merchants, some of whom had before been his +enemies, and were to be so again. Here, too, he found Father Louis +Hennepin, who had come down from Fort Frontenac to meet him.[103] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[97] _Memoire pour Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay sur les +Descouvertes du Sieur de la Salle_, 1682. + +[98] _Etat de la depense faite par Mr. de la Salle, Gouverneur du +Fort Frontenac. Recit de Nicolas de la Salle. Revue faite au Fort de +Frontenac, 1677; Memoire sur le Projet du Sieur de la Salle_ (Margry, i. +329). Plan of Fort Frontenac, published by Faillon, from the original +sent to France by Denonville in 1685. _Relation des Decouvertes du Sieur +de la Salle._ When Frontenac was at the fort in September, 1677, he +found only four _habitants_. It appears, by the _Relation des +Decouvertes du Sieur de la Salle_, that, three or four years later, +there were thirteen or fourteen families. La Salle spent 34,426 francs +on the fort. _Memoire au Roy, Papiers de Famille._ + +[99] _Colbert a Duchesneau, 28 Avril, 1677._ + +[100] _Memoire au Roy, presente sous la Regence; Obligation du Sieur de +la Salle envers le Sieur Plet; Autres Emprunts de Cavelier de la Salle_ +(Margry, i. 423-432). + +[101] Tonty, _Memoire_, in Margry, _Relations et Memoires inedits_, 5. + +[102] _Lettre de La Salle, 31 Oct., 1678._ Fort Conti was to have been +built on the site of the present Fort Niagara. The name of Lac de Conti +was given by La Salle to Lake Erie. The fort mentioned as Fort Dauphin +was built, as we shall see, on the Illinois, though under another name. +La Salle, deceived by Spanish maps, thought that the Mississippi +discharged itself into the Bay of St. Esprit (Mobile Bay). + +Henri de Tonty signed his name in the Gallicized, and not in the +original Italian form _Tonti_. He wore a hand of iron or some other +metal, which was usually covered with a glove. La Potherie says that he +once or twice used it to good purpose when the Indians became +disorderly, in breaking the heads of the most contumacious or knocking +out their teeth. Not knowing at the time the secret of the unusual +efficacy of his blows, they regarded him as a "medicine" of the first +order. La Potherie erroneously ascribes the loss of his hand to a +sabre-cut received in a _sortie_ at Messina. + +[103] _La Motte de Lussiere a----, sans date; Memoire de la Salle sur +les Extorsions commises par Bellinzani; Societe formee par La Salle; +Relation de Henri de Tonty_, 1684 (Margry, i. 338, 573; ii. 2, 25). + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +1678-1679. + +LA SALLE AT NIAGARA. + + Father Louis Hennepin: his Past Life; his + Character.--Embarkation.--Niagara Falls.--Indian Jealousy.--La + Motte and the Senecas.--A Disaster.--La Salle and his Followers. + + +Hennepin was all eagerness to join in the adventure; and, to his great +satisfaction, La Salle gave him a letter from his Provincial, Father Le +Fevre, containing the coveted permission. Whereupon, to prepare himself, +he went into retreat at the Recollet convent of Quebec, where he +remained for a time in such prayer and meditation as his nature, the +reverse of spiritual, would permit. Frontenac, always partial to his +Order, then invited him to dine at the chateau; and having visited the +bishop and asked his blessing, he went down to the Lower Town and +embarked. His vessel was a small birch canoe, paddled by two men. With +sandalled feet, a coarse gray capote, and peaked hood, the cord of St. +Francis about his waist, and a rosary and crucifix hanging at his side, +the father set forth on his memorable journey. He carried with him the +furniture of a portable altar, which in time of need he could strap on +his back like a knapsack. + +He slowly made his way up the St. Lawrence, stopping here and there, +where a clearing and a few log houses marked the feeble beginning of a +parish and a seigniory. The settlers, though good Catholics, were too +few and too poor to support a priest, and hailed the arrival of the +friar with delight. He said mass, exhorted a little, as was his custom, +and on one occasion baptized a child. At length he reached Montreal, +where the enemies of the enterprise enticed away his two canoe-men. He +succeeded in finding two others, with whom he continued his voyage, +passed the rapids of the upper St. Lawrence, and reached Fort Frontenac +at eleven o'clock at night of the second of November, where his brethren +of the mission, Ribourde and Buisset, received him with open arms.[104] +La Motte, with most of the men, appeared on the eighth; but La Salle and +Tonty did not arrive till more than a month later. Meanwhile, in +pursuance of his orders, fifteen men set out in canoes for Lake Michigan +and the Illinois, to trade with the Indians and collect provisions, +while La Motte embarked in a small vessel for Niagara, accompanied by +Hennepin.[105] + +[Illustration] + +_Father Hennepin Celebrating Mass._ + +Drawn by Howard Pyle. + +La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, 132. + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN.] + +This bold, hardy, and adventurous friar, the historian of the +expedition, and a conspicuous actor in it, has unwittingly painted his +own portrait with tolerable distinctness. "I always," he says, "felt a +strong inclination to fly from the world and live according to the rules +of a pure and severe virtue; and it was with this view that I entered +the Order of St. Francis."[106] He then speaks of his zeal for the +saving of souls, but admits that a passion for travel and a burning +desire to visit strange lands had no small part in his inclination for +the missions.[107] Being in a convent in Artois, his Superior sent him +to Calais, at the season of the herring-fishery, to beg alms, after the +practice of the Franciscans. Here and at Dunkirk he made friends of the +sailors, and was never tired of their stories. So insatiable, indeed, +was his appetite for them, that "often," he says, "I hid myself behind +tavern doors while the sailors were telling of their voyages. The +tobacco smoke made me very sick at the stomach; but, notwithstanding, I +listened attentively to all they said about their adventures at sea and +their travels in distant countries. I could have passed whole days and +nights in this way without eating."[108] + +He presently set out on a roving mission through Holland; and he +recounts various mishaps which befell him, "in consequence of my zeal in +laboring for the saving of souls," "I was at the bloody fight of +Seneff," he pursues, "where so many perished by fire and sword, and +where I had abundance of work in comforting and consoling the poor +wounded soldiers. After undergoing great fatigues, and running extreme +danger in the sieges of towns, in the trenches, and in battles, where I +exposed myself freely for the salvation of others while the soldiers +were breathing nothing but blood and carnage, I found myself at last in +a way of satisfying my old inclination for travel."[109] + +He got leave from his superiors to go to Canada, the most adventurous of +all the missions, and accordingly sailed in 1675, in the ship which +carried La Salle, who had just obtained the grant of Fort Frontenac. In +the course of the voyage, he took it upon him to reprove a party of +girls who were amusing themselves and a circle of officers and other +passengers by dancing on deck. La Salle, who was among the spectators, +was annoyed at Hennepin's interference, and told him that +he was behaving like a pedagogue. The friar retorted, by +alluding--unconsciously, as he says--to the circumstance that La Salle +was once a pedagogue himself, having, according to Hennepin, been for +ten or twelve years teacher of a class in a Jesuit school. La Salle, he +adds, turned pale with rage, and never forgave him to his dying day, +but always maligned and persecuted him.[110] + +On arriving in Canada, he was sent up to Fort Frontenac, as a +missionary. That wild and remote post was greatly to his liking. He +planted a gigantic cross, superintended the building of a chapel for +himself and his colleague Buisset, and instructed the Iroquois +colonists of the place. He visited, too, the neighboring Indian +settlements,--paddling his canoe in summer, when the lake was open, and +journeying in winter on snow-shoes, with a blanket slung at his back. +His most noteworthy journey was one which he made in the +winter,--apparently of 1677,--with a soldier of the fort. They crossed +the eastern extremity of Lake Ontario on snow-shoes, and pushed +southward through the forests, towards Onondaga,--stopping at evening to +dig away the snow, which was several feet deep, and collect wood for +their fire, which they were forced to replenish repeatedly during the +night, to keep themselves from freezing. At length, they reached the +great Onondaga town, where the Indians were much amazed at their +hardihood. Thence they proceeded eastward to the Oneidas, and afterwards +to the Mohawks, who regaled them with small frogs, pounded up with a +porridge of Indian corn. Here Hennepin found the Jesuit Bruyas, who +permitted him to copy a dictionary of the Mohawk language[111] which he +had compiled; and here he presently met three Dutchmen, who urged him to +visit the neighboring settlement of Orange, or Albany,--an invitation +which he seems to have declined.[112] + +They were pleased with him, he says, because he spoke Dutch. Bidding +them farewell, he tied on his snow-shoes again, and returned with his +companion to Fort Frontenac. Thus he inured himself to the hardships of +the woods, and prepared for the execution of the grand plan of discovery +which he calls his own,--"an enterprise," to borrow his own words, +"capable of terrifying anybody but me."[113] When the later editions of +his book appeared, doubts had been expressed of his veracity. "I here +protest to you, before God," he writes, addressing the reader, "that my +narrative is faithful and sincere, and that you may believe everything +related in it."[114] And yet, as we shall see, this reverend father was +the most impudent of liars; and the narrative of which he speaks is a +rare monument of brazen mendacity. Hennepin, however, had seen and dared +much; for among his many failings fear had no part, and where his +vanity or his spite was not involved, he often told the truth. His books +have their value, with all their enormous fabrications.[115] + +La Motte and Hennepin, with sixteen men, went on board the little vessel +of ten tons, which lay at Fort Frontenac. The friar's two brethren, +Buisset and Ribourde, threw their arms about his neck as they bade him +farewell; while his Indian proselytes, learning whither he was bound, +stood with their hands pressed upon their mouths, in amazement at the +perils which awaited their ghostly instructor. La Salle, with the rest +of the party, was to follow as soon as he could finish his preparations. +It was a boisterous and gusty day, the eighteenth of November. The sails +were spread; the shore receded,--the stone walls of the fort, the huge +cross that the friar had reared, the wigwams, the settlers' cabins, the +group of staring Indians on the strand. The lake was rough; and the men, +crowded in so small a craft, grew nervous and uneasy. They hugged the +northern shore, to escape the fury of the wind, which blew savagely from +the northeast; while the long gray sweep of naked forests on their right +betokened that winter was fast closing in. On the twenty-sixth, they +reached the neighborhood of the Indian town of Taiaiagon,[116] not far +from Toronto, and ran their vessel, for safety, into the mouth of a +river,--probably the Humber,--where the ice closed about her, and they +were forced to cut her out with axes. On the fifth of December, they +attempted to cross to the mouth of the Niagara; but darkness overtook +them, and they spent a comfortless night, tossing on the troubled lake, +five or six miles from shore. In the morning, they entered the mouth of +the Niagara, and landed on the point at its eastern side, where now +stand the historic ramparts of Fort Niagara. Here they found a small +village of Senecas, attracted hither by the fisheries, who gazed with +curious eyes at the vessel, and listened in wonder as the voyagers sang +_Te Deum_ in gratitude for their safe arrival. + +[Sidenote: NIAGARA FALLS.] + +Hennepin, with several others, now ascended the river in a canoe to the +foot of the mountain ridge of Lewiston, which, stretching on the right +hand and on the left, forms the acclivity of a vast plateau, rent with +the mighty chasm, along which, from this point to the cataract, seven +miles above, rush, with the fury of an Alpine torrent, the gathered +waters of four inland oceans. To urge the canoe farther was impossible. +He landed, with his companions, on the west bank, near the foot of that +part of the ridge now called Queenstown Heights, climbed the steep +ascent, and pushed through the wintry forest on a tour of exploration. +On his left sank the cliffs, the furious river raging below; till at +length, in primeval solitudes unprofaned as yet by the pettiness of man, +the imperial cataract burst upon his sight.[117] + +The explorers passed three miles beyond it, and encamped for the night +on the banks of Chippewa Creek, scraping away the snow, which was a foot +deep, in order to kindle a fire. In the morning they retraced their +steps, startling a number of deer and wild turkeys on their way, and +rejoined their companions at the mouth of the river. + +[Sidenote: LA MOTTE AND THE SENECAS.] + +La Motte now began the building of a fortified house, some two leagues +above the mouth of the Niagara.[118] Hot water was used to soften the +frozen ground; but frost was not the only obstacle. The Senecas of the +neighboring village betrayed a sullen jealousy at a design which, +indeed, boded them no good. Niagara was the key to the four great lakes +above; and whoever held possession of it could, in no small measure, +control the fur-trade of the interior. Occupied by the French, it would +in time of peace intercept the trade which the Iroquois carried on +between the western Indians and the Dutch and English at Albany, and in +time of war threaten them with serious danger. La Motte saw the +necessity of conciliating these formidable neighbors, and, if possible, +cajoling them to give their consent to the plan. La Salle, indeed, had +instructed him to that effect. He resolved on a journey to the great +village of the Senecas, and called on Hennepin, who was busied in +building a bark chapel for himself, to accompany him. They accordingly +set out with several men well armed and equipped, and bearing at their +backs presents of very considerable value. The village was beyond the +Genesee, southeast of the site of Rochester.[119] After a march of five +days, they reached it on the last day of December. They were conducted +to the lodge of the great chief, where they were beset by a staring +crowd of women and children. Two Jesuits, Raffeix and Julien Garnier, +were in the village; and their presence boded no good for the embassy. +La Motte, who seems to have had little love for priests of any kind, was +greatly annoyed at seeing them; and when the chiefs assembled to hear +what he had to say, he insisted that the two fathers should leave the +council-house. At this, Hennepin, out of respect for his cloth, thought +it befitting that he should retire also. The chiefs, forty-two in +number, squatted on the ground, arrayed in ceremonial robes of beaver, +wolf, or black-squirrel skin. "The senators of Venice," writes Hennepin, +"do not look more grave or speak more deliberately than the counsellors +of the Iroquois." La Motte's interpreter harangued the attentive +conclave, placed gift after gift at their feet,--coats, scarlet cloth, +hatchets, knives, and beads,--and used all his eloquence to persuade +them that the building of a fort on the banks of the Niagara, and a +vessel on Lake Erie, were measures vital to their interest. They gladly +took the gifts, but answered the interpreter's speech with evasive +generalities; and having been entertained with the burning of an Indian +prisoner, the discomfited embassy returned, half-famished, to Niagara. + +Meanwhile, La Salle and Tonty were on their way from Fort Frontenac, +with men and supplies, to join La Motte and his advance party. They +were in a small vessel, with a pilot either unskilful or treacherous. +On Christmas eve, he was near wrecking them off the Bay of Quinte. On +the next day they crossed to the mouth of the Genesee; and La Salle, +after some delay, proceeded to the neighboring town of the Senecas, +where he appears to have arrived just after the departure of La Motte +and Hennepin. He, too, called them to a council, and tried to soothe the +extreme jealousy with which they regarded his proceedings. "I told them +my plan," he says, "and gave the best pretexts I could, and I succeeded +in my attempt."[120] More fortunate than La Motte, he persuaded them to +consent to his carrying arms and ammunition by the Niagara portage, +building a vessel above the cataract, and establishing a fortified +warehouse at the mouth of the river. + +[Sidenote: JEALOUSIES.] + +This success was followed by a calamity. La Salle had gone up the +Niagara to find a suitable place for a ship-yard, when he learned that +the pilot in charge of the vessel he had left had disobeyed his orders, +and ended by wrecking it on the coast. Little was saved except the +anchors and cables destined for the new vessel to be built above the +cataract. This loss threw him into extreme perplexity, and, as Hennepin +says, "would have made anybody but him give up the enterprise."[121] The +whole party were now gathered at the palisaded house which La Motte had +built, a little below the mountain ridge of Lewiston. They were a motley +crew of French, Flemings, and Italians, all mutually jealous. La Salle's +enemies had tampered with some of the men; and none of them seemed to +have had much heart for the enterprise. The fidelity even of La Motte +was doubtful. "He served me very ill," says La Salle; "and Messieurs de +Tonty and de la Forest knew that he did his best to debauch all my +men."[122] His health soon failed under the hardships of these winter +journeyings, and he returned to Fort Frontenac, half-blinded by an +inflammation of the eyes.[123] La Salle, seldom happy in the choice of +subordinates, had, perhaps, in all his company but one man whom he could +fully trust; and this was Tonty. He and Hennepin were on indifferent +terms. Men thrown together in a rugged enterprise like this quickly +learn to know each other; and the vain and assuming friar was not likely +to commend himself to La Salle's brave and loyal lieutenant. Hennepin +says that it was La Salle's policy to govern through the dissensions of +his followers; and, from whatever cause, it is certain that those +beneath him were rarely in perfect harmony. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[104] Hennepin, _Description de la Louisiane_ (1683), 19; Ibid., _Voyage +Curieux_ (1704), 66. Ribourde had lately arrived. + +[105] _Lettre de La Motte de la Lussiere, sans date; Relation de Henri +de Tonty ecrite de Quebec, le 14 Novembre, 1684_ (Margry, i. 573). This +paper, apparently addressed to Abbe Renaudot, is entirely distinct from +Tonty's memoir of 1693, addressed to the minister Ponchartrain. + +[106] Hennepin, _Nouvelle Decouverte_ (1697), 8. + +[107] Ibid., _Avant Propos_, 5. + +[108] Ibid., _Voyage Curieux_ (1704), 12. + +[109] Hennepin, _Voyage Curieux_ (1704), 18. + +[110] Ibid. _Avis au Lecteur._ He elsewhere represents himself as on +excellent terms with La Salle; with whom, he says, he used to read +histories of travels at Fort Frontenac, after which they discussed +together their plans of discovery. + +[111] This was the _Racines Agnieres_ of Bruyas. It was published by Mr. +Shea in 1862. Hennepin seems to have studied it carefully; for on +several occasions he makes use of words evidently borrowed from it, +putting them into the mouths of Indians speaking a dialect different +from that of the Agniers, or Mohawks. + +[112] Compare Brodhead in _Hist. Mag._, x. 268. + +[113] "Une enterprise capable d'epouvanter tout autre que +moi."--Hennepin, _Voyage Curieux, Avant Propos_ (1704). + +[114] "Je vous proteste ici devant Dieu, que ma Relation est fidele et +sincere," etc.--Ibid., _Avis au Lecteur_. + +[115] The nature of these fabrications will be shown hereafter. They +occur, not in the early editions of Hennepin's narrative, which are +comparatively truthful, but in the edition of 1697 and those which +followed. La Salle was dead at the time of their publication. + +[116] This place is laid down on a manuscript map sent to France by the +Intendant Duchesneau, and now preserved in the Archives de la Marine, +and also on several other contemporary maps. + +[117] Hennepin's account of the falls and river of Niagara--especially +his second account, on his return from the West--is very minute, and on +the whole very accurate. He indulges in gross exaggeration as to the +height of the cataract, which, in the edition of 1683, he states at five +hundred feet, and raises to six hundred in that of 1697. He also says +that there was room for four carriages to pass abreast under the +American Fall without being wet. This is, of course, an exaggeration at +the best; but it is extremely probable that a great change has taken +place since his time. He speaks of a small lateral fall at the west side +of the Horse Shoe Fall which does not now exist. Table Rock, now +destroyed, is distinctly figured in his picture. He says that he +descended the cliffs on the west side to the foot of the cataract, but +that no human being can get down on the east side. + +The name of Niagara, written _Onguiaahra_ by Lalemant in 1641, and +_Ongiara_ by Sanson, on his map of 1657, is used by Hennepin in its +present form. His description of the falls is the earliest known to +exist. They are clearly indicated on the map of Champlain, 1632. For +early references to them, see "The Jesuits in North America," 235, +_note_. A brief but curious notice of them is given by Gendron, +_Quelques Particularitez du Pays des Hurons_, 1659. The indefatigable +Dr. O'Callaghan has discovered thirty-nine distinct forms of the name +Niagara. _Index to Colonial Documents of New York_, 465. It is of +Iroquois origin, and in the Mohawk dialect is pronounced Nyagarah. + +[118] Tonty, _Relation_, 1684 (Margry, i. 573). + +[119] Near the town of Victor. It is laid down on the map of Galinee, +and other unpublished maps. Compare Marshall, _Historical Sketches of +the Niagara Frontier_, 14. + +[120] _Lettre de La Salle a un de ses associes_ (Margry, ii. 32). + +[121] _Description de la Louisiane_ (1683), 41. It is characteristic of +Hennepin that, in the editions of his book published after La Salle's +death, he substitutes, for "anybody but him," "anybody but those who had +formed so generous a design,"--meaning to include himself, though he +lost nothing by the disaster, and had not formed the design. + +On these incidents, compare the two narratives of Tonty, of 1684 and +1693. The book bearing Tonty's name is a compilation full of errors. He +disowned its authorship. + +[122] _Lettre de La Salle, 22 Aout, 1682_ (Margry, ii. 212). + +[123] _Lettre de La Motte, sans date._ + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +1679. + +THE LAUNCH OF THE "GRIFFIN." + + The Niagara Portage.--A Vessel on the Stocks.--Suffering and + Discontent.--La Salle's Winter Journey.--The Vessel + launched.--Fresh Disasters. + + +[Sidenote: THE NIAGARA PORTAGE.] + +A more important work than that of the warehouse at the mouth of the +river was now to be begun. This was the building of a vessel above the +cataract. The small craft which had brought La Motte and Hennepin with +their advance party had been hauled to the foot of the rapids at +Lewiston, and drawn ashore with a capstan, to save her from the drifting +ice. Her lading was taken out, and must now be carried beyond the +cataract to the calm water above. The distance to the destined point was +at least twelve miles, and the steep heights above Lewiston must first +be climbed. This heavy task was accomplished on the twenty-second of +January. The level of the plateau was reached, and the file of burdened +men, some thirty in number, toiled slowly on its way over the snowy +plains and through the gloomy forests of spruce and naked oak-trees; +while Hennepin plodded through the drifts with his portable altar +lashed fast to his back. They came at last to the mouth of a stream +which entered the Niagara two leagues above the cataract, and which was +undoubtedly that now called Cayuga Creek.[124] + +Trees were felled, the place cleared, and the master-carpenter set his +ship-builders at work. Meanwhile, two Mohegan hunters, attached to the +party, made bark wigwams to lodge the men. Hennepin had his chapel, +apparently of the same material, where he placed his altar, and on +Sundays and saints' days said mass, preached, and exhorted; while some +of the men, who knew the Gregorian chant, lent their aid at the service. +When the carpenters were ready to lay the keel of the vessel, La Salle +asked the friar to drive the first bolt; "but the modesty of my +religious profession," he says, "compelled me to decline this honor." + +Fortunately, it was the hunting-season of the Iroquois, and most of the +Seneca warriors were in the forests south of Lake Erie; yet enough +remained to cause serious uneasiness. They loitered sullenly about the +place, expressing their displeasure at the proceedings of the French. +One of them, pretending to be drunk, attacked the blacksmith and tried +to kill him; but the Frenchman, brandishing a red-hot bar of iron, held +him at bay till Hennepin ran to the rescue, when, as he declares, the +severity of his rebuke caused the savage to desist.[125] The work of the +ship-builders advanced rapidly; and when the Indian visitors beheld the +vast ribs of the wooden monster, their jealousy was redoubled. A squaw +told the French that they meant to burn the vessel on the stocks. All +now stood anxiously on the watch. Cold, hunger, and discontent found +imperfect antidotes in Tonty's energy and Hennepin's sermons. + +[Sidenote: SUFFERING AND DISCONTENT.] + +La Salle was absent, and his lieutenant commanded in his place. Hennepin +says that Tonty was jealous because he, the friar, kept a journal, and +that he was forced to use all manner of just precautions to prevent the +Italian from seizing it. The men, being half-starved, in consequence of +the loss of their provisions on Lake Ontario, were restless and moody; +and their discontent was fomented by one of their number, who had very +probably been tampered with by La Salle's enemies.[126] The Senecas +refused to supply them with corn, and the frequent exhortations of the +Recollet father proved an insufficient substitute. In this extremity, +the two Mohegans did excellent service,--bringing deer and other game, +which relieved the most pressing wants of the party, and went far to +restore their cheerfulness. + +La Salle, meanwhile, had gone down to the mouth of the river, with a +sergeant and a number of men; and here, on the high point of land where +Fort Niagara now stands, he marked out the foundations of two +blockhouses.[127] Then, leaving his men to build them, he set out on +foot for Fort Frontenac, where the condition of his affairs demanded his +presence, and where he hoped to procure supplies to replace those lost +in the wreck of his vessel. It was February, and the distance was some +two hundred and fifty miles, through the snow-encumbered forests of the +Iroquois and over the ice of Lake Ontario. Two men attended him, and a +dog dragged his baggage on a sledge. For food, they had only a bag of +parched corn, which failed them two days before they reached the fort; +and they made the rest of the journey fasting. + +[Sidenote: THE SHIP FINISHED.] + +During his absence, Tonty finished the vessel, which was of about +forty-five tons' burden.[128] As spring opened, she was ready for +launching. The friar pronounced his blessing on her; the assembled +company sang _Te Deum_; cannon were fired; and French and Indians, +warmed alike by a generous gift of brandy, shouted and yelped in chorus +as she glided into the Niagara. Her builders towed her out and anchored +her in the stream, safe at last from incendiary hands; and then, +swinging their hammocks under her deck, slept in peace, beyond reach of +the tomahawk. The Indians gazed on her with amazement. Five small cannon +looked out from her portholes; and on her prow was carved a portentous +monster, the Griffin, whose name she bore, in honor of the armorial +bearings of Frontenac. La Salle had often been heard to say that he +would make the griffin fly above the crows, or, in other words, make +Frontenac triumph over the Jesuits. + +They now took her up the river, and made her fast below the swift +current at Black Rock. Here they finished her equipment, and waited for +La Salle's return; but the absent commander did not appear. The spring +and more than half of the summer had passed before they saw him again. +At length, early in August, he arrived at the mouth of the Niagara, +bringing three more friars; for, though no friend of the Jesuits, he was +zealous for the Faith, and was rarely without a missionary in his +journeyings. Like Hennepin, the three friars were all Flemings. One of +them, Melithon Watteau, was to remain at Niagara; the others, Zenobe +Membre and Gabriel Ribourde, were to preach the Faith among the tribes +of the West. Ribourde was a hale and cheerful old man of sixty-four. He +went four times up and down the Lewiston heights, while the men were +climbing the steep pathway with their loads. It required four of them, +well stimulated with brandy, to carry up the principal anchor destined +for the "Griffin." + +La Salle brought a tale of disaster. His enemies, bent on ruining the +enterprise, had given out that he was embarked on a harebrained venture, +from which he would never return. His creditors, excited by rumors set +afloat to that end, had seized on all his property in the settled parts +of Canada, though his seigniory of Fort Frontenac alone would have more +than sufficed to pay all his debts. There was no remedy. To defer the +enterprise would have been to give his adversaries the triumph that they +sought; and he hardened himself against the blow with his usual +stoicism.[129] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[124] It has been a matter of debate on which side of the Niagara the +first vessel on the Upper Lakes was built. A close study of Hennepin, +and a careful examination of the localities, have convinced me that the +spot was that indicated above. Hennepin repeatedly alludes to a large +detached rock, rising out of the water at the foot of the rapids above +Lewiston, on the west side of the river. This rock may still be seen +immediately under the western end of the Lewiston suspension-bridge. +Persons living in the neighborhood remember that a ferry-boat used to +pass between it and the cliffs of the western shore; but it has since +been undermined by the current and has inclined in that direction, so +that a considerable part of it is submerged, while the gravel and earth +thrown down from the cliff during the building of the bridge has filled +the intervening channel. Opposite to this rock, and on the east side of +the river, says Hennepin, are three mountains, about two leagues below +the cataract. (_Nouveau Voyage_ (1704), 462, 466.) To these "three +mountains," as well as to the rock, he frequently alludes. They are also +spoken of by La Hontan, who clearly indicates their position. They +consist in the three successive grades of the acclivity: first, that +which rises from the level of the water, forming the steep and lofty +river-bank; next, an intermediate ascent, crowned by a sort of terrace, +where the tired men could find a second resting-place and lay down their +burdens, whence a third effort carried them with difficulty to the level +top of the plateau. That this was the actual "portage," or carrying +place of the travellers, is shown by Hennepin (1704), 114, who describes +the carrying of anchors and other heavy articles up these heights in +August, 1679. La Hontan also passed the Falls by way of the "three +mountains" eight years later. La Hontan (1703), 106. It is clear, then, +that the portage was on the east side, whence it would be safe to +conclude that the vessel was built on the same side. Hennepin says that +she was built at the mouth of a stream (_riviere_) entering the Niagara +two leagues above the Falls. Excepting one or two small brooks, there is +no stream on the west side but Chippewa Creek, which Hennepin had +visited and correctly placed at about a league from the cataract. His +distances on the Niagara are usually correct. On the east side there is +a stream which perfectly answers the conditions. This is Cayuga Creek, +two leagues above the Falls. Immediately in front of it is an island +about a mile long, separated from the shore by a narrow and deep arm of +the Niagara, into which Cayuga Creek discharges itself. The place is so +obviously suited to building and launching a vessel, that, in the early +part of this century, the government of the United States chose it for +the construction of a schooner to carry supplies to the garrisons of the +Upper Lakes. The neighboring village now bears the name of La Salle. + +In examining this and other localities on the Niagara, I have been +greatly aided by my friend O. H. Marshall, Esq., of Buffalo, who is +unrivalled in his knowledge of the history and traditions of the Niagara +frontier. + +[125] Hennepin (1704), 97. On a paper drawn up at the instance of the +Intendant Duchesneau, the names of the greater number of La Salle's men +are preserved. These agree with those given by Hennepin: thus, the +master-carpenter, whom he calls Maitre Moyse, appears as Moise Hillaret; +and the blacksmith, whom he calls La Forge, is mentioned as--(illegible) +dit la Forge. + +[126] "This bad man," says Hennepin, "would infallibly have debauched +our workmen, if I had not reassured them by the exhortations which I +made them on fete-days and Sundays, after divine service." (1704), 98. + +[127] _Lettre de La Salle, 22 Aout, 1682_ (Margry, ii. 229); _Relation +de Tonty_, 1684 (Ibid., i. 577). He called this new post Fort Conti. It +was burned some months after, by the carelessness of the sergeant in +command, and was the first of a succession of forts on this historic +spot. + +[128] Hennepin (1683), 46. In the edition of 1697, he says that it was +of sixty tons. I prefer to follow the earlier and more trustworthy +narrative. + +[129] La Salle's embarrassment at this time was so great that he +purposed to send Tonty up the lakes in the "Griffin," while he went back +to the colony to look after his affairs; but suspecting that the pilot, +who had already wrecked one of his vessels, was in the pay of his +enemies, he resolved at last to take charge of the expedition himself, +to prevent a second disaster. (_Lettre de La Salle, 22 Aout, 1682_; +Margry, ii. 214.) Among the creditors who bore hard upon him were +Migeon, Charon, Giton, and Peloquin, of Montreal, in whose name his furs +at Fort Frontenac had been seized. The intendant also placed under seal +all his furs at Quebec, among which is set down the not very precious +item of two hundred and eighty-four skins of _enfants du diable_, or +skunks. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +1679. + +LA SALLE ON THE UPPER LAKES. + + The Voyage of the "Griffin."--Detroit.--A Storm.--St. Ignace of + Michilimackinac.--Rivals and Enemies.--Lake + Michigan.--Hardships.--A Threatened Fight.--Fort Miami.--Tonty's + Misfortunes.--Forebodings. + + +The "Griffin" had lain moored by the shore, so near that Hennepin could +preach on Sundays from the deck to the men encamped along the bank. She +was now forced up against the current with tow-ropes and sails, till she +reached the calm entrance of Lake Erie. On the seventh of August, La +Salle and his followers embarked, sang _Te Deum_, and fired their +cannon. A fresh breeze sprang up; and with swelling canvas the "Griffin" +ploughed the virgin waves of Lake Erie, where sail was never seen +before. For three days they held their course over these unknown waters, +and on the fourth turned northward into the Strait of Detroit. Here, on +the right hand and on the left, lay verdant prairies, dotted with groves +and bordered with lofty forests. They saw walnut, chestnut, and wild +plum trees, and oaks festooned with grape-vines; herds of deer, and +flocks of swans and wild turkeys. The bulwarks of the "Griffin" were +plentifully hung with game which the men killed on shore, and among the +rest with a number of bears, much commended by Hennepin for their want +of ferocity and the excellence of their flesh. "Those," he says, "who +will one day have the happiness to possess this fertile and pleasant +strait, will be very much obliged to those who have shown them the way." +They crossed Lake St. Clair,[130] and still sailed northward against the +current, till now, sparkling in the sun, Lake Huron spread before them +like a sea. + +[Sidenote: ST. IGNACE.] + +For a time they bore on prosperously. Then the wind died to a calm, then +freshened to a gale, then rose to a furious tempest; and the vessel +tossed wildly among the short, steep, perilous waves of the raging lake. +Even La Salle called on his followers to commend themselves to Heaven. +All fell to their prayers but the godless pilot, who was loud in +complaint against his commander for having brought him, after the honor +he had won on the ocean, to drown at last ignominiously in fresh water. +The rest clamored to the saints. St. Anthony of Padua was promised a +chapel to be built in his honor, if he would but save them from their +jeopardy; while in the same breath La Salle and the friars declared him +patron of their great enterprise.[131] The saint heard their prayers. +The obedient winds were tamed; and the "Griffin" plunged on her way +through foaming surges that still grew calmer as she advanced. Now the +sun shone forth on woody islands, Bois Blanc and Mackinaw and the +distant Manitoulins,--on the forest wastes of Michigan and the vast blue +bosom of the angry lake; and now her port was won, and she found her +rest behind the point of St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, floating in that +tranquil cove where crystal waters cover but cannot hide the pebbly +depths beneath. Before her rose the house and chapel of the Jesuits, +enclosed with palisades; on the right, the Huron village, with its bark +cabins and its fence of tall pickets; on the left, the square compact +houses of the French traders; and, not far off, the clustered wigwams of +an Ottawa village.[132] Here was a centre of the Jesuit missions, and a +centre of the Indian trade; and here, under the shadow of the cross, was +much sharp practice in the service of Mammon. Keen traders, with or +without a license, and lawless _coureurs de bois_, whom a few years of +forest life had weaned from civilization, made St. Ignace their resort; +and here there were many of them when the "Griffin" came. They and their +employers hated and feared La Salle, who, sustained as he was by the +governor, might set at nought the prohibition of the King, debarring him +from traffic with these tribes. Yet, while plotting against him, they +took pains to allay his distrust by a show of welcome. + +The "Griffin" fired her cannon, and the Indians yelped in wonder and +amazement. The adventurers landed in state, and marched under arms to +the bark chapel of the Ottawa village, where they heard mass. La Salle +knelt before the altar, in a mantle of scarlet bordered with gold. +Soldiers, sailors, and artisans knelt around him,--black Jesuits, gray +Recollets, swarthy _voyageurs_, and painted savages; a devout but motley +concourse. + +As they left the chapel, the Ottawa chiefs came to bid them welcome, and +the Hurons saluted them with a volley of musketry. They saw the +"Griffin" at her anchorage, surrounded by more than a hundred bark +canoes, like a Triton among minnows. Yet it was with more wonder than +good-will that the Indians of the mission gazed on the "floating fort," +for so they called the vessel. A deep jealousy of La Salle's designs had +been infused into them. His own followers, too, had been tampered with. +In the autumn before, it may be remembered, he had sent fifteen men up +the lakes to trade for him, with orders to go thence to the Illinois and +make preparation against his coming. Early in the summer, Tonty had been +despatched in a canoe from Niagara to look after them.[133] It was high +time. Most of the men had been seduced from their duty, and had +disobeyed their orders, squandered the goods intrusted to them, or used +them in trading on their own account. La Salle found four of them at +Michilimackinac. These he arrested, and sent Tonty to the Falls of Ste. +Marie, where two others were captured, with their plunder. The rest were +in the woods, and it was useless to pursue them. + +[Sidenote: RIVALS AND ENEMIES.] + +Anxious and troubled as to the condition of his affairs in Canada. La +Salle had meant, after seeing his party safe at Michilimackinac, to +leave Tonty to conduct it to the Illinois, while he himself returned to +the colony. But Tonty was still at Ste. Marie, and he had none to trust +but himself. Therefore, he resolved at all risks to remain with his men; +"for," he says, "I judged my presence absolutely necessary to retain +such of them as were left me, and prevent them from being enticed away +during the winter." Moreover, he thought that he had detected an +intrigue of his enemies to hound on the Iroquois against the Illinois, +in order to defeat his plan by involving him in the war. + +Early in September he set sail again, and passing westward into Lake +Michigan,[134] cast anchor near one of the islands at the entrance of +Green Bay. Here, for once, he found a friend in the person of a +Pottawattamie chief, who had been so wrought upon by the politic +kindness of Frontenac that he declared himself ready to die for the +children of Onontio.[135] Here, too, he found several of his advance +party, who had remained faithful and collected a large store of furs. It +would have been better had they proved false, like the rest. La Salle, +who asked counsel of no man, resolved, in spite of his followers, to +send back the "Griffin" laden with these furs, and others collected on +the way, to satisfy his creditors.[136] It was a rash resolution, for it +involved trusting her to the pilot, who had already proved either +incompetent or treacherous. She fired a parting shot, and on the +eighteenth of September set sail for Niagara, with orders to return to +the head of Lake Michigan as soon as she had discharged her cargo. La +Salle, with the fourteen men who remained, in four canoes deeply laden +with a forge, tools, merchandise, and arms, put out from the island and +resumed his voyage. + +[Sidenote: POTTAWATTAMIES.] + +The parting was not auspicious. The lake, glassy and calm in the +afternoon, was convulsed at night with a sudden storm, when the canoes +were midway between the island and the main shore. It was with +difficulty that they could keep together, the men shouting to each +other through the darkness. Hennepin, who was in the smallest canoe with +a heavy load, and a carpenter for a companion who was awkward at the +paddle, found himself in jeopardy which demanded all his nerve. The +voyagers thought themselves happy when they gained at last the shelter +of a little sandy cove, where they dragged up their canoes, and made +their cheerless bivouac in the drenched and dripping forest. Here they +spent five days, living on pumpkins and Indian corn, the gift of their +Pottawattamie friends, and on a Canada porcupine brought in by La +Salle's Mohegan hunter. The gale raged meanwhile with relentless fury. +They trembled when they thought of the "Griffin." When at length the +tempest lulled, they re-embarked, and steered southward along the shore +of Wisconsin; but again the storm fell upon them, and drove them for +safety to a bare, rocky islet. Here they made a fire of drift-wood, +crouched around it, drew their blankets over their heads, and in this +miserable plight, pelted with sleet and rain, remained for two days. + +At length they were afloat again; but their prosperity was brief. On the +twenty-eighth, a fierce squall drove them to a point of rocks covered +with bushes, where they consumed the little that remained of their +provisions. On the first of October they paddled about thirty miles, +without food, when they came to a village of Pottawattamies, who ran +down to the shore to help them to land; but La Salle, fearing that some +of his men would steal the merchandise and desert to the Indians, +insisted on going three leagues farther, to the great indignation of his +followers. The lake, swept by an easterly gale, was rolling its waves +against the beach, like the ocean in a storm. In the attempt to land, La +Salle's canoe was nearly swamped. He and his three canoe-men leaped into +the water, and in spite of the surf, which nearly drowned them, dragged +their vessel ashore with all its load. He then went to the rescue of +Hennepin, who with his awkward companion was in woful need of succor. +Father Gabriel, with his sixty-four years, was no match for the surf and +the violent undertow. Hennepin, finding himself safe, waded to his +relief, and carried him ashore on his sturdy shoulders; while the old +friar, though drenched to the skin, laughed gayly under his cowl as his +brother missionary staggered with him up the beach.[137] + +When all were safe ashore, La Salle, who distrusted the Indians they had +passed, took post on a hill, and ordered his followers to prepare their +guns for action. Nevertheless, as they were starving, an effort must be +risked to gain a supply of food; and he sent three men back to the +village to purchase it. Well armed, but faint with toil and famine, they +made their way through the stormy forest bearing a pipe of peace, but on +arriving saw that the scared inhabitants had fled. They found, however, +a stock of corn, of which they took a portion, leaving goods in +exchange, and then set out on their return. + +Meanwhile, about twenty of the warriors, armed with bows and arrows, +approached the camp of the French to reconnoitre. La Salle went to meet +them with some of his men, opened a parley with them, and kept them +seated at the foot of the hill till his three messengers returned, when +on seeing the peace-pipe the warriors set up a cry of joy. In the +morning they brought more corn to the camp, with a supply of fresh +venison, not a little cheering to the exhausted Frenchmen, who, in dread +of treachery, had stood under arms all night. + +[Sidenote: HARDSHIPS.] + +This was no journey of pleasure. The lake was ruffled with almost +ceaseless storms; clouds big with rain above, a turmoil of gray and +gloomy waves beneath. Every night the canoes must be shouldered through +the breakers and dragged up the steep banks, which, as they neared the +site of Milwaukee, became almost insurmountable. The men paddled all +day, with no other food than a handful of Indian corn. They were spent +with toil, sick with the haws and wild berries which they ravenously +devoured, and dejected at the prospect before them. Father Gabriel's +good spirits began to fail. He fainted several times from famine and +fatigue, but was revived by a certain "confection of Hyacinth" +administered by Hennepin, who had a small box of this precious specific. + +At length they descried at a distance, on the stormy shore, two or three +eagles among a busy congregation of crows or turkey buzzards. They +paddled in all haste to the spot. The feasters took flight; and the +starved travellers found the mangled body of a deer, lately killed by +the wolves. This good luck proved the inauguration of plenty. As they +approached the head of the lake, game grew abundant; and, with the aid +of the Mohegan, there was no lack of bear's meat and venison. They found +wild grapes, too, in the woods, and gathered them by cutting down the +trees to which the vines clung. + +[Sidenote: ENCOUNTER WITH INDIANS.] + +While thus employed, they were startled by a sight often so fearful in +the waste and the wilderness,--the print of a human foot. It was clear +that Indians were not far off. A strict watch was kept, not, as it +proved, without cause; for that night, while the sentry thought of +little but screening himself and his gun from the floods of rain, a +party of Outagamies crept under the bank, where they lurked for some +time before he discovered them. Being challenged, they came forward, +professing great friendship, and pretending to have mistaken the French +for Iroquois. In the morning, however, there was an outcry from La +Salle's servant, who declared that the visitors had stolen his coat from +under the inverted canoe where he had placed it; while some of the +carpenters also complained of being robbed. La Salle well knew that if +the theft were left unpunished, worse would come of it. First, he posted +his men at the woody point of a peninsula, whose sandy neck was +interposed between them and the main forest. Then he went forth, pistol +in hand, met a young Outagami, seized him, and led him prisoner to his +camp. This done, he again set out, and soon found an Outagami +chief,--for the wigwams were not far distant,--to whom he told what he +had done, adding that unless the stolen goods were restored, the +prisoner should be killed. The Indians were in perplexity, for they had +cut the coat to pieces and divided it. In this dilemma they resolved, +being strong in numbers, to rescue their comrade by force. Accordingly, +they came down to the edge of the forest, or posted themselves behind +fallen trees on the banks, while La Salle's men in their stronghold +braced their nerves for the fight. Here three Flemish friars with their +rosaries, and eleven Frenchmen with their guns, confronted a hundred and +twenty screeching Outagamies. Hennepin, who had seen service, and who +had always an exhortation at his tongue's end, busied himself to inspire +the rest with a courage equal to his own. Neither party, however, had an +appetite for the fray. A parley ensued: full compensation was made for +the stolen goods, and the aggrieved Frenchmen were farther propitiated +with a gift of beaver-skins. + +Their late enemies, now become friends, spent the next day in dances, +feasts, and speeches. They entreated La Salle not to advance farther, +since the Illinois, through whose country he must pass, would be sure to +kill him; for, added these friendly counsellors, they hated the French +because they had been instigating the Iroquois to invade their country, +Here was another subject of anxiety. La Salle was confirmed in his +belief that his busy and unscrupulous enemies were intriguing for his +destruction. + +He pushed on, however, circling around the southern shore of Lake +Michigan, till he reached the mouth of the St. Joseph, called by him the +Miamis. Here Tonty was to have rejoined him with twenty men, making his +way from Michilimackinac along the eastern shore of the lake; but the +rendezvous was a solitude,--Tonty was nowhere to be seen. It was the +first of November; winter was at hand, and the streams would soon be +frozen. The men clamored to go forward, urging that they should starve +if they could not reach the villages of the Illinois before the tribe +scattered for the winter hunt. La Salle was inexorable. If they should +all desert, he said, he, with his Mohegan hunter and the three friars, +would still remain and wait for Tonty. The men grumbled, but obeyed; +and, to divert their thoughts, he set them at building a fort of timber +on a rising ground at the mouth of the river. + +They had spent twenty days at this task, and their work was well +advanced, when at length Tonty appeared. He brought with him only half +of his men. Provisions had failed; and the rest of his party had been +left thirty leagues behind, to sustain themselves by hunting. La Salle +told him to return and hasten them forward. He set out with two men. A +violent north wind arose. He tried to run his canoe ashore through the +breakers. The two men could not manage their vessel, and he with his one +hand could not help them. She swamped, rolling over in the surf. Guns, +baggage, and provisions were lost; and the three voyagers returned to +the Miamis, subsisting on acorns by the way. Happily, the men left +behind, excepting two deserters, succeeded, a few days after, in +rejoining the party.[138] + +[Sidenote: FOREBODINGS.] + +Thus was one heavy load lifted from the heart of La Salle. But where was +the "Griffin"? Time enough, and more than enough, had passed for her +voyage to Niagara and back again. He scanned the dreary horizon with an +anxious eye. No returning sail gladdened the watery solitude, and a dark +foreboding gathered on his heart. Yet further delay was impossible. He +sent back two men to Michilimackinac to meet her, if she still existed, +and pilot her to his new fort of the Miamis, and then prepared to ascend +the river, whose weedy edges were already glassed with thin flakes of +ice.[139] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[130] They named it Sainte Claire, of which the present name is a +perversion. + +[131] Hennepin (1683), 58. + +[132] There is a rude plan of the establishment in La Hontan, though in +several editions its value is destroyed by the reversal of the plate. + +[133] _Relation de Tonty, 1684; Ibid., 1693_. He was overtaken at the +Detroit by the "Griffin." + +[134] Then usually known as Lac des Illinois, because it gave access to +the country of the tribes so called. Three years before, Allouez gave it +the name of Lac St. Joseph, by which it is often designated by the early +writers. Membre, Douay, and others, call it Lac Dauphin. + +[135] "The Great Mountain," the Iroquois name for the governor of +Canada. It was borrowed by other tribes also. + +[136] In the license of discovery granted to La Salle, he is expressly +prohibited from trading with the Ottawas and others who brought furs to +Montreal. This traffic on the lakes was, therefore, illicit. His enemy, +the Intendant Duchesneau, afterwards used this against him. _Lettre de +Duchesneau au Ministre, 10 Nov., 1680._ + +[137] Hennepin (1683), 79. + +[138] Hennepin (1683), 112; _Relation de Tonty_, 1693. + +[139] The official account of this journey is given at length in the +_Relation des Decouvertes et des Voyages du Sieur de la Salle_, +1679-1681. This valuable document, compiled from letters and diaries of +La Salle, early in the year 1682, was known to Hennepin, who evidently +had a copy of it before him when he wrote his book, in which he +incorporated many passages from it. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +1679, 1680. + +LA SALLE ON THE ILLINOIS. + + The St. Joseph.--Adventure of La Salle.--The + Prairies.--Famine.--The Great Town of the + Illinois.--Indians.--Intrigues.--Difficulties.--Policy of la + Salle.--Desertion.--Another Attempt to poison La Salle. + + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S ADVENTURE.] + +On the third of December the party re-embarked, thirty-three in all, in +eight canoes,[140] and ascended the chill current of the St. Joseph, +bordered with dreary meadows and bare gray forests. When they approached +the site of the present village of South Bend, they looked anxiously +along the shore on their right to find the portage or path leading to +the headquarters of the Illinois. The Mohegan was absent, hunting; and, +unaided by his practised eye, they passed the path without seeing it. La +Salle landed to search the woods. Hours passed, and he did not return. +Hennepin and Tonty grew uneasy, disembarked, bivouacked, ordered guns to +be fired, and sent out men to scour the country. Night came, but not +their lost leader. Muffled in their blankets and powdered by the +thick-falling snow-flakes, they sat ruefully speculating as to what had +befallen him; nor was it till four o'clock of the next afternoon that +they saw him approaching along the margin of the river. His face and +hands were besmirched with charcoal; and he was further decorated with +two opossums which hung from his belt, and which he had killed with a +stick as they were swinging head downwards from the bough of a tree, +after the fashion of that singular beast. He had missed his way in the +forest, and had been forced to make a wide circuit around the edge of a +swamp; while the snow, of which the air was full, added to his +perplexities. Thus he pushed on through the rest of the day and the +greater part of the night, till, about two o'clock in the morning, he +reached the river again, and fired his gun as a signal to his party. +Hearing no answering shot, he pursued his way along the bank, when he +presently saw the gleam of a fire among the dense thickets close at +hand. Not doubting that he had found the bivouac of his party, he +hastened to the spot. To his surprise, no human being was to be seen. +Under a tree beside the fire was a heap of dry grass impressed with the +form of a man who must have fled but a moment before, for his couch was +still warm. It was no doubt an Indian, ambushed on the bank, watching to +kill some passing enemy. La Salle called out in several Indian +languages; but there was dead silence all around. He then, with +admirable coolness, took possession of the quarters he had found, +shouting to their invisible proprietor that he was about to sleep in +his bed; piled a barricade of bushes around the spot, rekindled the +dying fire, warmed his benumbed hands, stretched himself on the dried +grass, and slept undisturbed till morning. + +The Mohegan had rejoined the party before La Salle's return, and with +his aid the portage was soon found. Here the party encamped. La Salle, +who was excessively fatigued, occupied, together with Hennepin, a wigwam +covered in the Indian manner with mats of reeds. The cold forced them to +kindle a fire, which before daybreak set the mats in a blaze; and the +two sleepers narrowly escaped being burned along with their hut. + +[Sidenote: THE KANKAKEE.] + +In the morning, the party shouldered their canoes and baggage and began +their march for the sources of the river Illinois, some five miles +distant. Around them stretched a desolate plain, half-covered with snow +and strewn with the skulls and bones of buffalo; while, on its farthest +verge, they could see the lodges of the Miami Indians, who had made this +place their abode. As they filed on their way, a man named Duplessis, +bearing a grudge against La Salle, who walked just before him, raised +his gun to shoot him through the back, but was prevented by one of his +comrades. They soon reached a spot where the oozy, saturated soil quaked +beneath their tread. All around were clumps of alder-bushes, tufts of +rank grass, and pools of glistening water. In the midst a dark and lazy +current, which a tall man might bestride, crept twisting like a snake +among the weeds and rushes. Here were the sources of the Kankakee, one +of the heads of the Illinois.[141] They set their canoes on this thread +of water, embarked their baggage and themselves, and pushed down the +sluggish streamlet, looking, at a little distance, like men who sailed +on land. Fed by an unceasing tribute of the spongy soil, it quickly +widened to a river; and they floated on their way through a voiceless, +lifeless solitude of dreary oak barrens, or boundless marshes overgrown +with reeds. At night, they built their fire on ground made firm by +frost, and bivouacked among the rushes. A few days brought them to a +more favored region. On the right hand and on the left stretched the +boundless prairie, dotted with leafless groves and bordered by gray +wintry forests, scorched by the fires kindled in the dried grass by +Indian hunters, and strewn with the carcasses and the bleached skulls of +innumerable buffalo. The plains were scored with their pathways, and the +muddy edges of the river were full of their hoof-prints. Yet not one was +to be seen. At night, the horizon glowed with distant fires; and by day +the savage hunters could be descried at times roaming on the verge of +the prairie. The men, discontented and half-starved, would have deserted +to them had they dared. La Salle's Mohegan could kill no game except two +lean deer, with a few wild geese and swans. At length, in their straits, +they made a happy discovery. It was a buffalo bull, fast mired in a +slough. They killed him, lashed a cable about him, and then twelve men +dragged out the shaggy monster, whose ponderous carcass demanded their +utmost efforts. + +The scene changed again as they descended. On either hand ran ranges of +woody hills, following the course of the river; and when they mounted to +their tops, they saw beyond them a rolling sea of dull green prairie, a +boundless pasture of the buffalo and the deer, in our own day strangely +transformed,--yellow in harvest-time with ripened wheat, and dotted with +the roofs of a hardy and valiant yeomanry.[142] + +[Sidenote: THE ILLINOIS TOWN.] + +They passed the site of the future town of Ottawa, and saw on their +right the high plateau of Buffalo Rock, long a favorite dwelling-place +of Indians. A league below, the river glided among islands bordered with +stately woods. Close on their left towered a lofty cliff,[143] crested +with trees that overhung the rippling current; while before them spread +the valley of the Illinois, in broad low meadows, bordered on the right +by the graceful hills at whose foot now lies the village of Utica. A +population far more numerous then tenanted the valley. Along the right +bank of the river were clustered the lodges of a great Indian town. +Hennepin counted four hundred and sixty of them.[144] In shape, they +were somewhat like the arched top of a baggage-wagon. They were built +of a framework of poles, covered with mats of rushes closely interwoven; +and each contained three or four fires, of which the greater part served +for two families. + +[Sidenote: HUNGER RELIEVED.] + +Here, then, was the town; but where were the inhabitants? All was silent +as the desert. The lodges were empty, the fires dead, and the ashes +cold. La Salle had expected this; for he knew that in the autumn the +Illinois always left their towns for their winter hunting, and that the +time of their return had not yet come. Yet he was not the less +embarrassed, for he would fain have bought a supply of food to relieve +his famished followers. Some of them, searching the deserted town, +presently found the _caches_, or covered pits, in which the Indians hid +their stock of corn. This was precious beyond measure in their eyes, and +to touch it would be a deep offence. La Salle shrank from provoking +their anger, which might prove the ruin of his plans; but his necessity +overcame his prudence, and he took thirty _minots_ of corn, hoping to +appease the owners by presents. Thus provided, the party embarked again, +and resumed their downward voyage. + +On New Year's Day, 1680, they landed and heard mass. Then Hennepin +wished a happy new year to La Salle first, and afterwards to all the +men, making them a speech, which, as he tells us, was "most +touching."[145] He and his two brethren next embraced the whole company +in turn, "in a manner," writes the father, "most tender and +affectionate," exhorting them, at the same time, to patience, faith, and +constancy. Four days after these solemnities, they reached the long +expansion of the river then called Pimitoui, and now known as Peoria +Lake, and leisurely made their way downward to the site of the city of +Peoria.[146] Here, as evening drew near, they saw a faint spire of +smoke curling above the gray forest, betokening that Indians were at +hand. La Salle, as we have seen, had been warned that these tribes had +been taught to regard him as their enemy; and when, in the morning, he +resumed his course, he was prepared alike for peace or war. + +The shores now approached each other; and the Illinois was once more a +river, bordered on either hand with overhanging woods.[147] + +At nine o'clock, doubling a point, he saw about eighty Illinois wigwams, +on both sides of the river. He instantly ordered the eight canoes to be +ranged in line, abreast, across the stream,--Tonty on the right, and he +himself on the left. The men laid down their paddles and seized their +weapons; while, in this warlike guise, the current bore them swiftly +into the midst of the surprised and astounded savages. The camps were in +a panic. Warriors whooped and howled; squaws and children screeched in +chorus. Some snatched their bows and war-clubs; some ran in terror; and, +in the midst of the hubbub, La Salle leaped ashore, followed by his men. +None knew better how to deal with Indians; and he made no sign of +friendship, knowing that it might be construed as a token of fear. His +little knot of Frenchmen stood, gun in hand, passive, yet prepared for +battle. The Indians, on their part, rallying a little from their +fright, made all haste to proffer peace. Two of their chiefs came +forward, holding out the calumet; while another began a loud harangue, +to check the young warriors who were aiming their arrows from the +farther bank. La Salle, responding to these friendly overtures, +displayed another calumet; while Hennepin caught several scared children +and soothed them with winning blandishments.[148] The uproar was +quelled; and the strangers were presently seated in the midst of the +camp, beset by a throng of wild and swarthy figures. + +[Sidenote: ILLINOIS HOSPITALITY.] + +Food was placed before them; and, as the Illinois code of courtesy +enjoined, their entertainers conveyed the morsels with their own hands +to the lips of these unenviable victims of their hospitality, while +others rubbed their feet with bear's grease. La Salle, on his part, made +them a gift of tobacco and hatchets; and when he had escaped from their +caresses, rose and harangued them. He told them that he had been forced +to take corn from their granaries, lest his men should die of hunger; +but he prayed them not to be offended, promising full restitution or +ample payment. He had come, he said, to protect them against their +enemies, and teach them to pray to the true God. As for the Iroquois, +they were subjects of the Great King, and therefore brethren of the +French; yet, nevertheless, should they begin a war and invade the +country of the Illinois, he would stand by them, give them guns, and +fight in their defence, if they would permit him to build a fort among +them for the security of his men. It was also, he added, his purpose to +build a great wooden canoe, in which to descend the Mississippi to the +sea, and then return, bringing them the goods of which they stood in +need; but if they would not consent to his plans and sell provisions to +his men, he would pass on to the Osages, who would then reap all the +benefits of intercourse with the French, while they were left destitute, +at the mercy of the Iroquois.[149] + +This threat had its effect, for it touched their deep-rooted jealousy of +the Osages. They were lavish of promises, and feasts and dances consumed +the day. Yet La Salle soon learned that the intrigues of his enemies +were still pursuing him. That evening, unknown to him, a stranger +appeared in the Illinois camp. He was a Mascoutin chief, named Monso, +attended by five or six Miamis, and bringing a gift of knives, hatchets, +and kettles to the Illinois.[150] The chiefs assembled in a secret +nocturnal session, where, smoking their pipes, they listened with open +ears to the harangue of the envoys. Monso told them that he had come in +behalf of certain Frenchmen, whom he named, to warn his hearers against +the designs of La Salle, whom he denounced as a partisan and spy of the +Iroquois, affirming that he was now on his way to stir up the tribes +beyond the Mississippi to join in a war against the Illinois, who, thus +assailed from the east and from the west, would be utterly destroyed. +There was no hope for them, he added, but in checking the farther +progress of La Salle, or, at least, retarding it, thus causing his men +to desert him. Having thrown his fire-brand, Monso and his party left +the camp in haste, dreading to be confronted with the object of their +aspersions.[151] + +[Sidenote: FRESH INTRIGUES.] + +In the morning, La Salle saw a change in the behavior of his hosts. They +looked on him askance, cold, sullen, and suspicious. There was one +Omawha, a chief, whose favor he had won the day before by the politic +gift of two hatchets and three knives, and who now came to him in secret +to tell him what had taken place at the nocturnal council. La Salle at +once saw in it a device of his enemies; and this belief was confirmed, +when, in the afternoon, Nicanope, brother of the head chief, sent to +invite the Frenchmen to a feast. They repaired to his lodge; but before +dinner was served,--that is to say, while the guests, white and red, +were seated on mats, each with his hunting-knife in his hand, and the +wooden bowl before him which was to receive his share of the bear's or +buffalo's meat, or the corn boiled in fat, with which he was to be +regaled,--while such was the posture of the company, their host arose +and began a long speech. He told the Frenchmen that he had invited them +to his lodge less to refresh their bodies with good cheer than to cure +their minds of the dangerous purpose which possessed them, of descending +the Mississippi. Its shores, he said, were beset by savage tribes, +against whose numbers and ferocity their valor would avail nothing; its +waters were infested by serpents, alligators, and unnatural monsters; +while the river itself, after raging among rocks and whirlpools, plunged +headlong at last into a fathomless gulf, which would swallow them and +their vessel forever. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND THE INDIANS.] + +La Salle's men were for the most part raw hands, knowing nothing of the +wilderness, and easily alarmed at its dangers; but there were two among +them, old _coureurs de bois_, who unfortunately knew too much; for they +understood the Indian orator, and explained his speech to the rest. As +La Salle looked around on the circle of his followers, he read an augury +of fresh trouble in their disturbed and rueful visages. He waited +patiently, however, till the speaker had ended, and then answered him, +through his interpreter, with great composure. First, he thanked him for +the friendly warning which his affection had impelled him to utter; but, +he continued, the greater the danger, the greater the honor; and even +if the danger were real, Frenchmen would never flinch from it. But were +not the Illinois jealous? Had they not been deluded by lies? "We were +not asleep, my brother, when Monso came to tell you, under cover of +night, that we were spies of the Iroquois. The presents he gave you, +that you might believe his falsehoods, are at this moment buried in the +earth under this lodge. If he told the truth, why did he skulk away in +the dark? Why did he not show himself by day? Do you not see that when +we first came among you, and your camp was all in confusion, we could +have killed you without needing help from the Iroquois? And now, while I +am speaking, could we not put your old men to death, while your young +warriors are all gone away to hunt? If we meant to make war on you, we +should need no help from the Iroquois, who have so often felt the force +of our arms. Look at what we have brought you. It is not weapons to +destroy you, but merchandise and tools for your good. If you still +harbor evil thoughts of us, be frank as we are, and speak them boldly. +Go after this impostor Monso, and bring him back, that we may answer him +face to face; for he never saw either us or the Iroquois, and what can +he know of the plots that he pretends to reveal?"[152] Nicanope had +nothing to reply, and, grunting assent in the depths of his throat, +made a sign that the feast should proceed. + +The French were lodged in huts, near the Indian camp; and, fearing +treachery, La Salle placed a guard at night. On the morning after the +feast, he came out into the frosty air and looked about him for the +sentinels. Not one of them was to be seen. Vexed and alarmed, he entered +hut after hut and roused his drowsy followers. Six of the number, +including two of the best carpenters, were nowhere to be found. +Discontented and mutinous from the first, and now terrified by the +fictions of Nicanope, they had deserted, preferring the hardships of the +midwinter forest to the mysterious terrors of the Mississippi. La Salle +mustered the rest before him, and inveighed sternly against the +cowardice and baseness of those who had thus abandoned him, regardless +of his many favors. If any here, he added, are afraid, let them but wait +till the spring, and they shall have free leave to return to Canada, +safely and without dishonor.[153] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AGAIN POISONED.] + +This desertion cut him to the heart. It showed him that he was leaning +on a broken reed; and he felt that, on an enterprise full of doubt and +peril, there were scarcely four men in his party whom he could trust. +Nor was desertion the worst he had to fear; for here, as at Fort +Frontenac, an attempt was made to kill him. Tonty tells us that poison +was placed in the pot in which their food was cooked, and that La Salle +was saved by an antidote which some of his friends had given him before +he left France. This, it will be remembered, was an epoch of poisoners. +It was in the following month that the notorious La Voisin was burned +alive, at Paris, for practices to which many of the highest nobility +were charged with being privy, not excepting some in whose veins ran the +blood of the gorgeous spendthrift who ruled the destinies of +France.[154] + +In these early French enterprises in the West, it was to the last degree +difficult to hold men to their duty. Once fairly in the wilderness, +completely freed from the sharp restraints of authority in which they +had passed their lives, a spirit of lawlessness broke out among them +with a violence proportioned to the pressure which had hitherto +controlled it. Discipline had no resources and no guarantee; while those +outlaws of the forest, the _coureurs de bois_, were always before their +eyes, a standing example of unbridled license. La Salle, eminently +skilful in his dealings with Indians, was rarely so happy with his own +countrymen; and yet the desertions from which he was continually +suffering were due far more to the inevitable difficulty of his position +than to any want of conduct on his part. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[140] _Lettre de Duchesneau a----, 10 Nov., 1680._ + +[141] The Kankakee was called at this time the Theakiki, or Haukiki +(Marest); a name which, as Charlevoix says, was afterwards corrupted by +the French to Kiakiki whence, probably, its present form. In La Salle's +time, the name "Theakiki" was given to the river Illinois through all +its course. It was also called the Riviere Seignelay, the Riviere des +Macopins, and the Riviere Divine, or Riviere de la Divine. The latter +name, when Charlevoix visited the country in 1721, was confined to the +northern branch. He gives an interesting and somewhat graphic account of +the portage and the sources of the Kankakee, in his letter dated _De la +Source du Theakiki, ce dix-sept Septembre_, 1721. + +Why the Illinois should ever have been called the "Divine," it is not +easy to see. The Memoirs of St. Simon suggest an explanation. Madame de +Frontenac and her friend Mademoiselle d'Outrelaise, he tells us, lived +together in apartments at the Arsenal, where they held their _salon_ and +exercised a great power in society. They were called at court _les +Divines_. (St. Simon, v. 335: Cheruel.) In compliment to Frontenac, the +river may have been named after his wife or her friend. The suggestion +is due to M. Margry. I have seen a map by Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, +on which the river is called "Riviere de la Divine ou l'Outrelaise." + +[142] The change is very recent. Within the memory of men not yet old, +wolves and deer, besides wild swans, wild turkeys, cranes, and pelicans, +abounded in this region. In 1840, a friend of mine shot a deer from the +window of a farmhouse, near the present town of La Salle. Running wolves +on horseback was his favorite amusement in this part of the country. The +buffalo long ago disappeared; but the early settlers found frequent +remains of them. Mr. James Clark, of Utica, Ill., told me that he once +found a large quantity of their bones and skulls in one place, as if a +herd had perished in the snowdrifts. + +[143] "Starved Rock." It will hold, hereafter, a conspicuous place in +the narrative. + +[144] _La Louisiane_, 137. Allouez (_Relation_, 1673-79) found three +hundred and fifty-one lodges. This was in 1677. The population of this +town, which embraced five or six distinct tribes of the Illinois, was +continually changing. In 1675, Marquette addressed here an auditory +composed of five hundred chiefs and old men, and fifteen hundred young +men, besides women and children. He estimates the number of fires at +five or six hundred. (_Voyages du Pere Marquette_, 98: Lenox.) Membre, +who was here in 1680, says that it then contained seven or eight +thousand souls. (Membre in Le Clerc, _Premier Etablissement de la Foy_, +ii. 173.) On the remarkable manuscript map of Franquelin, 1684, it is +set down at twelve hundred warriors, or about six thousand souls. This +was after the destructive inroad of the Iroquois. Some years later, +Rasle reported upwards of twenty-four hundred families. (_Lettre a son +Frere, in Lettres Edifiantes._) + +At times, nearly the whole Illinois population was gathered here. At +other times, the several tribes that composed it separated, some +dwelling apart from the rest; so that at one period the Illinois formed +eleven villages, while at others they were gathered into two, of which +this was much the larger. The meadows around it were extensively +cultivated, yielding large crops, chiefly of Indian corn. The lodges +were built along the river-bank for a distance of a mile, and sometimes +far more. In their shape, though not in their material, they resembled +those of the Hurons. There were no palisades or embankments. + +This neighborhood abounds in Indian relics. The village graveyard +appears to have been on a rising ground, near the river immediately in +front of the town of Utica. This is the only part of the river bottom, +from this point to the Mississippi, not liable to inundation in the +spring floods. It now forms part of a farm occupied by a tenant of Mr. +James Clark. Both Mr. Clark and his tenant informed me that every year +great quantities of human bones and teeth were turned up here by the +plough. Many implements of stone are also found, together with beads and +other ornaments of Indian and European fabric. + +[145] "Les paroles les plus touchantes."--_Hennepin_ (1683), 139. The +later editions add the modest qualification, "que je pus." + +[146] Peoria was the name of one of the tribes of the Illinois. +Hennepin's dates here do not exactly agree with those of La Salle +(_Lettre du 29 Sept., 1680_), who says that they were at the Illinois +village on the first of January, and at Peoria Lake on the fifth. + +[147] At least, it is so now at this place. Perhaps, in La Salle's time, +it was not wholly so; for there is evidence, in various parts of the +West, that the forest has made considerable encroachments on the open +country. + +[148] Hennepin (1683), 142. + +[149] Hennepin (1683), 144-149. The later editions omit a part of the +above. + +[150] "Un sauvage, nomme Monso, qui veut dire Chevreuil_."--La Salle._ +Probably Monso is a misprint for Mouso, as _mousoa_ is Illinois for +_chevreuil_, or deer. + +[151] Hennepin (1683), 151, (1704), 205; Le Clerc, ii. 157; _Memoire du +Voyage de M. de la Salle_. This is a paper appended to Frontenac's +Letter to the Minister, 9 Nov., 1680. Hennepin prints a translation of +it in the English edition of his later work. It charges the Jesuit +Allouez with being at the bottom of the intrigue. Compare _Lettre de La +Salle, 29 Sept., 1680_ (Margry, ii. 41), and _Memoire de La Salle_, in +Thomassy, _Geologie Pratique de la Louisiane_, 203. + +The account of the affair of Monso, in the spurious work bearing Tonty's +name, is mere romance. + +[152] The above is a paraphrase, with some condensation, from Hennepin, +whose account is substantially identical with that of La Salle. + +[153] Hennepin (1683), 162. _Declaration faite par Moyse Hillaret, +charpentier de barque, cy devant au service du Sr. de la Salle._ + +[154] The equally noted Brinvilliers was burned four years before. An +account of both will be found in the Letters of Madame de Sevigne. The +memoirs of the time abound in evidence of the frightful prevalence of +these practices, and the commotion which they excited in all ranks of +society. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +1680. + +FORT CREVEC[OE]UR. + + Building of the Fort.--Loss of the "Griffin."--A Bold + Resolution.--Another Vessel.--Hennepin sent to the + Mississippi.--Departure of La Salle. + + +[Sidenote: BUILDING OF THE FORT.] + +La Salle now resolved to leave the Indian camp, and fortify himself for +the winter in a strong position, where his men would be less exposed to +dangerous influence, and where he could hold his ground against an +outbreak of the Illinois or an Iroquois invasion. At the middle of +January, a thaw broke up the ice which had closed the river; and he set +out in a canoe, with Hennepin, to visit the site he had chosen for his +projected fort. It was half a league below the camp, on a low hill or +knoll, two hundred yards from the southern bank. On either side was a +deep ravine, and in front a marshy tract, overflowed at high water. +Thither, then, the party was removed. They dug a ditch behind the hill, +connecting the two ravines, and thus completely isolating it. The hill +was nearly square in form. An embankment of earth was thrown up on every +side: its declivities were sloped steeply down to the bottom of the +ravines and the ditch, and further guarded by _chevaux-de-frise_; while +a palisade, twenty-five feet high, was planted around the whole. The +lodgings of the men, built of musket-proof timber, were at two of the +angles; the house of the friars at the third; the forge and magazine at +the fourth; and the tents of La Salle and Tonty in the area within. + +Hennepin laments the failure of wine, which prevented him from saying +mass; but every morning and evening he summoned the men to his cabin to +listen to prayers and preaching, and on Sundays and fete-days they +chanted vespers. Father Zenobe usually spent the day in the Indian camp, +striving, with very indifferent success, to win them to the Faith, and +to overcome the disgust with which their manners and habits inspired +him. + +Such was the first civilized occupation of the region which now forms +the State of Illinois. La Salle christened his new fort Fort +Crevecoeur. The name tells of disaster and suffering, but does no +justice to the iron-hearted constancy of the sufferer. Up to this time +he had clung to the hope that his vessel, the "Griffin," might still be +safe. Her safety was vital to his enterprise. She had on board articles +of the last necessity to him, including the rigging and anchors of +another vessel which he was to build at Fort Crevecoeur, in order to +descend the Mississippi and sail thence to the West Indies. But now his +last hope had well-nigh vanished. Past all reasonable doubt, the +"Griffin" was lost; and in her loss he and all his plans seemed ruined +alike. + +Nothing, indeed, was ever heard of her. Indians, fur-traders, and even +Jesuits, have been charged with contriving her destruction. Some say +that the Ottawas boarded and burned her, after murdering those on board; +others accuse the Pottawattamies; others affirm that her own crew +scuttled and sunk her; others, again, that she foundered in a +storm.[155] As for La Salle, the belief grew in him to a settled +conviction that she had been treacherously sunk by the pilot and the +sailors to whom he had intrusted her; and he thought he had found +evidence that the authors of the crime, laden with the merchandise they +had taken from her, had reached the Mississippi and ascended it, hoping +to join Du Lhut, a famous chief of _coureurs de bois_, and enrich +themselves by traffic with the northern tribes.[156] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S ANXIETIES.] + +But whether her lading was swallowed in the depths of the lake, or lost +in the clutches of traitors, the evil was alike past remedy. She was +gone, it mattered little how. The main-stay of the enterprise was +broken; yet its inflexible chief lost neither heart nor hope. One path, +beset with hardships and terrors, still lay open to him. He might return +on foot to Fort Frontenac, and bring thence the needful succors. + +La Salle felt deeply the dangers of such a step. His men were uneasy, +discontented, and terrified by the stories with which the jealous +Illinois still constantly filled their ears, of the whirlpools and the +monsters of the Mississippi. He dreaded lest, in his absence, they +should follow the example of their comrades, and desert. In the midst of +his anxieties, a lucky accident gave him the means of disabusing them. +He was hunting, one day, near the fort, when he met a young Illinois on +his way home, half-starved, from a distant war excursion. He had been +absent so long that he knew nothing of what had passed between his +countrymen and the French. La Salle gave him a turkey he had shot, +invited him to the fort, fed him, and made him presents. Having thus +warmed his heart, he questioned him, with apparent carelessness, as to +the countries he had visited, and especially as to the Mississippi,--on +which the young warrior, seeing no reason to disguise the truth, gave +him all the information he required. La Salle now made him the present +of a hatchet, to engage him to say nothing of what had passed, and, +leaving him in excellent humor, repaired, with some of his followers, to +the Illinois camp. Here he found the chiefs seated at a feast of bear's +meat, and he took his place among them on a mat of rushes. After a +pause, he charged them with having deceived him in regard to the +Mississippi; adding that he knew the river perfectly, having been +instructed concerning it by the Master of Life. He then described it to +them with so much accuracy that his astonished hearers, conceiving that +he owed his knowledge to "medicine," or sorcery, clapped their hands to +their mouths in sign of wonder, and confessed that all they had said was +but an artifice, inspired by their earnest desire that he should remain +among them.[157] On this, La Salle's men took heart again; and their +courage rose still more when, soon after, a band of Chickasa, Arkansas, +and Osage warriors, from the Mississippi, came to the camp on a friendly +visit, and assured the French not only that the river was navigable to +the sea, but that the tribes along its banks would give them a warm +welcome. + +[Sidenote: ANOTHER VESSEL.] + +La Salle had now good reason to hope that his followers would neither +mutiny nor desert in his absence. One chief purpose of his intended +journey was to procure the anchors, cables, and rigging of the vessel +which he meant to build at Fort Crevecoeur, and he resolved to see her +on the stocks before he set out. This was no easy matter, for the +pit-sawyers had deserted. "Seeing," he writes, "that I should lose a +year if I waited to get others from Montreal, I said one day, before my +people, that I was so vexed to find that the absence of two sawyers +would defeat my plans and make all my trouble useless, that I was +resolved to try to saw the planks myself, if I could find a single man +who would help me with a will." Hereupon, two men stepped forward and +promised to do their best. They were tolerably successful, and, the rest +being roused to emulation, the work went on with such vigor that within +six weeks the hull of the vessel was half finished. She was of forty +tons' burden, and was built with high bulwarks, to protect those on +board from Indian arrows. + +La Salle now bethought him that, in his absence, he might get from +Hennepin service of more value than his sermons; and he requested him to +descend the Illinois, and explore it to its mouth. The friar, though +hardy and daring, would fain have excused himself, alleging a +troublesome bodily infirmity; but his venerable colleague Ribourde, +himself too old for the journey, urged him to go, telling him that if he +died by the way, his apostolic labors would redound to the glory of God. +Membre had been living for some time in the Indian camp, and was +thoroughly out of humor with the objects of his missionary efforts, of +whose obduracy and filth he bitterly complained. Hennepin proposed to +take his place, while he should assume the Mississippi adventure; but +this Membre declined, preferring to remain where he was. Hennepin now +reluctantly accepted the proposed task. "Anybody but me," he says, with +his usual modesty, "would have been very much frightened at the dangers +of such a journey; and, in fact, if I had not placed all my trust in +God, I should not have been the dupe of the Sieur de la Salle, who +exposed my life rashly."[158] + +On the last day of February, Hennepin's canoe lay at the water's edge; +and the party gathered on the bank to bid him farewell. He had two +companions,--Michel Accau, and a man known as the Picard du Gay,[159] +though his real name was Antoine Auguel. The canoe was well laden with +gifts for the Indians,--tobacco, knives, beads, awls, and other goods, +to a very considerable value, supplied at La Salle's cost; "and, in +fact," observes Hennepin, "he is liberal enough towards his +friends."[160] + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE OF HENNEPIN.] + +The friar bade farewell to La Salle, and embraced all the rest in turn. +Father Ribourde gave him his benediction. "Be of good courage and let +your heart be comforted," said the excellent old missionary, as he +spread his hands in benediction over the shaven crown of the reverend +traveller. Du Gay and Accau plied their paddles; the canoe receded, and +vanished at length behind the forest. We will follow Hennepin hereafter +on his adventures, imaginary and real. Meanwhile, we will trace the +footsteps of his chief, urging his way, in the storms of winter, through +those vast and gloomy wilds,--those realms of famine, treachery, and +death,--that lay betwixt him and his far-distant goal of Fort Frontenac. + +On the first of March,[161] before the frost was yet out of the ground, +when the forest was still leafless, and the oozy prairies still patched +with snow, a band of discontented men were again gathered on the shore +for another leave-taking. Hard by, the unfinished ship lay on the +stocks, white and fresh from the saw and axe, ceaselessly reminding them +of the hardship and peril that was in store. Here you would have seen +the calm, impenetrable face of La Salle, and with him the Mohegan +hunter, who seems to have felt towards him that admiring attachment +which he could always inspire in his Indian retainers. Besides the +Mohegan, four Frenchmen were to accompany him,--Hunaut, La Violette, +Collin, and Dautray.[162] His parting with Tonty was an anxious one, +for each well knew the risks that environed both. Embarking with his +followers in two canoes, he made his way upward amid the drifting ice; +while the faithful Italian, with two or three honest men and twelve or +thirteen knaves, remained to hold Fort Crevecoeur in his absence. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[155] Charlevoix, i. 459; La Potherie, ii. 140; La Hontan, _Memoir on +the Fur-Trade of Canada_. I am indebted for a copy of this paper to +Winthrop Sargent, Esq., who purchased the original at the sale of the +library of the poet Southey. Like Hennepin, La Hontan went over to the +English; and this memoir is written in their interest. + +[156] _Lettre de La Salle a La Barre, Chicagou, 4 Juin, 1683._ This is a +long letter, addressed to the successor of Frontenac in the government +of Canada. La Salle says that a young Indian belonging to him told him +that three years before he saw a white man, answering the description of +the pilot, a prisoner among a tribe beyond the Mississippi. He had been +captured with four others on that river, while making his way with +canoes, laden with goods, towards the Sioux. His companions had been +killed. Other circumstances, which La Salle details at great length, +convinced him that the white prisoner was no other than the pilot of the +"Griffin." The evidence, however, is not conclusive. + +[157] _Relation des Decouvertes et des Voyages du Sr. de la Salle, +Seigneur et Gouverneur du Fort de Frontenac, au dela des grands Lacs de +la Nouvelle France, faits par ordre de Monseigneur Colbert_, 1679, 80 et +81. Hennepin gives a story which is not essentially different, except +that he makes himself a conspicuous actor in it. + +[158] All the above is from Hennepin; and it seems to be marked by his +characteristic egotism. It appears, from La Salle's letters, that Accau +was the real chief of the party; that their orders were to explore not +only the Illinois, but also a part of the Mississippi; and that Hennepin +volunteered to go with the others. Accau was chosen because he spoke +several Indian languages. + +[159] An eminent writer has mistaken "Picard" for a personal name. Du +Gay was called "Le Picard," because he came from the province of +Picardy. + +[160] (1683), 188. This commendation is suppressed in the later +editions. + +[161] Tonty erroneously places their departure on the twenty-second. + +[162] _Declaration faite par Moyse Hillaret, charpentier de barque._ + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +1680. + +HARDIHOOD OF LA SALLE. + + The Winter Journey.--The Deserted Town.--Starved Rock.--Lake + Michigan.--The Wilderness.--War Parties.--La Salle's Men give + out.--Ill Tidings.--Mutiny.--Chastisement of the Mutineers. + + +La Salle well knew what was before him, and nothing but necessity +spurred him to this desperate journey. He says that he could trust +nobody else to go in his stead, and that unless the articles lost in the +"Griffin" were replaced without delay, the expedition would be retarded +a full year, and he and his associates consumed by its expenses. +"Therefore," he writes to one of them, "though the thaws of approaching +spring greatly increased the difficulty of the way, interrupted as it +was everywhere by marshes and rivers, to say nothing of the length of +the journey, which is about five hundred leagues in a direct line, and +the danger of meeting Indians of four or five different nations through +whose country we were to pass, as well as an Iroquois army which we knew +was coming that way; though we must suffer all the time from hunger; +sleep on the open ground, and often without food; watch by night and +march by day, loaded with baggage, such as blanket, clothing, kettle, +hatchet, gun, powder, lead, and skins to make moccasins; sometimes +pushing through thickets, sometimes climbing rocks covered with ice and +snow, sometimes wading whole days through marshes where the water was +waist-deep or even more, at a season when the snow was not entirely +melted,--though I knew all this, it did not prevent me from resolving to +go on foot to Fort Frontenac, to learn for myself what had become of my +vessel, and bring back the things we needed."[163] + +The winter had been a severe one; and when, an hour after leaving the +fort, he and his companions reached the still water of Peoria Lake, they +found it sheeted with ice from shore to shore. They carried their canoes +up the bank, made two rude sledges, placed the light vessels upon them, +and dragged them to the upper end of the lake, where they encamped. In +the morning they found the river still covered with ice, too weak to +bear them and too strong to permit them to break a way for the canoes. +They spent the whole day in carrying them through the woods, toiling +knee-deep in saturated snow. Rain fell in floods, and they took shelter +at night in a deserted Indian hut. + +In the morning, the third of March, they dragged their canoes half a +league farther; then launched them, and, breaking the ice with clubs and +hatchets, forced their way slowly up the stream. Again their progress +was barred, and again they took to the woods, toiling onward till a +tempest of moist, half-liquid snow forced them to bivouac for the night. +A sharp frost followed, and in the morning the white waste around them +was glazed with a dazzling crust. Now, for the first time, they could +use their snow-shoes. Bending to their work, dragging their canoes, +which glided smoothly over the polished surface, they journeyed on hour +after hour and league after league, till they reached at length the +great town of the Illinois, still void of its inhabitants.[164] + +[Sidenote: THE DESERTED TOWN.] + +It was a desolate and lonely scene,--the river gliding dark and cold +between its banks of rushes; the empty lodges, covered with crusted +snow; the vast white meadows; the distant cliffs, bearded with shining +icicles; and the hills wrapped in forests, which glittered from afar +with the icy incrustations that cased each frozen twig. Yet there was +life in the savage landscape. The men saw buffalo wading in the snow, +and they killed one of them. More than this: they discovered the tracks +of moccasins. They cut rushes by the edge of the river, piled them on +the bank, and set them on fire, that the smoke might attract the eyes of +savages roaming near. + +On the following day, while the hunters were smoking the meat of the +buffalo, La Salle went out to reconnoitre, and presently met three +Indians, one of whom proved to be Chassagoac, the principal chief of the +Illinois.[165] La Salle brought them to his bivouac, feasted them, gave +them a red blanket, a kettle, and some knives and hatchets, made friends +with them, promised to restrain the Iroquois from attacking them, told +them that he was on his way to the settlements to bring arms and +ammunition to defend them against their enemies, and, as the result of +these advances, gained from the chief a promise that he would send +provisions to Tonty's party at Fort Crevecoeur. + +After several days spent at the deserted town, La Salle prepared to +resume his journey. Before his departure, his attention was attracted to +the remarkable cliff of yellow sandstone, now called Starved Rock, a +mile or more above the village,--a natural fortress, which a score of +resolute white men might make good against a host of savages; and he +soon afterwards sent Tonty an order to examine it, and make it his +stronghold in case of need.[166] + +On the fifteenth the party set out again, carried their canoes along +the bank of the river as far as the rapids above Ottawa, then launched +them and pushed their way upward, battling with the floating ice, which, +loosened by a warm rain, drove down the swollen current in sheets. On +the eighteenth they reached a point some miles below the site of Joliet, +and here found the river once more completely closed. Despairing of +farther progress by water, they hid their canoes on an island, and +struck across the country for Lake Michigan. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S JOURNEY.] + +It was the worst of all seasons for such a journey. The nights were +cold, but the sun was warm at noon, and the half-thawed prairie was one +vast tract of mud, water, and discolored, half-liquid snow. On the +twenty-second they crossed marshes and inundated meadows, wading to the +knee, till at noon they were stopped by a river, perhaps the Calumet. +They made a raft of hard-wood timber, for there was no other, and shoved +themselves across. On the next day they could see Lake Michigan dimly +glimmering beyond the waste of woods; and, after crossing three swollen +streams, they reached it at evening. On the twenty-fourth they followed +its shore, till, at nightfall, they arrived at the fort which they had +built in the autumn at the mouth of the St. Joseph. Here La Salle found +Chapelle and Leblanc, the two men whom he had sent from hence to +Michilimackinac, in search of the "Griffin."[167] They reported that +they had made the circuit of the lake, and had neither seen her nor +heard tidings of her. Assured of her fate, he ordered them to rejoin +Tonty at Fort Crevecoeur; while he pushed onward with his party +through the unknown wild of Southern Michigan. + +"The rain," says La Salle, "which lasted all day, and the raft we were +obliged to make to cross the river, stopped us till noon of the +twenty-fifth, when we continued our march through the woods, which was +so interlaced with thorns and brambles that in two days and a half our +clothes were all torn, and our faces so covered with blood that we +hardly knew each other. On the twenty-eighth we found the woods more +open, and began to fare better, meeting a good deal of game, which after +this rarely failed us; so that we no longer carried provisions with us, +but made a meal of roast meat wherever we happened to kill a deer, bear, +or turkey. These are the choicest feasts on a journey like this; and +till now we had generally gone without them, so that we had often walked +all day without breakfast. + +[Sidenote: INDIAN ALARMS.] + +"The Indians do not hunt in this region, which is debatable ground +between five or six nations who are at war, and, being afraid of each +other, do not venture into these parts except to surprise each other, +and always with the greatest precaution and all possible secrecy. The +reports of our guns and the carcasses of the animals we killed soon led +some of them to find our trail. In fact, on the evening of the +twenty-eighth, having made our fire by the edge of a prairie, we were +surrounded by them; but as the man on guard waked us, and we posted +ourselves behind trees with our guns, these savages, who are called +Wapoos, took us for Iroquois, and thinking that there must be a great +many of us because we did not travel secretly, as they do when in small +bands, they ran off without shooting their arrows, and gave the alarm to +their comrades, so that we were two days without meeting anybody." + +La Salle guessed the cause of their fright; and, in order to confirm +their delusion, he drew with charcoal, on the trunks of trees from which +he had stripped the bark, the usual marks of an Iroquois war-party, with +signs for prisoners and for scalps, after the custom of those dreaded +warriors. This ingenious artifice, as will soon appear, was near proving +the destruction of the whole party. He also set fire to the dry grass of +the prairies over which he and his men had just passed, thus destroying +the traces of their passage. "We practised this device every night, and +it answered very well so long as we were passing over an open country; +but on the thirtieth we got into great marshes, flooded by the thaws, +and were obliged to cross them in mud or water up to the waist; so that +our tracks betrayed us to a band of Mascoutins who were out after +Iroquois. They followed us through these marshes during the three days +we were crossing them; but we made no fire at night, contenting +ourselves with taking off our wet clothes and wrapping ourselves in our +blankets on some dry knoll, where we slept till morning. At last, on +the night of the second of April, there came a hard frost, and our +clothes, which were drenched when we took them off, froze stiff as +sticks, so that we could not put them on in the morning without making a +fire to thaw them. The fire betrayed us to the Indians, who were +encamped across the marsh; and they ran towards us with loud cries, till +they were stopped halfway by a stream so deep that they could not get +over, the ice which had formed in the night not being strong enough to +bear them. We went to meet them, within gun-shot; and whether our +fire-arms frightened them, or whether they thought us more numerous than +we were, or whether they really meant us no harm, they called out, in +the Illinois language, that they had taken us for Iroquois, but now saw +that we were friends and brothers; whereupon, they went off as they +came, and we kept on our way till the fourth, when two of my men fell +ill and could not walk." + +In this emergency, La Salle went in search of some watercourse by which +they might reach Lake Erie, and soon came upon a small river, which was +probably the Huron. Here, while the sick men rested, their companions +made a canoe. There were no birch-trees; and they were forced to use +elm-bark, which at that early season would not slip freely from the wood +until they loosened it with hot water. Their canoe being made, they +embarked in it, and for a time floated prosperously down the stream, +when at length the way was barred by a matted barricade of trees fallen +across the water. The sick men could now walk again, and, pushing +eastward through the forest, the party soon reached the banks of the +Detroit. + +[Sidenote: THE JOURNEY'S END.] + +La Salle directed two of the men to make a canoe, and go to +Michilimackinac, the nearest harborage. With the remaining two, he +crossed the Detroit on a raft, and, striking a direct line across the +country, reached Lake Erie not far from Point Pelee. Snow, sleet, and +rain pelted them with little intermission: and when, after a walk of +about thirty miles, they gained the lake, the Mohegan and one of the +Frenchmen were attacked with fever and spitting of blood. Only one man +now remained in health. With his aid, La Salle made another canoe, and, +embarking the invalids, pushed for Niagara. It was Easter Monday when +they landed at a cabin of logs above the cataract, probably on the spot +where the "Griffin" was built. Here several of La Salle's men had been +left the year before, and here they still remained. They told him woful +news. Not only had he lost the "Griffin," and her lading of ten thousand +crowns in value, but a ship from France, freighted with his goods, +valued at more than twenty-two thousand livres, had been totally wrecked +at the mouth of the St. Lawrence; and of twenty hired men on their way +from Europe to join him, some had been detained by his enemy, the +Intendant Duchesneau, while all but four of the remainder, being told +that he was dead, had found means to return home. + +His three followers were all unfit for travel: he alone retained his +strength and spirit. Taking with him three fresh men at Niagara, he +resumed his journey, and on the sixth of May descried, looming through +floods of rain, the familiar shores of his seigniory and the bastioned +walls of Fort Frontenac. During sixty-five days he had toiled almost +incessantly, travelling, by the course he took, about a thousand miles +through a country beset with every form of peril and obstruction,--"the +most arduous journey," says the chronicler, "ever made by Frenchmen in +America." + +Such was Cavelier de la Salle. In him, an unconquerable mind held at its +service a frame of iron, and tasked it to the utmost of its endurance. +The pioneer of western pioneers was no rude son of toil, but a man of +thought, trained amid arts and letters.[168] He had reached his goal; +but for him there was neither rest nor peace. Man and Nature seemed in +arms against him. His agents had plundered him; his creditors had seized +his property; and several of his canoes, richly laden, had been lost in +the rapids of the St. Lawrence.[169] He hastened to Montreal, where his +sudden advent caused great astonishment; and where, despite his crippled +resources and damaged credit, he succeeded, within a week, in gaining +the supplies which he required and the needful succors for the forlorn +band on the Illinois. He had returned to Fort Frontenac, and was on the +point of embarking for their relief, when a blow fell upon him more +disheartening than any that had preceded. + +[Sidenote: THE MUTINEERS.] + +On the twenty-second of July, two _voyageurs_, Messier and Laurent, came +to him with a letter from Tonty, who wrote that soon after La Salle's +departure nearly all the men had deserted, after destroying Fort +Crevecoeur, plundering the magazine, and throwing into the river all +the arms, goods, and stores which they could not carry off. The +messengers who brought this letter were speedily followed by two of the +_habitants_ of Fort Frontenac, who had been trading on the lakes, and +who, with a fidelity which the unhappy La Salle rarely knew how to +inspire, had travelled day and night to bring him their tidings. They +reported that they had met the deserters, and that, having been +reinforced by recruits gained at Michilimackinac and Niagara, they now +numbered twenty men.[170] They had destroyed the fort on the St. +Joseph, seized a quantity of furs belonging to La Salle at +Michilimackinac, and plundered the magazine at Niagara. Here they had +separated, eight of them coasting the south side of Lake Ontario to find +harborage at Albany, a common refuge at that time of this class of +scoundrels; while the remaining twelve, in three canoes, made for Fort +Frontenac along the north shore, intending to kill La Salle as the +surest means of escaping punishment. + +[Sidenote: CHASTISEMENT.] + +He lost no time in lamentation. Of the few men at his command he chose +nine of the trustiest, embarked with them in canoes, and went to meet +the marauders. After passing the Bay of Quinte, he took his station with +five of his party at a point of land suited to his purpose, and detached +the remaining four to keep watch. In the morning, two canoes were +discovered approaching without suspicion, one of them far in advance of +the other. As the foremost drew near, La Salle's canoe darted out from +under the leafy shore,--two of the men handling the paddles, while he, +with the remaining two, levelled their guns at the deserters, and called +on them to surrender. Astonished and dismayed, they yielded at once; +while two more, who were in the second canoe, hastened to follow their +example. La Salle now returned to the fort with his prisoners, placed +them in custody, and again set forth. He met the third canoe upon the +lake at about six o'clock in the evening. His men vainly plied their +paddles in pursuit. The mutineers reached the shore, took post among +rocks and trees, levelled their guns, and showed fight. Four of La +Salle's men made a circuit to gain their rear and dislodge them, on +which they stole back to their canoe and tried to escape in the +darkness. They were pursued, and summoned to yield; but they replied by +aiming their guns at their pursuers, who instantly gave them a volley, +killed two of them, and captured the remaining three. Like their +companions, they were placed in custody at the fort, to await the +arrival of Count Frontenac.[171] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[163] _Lettre de La Salle a un de ses associes_ (Thouret?), _29 Sept., +1680_ (Margry, ii. 50). + +[164] Membre says that he was in the town at the time; but this could +hardly have been the case. He was, in all probability, among the +Illinois, in their camp near Fort Crevecoeur. + +[165] The same whom Hennepin calls Chassagouasse. He was brother of the +chief, Nicanope, who, in his absence, had feasted the French on the day +after the nocturnal council with Monso. Chassagoac was afterwards +baptized by Membre or Ribourde, but soon relapsed into the superstitions +of his people, and died, as the former tells us, "doubly a child of +perdition." See Le Clerc, ii. 181. + +[166] Tonty, _Memoire_. The order was sent by two Frenchmen, whom La +Salle met on Lake Michigan. + +[167] _Declaration de Moyse Hillaret; Relation des Decouvertes._ + +[168] A Rocky Mountain trapper, being complimented on the hardihood of +himself and his companions, once said to the writer, "That's so; but a +gentleman of the right sort will stand hardship better than anybody +else." The history of Arctic and African travel and the military records +of all time are a standing evidence that a trained and developed mind is +not the enemy, but the active and powerful ally, of constitutional +hardihood. The culture that enervates instead of strengthening is always +a false or a partial one. + +[169] Zenobe Membre in Le Clerc, ii. 202. + +[170] When La Salle was at Niagara, in April, he had ordered Dautray, +the best of the men who had accompanied him from the Illinois, to return +thither as soon as he was able. Four men from Niagara were to go with +him and he was to rejoin Tonty with such supplies as that post could +furnish. Dautray set out accordingly, but was met on the lakes by the +deserters, who told him that Tonty was dead, and seduced his men. +(_Relation des Decouvertes._) Dautray himself seems to have remained +true; at least, he was in La Salle's service immediately after, and was +one of his most trusted followers. He was of good birth, being the son +of Jean Bourdon, a conspicuous personage in the early period of the +colony; and his name appears on official records as Jean Bourdon, Sieur +d'Autray. + +[171] La Salle's long letter, written apparently to his associate +Thouret, and dated 29 Sept., 1680, is the chief authority for the above. +The greater part of this letter is incorporated, almost verbatim, in the +official narrative called _Relation des Decouvertes_. Hennepin, Membre, +and Tonty also speak of the journey from Fort Crevecoeur. The death of +the two mutineers was used by La Salle's enemies as the basis of a +charge of murder. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +1680. + +INDIAN CONQUERORS. + + The Enterprise renewed.--Attempt to rescue Tonty.--Buffalo.--A + Frightful Discovery.--Iroquois Fury.--The Ruined Town.--A Night of + Horror.--Traces of the Invaders.--No News of Tonty. + + +[Sidenote: ANOTHER EFFORT.] + +And now La Salle's work must be begun afresh. He had staked all, and all +had seemingly been lost. In stern, relentless effort he had touched the +limits of human endurance; and the harvest of his toil was +disappointment, disaster, and impending ruin. The shattered fabric of +his enterprise was prostrate in the dust. His friends desponded; his +foes were blatant and exultant. Did he bend before the storm? No human +eye could pierce the depths of his reserved and haughty nature; but the +surface was calm, and no sign betrayed a shaken resolve or an altered +purpose. Where weaker men would have abandoned all in despairing apathy, +he turned anew to his work with the same vigor and the same apparent +confidence as if borne on the full tide of success. + +His best hope was in Tonty. Could that brave and true-hearted officer +and the three or four faithful men who had remained with him make good +their foothold on the Illinois, and save from destruction the vessel on +the stocks and the forge and tools so laboriously carried thither, then +a basis was left on which the ruined enterprise might be built up once +more. There was no time to lose. Tonty must be succored soon, or succor +would come too late. La Salle had already provided the necessary +material, and a few days sufficed to complete his preparations. On the +tenth of August he embarked again for the Illinois. With him went his +lieutenant La Forest, who held of him in fief an island, then called +Belle Isle, opposite Fort Frontenac.[172] A surgeon, ship-carpenters, +joiners, masons, soldiers, _voyageurs_ and laborers completed his +company, twenty-five men in all, with everything needful for the outfit +of the vessel. + +His route, though difficult, was not so long as that which he had +followed the year before. He ascended the river Humber; crossed to Lake +Simcoe, and thence descended the Severn to the Georgian Bay of Lake +Huron; followed its eastern shore, coasted the Manitoulin Islands, and +at length reached Michilimackinac. Here, as usual, all was hostile; and +he had great difficulty in inducing the Indians, who had been excited +against him, to sell him provisions. Anxious to reach his destination, +he pushed forward with twelve men, leaving La Forest to bring on the +rest. On the fourth of November[173] he reached the ruined fort at the +mouth of the St. Joseph, and left five of his party, with the heavy +stores, to wait till La Forest should come up, while he himself hastened +forward with six Frenchmen and an Indian. A deep anxiety possessed him. +The rumor, current for months past, that the Iroquois, bent on +destroying the Illinois, were on the point of invading their country had +constantly gained strength. Here was a new disaster, which, if realized, +might involve him and his enterprise in irretrievable wreck. + +He ascended the St. Joseph, crossed the portage to the Kankakee, and +followed its course downward till it joined the northern branch of the +Illinois. He had heard nothing of Tonty on the way, and neither here nor +elsewhere could he discover the smallest sign of the passage of white +men. His friend, therefore, if alive, was probably still at his post; +and he pursued his course with a mind lightened, in some small measure, +of its load of anxiety. + +[Sidenote: BUFFALO.] + +When last he had passed here, all was solitude; but now the scene was +changed. The boundless waste was thronged with life. He beheld that +wondrous spectacle, still to be seen at times on the plains of the +remotest West, and the memory of which can quicken the pulse and stir +the blood after the lapse of years: far and near, the prairie was alive +with buffalo; now like black specks dotting the distant swells; now +trampling by in ponderous columns, or filing in long lines, morning, +noon, and night, to drink at the river,--wading, plunging, and snorting +in the water; climbing the muddy shores, and staring with wild eyes at +the passing canoes. It was an opportunity not to be lost. The party +landed, and encamped for a hunt. Sometimes they hid under the shelving +bank, and shot them as they came to drink; sometimes, flat on their +faces, they dragged themselves through the long dead grass, till the +savage bulls, guardians of the herd, ceased their grazing, raised their +huge heads, and glared through tangled hair at the dangerous intruders. +The hunt was successful. In three days the hunters killed twelve +buffalo, besides deer, geese, and swans. They cut the meat into thin +flakes, and dried it in the sun or in the smoke of their fires. The men +were in high spirits,--delighting in the sport, and rejoicing in the +prospect of relieving Tonty and his hungry followers with a plentiful +supply. + +They embarked again, and soon approached the great town of the Illinois. +The buffalo were far behind; and once more the canoes glided on their +way through a voiceless solitude. No hunters were seen; no saluting +whoop greeted their ears. They passed the cliff afterwards called the +Rock of St. Louis, where La Salle had ordered Tonty to build his +stronghold; but as he scanned its lofty top he saw no palisades, no +cabins, no sign of human hand, and still its primeval crest of forests +overhung the gliding river. Now the meadow opened before them where the +great town had stood. They gazed, astonished and confounded: all was +desolation. The town had vanished, and the meadow was black with fire. +They plied their paddles, hastened to the spot, landed; and as they +looked around their cheeks grew white, and the blood was frozen in their +veins. + +[Sidenote: A NIGHT OF HORROR.] + +Before them lay a plain once swarming with wild human life and covered +with Indian dwellings, now a waste of devastation and death, strewn with +heaps of ashes, and bristling with the charred poles and stakes which +had formed the framework of the lodges. At the points of most of them +were stuck human skulls, half picked by birds of prey.[174] Near at hand +was the burial-ground of the village. The travellers sickened with +horror as they entered its revolting precincts. Wolves in multitudes +fled at their approach; while clouds of crows or buzzards, rising from +the hideous repast, wheeled above their heads, or settled on the naked +branches of the neighboring forest. Every grave had been rifled, and the +bodies flung down from the scaffolds where, after the Illinois custom, +many of them had been placed. The field was strewn with broken bones and +torn and mangled corpses. A hyena warfare had been waged against the +dead. La Salle knew the handiwork of the Iroquois. The threatened blow +had fallen, and the wolfish hordes of the five cantons had fleshed their +rabid fangs in a new victim.[175] + +Not far distant, the conquerors had made a rude fort of trunks, boughs, +and roots of trees laid together to form a circular enclosure; and this, +too, was garnished with skulls, stuck on the broken branches and +protruding sticks. The _caches_, or subterranean store-houses of the +villagers, had been broken open and the contents scattered. The +cornfields were laid waste, and much of the corn thrown into heaps and +half burned. As La Salle surveyed this scene of havoc, one thought +engrossed him: where were Tonty and his men? He searched the Iroquois +fort: there were abundant traces of its savage occupants, and, among +them, a few fragments of French clothing. He examined the skulls; but +the hair, portions of which clung to nearly all of them, was in every +case that of an Indian. Evening came on before he had finished the +search. The sun set, and the wilderness sank to its savage rest. Night +and silence brooded over the waste, where, far as the raven could wing +his flight, stretched the dark domain of solitude and horror. + +Yet there was no silence at the spot where La Salle and his companions +made their bivouac. The howling of the wolves filled the air with fierce +and dreary dissonance. More dangerous foes were not far off, for before +nightfall they had seen fresh Indian tracks; "but, as it was very cold," +says La Salle, "this did not prevent us from making a fire and lying +down by it, each of us keeping watch in turn. I spent the night in a +distress which you can imagine better than I can write it; and I did not +sleep a moment with trying to make up my mind as to what I ought to do. +My ignorance as to the position of those I was looking after, and my +uncertainty as to what would become of the men who were to follow me +with La Forest if they arrived at the ruined village and did not find me +there, made me apprehend every sort of trouble and disaster. At last, I +decided to keep on my way down the river, leaving some of my men behind +in charge of the goods, which it was not only useless but dangerous to +carry with me, because we should be forced to abandon them when the +winter fairly set in, which would be very soon." + +[Sidenote: FEARS FOR TONTY.] + +This resolution was due to a discovery he had made the evening before, +which offered, as he thought, a possible clew to the fate of Tonty and +the men with him. He thus describes it: "Near the garden of the Indians, +which was on the meadows, a league from the village and not far from the +river, I found six pointed stakes set in the ground and painted red. On +each of them was the figure of a man with bandaged eyes, drawn in black. +As the savages often set stakes of this sort where they have killed +people, I thought, by their number and position, that when the Iroquois +came, the Illinois, finding our men alone in the hut near their garden, +had either killed them or made them prisoners. And I was confirmed in +this, because, seeing no signs of a battle, I supposed that on hearing +of the approach of the Iroquois, the old men and other non-combatants +had fled, and that the young warriors had remained behind to cover their +flight, and afterwards followed, taking the French with them; while the +Iroquois, finding nobody to kill, had vented their fury on the corpses +in the graveyard." + +Uncertain as was the basis of this conjecture, and feeble as was the +hope it afforded, it determined him to push forward, in order to learn +more. When daylight returned, he told his purpose to his followers, and +directed three of them to await his return near the ruined village. They +were to hide themselves on an island, conceal their fire at night, make +no smoke by day, fire no guns, and keep a close watch. Should the rest +of the party arrive, they, too, were to wait with similar precautions. +The baggage was placed in a hollow of the rocks, at a place difficult of +access; and, these arrangements made, La Salle set out on his perilous +journey with the four remaining men, Dautray, Hunaut, You, and the +Indian. Each was armed with two guns, a pistol, and a sword; and a +number of hatchets and other goods were placed in the canoe, as presents +for Indians whom they might meet. + +Several leagues below the village they found, on their right hand close +to the river, a sort of island, made inaccessible by the marshes and +water which surrounded it. Here the flying Illinois had sought refuge +with their women and children, and the place was full of their deserted +huts. On the left bank, exactly opposite, was an abandoned camp of the +Iroquois. On the level meadow stood a hundred and thirteen huts, and on +the forest trees which covered the hills behind were carved the totems, +or insignia, of the chiefs, together with marks to show the number of +followers which each had led to the war. La Salle counted five hundred +and eighty-two warriors. He found marks, too, for the Illinois killed or +captured, but none to indicate that any of the Frenchmen had shared +their fate. + +[Sidenote: SEARCH FOR TONTY.] + +As they descended the river, they passed, on the same day, six abandoned +camps of the Illinois; and opposite to each was a camp of the invaders. +The former, it was clear, had retreated in a body; while the Iroquois +had followed their march, day by day, along the other bank. La Salle and +his men pushed rapidly onward, passed Peoria Lake, and soon reached Fort +Crevecoeur, which they found, as they expected, demolished by the +deserters. The vessel on the stocks was still left entire, though the +Iroquois had found means to draw out the iron nails and spikes. On one +of the planks were written the words: "_Nous sommes tous sauvages: ce +15, 1680_,"--the work, no doubt, of the knaves who had pillaged and +destroyed the fort. + +La Salle and his companions hastened on, and during the following day +passed four opposing camps of the savage armies. The silence of death +now reigned along the deserted river, whose lonely borders, wrapped deep +in forests, seemed lifeless as the grave. As they drew near the mouth of +the stream they saw a meadow on their right, and on its farthest verge +several human figures, erect, yet motionless. They landed, and +cautiously examined the place. The long grass was trampled down, and all +around were strewn the relics of the hideous orgies which formed the +ordinary sequel of an Iroquois victory. The figures they had seen were +the half-consumed bodies of women, still bound to the stakes where they +had been tortured. Other sights there were, too revolting for +record.[176] All the remains were those of women and children. The men, +it seemed, had fled, and left them to their fate. + +Here, again, La Salle sought long and anxiously, without finding the +smallest sign that could indicate the presence of Frenchmen. Once more +descending the river, they soon reached its mouth. Before them, a broad +eddying current rolled swiftly on its way; and La Salle beheld the +Mississippi,--the object of his day-dreams, the destined avenue of his +ambition and his hopes. It was no time for reflections. The moment was +too engrossing, too heavily charged with anxieties and cares. From a +rock on the shore, he saw a tree stretched forward above the stream; and +stripping off its bark to make it more conspicuous, he hung upon it a +board on which he had drawn the figures of himself and his men, seated +in their canoe, and bearing a pipe of peace. To this he tied a letter +for Tonty, informing him that he had returned up the river to the ruined +village. + +His four men had behaved admirably throughout, and they now offered to +continue the journey if he saw fit, and follow him to the sea; but he +thought it useless to go farther, and was unwilling to abandon the three +men whom he had ordered to await his return. Accordingly, they retraced +their course, and, paddling at times both day and night, urged their +canoe so swiftly that they reached the village in the incredibly short +space of four days.[177] + +[Sidenote: THE COMET.] + +The sky was clear, and as night came on the travellers saw a prodigious +comet blazing above this scene of desolation. On that night, it was +chilling with a superstitious awe the hamlets of New England and the +gilded chambers of Versailles; but it is characteristic of La Salle, +that, beset as he was with perils and surrounded with ghastly images of +death, he coolly notes down the phenomenon, not as a portentous +messenger of war and woe, but rather as an object of scientific +curiosity.[178] + +He found his three men safely ensconced upon their island, where they +were anxiously looking for his return. After collecting a store of +half-burnt corn from the ravaged granaries of the Illinois, the whole +party began to ascend the river, and on the sixth of January reached the +junction of the Kankakee with the northern branch. On their way downward +they had descended the former stream; they now chose the latter, and +soon discovered, by the margin of the water, a rude cabin of bark. La +Salle landed and examined the spot, when an object met his eye which +cheered him with a bright gleam of hope. It was but a piece of wood; but +the wood had been cut with a saw. Tonty and his party, then, had passed +this way, escaping from the carnage behind them. Unhappily, they had +left no token of their passage at the fork of the two streams; and thus +La Salle, on his voyage downward, had believed them to be still on the +river below. + +With rekindled hope, the travellers pursued their journey, leaving their +canoes, and making their way overland towards the fort on the St. +Joseph. + +"Snow fell in extraordinary quantities all day," writes La Salle, "and +it kept on falling for nineteen days in succession, with cold so severe +that I never knew so hard a winter, even in Canada. We were obliged to +cross forty leagues of open country, where we could hardly find wood to +warm ourselves at evening, and could get no bark whatever to make a hut, +so that we had to spend the night exposed to the furious winds which +blow over these plains. I never suffered so much from cold, or had more +trouble in getting forward; for the snow was so light, resting suspended +as it were among the tall grass, that we could not use snow-shoes. +Sometimes it was waist deep; and as I walked before my men, as usual, to +encourage them by breaking the path, I often had much ado, though I am +rather tall, to lift my legs above the drifts, through which I pushed +by the weight of my body." + +[Sidenote: FORT MIAMI.] + +At length they reached their goal, and found shelter and safety within +the walls of Fort Miami. Here was the party left in charge of La Forest; +but, to his surprise and grief, La Salle heard no tidings of Tonty. He +found some amends for the disappointment in the fidelity and zeal of La +Forest's men, who had restored the fort, cleared ground for planting, +and even sawed the planks and timber for a new vessel on the lake. + +And now, while La Salle rests at Fort Miami, let us trace the adventures +which befell Tonty and his followers, after their chief's departure from +Fort Crevecoeur. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[172] _Robert Cavelier, Sr. de la Salle, a Francois Daupin, Sr. de +la Forest, 10 Juin, 1679._ + +[173] This date is from the _Relation_. Membre says the twenty-eighth; +but he is wrong, by his own showing, as he says that the party reached +the Illinois village on the first of December, which would be an +impossibility. + +[174] "Il ne restoit que quelques bouts de perches brulees qui +montroient quelle avoit ete l'etendue du village, et sur la plupart +desquelles il y avoit des tetes de morts plantees et mangees des +corbeaux."--_Relation des Decouvertes du Sr. de la Salle._ + +[175] "Beaucoup de carcasses a demi rongees par les loups, les +sepulchres demolis, les os tires de leurs fosses et epars par la +campagne; ... enfin les loups et les corbeaux augmentoient encore par +leurs hurlemens et par leurs cris l'horreur de ce spectacle."--_Relation +des Decouvertes du Sr. de la Salle._ + +The above may seem exaggerated; but it accords perfectly with what is +well established concerning the ferocious character of the Iroquois and +the nature of their warfare. Many other tribes have frequently made war +upon the dead. I have myself known an instance in which five corpses of +Sioux Indians placed in trees, after the practice of the Western bands +of that people, were thrown down and kicked into fragments by a war +party of the Crows, who then held the muzzles of their guns against the +skulls, and blew them to pieces. This happened near the head of the +Platte, in the summer of 1846. Yet the Crows are much less ferocious +than were the Iroquois in La Salle's time. + +[176] "On ne scauroit exprimer la rage de ces furieux ni les tourmens +qu'ils avoient fait souffrir aux miserables Tamaroa [_a tribe of the +Illinois_]. Il y en avoit encore dans des chaudieres qu'ils avoient +laissees pleines sur les feux, qui depuis s'etoient eteints," etc., +etc.--_Relation des Decouvertes._ + +[177] The distance is about two hundred and fifty miles. The letters of +La Salle, as well as the official narrative compiled from them, say that +they left the village on the second of December, and returned to it on +the eleventh, having left the mouth of the river on the seventh. + +[178] This was the "Great Comet of 1680." Dr. B. A. Gould writes me: "It +appeared in December, 1680, and was visible until the latter part of +February, 1681, being especially brilliant in January." It was said to +be the largest ever seen. By observations upon it, Newton demonstrated +the regular revolutions of comets around the sun. "No comet," it is +said, "has threatened the earth with a nearer approach than that of +1680." (_Winthrop on Comets, Lecture II_. p. 44.) Increase Mather, in +his _Discourse concerning Comets_, printed at Boston in 1683, says of +this one: "Its appearance was very terrible; the Blaze ascended above 60 +Degrees almost to its Zenith." Mather thought it fraught with terrific +portent to the nations of the earth. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +1680. + +TONTY AND THE IROQUOIS. + + The Deserters.--The Iroquois War.--The Great Town of the + Illinois.--The Alarm.--Onset of the Iroquois.--Peril of Tonty.--A + Treacherous Truce.--Intrepidity of Tonty.--Murder of Ribourde.--War + upon the Dead. + + +When La Salle set out on his rugged journey to Fort Frontenac, he left, +as we have seen, fifteen men at Fort Crevecoeur,--smiths, +ship-carpenters, house-wrights, and soldiers, besides his servant +L'Esperance and the two friars Membre and Ribourde. Most of the men were +ripe for mutiny. They had no interest in the enterprise, and no love for +its chief. They were disgusted with the present, and terrified at the +future. La Salle, too, was for the most part a stern commander, +impenetrable and cold; and when he tried to soothe, conciliate, and +encourage, his success rarely answered to the excellence of his +rhetoric. He could always, however, inspire respect, if not love; but +now the restraint of his presence was removed. He had not been long +absent, when a fire-brand was thrown into the midst of the discontented +and restless crew. + +It may be remembered that La Salle had met two of his men, La Chapelle +and Leblanc, at his fort on the St. Joseph, and ordered them to rejoin +Tonty. Unfortunately, they obeyed. On arriving, they told their comrades +that the "Griffin" was lost, that Fort Frontenac was seized by the +creditors of La Salle, that he was ruined past recovery, and that they, +the men, would never receive their pay. Their wages were in arrears for +more than two years; and, indeed, it would have been folly to pay them +before their return to the settlements, as to do so would have been a +temptation to desert. Now, however, the effect on their minds was still +worse, believing, as many of them did, that they would never be paid at +all. + +[Sidenote: THE DESERTERS.] + +La Chapelle and his companion had brought a letter from La Salle to +Tonty, directing him to examine and fortify the cliff so often +mentioned, which overhung the river above the great Illinois village. +Tonty, accordingly, set out on his errand with some of the men. In his +absence, the malcontents destroyed the fort, stole powder, lead, furs, +and provisions, and deserted, after writing on the side of the +unfinished vessel the words seen by La Salle, "_Nous sommes tous +sauvages_."[179] The brave young Sieur de Boisrondet and the servant +L'Esperance hastened to carry the news to Tonty, who at once despatched +four of those with him, by two different routes, to inform La Salle of +the disaster.[180] Besides the two just named, there now remained with +him only one hired man and the Recollet friars. With this feeble band, +he was left among a horde of treacherous savages, who had been taught to +regard him as a secret enemy. Resolved, apparently, to disarm their +jealousy by a show of confidence, he took up his abode in the midst of +them, making his quarters in the great village, whither, as spring +opened, its inhabitants returned, to the number, according to Membre, of +seven or eight thousand. Hither he conveyed the forge and such tools as +he could recover, and here he hoped to maintain himself till La Salle +should reappear. The spring and the summer were past, and he looked +anxiously for his coming, unconscious that a storm was gathering in the +east, soon to burst with devastation over the fertile wilderness of the +Illinois. + +[Sidenote: THE IROQUOIS WAR.] + +I have recounted the ferocious triumphs of the Iroquois in another +volume.[181] Throughout a wide semi-circle around their cantons, they +had made the forest a solitude; destroyed the Hurons, exterminated the +Neutrals and the Eries, reduced the formidable Andastes to helpless +insignificance, swept the borders of the St. Lawrence with fire, spread +terror and desolation among the Algonquins of Canada; and now, tired of +peace, they were seeking, to borrow their own savage metaphor, new +nations to devour. Yet it was not alone their homicidal fury that now +impelled them to another war. Strange as it may seem, this war was in no +small measure one of commercial advantage. They had long traded with the +Dutch and English of New York, who gave them, in exchange for their +furs, the guns, ammunition, knives, hatchets, kettles, beads, and brandy +which had become indispensable to them. Game was scarce in their +country. They must seek their beaver and other skins in the vacant +territories of the tribes they had destroyed; but this did not content +them. The French of Canada were seeking to secure a monopoly of the furs +of the north and west; and, of late, the enterprises of La Salle on the +tributaries of the Mississippi had especially roused the jealousy of the +Iroquois, fomented, moreover, by Dutch and English traders.[182] These +crafty savages would fain reduce all these regions to subjection, and +draw thence an exhaustless supply of furs, to be bartered for English +goods with the traders of Albany. They turned their eyes first towards +the Illinois, the most important, as well as one of the most accessible, +of the western Algonquin tribes; and among La Salle's enemies were some +in whom jealousy of a hated rival could so far override all the best +interests of the colony that they did not scruple to urge on the +Iroquois to an invasion which they hoped would prove his ruin. The +chiefs convened, war was decreed, the war-dance was danced, the war-song +sung, and five hundred warriors began their march. In their path lay the +town of the Miamis, neighbors and kindred of the Illinois. It was always +their policy to divide and conquer; and these forest Machiavels had +intrigued so well among the Miamis, working craftily on their jealousy, +that they induced them to join in the invasion, though there is every +reason to believe that they had marked these infatuated allies as their +next victims.[183] + +[Sidenote: THE ILLINOIS TOWN.] + +Go to the banks of the Illinois where it flows by the village of Utica, +and stand on the meadow that borders it on the north. In front glides +the river, a musket-shot in width; and from the farther bank rises, with +gradual slope, a range of wooded hills that hide from sight the vast +prairie behind them. A mile or more on your left these gentle +acclivities end abruptly in the lofty front of the great cliff, called +by the French the Rock of St. Louis, looking boldly out from the forests +that environ it; and, three miles distant on your right, you discern a +gap in the steep bluffs that here bound the valley, marking the mouth of +the river Vermilion, called Aramoni by the French.[184] Now stand in +fancy on this same spot in the early autumn of the year 1680. You are in +the midst of the great town of the Illinois,--hundreds of mat-covered +lodges, and thousands of congregated savages. Enter one of their +dwellings: they will not think you an intruder. Some friendly squaw will +lay a mat for you by the fire; you may seat yourself upon it, smoke your +pipe, and study the lodge and its inmates by the light that streams +through the holes at the top. Three or four fires smoke and smoulder on +the ground down the middle of the long arched structure; and, as to +each fire there are two families, the place is somewhat crowded when all +are present. But now there is breathing room, for many are in the +fields. A squaw sits weaving a mat of rushes; a warrior, naked except +his moccasins, and tattooed with fantastic devices, binds a stone +arrow-head to its shaft, with the fresh sinews of a buffalo. Some lie +asleep, some sit staring in vacancy, some are eating, some are squatted +in lazy chat around a fire. The smoke brings water to your eyes; the +fleas annoy you; small unkempt children, naked as young puppies, crawl +about your knees and will not be repelled. You have seen enough; you +rise and go out again into the sunlight. It is, if not a peaceful, at +least a languid scene. A few voices break the stillness, mingled with +the joyous chirping of crickets from the grass. Young men lie flat on +their faces, basking in the sun; a group of their elders are smoking +around a buffalo-skin on which they have just been playing a game of +chance with cherry-stones. A lover and his mistress, perhaps, sit +together under a shed of bark, without uttering a word. Not far off is +the graveyard, where lie the dead of the village, some buried in the +earth, some wrapped in skins and laid aloft on scaffolds, above the +reach of wolves. In the cornfields around, you see squaws at their +labor, and children driving off intruding birds; and your eye ranges +over the meadows beyond, spangled with the yellow blossoms of the +resin-weed and the Rudbeckia, or over the bordering hills still green +with the foliage of summer.[185] + +This, or something like it, one may safely affirm, was the aspect of the +Illinois village at noon of the tenth of September.[186] In a hut apart +from the rest, you would probably have found the Frenchmen. Among them +was a man, not strong in person, and disabled, moreover, by the loss of +a hand, yet in this den of barbarism betraying the language and bearing +of one formed in the most polished civilization of Europe. This was +Henri de Tonty. The others were young Boisrondet, the servant +L'Esperance, and a Parisian youth named Etienne Renault. The friars, +Membre and Ribourde, were not in the village, but at a hut a league +distant, whither they had gone to make a "retreat" for prayer and +meditation. Their missionary labors had not been fruitful; they had made +no converts, and were in despair at the intractable character of the +objects of their zeal. As for the other Frenchmen, time, doubtless, hung +heavy on their hands; for nothing can surpass the vacant monotony of an +Indian town when there is neither hunting, nor war, nor feasts, nor +dances, nor gambling, to beguile the lagging hours. + +[Sidenote: THE ALARM.] + +Suddenly the village was wakened from its lethargy as by the crash of a +thunderbolt. A Shawanoe, lately here on a visit, had left his Illinois +friends to return home. He now reappeared, crossing the river in hot +haste, with the announcement that he had met, on his way, an army of +Iroquois approaching to attack them. All was panic and confusion. The +lodges disgorged their frightened inmates; women and children screamed, +startled warriors snatched their weapons. There were less than five +hundred of them, for the greater part of the young men had gone to war. +A crowd of excited savages thronged about Tonty and his Frenchmen, +already objects of their suspicion, charging them, with furious +gesticulation, with having stirred up their enemies to invade them. +Tonty defended himself in broken Illinois, but the naked mob were but +half convinced. They seized the forge and tools and flung them into the +river, with all the goods that had been saved from the deserters; then, +distrusting their power to defend themselves, they manned the wooden +canoes which lay in multitudes by the bank, embarked their women and +children, and paddled down the stream to that island of dry land in the +midst of marshes which La Salle afterwards found filled with their +deserted huts. Sixty warriors remained here to guard them, and the rest +returned to the village. All night long fires blazed along the shore. +The excited warriors greased their bodies, painted their faces, +befeathered their heads, sang their war-songs, danced, stamped, yelled, +and brandished their hatchets, to work up their courage to face the +crisis. The morning came, and with it came the Iroquois. + +Young warriors had gone out as scouts, and now they returned. They had +seen the enemy in the line of forest that bordered the river Aramoni, or +Vermilion, and had stealthily reconnoitred them. They were very +numerous,[187] and armed for the most part with guns, pistols, and +swords. Some had bucklers of wood or raw-hide, and some wore those +corselets of tough twigs interwoven with cordage which their fathers had +used when fire-arms were unknown. The scouts added more, for they +declared that they had seen a Jesuit among the Iroquois; nay, that La +Salle himself was there, whence it must follow that Tonty and his men +were enemies and traitors. The supposed Jesuit was but an Iroquois chief +arrayed in a black hat, doublet, and stockings; while another, equipped +after a somewhat similar fashion, passed in the distance for La Salle. +But the Illinois were furious. Tonty's life hung by a hair. A crowd of +savages surrounded him, mad with rage and terror. He had come lately +from Europe, and knew little of Indians, but, as the friar Membre says +of him, "he was full of intelligence and courage," and when they heard +him declare that he and his Frenchmen would go with them to fight the +Iroquois, their threats grew less clamorous and their eyes glittered +with a less deadly lustre. + +[Sidenote: TONTY'S MEDIATION.] + +Whooping and screeching, they ran to their canoes, crossed the river, +climbed the woody hill, and swarmed down upon the plain beyond. About a +hundred of them had guns; the rest were armed with bows and arrows. They +were now face to face with the enemy, who had emerged from the woods of +the Vermilion, and were advancing on the open prairie. With unwonted +spirit, for their repute as warriors was by no means high, the Illinois +began, after their fashion, to charge; that is, they leaped, yelled, and +shot off bullets and arrows, advancing as they did so; while the +Iroquois replied with gymnastics no less agile and howlings no less +terrific, mingled with the rapid clatter of their guns. Tonty saw that +it would go hard with his allies. It was of the last moment to stop the +fight, if possible. The Iroquois were, or professed to be, at peace with +the French; and, taking counsel of his courage, he resolved on an +attempt to mediate, which may well be called a desperate one. He laid +aside his gun, took in his hand a wampum belt as a flag of truce, and +walked forward to meet the savage multitude, attended by Boisrondet, +another Frenchman, and a young Illinois who had the hardihood to +accompany him. The guns of the Iroquois still flashed thick and fast. +Some of them were aimed at him, on which he sent back the two Frenchmen +and the Illinois, and advanced alone, holding out the wampum belt.[188] +A moment more, and he was among the infuriated warriors. It was a +frightful spectacle,--the contorted forms, bounding, crouching, +twisting, to deal or dodge the shot; the small keen eyes that shone like +an angry snake's; the parted lips pealing their fiendish yells; the +painted features writhing with fear and fury, and every passion of an +Indian fight,--man, wolf, and devil, all in one.[189] With his swarthy +complexion and his half-savage dress, they thought he was an Indian, and +thronged about him, glaring murder. A young warrior stabbed at his heart +with a knife, but the point glanced aside against a rib, inflicting only +a deep gash. A chief called out that, as his ears were not pierced, he +must be a Frenchman. On this, some of them tried to stop the bleeding, +and led him to the rear, where an angry parley ensued, while the yells +and firing still resounded in the front. Tonty, breathless, and bleeding +at the mouth with the force of the blow he had received, found words to +declare that the Illinois were under the protection of the King and the +governor of Canada, and to demand that they should be left in +peace.[190] + +[Sidenote: PERIL OF TONTY.] + +A young Iroquois snatched Tonty's hat, placed it on the end of his gun, +and displayed it to the Illinois, who, thereupon thinking he was +killed, renewed the fight; and the firing in front clattered more +angrily than before. A warrior ran in, crying out that the Iroquois were +giving ground, and that there were Frenchmen among the Illinois, who +fired at them. On this, the clamor around Tonty was redoubled. Some +wished to kill him at once; others resisted. "I was never," he writes, +"in such perplexity; for at that moment there was an Iroquois behind me, +with a knife in his hand, lifting my hair as if he were going to scalp +me. I thought it was all over with me, and that my best hope was that +they would knock me in the head instead of burning me, as I believed +they would do." In fact, a Seneca chief demanded that he should be +burned; while an Onondaga chief, a friend of La Salle, was for setting +him free. The dispute grew fierce and hot. Tonty told them that the +Illinois were twelve hundred strong, and that sixty Frenchmen were at +the village, ready to back them. This invention, though not fully +believed, had no little effect. The friendly Onondaga carried his point; +and the Iroquois, having failed to surprise their enemies, as they had +hoped, now saw an opportunity to delude them by a truce. They sent back +Tonty with a belt of peace: he held it aloft in sight of the Illinois; +chiefs and old warriors ran to stop the fight; the yells and the firing +ceased; and Tonty, like one waked from a hideous nightmare, dizzy, +almost fainting with loss of blood, staggered across the intervening +prairie, to rejoin his friends. He was met by the two friars, Ribourde +and Membre, who in their secluded hut, a league from the village, had +but lately heard of what was passing, and who now, with benedictions and +thanksgiving, ran to embrace him as a man escaped from the jaws of +death. + +The Illinois now withdrew, re-embarking in their canoes, and crossing +again to their lodges; but scarcely had they reached them, when their +enemies appeared at the edge of the forest on the opposite bank. Many +found means to cross, and, under the pretext of seeking for provisions, +began to hover in bands about the skirts of the town, constantly +increasing in numbers. Had the Illinois dared to remain, a massacre +would doubtless have ensued; but they knew their foe too well, set fire +to their lodges, embarked in haste, and paddled down the stream to +rejoin their women and children at the sanctuary among the morasses. The +whole body of the Iroquois now crossed the river, took possession of the +abandoned town, building for themselves a rude redoubt or fort of the +trunks of trees and of the posts and poles forming the framework of the +lodges which escaped the fire. Here they ensconced themselves, and +finished the work of havoc at their leisure. + +Tonty and his companions still occupied their hut; but the Iroquois, +becoming suspicious of them, forced them to remove to the fort, crowded +as it was with the savage crew. On the second day, there was an alarm. +The Illinois appeared in numbers on the low hills, half a mile behind +the town; and the Iroquois, who had felt their courage, and who had +been told by Tonty that they were twice as numerous as themselves, +showed symptoms of no little uneasiness. They proposed that he should +act as mediator, to which he gladly assented, and crossed the meadow +towards the Illinois, accompanied by Membre, and by an Iroquois who was +sent as a hostage. The Illinois hailed the overtures with delight, gave +the ambassadors some refreshment, which they sorely needed, and sent +back with them a young man of their nation as a hostage on their part. +This indiscreet youth nearly proved the ruin of the negotiation; for he +was no sooner among the Iroquois than he showed such an eagerness to +close the treaty, made such promises, professed such gratitude, and +betrayed so rashly the numerical weakness of the Illinois, that he +revived all the insolence of the invaders. They turned furiously upon +Tonty, and charged him with having robbed them of the glory and the +spoils of victory. "Where are all your Illinois warriors, and where are +the sixty Frenchmen that you said were among them?" It needed all +Tonty's tact and coolness to extricate himself from this new danger. + +[Sidenote: IROQUOIS TREACHERY.] + +The treaty was at length concluded; but scarcely was it made, when the +Iroquois prepared to break it, and set about constructing canoes of +elm-bark, in which to attack the Illinois women and children in their +island sanctuary. Tonty warned his allies that the pretended peace was +but a snare for their destruction. The Iroquois, on their part, grew +hourly more jealous of him, and would certainly have killed him, had it +not been their policy to keep the peace with Frontenac and the French. + +Several days after, they summoned him and Membre to a council. Six packs +of beaver-skins were brought in; and the savage orator presented them to +Tonty in turn, explaining their meaning as he did so. The first two were +to declare that the children of Count Frontenac--that is, the +Illinois--should not be eaten; the next was a plaster to heal Tonty's +wound; the next was oil wherewith to anoint him and Membre, that they +might not be fatigued in travelling; the next proclaimed that the sun +was bright; and the sixth and last required them to decamp and go +home.[191] Tonty thanked them for their gifts, but demanded when they +themselves meant to go and leave the Illinois in peace. At this, the +conclave grew angry; and, despite their late pledge, some of them said +that before they went they would eat Illinois flesh. Tonty instantly +kicked away the packs of beaver-skins, the Indian symbol of the scornful +rejection of a proposal, telling them that since they meant to eat the +governor's children he would have none of their presents. The chiefs, +in a rage, rose and drove him from the lodge. The French withdrew to +their hut, where they stood all night on the watch, expecting an attack, +and resolved to sell their lives dearly. At daybreak, the chiefs ordered +them to begone. + +[Sidenote: MURDER OF RIBOURDE.] + +Tonty, with admirable fidelity and courage, had done all in the power of +man to protect the allies of Canada against their ferocious assailants; +and he thought it unwise to persist further in a course which could lead +to no good, and which would probably end in the destruction of the whole +party. He embarked in a leaky canoe with Membre, Ribourde, Boisrondet, +and the remaining two men, and began to ascend the river. After paddling +about five leagues, they landed to dry their baggage and repair their +crazy vessel; when Father Ribourde, breviary in hand, strolled across +the sunny meadows for an hour of meditation among the neighboring +groves. Evening approached, and he did not return. Tonty, with one of +the men, went to look for him, and, following his tracks, presently +discovered those of a band of Indians, who had apparently seized or +murdered him. Still, they did not despair. They fired their guns to +guide him, should he still be alive; built a huge fire by the bank, and +then, crossing the river, lay watching it from the other side. At +midnight, they saw the figure of a man hovering around the blaze; then +many more appeared, but Ribourde was not among them. In truth, a band of +Kickapoos, enemies of the Iroquois, about whose camp they had been +prowling in quest of scalps, had met and wantonly murdered the +inoffensive old man. They carried his scalp to their village, and danced +round it in triumph, pretending to have taken it from an enemy. Thus, in +his sixty-fifth year, the only heir of a wealthy Burgundian house +perished under the war-clubs of the savages for whose salvation he had +renounced station, ease, and affluence.[192] + +[Sidenote: ATTACK OF THE IROQUOIS.] + +Meanwhile, a hideous scene was enacted at the ruined village of the +Illinois. Their savage foes, balked of a living prey, wreaked their fury +on the dead. They dug up the graves; they threw down the scaffolds. Some +of the bodies they burned; some they threw to the dogs; some, it is +affirmed, they ate.[193] Placing the skulls on stakes as trophies, they +turned to pursue the Illinois, who, when the French withdrew, had +abandoned their asylum and retreated down the river. The Iroquois, +still, it seems, in awe of them, followed them along the opposite bank, +each night encamping face to face with them; and thus the adverse bands +moved slowly southward, till they were near the mouth of the river. +Hitherto, the compact array of the Illinois had held their enemies in +check; but now, suffering from hunger, and lulled into security by the +assurances of the Iroquois that their object was not to destroy them, +but only to drive them from the country, they rashly separated into +their several tribes. Some descended the Mississippi; some, more +prudent, crossed to the western side. One of their principal tribes, the +Tamaroas, more credulous than the rest, had the fatuity to remain near +the mouth of the Illinois, where they were speedily assailed by all the +force of the Iroquois. The men fled, and very few of them were killed; +but the women and children were captured to the number, it is said, of +seven hundred.[194] Then followed that scene of torture of which, some +two weeks later, La Salle saw the revolting traces.[195] Sated, at +length, with horrors, the conquerors withdrew, leading with them a host +of captives, and exulting in their triumphs over women, children, and +the dead. + +After the death of Father Ribourde, Tonty and his companions remained +searching for him till noon of the next day, and then in despair of +again seeing him, resumed their journey. They ascended the river, +leaving no token of their passage at the junction of its northern and +southern branches. For food, they gathered acorns and dug roots in the +meadows. Their canoe proved utterly worthless; and, feeble as they were, +they set out on foot for Lake Michigan. Boisrondet wandered off, and was +lost. He had dropped the flint of his gun, and he had no bullets; but he +cut a pewter porringer into slugs, with which he shot wild turkeys by +discharging his piece with a fire-brand, and after several days he had +the good fortune to rejoin the party. Their object was to reach the +Pottawattamies of Green Bay. Had they aimed at Michilimackinac, they +would have found an asylum with La Forest at the fort on the St. Joseph; +but unhappily they passed westward of that post, and, by way of Chicago, +followed the borders of Lake Michigan northward. The cold was intense; +and it was no easy task to grub up wild onions from the frozen ground to +save themselves from starving. Tonty fell ill of a fever and a swelling +of the limbs, which disabled him from travelling, and hence ensued a +long delay. At length they neared Green Bay, where they would have +starved, had they not gleaned a few ears of corn and frozen squashes in +the fields of an empty Indian town. + +[Sidenote: FRIENDS IN NEED.] + +This enabled them to reach the bay, and having patched an old canoe +which they had the good luck to find, they embarked in it; whereupon, +says Tonty, "there rose a northwest wind, which lasted five days, with +driving snow. We consumed all our food; and not knowing what to do next, +we resolved to go back to the deserted town, and die by a warm fire in +one of the wigwams. On our way, we saw a smoke; but our joy was short, +for when we reached the fire we found nobody there. We spent the night +by it; and before morning the bay froze. We tried to break a way for our +canoe through the ice, but could not; and therefore we determined to +stay there another night, and make moccasins in order to reach the town. +We made some out of Father Gabriel's cloak. I was angry with Etienne +Renault for not finishing his; but he excused himself on account of +illness, because he had a great oppression of the stomach, caused by +eating a piece of an Indian shield of raw-hide, which he could not +digest. His delay proved our salvation; for the next day, December +fourth, as I was urging him to finish the moccasins, and he was still +excusing himself on the score of his malady, a party of Kiskakon +Ottawas, who were on their way to the Pottawattamies, saw the smoke of +our fire, and came to us. We gave them such a welcome as was never seen +before. They took us into their canoes, and carried us to an Indian +village, only two leagues off. There we found five Frenchmen, who +received us kindly, and all the Indians seemed to take pleasure in +sending us food; so that, after thirty-four days of starvation, we found +our famine turned to abundance." + +This hospitable village belonged to the Pottawattamies, and was under +the sway of the chief who had befriended La Salle the year before, and +who was wont to say that he knew but three great captains in the +world,--Frontenac, La Salle, and himself.[196] + +THE ILLINOIS TOWN. + +The Site of the Great Illinois Town.--This has not till now been +determined, though there have been various conjectures concerning it. +From a study of the contemporary documents and maps, I became satisfied, +first, that the branch of the river Illinois, called the "Big +Vermilion," was the _Aramoni_ of the French explorers; and, secondly, +that the cliff called "Starved Rock" was that known to the French as _Le +Rocher_, or the Rock of St. Louis. If I was right in this conclusion, +then the position of the Great Village was established; for there is +abundant proof that it was on the north side of the river, above the +Aramoni, and below Le Rocher. I accordingly went to the village of +Utica, which, as I judged by the map, was very near the point in +question, and mounted to the top of one of the hills immediately behind +it, whence I could see the valley of the Illinois for miles, bounded on +the farther side by a range of hills, in some parts rocky and +precipitous, and in others covered with forests. Far on the right was a +gap in these hills, through which the Big Vermilion flowed to join the +Illinois; and somewhat towards the left, at the distance of a mile and a +half, was a huge cliff, rising perpendicularly from the opposite margin +of the river. This I assumed to be _Le Rocher_ of the French, though +from where I stood I was unable to discern the distinctive features +which I was prepared to find in it. In every other respect, the scene +before me was precisely what I had expected to see. There was a meadow +on the hither side of the river, on which stood a farmhouse; and this, +as it seemed to me, by its relations with surrounding objects, might be +supposed to stand in the midst of the space once occupied by the +Illinois town. + +On the way down from the hill I met Mr. James Clark, the principal +inhabitant of Utica, and one of the earliest settlers of this region. I +accosted him, told him my objects, and requested a half hour's +conversation with him, at his leisure. He seemed interested in the +inquiry, and said he would visit me early in the evening at the inn, +where, accordingly, he soon appeared. The conversation took place in the +porch, where a number of farmers and others were gathered. I asked Mr. +Clark if any Indian remains were found in the neighborhood. "Yes," he +replied, "plenty of them." I then inquired if there was any one spot +where they were more numerous than elsewhere. "Yes," he answered again, +pointing towards the farmhouse on the meadow; "on my farm down yonder by +the river, my tenant ploughs up teeth and bones by the peck every +spring, besides arrow-heads, beads, stone hatchets, and other things of +that sort." I replied that this was precisely what I had expected, as I +had been led to believe that the principal town of the Illinois Indians +once covered that very spot. "If," I added, "I am right in this belief, +the great rock beyond the river is the one which the first explorers +occupied as a fort; and I can describe it to you from their accounts of +it, though I have never seen it, except from the top of the hill where +the trees on and around it prevented me from seeing any part but the +front." The men present now gathered around to listen. "The rock," I +continued, "is nearly a hundred and fifty feet high, and rises directly +from the water. The front and two sides are perpendicular and +inaccessible; but there is one place where it is possible for a man to +climb up, though with difficulty. The top is large enough and level +enough for houses and fortifications." Here several of the men +exclaimed: "That's just it." "You've hit it exactly." I then asked if +there was any other rock on that side of the river which could answer to +the description. They all agreed that there was no such rock on either +side, along the whole length of the river. I then said: "If the Indian +town was in the place where I suppose it to have been, I can tell you +the nature of the country which lies behind the hills on the farther +side of the river, though I know nothing about it except what I have +learned from writings nearly two centuries old. From the top of the +hills, you look out upon a great prairie reaching as far as you can see, +except that it is crossed by a belt of woods, following the course of a +stream which enters the main river a few miles below." (See _ante_, p. +221, _note_.) "You are exactly right again," replied Mr. Clark; "we call +that belt of timber the 'Vermilion Woods,' and the stream is the Big +Vermilion." "Then," I said, "the Big Vermilion is the river which the +French called the Aramoni; 'Starved Rock' is the same on which they +built a fort called St. Louis, in the year 1682; and your farm is on the +site of the great town of the Illinois." + +I spent the next day in examining these localities, and was fully +confirmed in my conclusions. Mr. Clark's tenant showed me the spot where +the human bones were ploughed up. It was no doubt the graveyard violated +by the Iroquois. The Illinois returned to the village after their +defeat, and long continued to occupy it. The scattered bones were +probably collected and restored to their place of burial. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[179] For the particulars of this desertion, Membre in Le Clerc, ii. +171, _Relation des Decouvertes_; Tonty, _Memoire_, 1684, 1693; +_Declaration faite par devant le Sr. Duchesneau, Intendant en Canada, +par Moyse Hillaret, charpentier de barque cy-devant au service du Sr. +de la Salle, Aoust, 1680_. + +Moyse Hillaret, the "Maitre Moyse" of Hennepin, was a ring-leader of the +deserters, and seems to have been one of those captured by La Salle near +Fort Frontenac. Twelve days after, Hillaret was examined by La Salle's +enemy, the intendant; and this paper is the formal statement made by +him. It gives the names of most of the men, and furnishes incidental +confirmation of many statements of Hennepin, Tonty, Membre, and the +_Relation des Decouvertes_. Hillaret, Leblanc, and Le Meilleur, the +blacksmith nicknamed La Forge, went off together, and the rest seem to +have followed afterwards. Hillaret does not admit that any goods were +wantonly destroyed. + +There is before me a schedule of the debts of La Salle, made after his +death. It includes a claim of this man for wages to the amount of 2,500 +livres. + +[180] Two of the messengers, Laurent and Messier, arrived safely. The +others seem to have deserted. + +[181] The Jesuits in North America. + +[182] Duchesneau, in _Paris Docs._, ix. 163. + +[183] There had long been a rankling jealousy between the Miamis and the +Illinois. According to Membre, La Salle's enemies had intrigued +successfully among the former, as well as among the Iroquois, to induce +them to take arms against the Illinois. + +[184] The above is from notes made on the spot. The following is La +Salle's description of the locality in the _Relation des Decouvertes_, +written in 1681: "La rive gauche de la riviere, du cote du sud, est +occupee par un long rocher, fort etroit et escarpe presque partout, a la +reserve d'un endroit de plus d'une lieue de longueur, situe vis-a-vis du +village, ou le terrain, tout couvert de beaux chenes, s'etend par une +pente douce jusqu'au bord de la riviere. Au dela de cette hauteur est +une vaste plaine, qui s'etend bien loin du cote du sud, et qui est +traversee par la riviere Aramoni, dont les bords sont couverts d'une +lisiere de bois peu large." + +The Aramoni is laid down on the great manuscript map of Franquelin, +1684, and on the map of Coronelli, 1688. It is, without doubt, the Big +Vermilion. _Aramoni_ is the Illinois word for "red," or "vermilion." +Starved Rock, or the Rock of St. Louis, is the highest and steepest +escarpment of the _long rocher_ above mentioned. + +[185] The Illinois were an aggregation of distinct though kindred +tribes,--the Kaskaskias, the Peorias, the Kahokias, the Tamaroas, the +Moingona, and others. Their general character and habits were those of +other Indian tribes; but they were reputed somewhat cowardly and +slothful. In their manners, they were more licentious than many of their +neighbors, and addicted to practices which are sometimes supposed to be +the result of a perverted civilization. Young men enacting the part of +women were frequently to be seen among them. These were held in great +contempt. Some of the early travellers, both among the Illinois and +among other tribes, where the same practice prevailed, mistook them for +hermaphrodites. According to Charlevoix (_Journal Historique_, 303), +this abuse was due in part to a superstition. The Miamis and Piankishaws +were in close affinities of language and habits with the Illinois. All +these tribes belonged to the great Algonquin family. The first +impressions which the French received of them, as recorded in the +_Relation_ of 1671, were singularly favorable; but a closer acquaintance +did not confirm them. The Illinois traded with the lake tribes, to whom +they carried slaves taken in war, receiving in exchange guns, hatchets, +and other French goods. Marquette in _Relation_, 1670, 91. + +[186] This is Membre's date. The narratives differ as to the day, though +all agree as to the month. + +[187] The _Relation des Decouvertes_ says, five hundred Iroquois and one +hundred Shawanoes. Membre says that the allies were Miamis. He is no +doubt right, as the Miamis had promised their aid, and the Shawanoes +were at peace with the Illinois. Tonty is silent on the point. + +[188] Membre says that he went with Tonty: "J'etois aussi a cote du +Sieur de Tonty." This is an invention of the friar's vanity. "Les deux +peres Recollets etoient alors dans une cabane a une lieue du village, ou +ils s'etoient retires pour faire une espece de retraite, et ils ne +furent avertis de l'arrivee des Iroquois que dans le temps du +combat."--_Relation des Decouvertes_. "Je rencontrai en chemin les peres +Gabriel et Zenobe Membre, qui cherchoient de mes nouvelles."--Tonty, +_Memoire_, 1693. This was on his return from the Iroquois. The +_Relation_ confirms the statement, as far as concerns Membre: "II +rencontra le Pere Zenobe [_Membre_], qui venoit pour le secourir, aiant +ete averti du combat et de sa blessure." + +The perverted _Dernieres Decouvertes_, published without authority, +under Tonty's name, says that he was attended by a slave, whom the +Illinois sent with him as interpreter. In his narrative of 1684, Tonty +speaks of a Sokokis (Saco) Indian who was with the Iroquois and who +spoke French enough to serve as interpreter. + +[189] Being once in an encampment of Sioux when a quarrel broke out, and +the adverse factions raised the war-whoop and began to fire at each +other, I had a good, though for the moment a rather dangerous, +opportunity of seeing the demeanor of Indians at the beginning of a +fight. The fray was quelled before much mischief was done, by the +vigorous intervention of the elder warriors, who ran between the +combatants. + +[190] "Je leur fis connoistre que les Islinois etoient sous la +protection du roy de France et du gouverneur du pays, que j'estois +surpris qu'ils voulussent rompre avec les Francois et qu'ils voulussent +_attendre_ [_sic_] a une paix."--Tonty, _Memoire_, 1693. + +[191] An Indian speech, it will be remembered, is without validity if +not confirmed by presents, each of which has its special interpretation. +The meaning of the fifth pack of beaver, informing Tonty that the sun +was bright,--"que le soleil etoit beau," that is, that the weather was +favorable for travelling,--is curiously misconceived by the editor of +the _Dernieres Decouvertes_, who improves upon his original by +substituting the words "par le cinquieme paquet _ils nous exhortoient a +adorer le Soleil_." + +[192] Tonty, _Memoire_; Membre in Le Clerc, ii. 191. Hennepin, who hated +Tonty, unjustly charges him with having abandoned the search too soon, +admitting, however, that it would have been useless to continue it. This +part of his narrative is a perversion of Membre's account. + +[193] "Cependant les Iroquois, aussitot apres le depart du Sr. de +Tonty, exercerent leur rage sur les corps morts des Ilinois, qu'ils +deterrerent ou abbatterent de dessus les echafauds ou les Ilinois les +laissent longtemps exposes avant que de les mettre en terre. Ils en +brulerent la plus grande partie, ils en mangerent meme quelques uns, et +jetterent le reste aux chiens. Ils planterent les tetes de ces cadavres +a demi decharnes sur des pieux," etc.--_Relation des Decouvertes_. + +[194] _Relation des Decouvertes_; Frontenac to the King, _N. Y. Col. +Docs._, ix. 147. A memoir of Duchesneau makes the number twelve hundred. + +[195] "Ils [_les Illinois_] trouverent dans leur campement des carcasses +de leurs enfans que ces anthropophages avoient mangez, ne voulant meme +d'autre nourriture que la chair de ces infortunez."--_La Potherie_, ii. +145, 146. Compare _note, ante_, p. 211. + +[196] Membre in Le Clerc, ii. 199. The other authorities for the +foregoing chapter are the letters of La Salle, the _Relation des +Decouvertes_, in which portions of them are embodied, and the two +narratives of Tonty, of 1684 and 1693. They all agree in essential +points. + +In his letters of this period, La Salle dwells at great length on the +devices by which, as he believed, his enemies tried to ruin him and his +enterprise. He is particularly severe against the Jesuit Allouez, whom +he charges with intriguing "pour commencer la guerre entre les Iroquois +et les Illinois par le moyen des Miamis qu'on engageoit dans cette +negociation afin ou de me faire massacrer avec mes gens par quelqu'une +de ces nations ou de me brouiller avec les Iroquois."--_Lettre (a +Thouret?), 22 Aout, 1682_. He gives in detail the circumstances on which +this suspicion rests, but which are not convincing. He says, further, +that the Jesuits gave out that Tonty was dead in order to discourage the +men going to his relief, and that Allouez encouraged the deserters, +"leur servoit de conseil, benit mesme leurs balles, et les asseura +plusieurs fois que M. de Tonty auroit la teste cassee." He also affirms +that great pains were taken to spread the report that he was himself +dead. A Kiskakon Indian, he says, was sent to Tonty with a story to this +effect; while a Huron named Scortas was sent to him (La Salle) with +false news of the death of Tonty. The latter confirms this statement, +and adds that the Illinois had been told "que M. de la Salle estoit venu +en leur pays pour les donner a manger aux Iroquois." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +1680. + +THE ADVENTURES OF HENNEPIN. + + Hennepin an Impostor: his Pretended Discovery; his Actual + Discovery; Captured by the Sioux.--The Upper Mississippi. + + +It was on the last day of the winter that preceded the invasion of the +Iroquois that Father Hennepin, with his two companions, Accau and Du +Gay, had set out from Fort Crevecoeur to explore the Illinois to its +mouth. It appears from his own later statements, as well as from those +of Tonty, that more than this was expected of him, and that La Salle had +instructed him to explore, not alone the Illinois, but also the Upper +Mississippi. That he actually did so, there is no reasonable doubt; and +could he have contented himself with telling the truth, his name would +have stood high as a bold and vigorous discoverer. But his vicious +attempts to malign his commander and plunder him of his laurels have +wrapped his genuine merit in a cloud. + +Hennepin's first book was published soon after his return from his +travels, and while La Salle was still alive. In it he relates the +accomplishment of the instructions given him, without the smallest +intimation that he did more.[197] Fourteen years after, when La Salle +was dead, he published another edition of his travels,[198] in which he +advanced a new and surprising pretension. Reasons connected with his +personal safety, he declares, before compelled him to remain silent; but +a time at length had come when the truth must be revealed. And he +proceeds to affirm, that, before ascending the Mississippi, he, with his +two men, explored its whole course from the Illinois to the sea,--thus +anticipating the discovery which forms the crowning laurel of La Salle. + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN'S RESOLUTION.] + +"I am resolved," he says, "to make known here to the whole world the +mystery of this discovery, which I have hitherto concealed, that I might +not offend the Sieur de la Salle, who wished to keep all the glory and +all the knowledge of it to himself. It is for this that he sacrificed +many persons whose lives he exposed, to prevent them from making known +what they had seen, and thereby crossing his secret plans.... I was +certain that if I went down the Mississippi, he would not fail to +traduce me to my superiors for not taking the northern route, which I +was to have followed in accordance with his desire and the plan we had +made together. But I saw myself on the point of dying of hunger, and +knew not what to do; because the two men who were with me threatened +openly to leave me in the night, and carry off the canoe and everything +in it, if I prevented them from going down the river to the nations +below. Finding myself in this dilemma, I thought that I ought not to +hesitate, and that I ought to prefer my own safety to the violent +passion which possessed the Sieur de la Salle of enjoying alone the +glory of this discovery. The two men, seeing that I had made up my mind +to follow them, promised me entire fidelity; so, after we had shaken +hands together as a mutual pledge, we set out on our voyage."[199] + +He then proceeds to recount at length the particulars of his alleged +exploration. The story was distrusted from the first.[200] Why had he +not told it before? An excess of modesty, a lack of self-assertion, or a +too sensitive reluctance to wound the susceptibilities of others, had +never been found among his foibles. Yet some, perhaps, might have +believed him, had he not in the first edition of his book gratuitously +and distinctly declared that he did not make the voyage in question. "We +had some designs," he says, "of going down the river Colbert +[Mississippi] as far as its mouth; but the tribes that took us prisoners +gave us no time to navigate this river both up and down."[201] + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN AN IMPOSTOR.] + +In declaring to the world the achievement which he had so long concealed +and so explicitly denied, the worthy missionary found himself in serious +embarrassment. In his first book, he had stated that on the twelfth of +March he left the mouth of the Illinois on his way northward, and that +on the eleventh of April he was captured by the Sioux near the mouth of +the Wisconsin, five hundred miles above. This would give him only a +month to make his alleged canoe-voyage from the Illinois to the Gulf of +Mexico, and again upward to the place of his capture,--a distance of +three thousand two hundred and sixty miles. With his means of +transportation, three months would have been insufficient.[202] He saw +the difficulty; but, on the other hand, he saw that he could not greatly +change either date without confusing the parts of his narrative which +preceded and which followed. In this perplexity he chose a middle +course, which only involved him in additional contradictions. Having, as +he affirms, gone down to the Gulf and returned to the mouth of the +Illinois, he set out thence to explore the river above; and he assigns +the twenty-fourth of April as the date of this departure. This gives him +forty-three days for his voyage to the mouth of the river and back. +Looking further, we find that having left the Illinois on the +twenty-fourth he paddled his canoe two hundred leagues northward, and +was then captured by the Sioux on the twelfth of the same month. In +short, he ensnares himself in a hopeless confusion of dates.[203] + +Here, one would think, is sufficient reason for rejecting his story; and +yet the general truth of the descriptions, and a certain verisimilitude +which marks it, might easily deceive a careless reader and perplex a +critical one. These, however, are easily explained. Six years before +Hennepin published his pretended discovery, his brother friar, Father +Chretien Le Clerc, published an account of the Recollet missions among +the Indians, under the title of "Etablissement de la Foi." This book, +offensive to the Jesuits, is said to have been suppressed by order of +government; but a few copies fortunately survive.[204] One of these is +now before me. It contains the journal of Father Zenobe Membre, on his +descent of the Mississippi in 1681, in company with La Salle. The +slightest comparison of his narrative with that of Hennepin is +sufficient to show that the latter framed his own story out of incidents +and descriptions furnished by his brother missionary, often using his +very words, and sometimes copying entire pages, with no other +alterations than such as were necessary to make himself, instead of La +Salle and his companions, the hero of the exploit. The records of +literary piracy may be searched in vain for an act of depredation more +recklessly impudent.[205] + +Such being the case, what faith can we put in the rest of Hennepin's +story? Fortunately, there are tests by which the earlier parts of his +book can be tried; and, on the whole, they square exceedingly well with +contemporary records of undoubted authenticity. Bating his exaggerations +respecting the Falls of Niagara, his local descriptions, and even his +estimates of distance, are generally accurate. He constantly, it is +true, magnifies his own acts, and thrusts himself forward as one of the +chiefs of an enterprise to the costs of which he had contributed +nothing, and to which he was merely an appendage; and yet, till he +reaches the Mississippi, there can be no doubt that in the main he tells +the truth. As for his ascent of that river to the country of the Sioux, +the general statement is fully confirmed by La Salle, Tonty, and other +contemporary writers.[206] For the details of the journey we must rest +on Hennepin alone, whose account of the country and of the peculiar +traits of its Indian occupants afford, as far as they go, good evidence +of truth. Indeed, this part of his narrative could only have been +written by one well versed in the savage life of this northwestern +region.[207] Trusting, then, to his own guidance in the absence of +better, let us follow in the wake of his adventurous canoe. + +[Sidenote: HIS VOYAGE NORTHWARD.] + +It was laden deeply with goods belonging to La Salle, and meant by him +as presents to Indians on the way, though the travellers, it appears, +proposed to use them in trading on their own account. The friar was +still wrapped in his gray capote and hood, shod with sandals, and +decorated with the cord of St. Francis. As for his two companions, +Accau[208] and Du Gay, it is tolerably clear that the former was the +real leader of the party, though Hennepin, after his custom, thrusts +himself into the foremost place. Both were somewhat above the station of +ordinary hired hands; and Du Gay had an uncle who was an ecclesiastic of +good credit at Amiens, his native place. + +In the forests that overhung the river the buds were feebly swelling +with advancing spring. There was game enough. They killed buffalo, deer, +beavers, wild turkeys, and now and then a bear swimming in the river. +With these, and the fish which they caught in abundance, they fared +sumptuously, though it was the season of Lent. They were exemplary, +however, at their devotions. Hennepin said prayers at morning and night, +and the _angelus_ at noon, adding a petition to Saint Anthony of Padua +that he would save them from the peril that beset their way. In truth, +there was a lion in the path. The ferocious character of the Sioux, or +Dacotah, who occupied the region of the Upper Mississippi, was already +known to the French; and Hennepin, with excellent reason, prayed that it +might be his fortune to meet them, not by night, but by day. + +[Sidenote: CAPTURED BY THE SIOUX.] + +On the eleventh or twelfth of April, they stopped in the afternoon to +repair their canoe; and Hennepin busied himself in daubing it with +pitch, while the others cooked a turkey. Suddenly, a fleet of Sioux +canoes swept into sight, bearing a war-party of a hundred and twenty +naked savages, who on seeing the travellers raised a hideous clamor; +and, some leaping ashore and others into the water, they surrounded the +astonished Frenchmen in an instant.[209] Hennepin held out the +peace-pipe; but one of them snatched it from him. Next, he hastened to +proffer a gift of Martinique tobacco, which was better received. Some of +the old warriors repeated the name _Miamiha_, giving him to understand +that they were a war-party, on the way to attack the Miamis; on which, +Hennepin, with the help of signs and of marks which he drew on the sand +with a stick, explained that the Miamis had gone across the Mississippi, +beyond their reach. Hereupon, he says that three or four old men placed +their hands on his head, and began a dismal wailing; while he with his +handkerchief wiped away their tears, in order to evince sympathy with +their affliction, from whatever cause arising. Notwithstanding this +demonstration of tenderness, they refused to smoke with him in his +peace-pipe, and forced him and his companions to embark and paddle +across the river; while they all followed behind, uttering yells and +howlings which froze the missionary's blood. + +On reaching the farther side, they made their camp-fires, and allowed +their prisoners to do the same. Accau and Du Gay slung their kettle; +while Hennepin, to propitiate the Sioux, carried to them two turkeys, +of which there were several in the canoe. The warriors had seated +themselves in a ring, to debate on the fate of the Frenchmen; and two +chiefs presently explained to the friar, by significant signs, that it +had been resolved that his head should be split with a war-club. This +produced the effect which was no doubt intended. Hennepin ran to the +canoe, and quickly returned with one of the men, both loaded with +presents, which he threw into the midst of the assembly; and then, +bowing his head, offered them at the same time a hatchet with which to +kill him, if they wished to do so. His gifts and his submission seemed +to appease them. They gave him and his companions a dish of beaver's +flesh; but, to his great concern, they returned his peace-pipe,--an act +which he interpreted as a sign of danger. That night the Frenchmen slept +little, expecting to be murdered before morning. There was, in fact, a +great division of opinion among the Sioux. Some were for killing them +and taking their goods; while others, eager above all things that French +traders should come among them with the knives, hatchets, and guns of +which they had heard the value, contended that it would be impolitic to +discourage the trade by putting to death its pioneers. + +Scarcely had morning dawned on the anxious captives, when a young chief, +naked, and painted from head to foot, appeared before them and asked for +the pipe, which the friar gladly gave him. He filled it, smoked it, +made the warriors do the same, and, having given this hopeful pledge of +amity, told the Frenchmen that, since the Miamis were out of reach, the +war-party would return home, and that they must accompany them. To this +Hennepin gladly agreed, having, as he declares, his great work of +exploration so much at heart that he rejoiced in the prospect of +achieving it even in their company. + +[Sidenote: SUSPECTED OF SORCERY.] + +He soon, however, had a foretaste of the affliction in store for him; +for when he opened his breviary and began to mutter his morning +devotion, his new companions gathered about him with faces that betrayed +their superstitious terror, and gave him to understand that his book was +a bad spirit with which he must hold no more converse. They thought, +indeed, that he was muttering a charm for their destruction. Accau and +Du Gay, conscious of the danger, begged the friar to dispense with his +devotions, lest he and they alike should be tomahawked; but Hennepin +says that his sense of duty rose superior to his fears, and that he was +resolved to repeat his office at all hazards, though not until he had +asked pardon of his two friends for thus imperilling their lives. +Fortunately, he presently discovered a device by which his devotion and +his prudence were completely reconciled. He ceased the muttering which +had alarmed the Indians, and, with the breviary open on his knees, sang +the service in loud and cheerful tones. As this had no savor of sorcery, +and as they now imagined that the book was teaching its owner to sing +for their amusement, they conceived a favorable opinion of both alike. + +These Sioux, it may be observed, were the ancestors of those who +committed the horrible but not unprovoked massacres of 1862, in the +valley of the St. Peter. Hennepin complains bitterly of their treatment +of him, which, however, seems to have been tolerably good. Afraid that +he would lag behind, as his canoe was heavy and slow,[210] they placed +several warriors in it to aid him and his men in paddling. They kept on +their way from morning till night, building huts for their bivouac when +it rained, and sleeping on the open ground when the weather was +fair,--which, says Hennepin, "gave us a good opportunity to contemplate +the moon and stars." The three Frenchmen took the precaution of sleeping +at the side of the young chief who had been the first to smoke the +peace-pipe, and who seemed inclined to befriend them; but there was +another chief, one Aquipaguetin, a crafty old savage, who having lost a +son in war with the Miamis, was angry that the party had abandoned their +expedition, and thus deprived him of his revenge. He therefore kept up a +dismal lament through half the night; while other old men, crouching +over Hennepin as he lay trying to sleep, stroked him with their hands, +and uttered wailings so lugubrious that he was forced to the belief +that he had been doomed to death, and that they were charitably +bemoaning his fate.[211] + +[Sidenote: THE CAPTIVE FRIAR.] + +One night, the captives were, for some reason, unable to bivouac near +their protector, and were forced to make their fire at the end of the +camp. Here they were soon beset by a crowd of Indians, who told them +that Aquipaguetin had at length resolved to tomahawk them. The +malcontents were gathered in a knot at a little distance, and Hennepin +hastened to appease them by another gift of knives and tobacco. This was +but one of the devices of the old chief to deprive them of their goods +without robbing them outright. He had with him the bones of a deceased +relative, which he was carrying home wrapped in skins prepared with +smoke after the Indian fashion, and gayly decorated with bands of dyed +porcupine quills. He would summon his warriors, and placing these relics +in the midst of the assembly, call on all present to smoke in their +honor; after which, Hennepin was required to offer a more substantial +tribute in the shape of cloth, beads, hatchets, tobacco, and the like, +to be laid upon the bundle of bones. The gifts thus acquired were then, +in the name of the deceased, distributed among the persons present. + +On one occasion, Aquipaguetin killed a bear, and invited the chiefs and +warriors to feast upon it. They accordingly assembled on a prairie, west +of the river, where, after the banquet, they danced a "medicine-dance." +They were all painted from head to foot, with their hair oiled, +garnished with red and white feathers, and powdered with the down of +birds. In this guise they set their arms akimbo, and fell to stamping +with such fury that the hard prairie was dented with the prints of their +moccasins; while the chief's son, crying at the top of his throat, gave +to each in turn the pipe of war. Meanwhile, the chief himself, singing +in a loud and rueful voice, placed his hands on the heads of the three +Frenchmen, and from time to time interrupted his music to utter a +vehement harangue. Hennepin could not understand the words, but his +heart sank as the conviction grew strong within him that these +ceremonies tended to his destruction. It seems, however, that, after all +the chief's efforts, his party was in the minority, the greater part +being adverse to either killing or robbing the three strangers. + +Every morning, at daybreak, an old warrior shouted the signal of +departure; and the recumbent savages leaped up, manned their birchen +fleet, and plied their paddles against the current, often without +waiting to break their fast. Sometimes they stopped for a buffalo-hunt +on the neighboring prairies; and there was no lack of provisions. They +passed Lake Pepin, which Hennepin called the Lake of Tears, by reason +of the howlings and lamentations here uttered over him by Aquipaguetin, +and nineteen days after his capture landed near the site of St. Paul. +The father's sorrows now began in earnest. The Indians broke his canoe +to pieces, having first hidden their own among the alder-bushes. As they +belonged to different bands and different villages, their mutual +jealousy now overcame all their prudence; and each proceeded to claim +his share of the captives and the booty. Happily, they made an amicable +distribution, or it would have fared ill with the three Frenchmen; and +each taking his share, not forgetting the priestly vestments of +Hennepin, the splendor of which they could not sufficiently admire, they +set out across the country for their villages, which lay towards the +north in the neighborhood of Lake Buade, now called Mille Lac. + +[Sidenote: A HARD JOURNEY.] + +Being, says Hennepin, exceedingly tall and active, they walked at a +prodigious speed, insomuch that no European could long keep pace with +them. Though the month of May had begun, there were frosts at night; and +the marshes and ponds were glazed with ice, which cut the missionary's +legs as he waded through. They swam the larger streams, and Hennepin +nearly perished with cold as he emerged from the icy current. His two +companions, who were smaller than he, and who could not swim, were +carried over on the backs of the Indians. They showed, however, no +little endurance; and he declares that he should have dropped by the +way, but for their support. Seeing him disposed to lag, the Indians, to +spur him on, set fire to the dry grass behind him, and then, taking him +by the hands, ran forward with him to escape the flames. To add to his +misery, he was nearly famished, as they gave him only a small piece of +smoked meat once a day, though it does not appear that they themselves +fared better. On the fifth day, being by this time in extremity, he saw +a crowd of squaws and children approaching over the prairie, and +presently descried the bark lodges of an Indian town. The goal was +reached. He was among the homes of the Sioux. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[197] _Description de la Louisiane, nouvellement decouverte_, Paris, +1683. + +[198] _Nouvelle Decouverte d'un tres grand Pays situe dans l'Amerique_, +Utrecht, 1697. + +[199] _Nouvelle Decouverte_, 248, 250, 251. + +[200] See the preface of the Spanish translation by Don Sebastian +Fernandez de Medrano, 1699, and also the letter of Gravier, dated 1701, +in Shea's _Early Voyages on the Mississippi_. Barcia, Charlevoix, Kalm, +and other early writers put a low value on Hennepin's veracity. + +[201] _Description de la Louisiane_, 218. + +[202] La Salle, in the following year, with a far better equipment, was +more than three months and a half in making the journey. A Mississippi +trading-boat of the last generation, with sails and oars, ascending +against the current, was thought to do remarkably well if it could make +twenty miles a day. Hennepin, if we believe his own statements, must +have ascended at an average rate of sixty miles, though his canoe was +large and heavily laden. + +[203] Hennepin here falls into gratuitous inconsistencies. In the +edition of 1697, in order to gain a little time, he says that he left +the Illinois on his voyage southward on the eighth of March, 1680; and +yet in the preceding chapter he repeats the statement of the first +edition, that he was detained at the Illinois by floating ice till the +twelfth. Again, he says in the first edition that he was captured by the +Sioux on the eleventh of April; and in the edition of 1697 he changes +this date to the twelfth, without gaining any advantage by doing so. + +[204] Le Clerc's book had been made the text of an attack on the +Jesuits. See _Reflexions sur un Livre intitule Premier Etablissement de +la Foi_. This piece is printed in the _Morale Pratique des Jesuites_. + +[205] Hennepin may have copied from the unpublished journal of Membre, +which the latter had placed in the hands of his Superior; or he may have +compiled from Le Clerc's book, relying on the suppression of the edition +to prevent detection. He certainly saw and used it; for he elsewhere +borrows the exact words of the editor. He is so careless that he steals +from Membre passages which he might easily have written for himself; as, +for example, a description of the opossum and another of the +cougar,--animals with which he was acquainted. Compare the following +pages of the _Nouvelle Decouverte_ with the corresponding pages of Le +Clerc: Hennepin, 252, Le Clerc, ii. 217; H. 253, Le C. ii. 218; H. 257, +Le C. ii. 221; H. 259, Le C. ii. 224; H. 262, Le C. ii. 226; H. 265, Le +C. ii. 229; H. 267, Le C. ii. 233; H. 270, Le C. ii. 235; H. 280, Le C. +ii. 240; H. 295, Le C. ii. 249; H. 296, Le C. ii. 250; H. 297, Le C. ii. +253; H. 299, Le C. ii. 254; H. 301, Le C. ii. 257. Some of these +parallel passages will be found in Sparks's _Life of La Salle_, where +this remarkable fraud was first fully exposed. In Shea's _Discovery of +the Mississippi_, there is an excellent critical examination of +Hennepin's works. His plagiarisms from Le Clerc are not confined to the +passages cited above; for in his later editions he stole largely from +other parts of the suppressed _Etablissement de la Foi_. + +[206] It is certain that persons having the best means of information +believed at the time in Hennepin's story of his journeys on the Upper +Mississippi. The compiler of the _Relation des Decouvertes_, who was in +close relations with La Salle and those who acted with him, does not +intimate a doubt of the truth of the report which Hennepin on his return +gave to the Provincial Commissary of his Order, and which is in +substance the same which he published two years later. The _Relation_, +it is to be observed, was written only a few months after the return of +Hennepin, and embodies the pith of his narrative of the Upper +Mississippi, no part of which had then been published. + +[207] In this connection, it is well to examine the various Sioux words +which Hennepin uses incidentally, and which he must have acquired by +personal intercourse with the tribe, as no Frenchman then understood the +language. These words, as far as my information reaches, are in every +instance correct. Thus, he says that the Sioux called his breviary a +"bad spirit,"--_Ouackanche_. _Wakanshe_, or _Wakanshecha_, would express +the same meaning in modern English spelling. He says elsewhere that they +called the guns of his companions _Manzaouackanche_, which he +translates, "iron possessed with a bad spirit." The western Sioux to +this day call a gun _Manzawakan_, "metal possessed with a spirit." +_Chonga (shonka)_, "a dog," _Ouasi (wahsee)_, "a pine-tree," _Chinnen +(shinnan)_, "a robe," or "garment," and other words, are given +correctly, with their interpretations. The word _Louis_, affirmed by +Hennepin to mean "the sun," seems at first sight a wilful inaccuracy, as +this is not the word used in general by the Sioux. The Yankton band of +this people, however, call the sun _oouee_, which, it is evident, +represents the French pronunciation of _Louis_, omitting the initial +letter. This Hennepin would be apt enough to supply, thereby conferring +a compliment alike on himself, Louis Hennepin, and on the King, Louis +XIV., who, to the indignation of his brother monarchs, had chosen the +sun as his emblem. + +Various trivial incidents touched upon by Hennepin, while recounting his +life among the Sioux, seem to me to afford a strong presumption of an +actual experience. I speak on this point with the more confidence, as +the Indians in whose lodges I was once domesticated for several weeks +belonged to a western band of the same people. + +[208] Called Ako by Hennepin. In contemporary documents, it is written +Accau, Acau, D'Accau, Dacau, Dacan, and D'Accault. + +[209] The edition of 1683 says that there were thirty-three canoes; that +of 1697 raises the number to fifty. The number of Indians is the same in +both. The later narrative is more in detail than the former. + +[210] And yet it had, by his account, made a distance of thirteen +hundred and eighty miles from the mouth of the Mississippi upward in +twenty-four days! + +[211] This weeping and wailing over Hennepin once seemed to me an +anomaly in his account of Sioux manners, as I am not aware that such +practices are to be found among them at present. They are mentioned, +however, by other early writers. Le Sueur, who was among them in +1699-1700, was wept over no less than Hennepin. See the abstract of his +journal in La Harpe. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +1680, 1681. + +HENNEPIN AMONG THE SIOUX. + + Signs of Danger.--Adoption.--Hennepin and his Indian + Relatives.--The Hunting Party.--The Sioux Camp.--Falls of St. + Anthony.--A Vagabond Friar: his Adventures on the + Mississippi.--Greysolon du Lhut.--Return to Civilization. + + +As Hennepin entered the village, he beheld a sight which caused him to +invoke Saint Anthony of Padua. In front of the lodges were certain +stakes, to which were attached bundles of straw, intended, as he +supposed, for burning him and his friends alive. His concern was +redoubled when he saw the condition of the Picard Du Gay, whose hair and +face had been painted with divers colors, and whose head was decorated +with a tuft of white feathers. In this guise he was entering the +village, followed by a crowd of Sioux, who compelled him to sing and +keep time to his own music by rattling a dried gourd containing a number +of pebbles. The omens, indeed, were exceedingly threatening; for +treatment like this was usually followed by the speedy immolation of the +captive. Hennepin ascribes it to the effect of his invocations, that, +being led into one of the lodges, among a throng of staring squaws and +children, he and his companions were seated on the ground, and presented +with large dishes of birch-bark, containing a mess of wild rice boiled +with dried whortleberries,--a repast which he declares to have been the +best that had fallen to his lot since the day of his captivity.[212] + +[Sidenote: THE SIOUX.] + +This soothed his fears; but, as he allayed his famished appetite, he +listened with anxious interest to the vehement jargon of the chiefs and +warriors, who were disputing among themselves to whom the three captives +should respectively belong; for it seems that, as far as related to +them, the question of distribution had not yet been definitely settled. +The debate ended in the assigning of Hennepin to his old enemy +Aquipaguetin, who, however, far from persisting in his evil designs, +adopted him on the spot as his son. The three companions must now part +company. Du Gay, not yet quite reassured of his safety, hastened to +confess himself to Hennepin; but Accau proved refractory, and refused +the offices of religion, which did not prevent the friar from embracing +them both, as he says, with an extreme tenderness. Tired as he was, he +was forced to set out with his self-styled father to his village, which +was fortunately not far off. An unpleasant walk of a few miles through +woods and marshes brought them to the borders of a sheet of water, +apparently Lake Buade, where five of Aquipaguetin's wives received the +party in three canoes, and ferried them to an island on which the +village stood. + +At the entrance of the chief's lodge, Hennepin was met by a decrepit old +Indian, withered with age, who offered him the peace-pipe, and placed +him on a bear-skin which was spread by the fire. Here, to relieve his +fatigue,--for he was well-nigh spent,--a small boy anointed his limbs +with the fat of a wild-cat, supposed to be sovereign in these cases by +reason of the great agility of that animal. His new father gave him a +bark-platter of fish, covered him with a buffalo-robe, and showed him +six or seven of his wives, who were thenceforth, he was told, to regard +him as a son. The chief's household was numerous; and his allies and +relatives formed a considerable clan, of which the missionary found +himself an involuntary member. He was scandalized when he saw one of his +adopted brothers carrying on his back the bones of a deceased friend, +wrapped in the chasuble of brocade which they had taken with other +vestments from his box. + +[Sidenote: HENNEPIN AS A MISSIONARY.] + +Seeing their new relative so enfeebled that he could scarcely stand, the +Indians made for him one of their sweating baths,[213] where they +immersed him in steam three times a week,--a process from which he +thinks he derived great benefit. His strength gradually returned, in +spite of his meagre fare; for there was a dearth of food, and the squaws +were less attentive to his wants than to those of their children. They +respected him, however, as a person endowed with occult powers, and +stood in no little awe of a pocket compass which he had with him, as +well as of a small metal pot with feet moulded after the face of a lion. +This last seemed in their eyes a "medicine" of the most formidable +nature, and they would not touch it without first wrapping it in a +beaver-skin. For the rest, Hennepin made himself useful in various ways. +He shaved the heads of the children, as was the custom of the tribe; +bled certain asthmatic persons, and dosed others with orvietan, the +famous panacea of his time, of which he had brought with him a good +supply. With respect to his missionary functions, he seems to have given +himself little trouble, unless his attempt to make a Sioux vocabulary is +to be regarded as preparatory to a future apostleship. "I could gain +nothing over them," he says, "in the way of their salvation, by reason +of their natural stupidity." Nevertheless, on one occasion, he baptized +a sick child, naming it Antoinette in honor of Saint Anthony of Padua. +It seemed to revive after the rite, but soon relapsed and presently +died, "which," he writes, "gave me great joy and satisfaction." In this +he was like the Jesuits, who could find nothing but consolation in the +death of a newly baptized infant, since it was thus assured of a +paradise which, had it lived, it would probably have forfeited by +sharing in the superstitions of its parents. + +With respect to Hennepin and his Indian father, there seems to have been +little love on either side; but Ouasicoude, the principal chief of the +Sioux of this region, was the fast friend of the three white men. He was +angry that they had been robbed, which he had been unable to prevent, as +the Sioux had no laws, and their chiefs little power; but he spoke his +mind freely, and told Aquipaguetin and the rest, in full council, that +they were like a dog who steals a piece of meat from a dish and runs +away with it. When Hennepin complained of hunger, the Indians had always +promised him that early in the summer he should go with them on a +buffalo hunt, and have food in abundance. The time at length came, and +the inhabitants of all the neighboring villages prepared for departure. +To each band was assigned its special hunting-ground, and he was +expected to accompany his Indian father. To this he demurred; for he +feared lest Aquipaguetin, angry at the words of the great chief, might +take this opportunity to revenge the insult put upon him. He therefore +gave out that he expected a party of "Spirits"--that is to say, +Frenchmen--to meet him at the mouth of the Wisconsin, bringing a supply +of goods for the Indians; and he declares that La Salle had in fact +promised to send traders to that place. Be this as it may, the Indians +believed him; and, true or false, the assertion, as will be seen, +answered the purpose for which it was made. + +[Sidenote: CAMP OF SAVAGES.] + +The Indians set out in a body to the number of two hundred and fifty +warriors, with their women and children. The three Frenchmen, who though +in different villages had occasionally met during the two months of +their captivity, were all of the party. They descended Rum River, which +forms the outlet of Mille Lac, and which is called the St. Francis by +Hennepin. None of the Indians had offered to give him passage; and, +fearing lest he should be abandoned, he stood on the bank, hailing the +passing canoes and begging to be taken in. Accau and Du Gay presently +appeared, paddling a small canoe which the Indians had given them; but +they would not listen to the missionary's call, and Accau, who had no +love for him, cried out that he had paddled him long enough already. Two +Indians, however, took pity on him, and brought him to the place of +encampment, where Du Gay tried to excuse himself for his conduct; but +Accau was sullen, and kept aloof. + +After reaching the Mississippi, the whole party encamped together +opposite to the mouth of Rum River, pitching their tents of skin, or +building their bark-huts, on the slope of a hill by the side of the +water. It was a wild scene, this camp of savages among whom as yet no +traders had come and no handiwork of civilization had found its +way,--the tall warriors, some nearly naked, some wrapped in +buffalo-robes, and some in shirts of dressed deer-skin fringed with hair +and embroidered with dyed porcupine quills, war-clubs of stone in their +hands, and quivers at their backs filled with stone-headed arrows; the +squaws, cutting smoke-dried meat with knives of flint, and boiling it in +rude earthen pots of their own making, driving away, meanwhile, with +shrill cries, the troops of lean dogs, which disputed the meal with a +crew of hungry children. The whole camp, indeed, was threatened with +starvation. The three white men could get no food but unripe +berries,--from the effects of which Hennepin thinks they might all have +died, but for timely doses of his orvietan. + +[Sidenote: FALLS OF ST. ANTHONY.] + +Being tired of the Indians, he became anxious to set out for the +Wisconsin to find the party of Frenchmen, real or imaginary, who were to +meet him at that place. That he was permitted to do so was due to the +influence of the great chief Ouasicoude, who always befriended him, and +who had soundly berated his two companions for refusing him a seat in +their canoe. Du Gay wished to go with him; but Accau, who liked the +Indian life as much as he disliked Hennepin, preferred to remain with +the hunters. A small birch-canoe was given to the two adventurers, +together with an earthen pot; and they had also between them a gun, a +knife, and a robe of beaver-skin. Thus equipped, they began their +journey, and soon approached the Falls of St. Anthony, so named by +Hennepin in honor of the inevitable Saint Anthony of Padua.[214] As they +were carrying their canoe by the cataract, they saw five or six Indians, +who had gone before, and one of whom had climbed into an oak-tree beside +the principal fall, whence in a loud and lamentable voice he was +haranguing the spirit of the waters, as a sacrifice to whom he had just +hung a robe of beaver-skin among the branches.[215] Their attention was +soon engrossed by another object. Looking over the edge of the cliff +which overhung the river below the falls, Hennepin saw a snake, which, +as he avers, was six feet long,[216] writhing upward towards the holes +of the swallows in the face of the precipice, in order to devour their +young. He pointed him out to Du Gay, and they pelted him with stones +till he fell into the river, but not before his contortions and the +darting of his forked tongue had so affected the Picard's imagination +that he was haunted that night with a terrific incubus. + +[Sidenote: ADVENTURES.] + +They paddled sixty leagues down the river in the heats of July, and +killed no large game but a single deer, the meat of which soon spoiled. +Their main resource was the turtles, whose shyness and watchfulness +caused them frequent disappointments and many involuntary fasts. They +once captured one of more than common size; and, as they were +endeavoring to cut off his head, he was near avenging himself by +snapping off Hennepin's finger. There was a herd of buffalo in sight on +the neighboring prairie; and Du Gay went with his gun in pursuit of +them, leaving the turtle in Hennepin's custody. Scarcely was he gone +when the friar, raising his eyes, saw that their canoe, which they had +left at the edge of the water, had floated out into the current. Hastily +turning the turtle on his back, he covered him with his habit of St. +Francis, on which, for greater security, he laid a number of stones, and +then, being a good swimmer, struck out in pursuit of the canoe, which +he at length overtook. Finding that it would overset if he tried to +climb into it, he pushed it before him to the shore, and then paddled +towards the place, at some distance above, where he had left the turtle. +He had no sooner reached it than he heard a strange sound, and beheld a +long file of buffalo--bulls, cows, and calves--entering the water not +far off, to cross to the western bank. Having no gun, as became his +apostolic vocation, he shouted to Du Gay, who presently appeared, +running in all haste, and they both paddled in pursuit of the game. Du +Gay aimed at a young cow, and shot her in the head. She fell in shallow +water near an island, where some of the herd had landed; and being +unable to drag her out, they waded into the water and butchered her +where she lay. It was forty-eight hours since they had tasted food. +Hennepin made a fire, while Du Gay cut up the meat. They feasted so +bountifully that they both fell ill, and were forced to remain two days +on the island, taking doses of orvietan, before they were able to resume +their journey. + +Apparently they were not sufficiently versed in woodcraft to smoke the +meat of the cow; and the hot sun soon robbed them of it. They had a few +fishhooks, but were not always successful in the use of them. On one +occasion, being nearly famished, they set their line, and lay watching +it, uttering prayers in turn. Suddenly, there was a great turmoil in the +water. Du Gay ran to the line, and, with the help of Hennepin, drew in +two large cat-fish.[217] The eagles, or fish-hawks, now and then dropped +a newly caught fish, of which they gladly took possession; and once they +found a purveyor in an otter which they saw by the bank, devouring some +object of an appearance so wonderful that Du Gay cried out that he had a +devil between his paws. They scared him from his prey, which proved to +be a spade-fish, or, as Hennepin correctly describes it, a species of +sturgeon, with a bony projection from his snout in the shape of a +paddle. They broke their fast upon him, undeterred by this eccentric +appendage. + +[Sidenote: THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI.] + +If Hennepin had had an eye for scenery, he would have found in these his +vagabond rovings wherewith to console himself in some measure for his +frequent fasts. The young Mississippi, fresh from its northern springs, +unstained as yet by unhallowed union with the riotous Missouri, flowed +calmly on its way amid strange and unique beauties,--a wilderness, +clothed with velvet grass; forest-shadowed valleys; lofty heights, whose +smooth slopes seemed levelled with the scythe; domes and pinnacles, +ramparts and ruined towers, the work of no human hand. The canoe of the +voyagers, borne on the tranquil current, glided in the shade of gray +crags festooned with honeysuckles; by trees mantled with wild +grape-vines; dells bright with the flowers of the white euphorbia, the +blue gentian, and the purple balm; and matted forests, where the red +squirrels leaped and chattered. They passed the great cliff whence the +Indian maiden threw herself in her despair;[218] and Lake Pepin lay +before them, slumbering in the July sun,--the far-reaching sheets of +sparkling water, the woody slopes, the tower-like crags, the grassy +heights basking in sunlight or shadowed by the passing cloud; all the +fair outline of its graceful scenery, the finished and polished +master-work of Nature. And when at evening they made their bivouac fire +and drew up their canoe, while dim, sultry clouds veiled the west, and +the flashes of the silent heat-lightning gleamed on the leaden water, +they could listen, as they smoked their pipes, to the mournful cry of +the whippoorwills and the quavering scream of the owls. + +Other thoughts than the study of the picturesque occupied the mind of +Hennepin when one day he saw his Indian father, Aquipaguetin, whom he +had supposed five hundred miles distant, descending the river with ten +warriors in canoes. He was eager to be the first to meet the traders, +who, as Hennepin had given out, were to come with their goods to the +mouth of the Wisconsin. The two travellers trembled for the +consequences of this encounter; but the chief, after a short colloquy, +passed on his way. In three days he returned in ill-humor, having found +no traders at the appointed spot. The Picard was absent at the time, +looking for game; and Hennepin was sitting under the shade of his +blanket, which he had stretched on forked sticks to protect him from the +sun, when he saw his adopted father approaching with a threatening look, +and a war-club in his hand. He attempted no violence, however, but +suffered his wrath to exhale in a severe scolding, after which he +resumed his course up the river with his warriors. + +If Hennepin, as he avers, really expected a party of traders at the +Wisconsin, the course he now took is sufficiently explicable. If he did +not expect them, his obvious course was to rejoin Tonty on the Illinois, +for which he seems to have had no inclination; or to return to Canada by +way of the Wisconsin,--an attempt which involved the risk of starvation, +as the two travellers had but ten charges of powder left. Assuming, +then, his hope of the traders to have been real, he and Du Gay resolved, +in the mean time, to join a large body of Sioux hunters, who, as +Aquipaguetin had told them, were on a stream which he calls Bull River, +now the Chippeway, entering the Mississippi near Lake Pepin. By so +doing, they would gain a supply of food, and save themselves from the +danger of encountering parties of roving warriors. + +[Sidenote: HE REJOINS THE INDIANS.] + +They found this band, among whom was their companion Accau, and followed +them on a grand hunt along the borders of the Mississippi. Du Gay was +separated for a time from Hennepin, who was placed in a canoe with a +withered squaw more than eighty years old. In spite of her age, she +handled her paddle with great address, and used it vigorously, as +occasion required, to repress the gambols of three children, who, to +Hennepin's annoyance, occupied the middle of the canoe. The hunt was +successful. The Sioux warriors, active as deer, chased the buffalo on +foot with their stone-headed arrows, on the plains behind the heights +that bordered the river; while the old men stood sentinels at the top, +watching for the approach of enemies. One day an alarm was given. The +warriors rushed towards the supposed point of danger, but found nothing +more formidable than two squaws of their own nation, who brought strange +news. A war-party of Sioux, they said, had gone towards Lake Superior, +and had met by the way five "Spirits;" that is to say, five Europeans. +Hennepin was full of curiosity to learn who the strangers might be; and +they, on their part, were said to have shown great anxiety to know the +nationality of the three white men who, as they were told, were on the +river. The hunt was over; and the hunters, with Hennepin and his +companion, were on their way northward to their towns, when they met the +five "Spirits" at some distance below the Falls of St. Anthony. They +proved to be Daniel Greysolon du Lhut, with four well-armed Frenchmen. + +[Sidenote: DE LHUT'S EXPLORATIONS.] + +This bold and enterprising man, stigmatized by the Intendant Duchesneau +as a leader of _coureurs de bois_, was a cousin of Tonty, born at Lyons. +He belonged to that caste of the lesser nobles whose name was legion, +and whose admirable military qualities shone forth so conspicuously in +the wars of Louis XIV. Though his enterprises were independent of those +of La Salle, they were at this time carried on in connection with Count +Frontenac and certain merchants in his interest, of whom Du Lhut's +uncle, Patron, was one; while Louvigny, his brother-in-law, was in +alliance with the governor, and was an officer of his guard. Here, then, +was a kind of family league, countenanced by Frontenac, and acting +conjointly with him, in order, if the angry letters of the intendant are +to be believed, to reap a clandestine profit under the shadow of the +governor's authority, and in violation of the royal ordinances. The +rudest part of the work fell to the share of Du Lhut, who with a +persistent hardihood, not surpassed perhaps even by La Salle, was +continually in the forest, in the Indian towns, or in remote wilderness +outposts planted by himself, exploring, trading, fighting, ruling +lawless savages and whites scarcely less ungovernable, and on one or +more occasions varying his life by crossing the ocean to gain interviews +with the colonial minister Seignelay, amid the splendid vanities of +Versailles. Strange to say, this man of hardy enterprise was a martyr +to the gout, which for more than a quarter of a century grievously +tormented him; though for a time he thought himself cured by the +intercession of the Iroquois saint, Catharine Tegahkouita, to whom he +had made a vow to that end. He was, without doubt, an habitual breaker +of the royal ordinances regulating the fur-trade; yet his services were +great to the colony and to the crown, and his name deserves a place of +honor among the pioneers of American civilization.[219] + +When Hennepin met him, he had been about two years in the wilderness. In +September, 1678, he left Quebec for the purpose of exploring the region +of the Upper Mississippi, and establishing relations of friendship with +the Sioux and their kindred the Assiniboins. In the summer of 1679 he +visited three large towns of the eastern division of the Sioux, +including those visited by Hennepin in the following year, and planted +the King's arms in all of them. Early in the autumn he was at the head +of Lake Superior, holding a council with the Assiniboins and the lake +tribes, and inducing them to live at peace with the Sioux. In all this, +he acted in a public capacity, under the authority of the governor; but +it is not to be supposed that he forgot his own interests or those of +his associates. The intendant angrily complains that he aided and +abetted the _coureurs de bois_ in their lawless courses, and sent down +in their canoes great quantities of beaver-skins consigned to the +merchants in league with him, under cover of whose names the governor +reaped his share of the profits. + +In June, 1680, while Hennepin was in the Sioux villages, Du Lhut set out +from the head of Lake Superior, with two canoes, four Frenchmen, and an +Indian, to continue his explorations.[220] He ascended a river, +apparently the Burnt Wood, and reached from thence a branch of the +Mississippi, which seems to have been the St. Croix. It was now that, to +his surprise, he learned that there were three Europeans on the main +river below; and fearing that they might be Englishmen or Spaniards +encroaching on the territories of the King, he eagerly pressed forward +to solve his doubts. When he saw Hennepin, his mind was set at rest; and +the travellers met with mutual cordiality. They followed the Indians to +their villages of Mille Lac, where Hennepin had now no reason to +complain of their treatment of him. The Sioux gave him and Du Lhut a +grand feast of honor, at which were seated a hundred and twenty naked +guests; and the great chief Ouasicoude, with his own hands, placed +before Hennepin a bark dish containing a mess of smoked meat and wild +rice. + +Autumn had come, and the travellers bethought them of going home. The +Sioux, consoled by their promises to return with goods for trade, did +not oppose their departure; and they set out together, eight white men +in all. As they passed St. Anthony's Falls, two of the men stole two +buffalo-robes which were hung on trees as offerings to the spirit of the +cataract. When Du Lhut heard of it he was very angry, telling the men +that they had endangered the lives of the whole party. Hennepin admitted +that in the view of human prudence he was right, but urged that the act +was good and praiseworthy, inasmuch as the offerings were made to a +false god; while the men, on their part, proved mutinous, declaring that +they wanted the robes and meant to keep them. The travellers continued +their journey in great ill-humor, but were presently soothed by the +excellent hunting which they found on the way. As they approached the +Wisconsin, they stopped to dry the meat of the buffalo they had killed, +when to their amazement they saw a war-party of Sioux approaching in a +fleet of canoes. Hennepin represents himself as showing on this occasion +an extraordinary courage, going to meet the Indians with a peace-pipe, +and instructing Du Lhut, who knew more of these matters than he, how he +ought to behave. The Sioux proved not unfriendly, and said nothing of +the theft of the buffalo-robes. They soon went on their way to attack +the Illinois and Missouris, leaving the Frenchmen to ascend the +Wisconsin unmolested. + +[Sidenote: THE RETURN.] + +After various adventures, they reached the station of the Jesuits at +Green Bay; but its existence is wholly ignored by Hennepin, whose zeal +for his own Order will not permit him to allude to this establishment of +the rival missionaries.[221] He is equally reticent with regard to the +Jesuit mission at Michilimackinac, where the party soon after arrived, +and where they spent the winter. The only intimation which he gives of +its existence consists in the mention of the Jesuit Pierson, who was a +Fleming like himself, and who often skated with him on the frozen lake, +or kept him company in fishing through a hole in the ice.[222] When the +spring opened, Hennepin descended Lake Huron, followed the Detroit to +Lake Erie, and proceeded thence to Niagara. Here he spent some time in +making a fresh examination of the cataract, and then resumed his voyage +on Lake Ontario. He stopped, however, at the great town of the Senecas, +near the Genesee, where, with his usual spirit of meddling, he took upon +him the functions of the civil and military authorities, convoked the +chiefs to a council, and urged them to set at liberty certain Ottawa +prisoners whom they had captured in violation of treaties. Having +settled this affair to his satisfaction, he went to Fort Frontenac, +where his brother missionary, Buisset, received him with a welcome +rendered the warmer by a story which had reached him that the Indians +had hanged Hennepin with his own cord of St. Francis. + +From Fort Frontenac he went to Montreal; and leaving his two men on a +neighboring island, that they might escape the payment of duties on a +quantity of furs which they had with them, he paddled alone towards the +town. Count Frontenac chanced to be here, and, looking from the window +of a house near the river, he saw approaching in a canoe a Recollet +father, whose appearance indicated the extremity of hard service; for +his face was worn and sunburnt, and his tattered habit of St. Francis +was abundantly patched with scraps of buffalo-skin. When at length he +recognized the long-lost Hennepin, he received him, as the father +writes, "with all the tenderness which a missionary could expect from a +person of his rank and quality." He kept him for twelve days in his own +house, and listened with interest to such of his adventures as the friar +saw fit to divulge. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S LETTERS.] + +And here we bid farewell to Father Hennepin. "Providence," he writes, +"preserved my life that I might make known my great discoveries to the +world." He soon after went to Europe, where the story of his travels +found a host of readers, but where he died at last in a deserved +obscurity.[223] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[212] The Sioux, or Dacotah, as they call themselves, were a numerous +people, separated into three great divisions, which were again +subdivided into bands. Those among whom Hennepin was a prisoner belonged +to the division known as the Issanti, Issanyati, or, as he writes it, +_Issati_, of which the principal band was the Meddewakantonwan. The +other great divisions, the Yanktons and the Tintonwans, or Tetons, lived +west of the Mississippi, extending beyond the Missouri, and ranging as +far as the Rocky Mountains. The Issanti cultivated the soil; but the +extreme western bands subsisted on the buffalo alone. The former had two +kinds of dwelling,--the _teepee_, or skin-lodge, and the bark-lodge. The +teepee, which was used by all the Sioux, consists of a covering of +dressed buffalo-hide, stretched on a conical stack of poles. The +bark-lodge was peculiar to the Eastern Sioux; and examples of it might +be seen, until within a few years, among the bands on the St. Peter's. +In its general character, it was like the Huron and Iroquois houses, but +was inferior in construction. It had a ridge roof, framed of poles, +extending from the posts which formed the sides; and the whole was +covered with elm-bark. The lodges in the villages to which Hennepin was +conducted were probably of this kind. + +The name Sioux is an abbreviation of _Nadouessioux_, an Ojibwa word, +meaning "enemies." The Ojibwas used it to designate this people, and +occasionally also the Iroquois, being at deadly war with both. + +Rev. Stephen B. Riggs, for many years a missionary among the Issanti +Sioux, says that this division consists of four distinct bands. They +ceded all their lands east of the Mississippi to the United States in +1837, and lived on the St. Peter's till driven thence in consequence of +the massacres of 1862, 1863. The Yankton Sioux consist of two bands, +which are again subdivided. The Assiniboins, or Hohays, are an offshoot +from the Yanktons, with whom they are now at war. The Tintonwan, or +Teton Sioux, forming the most western division and the largest, comprise +seven bands, and are among the bravest and fiercest tenants of the +prairie. + +The earliest French writers estimate the total number of the Sioux at +forty thousand; but this is little better than conjecture. Mr. Riggs, in +1852, placed it at about twenty-five thousand. + +[213] These baths consist of a small hut, covered closely with +buffalo-skins, into which the patient and his friends enter, carefully +closing every aperture. A pile of heated stones is placed in the middle, +and water is poured upon them, raising a dense vapor. They are still +(1868) in use among the Sioux and some other tribes. + +[214] Hennepin's notice of the falls of St. Anthony, though brief, is +sufficiently accurate. He says, in his first edition, that they are +forty or fifty feet high, but adds ten feet more in the edition of 1697. +In 1821, according to Schoolcraft, the perpendicular fall measured forty +feet. Great changes, however, have taken place here, and are still in +progress. The rock is a very soft, friable sandstone, overlaid by a +stratum of limestone; and it is crumbling with such rapidity under the +action of the water that the cataract will soon be little more than a +rapid. Other changes equally disastrous, in an artistic point of view, +are going on even more quickly. Beside the falls stands a city, which, +by an ingenious combination of the Greek and Sioux languages, has +received the name of Minneapolis, or City of the Waters, and which in +1867 contained ten thousand inhabitants, two national banks, and an +opera-house; while its rival city of St. Anthony, immediately opposite, +boasted a gigantic water-cure and a State university. In short, the +great natural beauty of the place is utterly spoiled. + +[215] Oanktayhee, the principal deity of the Sioux, was supposed to live +under these falls, though he manifested himself in the form of a +buffalo. It was he who created the earth, like the Algonquin Manabozho, +from mud brought to him in the paws of a musk-rat. Carver, in 1766, saw +an Indian throw everything he had about him into the cataract as an +offering to this deity. + +[216] In the edition of 1683. In that of 1697 he had grown to seven or +eight feet. The bank-swallows still make their nests in these cliffs, +boring easily into the soft sandstone. + +[217] Hennepin speaks of their size with astonishment, and says that the +two together would weigh twenty-five pounds. Cat-fish have been taken in +the Mississippi, weighing more than a hundred and fifty pounds. + +[218] The "Lover's Leap," or "Maiden's Rock" from which a Sioux girl, +Winona, or the "Eldest Born," is said to have thrown herself, in the +despair of disappointed affection. The story, which seems founded in +truth, will be found, not without embellishments, in Mrs. Eastman's +_Legends of the Sioux_. + +[219] The facts concerning Du Lhut have been gleaned from a variety of +contemporary documents, chiefly the letters of his enemy Duchesneau, who +always puts him in the worst light, especially in his despatch to +Seignelay of 10 Nov., 1679, where he charges both him and the governor +with carrying on an illicit trade with the English of New York. Du Lhut +himself, in a memoir dated 1685 (see Harrisse, _Bibliographie_, 176), +strongly denies these charges. Du Lhut built a trading fort on Lake +Superior, called Cananistigoyan (La Hontan), or Kamalastigouia (Perrot). +It was on the north side, at the mouth of a river entering Thunder Bay, +where Fort William now stands. In 1684 he caused two Indians, who had +murdered several Frenchmen on Lake Superior, to be shot. He displayed in +this affair great courage and coolness, undaunted by the crowd of +excited savages who surrounded him and his little band of Frenchmen. The +long letter, in which he recounts the capture and execution of the +murderers, is before me. Duchesneau makes his conduct on this occasion +the ground of a charge of rashness. In 1686 Denonville, then governor of +the colony, ordered him to fortify the Detroit; that is, the strait +between Lakes Erie and Huron. He went thither with fifty men and built a +palisade fort, which he occupied for some time. In 1687 he, together +with Tonty and Durantaye, joined Denonville against the Senecas, with a +body of Indians from the Upper Lakes. In 1689, during the panic that +followed the Iroquois invasion of Montreal, Du Lhut, with twenty-eight +Canadians, attacked twenty-two Iroquois in canoes, received their fire +without returning it, bore down upon them, killed eighteen of them, and +captured three, only one escaping. In 1695 he was in command at Fort +Frontenac. In 1697 he succeeded to the command of a company of infantry, +but was suffering wretchedly from the gout at Fort Frontenac. In 1710 +Vaudreuil, in a despatch to the minister Ponchartrain, announced his +death as occurring in the previous winter, and added the brief comment, +"c'etait un tres-honnete homme." Other contemporaries speak to the same +effect. "Mr. Dulhut, Gentilhomme Lionnois, qui a beaucoup de merite +et de capacite."--_La Hontan_, i. 103 (1703). "Le Sieur du Lut, homme +d'esprit et d'experience."--_Le Clerc_, ii. 137. Charlevoix calls him +"one of the bravest officers the King has ever had in this colony." His +name is variously spelled Du Luc, Du Lud, Du Lude, Du Lut, Du Luth, Du +Lhut. For an account of the Iroquois virgin, Tegahkouita, whose +intercession is said to have cured him of the gout, see Charlevoix, i. +572. + +On a contemporary manuscript map by the Jesuit Raffeix, representing the +routes of Marquette, La Salle, and Du Lhut, are the following words, +referring to the last-named discoverer, and interesting in connection +with Hennepin's statements: "Mr. du Lude le premier a este chez les +Sioux en 1678, et a este proche la source du Mississippi, et ensuite +vint retirer le P. Louis [_Hennepin_] qui avoit este fait prisonnier +chez les Sioux." Du Lhut here appears as the deliverer of Hennepin. One +of his men was named Pepin; hence, no doubt, the name of Lake Pepin. + +[220] _Memoir on the French Dominion in Canada, N. Y. Col. Docs._, ix. +781. + +[221] On the other hand, he sets down on his map of 1683 a mission of +the Recollets at a point north of the farthest sources of the +Mississippi, to which no white man had ever penetrated. + +[222] He says that Pierson had come among the Indians to learn their +language; that he "retained the frankness and rectitude of our country" +and "a disposition always on the side of candor and sincerity. In a +word, he seemed to me to be all that a Christian ought to be" (1697), +433. + +[223] Since the two preceding chapters were written, the letters of La +Salle have been brought to light by the researches of M. Margry. They +confirm, in nearly all points, the conclusions given above; though, as +before observed (_note_, 186), they show misstatements on the part of +Hennepin concerning his position at the outset of the expedition. La +Salle writes: "J'ay fait remonter le fleuve Colbert, nomme par les +Iroquois Gastacha, par les Outaouais Mississipy par un canot conduit par +deux de mes gens, l'un nomme Michel Accault et l'autre Picard, auxquels +le R. P. Hennepin se joignit pour ne perdre pas l'occasion de prescher +l'Evangile aux peuples qui habitent dessus et qui n'en avoient jamais +oui parler." In the same letter he recounts their voyage on the Upper +Mississippi, and their capture by the Sioux in accordance with the story +of Hennepin himself. Hennepin's assertion, that La Salle had promised to +send a number of men to meet him at the mouth of the Wisconsin, turns +out to be true. "Estans tous revenus en chasse avec les Nadouessioux +[_Sioux_] vers Ouisconsing [_Wisconsin_], le R. P. Louis Hempin +[_Hennepin_] et Picard prirent resolution de venir jusqu'a l'emboucheure +de la riviere ou j'avois promis d'envoyer de mes nouvelles, comme +j'avois fait par six hommes que les Jesuistes desbaucherent en leur +disant que le R. P. Louis et ses compagnons de voyage avoient este +tuez." + +It is clear that La Salle understood Hennepin; for, after speaking of +his journey, he adds: "J'ai cru qu'il estoit a propos de vous faire le +narre des aventures de ce canot parce que je ne doute pas qu'on en +parle; et si vous souhaitez en conferer avec le P. Louis Hempin, +Recollect, qui est repasse en France, il faut un peu le connoistre, car +il ne manquera pas d'exagerer toutes choses, c'est son caractere, et a +moy mesme il m'a escrit comme s'il eust este tout pres d'estre brusle, +quoiqu'il n'en ait pas este seulement en danger; mais il croit qu'il luy +est honorable de le faire de la sorte, et _il parle plus conformement a +ce qu'il veut qu'a ce qu'il scait_."--_Lettre de la Salle, 22 Aout, +1682_ (1681?), Margry, ii. 259. + +On his return to France, Hennepin got hold of the manuscript, _Relation +des Decouvertes_, compiled for the government from La Salle's letters, +and, as already observed, made very free use of it in the first edition +of his book, printed in 1683. In 1699 he wished to return to Canada; +but, in a letter of that year, Louis XIV. orders the governor to seize +him, should he appear, and send him prisoner to Rochefort. This seems to +have been in consequence of his renouncing the service of the French +crown, and dedicating his edition of 1697 to William III. of England. + +More than twenty editions of Hennepin's travels appeared, in French, +English, Dutch, German, Italian, and Spanish. Most of them include the +mendacious narrative of the pretended descent of the Mississippi. For a +list of them, see _Hist. Mag._, i. 346; ii. 24. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +1681. + +LA SALLE BEGINS ANEW. + + His Constancy; his Plans; his Savage Allies; he becomes + Snow-blind.--Negotiations.--Grand Council.--La Salle's + Oratory.--Meeting with Tonty.--Preparation.--Departure. + + +In tracing the adventures of Tonty and the rovings of Hennepin, we have +lost sight of La Salle, the pivot of the enterprise. Returning from the +desolation and horror in the valley of the Illinois, he had spent the +winter at Fort Miami, on the St. Joseph, by the borders of Lake +Michigan. Here he might have brooded on the redoubled ruin that had +befallen him,--the desponding friends, the exulting foes; the wasted +energies, the crushing load of debt, the stormy past, the black and +lowering future. But his mind was of a different temper. He had no +thought but to grapple with adversity, and out of the fragments of his +ruin to build up the fabric of success. + +He would not recoil; but he modified his plans to meet the new +contingency. His white enemies had found, or rather perhaps had made, a +savage ally in the Iroquois. Their incursions must be stopped, or his +enterprise would come to nought; and he thought he saw the means by +which this new danger could be converted into a source of strength. The +tribes of the West, threatened by the common enemy, might be taught to +forget their mutual animosities and join in a defensive league, with La +Salle at its head. They might be colonized around his fort in the valley +of the Illinois, where in the shadow of the French flag, and with the +aid of French allies, they could hold the Iroquois in check, and acquire +in some measure the arts of a settled life. The Franciscan friars could +teach them the Faith; and La Salle and his associates could supply them +with goods, in exchange for the vast harvest of furs which their hunters +could gather in these boundless wilds. Meanwhile, he would seek out the +mouth of the Mississippi; and the furs gathered at his colony in the +Illinois would then find a ready passage to the markets of the world. +Thus might this ancient slaughter-field of warring savages be redeemed +to civilization and Christianity; and a stable settlement, half-feudal, +half-commercial, grow up in the heart of the western wilderness. This +plan was but a part of the original scheme of his enterprise, adapted to +new and unexpected circumstances; and he now set himself to its +execution with his usual vigor, joined to an address which, when dealing +with Indians, never failed him. + +[Sidenote: INDIAN FRIENDS.] + +There were allies close at hand. Near Fort Miami were the huts of +twenty-five or thirty savages, exiles from their homes, and strangers +in this western world. Several of the English colonies, from Virginia to +Maine, had of late years been harassed by Indian wars; and the Puritans +of New England, above all, had been scourged by the deadly outbreak of +King Philip's war. Those engaged in it had paid a bitter price for their +brief triumphs. A band of refugees, chiefly Abenakis and Mohegans, +driven from their native seats, had roamed into these distant wilds, and +were wintering in the friendly neighborhood of the French. La Salle soon +won them over to his interests. One of their number was the Mohegan +hunter, who for two years had faithfully followed his fortunes, and who +had been four years in the West. He is described as a prudent and +discreet young man, in whom La Salle had great confidence, and who could +make himself understood in several western languages, belonging, like +his own, to the great Algonquin tongue. This devoted henchman proved an +efficient mediator with his countrymen. The New-England Indians, with +one voice, promised to follow La Salle, asking no recompense but to call +him their chief, and yield to him the love and admiration which he +rarely failed to command from this hero-worshipping race. + +New allies soon appeared. A Shawanoe chief from the valley of the Ohio, +whose following embraced a hundred and fifty warriors, came to ask the +protection of the French against the all-destroying Iroquois. "The +Shawanoes are too distant," was La Salle's reply; "but let them come to +me at the Illinois, and they shall be safe." The chief promised to join +him in the autumn, at Fort Miami, with all his band. But, more important +than all, the consent and co-operation of the Illinois must be gained; +and the Miamis, their neighbors and of late their enemies, must be +taught the folly of their league with the Iroquois, and the necessity of +joining in the new confederation. Of late, they had been made to see the +perfidy of their dangerous allies. A band of the Iroquois, returning +from the slaughter of the Tamaroa Illinois, had met and murdered a band +of Miamis on the Ohio, and had not only refused satisfaction, but had +intrenched themselves in three rude forts of trees and brushwood in the +heart of the Miami country. The moment was favorable for negotiating; +but, first, La Salle wished to open a communication with the Illinois, +some of whom had begun to return to the country they had abandoned. With +this view, and also, it seems, to procure provisions, he set out on the +first of March, with his lieutenant La Forest, and fifteen men. + +The country was sheeted in snow, and the party journeyed on snow-shoes; +but when they reached the open prairies, the white expanse glared in the +sun with so dazzling a brightness that La Salle and several of the men +became snow-blind. They stopped and encamped under the edge of a forest; +and here La Salle remained in darkness for three days, suffering extreme +pain. Meanwhile, he sent forward La Forest and most of the men, keeping +with him his old attendant Hunaut. Going out in quest of pine-leaves,--a +decoction of which was supposed to be useful in cases of +snow-blindness,--this man discovered the fresh tracks of Indians, +followed them, and found a camp of Outagamies, or Foxes, from the +neighborhood of Green Bay. From them he heard welcome news. They told +him that Tonty was safe among the Pottawattamies, and that Hennepin had +passed through their country on his return from among the Sioux.[224] + +[Sidenote: ILLINOIS ALLIES.] + +A thaw took place; the snow melted rapidly; the rivers were opened; the +blind men began to recover; and launching the canoes which they had +dragged after them, the party pursued their way by water. They soon met +a band of Illinois. La Salle gave them presents, condoled with them on +their losses, and urged them to make peace and alliance with the Miamis. +Thus, he said, they could set the Iroquois at defiance; for he himself, +with his Frenchmen and his Indian friends, would make his abode among +them, supply them with goods, and aid them to defend themselves. They +listened, well pleased, promised to carry his message to their +countrymen, and furnished him with a large supply of corn.[225] +Meanwhile he had rejoined La Forest, whom he now sent to +Michilimackinac to await Tonty, and tell him to remain there till he, La +Salle, should arrive. + +Having thus accomplished the objects of his journey, he returned to Fort +Miami, whence he soon after ascended the St. Joseph to the village of +the Miami Indians, on the portage, at the head of the Kankakee. Here he +found unwelcome guests. These were three Iroquois warriors, who had been +for some time in the place, and who, as he was told, had demeaned +themselves with the insolence of conquerors, and spoken of the French +with the utmost contempt. He hastened to confront them, rebuked and +menaced them, and told them that now, when he was present, they dared +not repeat the calumnies which they had uttered in his absence. They +stood abashed and confounded, and during the following night secretly +left the town and fled. The effect was prodigious on the minds of the +Miamis, when they saw that La Salle, backed by ten Frenchmen, could +command from their arrogant visitors a respect which they, with their +hundreds of warriors, had wholly failed to inspire. Here, at the outset, +was an augury full of promise for the approaching negotiations. + +There were other strangers in the town,--a band of eastern Indians, more +numerous than those who had wintered at the fort. The greater number +were from Rhode Island, including, probably, some of King Philip's +warriors; others were from New York, and others again from Virginia. La +Salle called them to a council, promised them a new home in the West +under the protection of the Great King, with rich lands, an abundance of +game, and French traders to supply them with the goods which they had +once received from the English. Let them but help him to make peace +between the Miamis and the Illinois, and he would insure for them a +future of prosperity and safety. They listened with open ears, and +promised their aid in the work of peace. + +[Sidenote: GRAND COUNCIL.] + +On the next morning, the Miamis were called to a grand council. It was +held in the lodge of their chief, from which the mats were removed, that +the crowd without might hear what was said. La Salle rose and harangued +the concourse. Few men were so skilled in the arts of forest rhetoric +and diplomacy. After the Indian mode, he was, to follow his chroniclers, +"the greatest orator in North America."[226] He began with a gift of +tobacco, to clear the brains of his auditory; next, for he had brought a +canoe-load of presents to support his eloquence, he gave them cloth to +cover their dead, coats to dress them, hatchets to build a grand +scaffold in their honor, and beads, bells, and trinkets of all sorts, to +decorate their relatives at a grand funeral feast. All this was mere +metaphor. The living, while appropriating the gifts to their own use, +were pleased at the compliment offered to their dead; and their delight +redoubled as the orator proceeded. One of their great chiefs had lately +been killed; and La Salle, after a eulogy of the departed, declared that +he would now raise him to life again; that is, that he would assume his +name and give support to his squaws and children. This flattering +announcement drew forth an outburst of applause; and when, to confirm +his words, his attendants placed before them a huge pile of coats, +shirts, and hunting-knives, the whole assembly exploded in yelps of +admiration. + +Now came the climax of the harangue, introduced by a further present of +six guns:-- + +"He who is my master, and the master of all this country, is a mighty +chief, feared by the whole world; but he loves peace, and the words of +his lips are for good alone. He is called the King of France, and he is +the mightiest among the chiefs beyond the great water. His goodness +reaches even to your dead, and his subjects come among you to raise them +up to life. But it is his will to preserve the life he has given; it is +his will that you should obey his laws, and make no war without the +leave of Onontio, who commands in his name at Quebec, and who loves all +the nations alike, because such is the will of the Great King. You +ought, then, to live at peace with your neighbors, and above all with +the Illinois. You have had causes of quarrel with them; but their defeat +has avenged you. Though they are still strong, they wish to make peace +with you. Be content with the glory of having obliged them to ask for +it. You have an interest in preserving them; since, if the Iroquois +destroy them, they will next destroy you. Let us all obey the Great +King, and live together in peace, under his protection. Be of my mind, +and use these guns that I have given you, not to make war, but only to +hunt and to defend yourselves."[227] + +[Sidenote: THE CHIEFS REPLY.] + +So saying, he gave two belts of wampum to confirm his words; and the +assembly dissolved. On the following day, the chiefs again convoked it, +and made their reply in form. It was all that La Salle could have +wished. "The Illinois is our brother, because he is the son of our +Father, the Great King." "We make you the master of our beaver and our +lands, of our minds and our bodies." "We cannot wonder that our brothers +from the East wish to live with you. We should have wished so too, if we +had known what a blessing it is to be the children of the Great King." +The rest of this auspicious day was passed in feasts and dances, in +which La Salle and his Frenchmen all bore part. His new scheme was +hopefully begun. It remained to achieve the enterprise, twice defeated, +of the discovery of the mouth of the Mississippi,--that vital condition +of his triumph, without which all other success was meaningless and +vain. + +To this end he must return to Canada, appease his creditors, and collect +his scattered resources. Towards the end of May he set out in canoes +from Fort Miami, and reached Michilimackinac after a prosperous voyage. +Here, to his great joy, he found Tonty and Zenobe Membre, who had lately +arrived from Green Bay. The meeting was one at which even his stoic +nature must have melted. Each had for the other a tale of disaster; but +when La Salle recounted the long succession of his reverses, it was with +the tranquil tone and cheerful look of one who relates the incidents of +an ordinary journey. Membre looked on him with admiration. "Any one +else," he says, "would have thrown up his hand and abandoned the +enterprise; but, far from this, with a firmness and constancy that never +had its equal, I saw him more resolved than ever to continue his work +and push forward his discovery."[228] + +Without loss of time they embarked together for Fort Frontenac, paddled +their canoes a thousand miles, and safely reached their destination. +Here, in this third beginning of his enterprise, La Salle found himself +beset with embarrassments. Not only was he burdened with the fruitless +costs of his two former efforts, but the heavy debts which he had +incurred in building and maintaining Fort Frontenac had not been wholly +paid. The fort and the seigniory were already deeply mortgaged; yet +through the influence of Count Frontenac, the assistance of his +secretary Barrois, a consummate man of business, and the support of a +wealthy relative, he found means to appease his creditors and even to +gain fresh advances. To this end, however, he was forced to part with a +portion of his monopolies. Having first made his will at Montreal, in +favor of a cousin who had befriended him,[229] he mustered his men, and +once more set forth, resolved to trust no more to agents, but to lead on +his followers, in a united body, under his own personal command.[230] + +[Sidenote: THE TORONTO PORTAGE.] + +At the beginning of autumn he was at Toronto, where the long and +difficult portage to Lake Simcoe detained him a fortnight. He spent a +part of it in writing an account of what had lately occurred to a +correspondent in France, and he closes his letter thus: "This is all I +can tell you this year. I have a hundred things to write, but you could +not believe how hard it is to do it among Indians. The canoes and their +lading must be got over the portage, and I must speak to them +continually and bear all their importunity, or else they will do nothing +I want. I hope to write more at leisure next year, and tell you the end +of this business, which I hope will turn out well: for I have M. de +Tonty, who is full of zeal; thirty Frenchmen, all good men, without +reckoning such as I cannot trust; and more than a hundred Indians, some +of them Shawanoes, and others from New England, all of whom know how to +use guns." + +It was October before he reached Lake Huron. Day after day and week +after week the heavy-laden canoes crept on along the lonely wilderness +shores, by the monotonous ranks of bristling moss-bearded firs; lake and +forest, forest and lake; a dreary scene haunted with yet more dreary +memories,--disasters, sorrows, and deferred hopes; time, strength, and +wealth spent in vain; a ruinous past and a doubtful future; slander, +obloquy, and hate. With unmoved heart, the patient voyager held his +course, and drew up his canoes at last on the beach at Fort Miami. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[224] _Relation des Decouvertes._ Compare _Lettre de La Salle_ (Margry, +ii. 144). + +[225] This seems to have been taken from the secret repositories, or +_caches_, of the ruined town of the Illinois. + +[226] "En ce genre, il etoit le plus grand orateur de l'Amerique +Septentrionale."--_Relation des Decouvertes._ + +[227] Translated from the _Relation_, where these councils are reported +at great length. + +[228] Membre in Le Clerc, ii. 208. Tonty, in his memoir of 1693, speaks +of the joy of La Salle at the meeting. The _Relation_, usually very +accurate, says, erroneously, that Tonty had gone to Fort Frontenac. La +Forest had gone thither, not long before La Salle's arrival. + +[229] _Copie du Testament du deffunt Sr. de la Salle, 11 Aout, 1681._ +The relative was Francois Plet, to whom he was deeply in debt. + +[230] "On apprendra a la fin de cette annee, 1682, le succes de la +decouverte qu'il etoit resolu d'achever, au plus tard le printemps +dernier ou de perir en y travaillant. Tant de traverses et de malheurs +toujours arrives en son absence l'ont fait resoudre a ne se fier plus a +personne et a conduire lui-meme tout son monde, tout son equipage, et +toute son entreprise, de laquelle il esperoit une heureuse conclusion." + +The above is a part of the closing paragraph of the _Relation des +Decouvertes_, so often cited. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +1681-1682. + +SUCCESS OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--The Chicago Portage.--Descent of the + Mississippi.--The Lost Hunter.--The Arkansas.--The Taensas.--The + Natchez.--Hostility.--The Mouth of the Mississippi.--Louis XIV. + proclaimed Sovereign of the Great West. + + +The season was far advanced. On the bare limbs of the forest hung a few +withered remnants of its gay autumnal livery; and the smoke crept upward +through the sullen November air from the squalid wigwams of La Salle's +Abenaki and Mohegan allies. These, his new friends, were savages whose +midnight yells had startled the border hamlets of New England; who had +danced around Puritan scalps, and whom Puritan imaginations painted as +incarnate fiends. La Salle chose eighteen of them, whom he added to the +twenty-three Frenchmen who remained with him, some of the rest having +deserted and others lagged behind. The Indians insisted on taking their +squaws with them. These were ten in number, besides three children; and +thus the expedition included fifty-four persons, of whom some were +useless, and others a burden. + +On the 21st of December, Tonty and Membre set out from Fort Miami with +some of the party in six canoes, and crossed to the little river +Chicago.[231] La Salle, with the rest of the men, joined them a few days +later. It was the dead of winter, and the streams were frozen. They made +sledges, placed on them the canoes, the baggage, and a disabled +Frenchman; crossed from the Chicago to the northern branch of the +Illinois, and filed in a long procession down its frozen course. They +reached the site of the great Illinois village, found it tenantless, and +continued their journey, still dragging their canoes, till at length +they reached open water below Lake Peoria. + +[Sidenote: PRUDHOMME.] + +La Salle had abandoned for a time his original plan of building a vessel +for the navigation of the Mississippi. Bitter experience had taught him +the difficulty of the attempt, and he resolved to trust to his canoes +alone. They embarked again, floating prosperously down between the +leafless forests that flanked the tranquil river; till, on the sixth of +February, they issued upon the majestic bosom of the Mississippi. Here, +for the time, their progress was stopped; for the river was full of +floating ice. La Salle's Indians, too, had lagged behind; but within a +week all had arrived, the navigation was once more free, and they +resumed their course. Towards evening they saw on their right the mouth +of a great river; and the clear current was invaded by the headlong +torrent of the Missouri, opaque with mud. They built their camp-fires in +the neighboring forest; and at daylight, embarking anew on the dark and +mighty stream, drifted swiftly down towards unknown destinies. They +passed a deserted town of the Tamaroas; saw, three days after, the mouth +of the Ohio;[232] and, gliding by the wastes of bordering swamp, landed +on the twenty-fourth of February near the Third Chickasaw Bluffs.[233] +They encamped, and the hunters went out for game. All returned, +excepting Pierre Prudhomme; and as the others had seen fresh tracks of +Indians, La Salle feared that he was killed. While some of his followers +built a small stockade fort on a high bluff[234] by the river, others +ranged the woods in pursuit of the missing hunter. After six days of +ceaseless and fruitless search, they met two Chickasaw Indians in the +forest; and through them La Salle sent presents and peace-messages to +that warlike people, whose villages were a few days' journey distant. +Several days later Prudhomme was found, and brought into the camp, +half-dead. He had lost his way while hunting; and to console him for his +woes La Salle christened the newly built fort with his name, and left +him, with a few others, in charge of it. + +Again they embarked; and with every stage of their adventurous progress +the mystery of this vast New World was more and more unveiled. More and +more they entered the realms of spring. The hazy sunlight, the warm and +drowsy air, the tender foliage, the opening flowers, betokened the +reviving life of Nature. For several days more they followed the +writhings of the great river on its tortuous course through wastes of +swamp and cane-brake, till on the thirteenth of March[235] they found +themselves wrapped in a thick fog. Neither shore was visible; but they +heard on the right the booming of an Indian drum and the shrill outcries +of the war-dance. La Salle at once crossed to the opposite side, where, +in less than an hour, his men threw up a rude fort of felled trees. +Meanwhile the fog cleared; and from the farther bank the astonished +Indians saw the strange visitors at their work. Some of the French +advanced to the edge of the water, and beckoned them to come over. +Several of them approached, in a wooden canoe, to within the distance of +a gun-shot. La Salle displayed the calumet, and sent a Frenchman to meet +them. He was well received; and the friendly mood of the Indians being +now apparent, the whole party crossed the river. + +[Sidenote: THE ARKANSAS.] + +On landing, they found themselves at a town of the Kappa band of the +Arkansas, a people dwelling near the mouth of the river which bears +their name. "The whole village," writes Membre to his superior, "came +down to the shore to meet us, except the women, who had run off. I +cannot tell you the civility and kindness we received from these +barbarians, who brought us poles to make huts, supplied us with firewood +during the three days we were among them, and took turns in feasting us. +But, my Reverend Father, this gives no idea of the good qualities of +these savages, who are gay, civil, and free-hearted. The young men, +though the most alert and spirited we had seen, are nevertheless so +modest that not one of them would take the liberty to enter our hut, but +all stood quietly at the door. They are so well formed that we were in +admiration at their beauty. We did not lose the value of a pin while we +were among them." + +Various were the dances and ceremonies with which they entertained the +strangers, who, on their part, responded with a solemnity which their +hosts would have liked less if they had understood it better. La Salle +and Tonty, at the head of their followers, marched to the open area in +the midst of the village. Here, to the admiration of the gazing crowd of +warriors, women, and children, a cross was raised bearing the arms of +France. Membre, in canonicals, sang a hymn; the men shouted _Vive le +Roi_; and La Salle, in the King's name, took formal possession of the +country.[236] The friar, not, he flatters himself, without success, +labored to expound by signs the mysteries of the Faith; while La Salle, +by methods equally satisfactory, drew from the chief an acknowledgement +of fealty to Louis XIV.[237] + +[Sidenote: THE TAENSAS.] + +After touching at several other towns of this people, the voyagers +resumed their course, guided by two of the Arkansas; passed the sites, +since become historic, of Vicksburg and Grand Gulf; and, about three +hundred miles below the Arkansas, stopped by the edge of a swamp on the +western side of the river.[238] Here, as their two guides told them, +was the path to the great town of the Taensas. Tonty and Membre were +sent to visit it. They and their men shouldered their birch canoe +through the swamp, and launched it on a lake which had once formed a +portion of the channel of the river. In two hours, they reached the +town; and Tonty gazed at it with astonishment. He had seen nothing like +it in America,--large square dwellings, built of sun-baked mud mixed +with straw, arched over with a dome-shaped roof of canes, and placed in +regular order around an open area. Two of them were larger and better +than the rest. One was the lodge of the chief; the other was the temple, +or house of the Sun. They entered the former, and found a single room, +forty feet square, where, in the dim light,--for there was no opening +but the door,--the chief sat awaiting them on a sort of bedstead, three +of his wives at his side; while sixty old men, wrapped in white cloaks +woven of mulberry-bark, formed his divan. When he spoke, his wives +howled to do him honor; and the assembled councillors listened with the +reverence due to a potentate for whom, at his death, a hundred victims +were to be sacrificed. He received the visitors graciously, and +joyfully accepted the gifts which Tonty laid before him.[239] This +interview over, the Frenchmen repaired to the temple, wherein were kept +the bones of the departed chiefs. In construction, it was much like the +royal dwelling. Over it were rude wooden figures, representing three +eagles turned towards the east. A strong mud wall surrounded it, planted +with stakes, on which were stuck the skulls of enemies sacrificed to the +Sun; while before the door was a block of wood, on which lay a large +shell surrounded with the braided hair of the victims. The interior was +rude as a barn, dimly lighted from the doorway, and full of smoke. There +was a structure in the middle which Membre thinks was a kind of altar; +and before it burned a perpetual fire, fed with three logs laid end to +end, and watched by two old men devoted to this sacred office. There was +a mysterious recess, too, which the strangers were forbidden to explore, +but which, as Tonty was told, contained the riches of the nation, +consisting of pearls from the Gulf, and trinkets obtained, probably +through other tribes, from the Spaniards and other Europeans. + +The chief condescended to visit La Salle at his camp,--a favor which he +would by no means have granted, had the visitors been Indians. A master +of ceremonies and six attendants preceded him, to clear the path and +prepare the place of meeting. When all was ready, he was seen advancing, +clothed in a white robe and preceded by two men bearing white fans, +while a third displayed a disk of burnished copper,--doubtless to +represent the Sun, his ancestor, or, as others will have it, his elder +brother. His aspect was marvellously grave, and he and La Salle met with +gestures of ceremonious courtesy. The interview was very friendly; and +the chief returned well pleased with the gifts which his entertainer +bestowed on him, and which, indeed, had been the principal motive of his +visit. + +[Sidenote: THE NATCHEZ.] + +On the next morning, as they descended the river, they saw a wooden +canoe full of Indians; and Tonty gave chase. He had nearly overtaken it, +when more than a hundred men appeared suddenly on the shore, with bows +bent to defend their countrymen. La Salle called out to Tonty to +withdraw. He obeyed; and the whole party encamped on the opposite bank. +Tonty offered to cross the river with a peace-pipe, and set out +accordingly with a small party of men. When he landed, the Indians made +signs of friendship by joining their hands,--a proceeding by which +Tonty, having but one hand, was somewhat embarrassed; but he directed +his men to respond in his stead. La Salle and Membre now joined him, and +went with the Indians to their village, three leagues distant. Here they +spent the night. "The Sieur de la Salle," writes Membre, "whose very +air, engaging manners, tact, and address attract love and respect +alike, produced such an effect on the hearts of these people that they +did not know how to treat us well enough."[240] + +The Indians of this village were the Natchez; and their chief was +brother of the great chief, or Sun, of the whole nation. His town was +several leagues distant, near the site of the city of Natchez; and +thither the French repaired to visit him. They saw what they had already +seen among the Taensas,--a religious and political despotism, a +privileged caste descended from the sun, a temple, and a sacred +fire.[241] La Salle planted a large cross, with the arms of France +attached, in the midst of the town; while the inhabitants looked on with +a satisfaction which they would hardly have displayed had they +understood the meaning of the act. + +[Sidenote: HOSTILITY.] + +The French next visited the Coroas, at their village two leagues below; +and here they found a reception no less auspicious. On the thirty-first +of March, as they approached Red River, they passed in the fog a town of +the Oumas, and three days later discovered a party of fishermen, in +wooden canoes, among the canes along the margin of the water. They fled +at sight of the Frenchmen. La Salle sent men to reconnoitre, who, as +they struggled through the marsh, were greeted with a shower of arrows; +while from the neighboring village of the Quinipissas,[242] invisible +behind the cane-brake, they heard the sound of an Indian drum and the +whoops of the mustering warriors. La Salle, anxious to keep the peace +with all the tribes along the river, recalled his men, and pursued his +voyage. A few leagues below they saw a cluster of Indian lodges on the +left bank, apparently void of inhabitants. They landed, and found three +of them filled with corpses. It was a village of the Tangibao, sacked by +their enemies only a few days before.[243] + +And now they neared their journey's end. On the sixth of April the river +divided itself into three broad channels. La Salle followed that of the +west, and Dautray that of the east; while Tonty took the middle passage. +As he drifted down the turbid current, between the low and marshy +shores, the brackish water changed to brine, and the breeze grew fresh +with the salt breath of the sea. Then the broad bosom of the great Gulf +opened on his sight, tossing its restless billows, limitless, voiceless, +lonely as when born of chaos, without a sail, without a sign of life. + +La Salle, in a canoe, coasted the marshy borders of the sea; and then +the reunited parties assembled on a spot of dry ground, a short distance +above the mouth of the river. Here a column was made ready, bearing the +arms of France, and inscribed with the words, "Louis Le Grand, Roy De +France Et De Navarre, Regne; Le Neuvieme Avril, 1682." + +The Frenchmen were mustered under arms; and while the New England +Indians and their squaws looked on in wondering silence, they chanted +the _Te Deum_, the _Exaudiat_, and the _Domine salvum fac Regem_. Then, +amid volleys of musketry and shouts of _Vive le Roi_, La Salle planted +the column in its place, and, standing near it, proclaimed in a loud +voice,-- + +[Sidenote: POSSESSION TAKEN.] + +"In the name of the most high, mighty, invincible, and victorious +Prince, Louis the Great, by the grace of God King of France and of +Navarre, Fourteenth of that name, I, this ninth day of April, one +thousand six hundred and eighty-two, in virtue of the commission of his +Majesty, which I hold in my hand, and which may be seen by all whom it +may concern, have taken, and do now take, in the name of his Majesty and +of his successors to the crown, possession of this country of Louisiana, +the seas, harbors, ports, bays, adjacent straits, and all the nations, +peoples, provinces, cities, towns, villages, mines, minerals, fisheries, +streams, and rivers, within the extent of the said Louisiana, from the +mouth of the great river St. Louis, otherwise called the Ohio, ... as +also along the river Colbert, or Mississippi, and the rivers which +discharge themselves thereinto, from its source beyond the country of +the Nadouessioux ... as far as its mouth at the sea, or Gulf of Mexico, +and also to the mouth of the River of Palms, upon the assurance we have +had from the natives of these countries that we are the first Europeans +who have descended or ascended the said river Colbert; hereby protesting +against all who may hereafter undertake to invade any or all of these +aforesaid countries, peoples, or lands, to the prejudice of the rights +of his Majesty, acquired by the consent of the nations dwelling herein. +Of which, and of all else that is needful, I hereby take to witness +those who hear me, and demand an act of the notary here present."[244] + +Shouts of _Vive le Roi_ and volleys of musketry responded to his words. +Then a cross was planted beside the column, and a leaden plate buried +near it, bearing the arms of France, with a Latin inscription, +_Ludovicus Magnus regnat_. The weather-beaten voyagers joined their +voices in the grand hymn of the _Vexilla Regis_:-- + + "The banners of Heaven's King advance, + The mystery of the Cross shines forth;" + +and renewed shouts of _Vive le Roi_ closed the ceremony. + +On that day, the realm of France received on parchment a stupendous +accession. The fertile plains of Texas; the vast basin of the +Mississippi, from its frozen northern springs to the sultry borders of +the Gulf; from the woody ridges of the Alleghanies to the bare peaks of +the Rocky Mountains,--a region of savannas and forests, sun-cracked +deserts, and grassy prairies, watered by a thousand rivers, ranged by a +thousand warlike tribes, passed beneath the sceptre of the Sultan of +Versailles; and all by virtue of a feeble human voice, inaudible at half +a mile. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[231] La Salle, _Relation de la Decouverte_, 1682, in Thomassy, +_Geologie Pratique de la Louisiane 9; Lettre du Pere Zenobe Membre, 3 +Juin, 1682; Ibid., 14 Aout, 1682_; Membre in Le Clerc, ii. 214; Tonty, +1684, 1693; _Proces Verbal de la Prise de Possession de la Louisiane, +Feuilles detachees d'une Lettre de La Salle_ (Margry, ii. 164); _Recit +de Nicolas de la Salle_ (Ibid., i. 547). + +The narrative ascribed to Membre and published by Le Clerc is based on +the document preserved in the Archives Scientifiques de la Marine, +entitled _Relation de la Decouverte de l'Embouchure de la Riviere +Mississippi faite par le Sieur de la Salle, l'annee passee_, 1682. The +writer of the narrative has used it very freely, copying the greater +part verbatim, with occasional additions of a kind which seem to +indicate that he had taken part in the expedition. The _Relation de la +Decouverte_, though written in the third person, is the official report +of the discovery made by La Salle, or perhaps for him by Membre. + +[232] Called by Membre the Ouabache (Wabash). + +[233] La Salle, _Relation de la Decouverte de l'Embouchure, etc._; +Thomassy, 10. Membre gives the same date; but the _Proces Verbal_ makes +it the twenty-sixth. + +[234] Gravier, in his letter of 16 Feb., 1701, says that he encamped +near a "great bluff of stone, called Fort Prudhomme, because M. de La +Salle, going on his discovery, intrenched himself here with his party, +fearing that Prudhomme, who had lost himself in the woods, had been +killed by the Indians, and that he himself would be attacked." + +[235] La Salle, _Relation_; Thomassy, 11. + +[236] _Proces Verbal de la Prise de Possession du Pays des Arkansas, 14 +Mars, 1682._ + +[237] The nation of the Akanseas, Alkansas, or Arkansas, dwelt on the +west bank of the Mississippi, near the mouth of the Arkansas. They were +divided into four tribes, living for the most part in separate villages. +Those first visited by La Salle were the Kappas, or Quapaws, a remnant +of whom still subsists. The others were the Topingas, or Tongengas; the +Torimans; and the Osotouoy, or Sauthouis. According to Charlevoix, who +saw them in 1721, they were regarded as the tallest and best-formed +Indians in America, and were known as _les Beaux Hommes_. Gravier says +that they once lived on the Ohio. + +[238] In Tensas County, Louisiana. Tonty's estimates of distance are +here much too low. They seem to be founded on observations of latitude, +without reckoning the windings of the river. It may interest sportsmen +to know that the party killed several large alligators, on their way. +Membre is much astonished that such monsters should be born of eggs like +chickens. + +[239] Tonty, 1684, 1693. In the spurious narrative, published in Tonty's +name, the account is embellished and exaggerated. Compare Membre in Le +Clerc, ii. 227. La Salle's statements in the _Relation_ of 1682 +(Thomassy, 12) sustain those of Tonty. + +[240] Membre in Le Clerc, ii. 232. + +[241] The Natchez and the Taensas, whose habits and customs were +similar, did not, in their social organization, differ radically from +other Indians. The same principle of clanship, or _totemship_, so widely +spread, existed in full force among them, combined with their religious +ideas, and developed into forms of which no other example, equally +distinct, is to be found. (For Indian clanship, see "The Jesuits in +North America," _Introduction_.) Among the Natchez and Taensas, the +principal clan formed a ruling caste; and its chiefs had the attributes +of demi-gods. As descent was through the female, the chief's son never +succeeded him, but the son of one of his sisters; and as she, by the +usual totemic law, was forced to marry in another clan,--that is, to +marry a common mortal,--her husband, though the destined father of a +demi-god, was treated by her as little better than a slave. She might +kill him, if he proved unfaithful; but he was forced to submit to her +infidelities in silence. + +The customs of the Natchez have been described by Du Pratz, Le Petit, +Penecaut, and others. Charlevoix visited their temple in 1721, and found +it in a somewhat shabby condition. At this time, the Taensas were +extinct. In 1729 the Natchez, enraged by the arbitrary conduct of a +French commandant, massacred the neighboring settlers, and were in +consequence expelled from their country and nearly destroyed. A few +still survive, incorporated with the Creeks; but they have lost their +peculiar customs. + +[242] In St. Charles County, on the left bank, not far above New +Orleans. + +[243] Hennepin uses this incident, as well as most of those which have +preceded it, in making up the story of his pretended voyage to the Gulf. + +[244] In the passages omitted above, for the sake of brevity, the Ohio +is mentioned as being called also the _Olighin_-(Alleghany) _Sipou_, and +_Chukagoua_; and La Salle declares that he takes possession of the +country with the consent of the nations dwelling in it, of whom he names +the Chaouanons (Shawanoes), Kious, or Nadouessious (Sioux), Chikachas +(Chickasaws), Motantees (?), Illinois, Mitchigamias, Arkansas, Natchez, +and Koroas. This alleged consent is, of course, mere farce. If there +could be any doubt as to the meaning of the words of La Salle, as +recorded in the _Proces Verbal de la Prise de Possession de la +Louisiane_, it would be set at rest by Le Clerc, who says: "Le Sieur de +la Salle prit au nom de sa Majeste possession de ce fleuve, _de toutes +les rivieres qui y entrent, et de tous les pays qu'elles arrosent_." +These words are borrowed from the report of La Salle (see Thomassy, 14). +A copy of the original _Proces Verbal_ is before me. It bears the name +of Jacques de la Metairie, Notary of Fort Frontenac, who was one of the +party. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +1682, 1683. + +ST. LOUIS OF THE ILLINOIS. + + Louisiana.--Illness of La Salle: his Colony on the Illinois.--Fort + St. Louis.--Recall of Frontenac.--Le Febvre de la Barre.--Critical + Position of la Salle.--Hostility Of the New Governor.--Triumph of + the Adverse Faction.--La Salle sails for France. + + +Louisiana was the name bestowed by La Salle on the new domain of the +French crown. The rule of the Bourbons in the West is a memory of the +past, but the name of the Great King still survives in a narrow corner +of their lost empire. The Louisiana of to-day is but a single State of +the American republic. The Louisiana of La Salle stretched from the +Alleghanies to the Rocky Mountains; from the Rio Grande and the Gulf to +the farthest springs of the Missouri.[245] + +La Salle had written his name in history; but his hard-earned success +was but the prelude of a harder task. Herculean labors lay before him, +if he would realize the schemes with which his brain was pregnant. Bent +on accomplishing them, he retraced his course, and urged his canoes +upward against the muddy current. The party were famished. They had +little to subsist on but the flesh of alligators. When they reached the +Quinipissas, who had proved hostile on their way down, they resolved to +risk an interview with them, in the hope of obtaining food. The +treacherous savages dissembled, brought them corn, and on the following +night made an attack upon them, but met with a bloody repulse. The party +next revisited the Coroas, and found an unfavorable change in their +disposition towards them. They feasted them, indeed, but during the +repast surrounded them with an overwhelming force of warriors. The +French, however, kept so well on their guard, that their entertainers +dared not make an attack, and suffered them to depart unmolested.[246] + +[Sidenote: ILLNESS OF LA SALLE.] + +And now, in a career of unwonted success and anticipated triumph, La +Salle was arrested by a foe against which the boldest heart avails +nothing. As he ascended the Mississippi, he was seized by a dangerous +illness. Unable to proceed, he sent forward Tonty to Michilimackinac, +whence, after despatching news of their discovery to Canada, he was to +return to the Illinois. La Salle himself lay helpless at Fort Prudhomme, +the palisade work which his men had built at the Chickasaw Bluffs on +their way down. Father Zenobe Membre attended him; and at the end of +July he was once more in a condition to advance by slow movements +towards Fort Miami, which he reached in about a month. + +In September he rejoined Tonty at Michilimackinac, and in the following +month wrote to a friend in France: "Though my discovery is made, and I +have descended the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico, I cannot send you +this year either an account of my journey or a map. On the way back I +was attacked by a deadly disease, which kept me in danger of my life for +forty days, and left me so weak that I could think of nothing for four +months after. I have hardly strength enough now to write my letters, and +the season is so far advanced that I cannot detain a single day this +canoe which I send expressly to carry them. If I had not feared being +forced to winter on the way, I should have tried to get to Quebec to +meet the new governor, if it is true that we are to have one; but in my +present condition this would be an act of suicide, on account of the bad +nourishment I should have all winter in case the snow and ice stopped me +on the way. Besides, my presence is absolutely necessary in the place to +which I am going. I pray you, my dear sir, to give me once more all the +help you can. I have great enemies, who have succeeded in all they have +undertaken. I do not pretend to resist them, but only to justify myself, +so that I can pursue by sea the plans I have begun here by land." + +This was what he had proposed to himself from the first; that is, to +abandon the difficult access through Canada, beset with enemies, and +open a way to his western domain through the Gulf and the Mississippi. +This was the aim of all his toilsome explorations. Could he have +accomplished his first intention of building a vessel on the Illinois +and descending in her to the Gulf, he would have been able to defray in +good measure the costs of the enterprise by means of the furs and +buffalo-hides collected on the way and carried in her to France. With a +fleet of canoes, this was impossible; and there was nothing to offset +the enormous outlay which he and his associates had made. He meant, as +we have seen, to found on the banks of the Illinois a colony of French +and Indians to answer the double purpose of a bulwark against the +Iroquois and a place of storage for the furs of all the western tribes; +and he hoped in the following year to secure an outlet for this colony +and for all the trade of the valley of the Mississippi, by occupying the +mouth of that river with a fort and another colony. This, too, was an +essential part of his original design. + +But for his illness, he would have gone to France to provide for its +execution. Meanwhile, he ordered Tonty to collect as many men as +possible, and begin the projected colony on the banks of the Illinois. A +report soon after reached him that those pests of the wilderness the +Iroquois were about to renew their attacks on the western tribes. This +would be fatal to his plans; and, following Tonty to the Illinois, he +rejoined him near the site of the great town. + +[Sidenote: "STARVED ROCK."] + +The cliff called "Starved Rock," now pointed out to travellers as the +chief natural curiosity of the region, rises, steep on three sides as a +castle wall, to the height of a hundred and twenty-five feet above the +river. In front, it overhangs the water that washes its base; its +western brow looks down on the tops of the forest trees below; and on +the east lies a wide gorge or ravine, choked with the mingled foliage of +oaks, walnuts, and elms; while in its rocky depths a little brook creeps +down to mingle with the river. From the trunk of the stunted cedar that +leans forward from the brink, you may drop a plummet into the river +below, where the cat-fish and the turtles may plainly be seen gliding +over the wrinkled sands of the clear and shallow current. The cliff is +accessible only from behind, where a man may climb up, not without +difficulty, by a steep and narrow passage. The top is about an acre in +extent. Here, in the month of December, La Salle and Tonty began to +intrench themselves. They cut away the forest that crowned the rock, +built store-houses and dwellings of its remains, dragged timber up the +rugged pathway, and encircled the summit with a palisade.[247] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S COLONY.] + +[Illustration: LA SALLE'S COLONY +on the Illinois, +FROM THE MAP OF +FRANQUELIN, +1684] + +Thus the winter passed, and meanwhile the work of negotiation went +prosperously on. The minds of the Indians had been already prepared. In +La Salle they saw their champion against the Iroquois, the standing +terror of all this region. They gathered round his stronghold like the +timorous peasantry of the middle ages around the rock-built castle of +their feudal lord. From the wooden ramparts of St. Louis,--for so he +named his fort,--high and inaccessible as an eagle's nest, a strange +scene lay before his eye. The broad, flat valley of the Illinois was +spread beneath him like a map, bounded in the distance by its low wall +of woody hills. The river wound at his feet in devious channels among +islands bordered with lofty trees; then, far on the left, flowed calmly +westward through the vast meadows, till its glimmering blue ribbon was +lost in hazy distance. + +There had been a time, and that not remote, when these fair meadows were +a waste of death and desolation, scathed with fire, and strewn with the +ghastly relics of an Iroquois victory. Now all was changed. La Salle +looked down from his rock on a concourse of wild human life. Lodges of +bark and rushes, or cabins of logs, were clustered on the open plain or +along the edges of the bordering forests. Squaws labored, warriors +lounged in the sun, naked children whooped and gambolled on the grass. +Beyond the river, a mile and a half on the left, the banks were studded +once more with the lodges of the Illinois, who, to the number of six +thousand, had returned, since their defeat, to this their favorite +dwelling-place. Scattered along the valley, among the adjacent hills, +or over the neighboring prairie, were the cantonments of a half-score of +other tribes and fragments of tribes, gathered under the protecting aegis +of the French,--Shawanoes from the Ohio, Abenakis from Maine, Miamis +from the sources of the Kankakee, with others whose barbarous names are +hardly worth the record.[248] Nor were these La Salle's only +dependants. By the terms of his patent, he held seigniorial rights over +this wild domain; and he now began to grant it out in parcels to his +followers. These, however, were as yet but a score,--a lawless band, +trained in forest license, and marrying, as their detractors affirm, a +new squaw every day in the week. This was after their lord's departure, +for his presence imposed a check on these eccentricities. + +La Salle, in a memoir addressed to the Minister of the Marine, reports +the total number of the Indians around Fort St. Louis at about four +thousand warriors, or twenty thousand souls. His diplomacy had been +crowned with a marvellous success,--for which his thanks were due, first +to the Iroquois, and the universal terror they inspired; next, to his +own address and unwearied energy. His colony had sprung up, as it were, +in a night; but might not a night suffice to disperse it? + +The conditions of maintaining it were twofold: first, he must give +efficient aid to his savage colonists against the Iroquois; secondly, he +must supply them with French goods in exchange for their furs. The men, +arms, and ammunition for their defence, and the goods for trading with +them, must be brought from Canada, until a better and surer avenue of +supply could be provided through the entrepot which he meant to +establish at the mouth of the Mississippi. Canada was full of his +enemies; but as long as Count Frontenac was in power, he was sure of +support. Count Frontenac was in power no longer. He had been recalled to +France through the intrigues of the party adverse to La Salle; and Le +Febvre de la Barre reigned in his stead. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE AND LA BARRE.] + +La Barre was an old naval officer of rank, advanced to a post for which +he proved himself notably unfit. If he was without the arbitrary +passions which had been the chief occasion of the recall of his +predecessor, he was no less without his energies and his talents. He +showed a weakness and an avarice for which his age may have been in some +measure answerable. He was no whit less unscrupulous than his +predecessor in his secret violation of the royal ordinances regulating +the fur-trade, which it was his duty to enforce. Like Frontenac, he took +advantage of his position to carry on an illicit traffic with the +Indians; but it was with different associates. The late governor's +friends were the new governor's enemies; and La Salle, armed with his +monopolies, was the object of his especial jealousy.[249] + +Meanwhile, La Salle, buried in the western wilderness, remained for the +time ignorant of La Barre's disposition towards him, and made an effort +to secure his good-will and countenance. He wrote to him from his rock +of St. Louis, early in the spring of 1683, expressing the hope that he +should have from him the same support as from Count Frontenac; +"although," he says, "my enemies will try to influence you against me." +His attachment to Frontenac, he pursues, has been the cause of all the +late governor's enemies turning against him. He then recounts his voyage +down the Mississippi; says that, with twenty-two Frenchmen, he caused +all the tribes along the river to ask for peace; and speaks of his right +under the royal patent to build forts anywhere along his route, and +grant out lands around them, as at Fort Frontenac. + +"My losses in my enterprises," he continues, "have exceeded forty +thousand crowns. I am now going four hundred leagues south-southwest of +this place, to induce the Chickasaws to follow the Shawanoes and other +tribes, and settle, like them, at St. Louis. It remained only to settle +French colonists here, and this I have already done. I hope you will not +detain them as _coureurs de bois_, when they come down to Montreal to +make necessary purchases. I am aware that I have no right to trade with +the tribes who descend to Montreal, and I shall not permit such trade to +my men; nor have I ever issued licenses to that effect, as my enemies +say that I have done."[250] + +Again, on the fourth of June following, he writes to La Barre, from the +Chicago portage, complaining that some of his colonists, going to +Montreal for necessary supplies, have been detained by his enemies, and +begging that they may be allowed to return, that his enterprise may not +be ruined. "The Iroquois," he pursues, "are again invading the country. +Last year, the Miamis were so alarmed by them that they abandoned their +town and fled; but at my return they came back, and have been induced to +settle with the Illinois at my fort of St. Louis. The Iroquois have +lately murdered some families of their nation, and they are all in +terror again. I am afraid they will take flight, and so prevent the +Missouris and neighboring tribes from coming to settle at St. Louis, as +they are about to do. + +"Some of the Hurons and French tell the Miamis that I am keeping them +here for the Iroquois to destroy. I pray that you will let me hear from +you, that I may give these people some assurances of protection before +they are destroyed in my sight. Do not suffer my men who have come down +to the settlements to be longer prevented from returning. There is great +need here of reinforcements. The Iroquois, as I have said, have lately +entered the country; and a great terror prevails. I have postponed going +to Michilimackinac, because, if the Iroquois strike any blow in my +absence, the Miamis will think that I am in league with them; whereas, +if I and the French stay among them, they will regard us as protectors. +But, Monsieur, it is in vain that we risk our lives here, and that I +exhaust my means in order to fulfil the intentions of his Majesty, if +all my measures are crossed in the settlements below, and if those who +go down to bring munitions, without which we cannot defend ourselves, +are detained under pretexts trumped up for the occasion. If I am +prevented from bringing up men and supplies, as I am allowed to do by +the permit of Count Frontenac, then my patent from the King is useless. +It would be very hard for us, after having done what was required, even +before the time prescribed, and after suffering severe losses, to have +our efforts frustrated by obstacles got up designedly. + +"I trust that, as it lies with you alone to prevent or to permit the +return of the men whom I have sent down, you will not so act as to +thwart my plans. A part of the goods which I have sent by them belong +not to me, but to the Sieur de Tonty, and are a part of his pay. Others +are to buy munitions indispensable for our defence. Do not let my +creditors seize them. It is for their advantage that my fort, full as it +is of goods, should be held against the enemy. I have only twenty men, +with scarcely a hundred pounds of powder; and I cannot long hold the +country without more. The Illinois are very capricious and uncertain.... +If I had men enough to send out to reconnoitre the enemy, I would have +done so before this; but I have not enough. I trust you will put it in +my power to obtain more, that this important colony may be saved."[251] + +While La Salle was thus writing to La Barre, La Barre was writing to +Seignelay, the Marine and Colonial Minister, decrying his +correspondent's discoveries, and pretending to doubt their reality. "The +Iroquois," he adds, "have sworn his [La Salle's] death. The imprudence +of this man is about to involve the colony in war."[252] And again he +writes, in the following spring, to say that La Salle was with a score +of vagabonds at Green Bay, where he set himself up as a king, pillaged +his countrymen, and put them to ransom, exposed the tribes of the West +to the incursions of the Iroquois, and all under pretence of a patent +from his Majesty, the provisions of which he grossly abused; but, as his +privileges would expire on the twelfth of May ensuing, he would then be +forced to come to Quebec, where his creditors, to whom he owed more than +thirty thousand crowns, were anxiously awaiting him.[253] + +Finally, when La Barre received the two letters from La Salle, of which +the substance is given above, he sent copies of them to the Minister +Seignelay, with the following comment: "By the copies of the Sieur de la +Salle's letters, you will perceive that his head is turned, and that he +has been bold enough to give you intelligence of a false discovery, and +that, instead of returning to the colony to learn what the King wishes +him to do, he does not come near me, but keeps in the backwoods, five +hundred leagues off, with the idea of attracting the inhabitants to him, +and building up an imaginary kingdom for himself, by debauching all the +bankrupts and idlers of this country. If you will look at the two +letters I had from him, you can judge the character of this personage +better than I can. Affairs with the Iroquois are in such a state that I +cannot allow him to muster all their enemies together and put himself at +their head. All the men who brought me news from him have abandoned him, +and say not a word about returning, _but sell the furs they have brought +as if they were their own_; so that he cannot hold his ground much +longer."[254] Such calumnies had their effect. The enemies of La Salle +had already gained the ear of the King; and he had written in August, +from Fontainebleau, to his new governor of Canada: "I am convinced, like +you, that the discovery of the Sieur de la Salle is very useless, and +that such enterprises ought to be prevented in future, as they tend only +to debauch the inhabitants by the hope of gain, and to diminish the +revenue from beaver-skins."[255] + +In order to understand the posture of affairs at this time, it must be +remembered that Dutch and English traders of New York were urging on the +Iroquois to attack the western tribes, with the object of gaining, +through their conquest, the control of the fur-trade of the interior, +and diverting it from Montreal to Albany. The scheme was full of danger +to Canada, which the loss of the trade would have ruined. La Barre and +his associates were greatly alarmed at it. Its complete success would +have been fatal to their hopes of profit; but they nevertheless wished +it such a measure of success as would ruin their rival, La Salle. Hence, +no little satisfaction mingled with their anxiety when they heard that +the Iroquois were again threatening to invade the Miamis and the +Illinois; and thus La Barre, whose duty it was strenuously to oppose the +intrigue of the English, and use every effort to quiet the ferocious +bands whom they were hounding against the Indian allies of the French, +was, in fact, but half-hearted in the work. He cut off La Salle from all +supplies; detained the men whom he sent for succor; and, at a conference +with the Iroquois, told them that they were welcome to plunder and kill +him.[256] + +[Sidenote: A NEW ALARM.] + +The old governor, and the unscrupulous ring with which he was +associated, now took a step to which he was doubtless emboldened by the +tone of the King's letter, in condemnation of La Salle's enterprise. He +resolved to seize Fort Frontenac, the property of La Salle, under the +pretext that the latter had not fulfilled the conditions of the grant, +and had not maintained a sufficient garrison.[257] Two of his +associates, La Chesnaye and Le Ber, armed with an order from him, went +up and took possession, despite the remonstrances of La Salle's +creditors and mortgagees; lived on La Salle's stores, sold for their own +profit, and (it is said) that of La Barre, the provisions sent by the +King, and turned in the cattle to pasture on the growing crops. La +Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, was told that he might retain the command +of the fort if he would join the associates; but he refused, and sailed +in the autumn for France.[258] + +Meanwhile La Salle remained at the Illinois in extreme embarrassment, +cut off from supplies, robbed of his men who had gone to seek them, and +disabled from fulfilling the pledges he had given to the surrounding +Indians. Such was his position, when reports came to Fort St. Louis that +the Iroquois were at hand. The Indian hamlets were wild with terror, +beseeching him for succor which he had no power to give. Happily, the +report proved false. No Iroquois appeared; the threatened attack was +postponed, and the summer passed away in peace. But La Salle's position, +with the governor his declared enemy, was intolerable and untenable; and +there was no resource but in the protection of the court. Early in the +autumn, he left Tonty in command of the rock, bade farewell to his +savage retainers, and descended to Quebec, intending to sail for France. + +On his way, he met the Chevalier de Baugis, an officer of the King's +dragoons, commissioned by La Barre to take possession of Fort St. Louis, +and bearing letters from the governor ordering La Salle to come to +Quebec,--a superfluous command, as he was then on his way thither. He +smothered his wrath, and wrote to Tonty to receive De Baugis well. The +chevalier and his party proceeded to the Illinois, and took possession +of the fort,--De Baugis commanding for the governor, while Tonty +remained as representative of La Salle. The two officers could not live +in harmony; but, with the return of spring, each found himself in sore +need of aid from the other. Towards the end of March the Iroquois +attacked their citadel, and besieged it for six days, but at length +withdrew discomfited, carrying with them a number of Indian prisoners, +most of whom escaped from their clutches.[259] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE SAILS FOR FRANCE.] + +Meanwhile, La Salle had sailed for France. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[245] The boundaries are laid down on the great map of Franquelin, made +in 1684, and preserved in the Depot des Cartes of the Marine. The line +runs along the south shore of Lake Erie, and thence follows the heads of +the streams flowing into Lake Michigan. It then turns northwest, and is +lost in the vast unknown of the now British Territories. On the south, +it is drawn by the heads of the streams flowing into the Gulf, as far +west as Mobile, after which it follows the shore of the Gulf to a little +south of the Rio Grande; then runs west, northwest, and finally north, +along the range of the Rocky Mountains. + +[246] Tonty, 1684, 1693. + +[247] "Starved Rock" perfectly answers, in every respect, to the +indications of the contemporary maps and documents concerning "Le +Rocher," the site of La Salle's fort of St. Louis. It is laid down on +several contemporary maps, besides the great map of La Salle's +discoveries, made in 1684. They all place it on the south side of the +river; whereas Buffalo Rock, three miles above, which has been supposed +to be the site of the fort, is on the north. The latter is crowned by a +plateau of great extent, is but sixty feet high, is accessible at many +points, and would require a large force to defend it; whereas La Salle +chose "Le Rocher," because a few men could hold it against a multitude. +Charlevoix, in 1721, describes both rocks, and says that the top of +Buffalo Rock had been occupied by the Miami village, so that it was +known as _Le Fort des Miamis_. This is confirmed by Joutel, who found +the Miamis here in 1687. Charlevoix then speaks of "Le Rocher," calling +it by that name; says that it is about a league below, on the left or +south side, forming a sheer cliff, very high, and looking like a +fortress on the border of the river. He saw remains of palisades at the +top, which, he thinks, were made by the Illinois (_Journal Historique, +Let._ xxvii.), though his countrymen had occupied it only three years +before. "The French reside on the rock (Le Rocher), which is very lofty +and impregnable." (_Memoir on Western Indians_, 1718, _in N. Y. Col. +Docs._, ix. 890.) St. Cosme, passing this way in 1699, mentions it as +"Le Vieux Fort," and says that it is "a rock about a hundred feet high +at the edge of the river, where M. de la Salle built a fort, since +abandoned." (_Journal de St. Cosme._) Joutel, who was here in 1687, +says, "Fort St. Louis is on a steep rock, about two hundred feet high, +with the river running at its base." He adds that its only defences were +palisades. The true height, as stated above, is about a hundred and +twenty-five feet. + +A traditional interest also attaches to this rock. It is said that, in +the Indian wars that followed the assassination of Pontiac, a few years +after the cession of Canada, a party of Illinois, assailed by the +Pottawattamies, here took refuge, defying attack. At length they were +all destroyed by starvation, and hence the name of "Starved Rock." + +For other proofs concerning this locality, see _ante_, 239. + +[248] This singular extemporized colony of La Salle, on the banks of the +Illinois, is laid down in detail on the great map of La Salle's +discoveries, by Jean Baptiste Franquelin, finished in 1684. There can be +no doubt that this part of the work is composed from authentic data. La +Salle himself, besides others of his party, came down from the Illinois +in the autumn of 1683, and undoubtedly supplied the young engineer with +materials. The various Indian villages, or cantonments, are all +indicated, with the number of warriors belonging to each, the aggregate +corresponding very nearly with that of La Salle's report to the +minister. The Illinois, properly so called, are set down at 1,200 +warriors; the Miamis, at 1,300; the Shawanoes, at 200; the Ouiatnoens +(Weas), at 500; the Peanqhichia (Piankishaw) band, at 150; the +Pepikokia, at 160; the Kilatica, at 300; and the Ouabona, at 70,--in +all, 3,880 warriors. A few others, probably Abenakis, lived in the fort. + +The Fort St. Louis is placed, on the map, at the exact site of Starved +Rock, and the Illinois village at the place where, as already mentioned +(see 239), Indian remains in great quantities are yearly ploughed up. +The Shawanoe camp, or village, is placed on the south side of the river, +behind the fort. The country is here hilly, broken, and now, as in La +Salle's time, covered with wood, which, however, soon ends in the open +prairie. A short time since, the remains of a low, irregular earthwork +of considerable extent were discovered at the intersection of two +ravines, about twenty-four hundred feet behind, or south of, Starved +Rock. The earthwork follows the line of the ravines on two sides. On the +east, there is an opening, or gateway, leading to the adjacent prairie. +The work is very irregular in form, and shows no trace of the civilized +engineer. In the stump of an oak-tree upon it, Dr. Paul counted a +hundred and sixty rings of annual growth. The village of the Shawanoes +(Chaouenons), on Franquelin's map, corresponds with the position of this +earthwork. I am indebted to the kindness of Dr. John Paul and Col. D. F. +Hitt, the proprietor of Starved Rock, for a plan of these curious +remains and a survey of the neighboring district. I must also express my +obligations to Mr. W. E. Bowman, photographer at Ottawa, for views of +Starved Rock and other features of the neighboring scenery. + +An interesting relic of the early explorers of this region was found a +few years ago at Ottawa, six miles above Starved Rock, in the shape of a +small iron gun, buried several feet deep in the drift of the river. It +consists of a welded tube of iron, about an inch and a half in calibre, +strengthened by a series of thick iron rings, cooled on, after the most +ancient as well as the most recent method of making cannon. It is about +fourteen inches long, the part near the muzzle having been burst off. +The construction is very rude. Small field-pieces, on a similar +principle, were used in the fourteenth century. Several of them may be +seen at the Musee d'Artillerie at Paris. In the time of Louis XIV., the +art of casting cannon was carried to a high degree of perfection. The +gun in question may have been made by a French blacksmith on the spot. A +far less probable supposition is, that it is a relic of some unrecorded +visit of the Spaniards; but the pattern of the piece would have been +antiquated, even in the time of De Soto. + +[249] The royal instructions to La Barre, on his assuming the +government, dated at Versailles, 10 May, 1682, require him to give no +further permission to make journeys of discovery towards the Sioux and +the Mississippi, as his Majesty thinks his subjects better employed in +cultivating the land. The letter adds, however, that La Salle is to be +allowed to continue his discoveries, if they appear to be useful. The +same instructions are repeated in a letter of the Minister of the Marine +to the new intendant of Canada, De Meules. + +[250] _Lettre de La Salle a La Barre, Fort St. Louis, 2 Avril, 1683._ +The above is condensed from passages in the original. + +[251] _Lettre de La Salle a La Barre, Portage de Chicagou, 4 Juin, +1683._ The substance of the letter is given above, in a condensed form. +A passage is omitted, in which La Salle expresses his belief that his +vessel, the "Griffin," had been destroyed, not by Indians, but by the +pilot, who, as he thinks, had been induced to sink her, and then, with +some of the crew, attempted to join Du Lhut with their plunder, but were +captured by Indians on the Mississippi. + +[252] _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 14 Nov., 1682._ + +[253] _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 30 Avril, 1683._ La Salle had +spent the winter, not at Green Bay, as this slanderous letter declares, +but in the Illinois country. + +[254] _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 4 Nov., 1683._ + +[255] _Lettre du Roy a La Barre, 5 Aout, 1683._ + +[256] _Memoire pour rendre compte a Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay +de l'Etat ou le Sieur de Lasalle a laisse le Fort Frontenac pendant le +temps de sa decouverte._ On La Barre's conduct, see "Count Frontenac and +New France under Louis XIV.," chap. v. + +[257] La Salle, when at Mackinaw, on his way to Quebec, in 1682, had +been recalled to the Illinois, as we have seen, by a threatened Iroquois +invasion. There is before me a copy of a letter which he then wrote to +Count Frontenac, begging him to send up more soldiers to the fort, at +his (La Salle's) expense. Frontenac, being about to sail for France, +gave this letter to his newly arrived successor, La Barre, who, far from +complying with the request, withdrew La Salle's soldiers already at the +fort, and then made its defenceless state a pretext for seizing it. This +statement is made in the memoir addressed to Seignelay, before cited. + +[258] These are the statements of the memorial addressed in La Salle's +behalf to the minister, Seignelay. + +[259] Tonty, 1684, 1693; _Lettre de La Barre au Ministre, 5 Juin, 1684; +Ibid., 9 Juillet, 1684_. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +1680-1683. + +LA SALLE PAINTED BY HIMSELF. + + Difficulty of knowing him; his Detractors; his Letters; vexations + of his Position; his Unfitness for Trade; risks Of Correspondence; + his Reported Marriage; alleged Ostentation; motives of Action; + charges of Harshness; intrigues against him; unpopular Manners; a + Strange Confession; his Strength and his Weakness; contrasts of his + Character. + + +We have seen La Salle in his acts. While he crosses the sea, let us look +at him in himself. Few men knew him, even of those who saw him most. +Reserved and self-contained as he was, with little vivacity or gayety or +love of pleasure, he was a sealed book to those about him. His daring +energy and endurance were patent to all; but the motive forces that +urged him, and the influences that wrought beneath the surface of his +character, were hidden where few eyes could pierce. His enemies were +free to make their own interpretations, and they did not fail to use the +opportunity. + +The interests arrayed against him were incessantly at work. His men were +persuaded to desert and rob him; the Iroquois were told that he was +arming the western tribes against them; the western tribes were told +that he was betraying them to the Iroquois; his proceedings were +denounced to the court; and continual efforts were made to alienate his +associates. They, on their part, sore as they were from disappointment +and loss, were in a mood to listen to the aspersions cast upon him; and +they pestered him with letters, asking questions, demanding +explanations, and dunning him for money. It is through his answers that +we are best able to judge him; and at times, by those touches of nature +which make the whole world kin, they teach us to know him and to feel +for him. + +[Sidenote: CHARGES AGAINST LA SALLE.] + +The main charges against him were that he was a crack-brained schemer, +that he was harsh to his men, that he traded where he had no right to +trade, and that his discoveries were nothing but a pretence for making +money. No accusations appear that touch his integrity or his honor. + +It was hard to convince those who were always losing by him. A +remittance of good dividends would have been his best answer, and would +have made any other answer needless; but, instead of bills of exchange, +he had nothing to give but excuses and explanations. In the autumn of +1680, he wrote to an associate who had demanded the long-deferred +profits: "I have had many misfortunes in the last two years. In the +autumn of '78, I lost a vessel by the fault of the pilot; in the next +summer, the deserters I told you about robbed me of eight or ten +thousand livres' worth of goods. In the autumn of '79, I lost a vessel +worth more than ten thousand crowns; in the next spring, five or six +rascals stole the value of five or six thousand livres in goods and +beaver-skins, at the Illinois, when I was absent. Two other men of mine, +carrying furs worth four or five thousand livres, were killed or drowned +in the St. Lawrence, and the furs were lost. Another robbed me of three +thousand livres in beaver-skins stored at Michilimackinac. This last +spring, I lost about seventeen hundred livres' worth of goods by the +upsetting of a canoe. Last winter, the fort and buildings at Niagara +were burned by the fault of the commander; and in the spring the +deserters, who passed that way, seized a part of the property that +remained, and escaped to New York. All this does not discourage me in +the least, and will only defer for a year or two the returns of profit +which you ask for this year. These losses are no more my fault than the +loss of the ship 'St. Joseph' was yours. I cannot be everywhere, and +cannot help making use of the people of the country." + +He begs his correspondent to send out an agent of his own. "He need not +be very _savant_, but he must be faithful, patient of labor, and fond +neither of gambling, women, nor good cheer; for he will find none of +these with me. Trusting in what he will write you, you may close your +ears to what priests and Jesuits tell you. + +[Sidenote: VEXATIONS OF HIS POSITION.] + +"After having put matters in good trim for trade I mean to withdraw, +though I think it will be very profitable; for I am disgusted to find +that I must always be making excuses, which is a part I cannot play +successfully. I am utterly tired of this business; for I see that it is +not enough to put property and life in constant peril, but that it +requires more pains to answer envy and detraction than to overcome the +difficulties inseparable from my undertaking." + +And he makes a variety of proposals, by which he hopes to get rid of a +part of his responsibility to his correspondent. He begs him again to +send out a confidential agent, saying that for his part he does not want +to have any account to render, except that which he owes to the court, +of his discoveries. He adds, strangely enough for a man burdened with +such liabilities, "I have neither the habit nor the inclination to keep +books, nor have I anybody with me who knows how." He says to another +correspondent, "I think, like you, that partnerships in business are +dangerous, on account of the little practice I have in these matters." +It is not surprising that he wanted to leave his associates to manage +business for themselves: "You know that this trade is good; and with a +trusty agent to conduct it for you, you run no risk. As for me, I will +keep the charge of the forts, the command of posts and of men, the +management of Indians and Frenchmen, and the establishment of the +colony, which will remain my property, leaving your agent and mine to +look after our interests, and drawing my half without having any hand in +what belongs to you." + +La Salle was a very indifferent trader; and his heart was not in the +commercial part of his enterprise. He aimed at achievement, and thirsted +after greatness. His ambition was to found another France in the West; +and if he meant to govern it also,--as without doubt he did,--it is not +a matter of wonder or of blame. His misfortune was, that, in the pursuit +of a great design, he was drawn into complications of business with +which he was ill fitted to grapple. He had not the instinct of the +successful merchant. He dared too much, and often dared unwisely; +attempted more than he could grasp, and forgot, in his sanguine +anticipations, to reckon with enormous and incalculable risks. + +Except in the narrative parts, his letters are rambling and +unconnected,--which is natural enough, written, as they were, at odd +moments, by camp-fires and among Indians. The style is crude; and being +well aware of this, he disliked writing, especially as the risk was +extreme that his letters would miss their destination. "There is too +little good faith in this country, and too many people on the watch, for +me to trust anybody with what I wish to send you. Even sealed letters +are not too safe. Not only are they liable to be lost or stopped by the +way, but even such as escape the curiosity of spies lie at Montreal, +waiting a long time to be forwarded." + +[Sidenote: HIS LETTERS INTERCEPTED.] + +Again, he writes: "I cannot pardon myself for the stoppage of my +letters, though I made every effort to make them reach you. I wrote to +you in '79 (in August), and sent my letters to M. de la Forest, who gave +them in good faith to my brother. I don't know what he has done with +them. I wrote you another, by the vessel that was lost last year. I sent +two canoes, by two different routes; but the wind and the rain were so +furious that they wintered on the way, and I found my letters at the +fort on my return. I now send you one of them, which I wrote last year +to M. Thouret, in which you will find a full account of what passed, +from the time when we left the outlet of Lake Erie down to the sixteenth +of August, 1680. What preceded was told at full length in the letters my +brother has seen fit to intercept." + +This brother was the Sulpitian priest, Jean Cavelier, who had been +persuaded that La Salle's enterprise would be ruinous, and therefore set +himself sometimes to stop it altogether, and sometimes to manage it in +his own way. "His conduct towards me," says La Salle, "has always been +so strange, through the small love he bears me, that it was clear gain +for me when he went away; since while he stayed he did nothing but cross +all my plans, which I was forced to change every moment to suit his +caprice." + +There was one point on which the interference of his brother and of his +correspondents was peculiarly annoying. They thought it for their +interest that he should remain a single man; whereas, it seems that his +devotion to his purpose was not so engrossing as to exclude more tender +subjects. He writes:-- + +"I am told that you have been uneasy about my pretended marriage. I had +not thought about it at that time; and I shall not make any engagement +of the sort till I have given you reason to be satisfied with me. It is +a little extraordinary that I must render account of a matter which is +free to all the world. + +"In fine, Monsieur, it is only as an earnest of something more +substantial that I write to you so much at length. I do not doubt that +you will hereafter change the ideas about me which some persons wish to +give you, and that you will be relieved of the anxiety which all that +has happened reasonably causes you. I have written this letter at more +than twenty different times; and I am more than a hundred and fifty +leagues from where I began it. I have still two hundred more to get +over, before reaching the Illinois. I am taking with me twenty-five men +to the relief of the six or seven who remain with the Sieur de Tonty." + +This was the journey which ended in that scene of horror at the ruined +town of the Illinois. + +[Sidenote: CHARGED WITH OSTENTATION.] + +To the same correspondent, pressing him for dividends, he says: "You +repeat continually that you will not be satisfied unless I make you +large returns of profit. Though I have reason to thank you for what you +have done for this enterprise, it seems to me that I have done still +more, since I have put everything at stake; and it would be hard to +reproach me either with foolish outlays or with the ostentation which is +falsely imputed to me. Let my accusers explain what they mean. Since I +have been in this country, I have had neither servants nor clothes nor +fare which did not savor more of meanness than of ostentation; and the +moment I see that there is anything with which either you or the court +find fault, I assure you that I will give it up,--for the life I am +leading has no other attraction for me than that of honor; and the more +danger and difficulty there is in undertakings of this sort, the more +worthy of honor I think they are." + +His career attests the sincerity of these words. They are a momentary +betrayal of the deep enthusiasm of character which may be read in his +life, but to which he rarely allowed the faintest expression. + +"Above all," he continues, "if you want me to keep on, do not compel me +to reply to all the questions and fancies of priests and Jesuits. They +have more leisure than I; and I am not subtle enough to anticipate all +their empty stories. I could easily give you the information you ask; +but I have a right to expect that you will not believe all you hear, nor +require me to prove to you that I am not a madman. That is the first +point to which you should have attended, before having business with me; +and in our long acquaintance, either you must have found me out, or else +I must have had long intervals of sanity." + +To another correspondent he defends himself against the charge of +harshness to his men: "The facility I am said to want is out of place +with this sort of people, who are libertines for the most part; and to +indulge them means to tolerate blasphemy, drunkenness, lewdness, and a +license incompatible with any kind of order. It will not be found that I +have in any case whatever treated any man harshly, except for +blasphemies and other such crimes openly committed. These I cannot +tolerate: first, because such compliance would give grounds for another +accusation, much more just; secondly, because, if I allowed such +disorders to become habitual, it would be hard to keep the men in +subordination and obedience, as regards executing the work I am +commissioned to do; thirdly, because the debaucheries, too common with +this rabble, are the source of endless delays and frequent thieving; +and, finally, because I am a Christian, and do not want to bear the +burden of their crimes. + +[Sidenote: INTRIGUES AGAINST HIM.] + +"What is said about my servants has not even a show of truth; for I use +no servants here, and all my men are on the same footing. I grant that +as those who have lived with me are steadier and give me no reason to +complain of their behavior, I treat them as gently as I should treat the +others if they resembled them, and as those who were formerly my +servants are the only ones I can trust, I speak more openly to them than +to the rest, who are generally spies of my enemies. The twenty-two men +who deserted and robbed me are not to be believed on their word, +deserters and thieves as they are. They are ready enough to find some +pretext for their crime; and it needs as unjust a judge as the intendant +to prompt such rascals to enter complaints against a person to whom he +had given a warrant to arrest them. But, to show the falsity of these +charges, Martin Chartier, who was one of those who excited the rest to +do as they did, was never with me at all; and the rest had made their +plot before seeing me." And he proceeds to relate, in great detail, a +variety of circumstances to prove that his men had been instigated first +to desert, and then to slander him; adding, "Those who remain with me +are the first I had, and they have not left me for six years." + +"I have a hundred other proofs of the bad counsel given to these +deserters, and will produce them when wanted; but as they themselves are +the only witnesses of the severity they complain of, while the witnesses +of their crimes are unimpeachable, why am I refused the justice I +demand, and why is their secret escape connived at? + +"I do not know what you mean by having popular manners. There is nothing +special in my food, clothing, or lodging, which are all the same for me +as for my men. How can it be that I do not talk with them? I have no +other company. M. de Tonty has often found fault with me because I +stopped too often to talk with them. You do not know the men one must +employ here, when you exhort me to make merry with them. They are +incapable of that; for they are never pleased, unless one gives free +rein to their drunkenness and other vices. If that is what you call +having popular manners, neither honor nor inclination would let me stoop +to gain their favor in a way so disreputable: and, besides, the +consequences would be dangerous, and they would have the same contempt +for me that they have for all who treat them in this fashion. + +"You write me that even my friends say that I am not a man of popular +manners. I do not know what friends they are. I know of none in this +country. To all appearance they are enemies, more subtle and secret than +the rest. I make no exceptions; for I know that those who seem to give +me support do not do it out of love for me, but because they are in some +sort bound in honor, and that in their hearts they think I have dealt +ill with them. M. Plet will tell you what he has heard about it himself, +and the reasons they have to give.[260] I have seen it for a long time; +and these secret stabs they give me show it very plainly. After that, it +is not surprising that I open my mind to nobody, and distrust everybody. +I have reasons that I cannot write. + +"For the rest, Monsieur, pray be well assured that the information you +are so good as to give me is received with a gratitude equal to the +genuine friendship from which it proceeds; and, however unjust are the +charges made against me, I should be much more unjust myself if I did +not feel that I have as much reason to thank you for telling me of them +as I have to complain of others for inventing them. + +[Sidenote: HIS MANNERS.] + +"As for what you say about my look and manner, I myself confess that you +are not far from right. But _naturam expellas_; and if I am wanting in +expansiveness and show of feeling towards those with whom I associate, +_it is only through a timidity which is natural to me, and which has +made me leave various employments, where without it I could have +succeeded_. But as I judged myself ill-fitted for them on account of +this defect, I have chosen a life more suited to my solitary +disposition; which, nevertheless, does not make me harsh to my people, +though, joined to a life among savages, it makes me, perhaps, less +polished and complaisant than the atmosphere of Paris requires. I well +believe that there is self-love in this; and that, knowing how little I +am accustomed to a more polite life, the fear of making mistakes makes +me more reserved than I like to be. So I rarely expose myself to +conversation with those in whose company I am afraid of making blunders, +and can hardly help making them. Abbe Renaudot knows with what +repugnance I had the honor to appear before Monseigneur de Conti; and +sometimes it took me a week to make up my mind to go to the +audience,--that is, when I had time to think about myself, and was not +driven by pressing business. It is much the same with letters, which I +never write except when pushed to it, and for the same reason. It is a +defect of which I shall never rid myself as long as I live, often as it +spites me against myself, and often as I quarrel with myself about it." + +[Sidenote: HIS STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS.] + +Here is a strange confession for a man like La Salle. Without doubt, the +timidity of which he accuses himself had some of its roots in pride; but +not the less was his pride vexed and humbled by it. It is surprising +that, being what he was, he could have brought himself to such an avowal +under any circumstances or any pressure of distress. Shyness; a morbid +fear of committing himself; and incapacity to express, and much more to +simulate, feeling,--a trait sometimes seen in those with whom feeling is +most deep,--are strange ingredients in the character of a man who had +grappled so dauntlessly with life on its harshest and rudest side. They +were deplorable defects for one in his position. He lacked that +sympathetic power, the inestimable gift of the true leader of men, in +which lies the difference between a willing and a constrained obedience. +This solitary being, hiding his shyness under a cold reserve, could +rouse no enthusiasm in his followers. He lived in the purpose which he +had made a part of himself, nursed his plans in secret, and seldom asked +or accepted advice. He trusted himself, and learned more and more to +trust no others. One may fairly infer that distrust was natural to him; +but the inference may possibly be wrong. Bitter experience had schooled +him to it; for he lived among snares, pitfalls, and intriguing enemies. +He began to doubt even the associates who, under representations he had +made them in perfect good faith, had staked their money on his +enterprise, and lost it, or were likely to lose it. They pursued him +with advice and complaint, and half believed that he was what his +maligners called him,--a visionary or a madman. It galled him that they +had suffered for their trust in him, and that they had repented their +trust. His lonely and shadowed nature needed the mellowing sunshine of +success, and his whole life was a fight with adversity. + +All that appears to the eye is his intrepid conflict with obstacles +without; but this, perhaps, was no more arduous than the invisible and +silent strife of a nature at war with itself,--the pride, aspiration, +and bold energy that lay at the base of his character battling against +the superficial weakness that mortified and angered him. In such a man, +the effect of such an infirmity is to concentrate and intensify the +force within. In one form or another, discordant natures are common +enough; but very rarely is the antagonism so irreconcilable as it was in +him. And the greater the antagonism, the greater the pain. There are +those in whom the sort of timidity from which he suffered is matched +with no quality that strongly revolts against it. These gentle natures +may at least have peace, but for him there was no peace. + +Cavelier de La Salle stands in history like a statue cast in iron; but +his own unwilling pen betrays the man, and reveals in the stern, sad +figure an object of human interest and pity.[261] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[260] His cousin, Francois Plet, was in Canada in 1680, where, with La +Salle's approval, he carried on the trade of Fort Frontenac, in order to +indemnify himself for money advanced. La Salle always speaks of him with +esteem and gratitude. + +[261] The following is the character of La Salle, as drawn by his +friend, Abbe Bernou, in a memorial to the minister Seignelay: "Il est +irreprochable dans ses moeurs, regle dans sa conduite, et qui veut de +l'ordre parmy ses gens. Il est savant, judicieux, politique, vigilant, +infatigable, sobre, et intrepide. Il entend suffisament l'architecture +civile, militaire, et navale ainsy que l'agriculture; il parle ou entend +quatre ou cinq langues des Sauvages, et a beaucoup de facilite pour +apprendre les autres. Il scait toutes leurs manieres et obtient d'eux +tout ce qu'il veut par son adresse, par son eloquence, et parce qu'il +est beaucoup estime d'eux. Dans ses voyages il ne fait pas meilleure +chere que le moindre de ses gens et se donne plus de peine que pas un +pour les encourager, et il y a lieu de croire qu'avec la protection de +Monseigneur il fondera des colonies plus considerables que toutes celles +que les Francois ont etablies jusqu'a present."--_Memoire pour +Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay_, 1682 (Margry, ii. 277). + +The extracts given in the foregoing chapter are from La Salle's long +letters of 29 Sept., 1680, and 22 Aug., 1682 (1681?). Both are printed +in the second volume of the Margry collection, and the originals of both +are in the Bibliotheque Nationale. The latter seems to have been written +to La Salle's friend, Abbe Bernou; and the former, to a certain M. +Thouret. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +1684. + +A NEW ENTERPRISE. + + La Salle at Court: his Proposals.--Occupation of + Louisiana.--Invasion of Mexico.--Royal Favor.--Preparation.--A + Divided Command.--Beaujeu and La Salle.--Mental Condition of La + Salle: his Farewell to his Mother. + + +When La Salle reached Paris, he went to his old lodgings in Rue de la +Truanderie, and, it is likely enough, thought for an instant of the +adventures and vicissitudes he had passed since he occupied them before. +Another ordeal awaited him. He must confront, not painted savages with +tomahawk and knife, but--what he shrank from more--the courtly throngs +that still live and move in the pages of Sevigne and Saint-Simon. + +The news of his discovery and the rumor of his schemes were the talk of +a moment among the courtiers, and then were forgotten. It was not so +with their master. La Salle's friends and patrons did not fail him. A +student and a recluse in his youth, and a backwoodsman in his manhood, +he had what was to him the formidable honor of an interview with royalty +itself, and stood with such philosophy as he could command before the +gilded arm-chair, where, majestic and awful, the power of France sat +embodied. The King listened to all he said; but the results of the +interview were kept so secret that it was rumored in the ante-chambers +that his proposals had been rejected.[262] + +On the contrary, they had met with more than favor. The moment was +opportune for La Salle. The King had long been irritated against the +Spaniards, because they not only excluded his subjects from their +American ports, but forbade them to enter the Gulf of Mexico. Certain +Frenchmen who had sailed on this forbidden sea had been seized and +imprisoned; and more recently a small vessel of the royal navy had been +captured for the same offence. This had drawn from the King a +declaration that every sea should be free to all his subjects; and Count +d'Estrees was sent with a squadron to the Gulf, to exact satisfaction of +the Spaniards, or fight them if they refused it.[263] This was in time +of peace. War had since arisen between the two crowns, and brought with +it the opportunity of settling the question forever. In order to do so, +the minister Seignelay, like his father Colbert, proposed to establish a +French port on the Gulf, as a permanent menace to the Spaniards and a +basis of future conquest. It was in view of this plan that La Salle's +past enterprises had been favored; and the proposals he now made were in +perfect accord with it. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S PROPOSALS.] + +These proposals were set forth in two memorials. The first of them +states that the late Monseigneur Colbert deemed it important for the +service of his Majesty to discover a port in the Gulf of Mexico; that to +this end the memorialist, La Salle, made five journeys of upwards of +five thousand leagues, in great part on foot; and traversed more than +six hundred leagues of unknown country, among savages and cannibals, at +the cost of a hundred and fifty thousand francs. He now proposes to +return by way of the Gulf of Mexico and the mouth of the Mississippi to +the countries he has discovered, whence great benefits may be expected: +first, the cause of God may be advanced by the preaching of the gospel +to many Indian tribes; and, secondly, great conquests may be effected +for the glory of the King, by the seizure of provinces rich in silver +mines, and defended only by a few indolent and effeminate Spaniards. The +Sieur de la Salle, pursues the memorial, binds himself to be ready for +the accomplishment of this enterprise within one year after his arrival +on the spot; and he asks for this purpose only one vessel and two +hundred men, with their arms, munitions, pay, and maintenance. When +Monseigneur shall direct him, he will give the details of what he +proposes. The memorial then describes the boundless extent, the +fertility and resources of the country watered by the river Colbert, or +Mississippi; the necessity of guarding it against foreigners, who will +be eager to seize it now that La Salle's discovery has made it known; +and the ease with which it may be defended by one or two forts at a +proper distance above its mouth, which would form the key to an interior +region eight hundred leagues in extent. "Should foreigners anticipate +us," he adds, "they will complete the ruin of New France, which they +already hem in by their establishments of Virginia, Pennsylvania, New +England, and Hudson's Bay."[264] + +The second memorial is more explicit. The place, it says, which the +Sieur de la Salle proposes to fortify, is on the river Colbert, or +Mississippi, sixty leagues above its mouth, where the soil is very +fertile, the climate very mild, and whence we, the French, may control +the continent,--since, the river being narrow, we could defend ourselves +by means of fire-ships against a hostile fleet, while the position is +excellent both for attacking an enemy or retreating in case of need. The +neighboring Indians detest the Spaniards, but love the French, having +been won over by the kindness of the Sieur de la Salle. We could form of +them an army of more than fifteen thousand savages, who, supported by +the French and Abenakis, followers of the Sieur de la Salle, could +easily subdue the province of New Biscay (the most northern province of +Mexico), where there are but four hundred Spaniards, more fit to work +the mines than to fight. On the north of New Biscay lie vast forests, +extending to the river Seignelay[265] (Red River), which is but forty or +fifty leagues from the Spanish province. This river affords the means of +attacking it to great advantage. + +In view of these facts, pursues the memorial, the Sieur de la Salle +offers, if the war with Spain continues, to undertake this conquest with +two hundred men from France. He will take on his way fifty buccaneers at +St. Domingo, and direct the four thousand Indian warriors at Fort St. +Louis of the Illinois to descend the river and join him. He will +separate his force into three divisions, and attack at the same time the +centre and the two extremities of the province. To accomplish this great +design, he asks only for a vessel of thirty guns, a few cannon for the +forts, and power to raise in France two hundred such men as he shall +think fit, to be armed, paid, and maintained six months at the King's +charge. And the Sieur de la Salle binds himself, if the execution of +this plan is prevented for more than three years, by peace with Spain, +to refund to his Majesty all the costs of the enterprise, on pain of +forfeiting the government of the ports he will have established.[266] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLES'S PLANS.] + +Such, in brief, was the substance of this singular proposition. And, +first, it is to be observed that it is based on a geographical blunder, +the nature of which is explained by the map of La Salle's discoveries +made in this very year. Here the river Seignelay, or Red River, is +represented as running parallel to the northern border of Mexico, and at +no great distance from it,--the region now called Texas being almost +entirely suppressed. According to the map, New Biscay might be reached +from this river in a few days; and, after crossing the intervening +forests, the coveted mines of Ste. Barbe, or Santa Barbara, would be +within striking distance.[267] That La Salle believed in the possibility +of invading the Spanish province of New Biscay from Red River there can +be no doubt; neither can it reasonably be doubted that he hoped at some +future day to make the attempt; and yet it is incredible that a man in +his sober senses could have proposed this scheme with the intention of +attempting to execute it at the time and in the manner which he +indicates.[268] This memorial bears some indications of being drawn up +in order to produce a certain effect on the minds of the King and his +minister. La Salle's immediate necessity was to obtain from them the +means for establishing a fort and a colony within the mouth of the +Mississippi. This was essential to his own plans; nor did he in the +least exaggerate the value of such an establishment to the French +nation, and the importance of anticipating other powers in the +possession of it. But he thought that he needed a more glittering lure +to attract the eyes of Louis and Seignelay; and thus, it may be, he held +before them, in a definite and tangible form, the project of Spanish +conquest which had haunted his imagination from youth,--trusting that +the speedy conclusion of peace, which actually took place, would absolve +him from the immediate execution of the scheme, and give him time, with +the means placed at his disposal, to mature his plans and prepare for +eventual action. Such a procedure may be charged with indirectness; but +there is a different explanation, which we shall suggest hereafter, and +which implies no such reproach.[269] + +Even with this madcap enterprise lopped off, La Salle's scheme of +Mississippi trade and colonization, perfectly sound in itself, was too +vast for an individual,--above all, for one crippled and crushed with +debt. While he grasped one link of the great chain, another, no less +essential, escaped from his hand; while he built up a colony on the +Mississippi, it was reasonably certain that evil would befall his +distant colony of the Illinois. + +[Sidenote: LA BARRE REBUKED.] + +The glittering project which he now unfolded found favor in the eyes of +the King and his minister; for both were in the flush of an unparalleled +success, and looked in the future, as in the past, for nothing but +triumphs. They granted more than the petitioner asked, as indeed they +well might, if they expected the accomplishment of all that he proposed +to attempt. La Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, ejected from Fort +Frontenac by La Barre, was now at Paris; and he was despatched to +Canada, empowered to reoccupy, in La Salle's name, both Fort Frontenac +and Fort St. Louis of the Illinois. The King himself wrote to La Barre +in a strain that must have sent a cold thrill through the veins of that +official. "I hear," he says, "that you have taken possession of Fort +Frontenac, the property of the Sieur de la Salle, driven away his men, +suffered his land to run to waste, and even told the Iroquois that they +might seize him as an enemy of the colony." He adds, that, if this is +true, La Barre must make reparation for the wrong, and place all La +Salle's property, as well as his men, in the hands of the Sieur de la +Forest, "as I am satisfied that Fort Frontenac was not abandoned, as you +wrote to me that it had been."[270] Four days later, he wrote to the +intendant of Canada, De Meules, to the effect that the bearer, La +Forest, is to suffer no impediment, and that La Barre is to surrender to +him without reserve all that belongs to La Salle.[271] Armed with this +letter, La Forest sailed for Canada.[272] + +A chief object of his mission, as it was represented to Seignelay, was, +not only to save the colony at the Illinois from being broken up by La +Barre, but also to collect La Salle's scattered followers, muster the +savage warriors around the rock of St. Louis, and lead the whole down +the Mississippi, to co-operate in the attack on New Biscay. If La Salle +meant that La Forest should seriously attempt to execute such a scheme, +then the charges of his enemies that his brain was turned were better +founded than he would have us think.[273] + +[Sidenote: PREPARATION.] + +He had asked for two vessels,[274] and four were given to him. Agents +were sent to Rochelle and Rochefort to gather recruits. A hundred +soldiers were enrolled, besides mechanics and laborers; and thirty +volunteers, including gentlemen and burghers of condition, joined the +expedition. And, as the plan was one no less of colonization than of +war, several families embarked for the new land of promise, as well as a +number of girls, lured by the prospect of almost certain matrimony. Nor +were missionaries wanting. Among them was La Salle's brother, Cavelier, +and two other priests of St. Sulpice. Three Recollets were +added,--Zenobe Membre, who was then in France, Anastase Douay, and +Maxime Le Clerc. The principal vessel was the "Joly," belonging to the +royal navy, and carrying thirty-six guns. Another armed vessel of six +guns was added, together with a store-ship and a ketch. + +La Salle had asked for sole command of the expedition, with a subaltern +officer, and one or two pilots to sail the vessels as he should direct. +Instead of complying, Seignelay gave the command of the vessels to +Beaujeu, a captain of the royal navy,--whose authority was restricted to +their management at sea, while La Salle was to prescribe the route they +were to take, and have entire control of the troops and colonists on +land.[275] This arrangement displeased both parties. Beaujeu, an old and +experienced officer, was galled that a civilian should be set over +him,--and he, too, a burgher lately ennobled; nor was La Salle the man +to soothe his ruffled spirit. Detesting a divided command, cold, +reserved, and impenetrable, he would have tried the patience of a less +excitable colleague. Beaujeu, on his part, though set to a task which he +disliked, seems to have meant to do his duty, and to have been willing +at the outset to make the relations between himself and his unwelcome +associate as agreeable as possible. Unluckily, La Salle discovered that +the wife of Beaujeu was devoted to the Jesuits. We have seen the extreme +distrust with which he regarded these guides of his youth, and he seems +now to have fancied that Beaujeu was their secret ally. Possibly, he +suspected that information of his movements would be given to the +Spaniards; more probably, he had undefined fears of adverse +machinations. Granting that such existed, it was not his interest to +stimulate them by needlessly exasperating the naval commander. His +deportment, however, was not conciliating; and Beaujeu, prepared to +dislike him, presently lost temper. While the vessels still lay at +Rochelle; while all was bustle and preparation; while stores, arms, and +munitions were embarking; while boys and vagabonds were enlisting as +soldiers for the expedition,--Beaujeu was venting his disgust in long +letters to the minister. + +[Sidenote: BEAUJEU AND LA SALLE.] + +"You have ordered me, Monseigneur, to give all possible aid to this +undertaking, and I shall do so to the best of my power; but permit me to +take great credit to myself, for I find it very hard to submit to the +orders of the Sieur de la Salle, whom I believe to be a man of merit, +but who has no experience of war except with savages, and who has no +rank, while I have been captain of a ship thirteen years, and have +served thirty by sea and land. Besides, Monseigneur, he has told me that +in case of his death you have directed that the Sieur de Tonty shall +succeed him. This, indeed, is very hard; for, though I am not acquainted +with that country, I should be very dull, if, being on the spot, I did +not know at the end of a month as much of it as they do. I beg, +Monseigneur, that I may at least share the command with them; and that, +as regards war, nothing may be done without my knowledge and +concurrence,--for, as to their commerce, I neither intend nor desire to +know anything about it." + +Seignelay answered by a rebuff, and told him to make no trouble about +the command. This increased his irritation, and he wrote: "In my last +letter, Monseigneur, I represented to you the hardship of compelling me +to obey M. de la Salle, who has no rank, and _never commanded anybody +but school-boys_; and I begged you at least to divide the command +between us. I now, Monseigneur, take the liberty to say that I will obey +without repugnance, if you order me to do so, having reflected that +there can be no competition between the said Sieur de la Salle and me. + +"Thus far, he has not told me his plan; and he changes his mind every +moment. He is a man so suspicious, and so afraid that one will penetrate +his secrets, that I dare not ask him anything. He says that M. de +Parassy, commissary's clerk, with whom he has often quarrelled, is paid +by his enemies to defeat his undertaking; and many other things with +which I will not trouble you.... + +"He pretends that I am only to command the sailors, and have no +authority over the volunteer officers and the hundred soldiers who are +to take passage in the 'Joly;' and that they are not to recognize or +obey me in any way during the voyage.... + +"He has covered the decks with boxes and chests of such prodigious size +that neither the cannon nor the capstan can be worked." + +La Salle drew up a long list of articles, defining the respective rights +and functions of himself and Beaujeu, to whom he presented it for +signature. Beaujeu demurred at certain military honors demanded by La +Salle, saying that if a marshal of France should come on board his ship, +he would have none left to offer him. The point was referred to the +naval intendant; and the articles of the treaty having been slightly +modified, Beaujeu set his name to it. "By this," he says, "you can judge +better of the character of M. de la Salle than by all I can say. He is a +man who wants smoke [form and ceremony]. I will give him his fill of it, +and, perhaps, more than he likes. + +"I am bound to an unknown country, to seek what is about as hard to find +as the philosopher's stone. It vexes me, Monseigneur, that you should +have been involved in a business the success of which is very uncertain. +M. de la Salle begins to doubt it himself." + +While Beaujeu wrote thus to the minister, he was also writing to Cabart +de Villermont, one of his friends at Paris, with whom La Salle was also +on friendly terms. These letters are lively and entertaining, and by no +means suggestive of any secret conspiracy. He might, it is true, have +been more reserved in his communications; but he betrays no confidence, +for none was placed in him. It is the familiar correspondence of an +irritable but not ill-natured veteran, who is placed in an annoying +position, and thinks he is making the best of it. + +La Salle thought that the minister had been too free in communicating +the secrets of the expedition to the naval intendant at Rochefort, and +through him to Beaujeu. It is hard to see how Beaujeu was to blame for +this; but La Salle nevertheless fell into a dispute with him. "He could +hardly keep his temper, and used expressions which obliged me to tell +him that I cared very little about his affairs, and that the King +himself would not speak as he did. He retracted, made excuses, and we +parted good friends.... + +"I do not like his suspiciousness. I think him a good, honest Norman; +but Normans are out of fashion. It is one thing to-day, another +to-morrow. It seems to me that he is not so sure about his undertaking +as he was at Paris. This morning he came to see me, and told me he had +changed his mind, and meant to give a new turn to the business, and go +to another coast. He gave very poor reasons, to which I assented, to +avoid a quarrel. I thought, by what he said, that he wanted to find a +scapegoat to bear the blame, in case his plan does not succeed as he +hopes. For the rest, I think him a brave man and a true; and I am +persuaded that if this business fails, it will be because he does not +know enough, and will not trust us of the profession. As for me, I shall +do my best to help him, as I have told you before; and I am delighted to +have him keep his secret, so that I shall not have to answer for the +result. Pray do not show my letters, for fear of committing me with him. +He is too suspicious already; and never was Norman so Norman as he, +which is a great hinderance to business." + +Beaujeu came from the same province and calls himself jocularly _un bon +gros Normand_. His good-nature, however, rapidly gave way as time went +on. "Yesterday," he writes, "this Monsieur told me that he meant to go +to the Gulf of Mexico. A little while ago, as I said before, he talked +about going to Canada. I see nothing certain in it. It is not that I do +not believe that all he says is true; but not being of the profession, +and not liking to betray his ignorance, he is puzzled what to do. + +"I shall go straight forward, without regarding a thousand whims and +_bagatelles_. His continual suspicion would drive anybody mad except a +Norman like me; but I shall humor him, as I have always done, even to +sailing my ship on dry land, if he likes." + +[Sidenote: AN OPEN QUARREL.] + +A few days later, there was an open quarrel. "M. de la Salle came to me, +and said, rather haughtily and in a tone of command, that I must put +provisions for three months more on board my vessel. I told him it was +impossible, as she had more lading already than anybody ever dared to +put in her before. He would not hear reason, but got angry and abused me +in good French, and found fault with me because the vessel would not +hold his three months' provisions. He said I ought to have told him of +it before. 'And how would you have me tell you,' said I, 'when you never +tell me what you mean to do?' We had still another quarrel. He asked me +where his officers should take their meals. I told him that they might +take them where he pleased; for I gave myself no trouble in the matter, +having no orders. He answered that they should not mess on bacon, while +the rest ate fowls and mutton. I said that if he would send fowls and +mutton on board, his people should eat them; but, as for bacon, I had +often ate it myself. At this, he went off and complained to M. Dugue +that I refused to embark his provisions, and told him that he must live +on bacon. I excused him as not knowing how to behave himself, having +spent his life among school-boy brats and savages. Nevertheless, I +offered to him, his brother, and two of his friends, seats at my table +and the same fare as myself. He answered my civility by an +impertinence, saying that he distrusted people who offered so much and +seemed so obliging. I could not help telling him that I saw he was +brought up in the provinces." + +This was touching La Salle on a sensitive point. Beaujeu continues: "In +fact, you knew him better than I; for I always took him for a gentleman +(_honnete homme_). I see now that he is anything but that. Pray set Abbe +Renaudot and M. Morel right about this man, and tell them he is not what +they take him for. Adieu. It has struck twelve: the postman is just +going." + +Bad as was the state of things, it soon grew worse. Renaudot wrote to La +Salle that Beaujeu was writing to Villermont everything that happened, +and that Villermont showed the letters to all his acquaintance. +Villermont was a relative of the Jesuit Beschefer; and this was +sufficient to suggest some secret machination to the mind of La Salle. +Villermont's fault, however, seems to have been simple indiscretion, for +which Beaujeu took him sharply to task. "I asked you to burn my letters; +and I cannot help saying that I am angry with you, not because you make +known my secrets, but because you show letters scrawled in haste, and +sent off without being even read over. M. de la Salle not having told me +his secret, though M. de Seignelay ordered him to tell me, I am not +obliged to keep it, and have as good a right as anybody to make my +conjectures on what I read about it in the _Gazette de Hollande_. Let +Abbe Renaudot glorify M. de la Salle as much as he likes, and make him a +Cortez, a Pizarro, or an Almagro,--that is nothing to me; but do not let +him speak of me as an obstacle in his hero's way. Let him understand +that I know how to execute the orders of the court as well as he.... + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S INDISCRETION.] + +"You ask how I get on with M. de la Salle. Don't you know that this man +is impenetrable, and that there is no knowing what he thinks of one? He +told a person of note whom I will not name that he had suspicions about +our correspondence, as well as about Madame de Beaujeu's devotion to the +Jesuits. His distrust is incredible. If he sees one of his people speak +to the rest, he suspects something, and is gruff with them. He told me +himself that he wanted to get rid of M. de Tonty, who is in America." + +La Salle's claim to exclusive command of the soldiers on board the +"Joly" was a source of endless trouble. Beaujeu declared that he would +not set sail till officers, soldiers, and volunteers had all sworn to +obey him when at sea; at which La Salle had the indiscretion to say, "If +I am not master of my soldiers, how can I make him [Beaujeu] do his duty +in case he does not want to do it?" + +Beaujeu says that this affair made a great noise among the officers at +Rochefort, and adds: "_There are very few people who do not think that +his brain is touched._ I have spoken to some who have known him twenty +years. They all say that he was always rather visionary." + +It is difficult not to suspect that the current belief at Rochefort had +some foundation; and that the deadly strain of extreme hardship, +prolonged anxiety, and alternation of disaster and success, joined to +the fever which nearly killed him, had unsettled his judgment and given +a morbid development to his natural defects. His universal suspicion, +which included even the stanch and faithful Henri de Tonty; his needless +provocation of persons whose good-will was necessary to him; his doubts +whether he should sail for the Gulf or for Canada, when to sail to +Canada would have been to renounce, or expose to almost certain defeat, +an enterprise long cherished and definitely planned,--all point to one +conclusion. It may be thought that his doubts were feigned, in order to +hide his destination to the last moment; but if so, he attempted to +blind not only his ill wishers, but his mother, whom he also left in +uncertainty as to his route. + +[Sidenote: AN OVERWROUGHT BRAIN.] + +Unless we assume that his scheme of invading Mexico was thrown out as a +bait to the King, it is hard to reconcile it with the supposition of +mental soundness. To base so critical an attempt on a geographical +conjecture, which rested on the slightest possible information, and was +in fact a total error; to postpone the perfectly sound plan of securing +the mouth of the Mississippi, to a wild project of leading fifteen +thousand savages for an unknown distance through an unknown country to +attack an unknown enemy,--was something more than Quixotic daring. The +King and the minister saw nothing impracticable in it, for they did not +know the country or its inhabitants. They saw no insuperable difficulty +in mustering and keeping together fifteen thousand of the most wayward +and unstable savages on earth, split into a score and more of tribes, +some hostile to each other and some to the French; nor in the problem of +feeding such a mob, on a march of hundreds of miles; nor in the plan of +drawing four thousand of them from the Illinois, nearly two thousand +miles distant, though some of these intended allies had no canoes or +other means of transportation, and though, travelling in such numbers, +they would infallibly starve on the way to the rendezvous. It is +difficult not to see in all this the chimera of an overwrought brain, no +longer able to distinguish between the possible and the impossible. + +Preparation dragged slowly on; the season was growing late; the King +grew impatient, and found fault with the naval intendant. Meanwhile, the +various members of the expedition had all gathered at Rochelle. Joutel, +a fellow-townsman of La Salle, returning to his native Rouen, after +sixteen years in the army, found all astir with the new project. His +father had been gardener to Henri Cavelier, La Salle's uncle; and being +of an adventurous spirit he volunteered for the enterprise, of which he +was to become the historian. With La Salle's brother the priest, and +two of his nephews, one of whom was a boy of fourteen, Joutel set out +for Rochelle, where all were to embark together for their promised +land.[276] + +[Sidenote: A PARTING LETTER.] + +La Salle wrote a parting letter to his mother at Rouen:-- + + + Rochelle, 18 July, 1684. + +Madame my Most Honored Mother,-- + +At last, after having waited a long time for a favourable wind, and +having had a great many difficulties to overcome, we are setting sail +with four vessels, and nearly four hundred men on board. Everybody is +well, including little Colin and my nephew. We all have good hope of a +happy success. We are not going by way of Canada, but by the Gulf of +Mexico. I passionately wish, and so do we all, that the success of this +voyage may contribute to your repose and comfort. Assuredly, I shall +spare no effort that it may; and I beg you, on your part, to preserve +yourself for the love of us. + +You need not be troubled by the news from Canada, which are nothing but +the continuation of the artifices of my enemies. I hope to be as +successful against them as I have been thus far, and to embrace you a +year hence with all the pleasure that the most grateful of children can +feel with so good a mother as you have always been. Pray let this hope, +which shall not disappoint you, support you through whatever trials may +happen, and be sure that you will always find me with a heart full of +the feelings which are due to you. + +Madame my Most Honored Mother, from your most humble and most obedient +servant and son, + + De la Salle. + +My brother, my nephews, and all the others greet you, and take their +leave of you. + +This memorable last farewell has lain for two hundred years among the +family papers of the Caveliers.[277] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[262] _Lettres de l'Abbe Tronson, 8 Avril, 10 Avril, 1684_ (Margry, ii. +354). + +[263] _Lettres du Roy et du Ministre sur la Navigation du Golfe du +Mexique, 1669-1682_ (Margry, iii. 3-14). + +[264] _Memoire du Sr. de la Salle, pour rendre compte a Monseigneur +de Seignelay de la decouverte qu'il a faite par l'ordre de sa Majeste._ + +[265] This name, also given to the Illinois, is used to designate Red +River on the map of Franquelin, where the forests above mentioned are +represented. + +[266] _Memoire du Sr. de la Salle sur l'Entreprise qu'il a propose a +Monseigneur le Marquis de Seignelay sur une des provinces de Mexique._ + +[267] Both the memorial and the map represent the banks of Red River as +inhabited by Indians, called Terliquiquimechi, and known to the +Spaniards as _Indios bravos_, or _Indios de guerra_. The Spaniards, it +is added, were in great fear of them, as they made frequent inroads into +Mexico. La Salle's Mexican geography was in all respects confused and +erroneous; nor was Seignelay better informed. Indeed, Spanish jealousy +placed correct information beyond their reach. + +[268] While the plan, as proposed in the memorial, was clearly +impracticable, the subsequent experience of the French in Texas tended +to prove that the tribes of that region could be used with advantage in +attacking the Spaniards of Mexico, and that an inroad on a comparatively +small scale might have been successfully made with their help. In 1689, +Tonty actually made the attempt, as we shall see, but failed, from the +desertion of his men. In 1697, the Sieur de Louvigny wrote to the +Minister of the Marine, asking to complete La Salle's discoveries, and +invade Mexico from Texas. (_Lettre de M. de Louvigny, 14 Oct., 1697._) +In an unpublished memoir of the year 1700, the seizure of the Mexican +mines is given as one of the motives of the colonization of Louisiana. + +[269] Another scheme, with similar aims, but much more practicable, was +at this very time before the court. Count Penalossa, a Spanish Creole, +born in Peru, had been governor of New Mexico, where he fell into a +dispute with the Inquisition, which involved him in the loss of +property, and for a time of liberty. Failing to obtain redress in Spain, +he renounced his allegiance in disgust, and sought refuge in France, +where, in 1682, he first proposed to the King the establishment of a +colony of French buccaneers at the mouth of Rio Bravo, on the Gulf of +Mexico. In January, 1684, after the war had broken out, he proposed to +attack the Spanish town of Panuco, with twelve hundred buccaneers from +St. Domingo; then march into the interior, seize the mines, conquer +Durango, and occupy New Mexico. It was proposed to combine his plan with +that of La Salle; but the latter, who had an interview with him, +expressed distrust, and showed characteristic reluctance to accept a +colleague. It is extremely probable, however, that his knowledge of +Penalossa's original proposal had some influence in stimulating him to +lay before the court proposals of his own, equally attractive. Peace was +concluded before the plans of the Spanish adventurer could be carried +into effect. + +[270] _Lettre du Roy a La Barre, Versailles, 10 Avril, 1684._ + +[271] _Lettre du Roy a De Meules, Versailles, 14 Avril, 1684._ Seignelay +wrote to De Meules to the same effect. + +[272] On La Forest's mission,--_Memoire pour representer a Monseigneur +le Marquis de Seignelay la necessite d'envoyer le Sr. de la Forest en +diligence a la Nouvelle France; Lettre du Roy a La Barre, 14 Avril, +1684; Ibid., 31 Oct., 1684._ + +There is before me a promissory note of La Salle to La Forest, of 5,200 +livres, dated at Rochelle, 17 July, 1684. This seems to be pay due to La +Forest, who had served as La Salle's officer for nine years. A +memorandum is attached, signed by La Salle, to the effect that it is his +wish that La Forest reimburse himself, "_par preference_," out of any +property of his (La Salle's) in France or Canada. + +[273] The attitude of La Salle, in this matter, is incomprehensible. In +July, La Forest was at Rochefort, complaining because La Salle had +ordered him to stay in garrison at Fort Frontenac. _Beaujeu a +Villermont, 10 July, 1684_. This means an abandonment of the scheme of +leading the warriors at the rock of St. Louis down the Mississippi; but, +in the next month, La Salle writes to Seignelay that he is afraid La +Barre will use the Iroquois war as a pretext to prevent La Forest from +making his journey (to the Illinois), and that in this case he will +himself try to go up the Mississippi, and meet the Illinois warriors; so +that, in five or six months from the date of the letter, the minister +will hear of his departure to attack the Spaniards. (_La Salle a +Seignelay, Aout, 1684._) Either this is sheer folly, or else it is meant +to delude the minister. + +[274] _Memoire de ce qui aura este accorde au Sieur de la Salle._ + +[275] _Lettre au Roy a La Salle, 12 Avril, 1684; Memoire pour servir +d'Instruction au Sieur de Beaujeu, 14 Avril, 1684._ + +[276] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 12. + +[277] The letters of Beaujeu to Seignelay and to Cabart de Villermont, +with most of the other papers on which this chapter rests, will be found +in Margry, ii. 354-471. This indefatigable investigator has also brought +to light a number of letters from a brother officer of Beaujeu, +Machaut-Rougemont, written at Rochefort, just after the departure of the +expedition from Rochelle, and giving some idea of the views there +entertained concerning it. He says: "L'on ne peut pas faire plus +d'extravagances que le Sieur de la Salle n'en a fait sur toutes ses +pretentions de commandement. Je plains beaucoup le pauvre Beaujeu +d'avoir affaire a une humeur si saturnienne.... Je le croy beaucoup +visionnaire ... Beaujeu a une sotte commission." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +1684, 1685. + +THE VOYAGE. + + Disputes with Beaujeu.--St. Domingo.--La Salle Attacked with Fever: + his Desperate Condition.--The Gulf Of Mexico.--A Vain Search and a + Fatal Error. + + +The four ships sailed from Rochelle on the twenty-fourth of July. Four +days after, the "Joly" broke her bowsprit, by design as La Salle +fancied. They all put back to Rochefort, where the mischief was quickly +repaired; and they put to sea again. La Salle, and the chief persons of +the expedition, with a crowd of soldiers, artisans, and women, the +destined mothers of Louisiana, were all on board the "Joly." Beaujeu +wished to touch at Madeira, to replenish his water-casks. La Salle +refused, lest by doing so the secret of the enterprise might reach the +Spaniards. One Paget, a Huguenot, took up the word in support of +Beaujeu. La Salle told him that the affair was none of his; and as Paget +persisted with increased warmth and freedom, he demanded of Beaujeu if +it was with his consent that a man of no rank spoke to him in that +manner. Beaujeu sustained the Huguenot. "That is enough," returned La +Salle, and withdrew into his cabin.[278] + +This was not the first misunderstanding; nor was it the last. There was +incessant chafing between the two commanders; and the sailors of the +"Joly" were soon of one mind with their captain. When the ship crossed +the tropic, they made ready a tub on deck to baptize the passengers, +after the villanous practice of the time; but La Salle refused to permit +it, at which they were highly exasperated, having promised themselves a +bountiful ransom, in money or liquor, from their victims. "Assuredly," +says Joutel, "they would gladly have killed us all." + +[Sidenote: ST. DOMINGO.] + +When, after a wretched voyage of two months the ships reached St. +Domingo, a fresh dispute occurred. It had been resolved at a council of +officers to stop at Port de Paix; but Beaujeu, on pretext of a fair +wind, ran by that place in the night, and cast anchor at Petit Goave, on +the other side of the island. La Salle was extremely vexed; for he +expected to meet at Port de Paix the Marquis de Saint-Laurent, +lieutenant-general of the islands, Begon the intendant, and De Cussy, +governor of La Tortue, who had orders to supply him with provisions and +give him all possible aid. + +The "Joly" was alone: the other vessels had lagged behind. She had more +than fifty sick men on board, and La Salle was of the number. He sent a +messenger to Saint-Laurent, Begon, and Cussy, begging them to come to +him; ordered Joutel to get the sick ashore, suffocating as they were in +the hot and crowded ship; and caused the soldiers to be landed on a +small island in the harbor. Scarcely had the voyagers sung _Te Deum_ for +their safe arrival, when two of the lagging vessels appeared, bringing +tidings that the third, the ketch "St. Francois," had been taken by +Spanish buccaneers. She was laden with provisions, tools, and other +necessaries for the colony; and the loss was irreparable. Beaujeu was +answerable for it; for had he anchored at Port de Paix, it would not +have occurred. The lieutenant-general, with Begon and Cussy, who +presently arrived, plainly spoke their minds to him.[279] + +[Sidenote: ILLNESS OF LA SALLE.] + +La Salle's illness increased. "I was walking with him one day," writes +Joutel, "when he was seized of a sudden with such a weakness that he +could not stand, and was obliged to lie down on the ground. When he was +a little better, I led him to a chamber of a house that the brothers +Duhaut had hired. Here we put him to bed, and in the morning he was +attacked by a violent fever."[280] "It was so violent that," says +another of his shipmates, "his imagination pictured to him things +equally terrible and amazing."[281] He lay delirious in the wretched +garret, attended by his brother, and one or two others who stood +faithful to him. A goldsmith of the neighborhood, moved at his +deplorable condition, offered the use of his house; and Abbe Cavelier +had him removed thither. But there was a tavern hard by, and the patient +was tormented with daily and nightly riot. At the height of the fever, a +party of Beaujeu's sailors spent a night in singing and dancing before +the house; and, says Cavelier, "The more we begged them to be quiet, the +more noise they made." La Salle lost reason and well-nigh life; but at +length his mind resumed its balance, and the violence of the disease +abated. A friendly Capucin friar offered him the shelter of his roof; +and two of his men supported him thither on foot, giddy with exhaustion +and hot with fever. Here he found repose, and was slowly recovering, +when some of his attendants rashly told him the loss of the ketch "St. +Francois;" and the consequence was a critical return of the +disease.[282] + +There was no one to fill his place. Beaujeu would not; Cavelier could +not. Joutel, the gardener's son, was apparently the most trusty man of +the company; but the expedition was virtually without a head. The men +roamed on shore, and plunged into every excess of debauchery, +contracting diseases which eventually killed them. + +[Sidenote: COMPLAINTS OF BEAUJEU.] + +Beaujeu, in the extremity of ill-humor, resumed his correspondence with +Seignelay. "But for the illness of the Sieur de la Salle," he writes, "I +could not venture to report to you the progress of our voyage, as I am +charged only with the navigation, and he with the secrets; but as his +malady has deprived him of the use of his faculties, both of body and +mind, I have thought myself obliged to acquaint you with what is +passing, and of the condition in which we are." + +He then declares that the ships freighted by La Salle were so slow that +the "Joly" had continually been forced to wait for them, thus doubling +the length of the voyage; that he had not had water enough for the +passengers, as La Salle had not told him that there were to be any such +till the day they came on board; that great numbers were sick, and that +he had told La Salle there would be trouble if he filled all the space +between decks with his goods, and forced the soldiers and sailors to +sleep on deck; that he had told him he would get no provisions at St. +Domingo, but that he insisted on stopping; that it had always been +so,--that whatever he proposed La Salle would refuse, alleging orders +from the King; "and now," pursues the ruffled commander, "everybody is +ill; and he himself has a violent fever, as dangerous, the surgeon tells +me, to the mind as to the body." + +The rest of the letter is in the same strain. He says that a day or two +after La Salle's illness began, his brother Cavelier came to ask him to +take charge of his affairs; but that he did not wish to meddle with +them, especially as nobody knows anything about them, and as La Salle +has sold some of the ammunition and provisions; that Cavelier tells him +that he thinks his brother keeps no accounts, wishing to hide his +affairs from everybody; that he learns from buccaneers that the entrance +of the Mississippi is very shallow and difficult, and that this is the +worst season for navigating the Gulf; that the Spaniards have in these +seas six vessels of from thirty to sixty guns each, besides row-galleys; +but that he is not afraid, and will perish, or bring back an account of +the Mississippi. "Nevertheless," he adds, "if the Sieur de la Salle +dies, I shall pursue a course different from that which he has marked +out; for I do not approve his plans." + +"If," he continues, "you permit me to speak my mind, M. de la Salle +ought to have been satisfied with discovering his river, without +undertaking to conduct three vessels with troops two thousand leagues +through so many different climates, and across seas entirely unknown to +him. I grant that he is a man of knowledge, that he has reading, and +even some tincture of navigation; but there is so much difference +between theory and practice, that a man who has only the former will +always be at fault. There is also a great difference between conducting +canoes on lakes and along a river, and navigating ships with troops on +distant oceans."[283] + +While Beaujeu was complaining of La Salle, his followers were deserting +him. It was necessary to send them on board ship, and keep them there; +for there were French buccaneers at Petit Goave, who painted the +promised land in such dismal colors that many of the adventurers +completely lost heart. Some, too, were dying. "The air of this place is +bad," says Joutel; "so are the fruits; and there are plenty of women +worse than either."[284] + +It was near the end of November before La Salle could resume the voyage. +He was told that Beaujeu had said that he would not wait longer for the +store-ship "Aimable," and that she might follow as she could.[285] +Moreover, La Salle was on ill terms with Aigron, her captain, who had +declared that he would have nothing more to do with him.[286] Fearing, +therefore, that some mishap might befall her, he resolved to embark in +her himself, with his brother Cavelier, Membre, Douay, and others, the +trustiest of his followers. On the twenty-fifth they set sail; the +"Joly" and the little frigate "Belle" following. They coasted the shore +of Cuba, and landed at the Isle of Pines, where La Salle shot an +alligator, which the soldiers ate; and the hunter brought in a wild pig, +half of which he sent to Beaujeu. Then they advanced to Cape St. +Antoine, where bad weather and contrary winds long detained them. A load +of cares oppressed the mind of La Salle, pale and haggard with recent +illness, wrapped within his own thoughts, and seeking sympathy from +none. + +[Sidenote: A VAIN SEARCH.] + +At length they entered the Gulf of Mexico, that forbidden sea whence by +a Spanish decree, dating from the reign of Philip II., all foreigners +were excluded on pain of extermination.[287] Not a man on board knew the +secrets of its perilous navigation. Cautiously feeling their way, they +held a north-westerly course, till on the twenty-eighth of December a +sailor at the mast-head of the "Aimable" saw land. La Salle and all the +pilots had been led to form an exaggerated idea of the force of the +easterly currents; and they therefore supposed themselves near the Bay +of Appalache, when, in fact, they were much farther westward. + +On New Year's Day they anchored three leagues from the shore. La Salle, +with the engineer Minet, went to explore it, and found nothing but a +vast marshy plain, studded with clumps of rushes. Two days after there +was a thick fog, and when at length it cleared, the "Joly" was nowhere +to be seen. La Salle in the "Aimable," followed closely by the little +frigate "Belle," stood westward along the coast. When at the mouth of +the Mississippi in 1682, he had taken its latitude, but unhappily could +not determine its longitude; and now every eye on board was strained to +detect in the monotonous lines of the low shore some tokens of the +great river. In fact, they had already passed it. On the sixth of +January, a wide opening was descried between two low points of land; and +the adjacent sea was discolored with mud. "La Salle," writes his brother +Cavelier, "has always thought that this was the Mississippi." To all +appearance, it was the entrance of Galveston Bay.[288] But why did he +not examine it? Joutel says that his attempts to do so were frustrated +by the objections of the pilot of the "Aimable," to which, with a +facility very unusual with him, he suffered himself to yield. Cavelier +declares, on the other hand, that he would not enter the opening because +he was afraid of missing the "Joly." But he might have entered with one +of his two vessels, while the other watched outside for the absent ship. +From whatever cause, he lay here five or six days, waiting in vain for +Beaujeu;[289] till, at last, thinking that he must have passed westward, +he resolved to follow. The "Aimable" and the "Belle" again spread their +sails, and coasted the shores of Texas. Joutel, with a boat's crew, +tried to land; but the sand-bars and breakers repelled him. A party of +Indians swam out through the surf, and were taken on board; but La Salle +could learn nothing from them, as their language was unknown to him. +Again Joutel tried to land, and again the breakers repelled him. He +approached as near as he dared, and saw vast plains and a dim expanse of +forest, buffalo running with their heavy gallop along the shore, and +deer grazing on the marshy meadows. + +[Sidenote: THE SHORES OF TEXAS.] + +Soon after, he succeeded in landing at a point somewhere between +Matagorda Island and Corpus Christi Bay. The aspect of the country was +not cheering, with its barren plains, its reedy marshes, its +interminable oyster-beds, and broad flats of mud bare at low tide. +Joutel and his men sought in vain for fresh water, and after shooting +some geese and ducks returned to the "Aimable." Nothing had been seen of +Beaujeu and the "Joly;" the coast was trending southward; and La Salle, +convinced that he must have passed the missing ship, turned to retrace +his course. He had sailed but a few miles when the wind failed, a fog +covered the sea, and he was forced to anchor opposite one of the +openings into the lagoons north of Mustang Island. At length, on the +nineteenth, there came a faint breeze; the mists rolled away before it, +and to his great joy he saw the "Joly" approaching. + +"His joy," says Joutel, "was short." Beaujeu's lieutenant, Aire, came on +board to charge him with having caused the separation, and La Salle +retorted by throwing the blame on Beaujeu. Then came a debate as to +their position. The priest Esmanville was present, and reports that La +Salle seemed greatly perplexed. He had more cause for perplexity than +he knew; for in his ignorance of the longitude of the Mississippi, he +had sailed more than four hundred miles beyond it. + +Of this he had not the faintest suspicion. In full sight from his ship +lay a reach of those vast lagoons which, separated from the sea by +narrow strips of land, line this coast with little interruption from +Galveston Bay to the Rio Grande. The idea took possession of him that +the Mississippi discharged itself into these lagoons, and thence made +its way to the sea through the various openings he had seen along the +coast, chief among which was that he had discovered on the sixth, about +fifty leagues from the place where he now was.[290] + +[Sidenote: PERPLEXITY OF LA SALLE.] + +Yet he was full of doubt as to what he should do. Four days after +rejoining Beaujeu, he wrote him the strange request to land the troops, +that he "might fulfil his commission;" that is, that he might set out +against the Spaniards.[291] More than a week passed, a gale had set in, +and nothing was done. Then La Salle wrote again, intimating some doubt +as to whether he was really at one of the mouths of the Mississippi, and +saying that, being sure that he had passed the principal mouth, he was +determined to go back to look for it.[292] Meanwhile, Beaujeu was in a +state of great irritation. The weather was stormy, and the coast was +dangerous. Supplies were scanty; and La Salle's soldiers, still crowded +in the "Joly," were consuming the provisions of the ship. Beaujeu gave +vent to his annoyance, and La Salle retorted in the same strain. + +According to Joutel, he urged the naval commander to sail back in search +of the river; and Beaujeu refused, unless La Salle should give the +soldiers provisions. La Salle, he adds, offered to supply them with +rations for fifteen days; and Beaujeu declared this insufficient. There +is reason, however, to believe that the request was neither made by the +one nor refused by the other so positively as here appears. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[278] _Lettre (sans nom d'auteur) ecrite de St. Domingue, 14 Nov., 1684_ +(Margry, ii. 492); _Memoire autographe de l'Abbe Jean Cavelier sur le +Voyage de 1684_. Compare Joutel. + +[279] _Memoire de MM. de Saint-Laurens et Begon_ (Margry, ii. 499); +Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 28. + +[280] _Relation de Henri Joutel_ (Margry, iii. 98). + +[281] _Lettre (sans nom d'auteur), 14 Nov., 1684_ (Margry, ii. 496). + +[282] The above particulars are from the memoir of La Salle's brother, +Abbe Cavelier, already cited. + +[283] _Lettre de Beaujeu au Ministre, 20 Oct., 1684._ + +[284] _Relation de Henri Joutel_ (Margry, iii. 105). + +[285] _Memoire autographe de l'Abbe Jean Cavelier._ + +[286] _Lettre de Beaujeu au Ministre, 20 Oct., 1684._ + +[287] _Letter of Don Luis de Onis to the Secretary of State_ (American +State Papers, xii, 27-31). + +[288] "La hauteur nous a fait remarquer ... que ce que nous avions vu le +sixieme janvier estoit en effet la principale entree de la riviere que +nous cherchions."--_Lettre de La Salle au Ministre, 4 Mars, 1687._ + +[289] _Memoire autographe de l'Abbe Cavelier._ + +[290] "Depuis que nous avions quitte cette riviere qu'il croyoit +infailliblement estre le fleuve Colbert _[Mississippi]_ nous avions fait +environ 45 lieues ou 50 au plus." (Cavelier, _Memoire_.) This, taken in +connection with the statement of La Salle that this "principale entree +de la riviere que nous cherchions" was twenty-five or thirty leagues +northeast from the entrance of the Bay of St. Louis (Matagorda Bay), +shows that it can have been no other than the entrance of Galveston Bay, +mistaken by him for the chief outlet of the Mississippi. It is evident +that he imagined Galveston Bay to form a part of the chain of lagoons +from which it is in fact separated. He speaks of these lagoons as "une +espece de baye fort longue et fort large, _dans laquelle le fleuve +Colbert se decharge_." He adds that on his descent to the mouth of the +river in 1682 he had been deceived in supposing that this expanse of +salt water, where no shore was in sight, was the open sea. _Lettre de La +Salle au Ministre, 4 Mars, 1685._ Galveston Bay and the mouth of the +Mississippi differ little in latitude, though separated by about five +and a half degrees of longitude. + +[291] _Lettre de La Salle a Beaujeu, 23 Jan., 1685_ (Margry, ii. 526). + +[292] This letter is dated, "De l'emboucheure d'une riviere que _je +crois estre_ une des descharges du Mississipy" (Margry, ii. 528). + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +1685. + +LA SALLE IN TEXAS. + + A Party of Exploration--Wreck of the "Aimable."--Landing of the + Colonists.--A Forlorn Position.--Indian Neighbors.--Friendly + Advances of Beaujeu: his Departure.--A Fatal Discovery. + + +Impatience to rid himself of his colleague and to command alone no doubt +had its influence on the judgment of La Salle. He presently declared +that he would land the soldiers, and send them along shore till they +came to the principal outlet of the river. On this, the engineer Minet +took up the word,--expressed his doubts as to whether the Mississippi +discharged itself into the lagoons at all; represented that even if it +did, the soldiers would be exposed to great risks; and gave as his +opinion that all should reimbark and continue the search in company. The +advice was good, but La Salle resented it as coming from one in whom he +recognized no right to give it. "He treated me," complains the engineer, +"as if I were the meanest of mankind."[293] + +He persisted in his purpose, and sent Joutel and Moranget with a party +of soldiers to explore the coast. They made their way northeastward +along the shore of Matagorda Island, till they were stopped on the third +day by what Joutel calls a river, but which was in fact the entrance of +Matagorda Bay. Here they encamped, and tried to make a raft of +drift-wood. "The difficulty was," says Joutel, "our great number of men, +and the few of them who were fit for anything except eating. As I said +before, they had all been caught by force or surprise, so that our +company was like Noah's ark, which contained animals of all sorts." +Before their raft was finished, they descried to their great joy the +ships which had followed them along the coast.[294] + +[Sidenote: LANDING OF LA SALLE.] + +La Salle landed, and announced that here was the western mouth of the +Mississippi, and the place to which the King had sent him. He said +further that he would land all his men, and bring the "Aimable" and the +"Belle" to the safe harborage within. Beaujeu remonstrated, alleging the +shallowness of the water and the force of the currents; but his +remonstrance was vain.[295] + +The Bay of St. Louis, now Matagorda Bay, forms a broad and sheltered +harbor, accessible from the sea by a narrow passage, obstructed by +sand-bars and by the small island now called Pelican Island. Boats were +sent to sound and buoy out the channel, and this was successfully +accomplished on the sixteenth of February. The "Aimable" was ordered to +enter; and, on the twentieth, she weighed anchor. La Salle was on shore +watching her. A party of men, at a little distance, were cutting down a +tree to make a canoe. Suddenly some of them ran towards him with +terrified faces, crying out that they had been set upon by a troop of +Indians, who had seized their companions and carried them off. La Salle +ordered those about him to take their arms, and at once set out in +pursuit. He overtook the Indians, and opened a parley with them; but +when he wished to reclaim his men, he discovered that they had been led +away during the conference to the Indian camp, a league and a half +distant. Among them was one of his lieutenants, the young Marquis de la +Sablonniere. He was deeply vexed, for the moment was critical; but the +men must be recovered, and he led his followers in haste towards the +camp. Yet he could not refrain from turning a moment to watch the +"Aimable," as she neared the shoals; and he remarked with deep anxiety +to Joutel, who was with him, that if she held that course she would soon +be aground. + +[Sidenote: WRECK OF THE "AIMABLE".] + +They hurried on till they saw the Indian huts. About fifty of them, +oven-shaped, and covered with mats and hides, were clustered on a rising +ground, with their inmates gathered among and around them. As the French +entered the camp, there was the report of a cannon from the seaward. +The startled savages dropped flat with terror. A different fear seized +La Salle, for he knew that the shot was a signal of disaster. Looking +back, he saw the "Aimable" furling her sails, and his heart sank with +the conviction that she had struck upon the reef. Smothering his +distress,--she was laden with all the stores of the colony,--he pressed +forward among the filthy wigwams, whose astonished inmates swarmed about +the band of armed strangers, staring between curiosity and fear. La +Salle knew those with whom he was dealing, and, without ceremony, +entered the chief's lodge with his followers. The crowd closed around +them, naked men and half-naked women, described by Joutel as of singular +ugliness. They gave buffalo meat and dried porpoise to the unexpected +guests, but La Salle, racked with anxiety, hastened to close the +interview; and having without difficulty recovered the kidnapped men, he +returned to the beach, leaving with the Indians, as usual, an impression +of good-will and respect. + +When he reached the shore, he saw his worst fears realized. The +"Aimable" lay careened over on the reef, hopelessly aground. Little +remained but to endure the calamity with firmness, and to save, as far +as might be, the vessel's cargo. This was no easy task. The boat which +hung at her stern had been stove in,--it is said, by design. Beaujeu +sent a boat from the "Joly," and one or more Indian pirogues were +procured. La Salle urged on his men with stern and patient energy, and +a quantity of gunpowder and flour was safely landed. But now the wind +blew fresh from the sea; the waves began to rise; a storm came on; the +vessel, rocking to and fro on the sand-bar, opened along her side, and +the ravenous waves were strewn with her treasures. When the confusion +was at its height, a troop of Indians came down to the shore, greedy for +plunder. The drum was beat; the men were called to arms; La Salle set +his trustiest followers to guard the gunpowder, in fear, not of the +Indians alone, but of his own countrymen. On that lamentable night, the +sentinels walked their rounds through the dreary bivouac among the +casks, bales, and boxes which the sea had yielded up; and here, too, +their fate-hunted chief held his drearier vigil, encompassed with +treachery, darkness, and the storm. + +Not only La Salle, but Joutel and others of his party, believed that the +wreck of the "Aimable" was intentional. Aigron, who commanded her, had +disobeyed orders and disregarded signals. Though he had been directed to +tow the vessel through the channel, he went in under sail; and though +little else was saved from the wreck, his personal property, including +even some preserved fruits, was all landed safely. He had long been on +ill terms with La Salle.[296] + +All La Salle's company were now encamped on the sands at the left side +of the inlet where the "Aimable" was wrecked.[297] "They were all," says +the engineer Minet, "sick with nausea and dysentery. Five or six died +every day, in consequence of brackish water and bad food. There was no +grass, but plenty of rushes and plenty of oysters. There was nothing to +make ovens, so that they had to eat flour saved from the wreck, boiled +into messes of porridge with this brackish water. Along the shore were +quantities of uprooted trees and rotten logs, thrown up by the sea and +the lagoon." Of these, and fragments of the wreck, they made a sort of +rampart to protect their camp; and here, among tents and hovels, bales, +boxes, casks, spars, dismounted cannon, and pens for fowls and swine, +were gathered the dejected men and homesick women who were to seize New +Biscay, and hold for France a region large as half Europe. The +Spaniards, whom they were to conquer, were they knew not where. They +knew not where they were themselves; and for the fifteen thousand Indian +allies who were to have joined them, they found two hundred squalid +savages, more like enemies than friends. + +In fact, it was soon made plain that these their neighbors wished them +no good. A few days after the wreck, the prairie was seen on fire. As +the smoke and flame rolled towards them before the wind, La Salle caused +all the grass about the camp to be cut and carried away, and especially +around the spot where the powder was placed. The danger was averted; but +it soon became known that the Indians had stolen a number of blankets +and other articles, and carried them to their wigwams. Unwilling to +leave his camp, La Salle sent his nephew Moranget and several other +volunteers, with a party of men, to reclaim them. They went up the bay +in a boat, landed at the Indian camp, and, with more mettle than +discretion, marched into it, sword in hand. The Indians ran off, and the +rash adventurers seized upon several canoes as an equivalent for the +stolen goods. Not knowing how to manage them, they made slow progress on +their way back, and were overtaken by night before reaching the French +camp. They landed, made a fire, placed a sentinel, and lay down on the +dry grass to sleep. The sentinel followed their example, when suddenly +they were awakened by the war-whoop and a shower of arrows. Two +volunteers, Oris and Desloges, were killed on the spot; a third, named +Gayen, was severely wounded; and young Moranget received an arrow +through the arm. He leaped up and fired his gun at the vociferous but +invisible foe. Others of the party did the same, and the Indians fled. + +[Sidenote: BEAUJEU AND LA SALLE.] + +It was about this time that Beaujeu prepared to return to France. He had +accomplished his mission, and landed his passengers at what La Salle +assured him to be one of the mouths of the Mississippi. His ship was in +danger on this exposed and perilous coast, and he was anxious to find +shelter. For some time past, his relations with La Salle had been +amicable, and it was agreed between them that Beaujeu should stop at +Galveston Bay, the supposed chief mouth of the Mississippi; or, failing +to find harborage here, that he should proceed to Mobile Bay, and wait +there till April, to hear from his colleague. Two days before the wreck +of the "Aimable," he wrote to La Salle: "I wish with all my heart that +you would have more confidence in me. For my part, I will always make +the first advances; and I will follow your counsel whenever I can do so +without risking my ship. I will come back to this place, if you want to +know the results of the voyage I am going to make. If you wish, I will +go to Martinique for provisions and reinforcements. In fine, there is +nothing I am not ready to do: you have only to speak." + +La Salle had begged him to send ashore a number of cannon and a quantity +of iron, stowed in the "Joly," for the use of the colony; and Beaujeu +replies: "I wish very much that I could give you your iron, but it is +impossible except in a harbor; for it is on my ballast, and under your +cannon, my spare anchors, and all my stowage. It would take three days +to get it out, which cannot be done in this place, where the sea runs +like mountains when the slightest wind blows outside. I would rather +come back to give it to you, in case you do not send the 'Belle' to Baye +du St. Esprit [Mobile Bay] to get it.... I beg you once more to consider +the offer I make you to go to Martinique to get provisions for your +people. I will ask the intendant for them in your name; and if they are +refused, I will take them on my own account."[298] + +To this La Salle immediately replied: "I received with singular pleasure +the letter you took the trouble to write me; for I found in it +extraordinary proofs of kindness in the interest you take in the success +of an affair which I have the more at heart, as it involves the glory of +the King and the honor of Monseigneur de Seignelay. I have done my part +towards a perfect understanding between us, and have never been wanting +in confidence; but even if I could be so, the offers you make are so +obliging that they would inspire complete trust." He nevertheless +declines them,--assuring Beaujeu at the same time that he has reached +the place he sought, and is in a fair way of success if he can but have +the cannon, cannonballs, and iron stowed on board the "Joly."[299] + +Directly after he writes again, "I cannot help conjuring you once more +to try to give us the iron." Beaujeu replies: "To show you how ardently +I wish to contribute to the success of your undertaking, I have ordered +your iron to be got out, in spite of my officers and sailors, who tell +me that I endanger my ship by moving everything in the depth of the hold +on a coast like this, where the seas are like mountains. I hesitated to +disturb my stowage, not so much to save trouble as because no ballast is +to be got hereabout; and I have therefore had six cannon, from my lower +deck battery, let down into the hold to take the place of the iron." And +he again urges La Salle to accept his offer to bring provisions to the +colonists from Martinique. + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE OF BEAUJEU.] + +On the next day, the "Aimable" was wrecked. Beaujeu remained a fortnight +longer on the coast, and then told La Salle that being out of wood, +water, and other necessaries, he must go to Mobile Bay to get them. +Nevertheless, he lingered a week more, repeated his offer to bring +supplies from Martinique, which La Salle again refused, and at last set +sail on the twelfth of March, after a leave-taking which was courteous +on both sides.[300] + +La Salle and his colonists were left alone. Several of them had lost +heart, and embarked for home with Beaujeu. Among these was Minet the +engineer, who had fallen out with La Salle, and who when he reached +France was imprisoned for deserting him. Even his brother, the priest +Jean Cavelier, had a mind to abandon the enterprise, but was persuaded +at last to remain, along with his nephew the hot-headed Moranget, and +the younger Cavelier, a mere school-boy. The two Recollet friars, Zenobe +Membre and Anastase Douay, the trusty Joutel, a man of sense and +observation, and the Marquis de la Sablonniere, a debauched noble whose +patrimony was his sword, were now the chief persons of the forlorn +company. The rest were soldiers, raw and undisciplined, and artisans, +most of whom knew nothing of their vocation. Add to these the miserable +families and the infatuated young women who had come to tempt fortune in +the swamps and cane-brakes of the Mississippi. + +La Salle set out to explore the neighborhood. Joutel remained in command +of the so-called fort. He was beset with wily enemies, and often at +night the Indians would crawl in the grass around his feeble stockade, +howling like wolves; but a few shots would put them to flight. A strict +guard was kept; and a wooden horse was set in the enclosure, to punish +the sentinel who should sleep at his post. They stood in daily fear of a +more formidable foe, and once they saw a sail, which they doubted not +was Spanish; but she happily passed without discovering them. They +hunted on the prairies, and speared fish in the neighboring pools. On +Easter Day, the Sieur le Gros, one of the chief men of the company, +went out after the service to shoot snipes; but as he walked barefoot +through the marsh, a snake bit him, and he soon after died. Two men +deserted, to starve on the prairie, or to become savages among savages. +Others tried to escape, but were caught; and one of them was hung. A +knot of desperadoes conspired to kill Joutel; but one of them betrayed +the secret, and the plot was crushed. + +La Salle returned from his exploration, but his return brought no cheer. +He had been forced to renounce the illusion to which he had clung so +long, and was convinced at last that he was not at the mouth of the +Mississippi. The wreck of the "Aimable" itself was not pregnant with +consequences so disastrous. + +[Sidenote: CONDUCT OF BEAUJEU.] + +Note.--The conduct of Beaujeu, hitherto judged chiefly by the printed +narrative of Joutel, is set in a new and more favorable light by his +correspondence with La Salle. Whatever may have been their mutual +irritation, it is clear that the naval commander was anxious to +discharge his duty in a manner to satisfy Seignelay, and that he may be +wholly acquitted of any sinister design. When he left La Salle on the +twelfth of March, he meant to sail in search of the Bay of Mobile (Baye +du St. Esprit),--partly because he hoped to find it a safe harbor, where +he could get La Salle's cannon out of the hold and find ballast to take +their place; and partly to get a supply of wood and water, of which he +was in extreme need. He told La Salle that he would wait there till the +middle of April, in order that he (La Salle) might send the "Belle" to +receive the cannon; but on this point there was no definite agreement +between them. Beaujeu was ignorant of the position of the bay, which he +thought much nearer than it actually was. After trying two days to reach +it, the strong head-winds and the discontent of his crew induced him to +bear away for Cuba; and after an encounter with pirates and various +adventures, he reached France about the first of July. He was coldly +received by Seignelay, who wrote to the intendant at Rochelle: "His +Majesty has seen what you wrote about the idea of the Sieur de Beaujeu, +that the Sieur de la Salle is not at the mouth of the Mississippi. He +seems to found this belief on such weak conjectures that no great +attention need be given to his account, especially as _this man_ has +been prejudiced from the first against La Salle's enterprise." (_Lettre +de Seignelay a Arnoul, 22 Juillet, 1685._ Margry, ii. 604.) The minister +at the same time warns Beaujeu to say nothing in disparagement of the +enterprise, under pain of the King's displeasure. + +The narrative of the engineer, Minet, sufficiently explains a curious +map, made by him, as he says, not on the spot, but on the voyage +homeward, and still preserved in the Archives Scientifiques de la +Marine. This map includes two distinct sketches of the mouth of the +Mississippi. The first, which corresponds to that made by Franquelin in +1684, is entitled "Embouchure de la Riviere comme M. de la Salle la +marque dans sa Carte." The second bears the words, "Costes et Lacs par +la Hauteur de sa Riviere, comme nous les avons trouves." These "Costes +et Lacs" are a rude representation of the lagoons of Matagorda Bay and +its neighborhood, into which the Mississippi is made to discharge, in +accordance with the belief of La Salle. A portion of the coast-line is +drawn from actual, though superficial observation. The rest is merely +conjectural. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[293] _Relation de Minet; Lettre de Minet a Seignelay, 6 July, 1685_ +(Margry, ii. 591, 602). + +[294] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 68; _Relation_ (Margry, iii. +143-146) Compare _Journal d'Esmanville_ (Margry, ii. 510). + +[295] _Relation de Minet_ (Margry, ii. 591). + +[296] _Proces Verbal du Sieur de la Salle sur le Naufrage de la Flute +l'Aimable_; _Lettre de La Salle a Seignelay, 4 Mars, 1685_; _Lettre de +Beaujeu a Seignelay, sans date_. Beaujeu did his best to save the cargo. +The loss included nearly all the provisions, 60 barrels of wine, 4 +cannon, 1,620 balls, 400 grenades, 4,000 pounds of iron, 5,000 pounds of +lead, most of the tools, a forge, a mill, cordage, boxes of arms, nearly +all the medicines, and most of the baggage of the soldiers and +colonists. Aigron returned to France in the "Joly," and was thrown into +prison, "comme il paroist clairement que cet accident est arrive par sa +faute."--_Seignelay au Sieur Arnoul, 22 Juillet, 1685_ (Margry, ii. +604). + +[297] A map, entitled _Entree du Lac ou on a laisse le Sr. de la +Salle_, made by the engineer Minet, and preserved in the Archives de la +Marine, represents the entrance of Matagorda Bay, the camp of La Salle +on the left, Indian camps on the borders of the bay, the "Belle" at +anchor within, the "Aimable" stranded at the entrance, and the "Joly" +anchored in the open sea. + +[298] _Lettre de Beaujeu a La Salle, 18 Fev., 1685_ (Margry, ii. 542). + +[299] _Lettre de La Salle a Beaujeu, 18 Fev., 1685_ (Margry, ii. 546). + +[300] The whole of this correspondence between Beaujeu and La Salle will +be found in Margry, ii. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +1685-1687. + +ST. LOUIS OF TEXAS. + + The Fort.--Misery and Dejection.--Energy of La Salle: his Journey + of Exploration.--Adventures and Accidents.--The + Buffalo.--Duhaut.--Indian Massacre.--Return Of La Salle.--A New + Calamity.--A Desperate Resolution.--Departure for Canada.--Wreck of + the "Belle."--Marriage.--Sedition.--Adventures Of la Salle's + Party.--The Cenis.--The Camanches.--The Only Hope.--The Last + Farewell. + + +Of what avail to plant a colony by the mouth of a petty Texan river? The +Mississippi was the life of the enterprise, the condition of its growth +and of its existence. Without it, all was futile and meaningless,--a +folly and a ruin. Cost what it might, the Mississippi must be found. + +But the demands of the hour were imperative. The hapless colony, cast +ashore like a wreck on the sands of Matagorda Bay, must gather up its +shattered resources and recruit its exhausted strength, before it +essayed anew its pilgrimage to the "fatal river." La Salle during his +explorations had found a spot which he thought well fitted for a +temporary establishment. It was on the river which he named the La +Vache,[301] now the Lavaca, which enters the head of Matagorda Bay; and +thither he ordered all the women and children, and most of the men, to +remove; while the rest, thirty in number, remained with Joutel at the +fort near the mouth of the bay. Here they spent their time in hunting, +fishing, and squaring the logs of drift-wood which the sea washed up in +abundance, and which La Salle proposed to use in building his new +station on the Lavaca. Thus the time passed till midsummer, when Joutel +received orders to abandon his post, and rejoin the main body of the +colonists. To this end, the little frigate "Belle" was sent down the +bay. She was a gift from the King to La Salle, who had brought her +safely over the bar, and regarded her as a main-stay of his hopes. She +now took on board the stores and some of the men, while Joutel with the +rest followed along shore to the post on the Lavaca. Here he found a +state of things that was far from cheering. Crops had been sown, but the +drought and the cattle had nearly destroyed them. The colonists were +lodged under tents and hovels; and the only solid structure was a small +square enclosure of pickets, in which the gunpowder and the brandy were +stored. The site was good, a rising ground by the river; but there was +no wood within the distance of a league, and no horses or oxen to drag +it. Their work must be done by men. Some felled and squared the timber; +and others dragged it by main force over the matted grass of the +prairie, under the scorching Texan sun. The gun-carriages served to make +the task somewhat easier; yet the strongest men soon gave out under it. +Joutel went down to the first fort, made a raft and brought up the +timber collected there, which proved a most seasonable and useful +supply. Palisades and buildings began to rise. The men labored without +spirit, yet strenuously; for they labored under the eye of La Salle. The +carpenters brought from Rochelle proved worthless; and he himself made +the plans of the work, marked out the tenons and mortises, and directed +the whole.[302] + +[Sidenote: MISERY AND DEJECTION.] + +Death, meanwhile, made withering havoc among his followers; and under +the sheds and hovels that shielded them from the sun lay a score of +wretches slowly wasting away with the diseases contracted at St. +Domingo. Of the soldiers enlisted for the expedition by La Salle's +agents, many are affirmed to have spent their lives in begging at the +church doors of Rochefort, and were consequently incapable of +discipline. It was impossible to prevent either them or the sailors from +devouring persimmons and other wild fruits to a destructive excess. +Nearly all fell ill; and before the summer had passed, the graveyard had +more than thirty tenants.[303] The bearing of La Salle did not aid to +raise the drooping spirits of his followers. The results of the +enterprise had been far different from his hopes; and, after a season of +flattering promise, he had entered again on those dark and obstructed +paths which seemed his destined way of life. The present was beset with +trouble; the future, thick with storms. The consciousness quickened his +energies; but it made him stern, harsh, and often unjust to those +beneath him. + +Joutel was returning to camp one afternoon with the master-carpenter, +when they saw game; and the carpenter went after it. He was never seen +again. Perhaps he was lost on the prairie, perhaps killed by Indians. He +knew little of his trade, but they nevertheless had need of him. Le +Gros, a man of character and intelligence, suffered more and more from +the bite of the snake received in the marsh on Easter Day. The injured +limb was amputated, and he died. La Salle's brother, the priest, lay +ill; and several others among the chief persons of the colony were in +the same condition. + +Meanwhile, the work was urged on. A large building was finished, +constructed of timber, roofed with boards and raw hides, and divided +into apartments for lodging and other uses. La Salle gave the new +establishment his favorite name of Fort St. Louis, and the neighboring +bay was also christened after the royal saint.[304] The scene was not +without its charms. Towards the southeast stretched the bay with its +bordering meadows; and on the northeast the Lavaca ran along the base of +green declivities. Around, far and near, rolled a sea of prairie, with +distant forests, dim in the summer haze. At times, it was dotted with +the browsing buffalo, not yet scared from their wonted pastures; and the +grassy swells were spangled with the flowers for which Texas is +renowned, and which now form the gay ornaments of our gardens. + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S EXPLORATIONS.] + +And now, the needful work accomplished, and the colony in some measure +housed and fortified, its indefatigable chief prepared to renew his +quest of the "fatal river," as Joutel repeatedly calls it. Before his +departure he made some preliminary explorations, in the course of which, +according to the report of his brother the priest, he found evidence +that the Spaniards had long before had a transient establishment at a +spot about fifteen leagues from Fort St. Louis.[305] + +[Sidenote: LIFE AT THE FORT.] + +It was the last day of October when La Salle set out on his great +journey of exploration. His brother Cavelier, who had now recovered, +accompanied him with fifty men; and five cannon-shot from the fort +saluted them as they departed. They were lightly equipped; but some of +them wore corselets made of staves, to ward off arrows. Descending the +Lavaca, they pursued their course eastward on foot along the margin of +the bay, while Joutel remained in command of the fort. It was two +leagues above the mouth of the river; and in it were thirty-four +persons, including three Recollet friars, a number of women and girls +from Paris, and two young orphan daughters of one Talon, a Canadian, who +had lately died. Their live-stock consisted of some hogs and a litter of +eight pigs, which, as Joutel does not forget to inform us, passed their +time in wallowing in the ditch of the palisade; a cock and hen, with a +young family; and a pair of goats, which, in a temporary dearth of fresh +meat, were sacrificed to the needs of the invalid Abbe Cavelier. Joutel +suffered no man to lie idle. The blacksmith, having no anvil, was +supplied with a cannon as a substitute. Lodgings were built for the +women and girls, and separate lodgings for the men. A small chapel was +afterwards added, and the whole was fenced with a palisade. At the four +corners of the house were mounted eight pieces of cannon, which, in the +absence of balls, were loaded with bags of bullets.[306] Between the +palisades and the stream lay a narrow strip of marsh, the haunt of +countless birds; and at a little distance it deepened into pools full of +fish. All the surrounding prairies swarmed with game,--buffalo, deer, +hares, turkeys, ducks, geese, swans, plover, snipe, and grouse. The +river supplied the colonists with turtles, and the bay with oysters. Of +these last, they often found more than they wanted; for when in their +excursions they shoved their log canoes into the water, wading shoeless +through the deep, tenacious mud, the sharp shells would cut their feet +like knives; "and what was worse," says Joutel, "the salt water came +into the gashes, and made them smart atrociously." + +He sometimes amused himself with shooting alligators. "I never spared +them when I met them near the house. One day I killed an extremely large +one, which was nearly four feet and a half in girth, and about twenty +feet long." He describes with accuracy that curious native of the +southwestern plains, the "horned frog," which, deceived by its +uninviting appearance, he erroneously supposed to be venomous. "We had +some of our animals bitten by snakes; among the others, a bitch that had +belonged to the deceased Sieur le Gros. She was bitten in the jaw when +she was with me, as I was fishing by the shore of the bay. I gave her a +little theriac [an antidote then in vogue], which cured her, as it did +one of our sows, which came home one day with her head so swelled that +she could hardly hold it up. Thinking it must be some snake that had +bitten her, I gave her a dose of the theriac mixed with meal and water." +The patient began to mend at once. "I killed a good many rattle-snakes +by means of the aforesaid bitch, for when she saw one she would bark +around him, sometimes for a half hour together, till I took my gun and +shot him. I often found them in the bushes, making a noise with their +tails. When I had killed them, our hogs ate them." He devotes many pages +to the plants and animals of the neighborhood, most of which may easily +be recognized from his description. + +[Sidenote: THE BUFFALO.] + +With the buffalo, which he calls "our daily bread," his experiences were +many and strange. Being, like the rest of the party, a novice in the art +of shooting them, he met with many disappointments. Once, having mounted +to the roof of the large house in the fort, he saw a dark moving object +on a swell of the prairie three miles off; and rightly thinking that it +was a herd of buffalo, he set out with six or seven men to try to kill +some of them. After a while, he discovered two bulls lying in a hollow; +and signing to the rest of his party to keep quiet, he made his +approach, gun in hand. The bulls presently jumped up, and stared +through their manes at the intruder. Joutel fired. It was a close shot; +but the bulls merely shook their shaggy heads, wheeled about, and +galloped heavily away. The same luck attended him the next day. "We saw +plenty of buffalo. I approached several bands of them, and fired again +and again, but could not make one of them fall." He had not yet learned +that a buffalo rarely falls at once, unless hit in the spine. He +continues: "I was not discouraged; and after approaching several more +bands,--which was hard work, because I had to crawl on the ground, so as +not to be seen,--I found myself in a herd of five or six thousand, but, +to my great vexation, I could not bring one of them down. They all ran +off to the right and left. It was near night, and I had killed nothing. +Though I was very tired, I tried again, approached another band, and +fired a number of shots; but not a buffalo would fall. The skin was off +my knees with crawling. At last, as I was going back to rejoin our men, +I saw a buffalo lying on the ground. I went towards it, and saw that it +was dead. I examined it, and found that the bullet had gone in near the +shoulder. Then I found others dead like the first. I beckoned the men to +come on, and we set to work to cut up the meat,--a task which was new to +us all." It would be impossible to write a more true and characteristic +sketch of the experience of a novice in shooting buffalo on foot. A few +days after, he went out again, with Father Anastase Douay; approached a +bull, fired, and broke his shoulder. The bull hobbled off on three legs. +Douay ran in his cassock to head him back, while Joutel reloaded his +gun; upon which the enraged beast butted at the missionary, and knocked +him down. He very narrowly escaped with his life. "There was another +missionary," pursues Joutel, "named Father Maxime Le Clerc, who was very +well fitted for such an undertaking as ours, because he was equal to +anything, even to butchering a buffalo; and as I said before that every +one of us must lend a hand, because we were too few for anybody to be +waited upon, I made the women, girls, and children do their part, as +well as him; for as they all wanted to eat, it was fair that they all +should work." He had a scaffolding built near the fort, and set them to +smoking buffalo meat, against a day of scarcity.[307] + +[Sidenote: RETURN OF DUHAUT.] + +Thus the time passed till the middle of January; when late one evening, +as all were gathered in the principal building, conversing perhaps, or +smoking, or playing at cards, or dozing by the fire in homesick dreams +of France, a man on guard came in to report that he had heard a voice +from the river. They all went down to the bank, and descried a man in a +canoe, who called out, "Dominic!" This was the name of the younger of +the two brothers Duhaut, who was one of Joutel's followers. As the +canoe approached, they recognized the elder, who had gone with La Salle +on his journey of discovery, and who was perhaps the greatest villain of +the company. Joutel was much perplexed. La Salle had ordered him to +admit nobody into the fort without a pass and a watchword. Duhaut, when +questioned, said that he had none, but told at the same time so +plausible a story that Joutel no longer hesitated to receive him. As La +Salle and his men were pursuing their march along the prairie, Duhaut, +who was in the rear, had stopped to mend his moccasins, and when he +tried to overtake the party, had lost his way, mistaking a buffalo-path +for the trail of his companions. At night he fired his gun as a signal, +but there was no answering shot. Seeing no hope of rejoining them, he +turned back for the fort, found one of the canoes which La Salle had +hidden at the shore, paddled by night and lay close by day, shot +turkeys, deer, and buffalo for food, and, having no knife, cut the meat +with a sharp flint, till after a month of excessive hardship he reached +his destination. As the inmates of Fort St. Louis gathered about the +weather-beaten wanderer, he told them dreary tidings. The pilot of the +"Belle," such was his story, had gone with five men to sound along the +shore, by order of La Salle, who was then encamped in the neighborhood +with his party of explorers. The boat's crew, being overtaken by the +night, had rashly bivouacked on the beach without setting a guard; and +as they slept, a band of Indians had rushed in upon them, and butchered +them all. La Salle, alarmed by their long absence, had searched along +the shore, and at length found their bodies scattered about the sands +and half-devoured by wolves.[308] Well would it have been, if Duhaut had +shared their fate. + +Weeks and months dragged on, when, at the end of March, Joutel, chancing +to mount on the roof of one of the buildings, saw seven or eight men +approaching over the prairie. He went out to meet them with an equal +number, well armed; and as he drew near recognized, with mixed joy and +anxiety, La Salle and some of those who had gone with him. His brother +Cavelier was at his side, with his cassock so tattered that, says +Joutel, "there was hardly a piece left large enough to wrap a farthing's +worth of salt. He had an old cap on his head, having lost his hat by the +way. The rest were in no better plight, for their shirts were all in +rags. Some of them carried loads of meat, because M. de la Salle was +afraid that we might not have killed any buffalo. We met with great joy +and many embraces. After our greetings were over, M. de la Salle, seeing +Duhaut, asked me in an angry tone how it was that I had received this +man who had abandoned him. I told him how it had happened, and repeated +Duhaut's story. Duhaut defended himself, and M. de la Salle's anger was +soon over. We went into the house, and refreshed ourselves with some +bread and brandy, as there was no wine left."[309] + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S ADVENTURES.] + +La Salle and his companions told their story. They had wandered on +through various savage tribes, with whom they had more than one +encounter, scattering them like chaff by the terror of their fire-arms. +At length they found a more friendly band, and learned much touching the +Spaniards, who, they were told, were universally hated by the tribes of +that country. It would be easy, said their informants, to gather a host +of warriors and lead them over the Rio Grande; but La Salle was in no +condition for attempting conquests, and the tribes in whose alliance he +had trusted had, a few days before, been at blows with him. The invasion +of New Biscay must be postponed to a more propitious day. Still +advancing, he came to a large river, which he at first mistook for the +Mississippi; and building a fort of palisades, he left here several of +his men.[310] The fate of these unfortunates does not appear. He now +retraced his steps towards Fort St. Louis, and, as he approached it, +detached some of his men to look for his vessel, the "Belle," for whose +safety, since the loss of her pilot, he had become very anxious. + +On the next day these men appeared at the fort, with downcast looks. +They had not found the "Belle" at the place where she had been ordered +to remain, nor were any tidings to be heard of her. From that hour, the +conviction that she was lost possessed the mind of La Salle. Surrounded +as he was, and had always been, with traitors, the belief now possessed +him that her crew had abandoned the colony, and made sail for the West +Indies or for France. The loss was incalculable. He had relied on this +vessel to transport the colonists to the Mississippi, as soon as its +exact position could be ascertained; and thinking her a safer place of +deposit than the fort, he had put on board of her all his papers and +personal baggage, besides a great quantity of stores, ammunition, and +tools.[311] In truth, she was of the last necessity to the unhappy +exiles, and their only resource for escape from a position which was +fast becoming desperate. + +La Salle, as his brother tells us, now fell dangerously ill,--the +fatigues of his journey, joined to the effects upon his mind of this +last disaster, having overcome his strength, though not his fortitude. +"In truth," writes the priest, "after the loss of the vessel which +deprived us of our only means of returning to France, we had no resource +but in the firm guidance of my brother, whose death each of us would +have regarded as his own."[312] + +[Sidenote: DEPARTURE FOR CANADA.] + +La Salle no sooner recovered than he embraced a resolution which could +be the offspring only of a desperate necessity. He determined to make +his way by the Mississippi and the Illinois to Canada, whence he might +bring succor to the colonists, and send a report of their condition to +France. The attempt was beset with uncertainties and dangers. The +Mississippi was first to be found, then followed through all the +perilous monotony of its interminable windings to a goal which was to be +but the starting-point of a new and not less arduous journey. Cavelier +his brother, Moranget his nephew, the friar Anastase Douay, and others +to the number of twenty, were chosen to accompany him. Every corner of +the magazine was ransacked for an outfit. Joutel generously gave up the +better part of his wardrobe to La Salle and his two relatives. Duhaut, +who had saved his baggage from the wreck of the "Aimable," was +required to contribute to the necessities of the party; and the +scantily-furnished chests of those who had died were used to supply the +wants of the living. Each man labored with needle and awl to patch his +failing garments, or supply their place with buffalo or deer skins. On +the twenty-second of April, after mass and prayers in the chapel, they +issued from the gate, each bearing his pack and his weapons, some with +kettles slung at their backs, some with axes, some with gifts for +Indians. In this guise, they held their way in silence across the +prairie; while anxious eyes followed them from the palisades of St. +Louis, whose inmates, not excepting Joutel himself, seem to have been +ignorant of the extent and difficulty of the undertaking.[313] + +[Sidenote: WRECK OF THE "BELLE."] + +"On May Day," he writes, "at about two in the afternoon, as I was +walking near the house, I heard a voice from the river below, crying out +several times, _Qui vive?_ Knowing that the Sieur Barbier had gone that +way with two canoes to hunt buffalo, I thought that it might be one of +these canoes coming back with meat, and did not think much of the matter +till I heard the same voice again. I answered, _Versailles_, which was +the password I had given the Sieur Barbier, in case he should come back +in the night. But, as I was going towards the bank, I heard other voices +which I had not heard for a long time. I recognized among the rest that +of M. Chefdeville, which made me fear that some disaster had happened. I +ran down to the bank, and my first greeting was to ask what had become +of the 'Belle.' They answered that she was wrecked on the other side of +the bay, and that all on board were drowned except the six who were in +the canoe; namely, the Sieur Chefdeville, the Marquis de la Sablonniere, +the man named Teissier, a soldier, a girl, and a little boy."[314] + +From the young priest Chefdeville, Joutel learned the particulars of the +disaster. Water had failed on board the "Belle"; a boat's crew of five +men had gone in quest of it; the wind rose, their boat was swamped, and +they were all drowned. Those who remained had now no means of going +ashore; but if they had no water, they had wine and brandy in abundance, +and Teissier, the master of the vessel, was drunk every day. After a +while they left their moorings, and tried to reach the fort; but they +were few, weak, and unskilful. A violent north wind drove them on a +sand-bar. Some of them were drowned in trying to reach land on a raft. +Others were more successful; and, after a long delay, they found a +stranded canoe, in which they made their way to St. Louis, bringing with +them some of La Salle's papers and baggage saved from the wreck. + +These multiplied disasters bore hard on the spirits of the colonists; +and Joutel, like a good commander as he was, spared no pains to cheer +them. "We did what we could to amuse ourselves and drive away care. I +encouraged our people to dance and sing in the evenings; for when M. de +la Salle was among us, pleasure was often banished. Now, there is no +use in being melancholy on such occasions. It is true that M. de la +Salle had no great cause for merry-making, after all his losses and +disappointments; but his troubles made others suffer also. Though he had +ordered me to allow to each person only a certain quantity of meat at +every meal, I observed this rule only when meat was rare. The air here +is very keen, and one has a great appetite. One must eat and act, if he +wants good health and spirits. I speak from experience; for once, when I +had ague chills, and was obliged to keep the house with nothing to do, I +was dreary and down-hearted. On the contrary, if I was busy with hunting +or anything else, I was not so dull by half. So I tried to keep the +people as busy as possible. I set them to making a small cellar to keep +meat fresh in hot weather; but when M. de la Salle came back, he said it +was too small. As he always wanted to do everything on a grand scale, he +prepared to make a large one, and marked out the plan." This plan of the +large cellar, like more important undertakings of its unhappy projector, +proved too extensive for execution, the colonists being engrossed by the +daily care of keeping themselves alive. + +[Sidenote: MATRIMONY.] + +A gleam of hilarity shot for an instant out of the clouds. The young +Canadian, Barbier, usually conducted the hunting-parties; and some of +the women and girls often went out with them, to aid in cutting up the +meat. Barbier became enamoured of one of the girls; and as his devotion +to her was the subject of comment, he asked Joutel for leave to marry +her. The commandant, after due counsel with the priests and friars, +vouchsafed his consent, and the rite was duly solemnized; whereupon, +fired by the example, the Marquis de la Sablonniere begged leave to +marry another of the girls. Joutel, the gardener's son, concerned that a +marquis should so abase himself, and anxious at the same time for the +morals of the fort, which La Salle had especially commended to his care, +not only flatly refused, but, in the plenitude of his authority, forbade +the lovers all further intercourse. + +Father Zenobe Membre, superior of the mission, gave unwilling occasion +for further merriment. These worthy friars were singularly unhappy in +their dealings with the buffalo, one of which, it may be remembered, had +already knocked down Father Anastase. Undeterred by his example, Father +Zenobe one day went out with the hunters, carrying a gun like the rest. +Joutel shot a buffalo, which was making off, badly wounded, when a +second shot stopped it, and it presently lay down. The father superior +thought it was dead; and, without heeding the warning shout of Joutel, +he approached, and pushed it with the butt of his gun. The bull sprang +up with an effort of expiring fury, and, in the words of Joutel, +"trampled on the father, took the skin off his face in several places, +and broke his gun, so that he could hardly manage to get away, and +remained in an almost helpless state for more than three months. Bad as +the accident was, he was laughed at nevertheless for his rashness." + +The mishaps of the friars did not end here. Father Maxime Le Clerc was +set upon by a boar belonging to the colony. "I do not know," says +Joutel, "what spite the beast had against him, whether for a beating or +some other offence; but, however this may be, I saw the father running +and crying for help, and the boar running after him. I went to the +rescue, but could not come up in time. The father stooped as he ran, to +gather up his cassock from about his legs; and the boar, which ran +faster than he, struck him in the arm with his tusks, so that some of +the nerves were torn. Thus, all three of our good Recollet fathers were +near being the victims of animals."[315] + +In spite of his efforts to encourage them, the followers of Joutel were +fast losing heart. Father Maxime Le Clerc kept a journal, in which he +set down various charges against La Salle. Joutel got possession of the +paper, and burned it on the urgent entreaty of the friars, who dreaded +what might ensue, should the absent commander become aware of the +aspersions cast upon him. The elder Duhaut fomented the rising +discontent of the colonists, played the demagogue, told them that La +Salle would never return, and tried to make himself their leader. Joutel +detected the mischief, and, with a lenity which he afterwards deeply +regretted, contented himself with a rebuke to the offender, and words +of reproof and encouragement to the dejected band. + +[Sidenote: ADVENTURES OF THE TRAVELLERS.] + +He had caused the grass to be cut near the fort, so as to form a sort of +playground; and here, one evening, he and some of the party were trying +to amuse themselves, when they heard shouts from beyond the river, and +Joutel recognized the voice of La Salle. Hastening to meet him in a +wooden canoe, he brought him and his party to the fort. Twenty men had +gone out with him, and eight had returned. Of the rest, four had +deserted, one had been lost, one had been devoured by an alligator; and +the others, giving out on the march, had probably perished in attempting +to regain the fort. The travellers told of a rich country, a wild and +beautiful landscape,--woods, rivers, groves, and prairies; but all +availed nothing, and the acquisition of five horses was but an +indifferent return for the loss of twelve men. + +After leaving the fort, they had journeyed towards the northeast, over +plains green as an emerald with the young verdure of April, till at +length they saw, far as the eye could reach, the boundless prairie alive +with herds of buffalo. The animals were in one of their tame or stupid +moods; and they killed nine or ten of them without the least difficulty, +drying the best parts of the meat. They crossed the Colorado on a raft, +and reached the banks of another river, where one of the party, named +Hiens, a German of Wuertemberg, and an old buccaneer, was mired and +nearly suffocated in a mud-hole. Unfortunately, as will soon appear, he +managed to crawl out; and, to console him, the river was christened with +his name. The party made a bridge of felled trees, on which they crossed +in safety. La Salle now changed their course, and journeyed eastward, +when the travellers soon found themselves in the midst of a numerous +Indian population, where they were feasted and caressed without measure. +At another village they were less fortunate. The inhabitants were +friendly by day and hostile by night. They came to attack the French in +their camp, but withdrew, daunted by the menacing voice of La Salle, who +had heard them approaching through the cane-brake. + +La Salle's favorite Shawanoe hunter, Nika, who had followed him from +Canada to France, and from France to Texas, was bitten by a rattlesnake; +and, though he recovered, the accident detained the party for several +days. At length they resumed their journey, but were stopped by a river, +called by Douay, "La Riviere des Malheurs." La Salle and Cavelier, with +a few others, tried to cross on a raft, which, as it reached the +channel, was caught by a current of marvellous swiftness. Douay and +Moranget, watching the transit from the edge of the cane-brake, beheld +their commander swept down the stream, and vanishing, as it were, in an +instant. All that day they remained with their companions on the bank, +lamenting in despair for the loss of their guardian angel, for so Douay +calls La Salle.[316] It was fast growing dark, when, to their +unspeakable relief, they saw him advancing with his party along the +opposite bank, having succeeded, after great exertion, in guiding the +raft to land. How to rejoin him was now the question. Douay and his +companions, who had tasted no food that day, broke their fast on two +young eagles which they knocked out of their nest, and then spent the +night in rueful consultation as to the means of crossing the river. In +the morning they waded into the marsh, the friar with his breviary in +his hood to keep it dry, and hacked among the canes till they had +gathered enough to make another raft; on which, profiting by La Salle's +experience, they safely crossed, and rejoined him. + +Next, they became entangled in a cane-brake, where La Salle, as usual +with him in such cases, took the lead, a hatchet in each hand, and hewed +out a path for his followers. They soon reached the villages of the +Cenis Indians, on and near the river Trinity,--a tribe then powerful, +but long since extinct. Nothing could surpass the friendliness of their +welcome. The chiefs came to meet them, bearing the calumet, and followed +by warriors in shirts of embroidered deer-skin. Then the whole village +swarmed out like bees, gathering around the visitors with offerings of +food and all that was precious in their eyes. La Salle was lodged with +the great chief; but he compelled his men to encamp at a distance, lest +the ardor of their gallantry might give occasion of offence. The lodges +of the Cenis, forty or fifty feet high, and covered with a thatch of +meadow-grass, looked like huge bee-hives. Each held several families, +whose fire was in the middle, and their beds around the circumference. +The spoil of the Spaniards was to be seen on all sides,--silver lamps +and spoons, swords, old muskets, money, clothing, and a bull of the Pope +dispensing the Spanish colonists of New Mexico from fasting during +summer.[317] These treasures, as well as their numerous horses, were +obtained by the Cenis from their neighbors and allies the Camanches, +that fierce prairie banditti who then, as now, scourged the Mexican +border with their bloody forays. A party of these wild horsemen was in +the village. Douay was edified at seeing them make the sign of the cross +in imitation of the neophytes of one of the Spanish missions. They +enacted, too, the ceremony of the mass; and one of them, in his rude +way, drew a sketch of a picture he had seen in some church which he had +pillaged, wherein the friar plainly recognized the Virgin weeping at the +foot of the cross. They invited the French to join them on a raid into +New Mexico; and they spoke with contempt, as their tribesmen will speak +to this day, of the Spanish creoles, saying that it would be easy to +conquer a nation of cowards who make people walk before them with fans +to cool them in hot weather.[318] + +Soon after leaving the Cenis villages, both La Salle and his nephew +Moranget were attacked by fever. This caused a delay of more than two +months, during which the party seem to have remained encamped on the +Neches, or possibly the Sabine. When at length the invalids had +recovered sufficient strength to travel, the stock of ammunition was +nearly spent, some of the men had deserted, and the condition of the +travellers was such that there seemed no alternative but to return to +Fort St. Louis. This they accordingly did, greatly aided in their march +by the horses bought from the Cenis, and suffering no very serious +accident by the way,--excepting the loss of La Salle's servant, +Dumesnil, who was seized by an alligator while attempting to cross the +Colorado. + +[Sidenote: DEJECTION.] + +The temporary excitement caused among the colonists by their return soon +gave place to a dejection bordering on despair. "This pleasant land," +writes Cavelier, "seemed to us an abode of weariness and a perpetual +prison." Flattering themselves with the delusion, common to exiles of +every kind, that they were objects of solicitude at home, they watched +daily, with straining eyes, for an approaching sail. Ships, indeed, had +ranged the coast to seek them, but with no friendly intent. Their +thoughts dwelt, with unspeakable yearning, on the France they had left +behind, which, to their longing fancy, was pictured as an unattainable +Eden. Well might they despond; for of a hundred and eighty colonists, +besides the crew of the "Belle," less than forty-five remained. The +weary precincts of Fort St. Louis, with its fence of rigid palisades, +its area of trampled earth, its buildings of weather-stained timber, and +its well-peopled graveyard without, were hateful to their sight. La +Salle had a heavy task to save them from despair. His composure, his +unfailing equanimity, his words of encouragement and cheer, were the +breath of life to this forlorn company; for though he could not impart +to minds of less adamantine temper the audacity of hope with which he +still clung to the final accomplishment of his purposes, the contagion +of his hardihood touched, nevertheless, the drooping spirits of his +followers.[319] + +[Sidenote: TWELFTH NIGHT.] + +The journey to Canada was clearly their only hope; and, after a brief +rest, La Salle prepared to renew the attempt. He proposed that Joutel +should this time be of the party; and should proceed from Quebec to +France, with his brother Cavelier, to solicit succors for the colony, +while he himself returned to Texas. A new obstacle was presently +interposed. La Salle, whose constitution seems to have suffered from his +long course of hardships, was attacked in November with hernia. Joutel +offered to conduct the party in his stead; but La Salle replied that his +own presence was indispensable at the Illinois. He had the good fortune +to recover, within four or five weeks, sufficiently to undertake the +journey; and all in the fort busied themselves in preparing an outfit. +In such straits were they for clothing, that the sails of the "Belle" +were cut up to make coats for the adventurers. Christmas came, and was +solemnly observed. There was a midnight mass in the chapel, where +Membre, Cavelier, Douay, and their priestly brethren stood before the +altar, in vestments strangely contrasting with the rude temple and the +ruder garb of the worshippers. And as Membre elevated the consecrated +wafer, and the lamps burned dim through the clouds of incense, the +kneeling group drew from the daily miracle such consolation as true +Catholics alone can know. When Twelfth Night came, all gathered in the +hall, and cried, after the jovial old custom, "The King drinks," with +hearts, perhaps, as cheerless as their cups, which were filled with cold +water. + +[Sidenote: THE LAST FAREWELL.] + +On the morrow, the band of adventurers mustered for the fatal +journey.[320] The five horses, bought by La Salle of the Indians, stood +in the area of the fort, packed for the march; and here was gathered the +wretched remnant of the colony,--those who were to go, and those who +were to stay behind. These latter were about twenty in all,--Barbier, +who was to command in the place of Joutel; Sablonniere, who, despite his +title of marquis, was held in great contempt;[321] the friars, Membre +and Le Clerc,[322] and the priest Chefdeville, besides a surgeon, +soldiers, laborers, seven women and girls, and several children, doomed, +in this deadly exile, to wait the issues of the journey, and the +possible arrival of a tardy succor. La Salle had made them a last +address, delivered, we are told, with that winning air which, though +alien from his usual bearing, seems to have been at times a natural +expression of this unhappy man.[323] It was a bitter parting, one of +sighs, tears, and embracings,--the farewell of those on whose souls had +sunk a heavy boding that they would never meet again.[324] Equipped and +weaponed for the journey, the adventurers filed from the gate, crossed +the river, and held their slow march over the prairies beyond, till +intervening woods and hills shut Fort St. Louis forever from their +sight. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[301] Called by Joutel, Riviere aux Boeufs. + +[302] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 108; _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 174); +_Proces Verbal fait au poste de St. Louis, le 18 Avril, 1686_. + +[303] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 109. Le Clerc, who was not present, +says a hundred. + +[304] The Bay of St. Louis, St. Bernard's Bay, or Matagorda Bay,--for it +has borne all these names,--was also called Espiritu Santo Bay by the +Spaniards, in common with several other bays in the Gulf of Mexico. An +adjoining bay still retains the name. + +[305] Cavelier, in his report to the minister, says: "We reached a large +village, enclosed with a kind of wall made of clay and sand, and +fortified with little towers at intervals, where we found the arms of +Spain engraved on a plate of copper, with the date of 1588, attached to +a stake. The inhabitants gave us a kind welcome, and showed us some +hammers and an anvil, two small pieces of iron cannon, a small brass +culverin, some pike-heads, some old sword-blades, and some books of +Spanish comedy; and thence they guided us to a little hamlet of +fishermen, about two leagues distant, where they showed us a second +stake, also with the arms of Spain, and a few old chimneys. All this +convinced us that the Spaniards had formerly been here." (Cavelier, +_Relation du Voyage que mon frere entreprit pour decouvrir l'embouchure +du fleuve de Missisipy_.) The above is translated from the original +draft of Cavelier, which is in my possession. It was addressed to the +colonial minister, after the death of La Salle. The statement concerning +the Spaniards needs confirmation. + +[306] Compare Joutel with the Spanish account in _Carta en que se da +noticia de un viaje hecho a la Bahia de Espiritu Santo y de la poblacion +que tenian ahi los Franceses; Coleccion de Varios Documentos_, 25. + +[307] For the above incidents of life at Fort St. Louis, see Joutel, +_Relation_ (Margry, iii. 185-218, _passim_). The printed condensation of +the narrative omits most of these particulars. + +[308] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 206). Compare Le Clerc, ii. 296. +Cavelier, always disposed to exaggerate, says that ten men were killed. +La Salle had previously had encounters with the Indians, and punished +them severely for the trouble they had given his men. Le Clerc says of +the principal fight: "Several Indians were wounded, a few were killed, +and others made prisoners,--one of whom, a girl of three or four years, +was baptized, and died a few days after, as the first-fruit of this +mission, and a sure conquest sent to heaven." + +[309] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 219). + +[310] Cavelier says that he actually reached the Mississippi; but, on +the one hand, the abbe did not know whether the river in question was +the Mississippi or not; and, on the other, he is somewhat inclined to +mendacity. Le Clerc says that La Salle thought he had found the river. +According to the _Proces Verbal_ of 18 April, 1686, "il y arriva le 13 +Fevrier." Joutel says that La Salle told him "qu'il n'avoit point trouve +sa riviere." + +[311] _Proces Verbal fait au poste de St. Louis, le 18 Avril, 1686._ + +[312] Cavelier, _Relation du Voyage pour decouvrir l'Embouchure du +Fleuve de Missisipy_. + +[313] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 140; Anastase Douay in Le Clerc, ii. +303; Cavelier, _Relation_. The date is from Douay. It does not appear, +from his narrative, that they meant to go farther than the Illinois. +Cavelier says that after resting here they were to go to Canada. Joutel +supposed that they would go only to the Illinois. La Salle seems to have +been even more reticent than usual. + +[314] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 226). + +[315] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 244, 246). + +[316] "Ce fut une desolation extreme pour nous tous qui desesperions de +revoir jamais nostre Ange tutelaire, le Sieur de la Salle.... Tout le +jour se passa en pleurs et en larmes."--_Douay in Le Clerc_, ii. 315. + +[317] Douay in Le Clerc, ii. 321; Cavelier, _Relation_. + +[318] Douay in Le Clerc, ii. 324, 325. + +[319] "L'egalite d'humeur du Chef rassuroit tout le monde; et il +trouvoit des resources a tout par son esprit qui relevoit les esperances +les plus abatues."--Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 152. + +"Il seroit difficile de trouver dans l'Histoire un courage plus +intrepide et plus invincible que celuy du Sieur de la Salle dans les +evenemens contraires; il ne fut jamais abatu, et il esperoit toujours +avec le secours du Ciel de venir a bout de son entreprise malgre tous +les obstacles qui se presentoient."--_Douay in Le Clerc_, ii. 327. + +[320] I follow Douay's date, who makes the day of departure the seventh +of January, or the day after Twelfth Night. Joutel thinks it was the +twelfth of January, but professes uncertainty as to all his dates at +this time, as he lost his notes. + +[321] He had to be kept on short allowance, because he was in the habit +of bargaining away everything given to him. He had squandered the little +that belonged to him at St. Domingo, in amusements "indignes de sa +naissance," and in consequence was suffering from diseases which +disabled him from walking. (_Proces Verbal, 18 Avril, 1686._) + +[322] Maxime le Clerc was a relative of the author of _L'Etablissement +de la Foi_. + +[323] "Il fit une Harangue pleine d'eloquence et de cet air engageant +qui luy estoit si naturel: toute la petite Colonie y estoit presente et +en fut touchee jusques aux larmes, persuadee de la necessite de son +voyage et de la droiture de ses intentions."--_Douay in Le Clerc_, ii, +330. + +[324] "Nous nous separames les uns des autres, d'une maniere si tendre +et si triste qu'il sembloit que nous avions tous le secret pressentiment +que nous ne nous reverrions jamais."--Joutel, _Journal Historique_, +158. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +1687. + +ASSASSINATION OF LA SALLE. + + His Followers.--Prairie Travelling--A Hunters' Quarrel--The Murder + of Moranget.--The Conspiracy.--Death of La Salle: his Character. + + +[Sidenote: LA SALLE'S FOLLOWERS.] + +The travellers were crossing a marshy prairie towards a distant belt of +woods that followed the course of a little river. They led with them +their five horses, laden with their scanty baggage, and, with what was +of no less importance, their stock of presents for Indians. Some wore +the remains of the clothing they had worn from France, eked out with +deer-skins, dressed in the Indian manner; and some had coats of old +sail-cloth. Here was La Salle, in whom one would have known, at a +glance, the chief of the party; and the priest, Cavelier, who seems to +have shared not one of the high traits of his younger brother. Here, +too, were their nephews, Moranget and the boy Cavelier, now about +seventeen years old; the trusty soldier Joutel; and the friar Anastase +Douay. Duhaut followed, a man of respectable birth and education; and +Liotot, the surgeon of the party. At home, they might perhaps have +lived and died with a fair repute; but the wilderness is a rude +touchstone, which often reveals traits that would have lain buried and +unsuspected in civilized life. The German Hiens, the ex-buccaneer, was +also of the number. He had probably sailed with an English crew; for he +was sometimes known as _Gemme Anglais_, or "English Jem."[325] The Sieur +de Marie; Teissier, a pilot; L'Archeveque, a servant of Duhaut; and +others, to the number in all of seventeen,--made up the party; to which +is to be added Nika, La Salle's Shawanoe hunter, who, as well as another +Indian, had twice crossed the ocean with him, and still followed his +fortunes with an admiring though undemonstrative fidelity. + +They passed the prairie, and neared the forest. Here they saw buffalo; +and the hunters approached, and killed several of them. Then they +traversed the woods; found and forded the shallow and rushy stream, and +pushed through the forest beyond, till they again reached the open +prairie. Heavy clouds gathered over them, and it rained all night; but +they sheltered themselves under the fresh hides of the buffalo they had +killed. + +[Sidenote: PRAIRIE TRAVELLING.] + +It is impossible, as it would be needless, to follow the detail of their +daily march.[326] It was such an one, though with unwonted hardship, as +is familiar to the memory of many a prairie traveller of our own time. +They suffered greatly from the want of shoes, and found for a while no +better substitute than a casing of raw buffalo-hide, which they were +forced to keep always wet, as, when dry, it hardened about the foot like +iron. At length they bought dressed deer-skin from the Indians, of which +they made tolerable moccasins. The rivers, streams, and gullies filled +with water were without number; and to cross them they made a boat of +bull-hide, like the "bull boat" still used on the Upper Missouri. This +did good service, as, with the help of their horses, they could carry it +with them. Two or three men could cross in it at once, and the horses +swam after them like dogs. Sometimes they traversed the sunny prairie; +sometimes dived into the dark recesses of the forest, where the buffalo, +descending daily from their pastures in long files to drink at the +river, often made a broad and easy path for the travellers. When foul +weather arrested them, they built huts of bark and long meadow-grass; +and safely sheltered lounged away the day, while their horses, picketed +near by, stood steaming in the rain. At night, they usually set a rude +stockade about their camp; and here, by the grassy border of a brook, +or at the edge of a grove where a spring bubbled up through the sands, +they lay asleep around the embers of their fire, while the man on guard +listened to the deep breathing of the slumbering horses, and the howling +of the wolves that saluted the rising moon as it flooded the waste of +prairie with pale mystic radiance. + +They met Indians almost daily,--sometimes a band of hunters, mounted or +on foot, chasing buffalo on the plains; sometimes a party of fishermen; +sometimes a winter camp, on the slope of a hill or under the sheltering +border of a forest. They held intercourse with them in the distance by +signs; often they disarmed their distrust, and attracted them into their +camp; and often they visited them in their lodges, where, seated on +buffalo-robes, they smoked with their entertainers, passing the pipe +from hand to hand, after the custom still in use among the prairie +tribes. Cavelier says that they once saw a band of a hundred and fifty +mounted Indians attacking a herd of buffalo with lances pointed with +sharpened bone. The old priest was delighted with the sport, which he +pronounces "the most diverting thing in the world." On another occasion, +when the party were encamped near the village of a tribe which Cavelier +calls Sassory, he saw them catch an alligator about twelve feet long, +which they proceeded to torture as if he were a human enemy,--first +putting out his eyes, and then leading him to the neighboring prairie, +where, having confined him by a number of stakes, they spent the entire +day in tormenting him.[327] + +Holding a northerly course, the travellers crossed the Brazos, and +reached the waters of the Trinity. The weather was unfavorable, and on +one occasion they encamped in the rain during four or five days +together. It was not an harmonious company. La Salle's cold and haughty +reserve had returned, at least for those of his followers to whom he was +not partial. Duhaut and the surgeon Liotot, both of whom were men of +some property, had a large pecuniary stake in the enterprise, and were +disappointed and incensed at its ruinous result. They had a quarrel with +young Moranget, whose hot and hasty temper was as little fitted to +conciliate as was the harsh reserve of his uncle. Already at Fort St. +Louis, Duhaut had intrigued among the men; and the mild admonition of +Joutel had not, it seems, sufficed to divert him from his sinister +purposes. Liotot, it is said, had secretly sworn vengeance against La +Salle, whom he charged with having caused the death of his brother, or, +as some will have it, his nephew. On one of the former journeys this +young man's strength had failed; and, La Salle having ordered him to +return to the fort, he had been killed by Indians on the way. + +[Sidenote: MURDER OF MORANGET.] + +The party moved again as the weather improved, and on the fifteenth of +March encamped within a few miles of a spot which La Salle had passed on +his preceding journey, and where he had left a quantity of Indian corn +and beans in _cache_; that is to say, hidden in the ground or in a +hollow tree. As provisions were falling short, he sent a party from the +camp to find it. These men were Duhaut, Liotot,[328] Hiens the +buccaneer, Teissier, L'Archeveque, Nika the hunter, and La Salle's +servant Saget. They opened the _cache_, and found the contents spoiled; +but as they returned from their bootless errand they saw buffalo, and +Nika shot two of them. They now encamped on the spot, and sent the +servant to inform La Salle, in order that he might send horses to bring +in the meat. Accordingly, on the next day, he directed Moranget and De +Marle, with the necessary horses, to go with Saget to the hunters' camp. +When they arrived, they found that Duhaut and his companions had already +cut up the meat, and laid it upon scaffolds for smoking, though it was +not yet so dry as, it seems, this process required. Duhaut and the +others had also put by, for themselves, the marrow-bones and certain +portions of the meat, to which, by woodland custom, they had a perfect +right. Moranget, whose rashness and violence had once before caused a +fatal catastrophe, fell into a most unreasonable fit of rage, berated +and menaced Duhaut and his party, and ended by seizing upon the whole of +the meat, including the reserved portions. This added fuel to the fire +of Duhaut's old grudge against Moranget and his uncle. There is reason +to think that he had harbored deadly designs, the execution of which +was only hastened by the present outbreak. The surgeon also bore hatred +against Moranget, whom he had nursed with constant attention when +wounded by an Indian arrow, and who had since repaid him with abuse. +These two now took counsel apart with Hiens, Teissier, and L'Archeveque; +and it was resolved to kill Moranget that night. Nika, La Salle's +devoted follower, and Saget, his faithful servant, must die with him. +All of the five were of one mind except the pilot Teissier, who neither +aided nor opposed the plot. + +Night came: the woods grew dark; the evening meal was finished, and the +evening pipes were smoked. The order of the guard was arranged; and, +doubtless by design, the first hour of the night was assigned to +Moranget, the second to Saget, and the third to Nika. Gun in hand, each +stood watch in turn over the silent but not sleeping forms around him, +till, his time expiring, he called the man who was to relieve him, +wrapped himself in his blanket, and was soon buried in a slumber that +was to be his last. Now the assassins rose. Duhaut and Hiens stood with +their guns cocked, ready to shoot down any one of the destined victims +who should resist or fly. The surgeon, with an axe, stole towards the +three sleepers, and struck a rapid blow at each in turn. Saget and Nika +died with little movement; but Moranget started spasmodically into a +sitting posture, gasping and unable to speak; and the murderers +compelled De Marle, who was not in their plot, to compromise himself by +despatching him. + +The floodgates of murder were open, and the torrent must have its way. +Vengeance and safety alike demanded the death of La Salle. Hiens, or +"English Jem," alone seems to have hesitated; for he was one of those to +whom that stern commander had always been partial. Meanwhile, the +intended victim was still at his camp, about six miles distant. It is +easy to picture, with sufficient accuracy, the features of the +scene,--the sheds of bark and branches, beneath which, among blankets +and buffalo-robes, camp-utensils, pack-saddles, rude harness, guns, +powder-horns, and bullet-pouches, the men lounged away the hour, +sleeping or smoking, or talking among themselves; the blackened kettles +that hung from tripods of poles over the fires; the Indians strolling +about the place or lying, like dogs in the sun, with eyes half-shut, yet +all observant; and, in the neighboring meadow, the horses grazing under +the eye of a watchman. + +[Sidenote: SUSPENSE.] + +It was the eighteenth of March. Moranget and his companions had been +expected to return the night before; but the whole day passed, and they +did not appear. La Salle became very anxious. He resolved to go and look +for them; but not well knowing the way, he told the Indians who were +about the camp that he would give them a hatchet if they would guide +him. One of them accepted the offer; and La Salle prepared to set out in +the morning, at the same time directing Joutel to be ready to go with +him. Joutel says: "That evening, while we were talking about what could +have happened to the absent men, he seemed to have a presentiment of +what was to take place. He asked me if I had heard of any machinations +against them, or if I had noticed any bad design on the part of Duhaut +and the rest. I answered that I had heard nothing, except that they +sometimes complained of being found fault with so often; and that this +was all I knew; besides which, as they were persuaded that I was in his +interest, they would not have told me of any bad design they might have. +We were very uneasy all the rest of the evening." + +[Sidenote: THE FATAL SHOT.] + +In the morning, La Salle set out with his Indian guide. He had changed +his mind with regard to Joutel, whom he now directed to remain in charge +of the camp and to keep a careful watch. He told the friar Anastase +Douay to come with him instead of Joutel, whose gun, which was the best +in the party, he borrowed for the occasion, as well as his pistol. The +three proceeded on their way,--La Salle, the friar, and the Indian. "All +the way," writes the friar, "he spoke to me of nothing but matters of +piety, grace, and predestination; enlarging on the debt he owed to God, +who had saved him from so many perils during more than twenty years of +travel in America. Suddenly, I saw him overwhelmed with a profound +sadness, for which he himself could not account. He was so much moved +that I scarcely knew him." He soon recovered his usual calmness; and +they walked on till they approached the camp of Duhaut, which was on the +farther side of a small river. Looking about him with the eye of a +woodsman, La Salle saw two eagles circling in the air nearly over him, +as if attracted by carcasses of beasts or men. He fired his gun and his +pistol, as a summons to any of his followers who might be within +hearing. The shots reached the ears of the conspirators. Rightly +conjecturing by whom they were fired, several of them, led by Duhaut, +crossed the river at a little distance above, where trees or other +intervening objects hid them from sight. Duhaut and the surgeon crouched +like Indians in the long, dry, reed-like grass of the last summer's +growth, while L'Archeveque stood in sight near the bank. La Salle, +continuing to advance, soon saw him, and, calling to him, demanded where +was Moranget. The man, without lifting his hat, or any show of respect, +replied in an agitated and broken voice, but with a tone of studied +insolence, that Moranget was strolling about somewhere. La Salle rebuked +and menaced him. He rejoined with increased insolence, drawing back, as +he spoke, towards the ambuscade, while the incensed commander advanced +to chastise him. At that moment a shot was fired from the grass, +instantly followed by another; and, pierced through the brain, La Salle +dropped dead. + +The friar at his side stood terror-stricken, unable to advance or to +fly; when Duhaut, rising from the ambuscade, called out to him to take +courage, for he had nothing to fear. The murderers now came forward, and +with wild looks gathered about their victim. "There thou liest, great +Bashaw! There thou liest!"[329] exclaimed the surgeon Liotot, in base +exultation over the unconscious corpse. With mockery and insult, they +stripped it naked, dragged it into the bushes, and left it there, a prey +to the buzzards and the wolves. + +Thus in the vigor of his manhood, at the age of forty-three, died Robert +Cavelier de la Salle, "one of the greatest men," writes Tonty, "of this +age;" without question one of the most remarkable explorers whose names +live in history. His faithful officer Joutel thus sketches his portrait: +"His firmness, his courage, his great knowledge of the arts and +sciences, which made him equal to every undertaking, and his untiring +energy, which enabled him to surmount every obstacle, would have won at +last a glorious success for his grand enterprise, had not all his fine +qualities been counterbalanced by a haughtiness of manner which often +made him insupportable, and by a harshness towards those under his +command which drew upon him an implacable hatred, and was at last the +cause of his death."[330] + +[Sidenote: HIS CHARACTER.] + +The enthusiasm of the disinterested and chivalrous Champlain was not +the enthusiasm of La Salle; nor had he any part in the self-devoted zeal +of the early Jesuit explorers. He belonged not to the age of the +knight-errant and the saint, but to the modern world of practical study +and practical action. He was the hero not of a principle nor of a faith, +but simply of a fixed idea and a determined purpose. As often happens +with concentred and energetic natures, his purpose was to him a passion +and an inspiration; and he clung to it with a certain fanaticism of +devotion. It was the offspring of an ambition vast and comprehensive, +yet acting in the interest both of France and of civilization. + +Serious in all things, incapable of the lighter pleasures, incapable of +repose, finding no joy but in the pursuit of great designs, too shy for +society and too reserved for popularity, often unsympathetic and always +seeming so, smothering emotions which he could not utter, schooled to +universal distrust, stern to his followers and pitiless to himself, +bearing the brunt of every hardship and every danger, demanding of +others an equal constancy joined to an implicit deference, heeding no +counsel but his own, attempting the impossible and grasping at what was +too vast to hold,--he contained in his own complex and painful nature +the chief springs of his triumphs, his failures, and his death. + +It is easy to reckon up his defects, but it is not easy to hide from +sight the Roman virtues that redeemed them. Beset by a throng of +enemies, he stands, like the King of Israel, head and shoulders above +them all. He was a tower of adamant, against whose impregnable front +hardship and danger, the rage of man and of the elements, the southern +sun, the northern blast, fatigue, famine, disease, delay, +disappointment, and deferred hope emptied their quivers in vain. That +very pride which, Coriolanus-like, declared itself most sternly in the +thickest press of foes, has in it something to challenge admiration. +Never, under the impenetrable mail of paladin or crusader, beat a heart +of more intrepid mettle than within the stoic panoply that armed the +breast of La Salle. To estimate aright the marvels of his patient +fortitude, one must follow on his track through the vast scene of his +interminable journeyings,--those thousands of weary miles of forest, +marsh, and river, where, again and again, in the bitterness of baffled +striving, the untiring pilgrim pushed onward towards the goal which he +was never to attain. America owes him an enduring memory; for in this +masculine figure she sees the pioneer who guided her to the possession +of her richest heritage.[331] + +[Sidenote: DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE.] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[325] Tonty also speaks of him as "un flibustier anglois." In another +document, he is called "James." + +[326] Of the three narratives of this journey, those of Joutel, +Cavelier, and Anastase Douay, the first is by far the best. That of +Cavelier seems the work of a man of confused brain and indifferent +memory. Some of his statements are irreconcilable with those of Joutel +and Douay; and known facts of his history justify the suspicion of a +wilful inaccuracy. Joutel's account is of a very different character, +and seems to be the work of an honest and intelligent man. Douay's +account if brief; but it agrees with that of Joutel, in most essential +points. + +[327] Cavelier, _Relation_. + +[328] Called Lanquetot by Tonty. + +[329] "Te voila, grand Bacha, te voila!"--Joutel, _Journal Historique_, +203. + +[330] _Ibid._ + +[331] On the assassination of La Salle, the evidence is fourfold: 1. The +narrative of Douay, who was with him at the time. 2. That of Joutel, who +learned the facts, immediately after they took place, from Douay and +others, and who parted from La Salle an hour or more before his death. +3. A document preserved in the Archives de la Marine, entitled _Relation +de la Mort du Sr. de la Salle, suivant le rapport d'un nomme Couture a +qui M. Cavelier l'apprit en passant au pays des Akansa, avec toutes les +circonstances que le dit Couture a apprises d'un Francois que M. +Cavelier avoit laisse aux dits pays des Akansa, crainte qu'il ne gardat +pas le secret_. 4. The authentic memoir of Tonty, of which a copy from +the original is before me, and which has recently been printed by +Margry. + +The narrative of Cavelier unfortunately fails us several weeks before +the death of his brother, the remainder being lost. On a study of these +various documents, it is impossible to resist the conclusion that +neither Cavelier nor Douay always wrote honestly. Joutel, on the +contrary, gives the impression of sense, intelligence, and candor +throughout. Charlevoix, who knew him long after, says that he was "un +fort honnete homme, et le seul de la troupe de M. de la Salle, sur qui +ce celebre voyageur put compter." Tonty derived his information from the +survivors of La Salle's party. Couture, whose statements are embodied in +the _Relation de la Mort de M. de la Salle_, was one of Tonty's men, +who, as will be seen hereafter, were left by him at the mouth of the +Arkansas, and to whom Cavelier told the story of his brother's death. +Couture also repeats the statements of one of La Salle's followers, +undoubtedly a Parisian boy, named Barthelemy, who was violently +prejudiced against his chief, whom he slanders to the utmost of his +skill, saying that he was so enraged at his failures that he did not +approach the sacraments for two years; that he nearly starved his +brother Cavelier, allowing him only a handful of meal a day; that he +killed with his own hand "quantite de personnes," who did not work to +his liking; and that he killed the sick in their beds, without mercy, +under the pretence that they were counterfeiting sickness in order to +escape work. These assertions certainly have no other foundation than +the undeniable rigor of La Salle's command. Douay says that he confessed +and made his devotions on the morning of his death, while Cavelier +always speaks of him as the hope and the staff of the colony. + +Douay declares that La Salle lived an hour after the fatal shot; that he +gave him absolution, buried his body, and planted a cross on his grave. +At the time, he told Joutel a different story; and the latter, with the +best means of learning the facts, explicitly denies the friar's printed +statement. Couture, on the authority of Cavelier himself, also says that +neither he nor Douay was permitted to take any step for burying the +body. Tonty says that Cavelier begged leave to do so, but was refused. +Douay, unwilling to place upon record facts from which the inference +might easily be drawn that he had been terrified from discharging his +duty, no doubt invented the story of the burial, as well as that of the +edifying behavior of Moranget, after he had been struck in the head with +an axe. + +The locality of La Salle's assassination is sufficiently clear, from a +comparison of the several narratives; and it is also indicated on a +contemporary manuscript map, made on the return of the survivors of the +party to France. The scene of the catastrophe is here placed on a +southern branch of the Trinity. + +La Salle's debts, at the time of his death, according to a schedule +presented in 1701 to Champigny, intendant of Canada, amounted to 106,831 +livres, without reckoning interest. This cannot be meant to include all, +as items are given which raise the amount much higher. In 1678 and 1679 +alone, he contracted debts to the amount of 97,184 livres, of which +46,000 were furnished by Branssac, fiscal attorney of the Seminary of +Montreal. This was to be paid in beaver-skins. Frontenac, at the same +time, became his surety for 13,623 livres. In 1684, he borrowed 34,825 +livres from the Sieur Pen, at Paris. These sums do not include the +losses incurred by his family, which, in the memorial presented by them +to the King, are set down at 500,000 livres for the expeditions between +1678 and 1683, and 300,000 livres for the fatal Texan expedition of 1684 +These last figures are certainly exaggerated. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +1687, 1688. + +THE INNOCENT AND THE GUILTY. + + Triumph of the Murderers.--Danger of Joutel.--Joutel among the + Cenis.--White Savages.--Insolence of Duhaut and his + Accomplices.--Murder of Duhaut and Liotot.--Hiens, the + Buccaneer.--Joutel and his Party: their Escape; they reach the + Arkansas.--Bravery and Devotion of Tonty.--The Fugitives reach + the Illinois.--Unworthy Conduct of Cavelier.--He and his Companions + return to France. + +Father Anastase Douay returned to the camp, and, aghast with grief and +terror, rushed into the hut of Cavelier. "My poor brother is dead!" +cried the priest, instantly divining the catastrophe from the +horror-stricken face of the messenger. Close behind came the murderers, +Duhaut at their head. Cavelier, his young nephew, and Douay himself, all +fell on their knees, expecting instant death. The priest begged +piteously for half an hour to prepare for his end; but terror and +submission sufficed, and no more blood was shed. The camp yielded +without resistance; and Duhaut was lord of all. In truth, there were +none to oppose him; for, except the assassins themselves, the party was +now reduced to six persons,--Joutel, Douay, the elder Cavelier, his +young nephew, and two other boys, the orphan Talon and a lad called +Barthelemy. + +[Sidenote: DOUBT AND ANXIETY.] + +Joutel, for the moment, was absent; and L'Archeveque, who had a kindness +for him, went quietly to seek him. He found him on a hillock, making a +fire of dried grass in order that the smoke might guide La Salle on his +return, and watching the horses grazing in the meadow below. "I was very +much surprised," writes Joutel, "when I saw him approaching. When he +came up to me he seemed all in confusion, or, rather, out of his wits. +He began with saying that there was very bad news. I asked what it was. +He answered that the Sieur de la Salle was dead, and also his nephew the +Sieur de Moranget, his Indian hunter, and his servant. I was petrified, +and did not know what to say; for I saw that they had been murdered. The +man added that, at first, the murderers had sworn to kill me too. I +easily believed it, for I had always been in the interest of M. de la +Salle, and had commanded in his place; and it is hard to please +everybody, or prevent some from being dissatisfied. I was greatly +perplexed as to what I ought to do, and whether I had not better escape +to the woods, whithersoever God should guide me; but, by bad or good +luck, I had no gun and only one pistol, without balls or powder except +what was in my powder-horn. To whatever side I turned, my life was in +great peril. It is true that L'Archeveque assured me that they had +changed their minds, and had agreed to murder nobody else, unless they +met with resistance. So, being in no condition, as I just said, to go +far, having neither arms nor powder, I abandoned myself to Providence, +and went back to the camp, where I found that these wretched murderers +had seized everything belonging to M. de la Salle, and even my personal +effects. They had also taken possession of all the arms. The first words +that Duhaut said to me were, that each should command in turn; to which +I made no answer. I saw M. Cavelier praying in a corner, and Father +Anastase in another. He did not dare to speak to me, nor did I dare to +go towards him till I had seen the designs of the assassins. They were +in furious excitement, but, nevertheless, very uneasy and embarrassed. I +was some time without speaking, and, as it were, without moving, for +fear of giving umbrage to our enemies. + +"They had cooked some meat, and when it was supper-time they distributed +it as they saw fit, saying that formerly their share had been served out +to them, but that it was they who would serve it out in future. They, no +doubt, wanted me to say something that would give them a chance to make +a noise; but I managed always to keep my mouth closed. When night came +and it was time to stand guard, they were in perplexity, as they could +not do it alone; therefore they said to M. Cavelier, Father Anastase, +me, and the others who were not in the plot with them, that all we had +to do was to stand guard as usual; that there was no use in thinking +about what had happened,--that what was done was done; that they had +been driven to it by despair, and that they were sorry for it, and meant +no more harm to anybody. M. Cavelier took up the word, and told them +that when they killed M. de la Salle they killed themselves, for there +was nobody but him who could get us out of this country. At last, after +a good deal of talk on both sides, they gave us our arms. So we stood +guard; during which, M. Cavelier told me how they had come to the camp, +entered his hut like so many madmen, and seized everything in it." + +Joutel, Douay, and the two Caveliers spent a sleepless night, consulting +as to what they should do. They mutually pledged themselves to stand by +each other to the last, and to escape as soon as they could from the +company of the assassins. In the morning, Duhaut and his accomplices, +after much discussion, resolved to go to the Cenis villages; and, +accordingly, the whole party broke up their camp, packed their horses, +and began their march. They went five leagues, and encamped at the edge +of a grove. On the following day they advanced again till noon, when +heavy rains began, and they were forced to stop by the banks of a river. +"We passed the night and the next day there," says Joutel; "and during +that time my mind was possessed with dark thoughts. It was hard to +prevent ourselves from being in constant fear among such men, and we +could not look at them without horror. When I thought of the cruel +deeds they had committed, and the danger we were in from them, I longed +to revenge the evil they had done us. This would have been easy while +they were asleep; but M. Cavelier dissuaded us, saying that we ought to +leave vengeance to God, and that he himself had more to revenge than we, +having lost his brother and his nephew." + +[Sidenote: JOURNEY TO THE CENIS.] + +The comic alternated with the tragic. On the twenty-third, they reached +the bank of a river too deep to ford. Those who knew how to swim crossed +without difficulty, but Joutel, Cavelier, and Douay were not of the +number. Accordingly, they launched a log of light, dry wood, embraced it +with one arm, and struck out for the other bank with their legs and the +arm that was left free. But the friar became frightened. "He only clung +fast to the aforesaid log," says Joutel, "and did nothing to help us +forward. While I was trying to swim, my body being stretched at full +length, I hit him in the belly with my feet; on which he thought it was +all over with him, and, I can answer for it, he invoked Saint Francis +with might and main. I could not help laughing, though I was myself in +danger of drowning." Some Indians who had joined the party swam to the +rescue, and pushed the log across. + +The path to the Cenis villages was exceedingly faint, and but for the +Indians they would have lost the way. They crossed the main stream of +the Trinity in a boat of raw hides, and then, being short of +provisions, held a council to determine what they should do. It was +resolved that Joutel, with Hiens, Liotot, and Teissier, should go in +advance to the villages and buy a supply of corn. Thus, Joutel found +himself doomed to the company of three villains, who, he strongly +suspected, were contriving an opportunity to kill him; but, as he had no +choice, he dissembled his doubts, and set out with his sinister +companions, Duhaut having first supplied him with goods for the intended +barter. + +[Sidenote: JOUTEL AND THE CENIS.] + +They rode over hills and plains till night, encamped, supped on a wild +turkey, and continued their journey till the afternoon of the next day, +when they saw three men approaching on horseback, one of whom, to +Joutel's alarm, was dressed like a Spaniard. He proved, however, to be a +Cenis Indian, like the others. The three turned their horses' heads, and +accompanied the Frenchmen on their way. At length they neared the Indian +town, which, with its large thatched lodges, looked like a cluster of +gigantic haystacks. Their approach had been made known, and they were +received in solemn state. Twelve of the elders came to meet them in +their dress of ceremony, each with his face daubed red or black, and his +head adorned with painted plumes. From their shoulders hung deer-skins +wrought with gay colors. Some carried war-clubs; some, bows and arrows; +some, the blades of Spanish rapiers, attached to wooden handles +decorated with hawk's bells and bunches of feathers. They stopped +before the honored guests, and, raising their hands aloft, uttered howls +so extraordinary that Joutel could hardly preserve the gravity which the +occasion demanded. Having next embraced the Frenchmen, the elders +conducted them into the village, attended by a crowd of warriors and +young men; ushered them into their town-hall, a large lodge, devoted to +councils, feasts, dances, and other public assemblies; seated them on +mats, and squatted in a ring around them. Here they were regaled with +sagamite or Indian porridge, corn-cake, beans, bread made of the meal of +parched corn, and another kind of bread made of the kernels of nuts and +the seed of sunflowers. Then the pipe was lighted, and all smoked +together. The four Frenchmen proposed to open a traffic for provisions, +and their entertainers grunted assent. + +Joutel found a Frenchman in the village. He was a young man from +Provence, who had deserted from La Salle on his last journey, and was +now, to all appearance, a savage like his adopted countrymen, being +naked like them, and affecting to have forgotten his native language. He +was very friendly, however, and invited the visitors to a neighboring +village, where he lived, and where, as he told them, they would find a +better supply of corn. They accordingly set out with him, escorted by a +crowd of Indians. They saw lodges and clusters of lodges scattered along +their path at intervals, each with its field of corn, beans, and +pumpkins, rudely cultivated with a wooden hoe. Reaching their +destination, which was four or five leagues distant, they were greeted +with the same honors as at the first village, and, the ceremonial of +welcome over, were lodged in the abode of the savage Frenchman. It is +not to be supposed, however, that he and his squaws, of whom he had a +considerable number, dwelt here alone; for these lodges of the Cenis +often contained eight or ten families. They were made by firmly planting +in a circle tall, straight young trees, such as grew in the swamps. The +tops were then bent inward and lashed together; great numbers of +cross-pieces were bound on; and the frame thus constructed was thickly +covered with thatch, a hole being left at the top for the escape of the +smoke. The inmates were ranged around the circumference of the +structure, each family in a kind of stall, open in front, but separated +from those adjoining it by partitions of mats. Here they placed their +beds of cane, their painted robes of buffalo and deer-skin, their +cooking utensils of pottery, and other household goods; and here, too, +the head of the family hung his bow, quiver, lance, and shield. There +was nothing in common but the fire, which burned in the middle of the +lodge, and was never suffered to go out. These dwellings were of great +size, and Joutel declares that he has seen some of them sixty feet in +diameter.[332] + +It was in one of the largest that the four travellers were now lodged. A +place was assigned them where to bestow their baggage; and they took +possession of their quarters amid the silent stares of the whole +community. They asked their renegade countryman, the Provencal, if they +were safe. He replied that they were; but this did not wholly reassure +them, and they spent a somewhat wakeful night. In the morning, they +opened their budgets, and began a brisk trade in knives, awls, beads, +and other trinkets, which they exchanged for corn and beans. Before +evening, they had acquired a considerable stock; and Joutel's three +companions declared their intention of returning with it to the camp, +leaving him to continue the trade. They went, accordingly, in the +morning; and Joutel was left alone. On the one hand, he was glad to be +rid of them; on the other, he found his position among the Cenis very +irksome, and, as he thought, insecure. Besides the Provencal, who had +gone with Liotot and his companions, there were two other French +deserters among this tribe, and Joutel was very desirous to see them, +hoping that they could tell him the way to the Mississippi; for he was +resolved to escape, at the first opportunity, from the company of Duhaut +and his accomplices. He therefore made the present of a knife to a young +Indian, whom he sent to find the two Frenchmen and invite them to come +to the village. Meanwhile he continued his barter, but under many +difficulties; for he could only explain himself by signs, and his +customers, though friendly by day, pilfered his goods by night. This, +joined to the fears and troubles which burdened his mind, almost +deprived him of sleep, and, as he confesses, greatly depressed his +spirits. Indeed, he had little cause for cheerfulness as to the past, +present, or future. An old Indian, one of the patriarchs of the tribe, +observing his dejection and anxious to relieve it, one evening brought +him a young wife, saying that he made him a present of her. She seated +herself at his side; "but," says Joutel, "as my head was full of other +cares and anxieties, I said nothing to the poor girl. She waited for a +little time; and then, finding that I did not speak a word, she went +away."[333] + +[Sidenote: WHITE SAVAGES.] + +Late one night, he lay between sleeping and waking on the buffalo-robe +that covered his bed of canes. All around the great lodge, its inmates +were buried in sleep; and the fire that still burned in the midst cast +ghostly gleams on the trophies of savage chivalry--the treasured +scalp-locks, the spear and war-club, and shield of whitened +bull-hide--that hung by each warrior's resting-place. Such was the +weird scene that lingered on the dreamy eyes of Joutel, as he closed +them at last in a troubled sleep. The sound of a footstep soon wakened +him; and, turning, he saw at his side the figure of a naked savage, +armed with a bow and arrows. Joutel spoke, but received no answer. Not +knowing what to think, he reached out his hand for his pistols; on which +the intruder withdrew, and seated himself by the fire. Thither Joutel +followed; and as the light fell on his features, he looked at him +closely. His face was tattooed, after the Cenis fashion, in lines drawn +from the top of the forehead and converging to the chin; and his body +was decorated with similar embellishments. Suddenly, this supposed +Indian rose and threw his arms around Joutel's neck, making himself +known, at the same time, as one of the Frenchmen who had deserted from +La Salle and taken refuge among the Cenis. He was a Breton sailor named +Ruter. His companion, named Grollet, also a sailor, had been afraid to +come to the village lest he should meet La Salle. Ruter expressed +surprise and regret when he heard of the death of his late commander. He +had deserted him but a few months before. That brief interval had +sufficed to transform him into a savage; and both he and his companion +found their present reckless and ungoverned way of life greatly to their +liking. He could tell nothing of the Mississippi; and on the next day he +went home, carrying with him a present of beads for his wives, of which +last he had made a large collection. + +In a few days he reappeared, bringing Grollet with him. Each wore a +bunch of turkey-feathers dangling from his head, and each had wrapped +his naked body in a blanket. Three men soon after arrived from Duhaut's +camp, commissioned to receive the corn which Joutel had purchased. They +told him that Duhaut and Liotot, the tyrants of the party, had resolved +to return to Fort St. Louis, and build a vessel to escape to the West +Indies,--"a visionary scheme," writes Joutel, "for our carpenters were +all dead; and even if they had been alive, they were so ignorant that +they would not have known how to go about the work; besides, we had no +tools for it. Nevertheless, I was obliged to obey, and set out for the +camp with the provisions." + +On arriving, he found a wretched state of affairs. Douay and the two +Caveliers, who had been treated by Duhaut with great harshness and +contempt, had been told to make their mess apart; and Joutel now joined +them. This separation restored them their freedom of speech, of which +they had hitherto been deprived; but it subjected them to incessant +hunger, as they were allowed only food enough to keep them from +famishing. Douay says that quarrels were rife among the assassins +themselves,--the malcontents being headed by Hiens, who was enraged that +Duhaut and Liotot should have engrossed all the plunder. Joutel was +helpless, for he had none to back him but two priests and a boy. + +[Sidenote: SCHEMES OF ESCAPE.] + +He and his companions talked of nothing around their solitary camp-fire +but the means of escaping from the villanous company into which they +were thrown. They saw no resource but to find the Mississippi, and thus +make their way to Canada,--a prodigious undertaking in their forlorn +condition; nor was there any probability that the assassins would permit +them to go. These, on their part, were beset with difficulties. They +could not return to civilization without manifest peril of a halter; and +their only safety was to turn buccaneers or savages. Duhaut, however, +still held to his plan of going back to Fort St. Louis; and Joutel and +his companions, who with good reason stood in daily fear of him, devised +among themselves a simple artifice to escape from his company. The elder +Cavelier was to tell him that they were too fatigued for the journey, +and wished to stay among the Cenis; and to beg him to allow them a +portion of the goods, for which Cavelier was to give his note of hand. +The old priest, whom a sacrifice of truth even on less important +occasions cost no great effort, accordingly opened the negotiation, and +to his own astonishment and that of his companions, gained the assent of +Duhaut. Their joy, however, was short; for Ruter, the French savage, to +whom Joutel had betrayed his intention, when inquiring the way to the +Mississippi, told it to Duhaut, who on this changed front and made the +ominous declaration that he and his men would also go to Canada. Joutel +and his companions were now filled with alarm; for there was no +likelihood that the assassins would permit them, the witnesses of their +crime, to reach the settlements alive. In the midst of their trouble, +the sky was cleared as by the crash of a thunderbolt. + +[Sidenote: THE CRISIS.] + +Hiens and several others had gone, some time before, to the Cenis +villages to purchase horses; and here they had been detained by the +charms of the Indian women. During their stay, Hiens heard of Duhaut's +new plan of going to Canada by the Mississippi; and he declared to those +with him that he would not consent. On a morning early in May he +appeared at Duhaut's camp, with Ruter and Grollet, the French savages, +and about twenty Indians. Duhaut and Liotot, it is said, were passing +the time by practising with bows and arrows in front of their hut. One +of them called to Hiens, "Good-morning;" but the buccaneer returned a +sullen answer. He then accosted Duhaut, telling him that he had no mind +to go up the Mississippi with him, and demanding a share of the goods. +Duhaut replied that the goods were his own, since La Salle had owed him +money. "So you will not give them to me?" returned Hiens. "No," was the +answer. "You are a wretch!" exclaimed Hiens; "you killed my +master."[334] And drawing a pistol from his belt he fired at Duhaut, +who staggered three or four paces and fell dead. Almost at the same +instant Ruter fired his gun at Liotot, shot three balls into his body, +and stretched him on the ground mortally wounded. + +Douay and the two Caveliers stood in extreme terror, thinking that their +turn was to come next. Joutel, no less alarmed, snatched his gun to +defend himself; but Hiens called to him to fear nothing, declaring that +what he had done was only to avenge the death of La Salle,--to which, +nevertheless, he had been privy, though not an active sharer in the +crime. Liotot lived long enough to make his confession, after which +Ruter killed him by exploding a pistol loaded with a blank charge of +powder against his head. Duhaut's myrmidon, L'Archeveque, was absent, +hunting, and Hiens was for killing him on his return; but the two +priests and Joutel succeeded in dissuading him. + +The Indian spectators beheld these murders with undisguised amazement, +and almost with horror. What manner of men were these who had pierced +the secret places of the wilderness to riot in mutual slaughter? Their +fiercest warriors might learn a lesson in ferocity from these heralds of +civilization. Joutel and his companions, who could not dispense with the +aid of the Cenis, were obliged to explain away, as they best might, the +atrocity of what they had witnessed.[335] + +Hiens, and others of the French, had before promised to join the Cenis +on an expedition against a neighboring tribe with whom they were at war; +and the whole party having removed to the Indian village, the warriors +and their allies prepared to depart. Six Frenchmen went with Hiens; and +the rest, including Joutel, Douay, and the Caveliers, remained behind, +in the lodge where Joutel had been domesticated, and where none were now +left but women, children, and old men. Here they remained a week or +more, watched closely by the Cenis, who would not let them leave the +village; when news at length arrived of a great victory, and the +warriors soon after returned with forty-eight scalps. It was the French +guns that won the battle, but not the less did they glory in their +prowess; and several days were spent in ceremonies and feasts of +triumph.[336] + +When all this hubbub of rejoicing had subsided, Joutel and his +companions broke to Hiens their plan of attempting to reach home by way +of the Mississippi. As they had expected, he opposed it vehemently, +declaring that for his own part he would not run such a risk of losing +his head; but at length he consented to their departure, on condition +that the elder Cavelier should give him a certificate of his entire +innocence of the murder of La Salle, which the priest did not hesitate +to do. For the rest, Hiens treated his departing fellow-travellers with +the generosity of a successful free-booter; for he gave them a good +share of the plunder he had won by his late crime, supplying them with +hatchets, knives, beads, and other articles of trade, besides several +horses. Meanwhile, adds Joutel, "we had the mortification and chagrin of +seeing this scoundrel walking about the camp in a scarlet coat laced +with gold which had belonged to the late Monsieur de la Salle, and which +he had seized upon, as also upon all the rest of his property." A +well-aimed shot would have avenged the wrong, but Joutel was clearly a +mild and moderate person; and the elder Cavelier had constantly opposed +all plans of violence. Therefore they stifled their emotions, and armed +themselves with patience. + +[Sidenote: JOUTEL AND HIS PARTY.] + +Joutel's party consisted, besides himself, of the Caveliers (uncle and +nephew), Anastase Douay, De Marle, Teissier, and a young Parisian named +Barthelemy. Teissier, an accomplice in the murders of Moranget and La +Salle, had obtained a pardon, in form, from the elder Cavelier. They had +six horses and three Cenis guides. Hiens embraced them at parting, as +did the ruffians who remained with him. Their course was northeast, +toward the mouth of the Arkansas,--a distant goal, the way to which was +beset with so many dangers that their chance of reaching it seemed +small. It was early in June, and the forests and prairies were green +with the verdure of opening summer. + +They soon reached the Assonis, a tribe near the Sabine, who received +them well, and gave them guides to the nations dwelling towards Red +River. On the twenty-third, they approached a village, the inhabitants +of which, regarding them as curiosities of the first order, came out in +a body to see them; and, eager to do them honor, they required them to +mount on their backs, and thus make their entrance in procession. +Joutel, being large and heavy, weighed down his bearer, insomuch that +two of his countrymen were forced to sustain him, one on each side. On +arriving, an old chief washed their faces with warm water from an +earthen pan, and then invited them to mount on a scaffold of canes, +where they sat in the hot sun listening to four successive speeches of +welcome, of which they understood not a word.[337] + +At the village of another tribe, farther on their way, they met with a +welcome still more oppressive. Cavelier, the unworthy successor of his +brother, being represented as the chief of the party, became the +principal victim of their attentions. They danced the calumet before +him; while an Indian, taking him, with an air of great respect, by the +shoulders as he sat, shook him in cadence with the thumping of the drum. +They then placed two girls close beside him, as his wives; while, at the +same time, an old chief tied a painted feather in his hair. These +proceedings so scandalized him that, pretending to be ill, he broke off +the ceremony; but they continued to sing all night, with so much zeal +that several of them were reduced to a state of complete exhaustion. + +[Sidenote: ARRIVAL AT THE ARKANSAS.] + +At length, after a journey of about two months, during which they lost +one of their number,--De Marle, accidentally drowned while bathing,--the +travellers approached the river Arkansas, at a point not far above its +junction with the Mississippi. Led by their Indian guides, they +traversed a rich district of plains and woods, and stood at length on +the borders of the stream. Nestled beneath the forests of the farther +shore, they saw the lodges of a large Indian town; and here, as they +gazed across the broad current, they presently descried an object which +nerved their spent limbs, and thrilled their homesick hearts with joy. +It was a tall, wooden cross; and near it was a small house, built +evidently by Christian hands. With one accord they fell on their knees, +and raised their hands to Heaven in thanksgiving. Two men, in European +dress, issued from the door of the house and fired their guns to salute +the excited travellers, who on their part replied with a volley. Canoes +put out from the farther shore and ferried them to the town, where they +were welcomed by Couture and De Launay, two followers of Henri de +Tonty.[338] + +That brave, loyal, and generous man, always vigilant and always active, +beloved and feared alike by white men and by red,[339] had been +ejected, as we have seen, by the agent of the governor, La Barre, from +the command of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois. An order from the King +had reinstated him; and he no sooner heard the news of La Salle's +landing on the shores of the Gulf, and of the disastrous beginnings of +his colony,[340] than he prepared, on his own responsibility and at his +own cost, to go to his assistance. He collected twenty-five Frenchmen +and eleven Indians, and set out from his fortified rock on the +thirteenth of February, 1686;[341] descended the Mississippi, and +reached its mouth in Holy Week. All was solitude, a voiceless desolation +of river, marsh, and sea. He despatched canoes to the east and to the +west, searching the coast for some thirty leagues on either side. +Finding no trace of his friend, who at that moment was ranging the +prairies of Texas in no less fruitless search of his "fatal river," +Tonty wrote for him a letter, which he left in the charge of an Indian +chief, who preserved it with reverential care, and gave it, fourteen +years after, to Iberville, the founder of Louisiana.[342] Deeply +disappointed at his failure, Tonty retraced his course, and ascended the +Mississippi to the villages of the Arkansas, where some of his men +volunteered to remain. He left six of them; and of this number were +Couture and De Launay.[343] + +[Sidenote: A HOSPITABLE RECEPTION.] + +Cavelier and his companions, followed by a crowd of Indians, some +carrying their baggage, some struggling for a view of the white +strangers, entered the log cabin of their two hosts. Rude as it was, +they found in it an earnest of peace and safety, and a foretaste of +home. Couture and De Launay were moved even to tears by the story of +their disasters, and of the catastrophe that crowned them. La Salle's +death was carefully concealed from the Indians, many of whom had seen +him on his descent of the Mississippi, and who regarded him with +prodigious respect. They lavished all their hospitality on his +followers; feasted them on corn-bread, dried buffalo meat, and +watermelons, and danced the calumet before them, the most august of all +their ceremonies. On this occasion, Cavelier's patience failed him +again; and pretending, as before, to be ill, he called on his nephew to +take his place. There were solemn dances, too, in which the +warriors--some bedaubed with white clay, some with red, and some with +both; some wearing feathers, and some the horns of buffalo; some naked, +and some in painted shirts of deer-skin, fringed with scalp-locks, +insomuch, says Joutel, that they looked like a troop of devils--leaped, +stamped, and howled from sunset till dawn. All this was partly to do the +travellers honor, and partly to extort presents. They made objections, +however, when asked to furnish guides; and it was only by dint of great +offers that four were at length procured. + +[Sidenote: THE MISSISSIPPI.] + +With these, the travellers resumed their journey in a wooden canoe, +about the first of August,[344] descended the Arkansas, and soon reached +the dark and inexorable river, so long the object of their search, +rolling, like a destiny, through its realms of solitude and shade. They +launched their canoe on its turbid bosom, plied their oars against the +current, and slowly won their way upward, following the writhings of +this watery monster through cane-brake, swamp, and fen. It was a hard +and toilsome journey, under the sweltering sun of August,--now on the +water, now knee-deep in mud, dragging their canoe through the +unwholesome jungle. On the nineteenth, they passed the mouth of the +Ohio; and their Indian guides made it an offering of buffalo meat. On +the first of September, they passed the Missouri, and soon after saw +Marquette's pictured rock, and the line of craggy heights on the east +shore, marked on old French maps as "the Ruined Castles." Then, with a +sense of relief, they turned from the great river into the peaceful +current of the Illinois. They were eleven days in ascending it, in their +large and heavy wooden canoe; when at length, on the afternoon of the +fourteenth of September, they saw, towering above the forest and the +river, the cliff crowned with the palisades of Fort St. Louis of the +Illinois. As they drew near, a troop of Indians, headed by a Frenchman, +descended from the rock, and fired their guns to salute them. They +landed, and followed the forest path that led towards the fort, when +they were met by Boisrondet, Tonty's comrade in the Iroquois war, and +two other Frenchmen, who no sooner saw them than they called out, +demanding where was La Salle. Cavelier, fearing lest he and his party +would lose the advantage they might derive from his character of +representative of his brother, was determined to conceal his death; and +Joutel, as he himself confesses, took part in the deceit. Substituting +equivocation for falsehood, they replied that La Salle had been with +them nearly as far as the Cenis villages, and that, when they parted, +he was in good health. This, so far as they were concerned, was, +literally speaking, true; but Douay and Teissier, the one a witness and +the other a sharer in his death, could not have said so much without a +square falsehood, and therefore evaded the inquiry. + +Threading the forest path, and circling to the rear of the rock, they +climbed the rugged height, and reached the top. Here they saw an area, +encircled by the palisades that fenced the brink of the cliff, and by +several dwellings, a store-house, and a chapel. There were Indian lodges +too; for some of the red allies of the French made their abode with +them.[345] Tonty was absent, fighting the Iroquois; but his lieutenant, +Bellefontaine, received the travellers, and his little garrison of +bush-rangers greeted them with a salute of musketry, mingled with the +whooping of the Indians. A _Te Deum_ followed at the chapel; "and, with +all our hearts," says Joutel, "we gave thanks to God, who had preserved +and guided us." At length, the tired travellers were among countrymen +and friends. Bellefontaine found a room for the two priests; while +Joutel, Teissier, and young Cavelier were lodged in the store-house. + +[Sidenote: THE JESUIT ALLOUEZ.] + +The Jesuit Allouez was lying ill at the fort; and Joutel, Cavelier, and +Douay went to visit him. He showed great anxiety when told that La Salle +was alive, and on his way to the Illinois; asked many questions, and +could not hide his agitation. When, some time after, he had partially +recovered, he left St. Louis, as if to shun a meeting with the object of +his alarm.[346] Once before, in 1679, Allouez had fled from the +Illinois on hearing of the approach of La Salle. + +The season was late, and they were eager to hasten forward that they +might reach Quebec in time to return to France in the autumn ships. +There was not a day to lose. They bade farewell to Bellefontaine, from +whom, as from all others, they had concealed the death of La Salle, and +made their way across the country to Chicago. Here they were detained a +week by a storm; and when at length they embarked in a canoe furnished +by Bellefontaine, the tempest soon forced them to put back. On this, +they abandoned their design, and returned to Fort St. Louis, to the +astonishment of its inmates. + +[Sidenote: CONDUCT OF CAVELIER.] + +It was October when they arrived; and, meanwhile, Tonty had returned +from the Iroquois war, where he had borne a conspicuous part in the +famous attack on the Senecas by the Marquis de Denonville.[347] He +listened with deep interest to the mournful story of his guests. +Cavelier knew him well. He knew, so far as he was capable of knowing, +his generous and disinterested character, his long and faithful +attachment to La Salle, and the invaluable services he had rendered him. +Tonty had every claim on his confidence and affection. Yet he did not +hesitate to practise on him the same deceit which he had practised on +Bellefontaine. He told him that he had left his brother in good health +on the Gulf of Mexico, and drew upon him, in La Salle's name, for an +amount stated by Joutel at about four thousand livres, in furs, besides +a canoe and a quantity of other goods, all of which were delivered to +him by the unsuspecting victim.[348] + +This was at the end of the winter, when the old priest and his +companions had been living for months on Tonty's hospitality. They set +out for Canada on the twenty-first of March, reached Chicago on the +twenty-ninth, and thence proceeded to Michilimackinac. Here Cavelier +sold some of Tonty's furs to a merchant, who gave him in payment a draft +on Montreal, thus putting him in funds for his voyage home. The party +continued their journey in canoes by way of French River and the Ottawa, +and safely reached Montreal on the seventeenth of July. Here they +procured the clothing of which they were wofully in need, and then +descended the river to Quebec, where they took lodging,--some with the +Recollet friars, and some with the priests of the Seminary,--in order to +escape the questions of the curious. At the end of August they embarked +for France, and early in October arrived safely at Rochelle. None of the +party were men of especial energy or force of character; and yet, under +the spur of a dire necessity, they had achieved one of the most +adventurous journeys on record. + +[Sidenote: THE COLONISTS ABANDONED.] + +Now, at length, they disburdened themselves of their gloomy secret; but +the sole result seems to have been an order from the King for the arrest +of the murderers, should they appear in Canada.[349] Joutel was +disappointed. It had been his hope throughout that the King would send a +ship to the relief of the wretched band at Fort St. Louis of Texas. But +Louis XIV. hardened his heart, and left them to their fate. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[332] The lodges of the Florida Indians were somewhat similar. The +winter lodges of the now nearly extinct Mandans, though not so high in +proportion to their width, and built of more solid materials, as the +rigor of a northern climate requires, bear a general resemblance to +those of the Cenis. + +The Cenis tattooed their faces and some parts of their bodies, by +pricking powdered charcoal into the skin. The women tattooed the +breasts; and this practice was general among them, notwithstanding the +pain of the operation, as it was thought very ornamental. Their dress +consisted of a sort of frock, or wrapper of skin, from the waist to the +knees. The men, in summer, wore nothing but the waist-cloth. + +[333] _Journal Historique_, 237. + +[334] "Tu es un miserable. Tu as tue mon maistre."--Tonty, _Memoire_. +Tonty derived his information from some of those present. Douay and +Joutel have each left an account of this murder. They agree in essential +points; though Douay says that when it took place, Duhaut had moved his +camp beyond the Cenis villages, which is contrary to Joutel's statement. + +[335] Joutel, _Relation_ (Margry, iii. 371). + +[336] These are described by Joutel. Like nearly all the early observers +of Indian manners, he speaks of the practice of cannibalism. + +[337] These Indians were a portion of the Cadodaquis, or Caddoes, then +living on Red River. The travellers afterwards visited other villages of +the same people. Tonty was here two years afterwards, and mentions the +curious custom of washing the faces of guests. + +[338] Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 298. + +[339] _Journal de St. Cosme_, 1699. This journal has been printed by Mr. +Shea, from the copy in my possession. St. Cosme, who knew Tonty well, +speaks of him in the warmest terms of praise. + +[340] In the autumn of 1685, Tonty made a journey from the Illinois to +Michilimackinac, to seek news of La Salle. He there learned, by a letter +of the new governor, Denonville, just arrived from France, of the +landing of La Salle, and the loss of the "Aimable," as recounted by +Beaujeu, on his return. He immediately went back on foot to Fort St. +Louis of the Illinois, and prepared to descend the Mississippi, "dans +l'esperance de lui donner secours." _Lettre de Tonty au Ministre, 24 +Aoust, 1686; Ibid., a Cabart de Villermont, meme date_; _Memoire de +Tonty_; _Proces Verbal de Tonty, 13 Avril, 1686._ + +[341] The date is from the _Proces Verbal_. In the _Memoire_, hastily +written long after, he falls into errors of date. + +[342] Iberville sent it to France, and Charlevoix gives a portion of it. +(_Histoire de la Nouvelle France_, ii. 259.) Singularly enough, the +date, as printed by him, is erroneous, being 20 April, 1685, instead of +1686. There is no doubt whatever, from its relations with concurrent +events, that this journey was in the latter year. + +[343] Tonty, _Memoire; Ibid., Lettre a Monseigneur de Ponchartrain_, +1690. Joutel, _Journal Historique_, 301. + +[344] Joutel says that the Parisian boy, Barthelemy, was left behind. It +was this youth who afterwards uttered the ridiculous defamation of La +Salle mentioned in a preceding note. The account of the death of La +Salle, taken from the lips of Couture, was received by him from Cavelier +and his companions, during their stay at the Arkansas. Couture was by +trade a carpenter, and was a native of Rouen. + +[345] The condition of Fort St. Louis, at this time, may be gathered +from several passages of Joutel. The houses, he says, were built at the +brink of the cliff, forming, with the palisades, the circle of defence. +The Indians lived in the area. + +[346] Joutel adds that this was occasioned by "une espece de +conspiration qu'on a voulu faire contre les interests de Monsieur de la +Salle."--_Journal Historique_, 350. + +"Ce Pere apprehendoit que le dit sieur ne l'y rencontrast, ... suivant +ce que j'en ai pu apprendre, les Peres avoient avance plusieurs choses +pour contrebarrer l'entreprise et avoient voulu detacher plusieurs +nations de Sauvages, lesquelles s'estoient donnees a M. de la Salle. Ils +avoient este mesme jusques a vouloir destruire le fort Saint-Louis, en +ayant construit un a Chicago, ou ils avoient attire une partie des +Sauvages, ne pouvant en quelque facon s'emparer du dit fort. Pour +conclure, le bon Pere ayant eu peur d'y estre trouve, aima mieux se +precautionner en prenant le devant.... Quoyque M. Cavelier eust dit au +Pere qu'il pouvoit rester, il partit quelques sept ou huit jours avant +nous."--_Relation_ (Margry, iii. 500). + +La Salle always saw the influence of the Jesuits in the disasters that +befell him. His repeated assertion, that they wished to establish +themselves in the valley of the Mississippi, receives confirmation from +a document entitled _Memoire sur la proposition a faire par les R. Peres +Jesuites pour la decouverte des environs de la riviere du Mississipi et +pour voir si elle est navigable jusqu'a la mer_. It is a memorandum of +propositions to be made to the minister Seignelay, and was apparently +put forward as a feeler, before making the propositions in form. It was +written after the return of Beaujeu to France, and before La Salle's +death became known. It intimates that the Jesuits were entitled to +precedence in the valley of the Mississippi, as having first explored +it. It affirms that _La Salle had made a blunder, and landed his colony, +not at the mouth of the river, but at another place_; and it asks +permission to continue the work in which he has failed. To this end, it +petitions for means to build a vessel at St. Louis of the Illinois, +together with canoes, arms, tents, tools, provisions, and merchandise +for the Indians; and it also asks for La Salle's maps and papers, and +for those of Beaujeu. On their part, it pursues, the Jesuits will engage +to make a complete survey of the river, and return an exact account of +its inhabitants, its plants, and its other productions. + +[347] Tonty, Du Lhut, and Durantaye came to the aid of Denonville with a +hundred and eighty Frenchmen, chiefly _coureurs de bois_, and four +hundred Indians from the upper country. Their services were highly +appreciated; and Tonty especially is mentioned in the despatches of +Denonville with great praise. + +[348] "Monsieur Tonty, croyant M. de la Salle vivant, ne fit pas de +difficulte de luy donner pour environ quatre mille liv. de pelleterie, +de castors, loutres, un canot, et autres effets."--Joutel, _Journal +Historique_, 349. + +Tonty himself does not make the amount so great: "Sur ce qu'ils +m'assuroient qu'il etoit reste au Golfe de Mexique en bonne sante, je +les recus comme si c'avoit este lui mesme et luy prestay [_a Cavelier_] +plus de 700 francs."--Tonty, _Memoire_. + +Cavelier must have known that La Salle was insolvent. Tonty had long +served without pay. Douay says that he made the stay of the party at the +fort very agreeable, and speaks of him, with some apparent compunction, +as "ce brave gentilhomme, toujours inseparablement attache aux interets +du Sieur de la Salle, dont nous luy avons cache la deplorable destinee." + +Couture, from the Arkansas, brought word to Tonty, several months after, +of La Salle's death, adding that Cavelier had concealed it, with no +other purpose than that of gaining money or supplies from him (Tonty), +in his brother's name. Cavelier had a letter from La Salle, desiring +Tonty to give him supplies, and pay him 2,652 livres in beaver. If +Cavelier is to be believed, this beaver belonged to La Salle. + +[349] _Lettre du Roy a Denonville, 1 Mai, 1689._ Joutel must have been a +young man at the time of the Mississippi expedition; for Charlevoix saw +him at Rouen, thirty-five years after. He speaks of him with emphatic +praise; but it must be admitted that his connivance in the deception +practised by Cavelier on Tonty leaves a shade on his character, as well +as on that of Douay. In other respects, everything that appears +concerning him is highly favorable, which is not the case with Douay, +who, on one or two occasions, makes wilful misstatements. + +Douay says that the elder Cavelier made a report of the expedition to +the minister Seignelay. This report remained unknown in an English +collection of autographs and old manuscripts, whence I obtained it by +purchase, in 1854, both the buyer and seller being at the time ignorant +of its exact character. It proved, on examination, to be a portion of +the first draft of Cavelier's report to Seignelay. It consists of +twenty-six small folio pages, closely written in a clear hand, though in +a few places obscured by the fading of the ink, as well as by occasional +erasures and interlineations of the writer. It is, as already stated, +confused and unsatisfactory in its statements; and all the latter part +has been lost. On reaching France, he had the impudence to tell Abbe +Tronson, Superior of St. Sulpice, "qu'il avait laisse M. de la Salle +dans un tres-beau pays avec M. de Chefdeville en bonne sante."--_Lettre +de Tronson a Mad. Fauvel-Cavelier, 29 Nov., 1688._ + +Cavelier addressed to the King a memorial on the importance of keeping +possession of the Illinois. It closes with an earnest petition for money +in compensation for his losses, as, according to his own statement, he +was completely _epuise_. It is affirmed in a memorial of the heirs of +his cousin, Francois Plet, that he concealed the death of La Salle some +time after his return to France, in order to get possession of property +which would otherwise have been seized by the creditors of the deceased. +The prudent abbe died rich and very old, at the house of a relative, +having inherited a large estate after his return from America. +Apparently, this did not satisfy him; for there is before me the copy of +a petition, written about 1717, in which he asks, jointly with one of +his nephews, to be given possession of the seigniorial property held by +La Salle in America. The petition was refused. + +Young Cavelier, La Salle's nephew, died some years after, an officer in +a regiment. He has been erroneously supposed to be the same with one De +la Salle, whose name is appended to a letter giving an account of +Louisiana, and dated at Toulon, 3 Sept., 1698. This person was the son +of a naval official at Toulon, and was not related to the Caveliers. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +1688-1689. + +FATE OF THE TEXAN COLONY. + + Tonty attempts to rescue the Colonists: his Difficulties and + Hardships.--Spanish Hostility.--Expedition of Alonzo de Leon: he + reaches Fort St. Louis.--A Scene of Havoc.--Destruction of the + French.--The End. + + +[Sidenote: COURAGE OF TONTY.] + +Henri De Tonty, on his rock of St. Louis, was visited in September by +Couture and two Indians from the Arkansas. Then, for the first time, he +heard with grief and indignation of the death of La Salle, and the +deceit practised by Cavelier. The chief whom he had served so well was +beyond his help; but might not the unhappy colonists left on the shores +of Texas still be rescued from destruction? Couture had confirmed what +Cavelier and his party had already told him, that the tribes south of +the Arkansas were eager to join the French in an invasion of northern +Mexico; and he soon after received from the governor, Denonville, a +letter informing him that war had again been declared against Spain. As +bold and enterprising as La Salle himself, Tonty resolved on an effort +to learn the condition of the few Frenchmen left on the borders of the +Gulf, relieve their necessities, and, should it prove practicable, make +them the nucleus of a war-party to cross the Rio Grande, and add a new +province to the domain of France. It was the revival, on a small scale, +of La Salle's scheme of Mexican invasion; and there is no doubt that, +with a score of French musketeers, he could have gathered a formidable +party of savage allies from the tribes of Red River, the Sabine, and the +Trinity. This daring adventure and the rescue of his suffering +countrymen divided his thoughts, and he prepared at once to execute the +double purpose.[350] + +[Sidenote: TONTY MISREPRESENTED.] + +He left Fort St. Louis of the Illinois early in December, in a pirogue, +or wooden canoe, with five Frenchmen, a Shawanoe warrior, and two Indian +slaves; and, after a long and painful journey, he reached the villages +of the Caddoes on Red River on the twenty-eighth of March. Here he was +told that Hiens and his companions were at a village eighty leagues +distant; and thither he was preparing to go in search of them, when all +his men, excepting the Shawanoe and one Frenchman, declared themselves +disgusted with the journey, and refused to follow him. Persuasion was +useless, and there was no means of enforcing obedience. He found himself +abandoned; but he still pushed on, with the two who remained faithful. A +few days after, they lost nearly all their ammunition in crossing a +river. Undeterred by this accident, Tonty made his way to the village +where Hiens and those who had remained with him were said to be; but no +trace of them appeared, and the demeanor of the Indians, when he +inquired for them, convinced him that they had been put to death. He +charged them with having killed the Frenchmen, whereupon the women of +the village raised a wail of lamentation; "and I saw," he says, "that +what I had said to them was true." They refused to give him guides; and +this, with the loss of his ammunition, compelled him to forego his +purpose of making his way to the colonists on the Bay of St. Louis. With +bitter disappointment, he and his two companions retraced their course, +and at length approached Red River. Here they found the whole country +flooded. Sometimes they waded to the knees, sometimes to the neck, +sometimes pushed their slow way on rafts. Night and day it rained +without ceasing. They slept on logs placed side by side to raise them +above the mud and water, and fought their way with hatchets through the +inundated cane-brakes. They found no game but a bear, which had taken +refuge on an island in the flood; and they were forced to eat their +dogs. "I never in my life," writes Tonty, "suffered so much." In judging +these intrepid exertions, it is to be remembered that he was not, at +least in appearance, of a robust constitution, and that he had but one +hand. They reached the Mississippi on the eleventh of July, and the +Arkansas villages on the thirty-first. Here Tonty was detained by an +attack of fever. He resumed his journey when it began to abate, and +reached his fort of the Illinois in September.[351] + +[Sidenote: A SCENE OF HAVOC.] + +While the King of France abandoned the exiles of Texas to their fate, a +power dark, ruthless, and terrible was hovering around the feeble colony +on the Bay of St. Louis, searching with pitiless eye to discover and +tear out that dying germ of civilization from the bosom of the +wilderness in whose savage immensity it lay hidden. Spain claimed the +Gulf of Mexico and all its coasts as her own of unanswerable right, and +the viceroys of Mexico were strenuous to enforce her claim. The capture +of one of La Salle's four vessels at St. Domingo had made known his +designs, and in the course of the three succeeding years no less than +four expeditions were sent out from Vera Cruz to find and destroy him. +They scoured the whole extent of the coast, and found the wrecks of the +"Aimable" and the "Belle;" but the colony of St. Louis,[352] inland and +secluded, escaped their search. For a time, the jealousy of the +Spaniards was lulled to sleep. They rested in the assurance that the +intruders had perished, when fresh advices from the frontier province of +New Leon caused the Viceroy, Galve, to order a strong force, under +Alonzo de Leon, to march from Coahuila, and cross the Rio Grande. Guided +by a French prisoner, probably one of the deserters from La Salle, they +pushed their way across wild and arid plains, rivers, prairies, and +forests, till at length they approached the Bay of St. Louis, and +descried, far off, the harboring-place of the French.[353] As they drew +near, no banner was displayed, no sentry challenged; and the silence of +death reigned over the shattered palisades and neglected dwellings. The +Spaniards spurred their reluctant horses through the gateway, and a +scene of desolation met their sight. No living thing was stirring. Doors +were torn from their hinges; broken boxes, staved barrels, and rusty +kettles, mingled with a great number of stocks of arquebuses and +muskets, were scattered about in confusion. Here, too, trampled in mud +and soaked with rain, they saw more than two hundred books, many of +which still retained the traces of costly bindings. On the adjacent +prairie lay three dead bodies, one of which, from fragments of dress +still clinging to the wasted remains, they saw to be that of a woman. It +was in vain to question the imperturbable savages, who, wrapped to the +throat in their buffalo-robes, stood gazing on the scene with looks of +wooden immobility. Two strangers, however, at length arrived.[354] Their +faces were smeared with paint, and they were wrapped in buffalo-robes +like the rest; yet these seeming Indians were L'Archeveque, the tool of +La Salle's murderer Duhaut, and Grollet, the companion of the white +savage Ruter. The Spanish commander, learning that these two men were in +the district of the tribe called Texas,[355] had sent to invite them to +his camp under a pledge of good treatment; and they had resolved to +trust Spanish clemency rather than endure longer a life that had become +intolerable. From them the Spaniards learned nearly all that is known of +the fate of Barbier, Zenobe Membre, and their companions. Three months +before, a large band of Indians had approached the fort, the inmates of +which had suffered severely from the ravages of the small-pox. From fear +of treachery, they refused to admit their visitors, but received them at +a cabin without the palisades. Here the French began a trade with them; +when suddenly a band of warriors, yelling the war-whoop, rushed from an +ambuscade under the bank of the river, and butchered the greater number. +The children of one Talon, together with an Italian and a young man from +Paris named Breman, were saved by the Indian women, who carried them off +on their backs. L'Archeveque and Grollet, who with others of their stamp +were domesticated in the Indian villages, came to the scene of +slaughter, and, as they affirmed, buried fourteen dead bodies.[356] + +[Sidenote: THE SURVIVORS.] + +L'Archeveque and Grollet were sent to Spain, where, in spite of the +pledge given them, they were thrown into prison, with the intention of +sending them back to labor in the mines. The Indians, some time after De +Leon's expedition, gave up their captives to the Spaniards. The Italian +was imprisoned at Vera Cruz. Breman's fate is unknown. Pierre and Jean +Baptiste Talon, who were now old enough to bear arms, were enrolled in +the Spanish navy, and, being captured in 1696 by a French ship of war, +regained their liberty; while their younger brothers and their sister +were carried to Spain by the Viceroy.[357] With respect to the ruffian +companions of Hiens, the conviction of Tonty that they had been put to +death by the Indians may have been well founded; but the buccaneer +himself is said to have been killed in a quarrel with his accomplice +Ruter, the white savage; and thus in ignominy and darkness died the last +embers of the doomed colony of La Salle. + + * * * * * + +[Sidenote: FRUIT OF EXPLORATIONS.] + +Here ends the wild and mournful story of the explorers of the +Mississippi. Of all their toil and sacrifice, no fruit remained but a +great geographical discovery, and a grand type of incarnate energy and +will. Where La Salle had ploughed, others were to sow the seed; and on +the path which the undespairing Norman had hewn out, the Canadian +D'Iberville was to win for France a vast though a transient dominion. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[350] Tonty, _Memoire_. + +[351] Two causes have contributed to detract, most unjustly, from +Tonty's reputation,--the publication, under his name, but without his +authority, of a perverted account of the enterprises in which he took +part; and the confounding him with his brother, Alphonse de Tonty, who +long commanded at Detroit, where charges of peculation were brought +against him. There are very few names in French-American history +mentioned with such unanimity of praise as that of Henri de Tonty. +Hennepin finds some fault with him; but his censure is commendation. The +despatches of the governor, Denonville, speak in strong terms of his +services in the Iroquois war, praise his character, and declare that he +is fit for any bold enterprise, adding that he deserves reward from the +King. The missionary, St. Cosme, who travelled under his escort in 1699, +says of him: "He is beloved by all the _voyageurs_.... It was with deep +regret that we parted from him: ... he is the man who best knows the +country; ... he is loved and feared everywhere.... Your grace will, I +doubt not, take pleasure in acknowledging the obligations we owe him." + +Tonty held the commission of captain; but, by a memoir which he +addressed to Ponchartrain in 1690, it appears that he had never received +any pay. Count Frontenac certifies the truth of the statement, and adds +a recommendation of the writer. In consequence, probably, of this, the +proprietorship of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois was granted in the same +year to Tonty, jointly with La Forest, formerly La Salle's lieutenant. +Here they carried on a trade in furs. In 1699, a royal declaration was +launched against the _coureurs de bois_; but an express provision was +added in favor of Tonty and La Forest, who were empowered to send up the +country yearly two canoes, with twelve men, for the maintenance of this +fort. With such a limitation, this fort and the trade carried on at it +must have been very small. In 1702, we find a royal order, to the effect +that La Forest is henceforth to reside in Canada, and Tonty on the +Mississippi; and that the establishment at the Illinois is to be +discontinued. In the same year, Tonty joined D'Iberville in Lower +Louisiana, and was sent by that officer from Mobile to secure the +Chickasaws in the French interest. His subsequent career and the time of +his death do not appear. He seems never to have received the reward +which his great merit deserved. Those intimate with the late lamented +Dr. Sparks will remember his often-expressed wish that justice should be +done to the memory of Tonty. + +Fort St. Louis of the Illinois was afterwards reoccupied by the French. +In 1718, a number of them, chiefly traders, were living here; but three +years later it was again deserted, and Charlevoix, passing the spot, saw +only the remains of its palisades. + +[352] Fort St. Louis of Texas is not to be confounded with Fort St. +Louis of the Illinois. + +[353] After crossing the Del Norte, they crossed in turn the Upper +Nueces, the Hondo (Rio Frio), the De Leon (San Antonio), and the +Guadalupe, and then, turning southward, descended to the Bay of St. +Bernard.... Manuscript map of "Route que firent les Espagnols, pour +venir enlever les Francais restez a la Baye St. Bernard ou St. Louis, +apres la perte du vaisseau de Mr. de la Salle en 1689." (Margry's +collection.) + +[354] May 1st. The Spaniards reached the fort April 22. + +[355] This is the first instance in which the name occurs. In a letter +written by a member of De Leon's party, the Texan Indians are mentioned +several times. (See _Coleccion de Varios Documentos_, 25.) They are +described as an agricultural tribe, and were, to all appearance, +identical with the Cenis. The name Tejas, or Texas, was first applied as +a local designation to a spot on the river Neches, in the Cenis +territory, whence it extended to the whole country. (See Yoakum, +_History of Texas_, 52.) + +[356] _Derrotero de la Jornada que hizo el General Alonso de Leon para +el descubrimiento de la Bahia del Espiritu Santo, y poblacion de +Franceses. Ano de 1689._--This is the official journal of the +expedition, signed by Alonzo de Leon. I am indebted to Colonel Thomas +Aspinwall for the opportunity of examining it. The name of Espiritu +Santo was, as before mentioned, given by the Spaniards to St. Louis, or +Matagorda Bay, as well as to two other bays of the Gulf of Mexico. + +_Carta en que se da noticia de un viaje hecho a la Bahia de Espiritu +Santo y de la poblacion que tenian ahi los Franceses. Coleccion de +Varios Documentos para la Historia de la Florida_, 25.--This is a letter +from a person accompanying the expedition of De Leon. It is dated May +18, 1689, and agrees closely with the journal cited above, though +evidently by another hand. Compare Barcia, _Ensayo Cronologico_, 294. +Barcia's story has been doubted; but these authentic documents prove the +correctness of his principal statements, though on minor points he seems +to have indulged his fancy. + +The Viceroy of New Spain, in a report to the King, 1690, says that, in +order to keep the Texas and other Indians of that region in obedience to +his Majesty, he has resolved to establish eight missions among them. He +adds that he has appointed as governor, or commander, in that province, +Don Domingo Teran de los Rios, who will make a thorough exploration of +it, carry out what De Leon has begun; prevent the further intrusion of +foreigners like La Salle, and go in pursuit of the remnant of the +French, who are said still to remain among the tribes of Red River. I +owe this document to the kindness of Mr. Buckingham Smith. + +[357] _Memoire sur lequel on a interroge les deux Canadiens [Pierre et +Jean Baptiste Talon] qui sont soldats dans la Compagnie de Feuguerolles. +A Brest, 14 Fevrier, 1698._ + +_Interrogations faites a Pierre et Jean Baptiste Talon a leur arrivee de +la Veracrux._--This paper, which differs in some of its details from the +preceding, was sent by D'Iberville, the founder of Louisiana, to Abbe +Cavelier. Appended to it is a letter from D'Iberville, written in May, +1704, in which he confirms the chief statements of the Talons, by +information obtained by him from a Spanish officer at Pensacola. + + + + +APPENDIX. + + +I. + +EARLY UNPUBLISHED MAPS OF THE MISSISSIPPI AND THE GREAT LAKES. + + Most of the maps described below are to be found in the Depot des + Cartes de la Marine et des Colonies, at Paris. Taken together, they + exhibit the progress of western discovery, and illustrate the + records of the explorers. + +1. The map of Galinee, 1670, has a double title,--_Carte du Canada et +des Terres decouvertes vers le lac Derie, and Carte du Lac Ontario et +des habitations qui l'environnent ensemble le pays que Messrs. Dolier +et Galinee, missionnaires du seminaire de St. Sulpice, ont parcouru_. It +professes to represent only the country actually visited by the two +missionaries. Beginning with Montreal, it gives the course of the Upper +St. Lawrence and the shores of Lake Ontario, the river Niagara, the +north shore of Lake Erie, the Strait of Detroit, and the eastern and +northern shores of Lake Huron. Galinee did not know the existence of the +peninsula of Michigan, and merges Lakes Huron and Michigan into one, +under the name of "Michigane, ou Mer Douce des Hurons." He was also +entirely ignorant of the south shore of Lake Erie. He represents the +outlet of Lake Superior as far as the Saut Ste. Marie, and lays down +the river Ottawa in great detail, having descended it on his return. The +Falls of the Genesee are indicated, as also the Falls of Niagara, with +the inscription, "Sault qui tombe au rapport des sauvages de plus de 200 +pieds de haut." Had the Jesuits been disposed to aid him, they could +have given him much additional information, and corrected his most +serious errors; as, for example, the omission of the peninsula of +Michigan. The first attempt to map out the Great Lakes was that of +Champlain, in 1632. This of Galinee may be called the second. + +2. The map of Lake Superior, published in the Jesuit Relation of 1670, +1671, was made at about the same time with Galinee's map. Lake Superior +is here styled "Lac Tracy, ou Superieur." Though not so exact as it has +been represented, this map indicates that the Jesuits had explored every +part of this fresh-water ocean, and that they had a thorough knowledge +of the straits connecting the three Upper Lakes, and of the adjacent +bays, inlets, and shores. The peninsula of Michigan, ignored by Galinee, +is represented in its proper place. + +3. Three years or more after Galinee made the map mentioned above, +another, indicating a greatly increased knowledge of the country, was +made by some person whose name does not appear. This map, which is +somewhat more than four feet long and about two feet and a half wide, +has no title. All the Great Lakes, through their entire extent, are laid +down on it with considerable accuracy. Lake Ontario is called "Lac +Ontario, ou de Frontenac." Fort Frontenac is indicated, as well as the +Iroquois colonies of the north shore. Niagara is "Chute haute de 120 +toises par ou le Lac Erie tombe dans le Lac Frontenac." Lake Erie is +"Lac Teiocha-rontiong, dit communement Lac Erie." Lake St. Clair is +"Tsiketo, ou Lac de la Chaudiere." Lake Huron is "Lac Huron, ou Mer +Douce des Hurons." Lake Superior is "Lac Superieur." Lake Michigan is +"Lac Mitchiganong, ou des Illinois." On Lake Michigan, immediately +opposite the site of Chicago, are written the words, of which the +following is the literal translation: "The largest vessels can come to +this place from the outlet of Lake Erie, where it discharges into Lake +Frontenac [Ontario]; and from this marsh into which they can enter there +is only a distance of a thousand paces to the River La Divine [Des +Plaines], which can lead them to the River Colbert [Mississippi], and +thence to the Gulf of Mexico." This map was evidently made after that +voyage of La Salle in which he discovered the Illinois, or at least the +Des Plaines branch of it. The Ohio is laid down with the inscription, +"River Ohio, so called by the Iroquois on account of its beauty, which +the Sieur de la Salle descended." (_Ante_, 32, _note_.) + +4. We now come to the map of Marquette, which is a rude sketch of a +portion of Lakes Superior and Michigan, and of the route pursued by him +and Joliet up the Fox River of Green Bay, down the Wisconsin, and thence +down the Mississippi as far as the Arkansas. The river Illinois is also +laid down, as it was by this course that he returned to Lake Michigan +after his memorable voyage. He gives no name to the Wisconsin. The +Mississippi is called "Riviere de la Conception;" the Missouri, the +Pekitanoui; and the Ohio, the Ouabouskiaou, though La Salle, its +discoverer, had previously given it its present name, borrowed from the +Iroquois. The Illinois is nameless, like the Wisconsin. At the mouth of +a river, perhaps the Des Moines, Marquette places the three villages of +the Peoria Indians visited by him. These, with the Kaskaskias, Maroas, +and others, on the map, were merely sub-tribes of the aggregation of +savages known as the Illinois. On or near the Missouri he places the +Ouchage (Osages), the Oumessourit (Missouris), the Kansa (Kanzas), the +Paniassa (Pawnees), the Maha (Omahas), and the Pahoutet (Pah-Utahs?). +The names of many other tribes, "esloignees dans les terres," are also +given along the course of the Arkansas, a river which is nameless on the +map. Most of these tribes are now indistinguishable. This map has +recently been engraved and published. + +5. Not long after Marquette's return from the Mississippi, another map +was made by the Jesuits, with the following title: _Carte de la nouvelle +decouverte que les peres Iesuites ont fait en l'annee 1672, et continuee +par le P. Iacques Marquette de la mesme Compagnie accompagne de quelques +francois en l'annee 1673, qu'on pourra nommer en francois la +Manitoumie_. This title is very elaborately decorated with figures drawn +with a pen, and representing Jesuits instructing Indians. The map is the +same published by Thevenot, not without considerable variations, in +1681. It represents the Mississippi from a little above the Wisconsin to +the Gulf of Mexico, the part below the Arkansas being drawn from +conjecture. The river is named "Mitchisipi, ou grande Riviere." The +Wisconsin, the Illinois, the Ohio, the Des Moines(?), the Missouri, and +the Arkansas are all represented, but in a very rude manner. Marquette's +route, in going and returning, is marked by lines; but the return route +is incorrect. The whole map is so crude and careless, and based on +information so inexact, that it is of little interest. + +6. The Jesuits made also another map, without title, of the four Upper +Lakes and the Mississippi to a little below the Arkansas. The +Mississippi is called "Riuiere Colbert." The map is remarkable as +including the earliest representation of the Upper Mississippi, based, +perhaps, on the reports of Indians. The Falls of St. Anthony are +indicated by the word "Saut." It is possible that the map may be of +later date than at first appears, and that it may have been drawn in the +interval between the return of Hennepin from the Upper Mississippi and +that of La Salle from his discovery of the mouth of the river. The +various temporary and permanent stations of the Jesuits are marked by +crosses. + +7. Of far greater interest is the small map of Louis Joliet made and +presented to Count Frontenac after the discoverer's return from the +Mississippi. It is entitled _Carte de la decouverte du Sr. Jolliet ou +l'on voit La Communication du fleuve St. Laurens avec les lacs +frontenac, Erie, Lac des Hurons et Ilinois_. Then succeeds the +following, written in the same antiquated French, as if it were a part +of the title: "Lake Frontenac [Ontario] is separated by a fall of half a +league from Lake Erie, from which one enters that of the Hurons, and by +the same navigation, into that of the Illinois [Michigan], from the head +of which one crosses to the Divine River [Riviere Divine; _i. e._, the +Des Plaines branch of the river Illinois], by a portage of a thousand +paces. This river falls into the river Colbert [Mississippi], which +discharges itself into the Gulf of Mexico." A part of this map is based +on the Jesuit map of Lake Superior, the legends being here for the most +part identical, though the shape of the lake is better given by Joliet. +The Mississippi, or "Riuiere Colbert," is made to flow from three lakes +in latitude 47 deg.; and it ends in latitude 37 deg., a little below the mouth +of the Ohio, the rest being apparently cut off to make room for Joliet's +letter to Frontenac (_ante_, 76), which is written on the lower part of +the map. The valley of the Mississippi is called on the map "Colbertie, +ou Amerique Occidentale." The Missouri is represented without name, and +against it is a legend, of which the following is the literal +translation: "By one of these great rivers which come from the west and +discharge themselves into the river Colbert, one will find a way to +enter the Vermilion Sea (Gulf of California). I have seen a village +which was not more than twenty days' journey by land from a nation which +has commerce with those of California. If I had come two days sooner, I +should have spoken with those who had come from thence, and had brought +four hatchets as a present." The Ohio has no name, but a legend over it +states that La Salle had descended it. (See _ante_, 32, _note_). + +8. Joliet, at about the same time, made another map, larger than that +just mentioned, but not essentially different. The letter to Frontenac +is written upon both. There is a third map, of which the following is +the title: _Carte generalle de la France septentrionale contenant la +descouuerte du pays des Illinois, faite par le Sr. Jolliet_. This +map, which is inscribed with a dedication by the Intendant Duchesneau to +the minister Colbert, was made some time after the voyage of Joliet and +Marquette. It is an elaborate piece of work, but very inaccurate. It +represents the continent from Hudson's Strait to Mexico and California, +with the whole of the Atlantic and a part of the Pacific coast. An open +sea is made to extend from Hudson's Strait westward to the Pacific. The +St. Lawrence and all the Great Lakes are laid down with tolerable +correctness, as also is the Gulf of Mexico. The Mississippi, called +"Messasipi," flows into the Gulf, from which it extends northward nearly +to the "Mer du Nord." Along its course, above the Wisconsin, which is +called "Miskous," is a long list of Indian tribes, most of which cannot +now be recognized, though several are clearly sub-tribes of the Sioux. +The Ohio is called "Ouaboustikou." The whole map is decorated with +numerous figures of animals, natives of the country, or supposed to be +so. Among them are camels, ostriches, and a giraffe, which are placed on +the plains west of the Mississippi. But the most curious figure is that +which represents one of the monsters seen by Joliet and Marquette, +painted on a rock by the Indians. It corresponds with Marquette's +description (_ante_, 68). This map, which is an early effort of the +engineer Franquelin, does more credit to his skill as a designer than to +his geographical knowledge, which appears in some respects behind his +time. + +9. _Carte de l'Amerique Septentrionale depuis l'embouchure de la Riviere +St. Laurens jusques au Sein Mexique._ On this curious little map, the +Mississippi is called "Riuiere Buade" (the family name of Frontenac); +and the neighboring country is "La Frontenacie." The Illinois is +"Riuiere de la Diuine ou Loutrelaise," and the Arkansas is "Riuiere +Bazire." The Mississippi is made to head in three lakes, and to +discharge itself into "B. du S. Esprit" (Mobile Bay). Some of the +legends and the orthography of various Indian names are clearly borrowed +from Marquette. This map appears to be the work of Raudin, Frontenac's +engineer. I owe a tracing of it to the kindness of Henry Harrisse, Esq. + +10. _Carte des Parties les plus occidentales du Canada, par le Pere +Pierre Raffeix_, S. J. This rude map shows the course of Du Lhut from +the head of Lake Superior to the Mississippi, and partly confirms the +story of Hennepin, who, Raffeix says in a note, was rescued by Du Lhut. +The course of Joliet and Marquette is given, with the legend "Voyage et +premiere descouverte du Mississipy faite par le P. Marquette et Mr. +Joliet en 1672." The route of La Salle in 1679, 1680, is also laid down. + +11. In the Depot des Cartes de la Marine is another map of the Upper +Mississippi, which seems to have been made by or for Du Lhut. Lac Buade, +the "Issatis," the "Tintons," the "Houelbatons," the "Poualacs," and +other tribes of this region appear upon it. This is the map numbered +208 in the _Cartographie_ of Harrisse. + +12. Another map deserving mention is a large and fine one, entitled +_Carte de l'Amerique Septentrionale et partie de la Meridionale ... avec +les nouvelles decouvertes de la Riviere Missisipi, ou Colbert_. It +appears to have been made in 1682 or 1683, before the descent of La +Salle to the mouth of the Mississippi was known to the maker, who seems +to have been Franquelin. The lower Mississippi is omitted, but its upper +portions are elaborately laid down; and the name _La Louisiane_ appears +in large gold letters along its west side. The Falls of St. Anthony are +shown, and above them is written "Armes du Roy gravees sur cet arbre +l'an 1679." This refers to the _acte de prise de possession_ of Du Lhut +in July of that year, and this part of the map seems made from data +supplied by him. + +13. We now come to the great map of Franquelin, the most remarkable of +all the early maps of the interior of North America, though hitherto +completely ignored by both American and Canadian writers. It is entitled +_Carte de la Louisiane ou des Voyages du Sr. de la Salle et des pays +qu'il a decouverts depuis la Nouvelle France jusqu'au Golfe Mexique les +annees 1679, 80, 81, et 82, par Jean Baptiste Louis Franquelin, l'an +1684. Paris._ Franquelin was a young engineer, who held the post of +hydrographer to the King, at Quebec, in which Joliet succeeded him. +Several of his maps are preserved, including one made in 1681, in which +he lays down the course of the Mississippi,--the lower part from +conjecture,--making it discharge itself into Mobile Bay. It appears from +a letter of the governor, La Barre, that Franquelin was at Quebec in +1683, engaged on a map which was probably that of which the title is +given above, though had La Barre known that it was to be called a map of +the journeys of his victim La Salle, he would have been more sparing of +his praises. "He" (Franquelin), writes the governor, "is as skilful as +any in France, but extremely poor and in need of a little aid from his +Majesty as an Engineer; he is at work on a very correct map of the +country, which I shall send you next year in his name; meanwhile, I +shall support him with some little assistance."--_Colonial Documents of +New York_, IX. 205. + +The map is very elaborately executed, and is six feet long and four and +a half wide. It exhibits the political divisions of the continent, as +the French then understood them; that is to say, all the regions drained +by streams flowing into the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi are claimed +as belonging to France, and this vast domain is separated into two grand +divisions, La Nouvelle France and La Louisiane. The boundary line of the +former, New France, is drawn from the Penobscot to the southern +extremity of Lake Champlain, and thence to the Mohawk, which it crosses +a little above Schenectady, in order to make French subjects of the +Mohawk Indians. Thence it passes by the sources of the Susquehanna and +the Alleghany, along the southern shore of Lake Erie, across Southern +Michigan, and by the head of Lake Michigan, whence it sweeps +northwestward to the sources of the Mississippi. Louisiana includes the +entire valley of the Mississippi and the Ohio, besides the whole of +Texas. The Spanish province of Florida comprises the peninsula and the +country east of the Bay of Mobile, drained by streams flowing into the +Gulf; while Carolina, Virginia, and the other English provinces, form a +narrow strip between the Alleghanies and the Atlantic. + +The Mississippi is called "Missisipi, ou Riviere Colbert;" the Missouri, +"Grande Riviere des Emissourittes, ou Missourits;" the Illinois, +"Riviere des Ilinois, ou Macopins;" the Ohio, which La Salle had before +called by its present name, "Fleuve St. Louis, ou Chucagoa, ou +Casquinampogamou;" one of its principal branches is "Ohio, ou Olighin" +(Alleghany); the Arkansas, "Riviere des Acansea;" the Red River, +"Riviere Seignelay," a name which had once been given to the Illinois. +Many smaller streams are designated by names which have been entirely +forgotten. + +The nomenclature differs materially from that of Coronelli's map, +published four years later. Here the whole of the French territory is +laid down as "Canada, ou La Nouvelle France," of which "La Louisiane" +forms an integral part. The map of Homannus, like that of Franquelin, +makes two distinct provinces, of which one is styled "Canada" and the +other "La Louisiane," the latter including Michigan and the greater part +of New York. Franquelin gives the shape of Hudson's Bay, and of all the +Great Lakes, with remarkable accuracy. He makes the Mississippi bend +much too far to the West. The peculiar sinuosities of its course are +indicated; and some of its bends--as, for example, that at New +Orleans--are easily recognized. Its mouths are represented with great +minuteness; and it may be inferred from the map that, since La Salle's +time, they have advanced considerably into the sea. + +Perhaps the most interesting feature in Franquelin's map is his sketch +of La Salle's evanescent colony on the Illinois, engraved for this +volume. He reproduced the map in 1688, for presentation to the King, +with the title _Carte de l'Amerique Septentrionale, depuis le 25 jusq'au +65 degre de latitude et environ 140 et 235 degres de longitude, etc._ In +this map, Franquelin corrects various errors in that which preceded. One +of these corrections consists in the removal of a branch of the river +Illinois which he had marked on his first map,--as will be seen by +referring to the portion of it in this book,--but which does not in fact +exist. On this second map, La Salle's colony appears in much diminished +proportions, his Indian settlements having in good measure dispersed. + +Two later maps of New France and Louisiana, both bearing Franquelin's +name, are preserved in the Depot des Cartes de la Marine, as well as a +number of smaller maps and sketches, also by him. They all have more or +less of the features of the great map of 1684, which surpasses them all +in interest and completeness. + +The remarkable manuscript map of the Upper Mississippi by Le Sueur +belongs to a period later than the close of this narrative. + +These various maps, joined to contemporary documents, show that the +Valley of the Mississippi received, at an early date, the several names +of Manitoumie, Frontenacie, Colbertie, and La Louisiane. This last name, +which it long retained, is due to La Salle. The first use of it which I +have observed is in a conveyance of the Island of Belleisle made by him +to his lieutenant, La Forest, in 1679. + + +II. + +THE ELDORADO OF MATHIEU SAGEAN. + +Father Hennepin had among his contemporaries two rivals in the +fabrication of new discoveries. The first was the noted La Hontan, whose +book, like his own, had a wide circulation and proved a great success. +La Hontan had seen much, and portions of his story have a substantial +value; but his account of his pretended voyage up the "Long River" is a +sheer fabrication. His "Long River" corresponds in position with the +St. Peter, but it corresponds in nothing else; and the populous nations +whom he found on it--the Eokoros, the Esanapes, and the Gnacsitares, no +less than their neighbors the Mozeemlek and the Tahuglauk--are as real +as the nations visited by Captain Gulliver. But La Hontan did not, like +Hennepin, add slander and plagiarism to mendacity, or seek to +appropriate to himself the credit of genuine discoveries made by others. + +Mathieu Sagean is a personage less known than Hennepin or La Hontan; for +though he surpassed them both in fertility of invention, he was +illiterate, and never made a book. In 1701, being then a soldier in a +company of marines at Brest, he revealed a secret which he declared that +he had locked within his breast for twenty years, having been unwilling +to impart it to the Dutch and English, in whose service he had been +during the whole period. His story was written down from his dictation, +and sent to the minister Ponchartrain. It is preserved in the +Bibliotheque Nationale, and in 1863 it was printed by Mr. Shea. + +He was born, he declares, at La Chine in Canada, and engaged in the +service of La Salle about twenty years before the revelation of his +secret; that is, in 1681. Hence, he would have been, at the utmost, only +fourteen years old, as La Chine did not exist before 1667. He was with +La Salle at the building of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, and was left +here as one of a hundred men under command of Tonty. Tonty, it is to be +observed, had but a small fraction of this number; and Sagean describes +the fort in a manner which shows that he never saw it. Being desirous of +making some new discovery, he obtained leave from Tonty, and set out +with eleven other Frenchmen and two Mohegan Indians. They ascended the +Mississippi a hundred and fifty leagues, carried their canoes by a +cataract, went forty leagues farther, and stopped a month to hunt. +While thus employed, they found another river, fourteen leagues distant, +flowing south-southwest. They carried their canoes thither, meeting on +the way many lions, leopards, and tigers, which did them no harm; then +they embarked, paddled a hundred and fifty leagues farther, and found +themselves in the midst of the great nation of the Acanibas, dwelling in +many fortified towns, and governed by King Hagaren, who claimed descent +from Montezuma. The King, like his subjects, was clothed with the skins +of men. Nevertheless, he and they were civilized and polished in their +manners. They worshipped certain frightful idols of gold in the royal +palace. One of them represented the ancestor of their monarch armed with +lance, bow, and quiver, and in the act of mounting his horse; while in +his mouth he held a jewel as large as a goose's egg, which shone like +fire, and which, in the opinion of Sagean, was a carbuncle. Another of +these images was that of a woman mounted on a golden unicorn, with a +horn more than a fathom long. After passing, pursues the story, between +these idols, which stand on platforms of gold, each thirty feet square, +one enters a magnificent vestibule, conducting to the apartment of the +King. At the four corners of this vestibule are stationed bands of +music, which, to the taste of Sagean, was of very poor quality. The +palace is of vast extent, and the private apartment of the King is +twenty-eight or thirty feet square; the walls, to the height of eighteen +feet, being of bricks of solid gold, and the pavement of the same. Here +the King dwells alone, served only by his wives, of whom he takes a new +one every day. The Frenchmen alone had the privilege of entering, and +were graciously received. + +These people carry on a great trade in gold with a nation, believed by +Sagean to be the Japanese, as the journey to them lasts six months. He +saw the departure of one of the caravans, which consisted of more than +three thousand oxen, laden with gold, and an equal number of horsemen, +armed with lances, bows, and daggers. They receive iron and steel in +exchange for their gold. The King has an army of a hundred thousand men, +of whom three fourths are cavalry. They have golden trumpets, with which +they make very indifferent music; and also golden drums, which, as well +as the drummer, are carried on the backs of oxen. The troops are +practised once a week in shooting at a target with arrows; and the King +rewards the victor with one of his wives, or with some honorable +employment. + +These people are of a dark complexion and hideous to look upon, because +their faces are made long and narrow by pressing their heads between two +boards in infancy. The women, however, are as fair as in Europe; though, +in common with the men, their ears are enormously large. All persons of +distinction among the Acanibas wear their fingernails very long. They +are polygamists, and each man takes as many wives as he wants. They are +of a joyous disposition, moderate drinkers, but great smokers. They +entertained Sagean and his followers during five months with the fat of +the land; and any woman who refused a Frenchman was ordered to be +killed. Six girls were put to death with daggers for this breach of +hospitality. The King, being anxious to retain his visitors in his +service, offered Sagean one of his daughters, aged fourteen years, in +marriage; and when he saw him resolved to depart, promised to keep her +for him till he should return. + +The climate is delightful, and summer reigns throughout the year. The +plains are full of birds and animals of all kinds, among which are many +parrots and monkeys, besides the wild cattle, with humps like camels, +which these people use as beasts of burden. + +King Hagaren would not let the Frenchmen go till they had sworn by the +sky, which is the customary oath of the Acanibas, that they would return +in thirty-six moons, and bring him a supply of beads and other trinkets +from Canada. As gold was to be had for the asking, each of the eleven +Frenchmen took away with him sixty small bars, weighing about four +pounds each. The King ordered two hundred horsemen to escort them, and +carry the gold to their canoes; which they did, and then bade them +farewell with terrific howlings, meant, doubtless, to do them honor. + +After many adventures, wherein nearly all his companions came to a +bloody end, Sagean, and the few others who survived, had the ill luck to +be captured by English pirates, at the mouth of the St. Lawrence. He +spent many years among them in the East and West Indies, but would not +reveal the secret of his Eldorado to these heretical foreigners. + +Such was the story, which so far imposed on the credulity of the +minister Ponchartrain as to persuade him that the matter was worth +serious examination. Accordingly, Sagean was sent to Louisiana, then in +its earliest infancy as a French colony. Here he met various persons who +had known him in Canada, who denied that he had ever been on the +Mississippi, and contradicted his account of his parentage. +Nevertheless, he held fast to his story, and declared that the gold +mines of the Acanibas could be reached without difficulty by the river +Missouri. But Sauvolle and Bienville, chiefs of the colony, were +obstinate in their unbelief; and Sagean and his King Hagaren lapsed +alike into oblivion. + + + + +INDEX. + + +Abenakis, the, 285, 295, 316, 346. + +Acanibas, the, great nation of, + description of, 487-489; + gold mines of, 489. + +"Acansea" (Arkansas) River, the, 484. + +Accau, Michel, 186, 187, 249, 251, 253, 261, 265, 266, 273. + +African travel, history of, 198. + +Agniers (Mohawks), the, 136. + +Aigron, Captain, on ill-terms with La Salle, 372, 382, 383. + +Ailleboust, Madame d', 111. + +"Aimable," La Salle's store-ship, 372, 373, 374, 375, 379, 380, + 381, 405, 454, 468. + +Aire, Beaujeu's lieutenant, 375. + +Akanseas, nation of the, 300. See also _Arkansas Indians, the_. + +Albanel, + prominent among the Jesuit explorers, 109; + his journey up the Saguenay to Hudson's Bay, 109. + +Albany, 118, 200, 220. + +Algonquin Indians, the, + Jean Nicollet among, 3; + at Ste. Marie du Saut, 39; + the Iroquois spread desolation among, 219. + +Alkansas, nation of the, 300. See also _Arkansas Indians, the_. + +Alleghany Mountains, the, 84, 308, 309, 483. + +Alleghany River, the, 307, 483, 484. + +Allouez, Father Claude, + explores a part of Lake Superior, 6; + name of Lake Michigan, 42, 155; + sent to Green Bay to found a mission, 43; + joined by Dablon, 43; + among the Mascoutins and the Miamis, 44; + among the Foxes, 45; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + addresses the Indians at Saut Ste. Marie, 53; + population of the Illinois Valley, 169; + intrigues against La Salle, 175, 238; + at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 458; + his fear of La Salle, 459. + +Allumette Island, 3. + +Alton, city of, 68. + +America, + debt due La Salle from, 432. + +"Amerique Occidentale" (Mississippi Valley), 479. + +Amikoues, the, + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Andastes, + reduced to helpless insignificance by the Iroquois, 219. + +Andre, Louis, + mission of the Manitoulin Island assigned to, 41; + makes a missionary tour among the Nipissings, 41; + his experiences among them, 42; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Anthony, St., of Padua, the patron of La Salle's great + enterprise, 152, 250, 259. + +Anticosti, great island of, + granted to Joliet, 76. + +Appalache, Bay of, 373. + +Aquipaguetin, Chief, 254; + plots against Hennepin, 255, 261, 262, 264, 271, 272. + +Aramoni River, the, 221, 225, 239. + +Arctic travel, + history of, 198. + +Arkansas Indians, the, + Joliet and Marquette among, 72, 184; + La Salle among, 299; + various names of, 300; + tallest and best-formed Indians in America, 300, 308; + villages of, 466. + +Arkansas River, the, 71; + Joutel's arrival at, 453; + Joutel descends, 456; 478, 484. + +Arnoul, Sieur, 383, 390. + +Arouet, Francois Marie, see _Voltaire_. + +Aspinwall, Col. Thomas, 471. + +Assiniboins, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40, 261; + Du Lhut among, 276. + +Assonis, the, + Joutel among, 451; + Tonty among, 452. + +Atlantic coast, the, 480. + +Atlantic Ocean, the, 74. + +Auguel, Antoine, 186. + See also _Du Gay, Picard_. + +Autray, Sieur d', 200. + + +Bancroft, 75. + +Barbier, Sieur, 406; + marriage of, 408, 418; + fate of, 470. + +Barcia, 244, 471. + +Barrois, secretary of Count Frontenac, 293. + +Barthelemy, 433, 451, 456. + +Baugis, Chevalier de, 326, 327. + +Bazire, 101. + +Beauharnois, forest of, 14. + +Beaujeu, Madame de, + devotion to the Jesuits, 361. + +Beaujeu, Sieur de, + divides with La Salle the command of the new enterprise, 353; + lack of harmony between La Salle and, 354-361; + letters to Seignelay, 354-356; + letters to Cabart de Villermont, 357-360; + sails from Rochelle, 366; + disputes with La Salle, 366; + the voyage, 368; + complaints of, 370; + La Salle waiting for, 374; + meeting with La Salle, 375; + in Texas, 381; + makes friendly advances to La Salle, 385; + departure of, 387; + conduct of, 389; + coldly received by Seignelay, 389, 454. + +"Beautiful River" (Ohio), the, 70. + +Begon, the intendant, 367, 368. + +"Belle," La Salle's frigate, 372, 373, 374, 379, 383, 386, 389, + 392, 401, 404, 406, 407, 416, 417, 468. + +Bellefontaine, Tonty's lieutenant, 458, 460. + +Belle Isle, 203. + +Belleisle, Island of, 485. + +Bellinzani, 129. + +Bernon, Abbe, + on the character of La Salle, 342. + +Bibliotheque Mazarine, the, 17. + +Bienville, 489. + +Big Vermilion River, the, 221, 239, 241. + +Bissot, Claire, + her marriage to Louis Joliet, 76. + +Black Rock, 149. + +Boeufs, Riviere aux, 392. + +Bois Blanc, Island of, 153. + +Boisrondet, Sieur de, 218, 223, 227, 233, 236, 457. + +Boisseau, 101. + +Bolton, Captain, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + +Boston, 5; + rumored that the Dutch fleet had captured, 88. + +Boughton Hill, 21. + +Bourbon, Louis Armand de, see, _Conti, Prince de_. + +Bourdon, the engineer, 111. + +Bourdon, Jean, 200. + See also _Dautray_. + +Bourdon, Madame, superior of the Sainte Famille, 111. + +Bowman, W. E., 317. + +Branssac, + loans merchandise to La Salle, 49, 434. + +Brazos River, the, 424. + +Breman, + fate of, 471, 472. + +Brest, 486. + +Brinvilliers, + burned alive, 179. + +British territories, the, 309. + +Brodhead, 136. + +Bruyas, the Jesuit, 115; + among the Onondagas and the Mohawks, 115, 135; + the "Racines Agnieres" of, 136. + +Buade, Lake, 257, 262, 481. + +Buade, Louis de, see _Frontenac, Count_. + +Buade, Riviere (Mississippi), 481. + +Buffalo, the, 205, 398. + +Buffalo Rock, 169, 314; + occupied by the Miami village, 314; + described by Charlevoix, 314. + +Buisset, Luc, the Recollet, 121; + at Fort Frontenac, 132, 135, 137, 280. + +Bull River, 272. + +Burnt Wood River, the, 277. + + +Caddoes, the, 452; + villages of, 465. + +Cadodaquis, the, 452. + +California, Gulf of, 15, 31, 41, 63, 74, 84, 480. + +California, State of, 480. + +Camanches, the, 414. + +Cambray, Archbishop of, 16. + +Canada, 10; + Frontenac's treaty with the Indians confers an inestimable + blessing on all, 95; + no longer merely a mission, 104, 484. + +Canadian Parliament, Library of, the, 13. + +Cananistigoyan, 275. + +Carignan, regiment of, 12, 91. + +Carolina, 483. + +Carver, 62, 267. + +"Casquinampogamou" (St. Louis) River, the, 484. + +Casson, Dollier de, 15; + among the Nipissings, 16; + leads an expedition of conversion, 16; + combines his expedition with that of La Salle, 17; + journey of, 19, 20; + _belles paroles_ of La Salle, 25; + discoveries of La Salle, 29, 475. + +Cataraqui Bridge, the, 90. + +Cataraqui River, the, 87; + Frontenac at, 90; + fort built on the banks of, 92. + +Cavelier, nephew of La Salle, 420, 435, 438, 446, 449, 451, 458, 463. + +Cavelier, Henri, uncle of La Salle, 7, 363. + +Cavelier, Jean, father of La Salle, 7. + +Cavelier, Abbe Jean, brother of La Salle, 9; + at Montreal, 98; + La Salle defamed to, 113; + causes La Salle no little annoyance, 114, 333, 353, 367, 369, 370, + 371, 372, 374, 376, 388, 394, 396, 402, 405, 406, 412, 415, 416, + 417, 420, 421, 423; + unreliable in his writings, 433, 435, 436; + doubt and anxiety, 437, 438, 446; + plans to escape, 447; + the murder of Duhaut, 449; + sets out for home, 450, 451; + among the Assonis, 452, 453; + on the Arkansas, 455; + at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 457; + visit to Father Allouez, 459; + conceals La Salle's death, 460; + reaches Montreal, 462; + embarks for France, 462; + his report to Seignelay, 462, 463; + his memorial to the King, 463, 464. + +Cavelier, Madeleine, 28, 34. + +Cavelier, Rene Robert, see _La Salle, Sieur de_. + +Cayuga Creek, 145, 146. + +Cayugas, the, + Frontenac's address to, 91. + +Cenis, the, + La Salle among, 413; + villages of, 415; + Duhaut's journey to, 438; + Joutel among, 440-445; + customs of, 443; + joined by Hiens on a war-expedition, 450. + +Champigny, Intendant of Canada, 434. + +Champlain, Lake, 483. + +Champlain, Samuel de, + dreams of the South Sea, 14; + map of, 139; + his enthusiasm compared with that of La Salle, 431; + first to map out the Great Lakes, 476. + +Chaouanons (Shawanoes), the, 307, 317. + +Charlevoix, 50; + death of Marquette, 82; 103; + the names of the Illinois River, 167; + the loss of the "Griffin," 182; + the Illinois Indians, 223; + doubted veracity of Hennepin, 244; + the Iroquois virgin, Tegahkouita, 275; + the Arkansas nation, 300; + visits the Natchez Indians, 304; + describes "Starved Rock" and Buffalo Rock, 314; + speaks of "Le Rocher," 314; + character of La Salle, 433, 454; + the remains of Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 468. + +Charon, creditor of La Salle, 150. + +Charron, Madame, 111. + +Chartier, Martin, 337. + +Chassagoac, chief of the Illinois, + meeting with La Salle, 192. + +Chassagouasse, Chief, 192. + +Chateauguay, forest of, 14. + +"Chaudiere, Lac de la" (Lake St. Clair), 476. + +Chaumonot, the Jesuit, + founds the association of the Sainte Famille, 111. + +Chefdeville, M. de, 406, 407, 418, 463. + +Cheruel, 167. + +Chicago, 50, 236, 460, 462, 477. + +Chicago Portage, the, 320. + +Chicago River, the, 31; + Marquette on, 78, 296. + +Chickasaw Bluffs, the, 311. + +Chickasaw Indians, the, 184, 296, 307, 320, 468. + +Chikachas (Chickasaws), the, 307. + +China, 6, 14, 29. + +China, Sea of, 38, 83. + +Chippewa Creek, 139, 145. + +Chippeway River, the, 272. + +"Chucagoa" (St. Louis) River, the, 484. + +Chukagoua (Ohio) River, the, 307. + +Clark, James, 169, 170; + the site of the Great Illinois Town, 239. + +Coahuila, 469. + +Colbert, the minister, + Joliet's discovery of the Mississippi announced to, 34; + Frontenac's despatch, recommending La Salle, 99; + La Salle defamed to, 119; + a memorial of La Salle laid before, 122, 344, 345, 480. + +Colbert River (Mississippi), the, 35, 244, 307, 346, 376, 477, 479, 482. + +"Colbertie" (Mississippi Valley), 479. + +Collin, 187. + +Colorado River, the, 411, 415. + +Comet of 1680, the Great, 213. + +"Conception, Riviere de la" (Mississippi River), 477. + +Conti, Fort, 128; + location of, 129, 148. + +Conti, Lac de (Lake Erie), 129. + +Conti, Prince de (second), + patron of La Salle, 106; + letter from La Salle, 118. + +Copper mines of Lake Superior, 23; + Joliet attempts to discover, 23; + the Jesuits labor to explore, 38; + Indian legends concerning, 39; + Saint-Lusson sets out to discover, 49. + +Coroas, the, + visited by the French, 305, 310. + +Coronelli, map made by, 221, 484. + +Corpus Christi Bay, 375. + +Cosme, St., 69, 314, 454; + commendation of Tonty, 467. + +Courcelle, Governor, 11, 15, 17, 35; + quarrel with Talon, 56; + schemes to protect French trade in Canada, 85. + +Couture, + the assassination of La Salle, 433; + welcomes Joutel, 453, 455, 456, 461, 464. + +Creeks, the, 304. + +Crees, the, + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Crevecoeur, Fort, 34; + built by La Salle, 180; + La Salle at, 180-188; + destroyed by the mutineers, 199; + La Salle finds the ruins of, 211. + +Crow Indians, the, + make war upon the dead, 207. + +Cuba, 372, 389. + +Cussy, De, governor of La Tortue, 367, 368. + + +Dablon, Father Claude the Jesuit, + at Ste. Marie du Saut, 27, 51; + reports the discovery of copper, 38; + the location of the Illinois Indians, 41; + the name of Lake Michigan, 42; + joins Father Allouez at the Green Bay Mission, 43; + among the Mascoutins and the Miamis, 44; + the Cross among the Foxes, 45; + the authority and state of the Miami chief, 50; + Allouez's harangue at Saut Ste. Marie, 55; + rumors of the Dutch fleet, 88, 112. + +Dacotah (Sioux) Indians, the, 260. + +Dauphin, Fort, 128; + location of, 129. + +Dauphin, Lac (Lake Michigan), 155. + +Daupin, Francois, 203. + +Dautray, 187, 199, 210, 306. + +De Launay, see _Launay, De_. + +De Leon, see _Leon, Alonzo de_. + +De Leon (San Antonio), the, 469. + +Del Norte, the, 469. + +De Marle, see _Marle, De_. + +Denonville, Marquis de, 21, 121, 275, 454; + in the Iroquois War, 460; + announces war against Spain, 464; + commendation of Tonty, 467. + +Des Groseilliers, Medard Chouart, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + +Deslauriers, 118. + +Desloges, 384. + +Des Moines, 65. + +Des Moines River, the, 477, 478. + +De Soto, Hernando, + buried in the Mississippi, 3. + +Des Plaines River, the, 79, 477, 479. + +Detroit, 26. + +Detroit River, the, 31, 197, 279. + +Detroit, the Strait of, + first recorded passage of white men through, 26; + the "Griffin" in, 151; + Du Lhut ordered to fortify, 275, 475. + +Divine, the Riviere de la, 167, 479. + +Dollier, see _Casson, Dollier de_. + +Douay, Anastase, 69, 155; + joins La Salle's new enterprise, 353, 372; + in Texas, 388; + at Fort St. Louis, 399, 405, 406, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, + 417, 418, 420, 421, 422, 428; + the assassination of La Salle, 432; + unreliable in his writings, 433, 435; + doubt and anxiety, 437, 446; + the murder of Duhaut, 448, 449; + sets out for home, 451, 458; + visit to Father Allouez, 459; + character of, 462. + +Druilletes, Gabriel, + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + teaches Marquette the Montagnais language, 59. + +Duchesneau, the intendant, 69, 78, 101, 102, 125, 126, 138, 156, + 164, 197, 217, 218, 219, 235, 274, 275, 480. + +Du Gay, Picard, 186, 187, 250, 251, 253; + among the Sioux, 259, 261, 265, 266, 268, 269, 270, 272, 273. + +Duhaut, the brothers, 368, 400. + +Duhaut, the elder, + return of, 401; + at Fort St. Louis, 405; + plots against La Salle, 410, 420, 424; + quarrel with Moranget, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + assassinates La Salle, 429; + triumph of, 435; + journey to the Cenis villages, 438; + resolves to return to Fort St. Louis, 446; + quarrel with Hiens, 446; + plans to go to Canada, 448; + murder of, 448. + +Du Lhut, Daniel Greysolon, 182; + meeting with Hennepin, 273; + sketch of, 274; + exploits of, 275, 276; + route of, 276; + explorations of, 276-278; + among the Assiniboins and the Sioux, 276; + joined by Hennepin, 278; + reaches the Green Bay Mission, 279, 322; + in the Iroquois War, 460, 481, 482. + +Dumesnil, La Salle's servant, 415. + +Dumont, + La Salle borrows money from, 127. + +Duplessis, + attempts to murder La Salle, 166. + +Dupont, Nicolas, 99. + +Du Pratz, + customs of the Natchez, 304. + +Durango, 350. + +Durantaye, 275; + in the Iroquois War, 460. + +Dutch, the, + trade with the Indians, 219; + encourage the Iroquois to fight, 324. + +Dutch fleet, the, + rumored to have captured Boston, 88. + + +East Indies, the, 489. + +Eastman, Mrs., legend of Winona, 271. + +"Emissourites, Riviere des" (Missouri), 70. + +English, the, + hold out great inducements to Joliet to join them, 76; + French company formed to compete at Hudson's Bay with, 76; + trade with the Indians, 219; + encourage the Iroquois to fight, 324. + +"English Jem," 421. + +Eokoros, the, 486. + +Erie, Lake, 23, 25, 26, 29, 31, 96, 124, 141, 146, 151, 196, 197, + 275, 279, 309, 333, 475, 476, 477, 479, 483. + +Eries, the, + exterminated by the Iroquois, 219. + +Esanapes, the, 486. + +Esmanville, the priest, 375, 379. + +Espiritu Santo Bay, 394, 471. + +Estrees, Count d', 344. + + +Faillon, Abbe, + connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, 8; + the seigniory of La Salle, 12, 13; + detailed plan of Montreal, 13; + La Salle's discoveries, 29; + La Salle in need of money, 49; + throws much light on the life of, 58, 98; + on the establishment of the association of the Sainte Famille, 112; + plan of Fort Frontenac, 121. + +Fauvel-Cavelier, Mme., 463. + +Fenelon, Abbe, 16; + attempts to mediate between Frontenac and Perrot, 97; + preaches against Frontenac at Montreal, 98. + +Ferland, + throws much light on the life of Joliet, 58. + +Fire Nation, the, 44. + +Five Nations, the, 11. + +Florida, 483. + +Florida Indians, the, + lodges of, 442. + +Folles-Avoines, Nation des, 61. + +Forked River (Mississippi), the, 5. + +Fox River, the, 4, 43, 50, 62, 477. + +Foxes, the + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 43; + Father Allouez among, 45; + incensed against the French, 45; + the Cross among, 45, 287. + +France, + takes possession of the West, 52; + receives on parchment a stupendous accession, 308. + +Francheville, Pierre, 58. + +Francis, St., 249. + +Franciscans, the, 133. + +Franquelin, Jean Baptiste Louis, + manuscript map made by, 169, 221, + 309, 316, 317, 347, 390, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485. + +Fremin, the Jesuit, 21. + +French, the, + Hurons the allies of, 4; + in western New York, 19-23; + the Iroquois felt the power of, 42; + the Foxes incensed against, 45; + the Jesuits seek to embroil the Iroquois with, 115; + seeking to secure a monopoly of the furs of the north and west, 219; + in Texas, 348; + reoccupy Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 468. + +French River, 28, 462. + +Frontenac, Count, + La Salle addresses a memorial to, 32; + announces Joliet's discovery of the Mississippi to Colbert, 34; + speaks slightingly of Joliet, 34; + succeeds Courcelle as governor, 56, 57, 60, 67; + letter from Joliet to, 76; + favorably disposed to La Salle, 85; + comes to Canada a ruined man, 85; + schemes of, 86; + at Montreal, 87; + his journey to Lake Ontario, 88; + faculty for managing the Indians, 89; + reaches Lake Ontario, 89; + at Cataraqui, 90; + addresses the Indians, 91; + admirable dealing with the Indians, 92, 93; + his enterprise a complete success, 95; + confers an inestimable benefit on all Canada, 95; + his plan to command the Upper Lakes, 96; + quarrel with Perrot, 96; + arrests Perrot, 96; + has Montreal well in hand, 96; + the Abbe Fenelon attempts to mediate between Perrot and, 97; + the Abbe Fenelon preaches against, 98; + championed by La Salle, 99; + recommends La Salle to Colbert, 99; + expects to share in profits of La Salle's new post, 101; + hatred of the Jesuits, 102; + protects the Recollets, 109; + intrigues of the Jesuits, 118, 125, 201, 232, 235, 238, 274; + entertains Father Hennepin, 280, 292; + recalled to France, 318; + obligations of La Salle to, 434; + commendation of Tonty, 467, 479, 480, 481. + +Frontenac, Fort, 34; + granted to La Salle, 100; + rebuilt by La Salle, 101, 112; + La Salle at, 120; + plan of, 121; + not established for commercial gain alone, 122, 148, 203, 292; + La Barre takes possession of, 325; + restored to La Salle by the King, 351, 476. + +Frontenac (Ontario), Lake, 128, 476, 477, 479. + +Frontenac, Madame de, 167. + +"Frontenacie, La," 481. + +Fur-trade, the, + the Jesuits accused of taking part in, 109, 110; + the Jesuits seek to establish a monopoly in, 114. + + +Gabriel, Father, 158, 159, 227, 237. + +Gaeta, 128. + +Galinee, Father, 17; + recounts the journey of La Salle and the Sulpitians, 19, 20, 26; + cruelty of the Senecas, 22; + the work of the Jesuits, 28; + makes the earliest map of the Upper Lakes, 28, 106, 140, 475. + +Galve, Viceroy, 469. + +Galveston Bay, 374, 376, 385. + +Garakontie, Chief, 91. + +Garnier, Julien, 59; + among the Senecas, 141. + +Gayen, 384. + +Geest, Catherine + mother of La Salle, 7; + La Salle's farewell to, 364. + +Geest, Nicolas, 7. + +Gendron, 139. + +Genesee, the Falls of the, 476. + +Genesee River, the, 140, 142, 279. + +Georgian Bay of Lake Huron, 27, 203. + +Giton, + La Salle borrows money from, 150. + +Gnacsitares, the, 486. + +Gould, Dr. B. A., + on the "Great Comet of 1680," 213. + +Grandfontaine, Chevalier de, 56. + +Grand Gulf, 300. + +Grand River, 23, 25. + +Gravier, 244, 297; + the Arkansas nation, 300. + +Great Lakes, the, 4; + Joliet makes a map of the region of, 32; + early unpublished maps of, 475-485; + Champlain makes the first attempt to map out, 476. + +Great Manitoulin Island, the, 41. + +"Great Mountain," the Indian name for the governor of Canada, 156. + +Green Bay of Lake Michigan, the, 4, 31, 42, 43, 75; + La Salle at, 155; 236. + +Green Bay Mission, the, + Father Allouez sent to found, 43; + Marquette at, 62; + Father Hennepin and Du Lhut reach, 279. + +"Griffin," the, + building of, 144-148; + finished, 149; + voyage of, 151-153; + at St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 154; + set sail for Niagara laden with furs, 156; + La Salle's forebodings concerning, 163; + loss of, 181, 322. + +Grollet, 445, 446, 448, 470, 471; + sent to Spain, 472. + +Guadalupe, the, 469. + +Gulliver, Captain, 486. + + +Hagaren, King of the Acanibas, 487-489. + +Hamilton, town of, 23. + +Harrisse, Henry, 76, 481, 482. + +Haukiki (Marest) River, the, 167. + +Hennepin, Louis, + connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, 8; + at Fort Frontenac, 121; + meets La Salle on his return to Canada, 130; + receives permission to join La Salle, 131; + his journey to Fort Frontenac, 132; + sets out with La Motte for Niagara, 132; + portrait of, 133; + his past life, 133; + sails for Canada, 134; + relations with La Salle, 134, 135; + work among the Indians, 135; + the most impudent of liars, 136; + daring of, 137; + embarks on the journey, 137; + reaches the Niagara, 138; + account of the falls and river of Niagara, 139; + among the Senecas, 140, 141; + at the Niagara Portage, 145-147; + the launch of the "Griffin," 148, 149; + on board the "Griffin," 151; + St. Anthony of Padua the patron saint of La Salle's great + enterprise, 152; + the departure of the "Griffin" for Niagara, 157; + La Salle's encounter with the Outagamies, 161; + La Salle rejoined by Tonty, 163; + La Salle's forebodings concerning the "Griffin," 163; + population of the Illinois Valley, 169; + among the Illinois, 173, 174; + the story of Monso, 177; + La Salle's men desert him, 178; + at Fort Crevecoeur, 181; + sent to the Mississippi, 185; + the journey from Fort Crevecoeur, 201; + the mutineers at Fort Crevecoeur, 218; 234; + sets out to explore the Illinois River, 242; + his claims to the discovery of the Mississippi, 243; + doubted veracity of, 244; + captured by the Sioux, 245; + proved an impostor, 245; + steals passages from Membre and Le Clerc, 247; + his journey northward, 249; + suspected of sorcery, 253; + plots against, 255; + a hard journey, 257; + among the Sioux, 259-282; + adopted as a son by the Sioux, 261; + sets out for the Wisconsin, 266; + notice of the Falls of St. Anthony, 267; + rejoins the Indians, 273; + meeting with Du Lhut, 273; + joins Du Lhut, 278; + reaches the Green Bay Mission, 279; + reaches Fort Frontenac, 280; + goes to Montreal, 280; + entertained by Frontenac, 280; + returns to Europe, 280; + dies in obscurity, 281; + Louis XIV. orders the arrest of, 282; + various editions of the travels of, 282; + finds fault with Tonty, 467, 479, 481; + rivals of, 485, 486. + +Hiens, the German, 411, 421, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + quarrel with Duhaut and Liotot, 446; + murders Duhaut, 448; + joins the Cenis on a war expedition, 450, 465; + fate of, 472. + +Hillaret Moise, 147, 178, 187, 193, 217, 218. + +Hitt, Col. D. F., 317. + +Hohays, the, 261. + +Homannus, + map made by, 484. + +Hondo (Rio Frio), the, 469. + +Horse Shoe Fall, the, 139. + +Hotel-Dieu at Montreal, the, 13, 98. + +Hudson's Bay, + Joliet's voyage to, 76; + Albanel's journey to, 109, 346, 484. + +Hudson's Strait, 480. + +Humber River, the, 138, 203. + +Hunaut, 187, 210, 287. + +Hundred Associates, Company of the, 57. + +Huron Indians, the, + quarrel with the Winnebagoes, 4; + allies of the French, 4; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + Marquette among, 40; + terrified by the Sioux, 41; + destroyed by the Iroquois, 219. + +Huron, Lake, 26, 27, 31; + the Jesuits on, 37, 41; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52; + La Salle on, 152, 475, 476, 479. + +Huron Mission, the, 27. + +Huron River, the, 196. + +"Hyacinth, confection of," 159. + + +Iberville, the founder of Louisiana, 455; + joined by Tonty, 467, 472, 473. + +Ignatius, Saint, 78. + +Illinois, Great Town of the, 170; + deserted, 191; + La Salle at, 205; + description of, 221; + Tonty in, 223; + abandoned to the Iroquois, 230; + site of, 239. + +Illinois Indians, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 40, 41, 60; + Joliet and Marquette among, 66, 77, 78, 154, 155, 161; + La Salle among, 171-173; + hospitality of, 173; + deep-rooted jealousy of the Osages, 174, 203; + war with the Iroquois, 210, 220; + the Miamis join the Iroquois against, 220; + rankling jealousy between the Miamis and, 220; + an aggregation of kindred tribes, 223; + characteristics of, 223; + Tonty intercedes for, 228; + treaty made with the Iroquois, 231; + attacked by the Iroquois, 235; + become allies of La Salle, 287, 307; + at "Starved Rock," 314; + join La Salle's colony, 315, 316; + very capricious and uncertain, 322, 477. + +Illinois, Lake of the (Lake Michigan), 42, 75, 155, 477, 479. + +Illinois River, the, 31, 33, 34; + discovered by La Salle, 35; + Joliet and Marquette on, 74, 132; + La Salle on, 168; + various names of, 16, 204; + ravaged granaries of, 213, 220; + Father Hennepin sets out to explore, 242, 245, 296; + La Salle's projected colony on the banks of, 313, 315, 316, 405, 406; + Joutel on, 457, 477, 478, 481, 484. + +Illinois, State of, + first civilized occupation of, 181. + +Illinois, Valley of the, population of, 169. + +Immaculate Conception, the, doctrine of, + a favorite tenet of the + Jesuits, 61. + +Immaculate Conception, Mission of the, + Marquette sets out to found, 77. + +Incarnation, Marie de l', 111. + +Indians, the, + Father Jogues and Raymbault preach among, 5; + ferocity of, 11; + manitous of, 26, 44, 68; + their game of la crosse, 50; + the tribes meet at Saut Ste. Marie to confer with + Saint-Lusson, 51-56; + reception to Joliet and Marquette, 63; + lodges of, 75; + reception to Frontenac, 90; + Frontenac's admirable dealing with, 92, 93; + Alphabetical list of tribes referred to:-- + Abenakis, + Acanibas, + Agniers, + Akanseas, + Algonquins, + Alkansas, + Amikoues, + Andastes, + Arkansas, + Assiniboins, + Assonis, + Caddoes, + Cadodaquis, + Camanches, + Cenis, + Chaouanons, + Chickasaws, + Chikachas, + Coroas, + Creeks, + Crees, + Crows, + Dacotah, + Eries, + Fire Nation, + Five Nations, + Floridas, + Foxes, + Hohays, + Hurons, + Illinois, + Iroquois, + Issanti, + Issanyati, + Issati, + Kahokias, + Kanzas, + Kappas, + Kaskaskias, + Kickapoos, + Kilatica, + Kious, + Kiskakon Ottawas, + Knisteneaux, + Koroas, + Malhoumines, + Malouminek, + Mandans, + Maroas, + Mascoutins, + Meddewakantonwan, + Menomonies, + Miamis, + Mitchigamias, + Mohawks, + Mohegans, + Moingona, + Monsonis, + Motantees, + Nadouessioux, + Natchez, + Nation des Folles-Avoines, + Nation of the Prairie, + Neutrals, + Nipissings, + Ojibwas, + Omahas, + Oneidas, + Onondagas, + Osages, + Osotouoy, + Ottawas, + Ouabona, + Ouiatenons, + Oumalouminek, + Oumas, + Outagamies, + Pah-Utahs, + Pawnees, + Peanqhichia, + Peorias, + Pepikokia, + Piankishaws, + Pottawattamies, + Quapaws, + Quinipissas, + Sacs, + Sauteurs, + Sauthouis, + Senecas, + Shawanoes, + Sioux, + Sokokis, + Taensas, + Tamaroas, + Tangibao, + Terliquiquimechi, + Tetons, + Texas, + Tintonwans, + Tongengas, + Topingas, + Torimans, + Wapoos, + Weas, + Wild-rice, + Winnebagoes, + Yankton Sioux. + +Irondequoit Bay, 20. + +Iroquois Indians, the, 11; + alone remain, 37; + felt the power of the French, 42; + the "Beautiful River," 70; + Onondaga the political centre of, 87; + the Jesuits seek to embroil them with the French, 115; + ferocious character of, 207; + war with the Illinois, 210; + ferocious triumphs of, 219; + break into war, 219; + trade with the Dutch and the English, 219; + jealous of La Salle, 219; + joined by the Miamis against the Illinois, 220; + attack on the Illinois village, 225; + grant a truce to Tonty, 230; + take possession of the Illinois village, 230; + make a treaty with the Illinois, 231; + treachery of, 231; + Tonty departs from, 233; + attack on the dead, 234; + attack on the Illinois, 235, 320; + encouraged to fight by the Dutch and English traders, 324; + attack Fort St. Louis, 327. + +Iroquois War, the, + havoc and desolation of, 5, 219; + a war of commercial advantage, 219; + the French in, 460. + +Isle of Pines, the, 372. + +Issanti, the, 260. + +Issanyati, the, 260. + +Issati, the, 260. + +"Issatis," the, 481. + + +Jacques, companion of Marquette, 78, 80. + +Jansenists, the, 110. + +Japan, 6, 14. + +Japanese, the, 487. + +Jesuitism, + no diminution in the vital force of, 103. + +Jesuits, the, + their thoughts dwell on the Mississippi, 6; + La Salle's connection with, 8; + La Salle parts with, 9; + influence exercised by, 16; + want no help from the Sulpitians, 27; + a change of spirit, 36, 37; + their best hopes in the North and West, 37; + on the Lakes, 37; + labor to explore the copper mines of Lake Superior, 38; + a mixture of fanaticism, 38; + claimed a monopoly of conversion, 38; + make a map of Lake Superior, 38; + the missionary stations, 46; + trading with the Indians, 47; + doctrine of the Immaculate Conception a favorite tenet of, 61; + greatly opposed to the establishment of forts and trading-posts + in the upper country, 88; + opposition to Frontenac and La Salle, 102; + Frontenac's hatred of, 102; + turn their eyes towards the Valley of the Mississippi, 103; + no longer supreme in Canada, 104; + La Salle their most dangerous rival for the control of the West, 104; + masters at Quebec, 108; + accused of selling brandy to the Indians, 109; + accused of carrying on a fur-trade, 109, 110; + comparison between the Recollets and Sulpitians and, 112; + seek to establish a monopoly in the fur-trade, 114; + intrigues against La Salle, 115; + seek to embroil the Iroquois with the French, 115; + exculpated by La Salle from the attempt to poison him, 116; + induce men to desert from La Salle, 118; + have a mission among the Mohawks, 118; + plan against La Salle, 459; + maps made by, 478. + +Jesus, Order of, 37. + +Jesus, Society of, see _Society of Jesus_. + +Jogues, Father Isaac, + preaches among the Indians, 5, 59. + +Joliet, Louis, + destined to hold a conspicuous place in history of + western discovery, 23; + early life of, 23; + sent to discover the copper mines of Lake Superior, 23, 58; + his failure, 23; + meeting with La Salle and the Sulpitians, 23; + passage through the Strait of Detroit, 27; + makes maps of the region of the Mississippi and the Great Lakes, 32; + claims the discovery of the Mississippi, 33; + Frontenac speaks slightingly of, 34; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + sent by Talon to discover the Mississippi, 56; + early history of, 57; + characteristics of, 58; + Shea first to discover history of, 58; + Ferland, Faillon, and Margry throw much light on the life of, 58; + Marquette chosen to accompany him on his search for the + Mississippi, 59; + the departure, 60; + the Mississippi at last, 64; + on the Mississippi, 65; + meeting with the Illinois, 66; + at the mouth of the Missouri, 69; + on the lower Mississippi, 71; + among the Arkansas Indians, 72; + determines that the Mississippi discharges into the Gulf of + Mexico, 74; + resolves to return to Canada, 74; + serious accident to, 75; + letter to Frontenac, 76; + smaller map of his discoveries, 76; + marriage to Claire Bissot, 76; + journey to Hudson's Bay, 76; + the English hold out great inducements to, 76; + receives grants of land, 76; + engages in fisheries, 76; + makes a chart of the St. Lawrence, 77; + Sir William Phips makes a descent on the establishment of, 77; + explores the coast of Labrador, 77; + made royal pilot for the St. Lawrence by Frontenac, 77; + appointed hydrographer at Quebec, 77; + death of, 77; + said to be an impostor, 118; + refused permission to plant a trading station in the Valley of the + Mississippi, 126, 477; + maps made by, 479, 480, 481, 482. + +Joliet, town of, 193. + +"Joly," the vessel, 353, 366, 367, 372, 373, 374, 375, 377, 381, + 383, 385. + +Jolycoeur (Nicolas Perrot), 116. + +Joutel, Henri, 69, 314, 363, 367, 368, 372, 374, 375, 377, 379, + 380, 382, 388, 389, 392, 393, 395, 396, 397, 399, 400, 401, 402, + 403, 406, 407, 409, 410, 411, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 428; + sketches the portrait of La Salle, 430; + the assassination of La Salle, 432, 433; + danger of, 436; friendship of L'Archeveque for, 436; + doubt and anxiety, 437, 438; + among the Cenis Indians, 440-445; + plans to escape, 445-447; + the murder of Duhaut, 448, 449; + sets out for home, 450; + his party, 451; + among the Assonis, 451-453; + arrival at the Arkansas, 453; + friendly reception, 455; + descends the Arkansas, 456; + on the Illinois, 457; + at Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 457; + visit to Father Allouez, 459; + reaches Montreal, 462; + embarks for France, 462; + character of, 462. + + +Kahokias, the, 223. + +Kalm, 244. + +Kamalastigouia, 275. + +Kankakee, + the sources of, 167, 204, 288, 316. + +Kansa (Kanzas), the, 478. + +Kanzas, the, 478. + +Kappa band, the, of the Arkansas, 299. + +"Kaskaskia," + Illinois village of, 74; + the mission at, 79. + +Kaskaskias, the, 223, 477. + +Kiakiki River, the, 167. + +Kickapoos, the, + location of 43; + join the Mascoutins and Miamis, 62; + murder Father Ribourde, 233. + +Kilatica, the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +King Philip's War, 285. + +Kingston, 87, 90. + +Kious (Sioux), the, 307. + +Kiskakon Ottawas, the, 81, 237. + +Knisteneaux, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40. + +Koroas, the, 308. + + +La Barre, Le Febvre de, 182; + succeeds Frontenac as governor, 318; + weakness and avarice of, 318; + royal instructions to, 319; + letters from La Salle, 319-322; + defames La Salle to Seignelay, 322-324; + plots against La Salle, 325; + takes possession of Fort Frontenac and Fort St. Louis, 325-327; + ordered by the King to make restitution, 351, 482. + +Labrador, coasts of, 58; + explored by Joliet, 77. + +La Chapelle, 193; + takes false reports of La Salle to Fort Crevecoeur, 217. + +La Chesnaye, 102, 326. + +La Chine, + the seigniory of La Salle at, 12; + La Salle lays the rude beginnings of a settlement at, 13; + La Salle and the Sulpitians set out from, 19; + origin of the name, 29, 88, 486. + +La Chine Rapids, the, 75. + +La Crosse, Indian game of, 50. + +La Divine River, the (Des Plaines River), 477, 481. + +La Forest, La Salle's lieutenant, 101, 143, 203, 204, 208, 215, 236, + 286, 287, 292, 326, 333, 351, 352, 467, 485. + +La Forge, 147, 218. + +La Harpe, 255. + +La Hontan, 145, 153; + loss of the "Griffin," 182, 275, 276, 485, 486. + +Lakes, Upper, 24, 27; + Galinee, makes the earliest map of, 28, 38; + Jesuit missions on, 39; + Marquette on, 59, 85; + Frontenac's plan to command, 96; + first vessel on, 145; + La Salle on, 151-163. + +Lalemant, 139. + +La Metairie, Jacques de, 308. + +La Motte, see _Lussiere, La Motte de_. + +Lanquetot, see _Liotot_. + +Laon, 59. + +La Pointe, Jesuit mission of St. Esprit at, 40. + +La Potherie, 49; + reception of Saint-Lusson by the Miamis, 50; + Henri de Tonty's iron hand, 129; + loss of the "Griffin," 182; + the Iroquois attack on the Illinois, 235. + +L'Archeveque, 421, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + the assassination of La Salle, 429; + friendship for Joutel, 436; + danger of, 449, 470, 471; + sent to Spain, 472. + +La Sablonniere, Marquis de, 380, 388, 407, 409, 418. + +La Salle, Sieur de, birth of, 7; + origin of his name, 7; + connection with the Jesuits, 8; + characteristics of, 9; + parts with the Jesuits, 9; + sails for Canada, 10; + at Montreal, 10; + schemes of, 11; + his seigniory at La Chine, 12; + begins to study Indian languages, 14; + plans of discovery, 14, 15; + sells his seigniory, 16; + joins his expedition to that of the seminary priests, 17; + sets out from La Chine, 19; + journey of, 19, 20; + hospitality of the Senecas, 21; + fears for his safety, 22; + meeting with Joliet, 23; + _belles paroles_ of, 25; + parts with the Sulpitians, 25; + obscurity of his subsequent work, 28; + goes to Onondaga, 29; + deserted by his men, 30; + meeting with Perrot, 30; + reported movements of, 31; + Talon claims to have sent him to explore, 31; + affirms that he discovered the Ohio, 32; + discovery of the Mississippi, 33; + discovered the Illinois River, 35; + pays the expenses of his expeditions, 49; + in great need of money, 49; + borrows merchandise from the Seminary, 49; + contrasted with Marquette, 83; + called a visionary, 83; + projects of, 84; + Frontenac favorably disposed towards, 85; + faculty for managing the Indians, 89; + at Montreal, 97; + champions Frontenac, 99; + goes to France, 99; recommended to Colbert by Frontenac, 99; + petitions for a patent of nobility and a grant of Fort + Frontenac, 100; + his petition granted, 100; + returns to Canada, 101; + oppressed by the merchants of Canada, 101; + Le Ber becomes the bitter enemy of, 101; + aims at the control of the valleys of the Ohio and the + Mississippi, 102; + opposed by the Jesuits, 102; + the most dangerous rival of the Jesuits for the control of + the West, 104; + the Prince de Conti the patron of, 106; + the Abbe Renaudot's memoir of, 106, 107; + account of, 107; + not well inclined towards the Recollets, 108; + plots against, 113; + caused no little annoyance by his brother, 114; + Jesuit intrigues against, 115; + attempt to poison, 116; + exculpates the Jesuits, 116; + letter to the Prince de Conti, 118; + the Jesuits induce men to desert from, 118; + defamed to Colbert, 119; + at Fort Frontenac, 120; + sails again for France, 122; + his memorial laid before Colbert, 122; + urges the planting of colonies in the West, 123; + receives a patent from Louis XIV., 124; + forbidden to trade with the Ottawas, 125; + given the monopoly of buffalo-hides, 126; + makes plans to carry out his designs, 126; + assistance received from his friends, 127; + invaluable aid received from Henri de Tonty, 127; + joined by La Motte de Lussiere, 129; + sails for Canada, 129; + makes a league with the Canadian merchants, 129; + met by Father Hennepin on his return to Canada, 130; + joined by Father Hennepin, 131; + relations with Father Hennepin, 134, 135; + sets out to join La Motte, 141; + almost wrecked, 142; + treachery of his pilot, 142; + pacifies the Senecas, 142; + delayed by jealousies, 143; + returns to Fort Frontenac, 143; + unfortunate in the choice of subordinates, 143; + builds a vessel above the Niagara cataract, 144; + jealousy and discontent, 147; + lays foundation for blockhouses at Niagara, 148; + the launch of the "Griffin," 149; + his property attached by his creditors, 150; + on Lake Huron, 152; + commends his great enterprise to St. Anthony of Padua, 152; + at St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 153; + rivals and enemies, 154; + on Lake Michigan, 155; + at Green Bay, 155; + finds the Pottawattamies friendly, 155; + sends the "Griffin" back to Niagara laden with furs, 156; + trades with the Ottawas, 156; + hardships, 158; + encounter with the Outagamies, 160, 161; + rejoined by Tonty, 162; + forebodings concerning the "Griffin," 163; + on the St. Joseph, 164; + lost in the forest, 165; + on the Illinois, 166; + Duplessis attempts to murder, 166; + the Illinois town, 169, 170; + hunger relieved, 171; + Illinois hospitality, 173; + still followed by the intrigues of his enemies, 175; + harangues the Indians, 177; + deserted by his men, 178; + another attempt to poison, 178; + builds Fort Crevecoeur, 180; + loss of the "Griffin," 181; + anxieties of, 183; + a happy artifice, 184; + builds another vessel, 185; + sends Hennepin to the Mississippi, 185; + parting with Tonty, 188; + hardihood of, 189-201; + his winter journey to Fort Frontenac, 189; + the deserted town of the Illinois, 191; + meeting with Chief Chassagoac, 192; + "Starved Rock," 192; + Lake Michigan, 193; + the wilderness, 193, 194; + Indian alarms, 195; + reaches Niagara, 197; + man and nature in arms against, 198; + mutineers at Fort Crevecoeur, 199; + chastisement of the mutineers, 201; + strength in the face of adversity, 202; + his best hope in Tonty, 202; + sets out to succor Tonty, 203; + kills buffalo, 205; + a night of horror, 207; + fears for Tonty, 209; + finds the ruins of Fort Crevecoeur, 211; + beholds the Mississippi, 212; + beholds the "Great Comet of 1680," 213; + returns to Fort Miami, 215; + jealousy of the Iroquois of, 219, 238; + route of, 276; + Margry brings to light the letters of, 281; + begins anew, 283; + plans for a defensive league, 284; + Indian friends, 285; + hears good news of Tonty, 287; + Illinois allies, 287; + calls the Indians to a grand council, 289; + his power of oratory, 289; + his harangue, 289; + the reply of the chiefs, 291; + finds Tonty, 292; + parts with a portion of his monopolies, 293; + at Toronto, 293; + reaches Lake Huron, 294; + at Fort Miami, 294; + on the Mississippi, 297; + among the Arkansas Indians, 299; + takes formal possession of the Arkansas country, 300; + visited by the chief of the Taensas, 302; + visits the Coroas, 305; + hostility, 305; + the mouth of the Mississippi, 306; + takes possession of the Great West for France, 306; + bestows the name of "Louisiana" on the new domain, 309; + attacked by the Quinipissas, 310; + revisits the Coroas, 310; + seized by a dangerous illness, 310; + rejoins Tonty at Michilimackinac, 311; + his projected colony on the banks of the Illinois, 313; + intrenches himself at "Starved Rock," 313; + gathers his Indian allies at Fort St. Louis, 315; + his colony on the Illinois, 316; + success of his colony, 318; + letters to La Barre, 319-322; + defamed by La Barre to Seignelay, 322-324; + La Barre plots against, 325; + La Barre takes possession of Fort Frontenac and Fort + St. Louis, 325-327; + sails for France, 327; + painted by himself, 328-342; + difficulty of knowing him, 328; + his detractors, 329; + his letters, 329-331; + vexations of his position, 331; + his unfitness for trade, 332; + risks of correspondence, 332; + his reported marriage, 334; + alleged ostentation, 335; + motives of actions, 335; + charges of harshness, 336; + intrigues against him, 337; + unpopular manners, 337, 338; + a strange confession, 339; + his strength and his weakness, 340, 341; + contrasts of his character, 341, 342; + at court, 343; + received by the King, 344; + new proposals of, 345-347; + small knowledge of Mexican geography, 348; + plans of, 349; + his petitions granted, 350; + Forts Frontenac and St. Louis restored by the King to, 351; + preparations for his new enterprise, 353; + divides his command with Beaujeu, 353; + lack of harmony between Beaujeu and, 354-361; + indiscretion of, 361; + overwrought brain of, 362; + farewell to his mother, 364; + sails from Rochelle, 366; + disputes with Beaujeu, 366; + the voyage, 368; + his illness, 368; + Beaujeu's complaints of, 370; + resumes his journey, 372; + enters the Gulf of Mexico, 373; + waiting for Beaujeu, 374; + coasts the shores of Texas, 374; + meeting with Beaujeu, 375; + perplexity of, 375-377; + lands in Texas, 379; + attacked by the Indians, 380; + wreck of the "Aimable," 381; + forlorn position of, 383; + Indian neighbors, 384; + Beaujeu makes friendly advances to, 385; + departure of Beaujeu, 387; + at Matagorda Bay, 391; + misery and dejection, 393; + the new Fort St. Louis, 394; + explorations of, 395; + adventures of, 402; + again falls ill, 404; + departure for Canada, 405; + wreck of the "Belle," 407; + Maxime Le Clerc makes charges against, 410; + Duhaut plots against, 410; + return to Fort St. Louis, 411; + account of his adventures, 411-413; + among the Cenis Indians, 413; + attacked with hernia, 417; + Twelfth Night at Fort St. Louis, 417; + his last farewell, 418; + followers of, 420; + prairie travelling, 423; + Liotot swears vengeance against, 424; + the murder of Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + his premonition of disaster, 428; + murdered by Duhaut, 429; + character of, 430; + his enthusiasm compared with that of Champlain, 431; + his defects, 431; + America owes him an enduring memory, 432; + the marvels of his patient fortitude, 432; + evidences of his assassination, 432; + undeniable rigor of his command, 433; + locality of his assassination, 434; + his debts, 434; + Tonty's plan to assist, 453-455; + fear of Father Allouez for, 459; + Jesuit plans against, 459, 477, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, + 485, 486. + +La Salle, village of, 146, 167. + +La Taupine (Pierre Moreau), 78. + +La Tortue, 367. + +Launay, De, 453, 455. + +Laurent, 199, 218. + +Lavaca River, the, 392, 395, 396. + +La Vache River, the, 392. + +Laval-Montmorency, Francois Xavier de, + first bishop of Quebec, 110; + accused of harshness and intolerance, 110; + encourages the establishment of the association of + the Sainte Famille, 111. + +La Violette, 187. + +La Voisin, + burned alive at Paris, 179. + +Le Baillif, M., 34. + +Le Ber, Jacques, 97; + becomes La Salle's bitter enemy, 101, 326. + +Leblanc, 193; + takes false reports of La Salle to Fort Crevecoeur, 217, 218. + +Le Clerc, Father Chretien, 169, 175, 192, 198, 217, 234, 238; + his account of the Recollet missions among the Indians, 246; + Hennepin steals passages from, 247; + character of Du Lhut, 276; + energy of La Salle, 292, 296; + Louis XIV. becomes the sovereign of the Great West, 308; + misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, 393, 403, 406, 413, 414, + 415, 416, 417. + +Le Clerc, Maxime, + joins La Salle's new enterprise, 353; + in Texas, 400; + adventure with a boar, 410; + makes charges against La Salle, 410, 418. + +Le Fevre, Father, 131. + +Le Gros, Simon, 388, 394, 398. + +Le Meilleur, 218. + +Le Moyne, 102. + +Lenox, Mr., + the Journal of Marquette, 75; + death of Marquette, 81, 169. + +Leon, Alonzo de, 469, 471. + +Le Petit, + customs of the Natchez, 304. + +L'Esperance, 216, 218, 223. + +Le Sueur, map made by, 225, 485. + +Le Tardieu, Charles, 99. + +Lewiston, mountain ridge of, 138, 143; + rapids at, 144. + +Liotot, + La Salle's surgeon, 420; + swears vengeance against La Salle, 424, 425; + murders Moranget, Saget, and Nika, 426; + the assassination of La Salle, 429, 430; + resolves to return to Fort St. Louis, 446; + quarrels with Hiens, 446; + murder of, 449. + +Long Point, 25; + the Sulpitians spend the winter at, 25. + +"Long River," the, 485. + +Long Saut, the, 89. + +Louis XIV. + becomes the sovereign of the Great West, 308; + misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, 393, 403, 406, 413, 414, 415, + 416, 417. + +Louis XIV., of France, 26, 52, 115; + grants a patent to La Salle, 124; + orders the arrest of Hennepin, 282; + proclaimed by La Salle the sovereign of the Great West, 306; + receives La Salle, 344; + irritated against the Spaniards, 344; + grants La Salle's petitions, 350; + abandons the colonists, 463; + Cavelier's memorial to, 463. + +Louisiana, country of, 307; + name bestowed by La Salle, 309; + vast extent of, 309; + boundaries of, 309; + Iberville the founder of, 455, 483, 484, 485, 489. + +Louisville, 29, 32. + +Louvigny, Sieur de, 274, 349. + +"Lover's leap," the, 271. + +Loyola, Disciples of, + losing ground in Canada, 104. + +Lussiere, La Motte de, + joins La Salle, 129, 132; + embarks on the journey, 137; + reaches the Niagara, 138; + begins to build fortifications, 140; + jealousy of the Senecas, 140; + seeks to conciliate the Senecas, 140, 141; + fidelity to La Salle doubtful, 143. + + +Machaut-Rougemont, 365. + +Mackinaw, La Salle at, 325. + +Mackinaw, Island of, 153. + +Macopins, Riviere des (Illinois River), 167, 483. + +Madeira, 366. + +Maha (Omahas), the, 478. + +"Maiden's Rock," the, 271. + +"Malheurs, La Riviere des," 402. + +Malhoumines, the, 61. + +Malouminek, the, 61. + +Manabozho, the Algonquin deity, 267. + +Mance, Mlle., 112. + +Mandans, the, + winter lodges of, 442. + +Manitoulin Island, + Mission of, 41; + assigned to Andre, 41. + +Manitoulin Islands, + Saint-Lusson winters at, 50; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52, 153, 203. + +Manitoulins, the, 27. + +Manitoumie (Mississippi Valley), 485. + +Manitous, 26, 44, 68. + +Maps, + Champlain's map (the first) of the Great Lakes, 476; + Coronelli's map, 221, 484; + manuscript map of Franquelin, 169, 221, 316, 317, 347, 390, 481, + 482, 483, 484, 485; + map of Galinee, 475; + map of Lake Superior, 476; + map of the Great Lakes, 476; + map of Marquette, 477; + maps of the Jesuits, 478; + small maps of Joliet, 479, 480; + Raudin's map, 481; + rude map of Father Raffeix, 481; + Franquelin's map of Louisiana, 482; + the great map of Franquelin, 482; + map of Le Sueur, 481, 485; + map of Homannus, 484. + +Margry, + birth of La Salle, 7; + La Salle's connection with the Jesuits, 8; + La Salle sells his seigniory, 16; + La Salle's claims to the discovery of the Mississippi, 34, 35; + throws much light on the life of Joliet, 58, 77; + La Salle's marriage prevented by his brother, 114; + La Salle at Fort Frontenac, 121; + assistance given to La Salle, 127; + Henri de Tonty, 128, 130, 132; + La Motte at Niagara, 140; + La Salle pacifies the Senecas, 142; + La Salle at Niagara, 148; + La Salle attached by his creditors, 150; + the names of the Illinois, 167; + intrigues against La Salle, 175; + brings to light the letters of La Salle, 281, 296, 342; + letters of Beaujeu to Seignelay and to Cabart de Villermont, 365; + La Salle's disputes with Beaujeu, 366; + illness of La Salle, 368; + La Salle resumes his voyage, 372; + La Salle lands in Texas, 379; + Beaujeu makes friendly advances to La Salle, 386, 387; + misery and dejection at Matagorda Bay, 393; + life at Fort St. Louis, 400; + the murder of Duhaut and Liotot, 449; + Allouez's fear of La Salle, 459. + +Marle, Sieur de, 421; + murders Moranget, 427; + sets out for home, 451; + drowned, 453. + +Maroas, the, 477. + +Marquette, Jacques, the Jesuit, + at Ste. Marie du Saut, 27; + voyage of, 32; + discovery of the Mississippi, 33; + among the Hurons and the Ottawas, 40; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + the mission of Michilimackinac assigned to, 41, 51; + chosen to accompany Joliet in his search for the Mississippi, 59; + early life of, 59; + on the Upper Lakes, 59; + great talents as a linguist, 59; + traits of character, 59; + journal of his voyage to the Mississippi, 60; + especially devoted to the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, 61; + at the Green Bay Mission, 62; + among the Mascoutins and Miamis, 62; + on the Wisconsin River, 63; + the Mississippi at last, 64; on the Mississippi, 65; + map drawn by, 65; + meeting with the Illinois, 66; + affrighted by the Indian manitous, 68; + at the mouth of the Missouri, 69; + on the lower Mississippi, 71; + among the Arkansas Indians, 72; + determines that the Mississippi discharges into the + Gulf of Mexico, 74; + resolves to return to Canada, 74; + illness of, 74; + remains at Green Bay, 75; + journal of, 75; + true map of, 75; + sets out to found the mission of the Immaculate Conception, 77; + gives the name of "Immaculate Conception" to the Mississippi, 77; + on the Chicago River, 78; + return of his illness, 78; + founds the mission at the village "Kaskaskia," 79; + peaceful death of, 80; + burial of, 81; + his bones removed to St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 81; + miracle at the burial of, 81; + tradition of the death of, 82; + contrasted with La Salle, 83; 169, 223; + route of, 276; + pictured rock of, 457; + maps made by, 477, 478, 480, 481. + +Marshall, O. H., 140, 146. + +Martin, 75; death of Marquette, 81. + +Martin, Father Felix, + connection of La Salle with the Jesuits, 8. + +Martinique, 385, 386, 387. + +Mascoutins, the, + location of, 43; + Fathers Allouez and Dablon among, 44; + joined by the Kickapoos, 62; + visited by Marquette, 62; + La Salle falls in with, 195. + +Matagorda Bay, 376, 379, 383, 391, 471. + See also _St. Louis, Bay of._ + +Matagorda Island, 375, 379. + +Mather, Increase, 213. + +Mazarin, Cardinal, 129. + +Meddewakantonwan, the, 260. + +Medrano, Sebastian Fernandez de, 244. + +Membre, Father Zenobe, 150, 155, 169, 185, 191, 192, 198, 201, 204, 216; + the mutineers at Fort Crevecoeur, 217, 218; + intrigues of La Salle's enemies, 220, 223, 224; + the Iroquois attack on the Illinois village, 225, 227, 230, 231, 233; + the Iroquois attack on the dead, 234, 238; + his journal on his descent of the Mississippi with La Salle, 246; + Hennepin steals passages from, 247; + meeting with La Salle, 292; + sets out from Fort Miami, 296; + among the Arkansas Indians, 299; + visits the Taensas, 301; + attends La Salle during his illness, 311; + joins La Salle's new enterprise, 353; + on the "Joly," 372; + in Texas, 388; + adventure with a buffalo, 409, 417, 418; + fate of, 470. + +Menard, the Jesuit, + attempts to plant a mission on southern shore of Lake Superior, 6. + +Menomonie River, the, 51. + +Menomonies, the, + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 42; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + village of, 61. + +"Mer Douce des Hurons" (Lake Huron), 476. + +"Mer du Nord," the, 480. + +"Messasipi" (Mississippi River), the, 480. + +Messier, 199, 218. + +"Messipi" River, the, 6. + +Meules, De, the Intendant of Canada, 319, 351. + +Mexico, 5, 6, 32, 117, 125, 126, 129, 346, 348; + Spaniards in, 349; 464, 480. + +Mexico, Gulf of, 31, 32, 38, 48, 63, 70, 74, 84, 245, 306, 309, 311, + 312, 344, 345, 358, 371, 373, 394; + claimed by Spain, 468, 471, 477, 478, 479, 481, 482, 483. + +Mexican mines, the, 349. + +Miami, Fort, 162, 163; La Salle + returns to, 215, 283, 284, 286, 288, 292, 294, 296, 311. + +Miami River, the, 32. + +Miamis, the, + location of, 43, 44; + Fathers Allouez and Dablon among, 44; + receive Saint-Lusson, 50; + authority and state of the chief of, 50; + joined by the Kickapoos, 62; + visited by Marquette, 62; + join the Iroquois against the Illinois, 220; + rankling jealousy between the Illinois and, 220, 223, 251, 286; + village of, 288; + called by La Salle to a grand council, 289; + at Buffalo Rock, 314; + join La Salle's colony, 316; + afraid of the Iroquois, 320. + +Miamis, Le Fort des (Buffalo Rock), 314. + +Miamis River (St. Joseph), 162. + +Michigan, + shores of, 31; + forest wastes of, 153; + peninsula of, 475, 476, 483, 484. + +Michigan, Lake, 4, 31; + the Jesuits on, 37; + the name of, 42, 61, 75, 77, 132; + La Salle on, 155, 162, 193, 236, 309, 475, 477, 479. + +Michilimackinac, + mission of, 41; + assigned to Marquette, 41, 279, 311. + +Michilimackinac, Straits of, 31, 41, 42, 59, 61, 80, 110, 197, 203, + 236, 288, 292. + +Migeon, 150. + +Mignan, islands of, + granted to Joliet, 76. + +Mille Lac, 257, 265, 277. + +Milot, Jean, 16. + +Milwaukee, 159. + +Minet, La Salle's engineer, 373, 378, 379, 383, 387, 390. + +Minneapolis, city of, 267. + +Minong, Isle, 38. + +"Miskous" (Wisconsin), the, 480. + +Missions, early, + decline in the religious exaltation of, 103. + +Mississaquenk, 54. + +Mississippi River, the, + discovered by the Spaniards, 3; + De Soto buried in, 3; + Jean Nicollet reaches, 3; + Colonel Wood reaches, 5; + Captain Bolton reaches, 5; + Radisson and Des Groseilliers reach, 5; + the thoughts of the Jesuits dwell on, 6; + speculations concerning, 6; 30, 31; + Joliet makes a map of the region of, 32; 45, 46; + Talon resolves to find, 56; + Joliet selected to find, 56; + Marquette chosen to accompany Joliet, 59; + the discovery by Joliet and Marquette, 64; + its outlet into the Gulf of Mexico determined by Joliet and + Marquette, 74; + Marquette gives the name of "Immaculate Conception" to, 77; + La Salle's plans to control, 84; + Hennepin sent to, 185; + La Salle beholds, 212; + claims of Hennepin to the discovery of, 243; + Membre's journal on his descent of, 246; + La Salle on, 297, 307, 310, 311, 312, 345, 346, 352, 371, 373, + 374, 376, 389, 390, 391, 403, 404, 405, 457, 459, 466; + early unpublished maps of, 475-486. + +Mississippi, Valley of the, + La Salle aims at the control of, 102; + the Jesuits turn their eyes towards, 103; 479; + various names given to, 485. + +Missouri River, the, 6; + Joliet and Marquette at the mouth of, 69, 297, 457, 477, 478, 479, + 483, 489. + +Missouris, the, 279, 320. + +"Mitchigamea," village of, 72. + +Mitchigamias, the, 308. + +"Mitchiganong, Lac" (Lake Michigan), 477. + +Mobile Bay, 129, 385, 386, 387, 389, 481, 482, 483. + +Mobile, city of, 309, 467. + +Mohawk River, the, 483. + +Mohawks, the, 91; + Bruyas among, 115; + Jesuit mission among, 118; + Father Hennepin among, 135, 136, 483. + +Mohegan Indians, the, 285, 295, 486. + +Moingona, the, 223. + +Moingouena (Peoria), 65. + +Monso, the Mascoutin chief, + plots against La Salle, 174, 177, 192. + +Monsonis, the, at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Montagnais, the, 59. + +Montezuma, 487. + +Montreal, La Salle at, 10; + the most dangerous place in Canada, 10; + detailed plan of, 13; + Frontenac at, 87; + Frontenac has it well in hand, 96; + Joutel and Cavelier reach, 462, 475. + +Montreal, Historical Society of, 17. + +Moranget, La Salle's nephew, 379, 384, 385, 405, 412, 415, 420, 424; + quarrel with Duhaut, 425; + murder of, 426, 433. + +Moreau, Pierre, 78. + +Morel, M., 360. + +Morice, Marguerite, 7. + +Motantees (?), the, 307. + +Moyse, Maitre, 147, 217. + +Mozeemlek, the, 486. + +Mustang Island, 375. + + +Nadouessious (Sioux), the, 307. + +Nadouessioux, the country of, 307. + +Natchez, the, + village of, 303; + differ from other Indians, 304; + customs of, 304, 308. + +Natchez, city of, 304. + +Neches River, the, 415, 470. + +Neenah (Fox) River, the, 44. + +Neutrals, the, + exterminated by the Iroquois, 219. + +New Biscay, province of, 346, 348, 352, 383, 403. + +New England, 5, 346. + +New England Indians, the, 285. + +New France, 483, 484, 485. + +New Leon, province of, 468. + +New Mexico, 5, 350; + Spanish colonists of, 414. + +New Orleans, 484. + +New York, the French in western, 19-23, 288, 484. + +Niagara, name of, 139; + the key to the four great lakes above, 140, 197, 198, 279. + +Niagara Falls, 23; + Father Hennepin's account of, 139; + Hennepin's exaggerations respecting, 248, 476. + +Niagara, Fort, 129, 138, 148. + +Niagara Portage, the, 144, 145. + +Niagara River, the, 23, 96; + Father Hennepin's account of, 139, 475. + +Nicanope, 175, 177, 178, 192. + +Nicollet, Jean, + reaches the Mississippi, 3; + among the Indians, 3; + sent to make peace between the Winnebagoes and the Hurons, 4; + descends the Wisconsin, 5. + +Nika, La Salle's favorite Shawanoe hunter, 412, 421, 425; + murder of, 426. + +Nipissing, Lake, 28. + +Nipissings, the, + Jean Nicollet among, 3; + Dollier de Casson among, 16; + Andre makes a missionary tour among, 41; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Noiseux, M., Grand Vicar of Quebec, 82. + +North Sea, the, 38. + +Nueces, the upper, 469. + + +Oanktayhee, principal deity of the Sioux, 267. + +O'Callaghan, Dr., 139. + +Ohio River, the, 15, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 29, 32; + La Salle affirms that he discovered, 32; + the "Beautiful River," 70, 297, 307, 457, 477, 478, 479, 480, + 483, 484. + +Ohio, Valley of the, + La Salle aims at the control of, 102. + +Ojibwas, the, at Ste. Marie du Saut, 39. + +Olighin (Alleghany) River, the, 307. + +"Olighin" (Alleghany) River, the, 484. + +Omahas, the, 478. + +Omawha, Chief, 175. + +Oneida Indians, the, 18, 91, 135. + +Ongiara (Niagara), 139. + +Onguiaahra (Niagara), 139. + +Onis, Luis de, 373. + +Onondaga, + La Salle goes to, 29; + the political centre of the Iroquois, 87; + Hennepin reaches, 135. + +Onondaga Indians, the, 91; + Bruyas among, 115. + +"Onontio," the governor of Canada, 54. + +Ontario, Lake, 16; + discovered, 20, 23, 58, 85, 87; + Frontenac reaches, 89, 96, 99, 128, 135, 147, 200, 279, 475, 476, 479. + +Ontonagan River, the, 39. + +Orange, settlement of (Albany), 136. + +Oris, 384. + +Osages, the, 174; + deep-rooted jealousy of the Illinois for, 174, 184, 477. + +"Osages, Riviere des" (Missouri), 70. + +Osotouoy, the, 300. + +Otinawatawa, 22, 23. + +Ottawa, town of, 75, 169, 193. + +Ottawa River, the, 27, 30, 462, 476. + +Ottawas, the, 27; + Marquette among, 40; + terrified by the Sioux, 41; + La Salle forbidden to trade with, 125; + La Salle trades with, 156, 182. + +"Ouabache" (Wabash), River, the, 70, 297. + +Ouabona, the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +"Ouabouskiaou" (Ohio) River, the, 70, 477. + +"Ouaboustikou" (Ohio), the, 480. + +Ouasicoude, principal chief of the Sioux, 264; + friendship for Hennepin, 266, 277. + +Ouchage (Osages), the, 477. + +Ouiatnoens (Weas), the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +Oumalouminek, the, 61. + +Oumas, the, 305. + +Oumessourit (Missouris), the, 478. + +"Oumessourits, Riviere des" (Missouri), 70. + +Outagamies (Foxes), the, + location of, 43. + +Outagamies, the, + encounter with La Salle, 160, 161, 287. + +Outrelaise, Mademoiselle d', 167. + +Outrelaise, the Riviere del', 167. + + +Pacific coast, the, 480. + +Pacific Ocean, 84. + +Paget, 366. + +Pahoutet (Pah-Utahs?), the, 478. + +Pah-Utahs (?), the, 478. + +Palluau, Count of, see _Frontenac, Count_. + +Palms, the River of, 307. + +Paniassa (Pawnees), the, 478. + +Panuco, Spanish town of, 350. + +Paraguay, + the old and the new, 102, 103, 104, 117. + +Parassy, M. de, 356. + +Patron, 274. + +Paul, Dr. John, 317. + +Pawnees, the, 478. + +Peanqhichia (Piankishaw), the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +"Pekitanoui" River (Missouri), the, 69, 477. + +Pelee, Point, 26, 197. + +Pelican Island, 379. + +Peloquin, 150. + +Pen, Sieur, + obligations of La Salle to, 434. + +Penalossa, Count, 350. + +Penicaut, + customs of the Natchez, 304. + +Pennsylvania, State of, 346. + +Penobscot River, the, 483. + +Pensacola, 472. + +Peoria, city of, 34, 171. + +Peoria Indians, the, + villages of, 171, 223, 477. + +Peoria Lake, 171, 190, 211, 296. + +Peouaria (Peoria), 65. + +Pepikokia, the, + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +Pepin, 276. + +Pepin Lake, 256, 271, 272. + +Pere, 58. + +Perrot, the cure, 98. + +Perrot, Nicolas, + meeting with La Salle, 30; + accompanies Saint-Lusson in search of copper mines on Lake + Superior, 49; + conspicuous among Canadian voyageurs, 49; + characteristics of, 50; + marvellous account of the authority and state of the Miami chief, 50; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + local governor of Montreal, 87; + quarrel with Frontenac, 96; + arrested by Frontenac, 96; + the Abbe Fenelon attempts to mediate between Frontenac and, 97; + attempts to poison La Salle, 116. + +Peru, 350. + +Petit Goave, 367, 372. + +Philip, King, 288. + +Philip II. of Spain, 373. + +Phips, Sir William, + makes a descent on Joliet's establishment, 77. + +Piankishaws, the, 223; + join La Salle's colony, 316. + +"Picard, Le" (Du Gay), 186. + +Pierre, companion of Marquette, 78, 80. + +Pierron, the Jesuit, 115; + among the Senecas, 115. + +Pierson, the Jesuit, 279. + +Pimitoui River, the, 171. + +Platte, the, 207. + +Plet, Francois, 127, 293, 463. + +Poisoning, the epoch of, 179. + +Ponchartrain, the minister, 133, 276, 455, 467, 486, 489. + +Pontiac, + assassination of, 314. + +Port de Paix, 367, 368. + +Pottawattamies, the, + in grievous need of spiritual succor, 24; + the Sulpitians determine to visit, 24; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + location of, 42, 50, 77; + friendly to La Salle, 155, 182, 236, 237, 238; + Tonty among, 287; + at "Starved Rock," 314. + +"Poualacs," the, 481. + +Prairie du Chien, Fort, 64. + +Prairie, Nation of the, 44. + +Provence, 441. + +Prudhomme, Fort, 297; + La Salle ill at, 311. + +Prudhomme, Pierre, 297, 298. + +Puants, les (Winnebagoes), 42. + +Puants, La Baye des (Green Bay), 31, 42. + + +Quapaws, the, 300. + +Quebec, 15; + the Jesuits masters at, 108, 311, 460, 462, 482. + +Queenstown Heights, 138. + +Queylus, Superior of the Seminary of St. Sulpice, 11, 16. + +Quinipissas, the, 305; + attack La Salle, 310. + +Quinte, + Jesuit Mission at, 16. + +Quinte, Bay of, 87, 142, 200. + + +Radisson, Pierre Esprit, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + +Raffeix, Father Pierre, the Jesuit, + manuscript map of, 75; + among the Senecas, 141, 276, 481. + +Raoul, 126. + +Rasle, 170. + +Raudin, Frontenac's engineer, 92, 167, 481. + +Raymbault,----, + preaches among the Indians, 5. + +Recollet Missions, + Le Clerc's account of, 246. + +Recollets, the, + La Salle not well inclined towards, 108; + protected by Frontenac, 109; + comparison between the Sulpitians and the Jesuits and, 112, 218. + +Red River, 305, 347, 348, 451, 465, 466, 471, 484. + +Renaudot, Abbe, + memoir of La Salle, 106, 107; + assists La Salle, 127, 133, 339, 360, 361. + +Renault, Etienne, 223, 237. + +Rhode Island, State of, 288. + +Ribourde, Gabriel, + at Fort Frontenac, 132, 137; + at Niagara, 150; + at Fort Crevecoeur, 185, 187, 192, 216, 224, 229; + murder of, 233. + +Riggs, Rev. Stephen R., + divisions of the Sioux, 261. + +Rio Bravo, + French colony proposed at the mouth of, 350. + +Rio Frio, the, 469. + +Rio Grande River, the, 309, 376, 403, 465, 469. + +Rios, Domingo Teran de los, 471. + +Robertson, 103. + +Rochefort, 352, 366, 393. + +Rochelle, 129, 364, 393, 462. + +"Rocher, Le," 314; + Charlevoix speaks of, 314. + +Rochester, 140. + +Rocky Mountains, the, 260, 308, 309. + +Rouen, 7. + +Royale, Isle, 38. + +"Ruined Castles," the, 68, 457. + +Rum River, 265. + +Ruter, 445, 446, 447, 448; + murders Liotot, 449, 470, 472. + + +Sabine River, the, 415, 451, 465. + +Saco Indians, the, 227. + +Sacs, the, + location of, 43; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Sagean, Mathieu, + the Eldorado of, 485-489; + sketch of, 486; + +Saget, + La Salle's servant, 425; + murder of, 426. + +Saguenay River, the, 76; + Albanel's journey up, 109. + +St. Anthony, city of, 267. + +St. Anthony, the falls of, 267; + Hennepin's notice of, 267, 478, 482. + +St. Antoine Cape, 372. + +St. Bernard's Bay, 394, 469. + +St. Clair, Lake, 476. + +St. Claire, Lake, 152. + +St. Croix River, the, 277. + +St. Domingo, 347, 350, 367, 370, 393, 418, 468. + +St. Esprit, Bay of (Mobile Bay), 129, 386, 389, 481. + +St. Esprit, + Jesuit mission of, 40; + Indians at, 40. + +St. Francis, Order of, 133. + +St. Francis River, the, 265. + +"St. Francois," the ketch, 368; + loss of, 369. + +St. Francois Xavier, + council of congregated tribes held at, 43. + +St. Ignace, Point, 41, 59; + Jesuit chapel at, 82. + +St. Ignace of Michilimackinac, 81; + La Salle reaches, 153; + inhabitants of, 153. + +"St. Joseph," the ship, 330. + +St. Joseph, Lac (Lake Michigan), 155. + +St. Joseph River, the, 44, 162, 163; + La Salle on, 164, 203; + La Forest on, 236, 283, 288. + +Saint-Laurent, Marquis de, 367, 368. + +St. Lawrence River, the, 3, 12, 13, 15, 34, 63, 89, 122, 197, 198, + 219, 475, 480, 481, 483, 489. + +St. Louis, city of, 70. + +St. Louis, Bay of (Matagorda Bay), 376, 379, 394, 466, 468, 469, 471. + +St. Louis, Castle of, 87. + +St. Louis, Fort, of the Illinois, 241; + location of, 314; + La Salle's Indian allies gather at, 315; + location of, 316; + total number of Indians around, 317; + the Indians protected at, 320; + La Barre takes possession of, 327; + attacked by the Iroquois, 327, 347; + restored to La Salle by the King, 351; + Tonty returns to, 454; + Joutel at, 457; + condition of, 458; + Joutel's return to, 460; + Tonty leaves, 465; + reoccupied by the French, 468, 486. + +St. Louis, Fort, of Texas, 394, 395; + life at, 397; + La Salle returns to, 411, 415; + Twelfth Night at, 417; + Duhaut resolves to return to, 446; + abandoned by Louis XIV., 463; + the Spaniards at, 469; + desolation of, 469. + +St. Louis, Lake of, 13, 14, 19. + +St. Louis, Rock of, see "_Starved Rock_." + +St. Louis River, the, 307, 484. + +Saint-Lusson, Daumont de, + sent out by Talon to discover copper mines on Lake Superior, 49; + winters at the Manitoulin Islands, 50; + received by the Miamis, 50; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51; + takes possession of the West for France, 52; + proceeds to Lake Superior, 56; + returns to Quebec, 56. + +St. Malo, 5. + +St. Paul, site of, 257. + +St. Peter, the Valley of the, + unprovoked massacre by the Sioux + in, 254, 260. + +St. Peter River, the, 486. + +Saint-Simon, 343. + +St. Simon, mission of, 41, 42. + +St. Sulpice, Seminary of, 10; + buys back a part of La Salle's seigniory, 16; + plan an expedition of discovery, 16. + +Ste. Barbe, mines of, 348. + +Sainte Claire, 152. + +Sainte-Famille, the, association of, + a sort of female inquisition, 111; + founded by Chaumonot, 111; + encouraged by Laval, 111. + +Ste. Marie, Falls of, 155. + +Ste. Marie du Saut, + the Sulpitians arrive at, 27; + Jesuit mission at, 39; + a noted fishing-place, 39; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52. + +San Antonio, the, 469. + +Sanson, map of, 139. + +Santa Barbara, 348. + +Sargent, Winthrop, 182. + +Sassory tribe, the, 423. + +Sauteurs, the, 39; + the village of, 51. + +Sauthouis, the, 300. + +Saut Ste. Marie, the, 27; + a noted fishing-place, 42; + gathering of the tribes at, 51, 475. + +Sauvolle, 489. + +Schenectady, 483. + +Schoolcraft, the Falls of St. Anthony, 267. + +Scioto River, the, 32. + +Scortas, the Huron, 238. + +Seignelay, Marquis de, + memorials presented to, 35, 120, 274, 342; + La Barre defames La Salle to, 322, 344; + object of La Salle's mission, 352; + letters of Beaujeu to, 354-356; + complaints of Beaujeu, 370; + complaint of Minet, 378; + receives Beaujeu coldly, 389; + Jesuit petitions to, 459; + Cavelier's report to, 462, 463. + +Seignelay River (Red River), the, 167, 347, 348, 484. + +Seneca Indians, the, 14, 19, 20; + villages of, 21; + their hospitality to La Salle, 21; + cruelty of, 22, 29, 91; + Pierron among, 115; + village of, 138; + jealous of La Motte, 140; + La Motte seeks to conciliate, 140, 141; + pacified by La Salle, 142; + the great town of, 279; + Denonville's attack on, 460. + +Seneff, + bloody fight of, 134. + +Severn River, the, 203. + +Sevigne, 343. + +Sevigne, Madame de, letters of, 179. + +Shawanoes, the, 23, 225, 285, 307; + join La Salle's colony, 316, 320. + +Shea, J. G., + first to discover the history of Joliet, 58; + the journal of Marquette, 75; + death of Marquette, 81, 82, 115; + the "Racines Agnieres" of Bruyas, 136; + the veracity of Hennepin, 244; + critical examination of Hennepin's works, 247; + Tonty and La Barre, 454; + story of Mathieu Sagean, 486. + +Silhouette, the minister, 34. + +Simcoe, Lake, 203, 293. + +Simon, St., memoirs of, 167. + +Simonnet, 126. + +Sioux Indians, the, 6; + at the Jesuit mission of St. Esprit, 40; + break into open war, 41; + the Jesuits trade with, 110, 182, 207, 228; + capture Father Hennepin, 245, 250; + suspect Father Hennepin of sorcery, 253; + unprovoked massacres in the valley of the St. Peter, 254; + Hennepin among, 259-282; + divisions of, 260; + meaning of the word, 260; + total number of, 261; + use of the sweating-bath among, 263; + Du Lhut among, 276, 307, 480. + +Sipou (Ohio) River, the, 307. + +"Sleeping Bear," the, promontory of, 81. + +Smith, Buckingham, 471. + +Society of Jesus, the, + a powerful attraction for La Salle, 8; + an image of regulated power, 8. + +Sokokis Indians, the, 227. + +Soto, De, Hernando, see, _De Soto, Hernando_. + +South Bend, village of, 164. + +Southey, the poet, 182. + +South Sea, the, 6, 14, 38, 46, 52, 63, 70. + +Spain, + war declared against, 464; + claims the Gulf of Mexico, 468. + +Spaniards, the, + discover the Mississippi, 3; + Talon's plans to keep them in check, 48; + Louis XIV. irritated against, 344; + in Mexico, 349; + at Fort St. Louis of Texas, 469. + +Spanish Inquisition, the, 350. + +Spanish missions, the, 414, 471. + +Sparks, + exposes the plagiarism of Hennepin, 247, 468. + +"Starved Rock," 169; + attracts the attention of La Salle, 192; + Tonty sent to examine, 192, 205, 217, 221, 239; + description of, 313; + La Salle and Tonty intrench themselves at, 313; + described by Charlevoix, 314; + origin of the name, 314. + +"Sturgeon Cove," 77. + +Sulpice, St., 9. + +Sulpitians, the, + plan an expedition of discovery, 16; + join forces with La Salle, 17; + set out from La Chine, 19; + journey of, 19, 20; + meeting with Joliet, 23; + determine to visit the Pottawattamies, 24; + La Salle parts with, 25; + spends the winter at Long Point, 25; + resume their voyage, 26; + the storm, 26; + decide to return to Montreal, 26; + pass through the Strait of Detroit, 26; + arrive at Ste. Marie du Saut, 27; + the Jesuits want no help from, 27; + comparison between the Recollets and, 112. + +Superior, Lake, 5; + Menard attempts to plant a mission on southern shore of, 6; + Allouez explores a part of, 6; + Joliet attempts to discover the copper mines of, 23, 27; + the Jesuits on, 37; + the Jesuits make a map of, 38; + Saint-Lusson sets out to find the copper mines of, 49; + Saint-Lusson takes possession for France of, 52, 273, 276, 475; + map of, 476, 477, 479, 481. + +Susquehanna River, the, 483. + +Sweating-baths, Indian, 262. + + +Table Rock, 139. + +Tadoussac, 59. + +Taensas, the, great town of, 301; + visited by Membre and Tonty, 301; + differ from other Indians, 304. + +Tahuglauk, the, 486. + +Taiaiagon, Indian town of, 138. + +Tailhan, Father, 35, 49. + +Talon, 15. + +Talon, + among the Texan colonists, 471. + +Talon, Jean, Intendant of Canada, + sends Joliet to discover the copper + mines of Lake Superior, 23; + claims to have sent La Salle to explore, 31; + full of projects for the colony, 48; + his singular economy of the King's purse, 48; + sends Saint-Lusson to discover copper mines on Lake Superior, 49; + resolves to find the Mississippi, 56; + makes choice of Joliet, 56; + quarrels with Courcelle, 56; + returns to France, 57, 60, 109. + +Talon, Jean Baptiste, 472. + +Talon, Pierre, 472. + +Tamaroas, the, 223, 235, 286, 297. + +Tangibao, the, 305. + +Tears, the Lake of, 256. + +Tegahkouita, Catharine, the Iroquois saint, 275, 276. + +"Teiocha-rontiong, Lac" (Lake Erie), 476. + +Teissier, a pilot, 407, 421, 425, 451, 458. + +Tejas (Texas), 470. + +Terliquiquimechi, the, 348. + +Tetons, the, 260. + +Texan colony, the, fate of, 464-473. + +Texan expedition, La Salle's, 391-419, 434. + +Texan Indians, the, 470. + +Texas, + fertile plains of, 308; + French in, 348; + shores of, 374; + La Salle lands in, 379; + application of the name, 470, 483. + +Theakiki, the, 167. + +Thevenot, + on the journal of Marquette, 75; + map made by, 478. + +Third Chickasaw Bluffs, the, 297. + +Thomassy, 115, 175, 296, 298, 302, 308. + +Thouret, 201, 238, 333, 342. + +Thousand Islands, the, 89. + +Three Rivers, 3, 86, 90. + +Thunder Bay, 275. + +Tilly, Sieur de, 99. + +"Tintons," the, 481. + +Tintonwans, the, 260. + +Tongengas, the, 300. + +Tonty, Alphonse de, 467. + +Tonty, Henri de, 127; + renders assistance to La Salle, 128; + in Canada, 129; + La Motte at Niagara, 140; + sets out to join La Motte, 141; + almost wrecked, 142; + at the Niagara Portage, 144-147; + the building of the "Griffin," 144-148; + the launch, 149; 154, 155; + rejoins La Salle, 162; + among the Illinois, 172; + the attempt to poison La Salle, 179; + Hennepin sent to the Mississippi, 187; + La Salle's parting with, 188; + sent to examine "Starved Rock," 192; 194; + deserted by his men, 199, 217; + the journey from Fort Crevecoeur, 201; + La Salle's best hope in, 202; + La Salle sets out to succor, 203; + La Salle has fears for the safety of, 209; + sets out to examine "Starved Rock," 217; + in the Illinois village, 223; + attacked by the Iroquois, 225; + intercedes for the Illinois, 228; + peril of, 229; + a truce granted to, 229; + departs from the Iroquois, 233; + falls ill, 236; + friends in need, 237; + La Salle hears good news of, 287; + meeting with La Salle, 292; + sets out from Fort Miami, 296; + among the Arkansas Indians, 300; + visits the Taensas, 301; + illness of La Salle, 310; + sent to Michilimackinac, 311; + intrenches himself at "Starved Rock," 313; + left in charge of Fort St. Louis, 326, 334, 337; + attempts to attack the Spaniards of Mexico, 349, 355, 361, 421, 425; + the assassination of La Salle, 430, 433; + the murder of Duhaut, 448; + among the Assonis, 452; + plans to assist La Salle, 453-455; + his journey, seeking news of La Salle, 454, 455, 458; + in the Iroquois War, 460; + Cavelier conceals La Salle's death from, 461; + learns of La Salle's death, 464; + revives La Salle's scheme of Mexican invasion, 465; + sets out from Fort St. Louis of the Illinois, 465; + deserted by his men, 465; + courage of, 465; + difficulties and hardships, 466; + attacked by fever, 467; + misrepresented, 467; + praises of, 467; + joins Iberville in Lower Louisiana, 467, 486. + +Topingas, the, 300. + +Torimans, the, 300. + +Toronto, 27, 138. + +Toronto Portage, the, 293. + +Toulon, 463. + +"Tracy, Lac" (Lake Superior), 476. + +Trinity River, the, 413, 424, 434, 439, 465. + +Tronson, Abbe, 344, 463. + +"Tsiketo, Lac" (Lake St. Clair), 220. + +Turenne, 17. + +Two Mountains, Lake of, 82. + + +Upper Lakes, the, see _Lakes, Upper_. + +Ursulines, the, 95. + +Utica, village of, 79, 169, 170, 220, 239. + + +Vaudreuil, 276. + +Vera Cruz, 468, 472. + +Vermilion River, the, 221, 225, 226. + See also _Big Vermilion River, the_. + +"Vermilion Sea" (Gulf of California), the, 15, 38, 74, 480. + +"Vermilion Woods," the, 241. + +Verreau, H., 98. + +Vicksburg, 300. + +Victor, town of, 21, 140. + +"Vieux, Fort Le," 314. + +Villermont, Cabart de, + letters of Beaujeu to, 357-360; + letter of Tonty to, 454. + +Virginia, 288, 346, 483. + +"Virginia, Sea of," 6, 74. + +Voltaire, 7. + + +Watteau, Melithon, 150. + +Weas, the, join La Salle's colony, 316. + +West Indies, the, 181, 404, 446, 489. + +Wild Rice Indians (Menomonies), the, 61. + +William, Fort, 275. + +William III. of England, 282. + +Winnebago Lake, 43, 44, 62. + +Winnebagoes, the, + Jean Nicollet sent to, 4; + quarrel with the Hurons, 4; + location of, 42; + at Saut Ste. Marie, 51. + +Winona, legend of, 271. + +Winthrop, 213. + +Wisconsin, shores of, 157. + +Wisconsin River, the, 5, 63, 245, 265, 266, 272, 278, 477, 478, 480. + +Wood, Colonel, + reaches the Mississippi, 5. + + +Yanktons, the, 260. + +Yoakum, 470. + +You, 210. + +Zenobe (Membre), Father, 181. + +[Illustration] + + + + +FRANCIS PARKMAN'S WORKS. + +NEW LIBRARY EDITION. + + +Printed from entirely new plates, in clear and beautiful type, +upon a choice laid paper. Illustrated with twenty-six photogravure +plates executed by Goupil from historical portraits, and +from original drawings and paintings by Howard Pyle, De Cost +Smith, Thule de Thulstrup, Frederic Remington, Orson Lowell, +Adrien Moreau, and other artists. + +_Thirteen volumes, medium octavo, cloth, gilt top, price, $26.00; +half calf, extra, gilt top, $58.50; half crushed Levant morocco, +extra, gilt top, $78.00; half morocco, gilt top, $58.50. Any +work separately in cloth, $2.00 per volume._ + + + LIST OF VOLUMES. + + PIONEERS OF FRANCE IN THE NEW WORLD 1 vol. + THE JESUITS IN NORTH AMERICA 1 vol. + LA SALLE AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE GREAT WEST 1 vol. + THE OLD REGIME IN CANADA 1 vol. + COUNT FRONTENAC AND NEW FRANCE UNDER LOUIS XIV. 1 vol. + A HALF CENTURY OF CONFLICT 2 vols. + MONTCALM AND WOLFE 2 vols. + THE CONSPIRACY OF PONTIAC AND THE INDIAN WAR AFTER + THE CONQUEST OF CANADA 2 vols. + THE OREGON TRAIL 1 vol. + LIFE OF PARKMAN. By Charles Haight Farnham 1 vol. + + +ILLUSTRATIONS. + +1. Portrait of Francis Parkman. + +2. Jacques Cartier. From the painting at St. Malo. + +3. Madame de la Peltrie. From the painting in the Convent des +Ursulines. + +4. Father Jogues Haranguing the Mohawks. From the picture +by Thule de Thulstrup. + +5. Father Hennepin Celebrating Mass. From the picture by Howard +Pyle. + +6. La Salle Presenting a Petition to Louis XIV. From the painting +by Adrien Moreau. + +7. Jean Baptiste Colbert. From a painting by Claude Lefevbre at +Versailles. + +8. Jean Guyon before Bouille. From a picture by Orson Lowell. + +9. Madame de Frontenac. From the painting at Versailles. + +10. Entry of Sir William Phips into the Quebec Basin. From +a picture by L. Rossi. + +11. The Sacs and Foxes. From the picture by Charles Bodmer. + +12. The Return from Deerfield. From the painting by Howard Pyle. + +13. Sir William Pepperrell. From the painting by Smibert. + +14. Marquis de Beauharnois, Governor of Canada. From the +painting by Tonnieres in the Musee de Grenoble. + +15. Marquis de Montcalm. From the original painting in the possession +of the present Marquis de Montcalm. + +16. Marquis de Vaudreuil. From the painting in the possession of the +Countess de Clermont Tonnerre. + +17. General Wolfe. From the original painting by Highmore. + +18. The Fall of Montcalm. From the painting by Howard Pyle. + +19. View of the Taking of Quebec. From the early engraving of a +drawing made on the spot by Captain Hervey Smyth, Wolfe's aid-de-camp. + +20. Col. Henry Bouquet. From the original painting by Benjamin West. + +21. The Death of Pontiac. From the picture by De Cost Smith. + +22. Sir William Johnson. From a Mezzotint engraving. + +23. Half Sliding, Half Plunging. From a drawing by Frederic +Remington. + +24. The Thunder Fighters. From the picture by Frederic Remington. + +25. Francis Parkman. From a miniature taken about 1844. + +26. Francis Parkman. From a photograph taken in 1882. + +It is hardly necessary to quote here from the innumerable tributes to so +famous an American author as Francis Parkman. Among writers who +have bestowed the highest praise upon his writings are such names as James +Russell Lowell, Dr. John Fisk, President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard +University, George William Curtis, Edward Eggleston, W. D. Howells, +James Schouler, and Dr. Conan Doyle, as well as many prominent critics in +the United States, in Canada, and in England. + +In two respects Francis Parkman was exceptionally fortunate. He chose +a theme of the closest interest to his countrymen,--the colonization of the +American Continent and the wars for its possession,--and he lived through +fifty years of toil to complete his great historical series. + +The text of the New Library Edition is that of the latest issue of each +work prepared for the press by the distinguished author. He carefully +revised and added to several of his works, not through change of views, +but in the light of new documentary evidence which his patient research +and untiring zeal extracted from the hidden archives of the past. Thus he +rewrote and enlarged "The Conspiracy of Pontiac"; the new edition of +"La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West" (1878), and the 1885 +edition of "Pioneers of France" included very important additions; and a +short time before his death he added to "The Old Regime" fifty pages, +under the title of "The Feudal Chiefs of Acadia." The New Library Edition +therefore includes each work in its final state as perfected by the +historian. The indexes have been entirely remade. + + LITTLE, BROWN, & CO., Publishers, + 254 Washington Street. Boston. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of La Salle and the Discovery of the +Great West, by Francis Parkman + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LA SALLE *** + +***** This file should be named 40143.txt or 40143.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/1/4/40143/ + +Produced by Sharon Joiner, Christian Boissonnas, Charles +Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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