Snowflakes and Sunbeams; Or, The Young Fur-traders: A Tale of the Far North by - (little red riding hood ebook free .txt) đ
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âTo say truth, so am I; and these fellows are delightfully plump. But you spoke of eating your shoes, Jacques. When were you reduced to that direful extremity?â
Jacques finished reloading the canoe while they conversed, and the two were seated in their places, and quietly but swiftly ascending the stream again, ere the hunter replied.
âYouâve heerd of Sir John Franklin, I sâpose?â he inquired, after a minuteâs consideration.
âYes, often.â
âAnâ pârâaps youâve heerd tell of his first trip of discovery along the shores of the Polar Sea?â
âDo you refer to the time when he was nearly starved to death, and when poor Hood was shot by the Indian?â
âThe same,â said Jacques.
âOh, yes; I know all about that. Were you with them?â inquired Charley, in great surprise.
âWhy, noânot exactly on the trip; but I was sent in winter with provisions to themâand much need they had of them, poor fellows! I found them tearing away at some old parchment skins that had lain under the snow all winter, and that an Injinâs dog would haâ turned up his nose atâand they donât turn up their snouts at many things, I can tell ye. Well, after we had left all our provisions with them, we started for the fort again, just keepinâ as much as would drive off starvation; for, you see, we thought that surely we would git something on the road. But neither hoof nor feather did we see all the way (I was travellinâ with an Injin), and our grub was soon done, though we saved it up, and only took a mouthful or two the last three days. At last it was done, and we was pretty well used up, and the fort two days ahead of us. So says I to my comradeâwho had been looking at me for some time as if he thought that a cut off my shoulder wouldnât be a bad thingâsays I, âNipitabo, Iâm afeard the shoes must go for it now;â so with that I pulls out a pair oâ deerskin moccasins. âThey looks tender,â said I, trying to be cheerful. âWah!â said the Injin; and then I held them over the fire till they was done black, and Nipitabo ate one, and I ate the tother, with a lump oâ snow to wash it down!â
âIt must have been rather dry eating,â said Charley, laughing.
âRayther; but it was better than the Injinâs leather breeches, which we took in hand next day. They was uncommon tough, and very dirty, havinâ been worn about a year and a half. Howsâever, they kept us up; anâ as we only ate the legs, he had the benefit oâ the stump to arrive with at the fort next day.â
âWhatâs yon ahead?â exclaimed Charley, pausing as he spoke, and shading his eyes with his hand.
âItâs uncommon like trees,â said Jacques. âItâs likely a tree thatâs been tumbled across the river; and from its appearance, I think weâll have to cut through it.â
âCut through it!â exclaimed Charley; âif my sight is worth a gun-flint, weâll have to cut through a dozen trees.â
Charley was right. The river ahead of them became rapidly narrower; and either from the looseness of the surrounding soil, or the passing of a whirlwind, dozens of trees had been upset, and lay right across the narrow stream in terrible confusion. What made the thing worse was that the banks on either side, which were low and flat, were covered with such a dense thicket down to the waterâs edge, that the idea of making a portage to overcome the barrier seemed altogether hopeless.
âHereâs a pretty business, to be sure!â cried Charley, in great disgust.
âNever say die, Mister Charles,â replied Jacques, taking up the axe from the bottom of the canoe; âitâs quite clear that cuttinâ through the trees is easier than cuttinâ through the bushes, so here goes.â
For fully three hours the travellers were engaged in cutting their way up the encumbered stream, during which time they did not advance three miles; and it was evening ere they broke down the last barrier and paddled out into a sheet of clear water again.
âThatâll prepare us for the geese, Jacques,â said Charley, as he wiped the perspiration from his brow; âthereâs nothing like warm work for whetting the appetite, and making one sleep soundly.â
âThatâs true,â replied the hunter, resuming his paddle. âI often wonder how them white-faced fellows in the settlements manage to keep body and soul togetherâa-sittinâ, as they do, all day in the house, and a-lyinâ all night in a feather bed. For my part, rather than live as they do, I would cut my way up streams like them weâve just passed every day and all day, and sleep on top of a flat rock oâ nights, under the blue sky, all my life through.â
With this decided expression of his sentiments, the stout hunter steered the canoe up alongside of a huge flat rock, as if he were bent on giving a practical illustration of the latter part of his speech then and there.
âWeâd better camp now, Mister Charles; thereâs a portage oâ two miles here, and itâll take us till sundown to get the canoe and things over.â
âBe it so,â said Charley, landing. âIs there a good place at the other end to camp on?â
âFirst-rate. Itâs smooth as a blanket on the turf, and a clear spring bubbling at the root of a wide tree that would keep off the rain if it was to come down like water-spouts.â
The spot on which the travellers encamped that evening overlooked one of those scenes in which vast extent, and rich, soft variety of natural objects, were united with much that was grand and savage. It filled the mind with the calm satisfaction that is experienced when one gazes on the wide lawns studded with noble trees; the spreading fields of waving grain that mingle with stream and copse, rock and dell, vineyard and garden, of the cultivated lands of civilized men; while it produced that exulting throb of freedom which stirs manâs heart to its centre, when he casts a first glance over miles and miles of broad lands that are yet unowned, unclaimed; that yet lie in the unmutilated beauty with which the beneficent Creator originally clothed themâfar away from the well-known scenes of manâs checkered history; entirely devoid of those ancient monuments of manâs power and skill that carry the mind back with feelings of awe to bygone ages, yet stamped with evidences of an antiquity more ancient still in the wild primeval forests, and the noble trees that have sprouted, and spread, and towered in their strength for centuriesâtrees that have fallen at their posts, while others took their place, and rose and fell as they did, like long-lived sentinels whose duty it was to keep perpetual guard over the vast solitudes of the great American Wilderness.
The fire was lighted, and the canoe turned bottom up in front of it, under the branches of a spreading tree which stood on an eminence, whence was obtained a birdâs-eye view of the noble scene. It was a flat valley, on either side of which rose two ranges of hills, which were clothed to the top with trees of various kinds, the plain of the valley itself being dotted with clumps of wood, among which the fresh green foliage of the plane tree and the silver-stemmed birch were conspicuous, giving an airy lightness to the scene and enhancing the picturesque effect of the dark pines. A small stream could be traced winding out and in among clumps of willows, reflecting their drooping boughs and the more sombre branches of the spruce fir and the straight larch, with which in many places its banks were shaded. Here and there were stretches of clearer ground where the green herbage of spring gave to it a lawn-like appearance, and the whole magnificent scene was bounded by blue hills that became fainter as they receded from the eye and mingled at last with the horizon. The sun had just set, and a rich glow of red bathed the whole scene, which was further enlivened by flocks of wild-fowls and herds of reindeer.
These last soon drew Charleyâs attention from the contemplation of the scenery, and observing a deer feeding in an open space, towards which he could approach without coming between it and the wind, he ran for his gun and hurried into the woods while Jacques busied himself in arranging their blankets under the upturned canoe, and in preparing supper.
Charley discovered soon after starting, what all hunters discover sooner or laterânamely, that appearances are deceitful; for he no sooner reached the foot of the hill than he found, between him and the lawn-like country, an almost impenetrable thicket of underwood. Our young hero, however, was of that disposition which sticks at nothing, and instead of taking time to search for an opening, he took a race and sprang into the middle of it, in hopes of forcing his way through. His hopes were not disappointed. He got throughâquite throughâand alighted up to the armpits in a swamp, to the infinite consternation of a flock of teal ducks that were slumbering peacefully there with their heads under their wings, and had evidently gone to bed for the night. Fortunately he held his gun above the water and kept his balance, so that he was able to proceed with a dry charge, though with an uncommonly wet skin. Half-an-hour brought Charley within range, and watching patiently until the animal presented his side towards the place of his concealment, he fired and shot it through the heart.
âWell done, Mister Charles,â exclaimed Jacques, as the former staggered into camp with the reindeer on his shoulders. âA fat doe, too.â
âAy,â said Charley; âbut she has cost me a wet skin. So pray, Jacques, rouse up the fire, and letâs have supper as soon as you can.â
Jacques speedily skinned the deer, cut a couple of steaks from its flank, and placing them on wooden spikes, stuck them up to roast, while his young friend put on a dry shirt, and hung his coat before the blaze. The goose which had been shot earlier in the day was also plucked, split open, impaled in the same manner as the steaks, and set up to roast. By this time the shadows of night had deepened, and ere long all was shrouded in gloom, except the circle of ruddy light around the camp fire, in the centre of which Jacques and Charley sat, with the canoe at their backs, knives in their hands, and the two spits, on the top of which smoked their ample supper, planted in the ground before them.
One by one the stars went out, until none were visible except the bright, beautiful morning star, as it rose higher and higher in the eastern sky. One by one the owls and the wolves, ill-omened birds and beasts of night, retired to rest in the dark recesses of the forest. Little by little, the gray dawn overspread the sky, and paled the lustre of the morning star, until it faded away altogether; and then Jacques awoke with a start, and throwing out his arm, brought it accidentally into violent contact with Charleyâs nose.
This caused Charley to awake, not only with a start, but also with a roar, which brought them both suddenly into a sitting posture, in which they continued for some time in a state between sleeping and waking, their faces meanwhile expressive of mingled imbecility and extreme surprise. Bursting into a simultaneous laugh, which degenerated into a loud yawn, they sprang up, launched and reloaded their canoe, and resumed their journey.
The Indian campâThe new outpostâCharley sent on a mission to the Indians.
In the councils of the fur-traders, on the spring previous to that about which we are now writing, it had been decided to extend their operations a little in the lands that lie in central America, to the north of the Saskatchewan River; and in furtherance of that object, it had been intimated to the chief trader in charge of the district that an expedition should be set on foot, having for its object the examination of a territory into which they had not yet penetrated, and the establishment of an outpost therein. It was, furthermore, ordered that operations should be commenced at once, and that the choice of men to carry out the end in view was graciously left to the chief traderâs well-known sagacity.
Upon receiving this communication, the chief trader selected a gentleman named Mr. Whyte to lead the party; gave him a clerk and five men, provided him with a boat and a large supply of goods necessary for trade, implements requisite for building an establishment, and sent him off with a hearty shake of the
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