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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Founder of New France, by Charles W. Colby
+ </title>
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+
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Founder of New France: A Chronicle of
+Champlain, by Charles W. Colby
+
+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: The Founder of New France: A Chronicle of Champlain
+ Chronicles Of Canada, Volume 3 (Of 32)
+
+Author: Charles W. Colby
+
+Editor: George M. Wrong and H. H. Langton
+
+Release Date: December 13, 2009 [EBook #4213]
+Last Updated: January 26, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NEW FRANCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Gardner Buchanan, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto" cellpadding="4" border="3">
+<tr>
+<td>
+THERE IS AN ILLUSTRATED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY VIEWED AT EBOOK <big><b><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/30257">
+[# 30257 ]</a></b></big>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE FOUNDER OF NEW FRANCE
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ A Chronicle of Champlain
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Charles W. Colby
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CHRONICLES OF CANADA, Volume 3 (of 32)
+ </h3>
+ <h4>
+ Edited by George M. Wrong and H. H. Langton
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ TORONTO, 1915
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. CHAMPLAIN'S EARLY YEARS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. CHAMPLAIN IN ACADIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. CHAMPLAIN AT QUEBEC </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. CHAMPLAIN IN THE WILDERNESS
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. CHAMPLAIN'S LAST YEARS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. CHAMPLAIN'S WRITINGS AND
+ CHARACTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. CHAMPLAIN'S EARLY YEARS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Were there a 'Who's Who in History' its chronicle of Champlain's life and
+ deeds would run as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain, Samuel de. Explorer, geographer, and colonizer. Born in 1567 at
+ Brouage, a village on the Bay of Biscay. Belonged by parentage to the
+ lesser gentry of Saintonge. In boyhood became imbued with a love of the
+ sea, but also served as a soldier in the Wars of the League. Though an
+ enthusiastic Catholic, was loyal to Henry of Navarre. On the Peace of
+ Vervins (1598) returned to the sea, visiting the Spanish West Indies and
+ Mexico. Between 1601 and 1603 wrote his first book&mdash;the Bref
+ Discours. In 1603 made his first voyage to the St Lawrence, which he
+ ascended as far as the Lachine Rapids. From 1604 to 1607 was actively
+ engaged in the attempt of De Monts to establish a French colony in Acadia,
+ at the same time exploring the seaboard from Cape Breton to Martha's
+ Vineyard. Returned to the St Lawrence in 1608 and founded Quebec. In 1609
+ discovered Lake Champlain, and fought his first battle with the Iroquois.
+ In 1613 ascended the Ottawa to a point above Lac Coulange. In 1615 reached
+ Georgian Bay and was induced to accompany the Hurons, with their allies,
+ on an unsuccessful expedition into the country of the Iroquois. From 1617
+ to 1629 occupied chiefly in efforts to strengthen the colony at Quebec and
+ promote trade on the lower St Lawrence. Taken a captive to London by Kirke
+ in 1629 upon the surrender of Quebec, but after its recession to France
+ returned (1633) and remained in Canada until his death, on Christmas Day
+ 1635. Published several important narratives describing his explorations
+ and adventures. An intrepid pioneer and the revered founder of New France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into some such terms as these would the writer of a biographical
+ dictionary crowd his notice of Champlain's career, so replete with danger
+ and daring, with the excitement of sailing among the uncharted islands of
+ Penobscot Bay, of watching the sun descend below the waves of Lake Huron,
+ of attacking the Iroquois in their palisaded stronghold, of seeing English
+ cannon levelled upon the houses of Quebec. It is not from a biographical
+ dictionary that one can gain true knowledge of Champlain, into whose
+ experience were crowded so many novel sights and whose soul was tested,
+ year after year, by the ever-varying perils of the wilderness. No life, it
+ is true, can be fitly sketched in a chronological abridgment, but history
+ abounds with lives which, while important, do not exact from a biographer
+ the kind of detail that for the actions of Champlain becomes priceless.
+ Kant and Hegel were both great forces in human thought, yet throughout
+ eighty years Kant was tethered to the little town of Konigsberg, and Hegel
+ did not know what the French were doing in Jena the day after there had
+ been fought just outside a battle which smote Prussia to her knees. The
+ deeds of such men are their thoughts, their books, and these do not make a
+ story. The life of Champlain is all story. The part of it which belongs to
+ the Wars of the League is lost to us from want of records. But fortunately
+ we possess in his Voyages the plain, direct narrative of his exploits in
+ America&mdash;a source from which all must draw who would know him well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The method to be pursued in this book is not that of the critical essay.
+ Nor will these pages give an account of Champlain's times with reference
+ to ordinances regulating the fur trade, or to the policy of French kings
+ and their ministers towards emigration. Such subjects must be touched on,
+ but here it will be only incidentally. What may be taken to concern us is
+ the spirited action of Champlain's middle life&mdash;the period which lies
+ between his first voyage to the St Lawrence and his return from the land
+ of the Onondagas. Not that he had ended his work in 1616. The unflagging
+ efforts which he continued to put forth on behalf of the starving colony
+ at Quebec demand all praise. But the years during which he was incessantly
+ engaged in exploration show him at the height of his powers, with health
+ still unimpaired by exposure and with a soul that courted the unknown.
+ Moreover, this is the period for which we have his own narrative in
+ fullest detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even were we seeking to set down every known fact regarding Champlain's
+ early life the task would not be long. Parkman, in referring to his
+ origin, styles him 'a Catholic gentleman,' with not even a footnote
+ regarding his parentage. [Footnote: It is hard to define Champlain's
+ social status in a single word. Parkman, besides styling him 'a Catholic
+ gentleman,' speaks of him elsewhere as being 'within the pale of the
+ noblesse.' On the other hand, the Biographie Saintongeoise says that he
+ came from a family of fishermen. The most important facts would seem to be
+ these. In Champlain's own marriage contract his father is styled 'Antoine
+ de Champlain, Capitaine de la Marine.' The same document styles Champlain
+ himself 'Samuel de Champlain.' A petition in which he asks for a
+ continuation of his pension (circ. 1630) styles him in its opening words
+ 'Le Sieur de Champlain' and afterwards 'le dit sieur Champlain' in two
+ places, while in six places it styles him 'le dit sieur de Champlain.' Le
+ Jeune calls him 'Monsieur de Champlain.' It is clear that he was not a
+ noble. It is also clear that he possessed sufficient social standing to
+ warrant the use of de. On the title-page of all his books after 1604 he is
+ styled the 'Sieur de Champlain.'] Dionne, in a biography of nearly three
+ hundred pages, does indeed mention the names of his father and mother, but
+ dismisses his first twenty years in twenty lines, which say little more
+ than that he learned letters and religion from the parish priest and a
+ love of the sea from his father. Nor is it easy to enlarge these
+ statements unless one chooses to make guesses as to whether or not
+ Champlain's parents were Huguenots because he was called Samuel, a
+ favourite name with French Protestants. And this question is not worth
+ discussion, since no one has, or can, cast a doubt upon the sincerity of
+ his own devotion to the Catholic faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, Champlain by birth was neither a peasant nor a noble, but issued
+ from a middle-class family; and his eyes turned towards the sea because
+ his father was a mariner dwelling in the small seaport of Brouage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus when a boy Champlain doubtless had lessons in navigation, but he did
+ not become a sailor in the larger sense until he had first been a soldier.
+ His youth fell in the midst of the Catholic Revival, when the Church of
+ Rome, having for fifty years been sore beset by Lutherans and Calvinists,
+ began to display a reserve strength which enabled her to reclaim from them
+ a large part of the ground she had lost. But this result was not gained
+ without the bitterest and most envenomed struggle. If doctrinal divergence
+ had quickened human hatreds before the Council of Trent, it drove them to
+ fury during the thirty years that followed. At the time of the Massacre of
+ St Bartholomew Champlain was five years old. He was seventeen when William
+ the Silent was assassinated; twenty when Mary Stuart was executed at
+ Fotheringay; twenty-one when the Spanish Armada sailed against England and
+ when the Guises were murdered at Blois by order of Henry III; twenty-two
+ when Henry III himself fell under the dagger of Jacques Clement. The bare
+ enumeration of these events shows that Champlain was nurtured in an age of
+ blood and iron rather than amid those humanitarian sentiments which
+ prevail in an age of religious toleration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding his country a camp, or rather two camps, he became a soldier, and
+ fought for ten years in the wretched strife to which both Leaguers and
+ Huguenots so often sacrificed their love of country. With Henry of Valois,
+ Henry of Navarre, and Henry of Guise as personal foes and political
+ rivals, it was hard to know where the right line of faith and loyalty lay;
+ but Champlain was both a Catholic and a king's man, for whom all things
+ issued well when Henry of Navarre ceased to be a heretic, giving France
+ peace and a throne. It is unfortunate that the details of these
+ adventurous years in Champlain's early manhood should be lost. Unassisted
+ by wealth or rank, he served so well as to win recognition from the king
+ himself, but beyond the names of his commanders (D'Aumont, St Luc, and
+ Brissac) there is little to show the nature of his exploits. [Footnote: He
+ served chiefly in Brittany against the Spanish allies of the League, and
+ reached the rank of quartermaster.] In any case, these ten years of
+ campaigning were a good school for one who afterwards was to look death in
+ the face a thousand times amidst the icebergs of the North Atlantic, and
+ off the rocky coast of Acadia, and in the forests of the Iroquois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such parentage and early experiences as have been indicated Champlain
+ entered upon his career in the New World. It is characteristic that he did
+ not leave the army until his services were no longer needed. At the age of
+ thirty-one he was fortunate enough to be freed from fighting against his
+ own countrymen. In 1598 was signed the Peace of Vervins by which the
+ enemies of Henry IV, both Leaguers and Spaniards, acknowledged their
+ defeat. To France the close of fratricidal strife came as a happy release.
+ To Champlain it meant also the dawn of a career. Hastening to the coast,
+ he began the long series of voyages which was to occupy the remainder of
+ his life. Indeed, the sea and what lay beyond it were henceforth to be his
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sea, however, did not at once lead Champlain to New France. Provencal,
+ his uncle, held high employment in the Spanish fleet, and through his
+ assistance Champlain embarked at Blavet in Brittany for Cadiz, convoying
+ Spanish soldiers who had served with the League in France. After three
+ months at Seville he secured a Spanish commission as captain of a ship
+ sailing for the West Indies. Under this appointment it was his duty to
+ attend Don Francisco Colombo, who with an armada of twenty galleons sailed
+ in January 1599 to protect Porto Rico from the English. In the maritime
+ strife of Spain and England this expedition has no part that remains
+ memorable. For Champlain it meant a first command at sea and a first
+ glimpse of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The record of this voyage was an incident of no less importance in
+ Champlain's fortunes than the voyage itself. His cruisings in the Spanish
+ Main gave him material for a little book, the Bref Discours; and the Bref
+ Discours in turn advanced his career. Apart from any effect which it may
+ have had in securing for him the title of Geographer to the King, it shows
+ his own aspiration to be a geographer. Navigation can be regarded either
+ as a science or a trade. For Champlain it was plainly a science, demanding
+ care in observation and faithfulness of narrative. The Bref Discours was
+ written immediately upon his return from the West Indies, while the events
+ it describes were still fresh in mind. Appearing at a time when colonial
+ secrets were carefully guarded, it gave France a glimpse of Spanish
+ America from French eyes. For us it preserves Champlain's impressions of
+ Mexico, Panama, and the Antilles. For Champlain himself it was a
+ profession of faith, a statement that he had entered upon the honourable
+ occupation of navigator; in other words, that he was to be classed neither
+ with ship-captains nor with traders, but with explorers and authors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in March 1601 that Champlain reached France on his return from the
+ West Indies. The next two years he spent at home, occupied partly with the
+ composition of his Bref Discours and partly with the quest of suitable
+ employment. His avowed preference for the sea and the reputation which he
+ had already gained as a navigator left no doubt as to the sphere of his
+ future activities, but though eager to explore some portion of America on
+ behalf of the French crown, the question of ways and means presented many
+ difficulties. Chief among these was the fickleness of the king. Henry IV
+ had great political intelligence, and moreover desired, in general, to
+ befriend those who had proved loyal during his doubtful days. His
+ political sagacity should have led him to see the value of colonial
+ expansion, and his willingness to advance faithful followers should have
+ brought Champlain something better than his pension and the title of
+ Geographer. But the problems of France were intricate, and what most
+ appealed to the judgment of Henry was the need of domestic reorganization
+ after a generation of slaughter which had left the land desolate. Hence,
+ despite momentary impulses to vie with Spain and England in oversea
+ expansion, he kept to the path of caution, avoiding any expenditure for
+ colonies which could be made a drain upon the treasury, and leaving
+ individual pioneers to bear the cost of planting his flag in new lands. In
+ friendship likewise his good impulses were subject to the vagaries of a
+ mercurial temperament and a marked willingness to follow the line of least
+ resistance. In the circumstances it is not strange that Champlain remained
+ two years ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man to whom he owed most at this juncture was Aymar de Chastes. Though
+ Champlain had served the king faithfully, his youth and birth prevented
+ him from doing more than belongs to the duty of a subaltern. But De
+ Chastes, as governor of Dieppe, at a time when the League seemed
+ everywhere triumphant, gave Henry aid which proved to be the means of
+ raising him from the dust. It was a critical event for Champlain that
+ early in 1603 De Chastes had determined to fit out an expedition to
+ Canada. Piety and patriotism seem to have been his dominant motives, but
+ an opening for profit was also offered by a monopoly of the Laurentian fur
+ trade. During the civil wars Champlain's strength of character had become
+ known at first hand to De Chastes, who both liked and admired him. Then,
+ just at the right moment, he reached Fontainebleau, with his good record
+ as a soldier and the added prestige which had come to him from his
+ successful voyage to the West Indies. He and De Chastes concluded an
+ agreement, the king's assent was specially given, and in the early spring
+ of 1603 the founder of New France began his first voyage to the St
+ Lawrence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain was now definitely committed to the task of gaining for France a
+ foothold in North America. This was to be his steady purpose, whether
+ fortune frowned or smiled. At times circumstances seemed favourable; at
+ other times they were most disheartening. Hence, if we are to understand
+ his life and character, we must consider, however briefly, the conditions
+ under which he worked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It cannot be said that Champlain was born out of his right time. His
+ active years coincide with the most important, most exciting period in the
+ colonial movement. At the outset Spain had gone beyond all rivals in the
+ race for the spoils of America. The first stage was marked by unexampled
+ and spectacular profits. The bullion which flowed from Mexico and Peru was
+ won by brutal cruelty to native races, but Europe accepted it as wealth
+ poured forth in profusion from the mines. Thus the first conception of a
+ colony was that of a marvellous treasure-house where gold and silver lay
+ piled up awaiting the arrival of a Cortez or a Pizarro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unhappily disillusion followed. Within two generations from the time of
+ Columbus it became clear that America did not yield bonanza to every
+ adventurer. Yet throughout the sixteenth century there survived the dream
+ of riches to be quickly gained. Wherever the European landed in America he
+ looked first of all for mines, as Frobisher did on the unpromising shores
+ of Labrador. The precious metals proving illusive, his next recourse was
+ to trade. Hawkins sought his profit from slaves. The French bought furs
+ from the Indians at Tadoussac. Gosnold brought back from Cape Cod a mixed
+ cargo of sassafras and cedar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But wealth from the mines and profits from a coasting trade were only a
+ lure to the cupidity of Europe. Real colonies, containing the germ of a
+ nation, could not be based on such foundations. Coligny saw this, and
+ conceived of America as a new home for the French race. Raleigh, the most
+ versatile of the Elizabethans, lavished his wealth on the patriotic
+ endeavour to make Virginia a strong and self-supporting community. 'I
+ shall yet live to see it an English nation,' he wrote&mdash;at the very
+ moment when Champlain was first dreaming of the St Lawrence. Coligny and
+ Raleigh were both constructive statesmen. The one was murdered before he
+ could found such a colony as his thought presaged: the other perished on
+ the scaffold, though not before he had sowed the seed of an American
+ empire. For Raleigh was the first to teach that agriculture, not mines, is
+ the true basis of a colony. In itself his colony on Roanoke Island was a
+ failure, but the idea of Roanoke was Raleigh's greatest legacy to the
+ English race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the dawn of the seventeenth century events came thick and fast. It
+ was a time when the maritime states of Western Europe were all keenly
+ interested in America, without having any clear idea of the problem.
+ Raleigh, the one man who had a grasp of the situation, entered upon his
+ tragic imprisonment in the same year that Champlain made his first voyage
+ to the St Lawrence. But while thought was confused and policy unsettled,
+ action could no longer be postponed. The one fact which England, France,
+ and Holland could not neglect was that to the north of Florida no European
+ colony existed on the American coast. Urging each of these states to
+ establish settlements in a tract so vast and untenanted was the double
+ desire to possess and to prevent one's neighbour from possessing. On the
+ other hand, caution raised doubts as to the balance of cost and gain. The
+ governments were ready to accept the glory and advantage, if private
+ persons were prepared to take the risk. Individual speculators, very
+ conscious of the risk, demanded a monopoly of trade before agreeing to
+ plant a colony. But this caused new difficulty. The moment a monopoly was
+ granted, unlicensed traders raised an outcry and upbraided the government
+ for injustice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the problems upon the successful or unsuccessful solution of
+ which depended enormous national interests, and each country faced them
+ according to its institutions, rulers, and racial genius. It only needs a
+ table of events to show how fully the English, the French, and the Dutch
+ realized that something must be done. In 1600 Pierre Chauvin landed
+ sixteen French colonists at Tadoussac. On his return in 1601 he found that
+ they had taken refuge with the Indians. In 1602 Gosnold, sailing from
+ Falmouth, skirted the coast of Norumbega from Casco Bay to Cuttyhunk. In
+ 1603 the ships of De Chastes, with Champlain aboard, spent the summer in
+ the St Lawrence; while during the same season Martin Pring took a cargo of
+ sassafras in Massachusetts Bay. From 1604. to 1607 the French under De
+ Monts, Poutrincourt, and Champlain were actively engaged in the attempt to
+ colonize Acadia. But they were not alone in setting up claims to this
+ region. In 1605 Waymouth, sailing from Dartmouth, explored the mouth of
+ the Kennebec and carried away five natives. In 1606 James I granted
+ patents to the London Company and the Plymouth Company which, by their
+ terms, ran athwart the grant of Henry IV to De Monts. In the same year Sir
+ Ferdinando Gorges sent Pring once more to Norumbega. In 1607 Raleigh,
+ Gilbert, and George Popham made a small settlement at the mouth of the
+ Sagadhoc, where Popham died during the winter. As a result of his death
+ this colony on the coast of Maine was abandoned, but 1607 also saw the
+ memorable founding of Jamestown in Virginia. Equally celebrated is
+ Champlain's founding of Quebec in 1608. In 1609 the Dutch under an English
+ captain, Henry Hudson, had their first glimpse of Manhattan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This catalogue of voyages shows that an impulse existed which governments
+ could not ignore. The colonial movement was far from being a dominant
+ interest with Henry IV or James I, but when their subjects saw fit to
+ embark upon it privately, the crown was compelled to take cognizance of
+ their acts and frame regulations. 'Go, and let whatever good may, come of
+ it!' exclaimed Robert de Baudricourt as Joan of Arc rode forth from
+ Vaucouleurs to liberate France. In much the same spirit Henry IV saw De
+ Monts set sail for Acadia. The king would contribute nothing from the
+ public purse or from his own. Sully, his prime minister, vigorously
+ opposed colonizing because he wished to concentrate effort upon domestic
+ improvements. He believed, in the second place, that there was no hope of
+ creating a successful colony north of the fortieth parallel. Thirdly, he
+ was in the pay of the Dutch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most that Henry IV would do for French pioneers in America was to give
+ them a monopoly of trade in return for an undertaking to transport and
+ establish colonists. In each case where a monopoly was granted the number
+ of colonists was specified. As for their quality, convicts could be taken
+ if more eligible candidates were not forthcoming. The sixty unfortunates
+ landed by La Roche on Sable Island in 1598 were all convicts or sturdy
+ vagrants. Five years later only eleven were left alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the story of Champlain it is not necessary to touch upon the relations
+ of the French government with traders at a date earlier than 1599.
+ Immediately following the failure of La Roche's second expedition, Pierre
+ Chauvin of Honfleur secured a monopoly which covered the Laurentian fur
+ trade for ten years. The condition was that he should convey to Canada
+ fifty colonists a year throughout the full period of his grant. So far
+ from carrying out this agreement either in spirit or letter, he shirked it
+ without compunction. After three years the monopoly was withdrawn, less on
+ the ground that he had failed to fulfil his contract than from an outcry
+ on the part of merchants who desired their share of the trade. To
+ adjudicate between Chauvin and his rivals in St Malo and Rouen a
+ commission was appointed at the close of 1602. Its members were De
+ Chastes, governor of Dieppe, and the Sieur de la Cour, first president of
+ the Parlement of Normandy. On their recommendation the terms of the
+ monopoly were so modified as to admit to a share in the privilege certain
+ leading merchants of Rouen and St Malo, who, however, must pay their due
+ share in the expenses of colonizing. Before the ships sailed in 1603
+ Chauvin had died, and De Chastes at once took his place as the central
+ figure in the group of those to whom a new monopoly had just been
+ conceded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Footnote: The history of all the companies formed during these years for
+ trade in New France is the same. First a monopoly is granted under
+ circumstances ostensibly most favourable to the Government and to the
+ privileged merchants; then follow the howls of the excluded traders, the
+ lack of good voluntary colonists, the transportation to the colony of a
+ few beggars, criminals, or unpromising labourers; a drain on the company's
+ funds in maintaining these during the long winter; a steady decrease in
+ the number taken out; at length no attempt to fulfil this condition of the
+ monopoly; the anger of the Government when made aware of the facts; and
+ finally the sudden repeal of the monopoly several years before its legal
+ termination.&mdash;H. P. Biggar, 'Early Trading Companies of New France,'
+ p. 49.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are now on the threshold of Champlain's career, but only on the
+ threshold. The voyage of 1603, while full of prophecy and presenting
+ features of much interest, lacks the arduous and constructive quality
+ which was to mark his greater explorations. In 1603 the two boats equipped
+ by De Chastes were under the command of Pontgrave [Footnote: Francois
+ Grave, Sieur du Pont, whose name, strictly speaking, is Dupont-Grave, one
+ of the most active French navigators of the seventeenth century. From 1600
+ to 1629 his voyages to the St Lawrence and Acadia were incessant.] and
+ Prevert, both mariners from St Malo. Champlain sailed in Pontgrave's ship
+ and was, in fact, a superior type of supercargo. De Chastes desired that
+ his expedition should be self-supporting, and the purchase of furs was
+ never left out of sight. At the same time, his purpose was undoubtedly
+ wider than profit, and Champlain represented the extra-commercial motive.
+ While Pontgrave was trading with the Indians, Champlain, as the
+ geographer, was collecting information about their character, their
+ customs, and their country. Their religious ideas interested him much, and
+ also their statements regarding the interior of the continent. Such data
+ as he could collect between the end of May and the middle of August he
+ embodied in a book called Des Sauvages, which, true to its title, deals
+ chiefly with Indian life and is a valuable record, although in many
+ regards superseded by the more detailed writings of the Jesuits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voyage of 1603 added nothing material to what had been made known by
+ Jacques Cartier and the fur traders about Canada. Champlain ascended the
+ St Lawrence to the Sault St Louis [Footnote: Now called the Lachine
+ Rapids. An extremely important point in the history of New France, since
+ it marked the head of ship navigation on the St Lawrence. Constantly
+ mentioned in the writings of Champlain's period.] and made two side
+ excursions&mdash;one taking him rather less than forty miles up the
+ Saguenay and the other up the Richelieu to the rapid at St Ours. He also
+ visited Gaspe, passed the Isle Percee, had his first glimpse of the Baie
+ des Chaleurs, and returned to Havre with a good cargo of furs. On the
+ whole, it was a profitable and satisfactory voyage. Though it added little
+ to geographical knowledge, it confirmed the belief that money could be
+ made in the fur trade, and the word brought back concerning the Great
+ Lakes of the interior was more distinct than had before been reported. The
+ one misfortune of the expedition was that its author, De Chastes, did not
+ live to see its success. He had died less than a month before his ships
+ reached Havre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. CHAMPLAIN IN ACADIA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ [Footnote: This word (Acadia) has sometimes been traced to the Micmac
+ akade, which, appended to place-names, signifies an abundance of
+ something. More probably, however, it is a corruption of Arcadia. The
+ Acadia of De Monts' grant in 1604 extended from the parallel of 40 degrees
+ to that of 46 degrees north latitude, but in the light of actual
+ occupation the term can hardly be made to embrace more than the coast from
+ Cape Breton to Penobscot Bay.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The early settlements of the French in America were divided into two zones
+ by the Gulf of St Lawrence. Considered from the standpoint of
+ colonization, this great body of water has a double aspect. In the main it
+ was a vestibule to the vast region which extended westward from Gaspe to
+ Lake Michigan and thence to the Mississippi. But while a highway it was
+ also a barrier, cutting off Acadia from the main route that led to the
+ heart of the interior. Port Royal, on the Bay of Fundy, was one centre and
+ Quebec another. Between them stretched either an impenetrable wilderness
+ or an inland sea. Hence Acadia remained separate from the Laurentian
+ valley, which was the heart of Canada&mdash;although Acadia and Canada
+ combined to form New France. Of these two sister districts Canada was the
+ more secure. The fate of Acadia shows how much less vulnerable to English
+ attack were Quebec, Three Rivers, and Montreal than the seaboard
+ settlements of Port Royal, Grand Pre, and Louisbourg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a striking fact that Champlain had helped to found Port Royal before
+ he founded Quebec. He was not the pioneer of Acadian colonization: De
+ Monts deserves the praise of turning the first sod. But Champlain was a
+ leading figure in the hard fight at St Croix and Port Royal; he it was who
+ first charted in any detail the Atlantic seaboard from Cape Breton to Cape
+ Cod; and his narrative joins with that of Lescarbot to preserve the story
+ of the episode.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although unprosperous, the first attempt of the French to colonize Acadia
+ is among the bright deeds of their colonial history. While the death of De
+ Chastes was most inopportune, the future of the French race in America did
+ not hinge upon any one man. In 1603 fishing on the Grand Bank off
+ Newfoundland was a well-established occupation of Normans and Bretons, the
+ fur trade held out hope of great profit, and the spirit of national
+ emulation supplied a motive which was stronger still. Hence it is not
+ surprising that to De Chastes there at once succeeds De Monts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As regards position they belonged to much the same class. Both were men of
+ standing, with enough capital and influence to organize an expedition. In
+ respect, however, of personality and circumstance there were differences.
+ By reason of advanced age De Chastes had been unable to accompany his
+ ships, whereas De Monts was in his prime and had already made a voyage to
+ the St Lawrence. Moreover, De Monts was a Huguenot. A generation later no
+ Huguenot could have expected to receive a monopoly of the fur trade and a
+ royal commission authorizing him to establish settlements, but Henry IV,
+ who had once been a Protestant, could hardly treat his old co-religionists
+ as Richelieu afterwards treated them. The heresy of its founder was a
+ source of weakness to the first French colony in Acadia, yet through a
+ Calvinist it came into being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like De Chastes, De Monts had associates who joined with him to supply the
+ necessary funds, though in 1604. the investment was greater than on any
+ previous occasion, and a larger number were admitted to the benefits of
+ the monopoly. Not only did St Malo and Rouen secure recognition, but La
+ Rochelle and St Jean de Luz were given a chance to participate. De Monts'
+ company had a capital of 90,000 livres, divided in shares&mdash;of which
+ two-fifths were allotted to St Malo, two-fifths to La Rochelle and St Jean
+ de Luz conjointly, and the remainder to Rouen. The personal investment of
+ De Monts was somewhat more than a tenth of the total, as he took a
+ majority of the stock which fell to Rouen. Apart from Sully's
+ unfriendliness, the chief initial difficulty arose over religion. The
+ Parlement of Normandy refused to register De Monts' commission on the
+ ground that the conversion of the heathen could not fitly be left to a
+ heretic. This remonstrance was only withdrawn after the king had
+ undertaken to place the religious instruction of the Indians in the charge
+ of priests&mdash;a promise which did not prevent the Protestant colonists
+ from having their own pastor. The monopoly contained wider privileges than
+ before, including both Acadia and the St Lawrence. At the same time, the
+ obligation to colonize became more exacting, since the minimum number of
+ new settlers per annum was raised from fifty to a hundred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain's own statement regarding the motive of De Monts' expedition is
+ that it lay in the desire 'to find a northerly route to China, in order to
+ facilitate commerce with the Orientals.' After reciting a list of
+ explorations which began with John Cabot and had continued at intervals
+ during the next century, he continues: 'So many voyages and discoveries
+ without results, and attended with so much hardship and expense, have
+ caused us French in late years to attempt a permanent settlement in those
+ lands which we call New France, in the hope of thus realizing more easily
+ this object; since the voyage in search of the desired passage commences
+ on the other side of the ocean and is made along the coast of this
+ region.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A comparison of the words just quoted with the text of De Monts'
+ commission will serve to illustrate the strength of Champlain's
+ geographical instinct. The commission begins with a somewhat stereotyped
+ reference to the conversion of the heathen, after which it descants upon
+ commerce, colonies, and mines. The supplementary commission to De Monts
+ from Montmorency as Lord High Admiral adds a further consideration,
+ namely, that if Acadia is not occupied by the French it will be seized
+ upon by some other nation. Not a word of the route to the East occurs in
+ either commission, and De Monts is limited in the powers granted to a
+ region extending along the American seaboard from the fortieth parallel to
+ the forty-sixth, with as much of the interior 'as he is able to explore
+ and colonize.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This shows that, while the objects of the expedition were commercial and
+ political, Champlain's imagination was kindled by the prospect of finding
+ the long-sought passage to China. To his mind a French colony in America
+ is a stepping-stone, a base of operations for the great quest. De Monts
+ himself doubtless sought honour, adventure, and profit&mdash;the profit
+ which might arise from possessing Acadia and controlling the fur trade in
+ 'the river of Canada.' Champlain remains the geographer, and his chief
+ contribution to the Acadian enterprise will be found in that part of his
+ Voyages which describes his study of the coast-line southward from Cape
+ Breton to Malabar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whether considered from the standpoint of exploration or settlement,
+ the first chapter of French annals in Acadia is a fine incident. Champlain
+ has left the greatest fame, but he was not alone during these years of
+ peril and hardship. With him are grouped De Monts, Poutrincourt,
+ Lescarbot, Pontgrave, and Louis Hebert, all men of capacity and
+ enterprise, whose part in this valiant enterprise lent it a dignity which
+ it has never since lost. As yet no English colony had been established in
+ America. Under his commission De Monts could have selected for the site of
+ his settlement either New York or Providence or Boston or Portland. The
+ efforts of the French in America from 1604. to 1607 are signalized by the
+ character of their leaders, the nature of their opportunity, and the
+ special causes which prevented them from taking possession of Norumbega.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Footnote: There appears in Verrazano's map of 1529 the word Aranbega, as
+ attached to a small district on the Atlantic seaboard. Ten years later
+ Norumbega has become a region which takes in the whole coast from Cape
+ Breton to Florida. At intervals throughout the sixteenth century fables
+ were told in Europe of its extraordinary wealth, and it was not till the
+ time of Champlain that this myth was exposed. Champlain himself identifies
+ 'the great river of Norumbega' with the Penobscot.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Monts lacked neither courage nor persistence. His battle against
+ heartbreaking disappointments shows him to have been a pioneer of high
+ order. And with him sailed in 1604 Jean de Biencourt, Seigneur de
+ Poutrincourt, whose ancestors had been illustrious in Picardy for five
+ hundred years. Champlain made a third, joining the expedition as
+ geographer rather than shipmaster. Lescarbot and Hebert came two years
+ later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The company left Havre in two ships&mdash;on March 7, 1604, according to
+ Champlain, or just a month later, according to Lescarbot. Although De
+ Monts' commission gave him the usual privilege of impressing convicts, the
+ personnel of his band was far above the average. Champlain's statement is
+ that it comprised about one hundred and twenty artisans, and there were
+ also 'a large number of gentlemen, of whom not a few were of noble birth.'
+ Besides the excitement provided by icebergs, the arguments of priest and
+ pastor diversified the voyage, even to the point of scandal. After
+ crossing the Grand Bank in safety they were nearly wrecked off Sable
+ Island, but succeeded in reaching the Acadian coast on May 8. From their
+ landfall at Cap de la Heve they skirted the coast-line to Port Mouton,
+ confiscating en route a ship which was buying furs in defiance of De
+ Monts' monopoly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rabbits and other game were found in abundance at Port Mouton, but the
+ spot proved quite unfit for settlement, and on May 19 De Monts charged
+ Champlain with the task of exploring the coast in search of harbours.
+ Taking a barque of eight tons and a crew of ten men (together with
+ Ralleau, De Monts' secretary), Champlain set out upon this important
+ reconnaissance. Fish, game, good soil, good timber, minerals, and safe
+ anchorage were all objects of search. Skirting the south-western corner of
+ Nova Scotia, the little ship passed Cape Sable and the Tusquet Islands,
+ turned into the Bay of Fundy, and advanced to a point somewhat beyond the
+ north end of Long Island. Champlain gives at considerable length the
+ details of his first excursion along the Acadian seaboard. In his zeal for
+ discovery he caused those left at Port Mouton both inconvenience and
+ anxiety. Lescarbot says, with a touch of sharpness: 'Champlain was such a
+ time away on this expedition that when deliberating about their return [to
+ France] they thought of leaving him behind.' Champlain's own statement is
+ that at Port Mouton 'Sieur de Monts was awaiting us from day to day,
+ thinking only of our long stay and whether some accident had not befallen
+ us.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Monts' position at Port Mouton was indeed difficult. By changing his
+ course in mid-ocean he had missed rendezvous with the larger of his two
+ ships, which under the command of Pontgrave looked for him in vain from
+ Canseau to the Bay of Islands. Meanwhile, at Port Mouton provisions were
+ running low, save for rabbits, which could not be expected to last for
+ ever. The more timid raised doubts and spoke of France, but De Monts and
+ Poutrincourt both said they would rather die than go back. In this mood
+ the party continued to hunt rabbits, to search the coast north-easterly
+ for Pontgrave, and to await Champlain's return. Their courage had its
+ reward. Pontgrave's ship was found, De Monts revictualled, Champlain
+ reappeared, and by the middle of June the little band of Colonists was
+ ready to proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As De Monts heads south-west from Port Mouton it is difficult to avoid
+ thoughts regarding the ultimate destiny of France in the New World. This
+ was the predestined moment. The Wars of Religion had ended in the reunion
+ of the realm under a strong and popular king. The French nation was
+ conscious of its greatness, and seemed ready for any undertaking that
+ promised honour or advantage. The Huguenots were a sect whose members
+ possessed Calvinistic firmness of will, together with a special motive for
+ emigrating. And, besides, the whole eastern coast of America, within the
+ temperate zone, was still to be had for the taking. With such a
+ magnificent opportunity, why was the result so meagre?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A complete answer to this query would lead us far afield, but the whole
+ history of New France bears witness to the fact that the cause of failure
+ is not to be found in the individual French emigrant. There have never
+ been more valiant or tenacious colonists than the peasants of Normandy who
+ cleared away the Laurentian wilderness and explored the recesses of North
+ America. France in the age of De Monts and Champlain possessed adequate
+ resources, if only her effort had been concentrated on America, or if the
+ Huguenots had not been prevented from founding colonies, or if the crown
+ had been less meddlesome, or if the quest of beaver skins farther north
+ had not diverted attention from Chesapeake Bay and Manhattan Island. The
+ best chance the French ever had to effect a foothold in the middle portion
+ of the Atlantic coast came to them in 1604, when, before any rivals had
+ established themselves, De Monts was at hand for the express purpose of
+ founding a colony. It is quite probable that even if he had landed on
+ Manhattan Island, the European preoccupations of France would have
+ prevented Henry IV from supporting a colony at that point with sufficient
+ vigour to protect it from the English. Yet the most striking aspect of De
+ Monts' attempt in Acadia is the failure to seize a chance which never came
+ again to the French race. In 1607 Champlain sailed away from Port Royal
+ and the English founded Jamestown. In 1608 Champlain founded Quebec, and
+ thenceforth for over a century the efforts of France were concentrated on
+ the St Lawrence. When at length she founded Louisbourg it was too late; by
+ that time the English grasp upon the coast could not be loosened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile De Monts, to whom the future was veiled, left Port Mouton and,
+ creeping from point to point, entered the Bay of Fundy&mdash;or, as
+ Champlain calls it, 'the great Baye Francoise, so named by Sieur de
+ Monts.' The month was June, but no time could be lost, for at this
+ juncture the aim of exploration was the discovery of a suitable site, and
+ after the site had been fixed the colonists needed what time remained
+ before winter to build their houses. Hence De Monts' first exploration of
+ the Baye Francoise was not exhaustive. He entered Annapolis Basin and
+ glanced at the spot which afterwards was to be Port Royal. He tried in
+ vain to find a copper-mine of which he had heard from Prevert of St Malo.
+ He coasted the Bay of St John, and on June 25 reached St Croix Island.
+ 'Not finding any more suitable place than this island,' says Champlain,
+ the leaders of the colony decided that it should be fortified: and thus
+ was the French flag unfurled in Acadia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrangement of the settlement at St Croix was left to Champlain, who
+ gives us a drawing in explanation of his plan. The selection of an island
+ was mainly due to distrust of the Indians, with whom, however, intercourse
+ was necessary. The island lay close to the mouth of a river, now also
+ called the St Croix. As the choice of this spot proved most unfortunate,
+ it is well to remember the motives which prevailed at the time. 'Vessels
+ could pass up the river,' says Champlain, 'only at the mercy of the cannon
+ on this island, and we deemed the location most advantageous, not only on
+ account of its situation and good soil, but also on account of the
+ intercourse which we proposed with the savages of these coasts and of the
+ interior, as we should be in the midst of them. We hoped to pacify them in
+ course of time and put an end to the wars which they carry on with one
+ another, so as to derive service from them in future and convert them to
+ the Christian faith.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Monts' band was made up largely of artisans, who at once began with
+ vigour to erect dwellings. A mill and an oven were built; gardens were
+ laid out and many seeds planted therein. The mosquitoes proved
+ troublesome, but in other respects the colonists had good cause to be
+ pleased with their first Acadian summer. So far had construction work
+ advanced by the beginning of autumn that De Monts decided to send an
+ exploration party farther along the coast to the south-west. 'And,' says
+ Champlain, 'he entrusted me with this work, which I found very agreeable.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The date of departure from St Croix was September 2, so that no very
+ ambitious programme of discovery could be undertaken before bad weather
+ began. In a boat of eighteen tons, with twelve sailors and two Indian
+ guides, Champlain threaded the maze of islands which lies between
+ Passamaquoddy Bay and the mouth of the Penobscot. The most striking part
+ of the coast was Mount Desert, 'very high and notched in places, so that
+ there is the appearance to one at sea as of seven or eight mountains
+ extending along near each other.' To this island and the Isle au Haut
+ Champlain gave the names they have since borne. Thence advancing, with his
+ hand ever on the lead, he reached the mouth of the Penobscot, despite
+ those 'islands, rocks, shoals, banks, and breakers which are so numerous
+ on all sides that it is marvellous to behold.' Having satisfied himself
+ that the Penobscot was none other than the great river Norumbega, referred
+ to largely on hearsay by earlier geographers, he followed it up almost to
+ Bangor. On regaining the sea he endeavoured to reach the mouth of the
+ Kennebec, but when within a few miles of it was driven back to St Croix by
+ want of food. In closing the story of this voyage, which had occupied a
+ month, Champlain says with his usual directness: 'The above is an exact
+ statement of all I have observed respecting not only the coasts and
+ people, but also the river of Norumbega; and there are none of the marvels
+ there which some persons have described. I am of opinion that this region
+ is as disagreeable in winter as that of our settlement, in which we were
+ greatly deceived.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain was now to undergo his first winter in Acadia, and no part of
+ his life could have been more wretched than the ensuing eight months. On
+ October 6 the snow came. On December 3 cakes of ice began to appear along
+ the shore. The storehouse had no cellar, and all liquids froze except
+ sherry. 'Cider was served by the pound. We were obliged to use very bad
+ water and drink melted snow, as there were no springs or brooks.' It was
+ impossible to keep warm or to sleep soundly. The food was salt meat and
+ vegetables, which impaired the strength of every one and brought on
+ scurvy. It is unnecessary to cite here Champlain's detailed and graphic
+ description of this dreadful disease. The results are enough. Before the
+ spring came two-fifths of the colonists had died, and of those who
+ remained half were on the point of death. Not unnaturally, 'all this
+ produced discontent in Sieur de Monts and others of the settlement.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The survivors of the horrible winter at St Croix were not freed from
+ anxiety until June 15, 1605, when Pontgrave, six weeks late, arrived with
+ fresh stores. Had De Monts been faint-hearted, he doubtless would have
+ seized this opportunity to return to France. As it was, he set out in
+ search of a place more suitable than St Croix for the establishment of his
+ colony, On June 18, with a party which included twenty sailors and several
+ gentlemen, he and Champlain began a fresh voyage to the south-west. Their
+ destination was the country of the Armouchiquois, an Algonquin tribe who
+ then inhabited Massachusetts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain's story of his first voyage from Acadia to Cape Cod is given
+ with considerable fulness. The topography of the seaboard and its natural
+ history, the habits of the Indians and his adventures with them, were all
+ new subjects at the time, and he treats them so that they keep their
+ freshness. He is at no pains to conceal his low opinion of the coast
+ savages. Concerning the Acadian Micmacs he says little, but what he does
+ say is chiefly a comment upon the wretchedness of their life during the
+ winter. As he went farther south he found an improvement in the food
+ supply. At the mouth of the Saco he and De Monts saw well-kept patches of
+ Indian corn three feet high, although it was not yet midsummer. Growing
+ with the corn were beans, pumpkins, and squashes, all in flower; and the
+ cultivation of tobacco is also noted. Here the savages formed a permanent
+ settlement and lived within a palisade. Still farther south, in the
+ neighbourhood of Cape Cod, Champlain found maize five and a half feet
+ high, a considerable variety of squashes, tobacco, and edible roots which
+ tasted like artichokes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whether the coast Indians were Micmacs or Armouchiquois, whether they
+ were starving or well fed, Champlain tells us little in their praise. Of
+ the Armouchiquois he says:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I cannot tell what government they have, but I think
+ that in this respect they resemble their neighbours,
+ who have none at all. They know not how to worship or
+ pray; yet, like the other savages, they have some
+ superstitions, which I shall describe in their place.
+ As for weapons, they have only pikes, clubs, bows and
+ arrows. It would seem from their appearance that they
+ have a good disposition, better than those of the
+ north, but they are all in fact of no great worth.
+ Even a slight intercourse with them gives you at once
+ a knowledge of them. They are great thieves, and if
+ they cannot lay hold of any thing with their hands,
+ they try to do so with their feet, as we have oftentimes
+ learned by experience. I am of opinion that if they
+ had any thing to exchange with us they would not give
+ themselves to thieving. They bartered away to us their
+ bows, arrows, and quivers for pins and buttons; and
+ if they had had any thing else better they would have
+ done the same with it. It is necessary to be on one's
+ guard against this people and live in a state of
+ distrust of them, yet without letting them perceive it.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This passage at least shows that Champlain sought to be just to the
+ savages of the Atlantic. Though he found them thieves, he is willing to
+ conjecture that they would not steal if they had anything to trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thieving habits of the Cape Cod Indians led to a fight between them
+ and the French in which one Frenchman was killed, and Champlain narrowly
+ escaped death through the explosion of his own musket. At Cape Cod De
+ Monts turned back. Five of the six weeks allotted to the voyage were over,
+ and lack of food made it impossible to enter Long Island Sound. Hence
+ 'Sieur de Monts determined to return to the Island of St Croix in order to
+ find a place more favourable for our settlement, as we had not been able
+ to do on any of the coasts which he had explored during this voyage.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We now approach the picturesque episode of Port Royal. De Monts, having
+ regained St Croix at the beginning of August, lost no time in transporting
+ his people to the other side of the Bay of Fundy. The consideration which
+ weighed most with him in establishing his headquarters was that of trade.
+ Whatever his own preferences, he could not forget that his partners in
+ France expected a return on their investment. Had he been in a position to
+ found an agricultural colony, the maize fields he had seen to the
+ south-west might have proved attractive. But he depended largely upon
+ trade, and, as Champlain points out, the savages of Massachusetts had
+ nothing to sell. Hence it was unwise to go too far from the peltries of
+ the St Lawrence. To find a climate less severe than that of Canada,
+ without losing touch with the fur trade, was De Monts' problem. No one
+ could dream of wintering again at St Croix, and in the absence of trade
+ possibilities to the south there seemed but one alternative&mdash;Port
+ Royal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his notice of De Monts' cruise along the Bay of Fundy in June 1604,
+ Champlain says: 'Continuing two leagues farther on in the same direction,
+ we entered one of the finest harbours I had seen all along these coasts,
+ in which two thousand vessels might lie in security. The entrance is 800
+ paces broad; then you enter a harbour two leagues long and one broad,
+ which I have named Port Royal.' Here Champlain is describing Annapolis
+ Basin, which clearly made a deep impression upon the minds of the first
+ Europeans who saw it. Most of all did it appeal to the imagination of
+ Poutrincourt, who had come to Acadia for the purpose of discovering a spot
+ where he could found his own colony. At sight of Port Royal he had at once
+ asked De Monts for the grant, and on receiving it had returned to France,
+ at the end of August 1604, to recruit colonists. Thus he had escaped the
+ horrible winter at St Croix, but on account of lawsuits it had proved
+ impossible for him to return to Acadia in the following year. Hence the
+ noble roadstead of Port Royal was still unoccupied when De Monts,
+ Champlain, and Pontgrave took the people of St Croix thither in August
+ 1605. Not only did the people go. Even the framework of the houses was
+ shipped across the bay and set up in this haven of better hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spot chosen for the settlement lay on the north side of the bay. It
+ had a good supply of water, and there was protection from the north-west
+ wind which had tortured the settlers at St Croix. 'After everything had
+ been arranged,' says Champlain, 'and the majority of the dwellings built,
+ Sieur de Monts determined to return to France, in order to petition His
+ Majesty to grant him all that might be necessary for his undertaking.'
+ Quite apart from securing fresh advantages, De Monts at this time was sore
+ pressed to defend his title against the traders who were clamouring for a
+ repeal of the monopoly. With him returned some of the colonists whose
+ ambition had been satisfied at St Croix. Champlain remained, in the hope
+ of making further explorations 'towards Florida.' Pontgrave was left in
+ command. The others numbered forty-three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the autumn they began to make gardens. 'I also,' says Champlain,
+ 'for the sake of occupying my time made one, which was surrounded with
+ ditches full of water, in which I placed some fine trout, and into which
+ flowed three brooks of very fine running water, from which the greater
+ part of our settlement was supplied. I made also a little sluice-way
+ towards the shore, in order to draw off the water when I wished. This spot
+ was entirely surrounded by meadows, where I constructed a summer-house,
+ with some fine trees, as a resort for enjoying the fresh air. I made
+ there, also, a little reservoir for holding salt-water fish, which we took
+ out as we wanted them. I took especial pleasure in it and planted there
+ some seeds which turned out well. But much work had to be laid out in
+ preparation. We resorted often to this place as a pastime; and it seemed
+ as if the little birds round took pleasure in it, for they gathered there
+ in large numbers, warbling and chirping so pleasantly that I think I have
+ never heard the like.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a busy and cheerful autumn came a mild winter. The snow did not fall
+ till December 20, and there was much rain. Scurvy still caused trouble;
+ but though twelve died, the mortality was not so high as at St Croix.
+ Everything considered, Port Royal enjoyed good fortune&mdash;according to
+ the colonial standards of the period, when a winter death-rate of
+ twenty-six per cent was below the average.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the beginning of March 1606 Pontgrave fitted out a barque of eighteen
+ tons in order to undertake 'a voyage of discovery along the coast of
+ Florida'; and on the 16th of the month a start was made. Favoured by good
+ weather, he and Champlain would have reached the Hudson three years before
+ the Dutch. But, short of drowning, every possible mischance happened. They
+ had hardly set out when a storm cast them ashore near Grand Manan. Having
+ repaired the damage they made for St Croix, where fog and contrary winds
+ held them back eight days. Then Pontgrave decided to return to Port Royal
+ 'to see in what condition our companions were whom we had left there
+ sick.' On their arrival Pontgrave himself was taken ill, but soon
+ re-embarked, though still unwell. Their second start was followed by
+ immediate disaster. Leaving the mouth of the harbour, two leagues distant
+ from Port Royal, they were carried out of the channel by the tide and went
+ aground. 'At the first blow of our boat upon the rocks the rudder broke, a
+ part of the keel and three or four planks were smashed and some ribs stove
+ in, which frightened us, for our barque filled immediately; and all that
+ we could do was to wait until the sea fell, so that we might get ashore...
+ Our barque, all shattered as she was, went to pieces at the return of the
+ tide. But we, most happy at having saved our lives, returned to our
+ settlement with our poor savages; and we praised God for having rescued us
+ from this shipwreck, from which we had not expected to escape so easily.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This accident destroyed all hope of exploration to the southward until
+ word came from France. At the time of De Monts' departure the outlook had
+ been so doubtful that a provisional arrangement was made for the return of
+ the colonists to France should no ship arrive at Port Royal by the middle
+ of July. In this event Pontgrave was to take his people to Cape Breton or
+ Gaspe, where they would find trading ships homeward bound. As neither De
+ Monts nor Poutrincourt had arrived by the middle of June, a new barque was
+ built to replace the one which had been lost on April 10. A month later
+ Pontgrave carried out his part of the programme by putting aboard all the
+ inhabitants of Port Royal save two, who were induced by promise of extra
+ pay to remain in charge of the stores.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus sorrowfully the remnant of the colonists bade farewell to the
+ beautiful harbour and their new home. Four days later they were nearly
+ lost through the breaking of their rudder in the midst of a tempest.
+ Having been saved from wreck by the skill of their shipmaster, Champdore,
+ they reached Cape Sable on July 24. Here grief became rejoicing, for to
+ their complete surprise they encountered Ralleau, De Monts' secretary,
+ coasting along in a shallop. The glad tidings he gave them was that
+ Poutrincourt with a ship of one hundred and twenty tons had arrived. From
+ Canseau the Jonas had taken an outer course to Port Royal, while Ralleau
+ was keeping close to the shore in the hope of intercepting Pontgrave. 'All
+ this intelligence,' says Champlain, 'caused us to turn back; and we
+ arrived at Port Royal on the 25th of the month, where we found the
+ above-mentioned vessel and Sieur de Poutrincourt, and were greatly
+ delighted to see realized what we had given up in despair.' Lescarbot, who
+ arrived on board the Jonas, adds the following detail: 'M. de Poutrincourt
+ ordered a tun of wine to be set upon end, one of those which had been
+ given him for his proper use, and gave leave to all comers to drink freely
+ as long as it lasted, so that there were some who made gay dogs of
+ themselves.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wine-bibbing, however, was not the chief activity of Port Royal.
+ Poutrincourt at once set men to work on the land, and while they were
+ sowing wheat, rye, and hemp he hastened preparations for an autumn cruise
+ 'along the coast of Florida.' On September 5 all was ready for this
+ voyage, which was to be Champlain's last opportunity of reaching the lands
+ beyond Cape Cod. Once more disappointment awaited him. 'It was decided,'
+ he says, 'to continue the voyage along the coast, which was not a very
+ well considered conclusion, since we lost much time in passing over again
+ the discoveries made by Sieur de Monts as far as the harbour of
+ Mallebarre. It would have been much better, in my opinion, to cross from
+ where we were directly to Mallebarre, the route being already known, and
+ then use our time in exploring as far as the fortieth degree, or still
+ farther south, revisiting upon our homeward voyage the entire coast at
+ pleasure.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the interest of geographical research and French colonization Champlain
+ was doubtless right. Unfortunately, Poutrincourt wished to see for himself
+ what De Monts and Champlain had already seen. It was the more unfortunate
+ that he held this view, as the boats were victualled for over two months,
+ and much could have been done by taking a direct course to Cape Cod.
+ Little time, however, was spent at the Penobscot and Kennebec. Leaving St
+ Croix on September 12, Poutrincourt reached the Saco on the 21st. Here and
+ at points farther south he found ripe grapes, together with maize,
+ pumpkins, squashes, and artichokes. Gloucester Harbour pleased Champlain
+ greatly. 'In this very pleasant place we saw two hundred savages, and
+ there are here a large number of very fine walnut trees, cypresses,
+ sassafras, oaks, ashes and beeches....There are likewise fine meadows
+ capable of supporting a large number of cattle.' So much was he charmed
+ with this harbour and its surroundings that he called it Le Beauport.
+ After tarrying at Gloucester two or three days Poutrincourt reached Cape
+ Cod on October 2, and on the 20th he stood off Martha's Vineyard, his
+ farthest point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain's chronicle of this voyage contains more detail regarding the
+ Indians than will be found in any other part of his Acadian narratives.
+ Chief among Poutrincourt's adventures was an encounter with the natives of
+ Cape Cod. Unlike the Micmacs, the Armouchiquois were 'not so much hunters
+ as good fishermen and tillers of the land.' Their numbers also were
+ greater; in fact, Champlain speaks of seeing five or six hundred together.
+ At first they did not interfere with Poutrincourt's movements, even
+ permitting him to roam their land with a body of arquebusiers. After a
+ fortnight, however, their suspicions began to become manifest, and on
+ October 15 four hundred savages set upon five Frenchmen who, contrary to
+ orders, had remained ashore. Four were killed, and although a rescue party
+ set out at once from the barque, the natives made their escape.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ To pursue them was fruitless, for they are marvellously
+ swift. All that we could do was to carry away the dead
+ bodies and bury them near a cross which had been set
+ up the day before, and then to go here and there to
+ see if we could get sight of any of them. But it was
+ time wasted, therefore we came back. Three hours
+ afterwards they returned to us on the sea-shore. We
+ discharged at them several shots from our little brass
+ cannon, and when they heard the noise they crouched
+ down on the ground to escape the fire. In mockery of
+ us they pulled down the cross and disinterred the
+ dead, which displeased us greatly and caused us to go
+ for them a second time; but they fled, as they had
+ done before. We set up again the cross and reinterred
+ the dead, whom they had thrown here and there amid
+ the heath, where they kindled a fire to burn them. We
+ returned without any result, as we had done before,
+ well aware that there was scarcely hope of avenging
+ ourselves this time, and that we should have to renew
+ the undertaking when it should please God.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With a desire for revenge was linked the practical consideration that
+ slaves would prove useful at Port Royal. A week later the French returned
+ to the same place, 'resolved to get possession of some savages and, taking
+ them to our settlement, put them to grinding corn at the hand-mill, as
+ punishment for the deadly assault which they had committed on five or six
+ of our company.' As relations were strained, it became necessary to offer
+ beads and gewgaws, with every show of good faith. Champlain describes the
+ plan in full. The shallop was to leave the barque for shore, taking
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ the most robust and strong men we had, each one having
+ a chain of beads and a fathom of match on his arm;
+ and there, while pretending to smoke with them (each
+ one having an end of his match lighted so as not to
+ excite suspicion, it being customary to have fire at
+ the end of a cord in order to light the tobacco), coax
+ them with pleasing words so as to draw them into the
+ shallop; and if they should be unwilling to enter,
+ each one approaching should choose his man and, putting
+ the beads round his neck, should at the same time put
+ the rope on him to draw him by force. But if they
+ should be too boisterous and it should not be possible
+ to succeed, they should be stabbed, the rope being
+ firmly held; and if by chance any of them should get
+ away, there should be men on land to charge upon them
+ with swords. Meanwhile, the little cannon on our barque
+ was to be kept ready to fire upon their companions in
+ case they should come to assist them, under cover of
+ which firearms the shallop could withdraw in security.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This plot, though carefully planned, fell far short of the success which
+ was anticipated. To catch a redskin with a noose required more skill than
+ was available. Accordingly, none were taken alive. Champlain says: 'We
+ retired to our barque after having done all we could.' Lescarbot adds:
+ 'Six or seven of the savages were hacked and hewed in pieces, who could
+ not run so lightly in the water as on shore, and were caught as they came
+ out by those of our men who had landed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus taken an eye for an eye, Poutrincourt began his homeward
+ voyage, and, after three or four escapes from shipwreck, reached Port
+ Royal on November 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain was now about to spend his last winter in Acadia. Mindful of
+ former experiences, he determined to fight scurvy by encouraging exercise
+ among the colonists and procuring for them an improved diet. A third
+ desideratum was cheerfulness. All these purposes he served through
+ founding the Ordre de Bon Temps, which proved to be in every sense the
+ life of the settlement. Champlain himself briefly describes the procedure
+ followed, but a far more graphic account is given by Lescarbot, whose
+ diffuse and lively style is illustrated to perfection in the following
+ passage:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ To keep our table joyous and well provided, an order
+ was established at the board of the said M. de
+ Poutrincourt, which was called the Order of Good Cheer,
+ originally proposed by Champlain. To this Order each
+ man of the said table was appointed Chief Steward in
+ his turn, which came round once a fortnight. Now, this
+ person had the duty of taking care that we were all
+ well and honourably provided for. This was so well
+ carried out that though the epicures of Paris often
+ tell us that we had no Rue aux Ours over there, as a
+ rule we made as good cheer as we could have in this
+ same Rue aux Ours, and at less cost. For there was no
+ one who, two days before his turn came, failed to go
+ hunting or fishing, and to bring back some delicacy
+ in addition to our ordinary fare. So well was this
+ carried out that never at breakfast did we lack some
+ savoury meat of flesh or fish, and still less at our
+ midday or evening meals; for that was our chief banquet,
+ at which the ruler of the feast or chief butler, whom
+ the savages called Atoctegic, having had everything
+ prepared by the cook, marched in, napkin on shoulder,
+ wand of office in hand, and around his neck the collar
+ of the Order, which was worth more than four crowns;
+ after him all the members of the Order carrying each
+ a dish. The same was repeated at dessert, though not
+ always with so much pomp. And at night, before giving
+ thanks to God, he handed over to his successor in the
+ charge the collar of the Order, with a cup of wine,
+ and they drank to each other. I have already said that
+ we had abundance of game, such as ducks, bustards,
+ grey and white geese, partridges, larks, and other
+ birds; moreover moose, caribou, beaver, otter, bear,
+ rabbits, wild-cats, racoons, and other animals such
+ as the savages caught, whereof we made dishes well
+ worth those of the cook-shop in the Rue aux Ours, and
+ far more; for of all our meats none is so tender as
+ moose-meat (whereof we also made excellent pasties)
+ and nothing so delicate as beaver's tail. Yea, sometimes
+ we had half a dozen sturgeon at once, which the savages
+ brought us, part of which we bought, and allowed them
+ to sell the remainder publicly and to barter it for
+ bread, of which our men had abundance. As for the
+ ordinary rations brought from France, they were
+ distributed equally to great and small alike; and, as
+ we have said, the wine was served in like manner.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The results of this regime were most gratifying. The deaths from scurvy
+ dropped to seven, which represented a great proportionate decrease. At the
+ same time, intercourse with the Indians was put on a good basis thereby.
+ 'At these proceedings,' says Lescarbot, 'we always had twenty or thirty
+ savages&mdash;men, women, girls, and children&mdash;who looked on at our
+ manner of service. Bread was given them gratis, as one would do to the
+ poor. But as for the Sagamos Membertou, and other chiefs who came from
+ time to time, they sat at table eating and drinking like ourselves. And we
+ were glad to see them, while, on the contrary, their absence saddened us.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These citations bring into view the writer who has most copiously recorded
+ the early annals of Acadia&mdash;Marc Lescarbot. He was a lawyer, and at
+ this date about forty years old. Having come to Port Royal less as a
+ colonist than as a guest of Poutrincourt, he had no investment at stake.
+ But contact with America kindled the enthusiasm of which he had a large
+ supply, and converted him into the historian of New France. His story of
+ the winter he passed at Port Royal is quite unlike other narratives of
+ colonial experience at this period. Champlain was a geographer and
+ preoccupied with exploration. The Jesuits were missionaries and
+ preoccupied with the conversion of the savages. Lescarbot had a literary
+ education, which Champlain lacked, and, unlike the Jesuits, he approached
+ life in America from the standpoint of a layman. His prolixity often
+ serves as a foil to the terseness of Champlain, and suggests that he must
+ have been a merciless talker. Yet, though inclined to be garrulous, he was
+ a good observer and had many correct ideas&mdash;notably the belief that
+ corn, wine, and cattle are a better foundation for a colony than gold or
+ silver mines. In temperament he and Champlain were very dissimilar, and
+ evidence of mutual coolness may be found in their writings. These we shall
+ consider at a later stage. For the present it is enough to note that both
+ men sat at Poutrincourt's table and adorned the Order of Good Cheer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile De Monts was in France, striving with all the foes of the
+ monopoly. Thanks to the fur trade, his company had paid its way during the
+ first two years, despite the losses at St Croix. The third season had been
+ much less prosperous, and at the same moment when the Dutch and the
+ Basques [Footnote: Traders from the extreme south of France, whose chief
+ port was St Jean de Luz. Though living on the confines of France and
+ Spain, the Basques were of different racial origin from both Spaniards and
+ French. While subject politically to France, their remoteness from the
+ main ports of Normandy and Brittany kept them out of touch with the
+ mariners of St Malo and Havre, save as collision arose between them in the
+ St Lawrence. Among the Basques there were always interlopers, even when St
+ Jean de Luz had been given a share in the monopoly. They are sometimes
+ called Spaniards, from their close neighbourhood to the Pyrenees.] were
+ breaking the monopoly by defiance, the hatters of Paris were demanding
+ that it should be withdrawn altogether. To this alliance of a powerful
+ guild with a majority of the traders, the company of De Monts succumbed,
+ and the news which Poutrincourt received when the first ship came in 1607
+ was that the colony must be abandoned. As the company itself was about to
+ be dissolved, this consequence was inevitable. Champlain in his
+ matter-of-fact way states that De Monts sent letters to Poutrincourt, 'by
+ which he directed him to bring back his company to France.' Lescarbot is
+ much more outspoken. Referring to the merits and struggles of De Monts, he
+ exclaims:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yet I fear that in the end he may be forced to give
+ it all up, to the great scandal and reproach of the
+ French name, which by such conduct is made a
+ laughing-stock and a byword among the nations. For as
+ though their wish was to oppose the conversion of
+ these poor Western peoples, and the glory of God and
+ of the King, we find a set of men full of avarice and
+ envy, who would not draw a sword in the service of
+ the King, nor suffer the slightest ill in the world
+ for the honour of God, but who yet put obstacles in
+ the way of our drawing any profit from the province,
+ even in order to furnish what is indispensable to the
+ foundation of such an enterprise; men who prefer to
+ see the English and Dutch win possession of it rather
+ than the French, and would fain have the name of God
+ remain unknown in those quarters. And it is such
+ godless people who are listened to, who are believed,
+ and who win their suits. O tempora, O mores!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On August 11, 1607, Port Royal was abandoned for the second time, and its
+ people, sailing by Cape Breton, reached Roscou in Brittany at the end of
+ September. The subsequent attempt of Poutrincourt and his family to
+ re-establish the colony at Port Royal belongs to the history of Acadia
+ rather than to the story of Champlain. But remembering the spirit in which
+ he and De Monts strove, one feels glad that Lescarbot spoke his mind
+ regarding the opponents who baffled their sincere and persistent efforts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. CHAMPLAIN AT QUEBEC
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ From the Island of Orleans to Quebec the distance is
+ a league. I arrived there on the third of July, when
+ I searched for a place suitable for our settlement,
+ but I could find none more convenient or better than
+ the point of Quebec, so called by the savages, which
+ was covered with nut-trees. I at once employed a
+ portion of our workmen in cutting them down, that we
+ might construct our habitation there: one I set to
+ sawing boards, another to making a cellar and digging
+ ditches, another I sent to Tadoussac with the barque
+ to get supplies. The first thing we made was the
+ storehouse for keeping under cover our supplies, which
+ was promptly accomplished through the zeal of all,
+ and my attention to the work.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus opens Champlain's account of the place with which his name is linked
+ imperishably. He was the founder of Quebec and its preserver. During his
+ lifetime the results seemed pitifully small, but the task once undertaken
+ was never abandoned. By steadfastness he prevailed, and at his death had
+ created a colony which became the New France of Talon and Frontenac, of La
+ Salle and D'Iberville, of Brebeuf and Laval. If Venice from amid her
+ lagoons could exclaim, Esto perpetua, Quebec, firm based upon her cliff,
+ can say to the rest of Canada, Attendite ad petram unde excisi estis&mdash;'Look
+ unto the rock whence ye are hewn.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain's Quebec was very poor in everything but courage. The fact that
+ it was founded by the men who had just failed in Acadia gives proof of
+ this virtue. Immediately upon his return from Port Royal to France,
+ Champlain showed De Monts a map and plan which embodied the result of his
+ explorations during the last three years. They then took counsel regarding
+ the future, and with Champlain's encouragement De Monts 'resolved to
+ continue his noble and meritorious undertaking, notwithstanding the
+ hardships and labours of the past.' It is significant that once more
+ Champlain names exploration as the distinctive purpose of De Monts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To expect a subsidy from the crown was futile, but Henry felt compunction
+ for his abrupt recall of the monopoly. The result was that De Monts, in
+ recognition of his losses, was given a further monopoly&mdash;for the
+ season of 1608 only. At the same time, he was expressly relieved from the
+ obligation to take out colonists. On this basis De Monts found partners
+ among the merchants of Rouen, and three ships were fitted out&mdash;one
+ for Acadia, the others for the St Lawrence. Champlain, as lieutenant, was
+ placed in charge of the Laurentian expedition. With him went the
+ experienced and invaluable Pontgrave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly seventy-five years had now passed since Jacques Cartier first came
+ to anchor at the foot of Cape Diamond. During this period no one had
+ challenged the title of France to the shores of the St Lawrence; in fact,
+ a country so desolate made no appeal to the French themselves. Roberval's
+ tragic experience at Cap Rouge had proved a warning. To the average
+ Frenchman of the sixteenth century Canada meant what it afterwards meant
+ to Sully and Voltaire. It was a tract of snow; a land of barbarians,
+ bears, and beavers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The development of the fur trade into a staple industry changed this point
+ of view to a limited extent. The government, as we have seen, considered
+ it desirable that colonists should be established in New France at the
+ expense of traders. For the St Lawrence, however, the first and only
+ fruits of this enlightened policy had been Chauvin's sixteen derelicts at
+ Tadoussac.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The founding of Quebec represents private enterprise, and not an
+ expenditure of money by Henry IV for the sake of promoting colonization.
+ De Monts and Champlain were determined to give France a foothold in
+ America. The rights upon which the venture of 1608 was financed did not
+ run beyond the year. Thenceforth trade was to be free. It follows that De
+ Monts and his partners, in building a station at Quebec, did not rely for
+ their expenses upon any special favours from the crown. They placed their
+ reliance upon themselves, feeling confident of their power to hold a fair
+ share of the trade against all comers. For Champlain Quebec was a fixed
+ point on the way to the Orient. For De Monts it was a key to the commerce
+ of the great river. None of his rivals would begin the season of 1609 with
+ a permanent post in Canada. Thus part of the anticipated profits for 1608
+ was invested to secure an advantage in the approaching competition. The
+ whole success of the plan depended upon the mutual confidence of De Monts
+ and Champlain, both of whom unselfishly sought the advancement of French
+ interests in America&mdash;De Monts, the courageous capitalist and
+ promoter; Champlain, the explorer whose discoveries were sure to enlarge
+ the area of trading operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pontgrave sailed from Honfleur on April 5, 1608. Champlain followed eight
+ days later, reaching Tadoussac at the beginning of June. Here trouble
+ awaited him. The Basque traders, who always defied the monopoly, had set
+ upon Pontgrave with cannon and muskets, killing one man and severely
+ wounding two others, besides himself. Going ashore, Champlain found
+ Pontgrave very ill and the Basques in full possession. To fight was to run
+ the risk of ruining De Monts' whole enterprise, and as the Basques were
+ alarmed at what they had done, Darache, their captain, signed an agreement
+ that he would not molest Pontgrave or do anything prejudicial to the
+ rights of De Monts. This basis of compromise makes it clear that Pontgrave
+ was in charge of the season's trade, while Champlain's personal concern
+ was to found the settlement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An unpleasant dispute was thus adjusted, but the incident had a still more
+ unpleasant sequel. Leaving Tadoussac on June 30, Champlain reached Quebec
+ in four days, and at once began to erect his storehouse. A few days later
+ he stood in grave peril of his life through conspiracy among his own men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ringleader was a locksmith named Jean Duval, who had been at Port
+ Royal and narrowly escaped death from the arrows of the Cape Cod Indians.
+ Whether he framed his plot in collusion with the Basques is not quite
+ clear, but it seems unlikely that he should have gone so far as he did
+ without some encouragement. His plan was simply to kill Champlain and
+ deliver Quebec to the Basques in return for a rich reward, either promised
+ or expected. Some of the men he had no chance to corrupt, for they were
+ aboard the barques, guarding stores till a shelter could be built. Working
+ among the rest, Duval 'suborned four of the worst characters, as he
+ supposed, telling them a thousand falsehoods and presenting to them
+ prospects of acquiring riches.' The evidence subsequently showed that
+ Champlain was either to be strangled when unarmed, or shot at night as he
+ answered to a false alarm. The conspirators made a mutual promise not to
+ betray each other, on penalty that the first who opened his mouth should
+ be poniarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of this deadly danger Champlain escaped through the confession of a
+ vacillating spirit named Natel, who regretted his share in the plot, but,
+ once involved, had fears of the poniard. Finally he confessed to Testu,
+ the pilot, who immediately informed Champlain. Questioned as to the
+ motive, Natel replied that 'nothing had impelled them, except that they
+ had imagined that by giving up the place into the hands of the Basques or
+ Spaniards they might all become rich, and that they did not want to go
+ back to France.' Duval, with five others, was then seized and taken to
+ Tadoussac. Later in the summer Pontgrave brought the prisoners back to
+ Quebec, where evidence was taken before a court-martial consisting of
+ Champlain, Pontgrave, a captain, a surgeon, a first mate, a second mate,
+ and some sailors. The sentence condemned four to death, of whom three were
+ afterwards sent to France and put at the discretion of De Monts. Duval was
+ 'strangled and hung at Quebec, and his head was put on the end of a pike,
+ to be set in the most conspicuous place on our fort, that he might serve
+ as an example to those who remained, leading them to deport themselves
+ correctly in future, in the discharge of their duty; and that the
+ Spaniards and Basques, of whom there were large numbers in the country,
+ might not glory in the event.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be seen from the recital of Duval's conspiracy that Champlain was
+ fortunate to escape the fate of Hudson and La Salle. While this cause
+ celebre was running its course to a tragic end, the still more famous
+ habitation grew day by day under the hands of busy workmen. As fruits of a
+ crowded and exciting summer Champlain could point to a group of three
+ two-storeyed buildings. 'Each one,' he says, 'was three fathoms long and
+ two and a half wide. The storehouse was six fathoms long and three wide,
+ with a fine cellar six feet deep. I had a gallery made all round our
+ buildings, on the outside, at the second storey, which proved very
+ convenient. There were also ditches, fifteen feet wide and six deep. On
+ the outer side of the ditches I constructed several spurs, which enclosed
+ a part of the dwelling, at the points where we placed our cannon. Before
+ the habitation there is a place four fathoms wide and six or seven long,
+ looking out upon the river-bank. Surrounding the habitation are very good
+ gardens.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three dwellings of eighteen by fifteen feet each were a sufficiently
+ modest starting-point for continental ambitions, even when supplemented by
+ a storehouse of thirty-six feet by eighteen. In calling the gardens very
+ good Champlain must have been speaking with relation to the circumstances,
+ or else they were very small, for there is abundant witness to the
+ sufferings which Quebec in its first twenty years might have escaped with
+ the help of really abundant gardens. At St Croix and Port Royal an attempt
+ had been made to plant seeds, and at Quebec Champlain doubtless renewed
+ the effort, though with small practical result. The point is important in
+ its bearing on the nature of the settlement. Quebec, despite such gardens
+ as surrounded the habitation, was by origin an outpost of the fur trade,
+ with a small, floating, and precarious population. Louis Hebert, the first
+ real colonist, did not come till 1617.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lacking vegetables, Quebec fed itself in part from the river and the
+ forest. But almost all the food was brought from France. At times there
+ was game, though less than at Port Royal. The river supplied eels in
+ abundance, but when badly cooked they caused a fatal dysentery. The first
+ winter was a repetition of the horrors experienced at St Croix, with even
+ a higher death-rate. Scurvy began in February and lasted till the end of
+ April. Of the eighteen whom it attacked, ten died. Dysentery claimed
+ others. On June 5, 1609, word came that Pontgrave had arrived at
+ Tadoussac. Champlain's comment is eloquent in its brevity. 'This
+ intelligence gave me much satisfaction, as we entertained hopes of
+ assistance from him. Out of the twenty-eight at first forming our company
+ only eight remained, and half of these were ailing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monopoly granted to De Monts had now reached its close, and trade was
+ open to all comers. From 1609 until 1613 this unrestricted competition ran
+ its course, with the result that a larger market was created for beaver
+ skins, while nothing was done to build up New France as a colony. On the
+ whole, the most notable feature of the period is the establishment of
+ close personal relations between Champlain and the Indians. It was then
+ that he became the champion of the Algonquins and Hurons against the
+ Iroquois League or Five Nations, inaugurating a policy which was destined
+ to have profound consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The considerations which governed Champlain in his dealings with the
+ Indians lay quite outside the rights and wrongs of their tribal wars. His
+ business was to explore the continent on behalf of France, and accordingly
+ he took conditions as he found them. The Indians had souls to be saved,
+ but that was the business of the missionaries. In the state of nature all
+ savages were much like wild animals, and alliance with one nation or
+ another was a question which naturally settled itself upon the basis of
+ drainage basins. Lands within the Laurentian watershed were inhabited
+ mainly by Algonquins and Hurons, whose chief desire in life was to protect
+ themselves from the Iroquois and avenge past injuries. The Five Nations
+ dwelt far south from the Sault St Louis and did not send their furs there
+ for the annual barter. Champlain, ever in quest of a route to the East,
+ needed friends along the great rivers of the wilderness. The way to secure
+ them, and at the same time to widen the trading area, was to fight for the
+ savages of the St Lawrence and the Ottawa against those of the Mohawk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Champlain was a good ally, as he proved in the forest wars of 1609 and
+ 1615. With all their shortcomings, the Indians knew how to take the
+ measure of a man. The difference between a warrior and a trader was
+ especially clear to their untutored minds, they themselves being much
+ better fighters than men of commerce. Champlain, like others, suffered
+ from their caprice, but they respected his bravery and trusted his word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the next chapter we shall attempt to follow Champlain through the
+ wilderness, accompanied by its inhabitants, who were his guides and
+ friends. For the present we must pursue the fortunes of Quebec, whose
+ existence year by year hung upon the risk that court intrigue would
+ prevail against the determination of two brave men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From 1608 till 1611 De Monts had two partners, named Collier and Legendre,
+ both citizens of Rouen. It was with the money of these three that the post
+ at Quebec had been built and equipped. Champlain was their lieutenant and
+ Pontgrave the commander of their trading ships. After four years of
+ experience Collier and Legendre found the results unsatisfactory. 'They
+ were unwilling,' says Champlain, 'to continue in the association, as there
+ was no commission forbidding others from going to the new discoveries and
+ trading with the inhabitants of the country. Sieur de Monts, seeing this,
+ bargained with them for what remained at the settlement at Quebec, in
+ consideration of a sum of money which he gave them for their share.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the intrepid De Monts became sole proprietor of the habitation, and
+ whatever clustered round it, at the foot of Cape Diamond. But the property
+ was worthless if the fur trade could not be put on a stable basis. Quebec
+ during its first three years had been a disappointment because, contrary
+ to expectation, it gave its founders no advantage over their competitors
+ which equalled the cost of maintenance. De Monts was still ready to assist
+ Champlain in his explorations, but his resources, never great, were
+ steadily diminishing, and while trade continued unprofitable there were no
+ funds for exploration. Moreover, the assassination of Henry IV in 1610
+ weakened De Monts at court. Whatever Henry's shortcomings as a friend of
+ Huguenots and colonial pioneers, their chances had been better with him
+ than they now were with Marie de Medicis [Footnote: The second and
+ surviving wife of Henry IV&mdash;an Italian by birth and in close sympathy
+ with Spain. As regent for her son, Louis XIII, she did much to reverse the
+ policy of Henry IV, both foreign and domestic.] Champlain states that De
+ Monts' engagements did not permit him to prosecute his interests at court.
+ Probably his engagements would have been less pressing had he felt more
+ sure of favour. In any event, he made over to Champlain the whole conduct
+ of such negotiations as were called for by the unsatisfactory state of
+ affairs on the St Lawrence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain went to France. What follows is an illuminating comment upon the
+ conditions that prevailed under the Bourbon monarchy. As Champlain saw
+ things, the merchants who clamoured for freedom of trade were greedy
+ pot-hunters. 'All they want,' he says, 'is that men should expose
+ themselves to a thousand dangers to discover peoples and territories, that
+ they themselves may have the profit and others the hardship. It is not
+ reasonable that one should capture the lamb and another go off with the
+ fleece. If they had been willing to participate in our discoveries, use
+ their means and risk their persons, they would have given evidence of
+ their honour and nobleness, but, on the contrary, they show clearly that
+ they are impelled by pure malice that they may enjoy the fruit of our
+ labours equally with ourselves.' Against folk of this sort Champlain felt
+ he had to protect the national interests which were so dear to him and De
+ Monts. As things then went, there was only one way to secure protection.
+ At Fontainebleau a great noble was not habituated to render help without
+ receiving a consideration. But protection could be bought by those who
+ were able to pay for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patron selected by Champlain was the Comte de Soissons, a Bourbon by
+ lineage and first cousin of Henry IV. His kinship to the boy-king gave
+ him, among other privileges, the power to exact from the regent gifts and
+ offices as the price of his support. Possessing this leverage, Soissons
+ caused himself to be appointed viceroy of Canada, with a twelve-year
+ monopoly of the fur trade above Quebec. The monopoly thus re-established,
+ its privileges could be sublet, Soissons receiving cash for the rights he
+ conceded to the merchants, and they taking their chance to turn a profit
+ out of the transaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such at least was the theory; but before Soissons could turn his post into
+ a source of revenue he died. Casting about for a suitable successor,
+ Champlain selected another prince of the blood&mdash;Henri de Bourbon,
+ Prince de Conde, who duly became viceroy of Canada and holder of the
+ monopoly in succession to his uncle, the Comte de Soissons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The part of Champlain in these transactions is very conspicuous, and
+ justly so. There was no advantage in being viceroy of Canada unless the
+ post produced a revenue, and before the viceroy could receive a revenue
+ some one was needed to organize the chief Laurentian traders into a
+ company strong enough to pay Soissons or Conde a substantial sum.
+ Champlain was convinced that the stability of trade (upon which, in turn,
+ exploration depended) could be secured only in this way. It was he who
+ memorialized President Jeannin; [Footnote: One of the chief advisers of
+ Marie de Medicis. In the early part of his career he was President of the
+ Parlement of Dijon and an important member of the extreme Catholic party.
+ After the retirement of the Duc de Sully (1611) he was placed in charge of
+ the finances of France.] enlisted the sympathy of the king's almoner,
+ Beaulieu; appealed to the royal council; proposed the office of viceroy to
+ Soissons; and began the endeavour to organize a new trading company.
+ Considering that early in 1612 he suffered a serious fall from his horse,
+ this record of activity is sufficiently creditable for one twelve-month.
+ Meanwhile the Indians at Sault St Louis grieved at his absence, and his
+ enemies told them he was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until 1614 that the new programme in its entirety could be
+ carried out. This time the delay came, not from the court, but from the
+ merchants. Negotiations were in progress when the ships sailed for the
+ voyage of 1613, but Champlain could not remain to conclude them, as he
+ felt that he must keep faith with the Indians. However, on his return to
+ France that autumn, he resumed the effort, and by the spring of 1614. the
+ merchants of Rouen, St Malo, and La Rochelle had been brought to terms
+ among themselves as participants in a monopoly which was leased from the
+ viceroy. Conde received a thousand crowns a year, and the new company also
+ agreed to take out six families of colonists each season. In return it was
+ granted the monopoly for eleven years. De Monts was a member of the
+ company and Quebec became its headquarters in Canada. But the moving
+ spirit was Champlain, who was appointed lieutenant to the viceroy with a
+ salary and the right to levy for his own purposes four men from each ship
+ trading in the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more disappointment followed. Save for De Monts, Champlain's company
+ was not inspired by Champlain's patriotism. During the first three years
+ of its existence the obligation to colonize was wilfully disregarded,
+ while in the fourth year the treatment accorded Louis Hebert shows that
+ good faith counted for as little with the fur traders when they acted in
+ association as when they were engaged in cut-throat competition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain excepted, Hebert was the most admirable of those who risked
+ death in the attempt to found a settlement at Quebec. He was not a Norman
+ peasant, but a Parisian apothecary. We have already seen that he took part
+ in the Acadian venture of De Monts and Poutrincourt. After the capture of
+ Port Royal by the English he returned to France (1613) and reopened his
+ shop. Three years later Champlain was authorized by the company to offer
+ him and his family favourable terms if they would emigrate to Quebec, the
+ consideration being two hundred crowns a year for three years, besides
+ maintenance. On this understanding Hebert sold his house and shop, bought
+ an equipment for the new home, and set off with his family to embark at
+ Honfleur. Here he found that Champlain's shareholders were not prepared to
+ stand by their agreement. The company first beat him down from two hundred
+ to one hundred crowns a year, and then stipulated that he, his wife, his
+ children, and his domestic should serve it for the three years during
+ which the grant was payable. Even at the end of three years, when he found
+ himself at liberty to till the soil, he was bound to sell produce to the
+ company at the prices prevalent in France. The company was to have his
+ perpetual service as a chemist for nothing, and he must promise in writing
+ to take no part in the fur trade. Hebert had cut off his retreat and was
+ forced to accept these hard terms, but it is not strange that under such
+ conditions colonists should have been few. Sagard, the Recollet
+ missionary, says the company treated Hebert so badly because it wished to
+ discourage colonization. What it wanted was the benefit of the monopoly,
+ without the obligation of finding settlers who had to be brought over for
+ nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man of honour like Champlain could not have tricked Hebert into the bad
+ bargain he made, and their friendship survived the incident. But a company
+ which transacted its business in this fashion was not likely to enjoy long
+ life. Its chief asset was Champlain's friendship with the Indians,
+ especially after his long sojourn with them in 1615 and 1616. Some years,
+ particularly 1617, showed a large profit, but as time went on friction
+ arose between the Huguenots of La Rochelle and the Catholics of Rouen.
+ Then there were interlopers to be prosecuted, and the quarrels of Conde
+ with the government brought with them trouble to the merchants whose
+ monopoly depended on his grant. For three years (1616-19) the viceroy of
+ Canada languished in the Bastille. Shortly after his release he sold his
+ viceregal rights to the Duke of Montmorency, Admiral of France. The price
+ was 11,000 crowns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1619 Champlain's company ventured to disagree with its founder, and, as
+ a consequence, another crisis arose in the affairs of New France. The
+ cause of dispute was the company's unwillingness to keep its promises
+ regarding colonization. Champlain protested. The company replied that
+ Pontgrave should be put in charge at Quebec. Champlain then said that
+ Pontgrave was his old friend, and he hoped they would always be friends,
+ but that he was at Quebec as the viceroy's representative, charged with
+ the duty of defending his interests. The leader of Champlain's opponents
+ among the shareholders was Boyer, a trader who had formerly given much
+ trouble to De Monts, but was now one of the associates. When in the spring
+ of 1619 Champlain attempted to sail for Quebec as usual, Boyer prevented
+ him from going aboard. There followed an appeal to the crown, in which
+ Champlain was fully sustained, and Boyer did penance by offering a public
+ apology before the Exchange at Rouen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shortly after this incident that Conde abdicated in favour of
+ Montmorency. The admiral, like his predecessor, accepted a thousand crowns
+ a year and named Champlain as his lieutenant. He also instituted an
+ inquiry regarding the alleged neglect of the company to maintain the post
+ at Quebec. The investigation showed that abundant cause existed for
+ depriving the company of its monopoly, and in consequence the grant was
+ transferred, on similar terms, to William and Emery de Caen. Here
+ complications at once ensued. The De Caens, who were natives of Rouen,
+ were also Huguenots, a fact that intensified the ill-feeling which had
+ already arisen on the St Lawrence between Catholic and heretic. The
+ dispute between the new beneficiaries and the company founded by Champlain
+ involved no change in the policy of the crown towards trade and
+ colonization. It was a quarrel of persons, which eventually reached a
+ settlement in 1622. The De Caens then compromised by reorganizing the
+ company and giving their predecessors five-twelfths of the shares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recital of these intricate events will at least illustrate the
+ difficulties which beset Champlain in his endeavour to build up New
+ France. There were problems enough even had he received loyal support from
+ the crown and the company. With the English and Dutch in full rivalry, he
+ saw that an aggressive policy of expansion and settlement became each year
+ more imperative. Instead, he was called on to withstand the cabals of
+ self-seeking traders who shirked their obligations, and to endure the
+ apathy of a government which was preoccupied with palace intrigues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Quebec itself the two bright spots were the convent of the Recollets
+ [Footnote: The Recollets were a branch of the Franciscan order, noted for
+ the austerity of their rule.] and the little farm of Louis Hebert. The
+ Recollets first came to New France in 1615, and began at once by language
+ study to prepare for their work among the Montagnais and Hurons. It was a
+ stipulation of the viceroy that six of them should be supported by the
+ company, and in the absence of parish priests they ministered to the
+ ungodly hangers-on of the fur trade as well as to the Indians. Louis
+ Hebert and his admirable family were very dear to the Fathers. In 1617 all
+ the buildings which had been erected at Quebec lay by the water's edge.
+ Hebert was the first to make a clearing on the heights. His first domain
+ covered less than ten acres, but it was well tilled. He built a stone
+ house, which was thirty-eight feet by nineteen. Besides making a garden,
+ he planted apple-trees and vines. He also managed to support some cattle.
+ When one considers what all this means in terms of food and comfort, it
+ may be guessed that the fur traders, wintering down below on salt pork and
+ smoked eels, must have felt much respect for the farmer in his stone
+ mansion on the cliff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have from Champlain's own lips a valuable statement as to the condition
+ of things at Quebec in 1627, the year when Louis Hebert died. 'We were in
+ all,' he says, 'sixty-five souls, including men, women, and children.' Of
+ the sixty-five only eighteen were adult males fit for hard work, and this
+ small number must be reduced to two or three if we include only the
+ tillers of the soil. Besides these, a few adventurous spirits were away in
+ the woods with the Indians, learning their language and endeavouring to
+ exploit the beaver trade; but twenty years after the founding of Quebec
+ the French in Canada, all told, numbered less than one hundred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contrast with this the state of Virginia fifteen years after the
+ settlement of Jamestown. 'By 1622,' says John Fiske, 'the population of
+ Virginia was at least 4000, the tobacco fields were flourishing and
+ lucrative, durable houses had been built and made comfortable with
+ furniture brought from England, and the old squalor was everywhere giving
+ way to thrift. The area of colonization was pushed up the James River as
+ far as Richmond.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This contrast is not to be interpreted to the personal disadvantage of
+ Champlain. The slow growth and poverty of Quebec were due to no fault of
+ his. It is rather the measure of his greatness that he was undaunted by
+ disappointment and unembittered by the pettiness of spirit which met him
+ at every turn. A memorial which he presented in 1618 to the Chamber of
+ Commerce at Paris discloses his dream of what might be: a city at Quebec
+ named Ludovica, a city equal in size to St Denis and filled with noble
+ buildings grouped round the Church of the Redeemer. Tributary to this
+ capital was a vast region watered by the St Lawrence and abounding 'in
+ rolling plains, beautiful forests, and rivers full of fish.' From Ludovica
+ the heathen were to be converted and a passage discovered to the East. So
+ important a trade route would be developed, that from the tolls alone
+ there would be revenue to construct great public works. Rich mines and fat
+ cornfields fill the background.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the Quebec of Champlain's vision&mdash;if only France would see
+ it so! But in the Quebec of reality a few survivors saw the hunger of
+ winter yield to the starvation of spring. They lived on eels and roots
+ till June should bring the ships and food from home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. CHAMPLAIN IN THE WILDERNESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Champlain's journeyings with the Indians were the holiday of his life, for
+ at no other time was he so free to follow the bent of his genius. First
+ among the incentives which drew him to the wilderness was his ambition to
+ discover the pathway to China. In 1608 the St Lawrence had not been
+ explored beyond the Lachine Rapids, nor the Richelieu beyond Chambly&mdash;while
+ the Ottawa was known only by report. Beyond Lake St Louis stretched a
+ mysterious world, through the midst of which flowed the Great River. For
+ an explorer and a patriot the opportunity was priceless. The acquisition
+ of vast territory for the French crown, the enlargement of the trade zone,
+ the discovery of a route to Cathay, the prospect of Arcadian joys and
+ exciting adventures&mdash;beside such promptings hardship and danger
+ became negligible. And when exploring the wilderness Champlain was in full
+ command. Off the coast of Norumbega his wishes, as geographer, had been
+ subject to the special projects of De Monts and Poutrincourt. At
+ Fontainebleau he waited for weeks and months in the antechambers of
+ prelates or nobles. But when conducting an expedition through the forest
+ he was lord and master, a chieftain from whose arquebus flew winged death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of Champlain's expeditions along these great secluded waterways,
+ and across the portages of the forest, makes the most agreeable page of
+ his life both for writer and reader, since it is here that he himself is
+ most clearly in the foreground. At no point can his narrative be thought
+ dull, compact as it is and always in touch with energetic action. But the
+ details of fur trading at Tadoussac and the Sault St Louis, or even of
+ voyaging along the Acadian seaboard, are far less absorbing than the tale
+ of the canoe and the war party. Amid the depths of the interior Champlain
+ reaped his richest experiences as an explorer. With the Indians for his
+ allies and enemies he reached his fullest stature as a leader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not important to dwell upon the minor excursions which Champlain
+ made from his headquarters at Quebec into the country of the Montagnais.
+ [Footnote: An Algonquin tribe dwelling to the north of the St Lawrence,
+ for the most part between the Saguenay and the St Maurice.] He saw little
+ of the rocky northland which, with its myriad lakes and splendid streams,
+ sweeps from the St Lawrence to Hudson Bay. Southward and westward lay his
+ course to the cantons of the Iroquois south of Lake Ontario and the
+ villages of the Hurons north of Lake Simcoe. Above all, the expeditions of
+ 1609, 1613, and 1615 are the central episodes of his work as an explorer,
+ each marked by a distinct motive and abounding with adventures. In 1609 he
+ discovered Lake Champlain and fought his first battle with the Iroquois.
+ In 1613 he was decoyed by a lying guide into a fruitless search for the
+ North-West Passage by the route of the Ottawa. In 1615 he discovered Lake
+ Huron, traversed what is now Central Ontario, and attacked the Iroquois in
+ the heart of their own country. These three journeys make the sum of
+ Champlain's achievements as a pioneer of the interior. For all three,
+ likewise, we have his own story, upon which all other versions are based
+ and from which they draw their most striking details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The discovery of Lake Champlain had its root in Champlain's promise to the
+ Algonquins that he would aid them in their strife with the Iroquois. In
+ turn this promise was based upon the policy of conciliating those savage
+ tribes from whom the French derived their supply of furs, and with whom
+ throughout the St Lawrence basin they most constantly came in contact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the year which followed the founding of Quebec. Of the twenty-eight
+ who entered upon the first winter eight only had survived, and half of
+ these were ailing. On June 5 relief came in the person of Des Marais, who
+ announced that his father-in-law, Pontgrave, was already at Tadoussac.
+ Champlain at once set out to meet him, and it was arranged that Pontgrave
+ should take charge of the settlement for the coming year, while Champlain
+ fulfilled his promise to aid the Algonquins in their war with the
+ Iroquois. The full plan required that Pontgrave should spend the winter in
+ Canada, while Champlain, after his summer campaign, was to return to
+ France with a report of his explorations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indians had stated that the route to the land of the Iroquois was
+ easy, and Champlain's original design was to proceed in a shallop capable
+ of carrying twenty Frenchmen. Early in July he reached the mouth of the
+ Richelieu, but on arriving at Chambly he found it quite impossible to pass
+ the falls with his shallop. Either the expedition must be abandoned or the
+ plan be radically changed, with the consequence of incurring much greater
+ risks. To advance meant sending back the shallop with its crew and stores,
+ embarking in a canoe, and trusting wholly to the good faith of the
+ savages. The decision was not easy. 'I was much troubled,' says Champlain.
+ 'And it gave me especial dissatisfaction to go back without seeing a very
+ large lake, filled with handsome islands and with large tracts of fine
+ land bordering on the lake, where their enemies lived, according to their
+ representations. After duly thinking over the matter I determined to go
+ and fulfil my promise and carry out my desire. Accordingly I embarked with
+ the savages in their canoes, taking with me two men, who went cheerfully.
+ After making known my plan to Des Marais and others in the shallop, I
+ requested the former to return to our settlement with the rest of our
+ company, giving them the assurance that in a short time, by God's grace, I
+ would return to them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having convinced himself, Champlain was next forced to convince the
+ Indians, whose first impulse was to abandon the campaign when they found
+ that they would be accompanied by only three of the Frenchmen. Champlain's
+ firmness, however, communicated itself to them, and on July 12 they set
+ out from Chambly Basin to commence the portage. At the top of the rapid a
+ review of forces was held, and it proved that the Indians numbered sixty
+ men, equipped with twenty-four canoes. Advancing through a beautifully
+ wooded country, the little war-party encamped at a point not far below the
+ outlet of Lake Champlain, taking the precaution to protect themselves by a
+ rough fortification of tree trunks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point Champlain introduces a graphic statement regarding the
+ methods which the Indians employ to guard against surprise. On three sides
+ they protect the camp by fallen trees, leaving the river-bank without a
+ barricade in order that they may take quickly to their canoes. Then, as
+ soon as the camp has been fortified, they send out nine picked men in
+ three canoes to reconnoitre for a distance of two or three leagues. But
+ before nightfall these scouts return, and then all lie down to sleep,
+ without leaving any pickets or sentries on duty. When Champlain
+ remonstrated with them for such gross carelessness, they replied that they
+ worked hard enough during the daytime. The normal formation of an Indian
+ war-party embraced three divisions&mdash;the scouts, the main body, and
+ the hunters, the last always remaining in the rear and chasing their game
+ in a direction from which they did not anticipate the appearance of the
+ enemy. Having arrived at a distance of two or three days' march from their
+ enemies, they united in a single party (save for the scouts) and advanced
+ stealthily by night. At this juncture their food became baked Indian meal
+ soaked in water. They hid by day and made no fire, save that required to
+ smoke their tobacco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus does Champlain describe the savage as he is about to fall upon his
+ foe. He gives special prominence to the soothsayer, who on the eve of
+ battle enters into elaborate intercourse with the devil. Inside a wooden
+ hut the necromancer lies prostrate on the ground, motionless. Then he
+ springs to his feet and begins to torment himself, counterfeiting strange
+ tones to represent the speech of the devil, and carrying on violent antics
+ which leave him in a stream of perspiration. Outside the hut the Indians
+ sit round on their haunches like apes and fancy that they can see fire
+ proceeding from the roof, although the devil appears to the soothsayer in
+ the form of a stone. Finally, the chiefs, when they have by these means
+ learned that they will meet their enemy and kill a sufficient number,
+ arrange the order of battle. Sticks a foot long are taken, one for each
+ warrior, and these are laid out on a level place five or six feet square.
+ The leader then explains the order of battle, after which the warriors
+ substitute themselves for the sticks and go through the manoeuvres till
+ they can do them without confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this description of tactics we pass speedily to a story of real war.
+ Reaching Lake Champlain, the party skirted the western shore, with fine
+ views of the Green Mountains, on the summit of which Champlain mistook
+ white limestone for snow. On July 29, at Crown Point, the Iroquois were
+ encountered at about ten o'clock in the evening. Thus the first real
+ battle of French and Indians took place near that remarkable spot where
+ Lake Champlain and Lake George draw close together&mdash;the Ticonderoga
+ of Howe, the Carillon of Montcalm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Algonquins were in good courage, for, besides the muskets of the three
+ Frenchmen, they were inspired by a dream of Champlain that he had seen the
+ Iroquois drowning in a lake. As soon as the enemies saw each other, both
+ began to utter loud cries and make ready their weapons. The Algonquins
+ kept out on the water; the Iroquois went ashore and built a barricade.
+ When the Algonquins had made ready for battle
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ they dispatched two canoes to the enemy to inquire if
+ they wished to fight, to which the latter replied that
+ they wished nothing else; but they said that at present
+ there was not much light, and that it would be necessary
+ to wait for day so as to be able to recognize each
+ other; and that as soon as the sun rose they would
+ offer us battle. This was agreed to by our side.
+ Meanwhile the entire night was spent in dancing and
+ singing, on both sides, with endless insults and other
+ talk; as how little courage we had, how feeble a
+ resistance we should make against their arms, and that
+ when day came we should realize it to our ruin. Ours
+ also were not slow in retorting, telling them that
+ they would see such execution of arms as never before,
+ together with an abundance of such talk as is not
+ unusual in the siege of a town.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Care had been taken by the Algonquins that the presence of Champlain and
+ his two companions should come to the Iroquois as a complete surprise.
+ Each of the Frenchmen was in a separate canoe, convoyed by the Montagnais.
+ At daylight each put on light armour and, armed with an arquebus, went
+ ashore. Champlain was near enough the barricade to see nearly two hundred
+ Iroquois, 'stout and rugged in appearance. They came at a slow pace
+ towards us, with a dignity and assurance which greatly impressed me,
+ having three chiefs at their head.' Champlain, when urged by his allies to
+ make sure of killing the three chiefs, replied that he would do his best,
+ and that in any case he would show them his courage and goodwill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then began the fight, which must be described in Champlain's own words,
+ for in all his writings there is no more famous passage.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ As soon as we had landed, they began to run for some
+ two hundred paces towards their enemies, who stood
+ firmly, not having as yet noticed my companions, who
+ went into the woods with some savages. Our men began
+ to call me with loud cries; and in order to give me
+ a passage way they opened in two parts and put me at
+ their head, where I marched some twenty paces in
+ advance of the rest, until I was within about twenty
+ paces of the enemy, who at once noticed me and, halting,
+ gazed at me, as I did also at them. When I saw them
+ make a move to fire at us, I rested my musket against
+ my cheek and aimed directly at one of the three chiefs.
+ With the same shot two fell to the ground; and one of
+ their men was so wounded that he died some time after.
+ I had loaded my musket with four balls. When our side
+ saw this shot so favourable for them, they began to
+ raise such loud cries that one could not have heard
+ it thunder. Meanwhile the arrows flew on both sides.
+ The Iroquois were greatly astonished that two men had
+ been so quickly killed, although they were equipped
+ with armour woven from cotton thread and with wood
+ which was proof against their arrows. This caused
+ great alarm among them. As I was loading again, one
+ of my companions fired a shot from the woods, which
+ astonished them anew to such a degree that, seeing
+ their chiefs dead, they lost courage and took to
+ flight, abandoning their camp and fort and fleeing
+ into the woods, whither I pursued them, killing still
+ more of them. Our savages also killed several of them
+ and took ten or twelve prisoners. The remainder escaped
+ with the wounded. Fifteen or sixteen were wounded on
+ our side with arrow shots, but they were soon healed.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The spoils of victory included a large quantity of Indian corn, together
+ with a certain amount of meal, and also some of the native armour which
+ the Iroquois had thrown away in order to effect their escape. Then
+ followed a feast and the torture of one of the prisoners, whose sufferings
+ were mercifully concluded by a ball from Champlain's musket, delivered in
+ such wise that the unfortunate did not see the shot. Like Montcalm and
+ other French commanders of a later date, Champlain found it impossible to
+ curb wholly the passions of his savage allies. In this case his
+ remonstrances had the effect of gaining for the victim a coup de grace&mdash;which
+ may be taken as a measure of Champlain's prestige. The atrocious savagery
+ practised before and after death is described in full detail. Champlain
+ concludes the lurid picture as follows: 'This is the manner in which these
+ people behave towards those whom they capture in war, for whom it would be
+ better to die fighting or to kill themselves on the spur of the moment, as
+ many do rather than fall into the hands of their enemies.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond the point at which this battle was fought Champlain did not go. At
+ Ticonderoga he was within eighty miles of the site of Albany. Had he
+ continued, he would have reached the Hudson from the north in the same
+ summer the Half Moon [Footnote: Henry Hudson, an English mariner with a
+ Dutch crew, entered the mouth of the Hudson in a boat called the Half Moon
+ on September 4, 1609. As named by him, the river was called the 'Great
+ North River of New Netherland.'] entered it from the mouth. But the
+ Algonquins were content with their victory, though they candidly stated
+ that there was an easy route from the south end of Lake George to 'a river
+ flowing into the sea on the Norumbega coast near that of Florida.' The
+ return to Quebec and Tadoussac was attended by no incident of moment. The
+ Montagnais, on parting with Champlain at Tadoussac, generously gave him
+ the head of an Iroquois and a pair of arms, with the request that they be
+ carried to the king of France. The Algonquins had already taken their
+ departure at Chambly, where, says Champlain, 'we separated with loud
+ protestations of mutual friendship. They asked me whether I would not like
+ to go into their country to assist them with continued fraternal
+ relations; and I promised that I would do so.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a contribution to geographical knowledge the expedition of 1609
+ disclosed the existence of a noble lake, to which Champlain fitly gave his
+ own name. Its dimensions he considerably over-estimated, but in all
+ essential respects its situation was correctly described, while his
+ comments on the flora and fauna are very interesting. The garpike as he
+ saw it, with amplifications from the Indians as they had seen it, gave him
+ the subject for a good fish story. He was deeply impressed, too, by the
+ richness of the vegetation. His attack on the Iroquois was not soon
+ forgotten by that relentless foe, and prepared a store of trouble for the
+ colony he founded. But the future was closed to his view, and for the
+ moment his was the glorious experience of being the first to gaze with
+ European eyes upon a lake fairer and grander than his own France could
+ show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four years elapsed before Champlain was enabled to plunge once more into
+ the depths of the forest&mdash;this time only to meet with the severest
+ disappointment of his life. Much has been said already regarding his
+ ambition to discover a short route to Cathay. This was the great prize for
+ which he would have sacrificed everything save loyalty to the king and
+ duty to the church. For a moment he seemed on the point of gaining it.
+ Then the truth was brutally disclosed, and he found that he had been
+ wilfully deceived by an impostor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a feature of Champlain's policy that from time to time French
+ youths should spend the winter with the Indians&mdash;hunting with them,
+ living in their settlements, exploring their country, and learning their
+ language. Of Frenchmen thus trained to woodcraft during Champlain's
+ lifetime the most notable were Etienne Brule, Nicolas Vignau, Nicolas
+ Marsolet, and Jean Nicolet. Unfortunately the three first did not leave an
+ unclouded record. Brule, after becoming a most accomplished guide, turned
+ traitor and aided the English in 1629. Champlain accuses Marsolet of a
+ like disloyalty. [Footnote: Marsolet's defence was that he acted under
+ constraint.] Vignau, with more imagination, stands on the roll of fame as
+ a frank impostor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain, as we have seen, spent the whole of 1612 in France, and it was
+ at this time that Vignau appeared in Paris with a tale which could not but
+ kindle excitement in the heart of an explorer. The basis of fact was that
+ Vignau had undoubtedly passed the preceding winter with the Algonquins on
+ the Ottawa. The fable which was built upon this fact can best be told in
+ Champlain's own words.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He reported to me, on his return to Paris in 1612,
+ that he had seen the North Sea; that the river of the
+ Algonquins [the Ottawa] came from a lake which emptied
+ into it; and that in seventeen days one could go from
+ the Falls of St Louis to this sea and back again; that
+ he had seen the wreck and debris of an English ship
+ that had been wrecked, on board of which were eighty
+ men who had escaped to the shore, and whom the savages
+ killed because the English endeavoured to take from
+ them by force their Indian corn and other necessaries
+ of life; and that he had seen the scalps which these
+ savages had flayed off, according to their custom,
+ which they would show me, and that they would likewise
+ give me an English boy whom they had kept for me. This
+ intelligence greatly pleased me, for I thought that
+ I had almost found that for which I had for a long
+ time been searching.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Champlain makes it clear that he did not credit Vignau's tale with the
+ simple credulity of a man who has never been to sea. He caused Vignau to
+ swear to its truth at La Rochelle before two notaries. He stipulated that
+ Vignau should go with him over the whole route. Finally, as they were on
+ the point of sailing together for Canada in the spring of 1613, he once
+ more adjured Vignau in the presence of distinguished witnesses, saying
+ 'that if what he had previously said was not true, he must not give me the
+ trouble to undertake the journey, which involved many dangers. Again he
+ affirmed all that he had said, on peril of his life.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After taking these multiplied precautions against deceit, Champlain left
+ the Sault St Louis on May 29, 1613, attended by four Frenchmen and one
+ Indian, with Vignau for guide. Ascending the Ottawa, they encountered
+ their first difficulties at the Long Sault, where Dollard forty-seven
+ years later was to lose his life so gloriously. Here the passage of the
+ rapids was both fatiguing and dangerous. Prevented by the density of the
+ wood from making a portage, they were forced to drag their canoes through
+ the water. In one of the eddies Champlain nearly lost his life, and his
+ hand was severely hurt by a sudden jerk of the rope. Having mounted the
+ rapids, he met with no very trying obstacle until he had gone some
+ distance past the Chaudiere Falls. His reference to the course of the
+ Gatineau makes no sense, and Laverdiere has had recourse to the not
+ improbable conjecture that the printer dropped out a whole line at this
+ point. Champlain also over-estimates considerably the height of the Rideau
+ Falls and is not very exact in his calculation of latitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hardships of this journey were greatly and unnecessarily increased by
+ Vignau, whose only hope was to discourage his leader. In. the end it
+ proved that 'our liar' (as Champlain repeatedly calls him) had hoped to
+ secure a reward for his alleged discovery, believing that no one would
+ follow him long, even if an attempt were made to confirm the accuracy of
+ his report. But Champlain, undeterred by portages and mosquitoes, kept on.
+ Some savages who joined him said that Vignau was a liar, and on their
+ advice Champlain left the Ottawa a short distance above the mouth of the
+ Madawaska. Holding westward at some distance from the south shore, he
+ advanced past Muskrat Lake, and after a hard march came out again on the
+ Ottawa at Lake Allumette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the end of Champlain's route in 1613. From the Algonquins on
+ Allumette Island he learned that Vignau had wintered with them at the time
+ he swore he was discovering salt seas. Finally, the impostor confessed his
+ fraud and, falling on his knees, asked for mercy. The Indians would gladly
+ have killed him outright, but Champlain spared his life, though how deeply
+ he was moved can be seen from these words: 'Overcome with wrath I had him
+ removed, being unable to endure him any longer in my presence.' After his
+ confession there was nothing for it but to return by the same route. An
+ astrolabe found some years ago near Muskrat Lake may have been dropped
+ from Champlain's luggage on the journey westward, though he does not
+ mention the loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apart from disclosing the course of the Ottawa, the Voyage of 1613 is
+ chiefly notable for its account of Indian customs&mdash;for example, the
+ mode of sepulture, the tabagie or feast, and the superstition which leads
+ the Algonquins to throw pieces of tobacco into the cauldron of the
+ Chaudiere Falls as a means of ensuring protection against their enemies.
+ Of the feast given him by Tessouat, an Algonquin chief, Champlain says:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The next day all the guests came, each with his
+ porringer and wooden spoon. They seated themselves
+ without order or ceremony on the ground in the cabin
+ of Tessouat, who distributed to them a kind of broth
+ made of maize crushed between two stones, together
+ with meat and fish which was cut into little pieces,
+ the whole being boiled together without salt. They
+ also had meat roasted on the coals and fish boiled
+ apart, which he also distributed. In respect to myself,
+ as I did not wish any of their chowder, which they
+ prepare in a very dirty manner, I asked them for some
+ fish and meat, that I might prepare it my own way,
+ which they gave me. For drink we had fine, clear water.
+ Tessouat, who gave the tabagie, entertained us without
+ eating himself, according to their custom.
+
+ The tabagie being over, the young men, who are not
+ present at the harangues and councils, and who during
+ the tabagie remain at the door of the cabins, withdrew,
+ when all who remained began to fill their pipes, one
+ and another offering me one. We then spent a full
+ half-hour in this occupation, not a word being spoken,
+ as is their custom.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But for the dexterous arrangement by which Champlain managed to cook his
+ own food, the tabagie would have been more dangerous to health than the
+ portage. In any case, it was an ordeal that could not be avoided, for
+ feasting meant friendly intercourse, and only through friendly intercourse
+ could Champlain gain knowledge of that vast wilderness which he must
+ pierce before reaching his long-sought goal, the sea beyond which lay
+ China.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Vignau, his punishment was to make full confession before all the
+ French who had assembled at the Sault St Louis to traffic with the
+ Indians. When Champlain reached this rendezvous on June 17, he informed
+ the traders of all that had happened, including
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ the malice of my liar, at which they were greatly
+ amazed. I then begged them to assemble in order that
+ in their presence, and that of the savages and his
+ companions, he might make declaration of his
+ maliciousness; which they gladly did. Being thus
+ assembled, they summoned him and asked him why he had
+ not shown me the sea of the north, as he had promised
+ me at his departure. He replied that he had promised
+ something impossible for him, since he had never seen
+ the sea, and that the desire of making the journey
+ had led him to say what he did, also that he did not
+ suppose that I would undertake it; and he begged them
+ to be pleased to pardon him, as he also begged me
+ again, confessing that he had greatly offended, and
+ if I would leave him in the country he would by his
+ efforts repair the offence and see this sea, and bring
+ back trustworthy intelligence concerning it the
+ following year; and in view of certain considerations
+ I pardoned him on this condition.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Vignau's public confession was followed by the annual barter with the
+ Indians, after which Champlain returned to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We come now to the Voyage of 1615, which describes Champlain's longest and
+ most daring journey through the forest&mdash;an expedition that occupied
+ the whole period from July 9, 1615, to the last days of June 1616. Thus
+ for the first time he passed a winter with the Indians, enlarging greatly
+ thereby his knowledge of their customs and character. The central incident
+ of the expedition was an attack made by the Hurons and their allies upon
+ the stronghold of the Onondagas in the heart of the Iroquois country. But
+ while this war-party furnishes the chief adventure, there is no page of
+ Champlain's narrative which lacks its tale of the marvellous. As a story
+ of life in the woods, the Voyage of 1615 stands first among all
+ Champlain's writings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As in 1609, there was a mutuality of interest between Champlain and the
+ Indians who traded at the Sault. His desire was to explore and theirs was
+ to fight. By compromise they disclosed to him the recesses of their
+ country and he aided them against the Iroquois. In 1615 the Hurons not
+ only reminded him of his repeated promises to aid them, but stated flatly
+ that without such aid they could no longer attend the annual market, as
+ their enemies were making the route too unsafe. On their side they
+ promised a war-party of more than two thousand men. A further proof of
+ friendship was afforded by their willingness to receive a missionary in
+ their midst&mdash;the Recollet, Father Joseph Le Caron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain's line of exploration in 1615-16 took the following course. He
+ first ascended the Ottawa to the mouth of the Mattawa. Thence journeying
+ overland by ponds and portages he entered Lake Nipissing, which he skirted
+ to the outlet. French River next took him to Georgian Bay, or, as he calls
+ it for geographical definition, the Lake of the Attigouautan [Hurons]. His
+ own name for this vast inland sea is the Mer Douce. That he did not
+ explore it with any degree of thoroughness is evident from the terms of
+ his narrative as well as from his statement that its length, east and
+ west, is four hundred leagues. What he saw of Lake Huron was really the
+ east shore of Georgian Bay, from the mouth of French River to the bottom
+ of Matchedash Bay. Here he entered the country of the Hurons, which
+ pleased him greatly in comparison with the tract before traversed. 'It was
+ very fine, the largest part being cleared, and many hills and several
+ rivers rendering the region agreeable. I went to see their Indian corn,
+ which was at that time [early in August] far advanced for the season.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain's route through the district between Carmaron and Cahaigue can
+ best be followed in Father Jones's map of Huronia. [Footnote: This map
+ will be found in 'The Jesuit Missions 'in this Series, and also in vol.
+ xxxiv of 'The Jesuit Relations,' ed. Thwaites.] The points which Champlain
+ names are there indicated, in each case with as careful identification of
+ the locality as we are ever likely to get. For those who are not
+ specialists in the topography of Huronia it may suffice that Champlain
+ left Matchedash Bay not far from Penetanguishene, and thence went to
+ Carmaron at the very north of the peninsula. Returning, he passed through
+ some of the largest of the Huron villages, and after sixteen days came out
+ at Cahaigue, which was situated close to Lake Simcoe and almost on the
+ site of the modern Hawkestone. It was here that most of the Huron warriors
+ assembled for the great expedition against the Onondagas. Setting out on
+ their march, they first went a little to the northward, where they were
+ joined on the shores of Lake Couchiching by another contingent. The party
+ thus finally made up, Champlain's line of advance first took him to
+ Sturgeon Lake. Afterwards it pursued that important waterway which is
+ represented by the Otonabee river, Rice Lake, and the river Trent. Hence
+ the warriors entered Lake Ontario by the Bay of Quinte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This country between Lake Simcoe and the Bay of Quinte seems to have
+ pleased Champlain greatly. He saw it in September, when the temperature
+ was agreeable and when the vegetation of the forest could be enjoyed
+ without the torment inflicted by mosquitoes. 'It is certain,' he says,
+ 'that all this region is very fine and pleasant. Along the banks it seems
+ as if the trees had been set out for ornament in most places, and that all
+ these tracts were in former times inhabited by savages who were
+ subsequently compelled to abandon them from fear of their enemies. Vines
+ and nut trees are here very numerous. Grapes mature, yet there is always a
+ very pungent tartness, which is felt remaining in the throat when one eats
+ them in large quantities, arising from defect of cultivation. These
+ localities are very pleasant when cleared up.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Bay of Quinte the war-party skirted the east shore of Lake
+ Ontario, crossing the head of the St Lawrence, and thence following the
+ southern shore about fourteen leagues. At this point the Indians concealed
+ all their canoes and struck into the woods towards Lake Oneida. Though
+ made up chiefly of Hurons, the little army embraced various allies,
+ including a band of Algonquins. Whether from over-confidence at having
+ Champlain among them or from their natural lack of discipline, the allies
+ managed their attack very badly. On a pond a few miles south of Oneida
+ Lake lay the objective point of the expedition&mdash;a palisaded
+ stronghold of the Onondagas. At a short distance from this fort eleven of
+ the enemy were surprised and taken prisoners. What followed was much less
+ fortunate. Champlain does not state the number of Frenchmen present, but
+ as his drawing shows eleven musketeers, we may infer that his own
+ followers were distinctly more numerous than at the battle on Lake
+ Champlain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The height of the palisade was thirty feet, and a system of gutters
+ supplied abundant water for use in extinguishing fire. Champlain's plan of
+ attack was to employ a cavalier, or protected scaffolding, which should
+ overtop the palisade and could be brought close against it. From the top
+ of this framework four or five musketeers were to deliver a fusillade
+ against the Iroquois within the fort, while the Hurons kindled a fire at
+ the foot of the palisade. Champlain's drawing shows the rest of the
+ musketeers engaged in creating a diversion at other points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But everything miscarried. Though the cavalier was constructed, the allies
+ threw aside the wooden shields which Champlain had caused to be made as a
+ defence against the arrows of the Iroquois while the fire was being
+ kindled. Only a small supply of wood had been collected, and even this was
+ so placed that the flames blew away from the palisade instead of towards
+ it. On the failure of this attempt to fire the fort all semblance of
+ discipline was thrown to the winds. 'There also rose such disorder among
+ them,' says Champlain, 'that one could not understand another, which
+ greatly troubled me. In vain did I shout in their ears and remonstrate to
+ my utmost with them as to the danger to which they exposed themselves by
+ their bad behaviour, but on account of the great noise they made they
+ heard nothing. Seeing that shouting would only burst my head and that my
+ remonstrances were useless for putting a stop to the disorder, I did
+ nothing more, but determined, together with my men, to do what we could
+ and fire upon such as we could see.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight itself lasted only three hours, and the casualties of the
+ attacking party were inconsiderable, since but two of their chiefs and
+ fifteen warriors were wounded. In addition to their repulse, the Hurons
+ suffered a severe disappointment through the failure to join them of five
+ hundred allies who had given their solemn promise. Although Champlain had
+ received two severe wounds, one in the leg and another in the knee, he
+ urged a second and more concerted attack. But in vain. The most the Hurons
+ would promise was to wait four or five days for the expected
+ reinforcements. At the end of this time there was no sign of the five
+ hundred, and the return began. 'The only good point,' says Champlain,
+ 'that I have seen in their mode of warfare is that they make their retreat
+ very securely, placing all the wounded and aged in their centre, being
+ well armed on the wings and in the rear, and continuing this order without
+ interruption until they reach a place of security.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain himself suffered tortures during the retreat, partly from his
+ wounds, but even more from the mode of transportation. The Indian method
+ of removing the wounded was first to bind and pinion them 'in such a
+ manner that it is as impossible for them to move as for an infant in its
+ swaddling-clothes.' They were then carried in a kind of basket, 'crowded
+ up in a heap.' Doubtless as a mark of distinction, Champlain was carried
+ separately on the back of a savage. His wound was so severe that when the
+ retreat began he could not stand. But the transportation proved worse than
+ the wound. 'I never found myself in such a gehenna as during this time,
+ for the pain which I suffered in consequence of the wound in my knee was
+ nothing in comparison with that which I endured while I was carried bound
+ and pinioned on the back of one of our savages. So that I lost my
+ patience, and as soon as I could sustain myself got out of this prison, or
+ rather gehenna.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enemy made no pursuit, but forced marches were kept up for twenty-five
+ or thirty leagues. The weather now grew cold, as it was past the middle of
+ autumn. The fight at the fort of the Onondagas had taken place on October
+ 10, and eight days later there was a snowstorm, with hail and a strong
+ wind. But, apart from extreme discomfort, the retreat was successfully
+ accomplished, and on the shore of Lake Ontario they found the canoes
+ intact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been Champlain's purpose to spend the winter at Quebec, and when
+ the Hurons were about to leave the east end of Lake Ontario for their own
+ country he asked them for a canoe and an escort. Four Indians volunteered
+ for this service, but no canoe could be had, and in consequence Champlain
+ was forced reluctantly to accompany the Hurons. With his usual patience he
+ accepted the inevitable, which in this case was only unpleasant because he
+ was ill prepared for spending a winter among the Indians. After a few days
+ he perceived that their plan was to keep him and his companions, partly as
+ security for themselves and partly that he might assist at their councils
+ in planning better safeguards against their enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This enforced residence of Champlain among the Hurons during the winter of
+ 1615-16 has given us an excellent description of Indian customs. It was
+ also the means of composing a dangerous quarrel between the Hurons and the
+ Algonquins. Once committed to spending the winter among the Indians,
+ Champlain planned to make Huronia a point of departure for still further
+ explorations to the westward. Early in 1616 there seemed to be a
+ favourable opportunity to push forward in the direction of Lake Superior.
+ Then came this wretched brawl of Hurons and Algonquins, which threatened
+ to beget bitter hatred and war among tribes which hitherto had both been
+ friendly to the French. Accepting his duty, Champlain gave up his journey
+ to the far west and threw himself into the task of restoring peace. But
+ the measure of his disappointment is found in these words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ If ever there was one greatly disheartened, it was
+ myself, since I had been waiting to see this year what
+ during many preceding ones I had been seeking for with
+ great toil and effort, through so many fatigues and
+ risks of my life. But realizing that I could not help
+ the matter, and that everything depended on the will
+ of God, I comforted myself, resolving to see it in a
+ short time. I had such sure information that I could
+ not doubt the report of these people, who go to traffic
+ with others dwelling in those northern regions, a
+ great part of whom live in a place very abundant in
+ the chase and where there are great numbers of large
+ animals, the skins of several of which I saw, and
+ which I concluded were buffaloes from their
+ representation of their form. Fishing is also very
+ abundant there. This journey requires forty days as
+ well in returning as in going.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus Champlain almost had a chance to see the bison and the great plains
+ of the West. As it was, he did his immediate duty and restored the peace
+ of Huron and Algonquin. In partial compensation for the alluring journey
+ he relinquished, he had a better opportunity to study the Hurons in their
+ settlements and to investigate their relations with their neighbours&mdash;the
+ Tobacco Nation, the Neutral Nation, les Cheveux Releves, and the Race of
+ Fire. Hence the Voyage of 1615 not only describes the physical aspects of
+ Huronia, but contains intimate details regarding the life of its people&mdash;their
+ wigwams, their food, their manner of cooking, their dress, their
+ decorations, their marriage customs, their medicine-men, their burials,
+ their assemblies, their agriculture, their amusements, and their mode of
+ fishing. It is Champlain's most ambitious piece of description, far less
+ detailed than the subsequent narratives of the Jesuits, but in comparison
+ with them gaining impact from being less diffuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on May 20, 1616, that Champlain left the Huron country, never again
+ to journey thither or to explore the recesses of the forest. Forty days
+ later he reached the Sault St Louis, and saw once more his old friend
+ Pontgrave. Thenceforward his life belongs not to the wilderness, but to
+ Quebec.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. CHAMPLAIN'S LAST YEARS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Champlain reached the Sault St Louis on July 1, 1616, his career as
+ an explorer had ended. The nineteen years of life that still remained he
+ gave to Quebec and the duties of his lieutenancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time he had won the central position in his own domain. Question
+ might arise as to the terms upon which a monopoly of trade should be
+ granted, or as to the persons who should be its recipients. But whatever
+ company might control the trade, Champlain was the king's representative
+ in New France. When Boyer affronted him, the council had required that a
+ public apology should be offered. When Montmorency instituted the
+ investigation of 1620, it was Champlain's report which determined the
+ issue. Five years later, when the Duc de Ventadour became viceroy in place
+ of Montmorency, Champlain still remained lieutenant-general of New France.
+ Such were his character, services, and knowledge that his tenure could not
+ be questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding this source of satisfaction, the post was difficult in the
+ extreme. The government continued to leave colonizing in the hands of the
+ traders, and the traders continued to shirk their obligations. The Company
+ of the De Caens did a large business, but suffered more severely than any
+ of its predecessors from the strife of Catholic and Huguenot. Those of the
+ reformed religion even held their services in the presence of the Indians,
+ thus anticipating the scandals of Kikuyu. Though the Duc de Ventadour gave
+ orders that there should be no psalm-singing after the outbound ships
+ passed Newfoundland, this provision seems not to have been effective. It
+ was a difficult problem for one like Champlain, who, while a loyal
+ Catholic, had been working all his life with Huguenot associates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The period of the De Caens was marked by the presence at Quebec of Madame
+ Champlain. The romance of Champlain's life does not, however, revolve
+ about his marriage. In 1610, at the age of forty-three, he espoused Helene
+ Boulle, whose father was secretary of the King's Chamber to Henry IV. As
+ the bride was only twelve years old, the marriage contract provided that
+ she should remain two years longer with her parents. She brought a dowry
+ of six thousand livres, and simultaneously Champlain made his will in her
+ favour. Probably De Monts had some part in arranging the marriage, for
+ Nicholas Boulle was a Huguenot and De Monts appears as a witness to the
+ notarial documents. Subsequently, Madame Champlain became an enthusiastic
+ Catholic and ended her days as a nun. She had no children, and was only
+ once in Canada, residing continuously at Quebec from 1620 to 1624. No
+ mention whatever is made of her in Champlain's writings, but he named St
+ Helen's Island after her, and appears to have been unwilling that she
+ should enter a convent during his lifetime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One need feel little surprise that Madame Champlain should not care to
+ visit Canada a second time, for the buildings at Quebec had fallen into
+ disrepair, and more than once the supply of food ran very low. During 1625
+ Champlain remained in France with his wife, and therefore did not witness
+ the coming o the Jesuits to the colony. This event, which is a landmark in
+ the history of Quebec and New France, followed upon the inability of the
+ Recollets to cover the mission field with any degree of completeness.
+ Conscious that their resources were unequal to the task, they invoked the
+ aid of the Jesuits, and in this appeal were strongly supported by
+ Champlain. Once more the horizon seemed to brighten, for the Jesuits had
+ greater resources and influence than any other order in the Roman Catholic
+ Church, and their establishment at Quebec meant much besides a mere
+ increase in the population. The year 1626 saw Champlain again at his post,
+ working hard to complete a new factory which he had left unfinished, while
+ the buildings of the Jesuit establishment made good progress under the
+ hand of workmen specially brought from France. What still remained
+ imperfect was the fortification. The English had destroyed the French
+ settlements at Mount Desert and Port Royal. What was to hinder them from
+ bombarding Quebec?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This danger soon clouded the mood of optimism that had been inspired by
+ the coming of the Jesuits. The De Caens objected to any outlay on a fort,
+ and would not give Champlain the men he needed. In reply Champlain sent
+ the viceroy a report which was unfavourable to the company and its
+ methods. But even without this representation, the monopoly of the De
+ Caens was doomed by reason of events which were taking place in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the court of Louis XIII Richelieu had now gained an eminence and power
+ such as never before had been possessed by a minister of the French crown.
+ Gifted with imagination and covetous of national greatness, he saw the
+ most desirable portions of other continents in the hands of the Spaniards,
+ the Portuguese, the English, and the Dutch. The prospect was not pleasing,
+ and he cast about for a remedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Hanotaux, [Footnote: Gabriel Hanotaux, member of the French Academy,
+ is the author of the most authoritative work on the life and times of
+ Richelieu.] Richelieu is 'the true founder of our colonial empire,' and La
+ Ronciere adds: 'Madagascar, Senegal, Guiana' the Antilles, Acadia, and
+ Canada&mdash;this, to be exact, was the colonial empire for which we were
+ indebted to Richelieu.' Regarding his breadth of outlook there can be no
+ doubt, and in his Memoirs he left the oft-quoted phrase: 'No realm is so
+ well situated as France to be mistress of the seas or so rich in all
+ things needful.' Desiring to strengthen maritime commerce and to hold
+ distant possessions, he became convinced that the English and the Dutch
+ had adopted the right policy. Strong trading companies&mdash;not weak ones&mdash;were
+ what France needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry IV could have given the French a fair start, or even a lead, in the
+ race for colonies. He missed this great opportunity; partly because he was
+ preoccupied with the reorganization of France, and partly because Sully,
+ his minister, had no enthusiasm for colonial ventures. Twenty years later
+ the situation had changed. Richelieu, who was a man of wide outlook, was
+ also compelled by the activity of England and Holland to give attention to
+ the problem of a New France. The spirit of colonization was in the air,
+ and Richelieu, with his genius for ideas, could not fail to see its
+ importance or what would befall the laggards. His misfortune was that he
+ lacked certain definite qualifications which a greater founder of colonies
+ needed to possess. Marvellous in his grasp of diplomatic situations and in
+ his handling of men, he had no talent whatever for the details of
+ commerce. His fiscal regime, particularly after France engaged in her duel
+ with the House of Hapsburg, was disorganized and intolerable. Nor did he
+ recognize that, for the French, the desire to emigrate required even
+ greater encouragement than the commercial instinct. He compelled his
+ company to transport settlers, but the number was not large, and he
+ kindled no popular enthusiasm for the cause of colonization. France had
+ once led the crusade eastward. Under proper guidance she might easily have
+ contributed more than she did to the exodus westward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any rate Richelieu, 'a man in the grand style, if ever man was,' had
+ decided that New France should no longer languish, and the Company of One
+ Hundred Associates was the result. In 1627 he abolished the office of
+ viceroy, deprived the De Caens of their charter, and prepared to make
+ Canada a real colony. The basis of the plan was an association of one
+ hundred members, each subscribing three thousand livres. Richelieu's own
+ name heads the list of members, followed by those of the minister of
+ finance and the minister of marine. Most of the members resided in Paris,
+ though the seaboard and the eastern provinces were also represented.
+ Nobles, wealthy merchants, small traders, all figure in the list, and
+ twelve titles of nobility were distributed among the shareholders to help
+ in the enlistment of capital. The company received a monopoly of trade for
+ fifteen years, and promised to take out three hundred colonists annually
+ during the whole period covered by the grant. It also received the St
+ Lawrence valley in full ownership. One notable provision of the charter
+ was that only Roman Catholics should be sent to New France, and the
+ company was placed under special obligation to maintain three priests in
+ each settlement until the colony could support its own clergy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain was now sixty years of age, and he had suffered much. Suddenly
+ there burst forth this spontaneous enthusiasm of Richelieu the
+ all-powerful. Was Champlain's dream of the great city of Ludovica to come
+ true after all?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas, like previous visions, it faded before the glare of harsh,
+ uncompromising facts. The year in which Richelieu founded his Company of
+ New France was also the year of a fierce Huguenot revolt. Calling on
+ England for aid, La Rochelle defied Paris, the king, and the cardinal.
+ Richelieu laid siege to the place. Guiton, the mayor, sat at his
+ council-board with a bare dagger before him to warn the faint-hearted. The
+ old Duchesse de Rohan starved with the populace. Salbert, the most
+ eloquent of Huguenot pastors, preached that martyrdom was better than
+ surrender. Meanwhile, Richelieu built his mole across the harbour, and
+ Buckingham wasted the English troops to which the citizens looked for
+ their salvation. Then the town yielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fall of La Rochelle was a great personal triumph for Richelieu, but
+ the war with England brought disaster to the Company of New France. At
+ Dieppe there had lived for many years an Englishman named Jarvis, or
+ Gervase, Kirke, who with his five sons&mdash;David, Lewis, Thomas, John,
+ and Jamesknew much at first hand about the French merchant marine. Early
+ in the spring of 1628 Kirke (who had shortly before moved to London)
+ secured letters of marque and sent forth his sons to do what damage they
+ could to the French in the St Lawrence. Champlain had spent the winter at
+ Quebec and was, of course, expecting his usual supplies with the opening
+ of navigation. Instead came Lewis Kirke, sent from Tadoussac by his
+ brother David, to demand surrender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champlain made a reply which, though courteous, was sufficiently bold to
+ convince the Kirkes that Quebec could be best captured by starvation. They
+ therefore sailed down the St Lawrence to intercept the fleet from France,
+ confident that their better craft would overcome these 'sardines of the
+ sea.' The plan proved successful even beyond expectation, for after a long
+ cannonade they captured without material loss the whole fleet which had
+ been sent out by the Company of New France. Ships, colonists, annual
+ supplies, building materials&mdash;all fell into the hands of the
+ enterprising Kirkes, who then sailed for England with their booty. Alike
+ to Champlain and to the Hundred Associates it was a crippling blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, but for the war with England, Quebec would have seen its population
+ trebled in 1628. As it was, the situation became worse than ever. Lewis
+ Kirke had been careful to seize the cattle pastured at Cap Tourmente and
+ to destroy the crops. When winter came, there were eighty mouths to feed
+ on a scant diet of peas and maize, imperfectly ground, with a reserve
+ supply of twelve hundred eels. Towards spring anything was welcome, and
+ the roots of Solomon's seal were esteemed a feast. Champlain even gave
+ serious thought to a raid upon the Mohawks, three hundred miles away, in
+ the hope that food could be brought back from their granaries. Finally, on
+ the 19th of July 1629, Lewis Kirke returned with a second summons to
+ surrender. This time only one answer was possible, for to the survivors at
+ Quebec the English came less in the guise of foes than as human beings who
+ could save them from starvation. Champlain and his people received
+ honourable treatment, and were promised a passage to France. The family
+ Hebert, however, decided to remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We need not dwell upon the emotions with which Champlain saw the French
+ flag pulled down at Quebec. Doubtless it seemed the disastrous end of his
+ life-work, but he was a good soldier and enjoyed also the comforts of
+ religion. A further consolation was soon found in the discovery that
+ Quebec might yet be reclaimed. Ten weeks before Champlain surrendered, the
+ two countries were again at peace, and the Treaty of Suza embodied a
+ provision that captures made after the treaty was signed should be
+ mutually restored. This intelligence reached Champlain when he landed in
+ England on the homeward voyage. It is characteristic of the man, that
+ before going on to France he posted from Dover to London, and urged the
+ French ambassador that he should insistently claim Quebec.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a result of the war Canada and Acadia were both in the possession of
+ England. On the other hand, the dowry of Henrietta Maria was still, for
+ the most part, in the treasury of France. When one remembers that 1628 saw
+ Charles I driven by his necessities to concede the Petition of Right, it
+ will be readily seen that he desired the payment of his wife's dowry.
+ Hence Richelieu, whose talents in diplomacy were above praise, had
+ substantial reason to expect that Canada and Acadia would be restored. The
+ negotiations dragged on for more than two years, and were complicated by
+ disputes growing out of the captures made under letter of marque. When all
+ was settled by the Treaty of St Germain-en-Laye (March 1632) Quebec and
+ Port Royal became once more French&mdash;to the profound discontent of the
+ Kirkes and Sir William Alexander, [Footnote: Alexander had received grants
+ from the British crown in 1621 and 1625 which covered the whole coast from
+ St Croix Island to the St Lawrence.] but with such joy on the part of
+ Champlain as only patriots can know who have given a lifelong service to
+ their country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having regained Canada, Richelieu was forced to decide what he would do
+ with it. In certain important respects the situation had changed since
+ 1627, when he founded the Company of New France. Then Gustavus Adolphus
+ and the Swedes were not a factor in the dire strife which was convulsing
+ Europe. [Footnote: At this period the largest interest in European
+ politics was the rivalry between France and the House of Hapsburg, which
+ held the thrones of Spain and Austria. This rivalry led France to take an
+ active part in the Thirty Years' War, even though her allies in that
+ struggle were Protestants. Between 1627, when the Company of New France
+ was founded, and 1632, when Canada was restored to France, the Swedes
+ under Gustavus Adolphus had won a series of brilliant victories over the
+ Catholic and Hapsburg forces in Germany, After the death of Gustavus
+ Adolphus in 1632, Richelieu attacked the Emperor Ferdinand II in great
+ force, thereby conquering Alsace.] In 1632 the political problems of
+ Western and Central Europe had assumed an aspect quite different from that
+ which they had worn five years earlier. More and more France was drawn
+ into the actual conflict of the Thirty Years' War, impelled by a sense of
+ new and unparalleled opportunity to weaken the House of Hapsburg. This, in
+ turn, meant the preoccupation of Richelieu with European affairs, and a
+ heavy drain upon the resources of France in order to meet the cost of her
+ more ambitious foreign policy. Thus the duel with Austria, as it
+ progressed during the last decade of the cardinal's life, meant a fresh
+ check to those colonial prospects which seemed so bright in 1627.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richelieu's first step in resuming possession of Canada was to compose
+ matters between the De Caens and the Company of New France. Emery de Caen
+ and his associates were given the trading rights for 1632 and 79,000
+ livres as compensation for their losses through the revocation of the
+ monopoly. Dating from the spring of 1633, the Company of New France was to
+ be placed in full possession of Canada, subject to specific obligations
+ regarding missions and colonists. Conformably with this programme, Emery
+ de Caen appeared at Quebec on July 5, 1632, with credentials empowering
+ him to receive possession from Lewis and Thomas Kirke, the representatives
+ of England. With De Caen came Paul Le Jeune and two other Jesuits, a
+ vanguard of the missionary band which was to convert the savages. 'We cast
+ anchor,' says Le Jeune, 'in front of the fort which the English held; we
+ saw at the foot of this fort the poor settlement of Quebec all in ashes.
+ The English, who came to this country to plunder and not to build up, not
+ only burned a greater part of the detached buildings which Father Charles
+ Lalemant had erected, but also all of that poor settlement of which
+ nothing is now to be seen but the ruins of its stone walls.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The season of 1632 thus belonged to De Caen, whose function was merely to
+ tie up loose ends and prepare for the establishment of the new regime. The
+ central incident of the recession was the return of Champlain himself&mdash;an
+ old man who had said a last farewell to France and now came, as the king's
+ lieutenant, to end his days in the land of his labours and his hopes. If
+ ever the oft-quoted last lines of Tennyson's Ulysses could fitly be
+ claimed by a writer on behalf of his hero, they apply to Champlain as he
+ sailed from the harbour of Dieppe on March 23, 1633.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Come, my friends,
+
+ 'Tis not too late to seek a newer world.
+ Push off, and sitting well in order smite
+ The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
+ To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
+ Of all the western stars until I die.
+
+ Tho' much is taken, much abides; and tho'
+ We are not now that strength which in old days
+ Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are;
+ One equal temper of heroic hearts,
+ Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
+ To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was Champlain's reward that he saw Quebec once more under the
+ fleur-de-lis, and was welcomed by the Indians with genuine emotion. The
+ rhetorical gifts of the red man were among his chief endowments, and all
+ that eloquence could lavish was poured forth in honour of Champlain at the
+ council of the Hurons, who had come to Quebec for barter at the moment of
+ his return. The description of this council is one of the most graphic
+ passages in Le Jeune's Relations. A captain of the Hurons first arose and
+ explained the purpose of the gathering. 'When this speech was finished all
+ the Savages, as a sign of their approval, drew from the depths of their
+ stomachs this aspiration, HO, HO, HO, raising the last syllable very
+ high.' Thereupon the captain began another speech of friendship, alliance,
+ and welcome to Champlain, followed by gifts. Then the same captain made a
+ third speech, which was followed by Champlain's reply&mdash;a harangue
+ well adapted to the occasion. But the climax was reached in the concluding
+ orations of two more Huron chiefs. 'They vied with each other in trying to
+ honour Sieur de Champlain and the French, and in testifying their
+ affection for us. One of them said that when the French were absent the
+ earth was no longer the earth, the river was no longer the river, the sky
+ was no longer the sky; but upon the return of Sieur de Champlain
+ everything was as before: the earth was again the earth, the river was
+ again the river, and the sky was again the sky.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus welcomed by the savages, Champlain resumed his arduous task. He was
+ establishing Quebec anew and under conditions quite unlike those which had
+ existed in 1608. The most notable difference was that the Jesuits were now
+ at hand to aid in the upbuilding of Canada. The Quebec of De Monts and De
+ Caen had been a trading-post, despite the efforts of the Recollets and
+ Jesuits to render it the headquarters of a mission. Undoubtedly there
+ existed from the outset a desire to convert the Indians, but as a source
+ of strength to the colony this disposition effected little until the
+ return of the Jesuits in 1632.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the re-establishment of the Jesuit mission the last days of Champlain
+ are inseparably allied. A severe experience had proved that the colonizing
+ zeal of the crown was fitful and uncertain. Private initiative was needed
+ to supplement the official programme, and of such initiative the supply
+ seemed scanty. The fur traders notoriously shirked their obligations to
+ enlarge the colony, and after 1632 the Huguenots, who had a distinct
+ motive for emigrating, were forbidden by Richelieu to settle in Canada.
+ There remained the enthusiasm of the Jesuits and the piety of those in
+ France who supplied the funds for their work among the Montagnais, the
+ Hurons, and the Iroquois. As the strongest order in the Roman Catholic
+ Church, the Jesuits possessed resources which enabled them to maintain an
+ active establishment in Canada. Through them Quebec became religious, and
+ their influence permeated the whole colony as its population increased and
+ the zone of occupation grew wider. Le Jeune, Lalemant, Brebeuf, and Jogues
+ are among the outstanding names of the restored New France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the last two years of his life Champlain lived patriarchally at
+ Quebec, administering the public affairs of the colony and lending its
+ religious impulses the strength of his support and example. Always a man
+ of serious mind, his piety was confirmed by the reflections of advancing
+ age and his daily contact with the missionaries. In his household there
+ was a service of prayer three times daily, together with reading at supper
+ from the lives of the saints. In pursuance of a vow, he built a chapel
+ named Notre Dame de la Recouvrance, which records the gratitude he felt
+ for the restoration of Quebec to France. He was, in short, the ideal
+ layman&mdash;serving his king loyally in all business of state, and
+ demeaning himself as a pilgrim who is about to set forth for the City of
+ God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not to be inferred from the prominence of Champlain's religious
+ interests that he neglected his public duties, which continued to be many
+ and exacting. One of his problems was to prevent the English from trading
+ in the St Lawrence contrary to treaty; another was to discourage the
+ Hurons from selling their furs to the Dutch on the Hudson. The success of
+ the mission, which he had deeply at heart, implied the maintenance of
+ peace among the Indians who were friendly to the French. He sought also to
+ police the region of the Great Lakes by a band of French soldiers, and his
+ last letter to Richelieu (dated August 15, 1635) contains an earnest
+ appeal for a hundred and twenty men, to whom should be assigned the duty
+ of marshalling the Indian allies against the English and Dutch, as well as
+ of preserving order throughout the forest. The erection of a fort at Three
+ Rivers in 1634 was due to his desire that the annual barter should take
+ place at a point above Quebec. A commission which he issued in the same
+ year to Jean Nicolet to explore the country of the Wisconsins, shows that
+ his consuming zeal for exploration remained with him to the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was permitted Champlain to die in harness. He remained to the last
+ lieutenant of the king in Canada. At the beginning of October 1635 he was
+ stricken with paralysis, and passed away on Christmas Day of the same
+ year. We do not possess the oration which Father Paul Le Jeune delivered
+ at his funeral, but there remains from Le Jeune's pen an appreciation of
+ his character in terms which to Champlain himself would have seemed the
+ highest praise.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ On the twenty-fifth of December, the day of the birth
+ of our Saviour upon earth, Monsieur de Champlain, our
+ Governor, was reborn in Heaven; at least we can say
+ that his death was full of blessings. I am sure that
+ God has shown him this favour in consideration of the
+ benefits he has procured for New France, where we hope
+ some day God will be loved and served by our French,
+ and known and adored by our Savages. Truly he had led
+ a life of great justice, equity, and perfect loyalty
+ to his King and towards the Gentlemen of the Company.
+ But at his death he crowned his virtues with sentiments
+ of piety so lofty that he astonished us all. What
+ tears he shed! how ardent became his zeal for the
+ service of God! how great was his love for the families
+ here!&mdash;saying that they must be vigorously assisted
+ for the good of the Country, and made comfortable in
+ every possible way in these early stages, and that he
+ would do it if God gave him health. He was not taken
+ unawares in the account which he had to render unto
+ God, for he had long ago prepared a general Confession
+ of his whole life, which he made with great contrition
+ to Father Lalemant, whom he honoured with his friendship.
+ The Father comforted him throughout his sickness,
+ which lasted two months and a half, and did not leave
+ him until his death. He had a very honourable burial,
+ the funeral procession being farmed of the people,
+ the soldiers, the captains, and the churchmen. Father
+ Lalemant officiated at this burial, and I was charged
+ with the funeral oration, for which I did not lack
+ material. Those whom he left behind have reason to be
+ well satisfied with him; for, though he died out of
+ France, his name will not therefor be any less glorious
+ to posterity.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. CHAMPLAIN'S WRITINGS AND CHARACTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There are some things that speak for themselves. In attempting to
+ understand Champlain's character, we are first met by the fact that he
+ pursued unflinchingly his appointed task. For thirty-two years he
+ persevered, amid every kind of hardship, danger, and discouragement, in
+ the effort to build up New France. He had personal ambitions as an
+ explorer, which were kept in strict subordination to his duty to the king.
+ He possessed concentration of aim without fanaticism. His signal
+ unselfishness was adorned by a patience which equalled that of
+ Marlborough. Inspired by large ideals, he did not scorn imperfect means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus there are certain large aspects of Champlain's character that stand
+ forth in the high light of deed, and do not depend for their effect either
+ upon his own words or those of others. But when once we have paid tribute
+ to the fine, positive qualities which are implied by his accomplishment,
+ we must hasten to recognize the extraordinary value of his writings as an
+ index to his mind and soul. His narrative is not an epic of disaster. It
+ is a plain and even statement of great dangers calmly met and treated as a
+ matter of course. Largely it is a record of achievement. At points where
+ it is a record of failure Champlain accepts the inevitable gracefully and
+ conforms his emotions to the will of God. The Voyages reveal a strong man
+ 'well four-squared to the blows of fortune.' They also illustrate the
+ virtue of muscular Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a time which, like ours, is becoming sated with cleverness, it is a
+ delight to read the unvarnished story of Champlain. In saying that the
+ adjective is ever the enemy of the noun, Voltaire could not have levelled
+ the shaft at him, for few writers have been more sparing in their use of
+ adjectives or other glowing words. His love of the sea and of the forest
+ was profound, but he is never emotional in his expressions. Yet with all
+ his soberness and steadiness he possessed imagination. In its strength and
+ depth his enthusiasm for colonization proves this, even if we omit his
+ picture of the fancied Ludovica. But as a man of action rather than of
+ letters he instinctively omits verbiage. In some respects we suffer from
+ Champlain's directness of mind for on much that he saw he could have
+ lingered with profit. But very special inducements are needed to draw him
+ from his plain tale into a digression. Such inducements occur at times
+ when he is writing of the Indians, for he recognized that Europe was eager
+ to hear in full detail of their traits and customs. Thus set passages of
+ description, inserted with a sparing hand, seemed to him a proper element
+ of the text, but anything like conscious embellishment of the narrative he
+ avoids&mdash;probably more through mere naturalness than conscious
+ self-repression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Marco Polo to Scott's Journal the literature of geographical
+ discovery abounds with classics, and standards of comparison suggest
+ themselves in abundance to the critic of Champlain's Voyages. Most
+ naturally, of course, one turns to the records of American exploration in
+ the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries&mdash;to Ramusio, Oviedo, Peter
+ Martyr, Hakluyt, and Purchas. No age can show a more wonderful galaxy of
+ pioneers than that which extends from Columbus to La Salle, and among the
+ great explorers of this era Champlain takes his place by virtue alike of
+ his deeds and writings. In fact, he belongs to the small and distinguished
+ class of those who have recorded their own discoveries in a suitable and
+ authentic narrative, for in few cases have geographical results of equal
+ moment been described by the discoverer himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the many writings which are available for comparison and contrast
+ one turns, singularly yet inevitably, to Lescarbot. The singularity of a
+ comparison between Champlain and Lescarbot is that Lescarbot was not a
+ geographer. At the same time, he is the only writer of importance whose
+ trail crosses that of Champlain, and some light is thrown on Champlain's
+ personality by a juxtaposition of texts. That is to say, both were in
+ Acadia at the same time, sat together at Poutrincourt's table, gazed on
+ the same forests and clearings, met the same Indians, and had a like
+ opportunity of considering the colonial problems which were thrust upon
+ the French in the reign of Henry IV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be hard to find narratives more dissimilar,&mdash;and the
+ contrast is not wholly to the advantage of Champlain. Or rather, there are
+ times when his Doric simplicity of style seems jejune beside the flowing
+ periods and picturesque details of Lescarbot. No better illustration of
+ this difference in style, arising from fundamental difference in
+ temperament, can be found than the description which each gives of the
+ Ordre de Bon Temps. To Champlain belongs the credit of inventing this
+ pleasant means of promoting health and banishing ennui, but all he tells
+ of it is this: 'By the rules of the Order a chain was put, with some
+ little ceremony, on the neck of one of our company, commissioning him for
+ the day to go a-hunting. The next day it was conferred upon another, and
+ thus in succession. All exerted themselves to the utmost to see who would
+ do the best and bring home the finest game. We found this a very good
+ arrangement, as did also the savages who were with us.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the limit of the information which we receive from Champlain
+ regarding the Ordre de Bon Temps, his own invention and the life of the
+ company. It is reserved for Lescarbot to give us the picture which no one
+ can forget&mdash;the Atoctegic, or ruler of the feast, leading the
+ procession to dinner 'napkin on shoulder, wand of office in hand, and
+ around his neck the collar of the Order, which was worth more than four
+ crowns; after him all the members of the Order, carrying each a dish.'
+ Around stand the savages, twenty or thirty of them, 'men, women, girls,
+ and children,' all waiting for scraps of food. At the table with the
+ French themselves sits the Sagamos Membertou and the other Indian chiefs,
+ gladdening the company by their presence. And the food!&mdash;'ducks,
+ bustards, grey and white geese, partridges, larks, and other birds;
+ moreover moose, caribou, beaver, otter, bear, rabbits, wild-cats, racoons,
+ and other animals,' the whole culminating in the tenderness of moose meat
+ and the delicacy of beaver's tail. Such are the items which Champlain
+ omits and Lescarbot includes. So it is throughout their respective
+ narratives&mdash;Champlain ever gaining force through compactness, and
+ Lescarbot constantly illuminating with his gaiety or shrewdness matters
+ which but for him would never have reached us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This difference of temperament and outlook, which is so plainly reflected
+ on the printed page, also had its effect upon the personal relations of
+ the two men. It was not that Lescarbot scandalized Champlain by his
+ religious views, for though liberal-minded, Lescarbot was not a heretic,
+ and Champlain knew how to live harmoniously even with Huguenots. The cause
+ of the coolness which came to exist between them must be sought rather in
+ fundamental contrasts of character. To Champlain, Lescarbot doubtless
+ seemed a mere hanger-on or protege of Poutrincourt, with undue levity of
+ disposition and a needless flow of conversation. To Lescarbot, Champlain
+ may well have seemed deficient in literary attainments, and so preoccupied
+ with the concerns of geography as to be an uncongenial companion. To
+ whatever cause conjecture may trace it, they did not become friends,
+ although such lack of sympathy as existed shows itself only in an
+ occasional pin-prick, traceable particularly in the later editions of
+ their writings. For us it is the more needful to lay stress upon the
+ merits of Lescarbot, because he tends to be eclipsed by the greater
+ reputation of Champlain, and also because his style is sometimes so
+ diffuse as to create prejudice. But at his best he is admirable, and
+ without him we should know much less than we do about that Acadian
+ experience which holds such a striking place in the career of Champlain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The popular estimate of French character dwells overmuch upon the levity
+ or gaiety which undoubtedly marks the Gallic race. France could not have
+ accomplished her great work for the world without stability of purpose and
+ seriousness of mood. Nowhere in French biography are these qualities more
+ plainly illustrated than by the acts of Champlain. The doggedness with
+ which he clung to his patriotic and unselfish task is the most conspicuous
+ fact in his life. Coupled therewith is his fortitude, both physical and
+ moral. In times of crisis the conscript sets his teeth and dies without a
+ murmur. But Champlain enlisted as a volunteer for a campaign which was to
+ go on unceasingly till his last day. How incessant were its dangers can be
+ made out in full detail from the text of the Voyages. We may omit the
+ perils of the North Atlantic, though what they were can be seen from
+ Champlain's description of his outward voyage in the spring of 1611. The
+ remaining dangers will suffice. Scurvy, which often claimed a death-roll
+ of from forty to eighty per cent in a single winter; famine such as that
+ which followed the failure of ships from home to arrive at the opening of
+ navigation; the storms which drove the frail shallop on the rocks and
+ shoals of Norumbega; the risk of mutiny; the chances of war, whether
+ against the Indians or the English; the rapids of the wilderness as they
+ threatened the overloaded canoe on its swift descent; the possible
+ treachery of Indian guides&mdash;such is a partial catalogue of the
+ death-snares which surrounded the pathway of an explorer like Champlain.
+ Every one of these dangers is brought before us by his own narrative in a
+ manner which does credit to his modesty no less than to his fortitude.
+ Without embellishment or self-glorification, he recites in a few lines
+ hairbreadth escapes which a writer of less steadfast soul would have
+ amplified into a thrilling tale of heroism. None the less, to the
+ discriminating reader Champlain's Voyages are an Odyssey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bound up with habitual fortitude is the motive from which it springs. In
+ Champlain's case patriotism and piety were the groundwork of a conspicuous
+ and long-tested courage. The patriotism which exacted such sacrifices was
+ not one which sought to define itself even in the form of a justifiable
+ digression from the recital of events. But we may be sure that Champlain
+ at the time he left Port Royal had made up his mind that the Spaniards,
+ the English, and the Dutch were not to parcel out the seaboard of North
+ America to the exclusion of the French. As for the religious basis of his
+ fortitude, we do not need Le Jeune's story of his death-bed or the record
+ of his friendship with men of religion. His narrative abounds throughout
+ with simple and natural expressions of piety, not the less impressive
+ because they are free from trace of the theological intolerance which
+ envenomed French life in his age. And not only did Champlain's trust in
+ the Lord fortify his soul against fear, but religion imposed upon him a
+ degree of self-restraint which was not common among explorers of the
+ seventeenth century. It is far from fanciful to see in this one of the
+ chief causes of his hold upon the Indians. To them he was more than a
+ useful ally in war time. They respected his sense of honour, and long
+ after his death remembered the temperance which marked his conduct when he
+ lived in their villages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a writer, Champlain enjoyed the advantage of possessing a fresh,
+ unhackneyed subject. The only exception to this statement is furnished by
+ his early book on the West Indies and Mexico, where he was going over
+ ground already trodden by the Spaniards. His other writings relate to a
+ sphere of exploration and settlement which he made his own, and of which
+ he well merited to be the chronicler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Running through the Voyages is the double interest of discovery and
+ colonization, constantly blending and reacting upon each other, but still
+ remaining matters of separate concern. It is obvious that in the mind of
+ the narrator discovery is always the more engaging theme. Champlain is
+ indeed the historian of St Croix, Port Royal, and Quebec, but only
+ incidentally or from chance. By temper he was the explorer, that is, the
+ man of action, willing to record the broad results, but without the
+ instinct which led Lescarbot to set down the minutiae of life in a small,
+ rough settlement. There is one side of Champlain's activity as a colonizer
+ which we must lament that he has not described&mdash;namely, his efforts
+ to interest the nobles and prelates of the French court in the upbuilding
+ of Canada. A diary of his life at Paris and Fontainebleau would be among
+ the choicest documents of the early colonial era. But Champlain was too
+ blunt and loyal to set down the story of his relations with the great, and
+ for this portion of his life we must rely upon letters, reports, and
+ memoranda, which are so formal as to lack the atmosphere of that painful
+ but valiant experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Excluding the brief notices of life at St Croix, Port Royal, and Quebec,
+ Champlain's Voyages present a story of discovery by sea and discovery by
+ land. In other words, the four years of Acadian adventure relate to
+ discoveries made along the seaboard, while the remaining narratives,
+ including the Des Sauvages of 1604, relate to the basin of the St
+ Lawrence. Mariner though he was by early training, Champlain achieved his
+ chief success as an explorer by land, in the region of the Great Lakes.
+ Bad fortune prevented him from pursuing his course past Martha's Vineyard
+ to the mouth of the Hudson and Chesapeake Bay. It was no small achievement
+ to accomplish what he did on the coast of Norumbega, but his most
+ distinctive discoveries were those which he made in the wilderness,
+ leading up to his fine experience of 1615-16 among the Hurons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To single out Champlain's chief literary triumph, it was he who introduced
+ the Algonquin, the Huron, and the Iroquois to the delighted attention of
+ France. Ever since the days of Cartier the French had known that savages
+ inhabited the banks of the St Lawrence, but Champlain is the pioneer in
+ that great body of literature on the North American Indian, which
+ thenceforth continued without interruption in France to the Rene and Atala
+ of Chateaubriand. Above all other subjects, the Indians are Champlain's
+ chief theme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To some extent the account of Indian life which is given in the Voyages
+ suffers by comparison with the Relations of the Jesuits. The Fathers, by
+ reason of their long residence among the Indians, undoubtedly came to
+ possess a more intimate knowledge of their character and customs than it
+ was possible for Champlain to acquire during the time he spent among them.
+ On the other hand, the Jesuits were so preoccupied with the progress of
+ the mission that they tended to view the life of the savages too
+ exclusively from one angle. Furthermore, the volume of their description
+ is so great as to overwhelm all readers who are not specially interested
+ in the mission or the details of Indian custom. Champlain wrote with
+ sufficient knowledge to bring out salient traits in high relief, while his
+ descriptive passages are sufficiently terse to come within the range of
+ those who are not specialists. When we remember the perpetual interest
+ which, for more than three hundred years, Europe has felt in the North
+ American Indian, the Voyages of Champlain are seen in their true
+ perspective. For he, with fresh eyes, saw the red man in his wigwam, at
+ his council, and on the war-path; watched his stoic courage under torture
+ and his inhuman cruelty in the hour of vengeance. Tales of the wilderness,
+ the canoe, the portage, and the ambush have never ceased to fascinate the
+ imagination of Europe. Champlain's narrative may be plain and unadorned,
+ but, with such a groundwork, the imagination of every reader could supply
+ details at will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all essential respects Champlain seems to have been a good observer and
+ an accurate chronicler. It is true that his writings are not free from
+ error involving facts of distance, altitude, and chronology. But such
+ slips as have crept into his text do not constitute a serious blemish or
+ tend to impugn the good faith of his statements on matters where there is
+ no other source of information. Everything considered, his substantial
+ accuracy is much more striking than his partial inaccuracy. In fact, no
+ one of his high character and disinterested zeal could write with any
+ other purpose than to describe truly what he had seen and done. The seal
+ of probity is set upon Champlain's writings no less than upon the record
+ of his dealings with his employers and the king. Unselfish as to money or
+ fame, he sought to create New France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In national progress much depends on the auspices under which the nation
+ was founded and the tradition which it represents. Thus England, and all
+ the English world, has an imperishable tradition in the deeds and
+ character of Alfred the Great; thus Canada has had from the outset of the
+ present stage in her development a great possession in the equal
+ self-sacrifice of Montcalm and Wolfe. On the other hand, the nation is
+ doomed to suffer which bases its traditions of greatness upon such acts as
+ the seizure of Silesia by Frederick or Bismarck's manipulation of the Ems
+ telegram.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Canada Champlain is not alone a heroic explorer of the seventeenth
+ century, but the founder of Quebec; and it is a rich part of our heritage
+ that he founded New France in the spirit of unselfishness, of loyalty, and
+ of faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Original Text
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best edition of Champlain's own works, in the original text, is that
+ of Laverdiere&mdash;'OEuvres de Champlain, pabliees sous le Patronage de
+ l'Universite Laval. Par l'Abbe C.-H. Laverdiere, M.A. Seconde Edition. 6
+ tomes, 4to. Quebec: Imprime au Seminaire par Geo. E. Desbarats, 1870.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The list of Champlain's writings includes:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+1. The 'Bref Discours,' describing his trip to the West
+ Indies.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+2. The 'Des Sauvages,' describing his first voyage to
+ the St Lawrence.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+3. The 'Voyages' of 1613, covering the years 1604-13
+ inclusive.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+4. The 'Voyages' of 1619, covering the years 1615-18
+ inclusive.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+5. The 'Voyages' of 1632, which represent a re-editing
+ of the early voyages from 1603 forward, and continue
+ the narrative from 1618 to 1629.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 6. A general treatise on the duties of the mariner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ English Translations
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+1. The 'Bref Discours,' in a translation by Alice Wilmere,
+ was published by the Hakluyt Society in 1859.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+2. The Des Sauvages (1604) was translated in 'Purchas
+ His Pilgrimes' (1625).
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+3. The 'Voyages' of 1604-18 inclusive were translated by
+ C. P. Otis for the Prince Society of Boston, in three
+ volumes, 1878-82, with the Rev. E. F. Slafter as
+ editor. This is a fine work, but not easily accessible
+ in its original form. Fortunately, Professor Otis's
+ translation has been reprinted, with an introduction
+ and notes by Professor W. L. Grant, in the 'Original
+ Narratives of Early American History' (Scribners,
+ 1907). The passages quoted in the present volume are
+ taken from Otis's translation, with occasional changes.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+4. The 'Voyages' of 1604-16 inclusive have also been well
+ translated by Annie Nettleton Bourne, with an
+ introduction and notes by Professor E. G. Bourne
+ (A. S. Barnes and Co., 1906). This translation follows
+ the edition of 1632, and also gives the translation
+ of 'Des Souvages' which appears in Purchas.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ General Literature
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The career of Champlain is treated in many historical works, of which the
+ following are a few: Parkman, 'Pioneers of France in the New World';
+ Dionne, 'Samuel de Champlain' (in the Makers of Canada' series); Biggar,
+ 'Early Trading Companies of New France'; Slafter, 'Champlain' (in Winsor's
+ 'Narrative and Critical History of America,' vol. iv, part i, chap. iii);
+ Salone, 'La Colonisation de la Nouvelle France'; Sulte, 'Histoire des
+ Canadiens-Francais'; Ferland, 'Cours d'Histoire du Canada'; Garneau,
+ 'Histoire du Canada,' fifth edition edited by the author's grandson,
+ Hector Garneau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Portrait
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, there is no authentic portrait of Champlain. That ascribed
+ to Moncornet is undoubtedly spurious, as has been proved by V. H. Paltsits
+ in 'Acadiensis,' vol. iv, pp. 306-11.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Founder of New France: A Chronicle
+of Champlain, by Charles W. Colby
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>