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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62844 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62844)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Dominion, by R. E. Vernède
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Fair Dominion
- A Record of Canadian Impressions
-
-Author: R. E. Vernède
-
-Illustrator: Cyrus Cuneo
-
-Release Date: August 3, 2020 [EBook #62844]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FAIR DOMINION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover art]
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: LOOKING FROM LAKE AGNES DOWN ON LAKES MIRROR AND
-LOUISE.]
-
-
-
-
- THE FAIR DOMINION
-
- A RECORD OF CANADIAN IMPRESSIONS
-
-
- BY
-
- R. E. VERNÈDE
-
- AUTHOR OF
- 'THE PURSUIT OF MR. FAVIEL,' 'MERIEL OF THE MOORS,' ETC.
-
-
-
- With 12 Illustrations in Colour
- from Drawings by
- CYRUS CUNEO
-
-
-
- LONDON
- KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO., LTD.
- DRYDEN HOUSE, GERRARD STREET, W.
- 1911
-
-
-
-
-
-{v}
-
-PREFACE
-
-You know how long ago, in the earlier-than-Victorian days, the
-country cousin, in order to see life, went up to the Metropolis. A
-terrible journey it was, but well worth the labour and anxiety.
-Accounts are still extant of how the bustle and noise of the streets
-amazed him, of how endless the houses seemed, how startled he was by
-the glittering, clattering folk, how innocent and countrified he felt
-by comparison with them. Nowadays, though the London we know is to
-that old London as a vast and sleepless city to a small somnolent
-town, the country cousin is no longer carried off his feet by a visit
-to it. It is not vast enough or noisy enough or new enough to
-impress him. Perhaps no single city ever will be again.
-
-But Canada! Some Winnipeg school teachers who came over recently to
-see London, told a journalist that it seemed so quiet compared with
-Canadian cities. 'In our cities,' {vi} they said, 'it is impossible
-to escape from the noise of the streets.' ... Yet the streets and the
-cities are not really the things that impress one most in Canada.
-The amazing things are the forests and the fields, the prairies and
-the lakes and the mountains: all the illimitable space and the
-irrepressible men who are closing it in and giving it names for us to
-know it by.
-
-Clearly the English country cousin who wishes to be impressed should
-go to Canada. It is as easy to reach as London was in the old days,
-and there are no highwaymen. He will come back--if he comes
-back--with many stories to tell his friends of the wonders he has
-seen and of the still more incredible things that will soon be
-visible. That is at least my position. I went out originally for
-the _Bystander_, which wanted its Canadian news, like all its other
-news, up-to-date and not too solemn, and I am indebted to the editor
-of that journal for permission to make use in parts of the articles I
-sent him for this book, in which, by the way, I have still
-endeavoured to avoid solemnity. For some reason or other, many
-writers upon Canada do fall into a solemn and portentous way of
-describing the country--with the result {vii} that people who know
-nothing of the facts say to themselves, 'This is indeed an important
-Dominion, but dull.' As a matter of fact, of course, Canada is a
-highly exciting country--from its grizzly bears to its political
-problems--and having spent delightful months in various parts, some
-well known, others, such as the French River, the Columbia Valley,
-and the Selkirks, very little known; riding in trains or on mountain
-ponies, sometimes trying to catch maskinongés (a tigerish kind of
-pike), sometimes trying to catch prime ministers (who cannot be
-described in such a general way)--I have tried to set down my
-impressions as incompletely as I received them. Never, I hope, have
-I fallen into the error of describing exactly how many salmon are
-canned in the Dominion, or what Sir Wilfrid Laurier should do if he
-really wishes to remain a great party leader. The errors I have
-fallen into will be obvious, and I need not run through them here....
-As for criticisms--if now and then I stop to make some--if I start
-saying, 'Canada is a great country, nevertheless, we do some things
-just as well or better at home,' no Canadian need mind. Country
-cousins have said just {viii} that sort of thing from all time.
-Every cousin--even the most countrified--makes some reservations in
-favour of his own place; he would not be worth entertaining
-otherwise. If the criticisms are pointless, Canadians may say, 'What
-can you expect from a country cousin?' If there is something in
-them, they will be entitled to remark, 'This English country cousin
-shows some intelligence. But then he has been to Canada--the centre
-of things.'
-
-
-
-
-{ix}
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAP.
-
-I. THE START FROM LIVERPOOL
-
-II. THE STEERAGE PASSAGE
-
-III. LANDING IN CANADA
-
-IV. A FAIRLY LONG DAY IN QUEBEC
-
-V. THE ATTRACTION OF THE SAGUENAY
-
-VI. STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRÉ AND A TRAVELLER'S VOW
-
-VII. A HABITANT VILLAGE AND ITS NOTAIRE
-
-VIII. GLIMPSES OF MONTREAL
-
-IX. TORONTO, NIAGARA FALLS, AND A NEGRO PORTER
-
-X. MASKINONGÉ FISHING ON THE FRENCH RIVER
-
-XI. SOME SUPERFICIAL REFLECTIONS AT SUDBURY
-
-XII. THROUGH THE HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO
-
-XIII. THE OLD TIMERS OF KILDONAN AND THE NEW TIMERS OF WINNIPEG
-
-XIV. A PRAIRIE TOWN AND THE PRAIRIE POLICE
-
-XV. IN CALGARY
-
-{x}
-
-XVI. THE AMERICANISATION QUESTION
-
-XVII. AMONG THE READY-MADE FARMS
-
-XVIII. INTO THE ROCKIES WITH A DEFENDER OF THE FAITH
-
-XIX. A HOT BATH IN BANFF
-
-XX. CANADA AND WOMAN
-
-XXI. THE LAKES AMONG THE CLOUDS
-
-XXII. A SOLITARY RIDE INTO THE YOHO VALLEY
-
-XXIII. THE FRUIT-LANDS OF LAKE WINDERMERE
-
-XXIV. THE SELKIRKS--A GRIZZLY-BEAR COUNTRY
-
-XXV. AN EIGHTY-MILE WALK THROUGH THE COLUMBIA VALLEY
-
-XXVI. FROM GOLDEN TO THE COAST
-
-XXVII. A LITTLE ABOUT VANCOUVER CITY
-
-XXVIII. THE HAPPY FARMERS OF THE ISLAND
-
-XXIX. A CHAT WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF
- BRITISH COLUMBIA AND A BIG FIRE AT VICTORIA
-
-XXX. BACK THROUGH OTTAWA
-
-INDEX
-
-
-
-
-{xi}
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-LOOKING FROM LAKE AGNES DOWN ON LAKES MIRROR AND LOUISE ...
-Frontispiece
-
-CHATEAU FRONTENAC FROM THE OLD RAMPARTS. DAY. QUEBEC
-
-CHATEAU FRONTENAC AND DUFFERIN TERRACE. NIGHT. QUEBEC
-
-MOUNT LEFROY. CANADIAN ROCKIES
-
-A TRAIL IN THE ROCKIES
-
-THE HALT. SADDLEBACK. LAGGAN
-
-LAKE LOUISE. LAGGAN. ALBERTA
-
-IN THE VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS
-
-ON THE TRAIL, YOHO VALLEY
-
-THE DEVIL'S FINGERS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS
-
-A SENTINEL OF THE ROCKIES
-
-IN THE SELKIRKS. THE RETURN FROM THE HUNT
-
-
-
-
-{1}
-
-THE FAIR DOMINION
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE START FROM LIVERPOOL
-
-Canada and its wonders might lie before us, yet it was not all joy
-there at the Liverpool docks, where we waited our opportunity to go
-on board S.S. _Empress of Britain_. For one thing, the sun on that
-August day of last year was so unusually warm that standing about
-with a bag amongst crowds of people who were seeing other people off
-was hard work; for another, I had left behind me in my Hertfordshire
-home my bull-mastiff, forlorn ever since I had begun packing, and not
-a bit deceived by the bone she had been supplied with at parting.
-Even while she had gnawed it, she had whined. All those other people
-already on the great ship, the people in the bows--the
-emigrants--were leaving more even than a bull-mastiff: friends--for
-who knew how long?--their parents in England perhaps for ever. Here
-were thoughts to obscure the {2} pleasure of those who were making
-for a new world, thoughts to sadden those who, whether by their own
-choice or not, were staying behind. Less than my bull-mastiff could
-they be either deceived or solaced. True, they might remember that
-this is the way a great Empire is made. We talk of the Empire often
-enough. But then we who talk of it are rarely those who make it or
-suffer for it; and perhaps we are therefore more easily consoled by a
-great idea than they.
-
-Luckily going on board ship has to be a bustling business. My two
-companions and I, who had been promised a four-berth third-class
-cabin between us, had to bustle quite a lot--to different gangways
-from which we were rapidly sent back and into various queues, which
-turned out, after we had waited in them for some time, to be composed
-of some other class of passenger. We were extremely heated before we
-found ourselves in the end about to be passed up a gangway at which
-the medical inspection of a group of Scandinavians was at the moment
-going on. Scandinavian seems to be a roomy word which covers all
-Swedes, Norwegians, Danes, Lapps; and no foreigners not coming under
-this category are carried by the 'Empress' boats.
-
-{3}
-
-The theory seems to be in regard to them that they are the only right
-and proper shipmates for English emigrants going to Canada. They
-were being pretty carefully examined all the same, men and women
-alike. The doctors' attention seemed to centre on their heads and
-eyelids. Hats were pulled off as they came level with them, and
-tow-coloured hair was grasped and peered into apparently with
-satisfactory results, for only a couple of elderly people were held
-back for a few minutes; and they I fancy had not passed the eye test,
-and were therefore not free from suspicion of having trachoma--a not
-uncommon North European disease supposed to cause total blindness,
-which is least of all to be desired in a new country. The two
-detained Scandinavians were re-examined and passed, after which our
-turn came. I think we all three felt a little uneasy in the eyelids
-as we advanced upon the doctor, but we need not have been anxious,
-for after a swift glance at us he reassured us by grinning and
-saying, 'There's nothing wrong with you, I should say,'--and so we
-passed on board. For the next hour or two we were part of a whirl of
-confused humanity. There is always a tendency among landsmen to
-become sheepish at sea, and in the steerage there were nine {4}
-hundred of us, most of whom had never been at sea before. So we
-rushed together and got jammed down companionways and in passages
-which even on so big a liner as this could not hold us all abreast,
-and scrummed to find the numbers of our berths from the steward, and
-flung ourselves in masses upon our baggage, and pressed pell-mell to
-the sides of the ship to wave good-bye, and formed a solid tossing
-square saloonwards when bells rang and we thought they might mean
-meals.
-
-Of course there must have been even then self-possessed passengers,
-who knew what they were about and only seemed to be lost with the
-crowd, and to be vaguely trying to muddle through. Canadians
-returning to their own country were conspicuous later by reason of
-their cool bearing and air of knowing their way about the world. And
-the invisible discipline of the ship that was to turn us all later
-into reasonable and orderly individuals was no doubt already at work.
-But the impression any one looking down on us that first evening
-would have received would have been the impression of a scurrying
-crowd, fancifully and variously dressed for its Atlantic
-voyage--clerks in pink shirts and high collars and bowler hats,
-peasants in smocks, women in the {5} very latest flapping head-gear,
-or bareheaded and shawled, infants either terribly smart or mere
-bundles of old clothes.
-
-Up on the first-class deck superior people were walking calmly about
-with just the right clothes and manners for such a small event as
-crossing the Atlantic must have been to most of them. Occasionally
-one of these upper folk would come to the rails, lean over and
-smilingly stare at us: wondering perhaps at our confusion. But then
-all our fortunes were embarked on the ship, and only a little part of
-theirs.
-
-When I went to sleep that night on a clean straw mattress in a lower
-berth, with a pleasant air blowing in through the port-hole in the
-passage, we were, I suppose, out to sea, and the air was Atlantic
-air, and no longer that of the old country.
-
-
-
-
-{6}
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE STEERAGE PASSAGE
-
-Apart from its other merits the steerage has this to its
-credit--every one is very friendly and affable. No one required an
-introduction before entering into conversation, and the suspicion
-that we might be making the acquaintance of some doubtful and
-inferior person who would perhaps presume upon it later did not worry
-any of us. I sat at a delightful table. Some one who knew the ins
-and outs of a steerage passage had advised me to go in to meals with
-the first 'rush,' instead of waiting for the second or third. His
-theory was that the first relay got the pick of the food. So my two
-friends and I had taken care to answer the very first call to the
-saloon, which happened to be for high tea, and, seating ourselves at
-random, found that we were thereby self-condemned to take every meal
-in the same order--including breakfast at the unaccustomed and
-somewhat dispiriting hour of 7 A.M. {7} I do not know that it
-greatly mattered. In the cabin next ours there were several small
-children, who appeared to wake and weep about 4 A.M., and either to
-throw themselves or be thrown out of their berths on to the floor a
-little later. Their lamentations then became so considerable, that
-we were not sorry to rise and go elsewhere.
-
-Besides the three of us, there were at our table the following:--
-
-(1) A Norwegian peasant. Going on to the land. Quiet and rapid in
-his eating.
-
-(2) Another Norwegian peasant, also going on to the land. He must
-have arrived on board very hungry, and he remained so throughout the
-voyage. He used to help himself to butter with his egg spoon, after
-he had finished most of his egg with it. Moreover, he would rise and
-stretch a red and dusky arm all down the table, if he sighted
-something appetising afar off. As we had a most excellent table
-steward, whose waiting could not have been beaten in the first-class,
-we all rather resented this behaviour, and I--as his next door
-neighbour--was deputed to hold him courteously in his seat until the
-desired eatables could be passed him.
-
-(3) A Durham miner going to a mine in {8} northern Ontario. A cheery
-red-faced person. He had bought a revolver before starting for
-Canada, because friends had told him that they were rough sort of
-places up there. I afterwards stayed a night in a mining town, and
-the only row that I heard was caused by a young Salvation Army girl,
-who beat a drum violently for hours outside the bar. We advised the
-miner to practise with his revolver in some isolated spot, these
-weapons being tricky.
-
-(4) A small shy cockney boy who was going out to his dad at Winnipeg.
-I don't know what his dad was, but I should think a clerk of sorts.
-
-(5) A brass metal worker from the North. Going to a job in
-Peterborough. A quiet pleasant young man.
-
-(6) A chauffeur who had also been in the Royal Engineers. Had been
-in the South African War, and told stories about it much more
-interesting than those you see in books.
-
-(7) A horse-breaker, with whom I spent many hours learning about bits
-and bridles and shoes. He was the only married man among these
-seven. He hoped to bring his wife and family out within the year,
-and was not going to be happy until he did, even though {9} the kids
-would have to be vaccinated, and he had most conscientious objections
-to this process.
-
-All these men--even the Norwegian with his egg-spoon habits--would
-be, I could not help thinking, a distinct gain to any country. I
-fancy too that they represented the steerage generally. Of course
-there were other types. I remember some characteristic Londoners of
-the less worthy sort--gummy-faced youths in dirty clothes that had
-been smart. There was one in particular, whom the horse-breaker
-would refer to as 'that lad that goes about in what was once a soot
-o' clothes,' who had a perfect genius for card tricks and making
-music on a comb. His career in Canada, judging by criticisms passed
-upon him by returning Canadians, was likely to be brief and
-unsuccessful.
-
-The food--to turn to what is always of considerable interest on a
-voyage--was good but solid. Pea soup, followed by pork chops and
-plum-pudding, makes an excellent dinner when you are hungry.
-Everybody was hungry the first day and also the last three days. In
-between there was a cessation of appetites. The sea was never in the
-least rough, but there was some slight motion on the second day out,
-{10} and the majority of the nine hundred had probably never been to
-sea before. The strange affliction took them unawares, and they did
-not know how to deal with it. Where they were first seized, there
-they remained and were ill. The sides of the ship which appealed to
-more experienced travellers did not allure them. It was during this
-affliction that a device which had struck me as a most excellent idea
-upon going on board seemed in practice less good. This was a
-railed-in sand-pit which the paternal company had constructed between
-decks for the entertainment of the emigrant children. I had seen a
-dozen or more at a time playing in it with every manifestation of
-delight. Even now while they were ailing there, they did not seem to
-mind it.
-
-Everywhere one went on that day of tribulation one had to walk warily.
-
-Afterwards the sea settled down into a mill pond, and every one began
-to wear a cheerful and hopeful look. In the evenings, and sometimes
-in the afternoons as well, some of the Scandinavians would produce
-concertinas and violins, and the whole of them would dance their
-folk-dances for hours. It was extraordinary how gracefully they
-danced--the squat fair-haired women and the big men heavily {11}
-clothed and booted. There was an attempt on the part of some of the
-English people to take part in these dances, but they soon realised
-their inferiority, and gave it up in favour of sports and concerts.
-The sports, though highly successful in themselves, led to a slight
-contretemps when the Bishop of London, who happened to be on board,
-came over by request to distribute the prizes. The Scandinavians,
-who quite wrongly thought they had been left out of the sports,
-seized the opportunity afforded by the bishop's address (which was
-concerned with our future in Canada), to form in Indian file, with a
-concertinist at their head, and march round and round the platform on
-which the bishop stood, making a deafening noise. It looked for a
-little as if there might be a scuffle between them and the
-prize-winners, but peace prevailed, though we were all prevented from
-hearing what was no doubt very sound advice. Apart from this, there
-was no horseplay to speak of until the last night but one, when a
-rowdy set, headed by a fat Yorkshireman, chose to throw bottles about
-in the dark, down in that part of the ship where about fifty men were
-berthed together. For this the ringleader was hauled before the
-captain and properly threatened.
-
-{12}
-
-Our concerts went with less éclat. They were held in the
-dining-saloon, and there were usually good audiences. It seemed
-however that we had only one accompanist, whose command of the piano
-was limited, and in any case self-consciousness invariably got the
-better of the performers at the last moment. Either they would not
-come forward at all when their turn arrived, or else, having come
-forward, they turned very red, wavered through a few notes and then
-lost their voices altogether. Our best English concertina player, a
-fat little Lancashire engineer, had his instrument seized with the
-strangest noises halfway through 'Variations on the Harmonica,' and
-after a manly effort to restrain them, failed and had to retire in
-haste. We generally bridged over these recurring gaps in the
-programme by singing 'Yip i addy.'
-
-It was so fine most of the voyage, that one could be quite happy on
-deck doing nothing at all but resting and strolling and talking. A
-few of the girls skipped occasionally and some of the men boxed:
-there was no real zeal for deck games. The voyage was too short, and
-with the new life and the new world at the end of it we all wanted to
-find out from one another what we knew--or at least what we {13}
-thought--Canada would be like. We stood in some awe of returning
-Canadians who talked of dollars as if they were pence, and we
-wondered if we should get jobs as easily as people said we should.
-Almost every type of worker was represented among us, and many types
-of people.
-
-Chief among my own particular acquaintances made on the boat were a
-young lady-help from Alberta, two Russian Jews from Archangel, a
-Norwegian farm hand from somewhere near the Arctic circle, two miners
-from Ontario, and three small boys belonging to Perth, Scotland.
-
-I do not know how the Russian Jews came to be on the boat. They had
-some Finnish, and I suppose slipped in with the Scandinavians. They
-also spoke a few words of German, which was the language we misused
-together. They were brothers, good-looking men with charming
-manners. The elder wore a frock coat and a bowler hat, and looked a
-romantic Shylock. The other was clothed in a smock, and was hatless.
-They said they had fled from the strife of Russia, and they wished
-particularly to know if Canada was a free country. The younger man
-was an ironworker and made penny puzzles in iron {14} which, so far
-as I could make out, the elder brother invented. They had one puzzle
-with them, but it was very complicated, and I was afraid that the
-sale of such things in Canada might be limited, unless Canadians
-fancied bewildering themselves over intricate ironwork during the
-long winters. Still those two fugitives rolled Russian cigarettes
-very well too, which should earn them a living.
-
-The Norwegian was a simple youth in a queer hat, which afterwards
-blew off into the sea much to his sorrow. He was very bent on
-acquiring the English language during the voyage, not having any of
-it to start with. I used to sit with him on one side and the small
-Perthshire boys on the other, while we translated Scottish into
-Norwegian and back again. The Scotch boys would inquire of me what
-'hat' was in Norse, and I would point to the queer head-gear
-above-mentioned, and ask its owner to name its Norwegian equivalent.
-One of the things that stumped me--being a mere Englishman--was a
-question put by the smallest Perth boy: 'Whit is gollasses in
-Norwegian?'
-
-It took me some time to find out what gollasses were in English, and
-I don't know how to spell them now.
-
-
-
-
-{15}
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-LANDING IN CANADA
-
-It was while we were still out to sea that I first realised what
-Canada might be like, and how different from England. We had been
-steaming for five days, and hitherto the Atlantic had seemed a
-familiar and still English sea. The sky above, the air around, even
-the vast slowly heaving waters and the set of the sun one might see
-from an English cliff. But on this last day but one, which was a day
-of hot sun, the sky seemed to have risen immeasurably higher than in
-England and to have become incredibly clearer, except where little
-white rugged clouds were set. Snow clouds in a perfect winter's sky,
-I should have said, if I had known myself to be at home; yet the air
-round the ship was of the very balmiest summer. We should never get
-such a sky and such an air together in England, and we were all
-stimulated by it and began to forget England and think more of
-Canada. We wondered {16} when we were going to see the lights of
-Belle Isle, and somebody said we should pass an island called
-Anticosti, and we began to look out for Anticosti, and anybody who
-knew anything about Anticosti was listened to like an oracle. Not
-that anybody did know much--even those who had crossed to and fro
-several times. After all there was no reason why they should, for
-Atlantic liners do not stop there, and there is not much to be seen
-in passing. Still we weighed the words of those who had passed it
-carefully, and decided to see what we could of it so that we might
-also be regarded as oracles next time we came that way.
-
-Though we had not seen Canada, yet we had received a favourable
-impression of it, which was lucky, because the next day, when we had
-got into the St. Lawrence, it came on to sleet and vapour. We of the
-steerage, who had brought up our boxes and babies almost before
-breakfast, so as to be ready to land at the earliest moment, had to
-content ourselves with sitting on them between decks (on the boxes,
-for choice, but the babies would get in the way too), and watch the
-little white villages and tinned church spires and dark woods of
-French Canada drive past the portholes in the {17} mist. We should
-like to have been on deck seeing more of our new home, breathing some
-of its bracing air; but the rain was incessant. Heavens, but it got
-stuffy too on that lower deck. Nine hundred of us in our best
-clothes and our overcoats--holding on to bundles and kids, and
-sweating. It got so stuffy, that I took the opportunity of crossing
-in the rain to the first-class, and hunting out two people to whom I
-had introductions. One was the Canadian Minister for Emigration, who
-had already been over to inspect us in a paternal sort of way and
-declared that we were 'a particularly good lot'--very different, he
-hinted, from the sort of English emigrants who used to be shipped
-over, and got Englishmen a bad name in the new country for years.
-His gratification at our general excellence was so natural that I did
-not broach the question of whether Canada's gain was England's loss.
-I hope it was not. I suppose we can afford to lose even good men,
-provided we are not going to lose them really, but only station them
-at a different spot along the great road of the Empire.
-
-The other person I was anxious to see was Archbishop Bourne, who was
-going out to the Eucharistic Congress at Montreal. We {18} discussed
-that extraordinarily lucid book of Monsieur André Siegfried, which
-deals with the race question in Canada. The archbishop admitted its
-value, though he thought it unfair in parts. He was assured, for
-example, that the unsocial attitude of the Irish and French Canadian
-Catholics towards one another as well as towards those of another
-religion was fast disappearing, nor did he seem to think that the
-Church any longer tended to frustrate enterprise by keeping its
-members under its wing in the East. Many Catholics were going West
-nowadays, and after the Congress he himself was going West in the
-spirit of the times. Perhaps he was right about the _rapprochement_
-of the Irish and French Catholics, though men on the spot maintain
-that their unsociability is largely due to the fact that both have a
-singular yearning for State employment and the employment will not
-always go round.
-
-It was still raining when I recrossed to the steerage, and it was
-still raining when we got into the Canadian Pacific Railway dock at
-about 5 P.M. I was standing beside the horse-breaker at the time,
-and the first thing that caught his eye in Quebec was the shape of
-the telegraph poles.
-
-{19}
-
-'Why, look at them,' he said, 'they're all crooked!'
-
-A little later, he commented on the slowness with which the
-French-Canadian porters were getting the baggage off the boat. 'They
-may have this here hustle on them that they talk of,' he said, 'but
-I've seen that done a lot quicker in London.'
-
-It was more loyalty to the old country than disloyalty to the new
-that prompted the remark, in which there was perhaps some
-justification. A Canadian who was standing by seemed to think so at
-any rate.
-
-'This is only French Canada,' he said, 'wait till you get West.'
-
-Still we all of us had to wait a bit in French Canada anyhow. We did
-not get through the emigration sheds till 9.30 P.M., and then there
-was one's baggage to be got through the Customs after. Not that
-there was much in that, the officials being most amiable. But we
-none of us much enjoyed the emigrant inspection. It is necessary and
-desirable no doubt, but we felt that we had been inspected pretty
-often already on board the boat, and we had been up since daylight,
-and we were hungry and miserable, and hot in the sheds and cold out
-of them, and the babies fractious, {20} and everybody shoving and
-pushing, and we felt like some sheep at sheep-dog trials which have
-to be driven through pen after pen, and would go so much faster if
-they only knew how, and the dogs didn't press them. However it was
-all accomplished at last, and then the emigrants got into the
-westbound train that was waiting for them. First and second-class
-passengers had long since vanished in carriages to such abodes of
-luxury as the Cháteau Frontenac and the rest of the leading hotels.
-Now there were no carriages left. And we heard that a hundred people
-at least had been turned away from the Château Frontenac, so full was
-it; and since in any case we wished to start our Canadian impressions
-from a humbler standpoint, we set out in the rain for a Quebec inn
-which some of the Canadians returning in the steerage had told us of.
-I suppose we had a good deal more than a mile to go through the rain
-carrying bags, along those awful roads from the docks. I know
-something about those roads, because I not only walked along them
-that night, but next morning I drove a dray along them. I had gone
-back to the docks to get my trunk which I had had to leave there, and
-the dray was the only thing I could get to drive up in. Soon after
-we had started {21} I said to the driver--a merry-faced French
-Canadian--'Il trotte bien,' referring to the horse, and he was so
-pleased with the compliment, or the French perhaps, that he handed me
-the reins and let me drive the rest of the way through the stone
-piles and mud that appeared to form the roads in lower Quebec. In
-return for the reins I had lent him my tobacco pouch; and when the
-horse leapt an extra deep hole, he would stop filling his pipe and
-hold me in round the waist.
-
-To go back to the inn--I suppose it was ten o'clock before we got
-there. A few men sat smoking, with their feet against the wall in
-the entrance room where the office was; and after we had waited about
-for ten minutes or so, one of them told us if we wanted to see the
-clerk we'd better ring a bell. We did so, and presently a youth
-turned up and patronisingly accorded us rooms for the night.
-
-'Is there any chance of getting a meal to-night?' we inquired,
-somewhat damped by his unenthusiastic reception. (I may say that I
-never met an office clerk in a Canadian hotel who did seem keen on
-welcoming guests. That is one of the differences between the old
-world and the new.)
-
-'Yup, there's a café downstairs,' said the {22} youth, as he lit a
-cigar and sat down to read a newspaper.
-
-We went downstairs, and there in a narrow little room behind a long
-counter which had plates of sausage rolls, under meat covers to keep
-them from the flies, upon it, and little high stools upon which you
-sit in discomfort to eat the sausage rolls quickly in front of it, we
-found a small pale-faced boy who said 'Sure!' in the cheeriest way
-when we repeated our question about food. Five minutes later he had
-produced from a stove which he was almost too small to reach fried
-bacon and eggs and coffee, and while we sat and ate these good
-things, he gave us advice about the future. He evidently knew
-without asking that we were emigrants from the old country, and he
-supposed we wanted jobs. He recommended waiting as a start--waiting
-in a hotel. Waiting was not, he said, much of a thing to stick at;
-but there was pretty good money to be made at it in the season. Lots
-of tourists gave good tips--especially in Quebec--and you could save
-money as a waiter if you tried. He himself was from the States, but
-he liked Quebec well enough. Of course it was not as hustling as
-further west, and not to be compared to the States. If a man {23}
-had ideas, the States was the place for him. There were more
-opportunities for a man with ideas in the States than there were in
-Canada. We asked him how much a man with ideas could reckon upon
-making in the States, and he said such a man could reckon upon making
-as much as five dollars a day. It did not seem an overwhelming
-amount to my aspiring mind--not for a man with ideas. Perhaps that
-is because one has heard of so many millionaires down in the States,
-beginning with Mr. Rockefeller. But then again, perhaps millionaires
-are not men with ideas themselves so much as men who know how to use
-the ideas of others.
-
-Having started on money, the boy gave us a lecture on the Canadian
-coinage, the advantages of the decimal system, where copper money
-held good and why--all in a way that would have done credit to a
-financial expert. We thought him an amazing boy to be frying eggs
-and bacon behind a counter in a small café: only you don't just stick
-to one groove in Canada. At least you ought not to, as the boy
-himself told us. Englishmen were like that, but it didn't do in the
-States or Canada. A man should have several strings to his bow, and
-be ready to turn his hand to anything.
-
-{24}
-
-Refreshed by our supper and his advice, we adjourned to the bar which
-was handy, and got further enlightenment from the barman there. He
-was a French Canadian, very dapper in a stiff white shirt and patent
-leather boots. Money was also his theme. He told us he made forty
-cents an hour, and meant to get up to seventy-five cents pretty soon.
-That was good money to get, but he was worth it, and if the boss
-didn't think so he would try some other boss who did. It was no good
-a man's sitting down and taking less money than he was worth. A man
-would not get anywhere if he did that sort of thing. He certainly
-mixed cocktails at a lightning pace, and all the time he chatted he
-strode up and down behind the bar like a caged jackal. He gave me my
-first idea of that un-English restlessness--American, I suppose, in
-its origin--which is beginning to spread so rapidly through Canada.
-In America I fancy they are beginning to distrust it a little. Too
-much enterprise may lead to an unsettled condition that is not much
-better than stagnation. Farm hands tend to leave their employers at
-critical moments, just for the sake of novelty. Farmers themselves
-are so anxious to get on that they take what they can out of the
-land, and move {25} to new farms, leaving the old ruined. It may be
-that in a newer country like Canada enterprise is less perilous.
-That remains to be seen. We retired to bed at midnight, sleepier
-even than men from the old country are reputed to be.
-
-
-
-
-{26}
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-A FAIRLY LONG DAY IN QUEBEC
-
-Quebec city is full of charms and memories. I am no lover of cities
-when they have grown so great that no one knows any longer what site
-they were built on, or what sort of a country is buried beneath them.
-Their streets may teem with people and their buildings be very
-splendid, but if they have shut off the landscape altogether I cannot
-admire them. Quebec will never be one of those cities, however great
-she may grow. Quebec stands on a hill, and just as a city on a hill
-cannot be hid, so too it cannot hide from those who live in it the
-country round, nor even the country it stands on. Always there will
-be in Quebec a sense of steepness. The cliffs still climb even where
-they are crowded with houses. And the air that reaches Quebec is the
-air of the hills. Always too--from Dufferin Terrace at least--there
-will be visible the sweep of the St. Lawrence, the dark crawl to the
-north-east {27} of the Laurentian Mountains, and the clear and
-immensely lofty Canadian skies.
-
-I spent the whole of my first day in Quebec on Dufferin Terrace,
-except for that journey down to the docks. Once I was on the
-terrace, I forgot how bad the roads had been. You might drive a
-thousand miles through stones and mud, and forget them all the moment
-you set foot on Dufferin Terrace. Everything you see from it is
-beautiful, from the Château Frontenac behind--surely the most
-picturesque and most picturesquely situated hotel in the world--to
-the wind on the river below. Most beautiful of all the things I saw
-was the moon starting to rise behind Port Levis. It started in the
-trees, and at first I thought it was a forest fire. There was
-nothing but red flame that spread and spread among the trees at
-first. Suddenly it shot up into a round ball of glowing orange, so
-that I knew it was the moon long before it turned silver, high up,
-and made a glimmering pathway across the river.
-
-During this moonrise the band was playing on the terrace, and all
-Quebec was strolling up and down or standing listening to the music,
-as is its custom on summer evenings. The scene on the terrace has
-often enough been described--with its mingling of many {28} types,
-American tourists and Dominican friars, habitants from far villages,
-and business men from the centre of things, archbishops and Members
-of Parliament, and ships' stewards and commercial travellers, and
-freshly arrived immigrants and old market women. The fair Quebeckers
-love the terrace as much as their men folk, and I saw several pretty
-faces among them and many pretty figures. They know how to walk,
-these French Canadian ladies, and also how to dress--the latter an
-art which has still to be achieved by the women of the West.
-
-[Illustration: CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC, QUEBEC, FROM THE OLD RAMPARTS.]
-
-The terrace besides being gay is very friendly too. My two
-companions of the voyage had gone on that morning, being in a hurry
-to reach the prairie; but I found several new friends on the terrace
-in the course of the day. One was a young working man from England,
-who had brought his child on to the terrace to play when I first met
-him. He was so well-dressed and prosperous looking that I should
-never have guessed he was only a shoe-leather cutter, as he told me
-he was. But then he had been out in Quebec for five years, and he
-was making twenty-five dollars a week instead of the thirty-two
-shillings a week he used to make in Nottingham at the same trade. He
-said he {29} had been sorry to leave England, but you were more of a
-man in Canada. There were not twenty men after one job--that was the
-difference. Consequently, if your boss offered to give you any dirt,
-you could tell him to go to Hell. I suppose we should have counted
-him a wicked and dangerous Socialist in England, but there is no
-doubt that he is a typical Canadian citizen, and the kind of man they
-want there. Another acquaintance I picked up was a commercial
-traveller from Toronto--a stout tubby energetic man, who asked me,
-almost with tears in his eyes, why England would not give up Free
-Trade and study Canadian needs? He was particularly keen on English
-manufacturers studying Canadian needs, and he put the matter in quite
-a novel light as far as I was concerned. His argument was that we
-made things in England too well. What was the use, he demanded, of
-making good durable things when Canadians did not want them? It only
-meant that the States jumped in with inferior goods more suited to
-the moment. He assured me that Canada was a new country, and
-Canadians did not want to buy things that would last hundreds of
-years. Take furniture, machinery, anything--Canadians only wanted
-stuff that {30} would last them a year or two, after which they could
-scrap it and get something new. That kept the money in circulation.
-Anyway, he insisted, a thing was no good if it was better than what a
-customer required. I had not thought of things in that way before,
-and it was interesting to hear him.
-
-My third acquaintance was a member of the Quebec Parliament, who
-started to chat quite informally, and having ascertained that I was
-fresh from the old country took me to his house, that I might drink
-Scotch whisky, and be informed that French Canadians loved the King
-and hated the Boer War. I think when a French Canadian does not know
-you well, he will always make these two admissions--but not any
-more--lest you should be unsympathetic or he should give himself away.
-
-That is why, since the position of French Canadians in Canadian
-politics will some day be of the greatest importance, we ought all to
-be thankful for the existence of Mr. Bourassa. Mr. Bourassa is
-represented--by his opponents--as the violent leader of a small
-faction of French Canadians, as a trial to moderate men of all sorts,
-including the majority of his own French-Canadian fellow-citizens.
-All this is very true. In Canadian politics, as they stand {31} at
-present, Mr. Bourassa stands for just that and very little more.
-Politically he is an extremist and a nuisance. But disregarding for
-a moment immediate practical politics, Mr. Bourassa stands for much
-more than that--stands indeed for the real essence of French Canada.
-He is the French Canadian in action, shouting on the house-tops what
-most of them prefer to dream of by the fire-side, insisting upon
-bringing forward ideas which the others would leave to be brought
-forward by chance or in the lapse of time.
-
-He has been called the Parnell of Canada, but these international
-metaphors are generally calculated to mislead. The most that Parnell
-ever demanded was Home Rule for Ireland--that small part of Great
-Britain, that fraction of the Empire. Mr. Bourassa does not only
-want Home Rule for Quebec. He wants it for Canada; only the Canada
-he sees thus self-ruling is a Canada permeated by French Canadianism.
-If Parnell had wanted Home Rule, so that England, Scotland, and Wales
-might be ruled from Dublin, he would have attained to something of
-the completeness of Mr. Bourassa's policy. Mr. Bradley, whose book
-on _Canada in the Twentieth Century_ is as complete as any one book
-on Canada could {32} be, and as up-to-date as any--allowing for the
-fact that Canada changes yearly--declared in in it, some years ago,
-that the French Canadians realised that for them to populate the
-North-West was a dream to be given up. It may be a dream, but I
-doubt if it is given up: and the dreams of a population more prolific
-than any other on the face of the earth may some day become
-realities. What is against these dreams? The influx of English
-immigrants? The rush for the land of American farmers? But these
-are only temporary obstacles. The Americans may go back again. They
-often do. The English immigrants are largely unmarried young men,
-and there are no women in the West. They are making ready the land,
-but the inheritors of it have yet to appear. It is not strange if
-Mr. Bourassa sees those inheritors among his own people--only it is
-not yet their time, not for many years yet--not for so many years yet
-that it seems almost unpractical and absurd to look forward to it.
-Even such a faith as that which Mr. Bourassa has confessed to in
-regard to the Eastern provinces--Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, New
-Brunswick--that 'In fifteen years they will have become French in
-language and Roman Catholic in faith,' seems highly unpractical.
-{33} Ontario is not likely to become Roman Catholic any faster than
-Ulster. But on the other hand it will only increase in its
-anti-Frenchness and its anti-Roman Catholicism in so far as it is
-upheld and influenced by Imperialism. Imperialism to Mr. Bourassa is
-that bogey which goes about linking up all those small
-non-conforming, hustling, militant and materialistic communities
-which unaided would come into the Catholic French-Canadian fold. It
-is that odious system which prevents other nations within the
-Empire--such as French Canada--from developing along their own
-natural lines. It is something which easily causes Mr. Bourassa to
-forget that England and Englishmen--representing a distant
-sovereignty which keeps the world's peace--have been a boon and a
-blessing to French Canadians rather than otherwise; and causes him to
-remember that they may in a moment become an imminent
-sovereignty--imposing conscription, war, chapels (things that the
-Ontarian takes to like a duck to water) upon the whole Canadian
-community. Such impositions would not only strengthen the non-French
-Canadians, and ruin the natural progress-to-power of the French
-Canadians; but they would topple down like a house of {34} cards
-those splendid dreams which might in a French-Canadianised Canada
-become realities. What dreams? Rome shifted to Montreal for one,
-and the Vatican gardens of the future sweeping down to the St.
-Lawrence. The whole vast wealth of the Dominion diverted to the
-carrying out of those traditions which are neither French nor English
-but Canadian ... started four hundred years before by the captains
-and the priests, voyageurs and martyrs, who in an age of unbelief
-went forth in response to miraculous signs for the furtherance of the
-glory of God.
-
-[Illustration: CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC AND DUFFERIN TERRACE. NIGHT.
-QUEBEC.]
-
-I said that Quebec was full of memories. It is well to remember that
-most of these are French-Canadian memories. The Englishman, at home
-or touring, thinks most naturally of Wolfe in connection with Quebec,
-and thinks with pride how that fight on the Plains of Abraham marked,
-in Major Wood's words, 'three of the mightiest epochs of modern
-times--the death of Greater France, the coming of age of Greater
-Britain, and the birth of the United States.' The splendid daring
-climb of the English army, the romantic fevered valour of its
-general, the suddenness and completeness of the reversal of
-positions, unite to make us think that never was a more glorious {35}
-event, or one better calculated to appeal to men of the New World.
-But do not let us forget that for French Canadians--great event as it
-was, severing their allegiance to France for ever on the one hand,
-leaving them free men as never before on the other--it was only one
-event in a new world that was already for them (but not for us) three
-hundred years old. 'Here Wolfe fell.' But here also, long before
-Wolfe fell, Champlain stood, and French captains led valiant men on
-expeditions against strange insidious foes, and the Cross was carried
-onwards by the priests, and amid mystic voices and divinations, and
-slaughterings and endurances, the faith prevailed and the character
-of the people was formed. They have no hankering for France--these
-people to whom Wolfe's battle seems but one out of many. France,
-they think, has forsaken the Church. But they are French
-still--these people--and amazingly conservative in their customs and
-their creed. We may tell them that England--which sent out
-Wolfe--has given them material prosperity, equality under the law,
-the means of justice. They will reply, or rather they will silently
-think, and only an occasional Nationalist will dare to say:--
-
-'We owe nothing to Great Britain. England {36} did not take Canada
-for love, or to plant the Cross of religion as the French did, but in
-order to plant their trading posts and make money.'
-
-Gratitude is not a virtue nations take pride in possessing; they are
-indeed seldom nations until they have forgotten to be grateful. I
-suppose French Canadians are on their way to forgetting to be
-grateful to England for what she did in times past, but it is not
-because they have any real quarrel with England, or desire to injure
-her. Merely because they feel that from England exudes that
-Imperialism which appeals in no way from the past, and menaces, they
-think, their future.
-
-
-
-
-{37}
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE ATTRACTION OF THE SAGUENAY
-
-Almost directly one lands in Canada, one feels the desire to move
-west. It is not that the east fails to attract and interest, or that
-a man might not spend many years in Quebec province alone, and still
-have seen little of its vast, wild, northern parts. Again there is
-the Evangeline country, little known for all that it is 'storied.'
-But the tide is west just at present. Everybody asks everybody
-else--Have you been West, or Are you going West? And every one who
-has been West or is going feels himself to be in the movement. Some
-day no doubt the tide will set back again, or flow both ways equally.
-To-day it flows westward.
-
-I should have been sorry, however, if I had not gone eastward at
-least as far as the Saguenay, and I am duly grateful to the American
-who, so to speak, irritated me into going there. He was a thin, pale
-youth, somewhat bald from {38} clutching at his hair, who sat next to
-me at dinner my third day at Quebec. He announced to the table at
-large that he was travelling for his pleasure, but to judge from his
-strained face, travelling for his pleasure was one of the hardest
-jobs he had tried. He had been doing Quebec, and he gave all
-Canadians present to understand that Quebec had made him very very
-tired. Look at the trips around too. Look at the Montmorency Falls.
-Had anybody present seen Niagara? Well, if anybody had seen Niagara,
-the Montmorency Falls could only make him tired. One or two
-Canadians present bent lower to their food. But on the whole
-Canadians do not readily enter into argument, and half Niagara Falls
-is Canadian too, so that finding no opponents the youth proceeded
-triumphantly to give the relative proportions in figures of the two
-falls. As he directed them chiefly at me, I felt bound to say that I
-had seen falls about a tenth the size of either which had struck me
-as worth going to see. He then said that he guessed I was from
-England. I said this was so. Thereupon he told me that everybody in
-England was asleep. I suggested that sleep was better than insomnia,
-and shocked by my soporific levity, he advised me to go and have a
-look at {39} New York if I wanted to know how things could hum. I
-said I supposed that New York was a fairly busy place. A silly
-remark--only he happened to be a New Yorker, and all that tiredness
-left him. I learnt so much about the busyness of New York that I
-have hardly forgotten it all yet.
-
-Afterwards, but some time afterwards, when the American had left the
-table, a Scottish Canadian asked me if I had done the Saguenay trip,
-and when I said that I had not done it, he strongly advised me not to
-miss it.
-
-'It's the finest trip in Canada. Yes, sir.'
-
-I decided to go. It takes just two days from the start at Quebec to
-Chicoutimi and back, and you go in a spacious sort of houseboat which
-paddles along at just the right pace, first on one side of the river
-then on the other, stopping to load and unload at the little villages
-along the St. Lawrence. There to the left--a great sheet of silver
-hung from the cliff--were the Montmorency Falls, which had made that
-young American tired. A hundred and twenty years ago Queen
-Victoria's father occupied the Kent house, hard by the Falls, now a
-hotel. Wolfe lay ill for two weeks in a farm close by; probably on
-no other sick-bed in the world were plans so big with fate {40}
-conceived. Then the Ile d'Orléans floats by--that fertile island
-which Cartier named after the Grape God four hundred years ago,
-because of the vines that grew there. All this waterway is history,
-French-Canadian history mostly. With a fine mist hung over the
-river, concealing the few modern spires and roofs, you can see the
-country to-day just as Cartier saw it when he came sailing up.
-Neither four hundred nor four thousand years will serve to modernise
-the banks of the St. Lawrence. Take that thirty-mile stretch where
-the Laurentides climb sheer from the water. That is what Cartier
-saw--nothing different. No houses, no people; only the grey rock
-growing out of the green trees, and the grey sky overhead. Lower
-down, with the sun shining as it did for us, Cartier would see, if he
-came sailing up to-day, all those picturesque French-Canadian
-villages which have sprung up along the shore--Baie St. Paul, St.
-Irénée, Murray Bay, Tadousac, with the white farms of the Habitants,
-and the summer homes of the Quebeckers and Montrealers, and the
-shining spires of the churches, and the wooden piers jutting far out
-into the river. Those piers are particularly cheerful places. There
-are always gangs of porters waiting to run out freight from the hold,
-and {41} a gathering of ladies in gay frocks who want to greet
-friends on board, and heaps of little habitants playing about or
-smoking their pipes. The habitant appears to start his pipe at the
-age of eight or nine years, judging from those who frequent the piers.
-
-I think I was the only Englishman on board that boat. Most of the
-passengers were Americans, but cheerful ones--not like that young man
-at the hotel--and we were all very keen on seeing everything, so that
-it became dusk much too soon for most of us. We got to Tadousac just
-about dusk, which I was particularly sorry for, since of all the
-places we passed, it held the most memories. In 1600 the whole fur
-trade of Canada centred round this benighted little spot, and the men
-of St. Malo were the rivals of the Basques for the black foxes
-trapped by the Indians of that date. I should like to have seen this
-queer little port by daylight, but I suppose for most purposes
-Parkman's description holds good, and cannot easily be beaten:--
-
-'A desolation of barren mountain closes round it, betwixt whose ribs
-of rugged granite, bristling with savins, birches, and firs, the
-Saguenay rolls its gloomy waters from the northern wilderness.
-Centuries of civilisation {42} have not tamed the wildness of the
-place; and still, in grim repose, the mountains hold their guard
-around the waveless lake that glistens in their shadow, and doubles,
-in its sullen mirror, crag, precipice and forest.'
-
-I know that Parkman goes on to say that when Champlain landed here in
-April 1608 he found the lodges of an Indian camp, which he marked in
-his plan of Tadousac. When we landed, there were also a few shacks
-in much the same spot, and in one of the best lighted of them hung a
-placard to this effect:--
-
- THE ONLY REAL INDIAN
- BUY WORK FROM HIM.
-
-
-The lodges Champlain saw belonged to an Algonquin horde, 'Denizens of
-surrounding wilds, and gatherers of their only harvest--skins of the
-moose, cariboo, and bear; fur of the beaver, marten, otter, fox, wild
-cat, and lynx.'
-
-Other days, other harvests. From the shack of the Only Real Indian I
-saw one stout tourist issue forth (a Chicago pork-packer he must have
-been, if persons ever correspond to their professions), laden with
-three toy bows and arrows, as many miniature canoes, and what
-appeared to be a couple of patchwork bedspreads. That the descendant
-of braves should live by making {43} patchwork bedspreads seemed too
-much, even though I had given up as illusions the Red Indians of my
-boyhood. Far rather would I at that moment have seen the stout
-tourist come forth, either scalpless himself, or dangling at his
-ample belt the raven locks of the Only Real Indian.
-
-In the night we went on to Chicoutimi, but saw nothing of that, being
-asleep. We had sung songs, American songs--'John Brown's Body,'
-'Marching through Georgia,' etc., till a late hour of the night; and
-in any case the bracing river air would have insured sleep. Only in
-the morning as we came down the Saguenay again did I wake to its
-beauty and strangeness. Men have learnt to tunnel through rocks at
-last, but the Saguenay learnt this art for itself thousands of years
-ago. A wide water tunnel through the sheer rock, a roofless tunnel,
-open to the sky, that is the Saguenay--most magnificent at the point
-where Cap Trinité looms up, a wall of darkness fifteen hundred feet
-high.
-
-It is a curious fact that famous landscapes always produce a
-remarkable frivolity in the human tourist visiting them. Perhaps it
-is man's instinct to assert himself against nature. When the boat
-draws opposite Cap Trinité, {44} stewards produce buckets of stones
-and passengers are invited to try and hit the Cap with the stones
-from impossible distances. I do not know that it greatly added to
-the pleasure of the trip, but we all tried to hit the cliff with the
-stones and most of us failed, and had to content ourselves with
-drawing echoes from it. After that we went on, and some of the white
-whales which are characteristic of the Saguenay began to appear, and
-experienced travellers explained that they were not really white
-whales but a sort of white porpoise. Once again, as we passed it,
-Tadousac was invisible, but this time because a white fog had wrapped
-it round. So silently we turned out of the Saguenay into the St.
-Lawrence. I think the silence of the Saguenay was what had most
-impressed me. Not very long before I had steamed down the Hoogly
-where by day the kites wheel and shriek overhead, and the air buzzes
-with insects' sounds, and all night the jackals scream--a noisy
-river, full of treacherous sandbanks, its shores green with the
-bright poisonous green of the East. The Saguenay, unique as it is in
-many ways, seemed by the contrast of its deepness and silence, and by
-the fresh darkness of the rocks and trees that shut it in, to be
-peculiarly a river of the West. I do not know if it {45} would have
-made the somewhat bald young American tired.
-
-It is only fair to say that his attitude about Quebec is not at all
-characteristic of his fellow-countrymen. For most Americans, Quebec
-province (and still more perhaps the woods of Ontario) is becoming
-almost as popular a playground as Switzerland is for Englishmen.
-Camping out has become a great craze among Americans, and if the
-camping out can be done amid unspoilt natural surroundings, close to
-rivers where one can fish and woods where one can hunt, an ideal
-holiday is assured them. I forget who it was who said that much of
-the old American versatility and nobility had disappeared since the
-American boys left off whittling sticks, but in any case the desire
-to whittle sticks is renewed again among them, from Mr. Roosevelt
-downwards. And in Canada this whittling of sticks--this return to
-nature--can easily be accomplished. For the north is still there,
-unexploited. In Quebec province, fishing and hunting clubs of Quebec
-and Montreal have secured the rights over vast tracts of country. So
-vast are those tracts that one or two clubs, I was told, have not
-even set eyes on all the trout streams they preserve. This may be an
-exaggeration, though probably {46} not a great one. There
-remains--especially in Ontario--much water and wood that any one may
-sport in unlicensed, or get access to by permission of the local
-hotel proprietor. Some of the Americans on the boat had been fishing
-in Quebec streams and told me of excellent sport they had had, so
-that I began to wonder why no Englishmen ever came this way. The
-voyage to Canada is a little further than that to Norway, but there
-are more fish in Canada. And there is certainly only one Saguenay in
-the world.
-
-
-
-
-{47}
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRÉ AND A TRAVELLER'S VOW
-
-Ste. Anne de Beaupré is usually referred to as the Lourdes of Canada.
-When a metaphor of this sort is used it usually means that the spot
-referred to is in some way inferior to the original. In the case of
-Ste. Anne de Beaupré, the inferiority is not, I believe, in the
-matter of the number of miracles wrought there, but in the matter of
-general picturesqueness. Ste. Anne de Beaupré is not nearly so
-picturesque as Lourdes. If you wish to palliate this fact, you say,
-as one writer has said, that 'The beauty of modern architecture
-mingles at Beaupré with the remains of a hoary past.' If you do not
-wish to palliate it, you say, as I do, that Ste. Anne de Beaupré is
-not in the least picturesque. I did not particularly care for the
-modern architecture, and the hoary past is not particularly in
-evidence. Do not suppose me to say that Beaupré has not a hoary
-past. Red Indians, long before the days of railroads, {48} travelled
-thither to pray at the feet of Ste. Anne. Breton seamen, who belong
-only to tradition, promised a shrine to Ste. Anne, if she would save
-them from shipwreck. They erected the first chapel. The second and
-larger chapel was built as far back as 1657, and miracles were quite
-frequent from then onwards. Nevertheless, the basilica is quite new,
-and so is the whole appearance of the place.
-
-I visited it in company with a French-Canadian commercial traveller.
-He was a great big good-looking youth with curly hair and blue eyes,
-and he travelled in corsets or something of that sort for a Montreal
-firm. I could not help thinking that many ladies would buy corsets
-from him or anything else whether they wanted them or not, because of
-his charming boyish manner and his good looks. He asked me to go to
-Ste. Anne de Beaupré with him. He said that he supposed that I was
-not a Catholic, but that did not matter. He wished to go to the good
-Ste. Anne, and it would be a good thing to go. He had been several
-times before, but he had not been for several years. He could easily
-take the afternoon off, and first of all we would go by the electric
-train to the good Ste. Anne, and then on the way back we would step
-off {49} at the Falls station, and see the Montmorency Falls, and
-also the Zoo that is there. It would be great fun to see the Zoo.
-He had not seen the Zoo for several years, and the animals would be
-very interesting.
-
-So we took an afternoon electric train. There are electric trains
-for pilgrims, of whom a hundred thousand at least are said to visit
-the shrine yearly, and there are also electric trains for tourists.
-We took a tourist train, and having secured one of the little
-handbooks supplied by the electric company, had the gratification of
-knowing that even if the car was pretty full it was, so the company
-claimed, run at a greater rate of speed than any other electric
-service.
-
-At times in Canada I found myself getting very slack in attempting
-descriptions of things simply because some company that had rights of
-transport over the particular district had, so to speak, thrust into
-my hand some pamphlet in which all the description was done for me.
-Thus it was in the case of the district line between Quebec and Ste.
-Anne de Beaupré. 'It is difficult,' I read in the electric company's
-handbook which we had secured, 'to describe in words the dainty
-beauty of the scenery along this route.'
-
-{50}
-
-'That is a nuisance,' I said to my companion, 'because words are the
-only things I could describe it in.'
-
-'It is much better to smoke,' said he.
-
-So we smoked; and now I tell you straight out of that illogical
-pamphlet, that 'The route from Quebec to Ste. Anne may be compared to
-a splendid panorama. There are shady woodlands and green pastures,
-undulating hills and sparkling rivers, whose banks are lined with
-pretty villages, the tinned spires of the parish churches rising
-above the rest of the houses, sparkling in the sun.' There, a little
-ungrammatically, you have the scene 'to which,' adds my pamphlet,
-'the Falls of Montmorency river add a touch of grandeur.' Ste. Anne
-de Beaupré itself is twenty-one miles from Quebec. We went straight
-from the station into the church, where the first thing to catch the
-eye are the votive offerings and particularly the crutches,
-walking-sticks, and other appliances left there by pilgrims who,
-having been cured of their infirmities by miracle, had no further use
-for these material aids. It is difficult to arrange such things in
-any way that can be called artistic, and since the general effect is
-nothing but ugly it might be wise for the church officials also to
-dispense with such material {51} aids to faith. Apart from these the
-most striking object is the miraculous statue. It stands on a
-pedestal ten feet high and twelve feet from the communion rails. The
-pedestal was the gift of a New York lady, the statue itself was
-presented by a Belgian family. At the foot of it many people were
-kneeling. A mass was being said and the church was very full, and
-every time a petitioner got up from his knees from the feet of the
-statue another moved down the aisle and took his or her place. I
-suppose we were in the church fully half an hour before my companion
-found an opportunity to go and kneel at the feet of the good Ste.
-Anne, and having watched him there, I got up from my place and went
-out into the village. It was rather a depressing village, full of
-small hotels and restaurants and shops stocked with miraculous
-souvenirs. I suppose more rubbish is sold in this line than in any
-other. After inspecting a variety of it, I bought a bottle of cider
-and a local cigar and sat on a fence smoking until my friend
-reappeared. He came out most subdued and grave--not in the least the
-boisterous person who had gone in--and said we would now go back. As
-we had to wait half an hour for a returning train, I suggested that
-we should go and have some more cider, {52} but he said no, he would
-rather drink from the holy spring. 'Although this water,' said my
-pamphlet, 'has always been known to be there, it is only within the
-last thirty or thirty-five years that the pilgrims began to make a
-pious use of it. What particular occasion gave rise to this
-confidence, or when this practice first spread among the people,
-cannot be positively asserted. However it may be, it is undeniable
-that faith in the water from the fountain has become general, and the
-use of it, from motives of devotion, often produces effects of a
-marvellous nature.' Unfortunately, the fountain was not working,
-owing, I expect, to the water having got low in the dry weather, and
-my friend had to go without his drink. He said, however, that it did
-not matter, and remained in a grave, aloof state all the way back in
-the train as far as the Falls station, and indeed till we got to the
-Zoo in the Kent house grounds. There, the exertion of trying to get
-the beavers to cease working and come out and show themselves to
-me--an exertion finally crowned with success, for the fat, furry,
-silent creatures came out and sat on a log for us--livened him up a
-bit. But he fell into a muse again in front of the cage containing
-the timber wolf, and remained there so long that I was almost {53}
-overcome by the smell of this ferocious animal. I got him away at
-last, and I do not think he spoke after that until we got to Quebec
-and were walking from the station to our inn.
-
-'I have made a vow,' he then said suddenly.
-
-'What sort of vow?' I inquired.
-
-'I made it this afternoon,' he said, 'to the good Ste. Anne--never
-any more to drink whisky.'
-
-'It's not a bad vow to have made,' I said.
-
-'No,' he said seriously, 'whisky is very terrible stuff. I shall
-never drink it again. When I drink it it goes very quickly to my
-head. Soon I am tight. That will not do.'
-
-'Much better not to drink it certainly,' I agreed.
-
-'Yes,' he continued vehemently. 'I am married. You did not guess
-that perhaps? Also it is only recently that I have gone "on the
-road." If the company I work for hears that I go about and get
-tight, I shall at once be fired. So I shall not drink any more
-whisky. Never. That is why I made the vow to the good Ste. Anne.'
-
-We walked in silence the rest of the way to the inn, and I reflected
-on the nature of vows. {54} It seemed very possible that a vow like
-this might easily be a help to my companion. He was obviously not
-what is called a strong character. It is strange how often a charm
-of manner goes with a weakness of the will. And commercial
-travelling--particularly perhaps in Canada--lays a man open to the
-temptations of drink. If he went on drinking, it would probably mean
-the ruin of the young girl he had married. Only one has always the
-feeling that a vow is only a partial aid to keeping upright, just as
-a stick is to walking. A man may lean too heavily on either.
-Moreover, the making of a vow, while it may strengthen a man
-temporarily in one direction tends to leave him unbalanced in other
-directions. It makes him feel so strong perhaps in one part of him
-that he forgets other parts where he is weak. I rather think that
-the last part of these somewhat superficial reflections upon vows
-occurred to me later in the evening, and not as we were walking home.
-We had had supper by that time, and my companion had drunk a good
-deal of water during the meal--a beverage, by the way, which is not
-particularly safe either here or in any other Canadian town. At
-times he had been depressed by it, at times elevated. After we had
-smoked {55} together and he had grown more and more restless, he
-jumped up and said:
-
-'Let us go out for a walk.'
-
-'Where to?' I asked.
-
-'Oh, up on to the terrace,' he said. 'I tell you,' he went on
-excitedly, 'where I will take you. There is a special place up there
-that I know very well. It is where one meets the girls. We will go
-there to-night and meet the girls.'
-
-Really, I could have given a very good exposition of the temptation
-offered by vows at that moment when he suggested this Sentimental
-Journey.
-
-
-
-
-{56}
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-A HABITANT VILLAGE AND ITS NOTAIRE
-
-'Il trotte bien.'
-
-The second time I made use of this simple compliment I was again
-being driven by a French Canadian, and again it was on an
-extraordinarily bad road. But the vehicle was a sulky, and the road
-was a country road--about halfway between Quebec and Montreal. I had
-been already two days in the Habitant country which the ordinary
-Englishman misses. Tourists in particular will go through French
-Canada too fast. Their first stop after Quebec is Montreal, and the
-guide-books help them to believe that they have lost nothing. It may
-be that they do lose nothing in the way of spectacular views or big
-hotels, but on the other hand they have undoubtedly lost the peaceful
-charm of many a Laurentian village, and they have seen nothing at all
-of the life of the French-Canadian farmer. That is a pity for the
-English tourist, because they too, {57} the Habitants, belong to the
-Empire, and we ought to know them for what they are apart from their
-politics--courteous, solid, essentially prudent folk, often well to
-do, but with no disposition to make a show of themselves.
-
-I had spent my two days at the villa of a most hospitable French
-lady, in one of the older villages on the St. Lawrence. It was not
-exactly a beautiful village--rather ramshackle in fact--but
-remarkably peaceful, and the great smooth river running by must give
-it a perennial charm, such as comes from having the sea near. I had
-missed my train going from that village, and had passed the time by
-taking lunch at a little inn near the station. It was Friday, and
-the landlord gave me pike and eggs for lunch. I had seen my pike and
-several others lying in a sandy ditch near, passing a sort of
-amphibious life in it, until Friday and a guest should make it
-necessary for one of them to go into the frying pan. The landlord
-came and chatted with me while I had lunch, and was grieved to find
-that I was not a Catholic. I was English, but not Catholic? I said
-that was so, and he shook his head sorrowfully. But there were
-Catholics in England, he asked a little later. I said, Oh yes,
-certainly. Many? I said that there {58} must be a good many, but I
-could not tell him the exact numbers. Would a tenth of the English
-at least be Catholics, he next demanded? I said I thought at least
-that number, but I left him, I fear, a disappointed man. He had
-hoped more from England than that, and even my strenuous praise of
-the fried pike did not draw a smile from him.
-
-My compliment about the horse drawing the sulky--to go back to that
-drive, obtained a better response. The driver replied in the French
-tongue: 'Monsieur, he trots very well, particularly in considering
-that he has the age of twenty-eight years.'
-
-I said that this was wonderful, and the driver replied that it was,
-but that in French Canada such wonders did happen. He was intensely
-patriotic, and this made the drive more interesting. He was all for
-French-Canadian things, excepting, I think, the roads, which were
-indeed nothing but ruts, some of the ruts being less deep than the
-others, and being selected accordingly for the greater convenience of
-our ancient steed. I liked his patriotism. It was at once so
-genuine and so complete. For example, when I said that I had not
-seen any Jersey cows on the farms we had passed, the driver said:
-'No. The {59} cow of Jersey is a good cow and gives much milk. But
-the Canadian cow is a better cow and gives still more milk.' I was
-unable to make out what the prevailing milch-cow was in that part.
-Canada has, I believe, begun to swear by the Holstein, but this can
-hardly as yet be claimed as the Canadian cow. Still it passed the
-time very pleasantly to have my driver so enthusiastic, and of what
-should a man speak well, if not of his own country? He articulated
-his French very slowly and distinctly, so that I was able to
-understand him more easily than I should have understood a European
-Frenchman. I was surprised at this, because one is usually told that
-French Canadians talk so queerly that they are very hard to follow.
-Perhaps my obvious inferiority in the language caused those Habitants
-I met to adapt themselves to my necessity. I can only say that from
-a few days' experience of conversation with all sorts and conditions,
-I carried away the impression that French-Canadian was a very clear
-and easy language. As for the country, I should call it serene and
-spacious in aspect rather than fine. The farmhouses are pleasant
-enough and comfortable within, but their immediate surroundings are
-apt to be untidy. Very seldom of course {60} does one see a flower
-garden, and vegetables do not make amends for the lack of flowers.
-On the other hand, the tobacco patch that is so frequently to be seen
-in the neighbourhood of the small farms is pleasant to look at,
-especially for one who thinks much of smoke. There is not much
-satisfaction to the eye in the small wired fields, nor would either
-the farming or the soil startle an English farmer. I think that the
-maple woods are the one thing that he would regard with real envy.
-
-Nevertheless, no one would have denied that it was a really pretty
-village, to which my driver brought me at last in the sulky. It was
-built all round an old church in a sort of dell, behind which the
-land rose steeply to a wood of maples. I had been given an
-introduction to the curé, and we drove to his house by the church,
-only to be told by the sexton (I think it was the sexton) that
-Monsieur le Curé had, much to his regret, been called to Quebec, but
-had begged that I would go over to the notaire, who would be pleased
-to show me everything that was to be seen. We went to the notaire.
-I think he was the postmaster too--at any rate he lived in the post
-office, and a very kindly old gentleman he was. I do not know one I
-have liked more {61} on so short an acquaintance, though he did start
-by giving me Canadian wine to drink. It was a sort of port or
-sherry--or both mixed--and was made, I think he said, in Montreal.
-It had the genuine oily taste, but also a smack of vinegar. That in
-itself would not have mattered so much, if the notaire had not said
-it was best drunk with a little water, and provided me with water
-from a saline spring which had its source in his backyard. These
-saline springs seem not uncommon in Canada, and must be considered as
-a distinct asset. But not mixed with port. Some local tobacco which
-was very good, as indeed much of the tobacco grown in Quebec province
-seems to be, took the taste away, and after that the notaire proposed
-that he should take me out to see one of the huts where they boil
-down the maple water in the early spring. He told me that my own
-horse and driver should rest, and that we should go on the carriage
-of Monsieur Blanc which was, it appeared, already in waiting,
-together with Monsieur Blanc himself. Monsieur Blanc was the local
-miller, and solely for the purpose of showing the village to a
-stranger from England he had put himself to all this trouble. After
-we had all bowed to one another and exchanged {62} compliments, we
-started for the maple wood, and all the way the notaire explained to
-me the economy of the village. It appeared that the farms round
-averaged eighty acres of arable land, and a man and his son would
-work one of that size. Each farmer would also have rights of grazing
-on pasture land which was held in common--not to mention his piece of
-maple wood. All the farmers belonged to a co-operative farmers'
-society, which saved much when purchasing seeds, implements, and so
-forth. The notaire himself was secretary of this society. I believe
-he was also secretary of pretty well everything that mattered, and
-might be regarded as the business uncle of the parish in which the
-curé was spiritual father. As we drove along, avoiding roads as much
-as possible, because the fields were so much more level, he greeted
-everybody and everybody greeted him, stopping their field work for
-the purpose. Jules left hay-making to show us the shortest cut to
-the nearest hut; Antoine fetched the key. It was a tiny wooden
-shack, the one we inspected--standing in the middle of the
-trees--with just room in it for the heating apparatus and the boilers
-to boil the maple water in. The cups which are attached to the trees
-in the early spring, when {63} the sap begins to run--the tapping is
-done high up--hung along the wooden walls. The notaire explained the
-whole process to me. In the spring, when all is sleet and slush and
-nothing can be done on the farm, the farmer and perhaps his wife come
-up into the wood, and tap the trees and boil the water up until the
-syrup is formed. It takes them days, very cold days, and they camp
-out in the hut, though it hardly seemed possible that there should be
-room for them. But it is all very healthy and pleasant, and they
-drink so much of the syrup, while they are working, that they usually
-go back to their farms very 'fat and salubrious.' So the notaire
-said, and he also assured me that seven years before another English
-visitor who spoke French very badly (he put it much more politely
-than that though) had come to the village in the spring, and slept in
-one of the huts for days, and helped make the sugar and enjoyed
-himself thoroughly. I told the notaire I could quite believe it and
-wished I had come in the spring too. I am not sure that I shall not
-go back in the spring some day, for the simplicity of the place was
-fascinating, even though the railway had come closer, and land had
-doubled in value, and the farmers were more scientific than they used
-to {64} be and made more money, though even so--as the notaire
-earnestly declared--they would would never spend it on show. I
-remarked that the notaire, even while he was recounting these modern
-innovations, such as wealth, was not carried away by the glory of
-them as a Westerner would be. He took a simple pride in the fact
-that the village marched forward, but he was prouder still that it
-remained modest. And when we got back to the post office, he told me
-that what he liked best was the simplicity of it all. People used to
-ask him sometimes why he who spoke English and Latin and Greek, for
-he had been five years at college, qualifying to become a notaire,
-should be content to live in such a small out-of-the-way place,
-instead of setting up in Quebec or Montreal. They could not
-understand that to be one's own master, and not to be rushed hither
-and thither at the beck of clients, contented him, especially in a
-place where the farmers looked upon him as their friend, and he could
-play the organ in the village church. He made me understand it very
-well, even though his English was rusty (for I think the syrup-making
-Englishman had been the last he had talked with), and he had a
-scholarly dislike to using any but the {65} right word, and he would
-sometimes bring up a dozen wrong ones and reject them, before our
-united efforts found the only one that conveyed his precise meaning.
-
-I think I understood, and many times on the way back, seated behind
-the twenty-eight year-old horse, I said to myself, that altogether
-the notaire was a very fine old gentleman, and if there were many
-such to be found in the French Canadian villages, I hoped they would
-not change too soon. To make the money circulate--after the fashion
-of the Toronto drummer--is a virtue no doubt; but courtesy and
-simplicity and prudence are also virtues that not the greatest
-country that is yet to come will find itself able to dispense with.
-
-
-
-
-{66}
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-GLIMPSES OF MONTREAL
-
-Just as a man who knows mountains can in a little time describe the
-character of a mountain that is new to him, so a man who knows the
-country in general will soon find himself becoming acquainted with
-new country. It is not so with cities. Only a long residence in it
-will reveal the character of a city. I suppose that is because man
-is more subtle than nature. A clay land is always a clay land; it
-produces the same crops, the same weeds, the same men. But who will
-undertake to say what a city on a clay land produces? Only the man
-who has long been familiar with the particular city, and he probably
-will not even be aware that it stands on clay.
-
-This is preparatory to saying that being a stranger to Montreal, I
-did not find out much about it in the few days I was there, and I
-will not pretend that I did. It is, I suppose, architecturally, far
-the most beautiful city in {67} the Dominion, and indeed in the
-Western Hemisphere, and for that very reason appears less strange to
-European eyes than most other Canadian towns. I would not suggest
-that all European towns are architecturally beautiful, or that
-Montreal is anything but Canadian inwardly. Superficially it looks
-like some fine French town. It also smells French.
-
- 'But them thereon didst only breathe
- And sentst it back to me,
- Since when it blows and smells, I swear,
- Not of itself but thee.'
-
-Thus England might address France on the subject of Montreal, though
-indeed France did more than breathe on Montreal. I would not be
-taken to suggest that the smell is a malodorous one--merely French.
-You get just that smell in summer in any French town from Rouen to
-Marseilles, and it is probably due to nothing but the sun being at
-the right temperature to bring out the mingled scent of omelettes and
-road grit, cigarettes, _apéritifs_, and washing in sufficient
-strength to attract the sensitive British nose. As for Montreal's
-French appearance--the city is by all accounts strictly divided into
-a French East-end and an English West-end, St. Laurent being the
-dividing line. But when I passed west of {68} St. Laurent, and
-hundreds of French men and French women and French children continued
-to file past me, and I asked my way many times in English and was not
-understood, I began to doubt the reality of that dividing line. It
-seems a pity that there should be one, but there is of course, and it
-runs through Canada as well as Montreal. Race and religion and
-language combine to keep that line marked out, and it only becomes
-faint in business quarters.
-
-The time has gone by for great commercial undertakings to be
-conducted by means of gesticulations or by the aid of an interpreter.
-Master and man must speak the same language, at any rate outwardly.
-Therefore all clerks learn English, which is also American; and I
-take it that statistics, if they were kept, would show many more
-French Canadians speaking English every year--whatever they may be
-thinking.
-
-So commerce, long the butt of moralists, takes its part among the
-moral influences of the world. Already writers like Mr. Angell have
-begun to assure us that it alone--by reason of its enormous and
-far-reaching interests--can keep international war at a distance:
-here is an example of how it {69} increases peace within a nation.
-In the end, perhaps, Mammon himself may appear, purged of his
-grossness upon the canonical list--St. Mammon!
-
-Montreal has, so I am told, sixty-four millionaires--real, not dollar
-millionaires; self-made, not descended millionaires; strenuous, not
-idle millionaires. Most of them live in Sherbrooke Street, or near
-it, on the way up to the Mountain. It is a fine wide road with an
-extraordinary variety of houses in it. You cannot point to any one
-house and say this is the sort of house a millionaire builds, for the
-next one is quite different, and so is the next and the next. It is
-natural that Canadians should be more original in their
-house-building than our millionaires. They are more original men
-altogether. They have made their money in a more original way, and
-when they have made it, they have to think out original methods of
-spending it--unlike ours, who find the etiquette of it all ready made
-for them, and a practised set of people who want nothing more than to
-be able to help millionaires scatter their money in the only correct
-and fashionable way. You have to think everything out for yourself
-in Canada, even to the spending of your money. That is, if you have
-the money in large quantities. {70} For the ordinary person the
-inherent slipperiness of the dollar suffices, and he will find that
-it will circulate itself without his worrying. The diversity of
-house-building, such as may be found in Sherbrooke Street, should
-give encouragement to Canadian architects, but does, as a matter of
-fact, let in the American architects as well. I could not feel that
-they had altogether succeeded in this street--certainly not half so
-well as they have succeeded in some of the business buildings,
-especially the interior of the Bank of Montreal--but that is not
-surprising. Architects must have their motives, and the reasons that
-went to the building of some of the stately private houses of Europe
-have ceased to exist now. The most that a man can demand from his
-house--certainly in Canada--is that it shall be luxurious. Nobody is
-going to keep retainers there. The three hundred servants even that
-went to make up the household of an Elizabethan nobleman could not be
-had in Canada either for love or money. Those three hundred serve in
-the bank or the shops--not in the houses--and it is there that the
-big man works also. Slowly we come to the right proportions of
-things; nor am I suggesting that the private houses of the Canadian
-millionaires are in the {71} least lacking in size. They are as
-large as they need be, if not larger; and where they did not
-altogether succeed was, I thought, in the attempt made with some of
-them to achieve importance by rococo effects. The road itself,
-curiously enough, was rather bad and rutty; I began to think, seeing
-it, that there is some strange influence at work in French Canada
-which prevents a road from ever being first-rate. It may be that
-since roads there are only needed in summer, for a half year instead
-of a whole one, the care and affection we lavish upon them is not
-necessary. The good snow comes and turns Sherbrooke Street into a
-sleigh-bearing thoroughfare only comparable with those of St.
-Petersburg. The ruts are drifted up and vanish--why bother about
-them? It is a good enough explanation. If another is needed, it may
-be that there is money to be made--by those in charge of the keeping
-up of the roads--by the simple method of not keeping them up.
-
-Montreal has slums as well as Sherbrooke Street, which seems to show
-that sixty-four millionaires are no real guarantee of a city's
-perfectness. I heard about those slums from the editor of one of
-Montreal's leading newspapers. The subject arose out of a question
-{72} I put him as to whether he could tell me the difference between
-Conservatives and Liberals in Canada. Some people maintain that the
-difference even in England is so slight as to be unreal. To a
-Canadian who is not much of a politician (but is, of course, either a
-Liberal or a Conservative), the question amounts to being a catch
-question. He has to think for a long time before he answers. This
-editor, who was a Liberal, took it quite coolly.
-
-'Oh,' he said, 'Liberals here are very much like Liberals in the old
-country; we stand for Social Reform and the interests of the People.'
-
-Then he told me about the slums in Montreal. But for these I should
-have felt doubtful about the parallel, even though it was drawn by so
-eminent an authority as the editor of a newspaper. For, naturally,
-at present in most parts of Canada there is no People (with our own
-English capital P) to stand for, just as there are no peers and no
-Constitution. Where there are slums, there may be a People to be
-represented. The more is the pity that there should be slums. Why
-does Montreal possess them? Largely, I suppose, for the reason that
-any very great city possesses them. There are landlords who can make
-money out of them, there are people so poor that they will live in
-them; {73} and their poverty is accounted for by the fact that cities
-draw the destitute as the moon the tides. It seems against reason
-that Canada, capable of absorbing hundreds of thousands of
-immigrants, calling for them to be absorbed, so long as they are able
-men, should have any destitute to be drawn to the cities; but it has
-to be remembered that no immigration laws can really prevent a
-percentage of incapables arriving. They may not be incapables as
-such, but they are incapables on the land, which is indeed in Canada
-endlessly absorbent, but absorbent only of those who have in them in
-some way the land-spirit. To expect the land to take on hordes of
-the city-bred without ever failing is to dream. It would be easier
-for the sea to swallow men clothed in cork jackets. Some are bound
-to be rejected, and they turn to the cities. But the cities of a New
-World cannot absorb indefinite numbers of men; London or Glasgow
-cannot. The work is not there for them--not for all of them.
-
-The Canadian winter also has to be remembered as a factor driving men
-to cities like Montreal. Even good men on the land cannot always
-during the winter obtain work on the farms; or think that the little
-they can make there is not worth while. So they, too, make {74} for
-the cities, not always to their own improving. This problem of the
-Canadian winter is one that has still to be reckoned with, and no
-doubt the Canadians will solve it in due course--perhaps by some
-extension of the Russian methods whereby the peasant of the summer
-becomes the handicraftsman of the winter. It is not the winter
-itself that is at fault in Canada, as used to be thought; it is the
-method of dealing with it. The Canadian may not mind the hard, cold
-months--may even boast of them, but he cannot ignore them. And the
-solution of the winter problem seems to be that though Canada is
-marked out as an agricultural country, it must also equally become a
-manufacturing one, so that men--who cannot hibernate like
-dormice--may be able to work the year through. The whitest nation is
-that nation whose leisure is got by choice not by compulsion.
-
-There must be local reasons, too, for Montreal slums, but these a
-visitor is not happy in describing. Municipal mismanagement is
-unfortunately not exclusive to Europe; and my editor gave me examples
-of it in Montreal which were impressive without being novel.
-
-He also pointed out that there were forty thousand Jews in Montreal,
-as though that {75} might have something to do with her slums.
-Others point out that the Catholic Church, which believes that the
-poor must be always with us, is supreme in Montreal; poverty and the
-faith, they say, go always together. I think it is truest to argue
-that, while all these things are in their degree contributory, it is
-not fair to fix on any one of them as the chief cause of the ill.
-One thing is certain. Montreal's slums are not typical of Canada,
-but of a great city. No great city has as yet found itself
-completely, and the greater it is, the less soluble are its problems
-of poverty. It may be that they can be resolved only by the great
-cities ceasing to exist in the form we know them.
-
-Meanwhile it looks as though the welfare of employees is not being
-neglected by the leading directors of industry. Take, for example,
-the Angus Shops, which are larger than any other engineering shops in
-the world. Here are built these huge houses of cranks and pistons,
-the railway engines of the Canadian Pacific, that hustle one from end
-to end of the Dominion; here also are turned out all else that
-appertains to the biggest railway company in existence. In these
-shops a system has been introduced which might be called a
-Bourneville system, only Canadianised. The management {76} refers to
-it as Welfare Work, and it consists mainly in certain methods whereby
-the men can obtain good food--while they are working--at low prices,
-apprentices are helped to an education, the cost of 'holiday homes'
-is defrayed, and so on. Very sensibly the management admits the
-system to be a part of a business plan, which it finds remunerative.
-The idea that beneficence plays a leading part in it is almost
-scouted; indeed it would not be easy to persuade Canadian working-men
-that their bosses were doing things from charity. I went over the
-shops, and found them built on a vast and airy scale. Not being an
-engineering sort of person, I usually feel, when I invade a machinery
-place, like some unfortunate beetle that has strayed into a beehive,
-and may at any moment be attacked by the busy and alarming creatures
-that are buzzing about there. As I watched the huge engines, swung
-like bags of feathers from the roof, some black demon would heave
-showers of sparks at me, and when I started back, another would come
-raiding out with red-hot tongs. I admired respectfully. But I am
-one of those who can enjoy my honey just as much without knowing just
-how it was made. Still, here was a big bit of Montreal, and what
-miles of French houses {77} with green shutters one drove past to get
-to it!
-
-It would be absurd to suggest that poverty or slums are conspicuous
-things in Montreal. The average tourist will see none of them, but
-only many beautiful things--from the Bank of Montreal to the
-Cathedral, from the Lachine Rapids to the Mountain. I will not
-describe shooting the Rapids, it has been so often done. I wish I
-could describe the view from the Mountain. It is the most beautiful
-view of a city that can be seen. Marseilles from her hill is
-beautiful, so is Paris from Champigny. From neither of these, nor
-from any hill that I know of, is there so complete a view of so fair
-a city. The Mountain is wooded, and through the arches of the trees
-you gain a score of changing outlooks; but from the edge you see all
-Montreal--houses and streets and spires, each roof and gate, each
-chimney and window--so it seems. And beyond, the great river, and
-beyond, and on every side--Canada. If there were a mountain above
-Oxford, something like this might be seen.
-
-It was up this wooded steep to Fletcher's field, where an altar had
-been set up, that the great Eucharistic procession of 1910 wound its
-way. I was in Montreal just before this event, {78} for which the
-Montrealers had spent months preparing, and I realised a little why
-Montreal hopes some day to be the New Rome. The whole city was in a
-fervour of enthusiasm. A society had been formed for the special
-purpose of growing flowers to line the way along which the
-Cardinal-legate would walk, and gifts of money for the same purpose
-had been received from every part of Canada. The papers, of course,
-were full of every detail about Church dignitaries arriving or about
-to arrive. Nor were the shops behindhand. 'Eucharistic Congress!
-House decoration at moderate prices' was everywhere placarded; and
-papal flags and papal arms were to be had cheap. There were Congress
-sales, too, and you could buy Congress 'creations' from the
-dressmakers, Congress hats from the milliners, Congress boots from
-the bootmakers.
-
-On the day that Cardinal Vannutelli arrived, in a dismal and violent
-downpour of rain, all Montreal in macintoshes was to be seen dashing
-for the Bonsecours wharf to offer its respectful greetings to the
-papal legate.
-
-Will the Montrealers' dream of providing the New Rome ever be
-achieved? Who can say? Rome, though Italians may become subversive
-of the faith, will perhaps stand for ever. If it {79} ceased, as the
-centre of the Catholic faith, Montreal might certainly claim to take
-its place. It is already the centre of French-Canadian Catholicism;
-it might become the religious centre of Canada. There is no
-certainty that Catholicism will persist in Canada only among the
-French Canadians. It seems equally possible that Rome will prevail
-among non-French Canadians. Both in Canada and the States her
-strides forward have been enormous--comparable perhaps only to the
-steps taken in other directions by Free Thought in Europe. Is it
-that Catholicism makes peculiar appeal in a new country, or that in
-these new countries the propagation of the faith has been great and
-unceasing? These are debatable questions (though undebatable, I
-think, is the statement that in the New World Rome has a marvellous
-history of things attempted splendidly and achieved without
-reproach). I will not debate, then, but rather return to the
-Mountain and ask you to picture the great Eucharistic procession
-moving slowly up to it--up to the altar built there in the open,
-under the high and clear Canadian skies--all the inhabitants of a
-mighty city moving with it, till the city itself is left behind and
-all that is low and earthly left for the moment {80} with it. Then
-you will have in your mind one picture of Montreal at least not
-unworthy of it. It will be a picture of Montreal at its best and
-highest--a city of the faithful--near to their Mountain.
-
-
-
-
-{81}
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-TORONTO, NIAGARA FALLS, AND A NEGRO PORTER
-
-From Montreal to Toronto is a pleasant run through a southern part of
-Canada. One passes orchards and woods and Smith's Falls, where
-bricks are made, and Peterborough, which has the largest hydraulic
-lift-lock in the world. The Union railway station at Toronto, when I
-got there, was a seething mass of people and baggage, with an
-occasional railway official hidden in the vortex. I spent an hour
-trying to put a bag into the parcel-room, and after that gave up
-trying. Canadians are singularly patient in matters of this kind.
-Laden with heavy bags, they will collect in crowds outside the small
-window of a parcel-room, and burdened thus will wait there for hours
-without a murmur, while the youth inside lounges about at his
-leisure. My temper has frequently been stretched to the limit in
-Germany when I have had to wait perhaps ten minutes for a penny stamp
-while the Prussian {82} postal official behind the glass slit curled
-his moustaches in imitation of the Kaiser. I think the methods at
-that parcel-room in Toronto were even more trying. I will admit that
-it was Labour Day, and that Toronto was also in the throes of the
-World's Fair. But in a city of that size one would expect some
-preparation to be made for forthcoming throes. The truth seems to be
-that throughout Canada important events, attracting immense crowds,
-are brought off without any extra provision being made. Montreal
-managed to contain its Congress hordes pretty well, but Toronto
-during the World's Fair had a general air about it of sleeping six in
-a bed, if it slept at all. I kept coming across the same sort of
-thing at other places. Calgary, I remember, looked for the few days
-I was there like the Old Kent Road on a Saturday night, so crowded
-was it with people who had come in to witness the return to its
-native heath of a victorious football team. Regina was overrun with
-the Canadian bankers who, in massive formation, were touring the
-North-West. In one or two small places in the Rockies enormous
-trainloads of Canada's leading merchants, who were inspecting British
-Columbia with an eye to its future, were deposited for a day in
-passing, and caused as much {83} confusion as the canoe-loads of
-savages must have done when they descended on Robinson Crusoe's
-island.
-
-Labour Day is in the New World very different from what it is with
-us. In Canada, if you like, you may for three hundred and sixty-four
-days labour and do all that you have to do, but the three hundred and
-sixty-fifth is Labour Day, and no manner of work--except
-transportation--may be done that day. Transport work is necessary,
-because by way of observing Labour Day it is the thing to go
-somewhere in great multitudes, preferably by rail, and pursue the
-sort of pleasure that is only to be obtained by those who seek it
-multitudinously.
-
-Toronto was on this occasion a chosen spot for people to rollick in.
-This, added to the fact that the World's Fair was also in progress,
-prevented me from being able to get a room for the night, though I
-applied at five different hotels. At the sixth, which was full of
-excited commercial travellers, I was granted a bed on a top landing.
-I did not mind so much because I was seeing Toronto in a lively
-state. Ordinarily, I imagine, Toronto is the least bit too decorous,
-not devoid of cheerfulness, but not joyous either. There is nothing
-Parisian about Toronto, you would say. This stands to reason, {84}
-because if there is any Parisian air in Canada at all it belongs to
-Montreal, and Toronto would be the last place to imitate Montreal in
-any manner. The extraordinary rivalry that exists between the great
-East Canadian cities never leads to imitation. On the plains it is
-different. Winnipeg is the great model for all the little towns on
-the plains. But while Quebec resents the idea that Montreal is a
-much more important city than itself, and Montreal regrets that the
-seat of Government should be at so small a place as Ottawa, and
-Toronto considers Montreal ill-balanced in spite of its wealth, each
-of them would only consent to expand its own real superiority along
-its own particular lines and in its own particular manner.
-
-Still on Labour Night Toronto was quite gay. It did not look like
-the Boston of Canada at all, though it has substantial grounds, I
-read somewhere, for making this claim. I could realise that it was
-entitled to make this claim if it wanted to. If one shut one's eyes
-to the crowds, one could feel an air of brisk sobriety permeating it;
-and everything that one reads about it goes to show that a brisk
-sobriety is what it aims at. It keeps the Sabbath, for example, most
-strictly, though it hustles or almost hustles the rest of the week.
-I should {85} guess Toronto places briskness next to godliness, not a
-very bad second either. Its industries and its opulence are too well
-known to be worth detailing here. What struck me as most interesting
-about Toronto was that it seemed to represent more than any other
-place in Canada what we mean in England when we talk of Canadians.
-We do not mean the French Canadians of Quebec Province, nor the
-American Canadians and English public-school boys who are to be found
-in such numbers in Alberta and the plains. The sort of people we are
-thinking of are people who have been born in Canada, who have even
-spent generations there, but are, nevertheless, British by descent
-and British in tongue. There are people of this sort in other parts
-of Canada. The inhabitants of the Maritime Provinces are such, in
-spite of the fact that Mr. Bourassa has claimed that within fifteen
-years they will have become French in language and Roman Catholic in
-faith. Mr. Bourassa has made the same claim, to be sure, with regard
-to the inhabitants of Ontario. In the meantime, it would be truer to
-describe the inhabitants of Ontario as Canadians in the English
-sense. And Toronto is their capital. It is, of course, the home of
-the United Empire Loyalists who {86} settled here when the States
-broke away from our rule. The temper that made any rule but
-England's and any liberty that was not English liberty unendurable
-still remains, and I think Mr. Bourassa will have his work cut out to
-Gallicise them. Still even the sternest traditions of loyalty do not
-prevent--nay, even encourage--a certain change in the character of a
-people.
-
-It is probable that Ontarians are less English now than they were,
-just as Quebeckers are less French. Which have the right to be held
-more essentially Canadian may be questioned, but I repeat that when
-we in England talk of Canadians we have in mind a type of men to
-which the Ontarians correspond more than any others. It would be
-absurd, no doubt, to look for the English type in a metropolis like
-London, and perhaps it is absurd to look for the Ontarian type in a
-metropolis like Toronto. But it is less absurd, I think, and anyhow
-I did look for it there. What did I find? Well, I hope elsewhere to
-go cautiously and delicately into this matter of what a typical
-Canadian is like. Here I will only say that if you can imagine a
-Lowland Scot, cautious and self-possessed, outwardly resisting
-American exuberance and {87} extravagance, but inwardly by slow
-degrees absorbing--and thereby moderating--that hustling spirit of
-which these things are manifestations, you have something not unlike
-the Canadian of Toronto. Remember that Toronto is the southern
-gateway of Canada. It fronts on the States. It deals with the
-States. Between it and the States there is constant intercourse. It
-pursues the same industries, following in many cases the same
-methods. Many American managers of men are to be found in Toronto.
-It is not unnatural that some of the American spirit should dwell
-there also, and even tend to breed there.
-
-Now for the Fair. Fairing is a pretty old thing, and I have done a
-good deal of it, but fairing at Toronto struck me as being somehow
-new. I do not mean in the way of the exhibits one saw. They were
-nothing out of the way to any one who has seen the more famous
-exhibitions of the Old World, and the arrangements struck me as poor.
-The grounds by the lake are fairly extensive, but the buildings are
-second-rate. I thought when I saw the fruit exhibit in one of them
-that the whole display was little better than at a little English
-village flower show. But the keenness of the crowd visiting the
-ground! There was the {88} novelty. They did not glimpse at things
-in our blasé European way, and then sink into seats to listen to the
-band. They did listen to the band, but that was because the band was
-part of the show; and they wanted to do the show, every inch of it.
-Whole families camped for the day on the grounds. They brought meals
-with them in paper bags and boxes to fortify themselves lest they
-should drop before they had seen everything. Not that there was any
-lack of smartness either. The ladies had on their best hats and
-frocks, and the Canadian best in these respects is very fine. But
-one did not suspect them, as one would have suspected ladies at the
-White City or the Brussels Exhibition, of being there merely to show
-themselves off. Their frocks were in honour of the Fair. The Fair
-was the thing. It was a scene of the greatest enthusiasm under a
-tolerably hot sun. I had been asked to note if any English firms had
-taken the trouble to exhibit, and I am bound to say that I saw very
-few. It seems a pity when one considers the sort of people who visit
-the Fair--not merely a crowd amusing itself for an hour or two with
-glancing at the exhibits, but a crowd trying to find out what there
-was to buy--a crowd with dollars in its pockets and plenty of dollars
-in its banks. {89} I dare say there are difficulties in the way.
-There was not, for example, indefinite room for more exhibits, nor
-are Canadian manufacturers, with rumours of reduced tariffs going
-about, to be presumed eager to encourage competitors. Still, it
-seemed a pity.
-
-I clove my way to bed that night on the top landing through a horde
-of keen commercial travellers joyfully discussing all the business
-the exhibition would bring them. Next day I went to Niagara, by
-steamer, across the great lake. Toronto owes at least half its
-greatness to the Falls, and there should be, but I do not think there
-is, a really big monument to their discoverer, Father Louis Hennepin.
-Very likely, though, the discovery of Niagara was its own reward,
-especially for so inquisitive a man as that friar. He has himself
-confessed how, in the old days, when he was only a begging friar,
-sent by the Superior of his Order to beg for alms at the seaport of
-Calais, he used, in his curiosity, to hide himself behind tavern
-doors and listen to the sailors within telling of their voyages,
-while their tobacco smoke was wafted out and made him 'very sick at
-the stomach.' In the end he was the first white man to see the
-Falls, in the winter of 1687....
-
-They were framed in a most gorgeous sunset {90} when I saw them on an
-August day. The green and white foam swooped from a mountain of
-clouds all grey and gold--clouds piled fantastically into the
-furthest sky. No one seeing them in such a light could be
-disappointed with them, but I would forbid any more writers to write
-about them. Every man should be his own poet where the greater
-sights of the world are concerned. On second thoughts it is
-permissible to read Mr. Howells on the subject, and even Dickens,
-provided one is never likely to see them with one's own eyes. I saw
-the Falls at sunset, by starlight, and in the sunrise, and I can
-commend them at all these times. The river that drowned Captain Webb
-and was crossed by Blondin on the tight-rope, though extraordinary in
-its way, seemed to me comparatively unbeautiful and uninteresting.
-Any big sea on the Atlantic or Pacific is a finer sight and grips a
-man harder. I like a river quiet myself. Moreover, the villas above
-Niagara River give the landscape a domestic air in which its mad
-swirl seems only like an attempt to show off malignantly.
-
-One of my pleasantest recollections of Niagara is a conversation I
-had with the porter at the hotel where I stopped on the Canadian
-side. He was an American negro, extremely urbane {91} and chatty.
-He told me that he guessed I was an Englishman. It was pretty easy,
-he said, to tell that. I did not feel sure whether to feel flattered
-or not, but I felt sure later, when he introduced me to the
-lift-boy--a typical little stunted anæmic street arab from one of our
-northern cities--with a wave of the hand and the remark, 'Thar's one
-of your fellow-countrymen.' Afterwards, in self-defence, I steered
-the conversation towards Canada, and the porter, who regarded himself
-as an American citizen only, told me that the Canadians were a slow,
-stupid people, who could not be trusted of themselves to do anything
-but cultivate a little land badly.
-
-'Look at Toronto,' he said; 'do you think there'd be any hustle in
-that place if the Canadians had been left to themselves? No, sah.
-But we came along and lent them our brains and our enterprise, and I
-guess now it's a big fine city.'
-
-
-
-
-{92}
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-MASKINONGÉ FISHING ON THE FRENCH RIVER
-
-A friend, acquainted with Canada, met me in Toronto, and I told him I
-was tired of cities and thought of going to the Muskoka Lakes.
-
-'What do you expect to get there?' he asked.
-
-'Scenery,' I said--'camping, fishing. A Fenimore Cooper existence in
-the backwoods. Isn't it to be had there?'
-
-'The scenery's all right,' he said, 'and you can camp out of course,
-and there are some fish. But if you mean you want a quiet,
-unconventional life----'
-
-'I do for a few days,' I said.
-
-'You'd better go further than the Muskoka district, then,' he said.
-'It's beginning to be rather a fashionable camping-ground--quite
-pleasant in its way. If you care to see charming American maidens in
-expensive frocks falling out of canoes just on purpose to be able to
-change into frocks still more expensive, the Muskoka country is the
-place for you. If {93} not, you had better come with me and fish for
-maskinongés on the French River.'
-
-I did not know where the French River was or what maskinongés were,
-or how you caught them; but I said 'Yes,' being very tired of cities,
-and we took the night train from Toronto, and at 4.30 A.M. dropped
-off it on to a bridge that spanned a deep, big river. The dawn was
-exceedingly cold and grey.
-
-Literally we dropped off the train, for it did not stop but only
-slowed down, and after us the negro porter dropped our bags and
-tackle. A minute later the train had vanished, and we were left
-alone on the bridge, staring at the rocky, wooded cliffs that rose on
-either bank. Rock, wood, and water indeed met the eye wherever one
-looked. It seemed a country where Nature had once built mountains,
-savage and sparsely wooded mountains in the midst of a great inland
-sea, then in a cataclysmal mood had dashed them to pieces in every
-direction. And as the boulders and splinters of boulders flew, some
-fell in circles and made little lakes out of the great sea; some fell
-in heaped cliffs and banks, between which the sea was squeezed into
-winding, forking streams; some fell and sank and left the sea a
-shallow swamp above them; some fell and stood up {94} out of the
-water and became islands of dry rock. Every splinter that flew bore
-in some crack of it a seed of spruce or fir or birch, which grew; so
-that all this barren rock and waste of water became crowned with
-trees. I dare say any geologist could explain exactly what did
-happen. I am merely explaining what appears to have happened, when
-you look at it the first time with eyes still full of sleep.
-
-It was the French River at which we were gazing, and it looked at
-this point somewhat wider than the Thames at Hammersmith. It was
-flat and full with a good current; and my friend made some remark
-about never having been given to understand, when he was at school in
-England, that there was such a river at all--much less that it was
-finer than the Thames.
-
-'I doubt if one would find it marked on an English school map even
-now,' he continued.
-
-'I don't know, I'm sure,' I replied.
-
-'Doesn't it show how disgracefully ignorant we are of Canada?' he
-demanded in the hollow tones of an Imperial enthusiast.
-
-'Yes,' I agreed. I daresay I should have agreed anyhow. It was
-disgraceful that we neither of us had known anything about the {95}
-French River. But the reason I agreed so quickly was that, if I had
-not done so, he was capable of proving to me that such gross
-ignorance, if persisted in, will some day prove fatal to the Empire.
-Whereas I merely wanted breakfast. Any one who has been dropped off
-a train at 4.30 on a misty morning in the sort of country I have
-described will sympathise with me.
-
-Luckily the dawn soon became a little less grey, and presently we
-beheld a wooden shack standing on a crag some quarter of a mile up
-stream, with a dozen canoes moored below it. Presently also--and
-this was more to the point--some one in the shack became aware of us
-standing on the bridge, and put out in an old boat fitted with a
-motor to fetch us. An hour later we were enjoying breakfast inside
-the shack, which is really a hotel of sorts, and its proprietor, Mr.
-Fenton, was explaining to us all about the fishing to be had on the
-French River. For five dollars--or nine for two persons, he would
-supply us with a canoe, an Indian guide, a tent, provisions, and a
-hundred miles or so of first-class fishing.
-
-Now for the benefit of all benighted Englishmen who do not know the
-French River or Mr. Fenton of Pickerel, but would like to make {96}
-their acquaintance and that of the maskinongé, let me enlarge upon my
-existence for the next few days.
-
-Let me begin with Bill. Bill was our Indian guide. He was an
-Ojibway. Youthful, well built, reserved in manner, he paddled us on
-the average eight hours, cooked three meals, and set up or took down
-our tent in an incredibly short time every day. When either of us
-caught a fish, Bill laughed; when we did not, he stared into space.
-He laughed pretty often, for we caught quite a number of fish. It
-seemed unavoidable on the French River. Occasionally, in answer to
-questions, Bill spoke. He spoke English. Once or twice he spoke on
-his own account. I remember his saying that he preferred eggs to
-fish. I do not know how much Bill thought. Accustomed to connect
-such outward reserve and dignity as Bill showed with a philosophic
-mind, I fancied for quite a long time that Bill must think a great
-deal. I doubt it now. Those who have studied the Red Indian in his
-native haunts have discovered, I believe, that though his mind works
-in mysterious ways, it does work; but not quickly, or with superhuman
-gravity or discernment. As for that look of reserve--it indicates no
-more brain-work or {97} brain-power than the look of reserve on the
-face of an alligator. When I read hereafter that the hero of a book
-has a reserved face and an imperturbable manner (he so very often has
-in the novels of ladies) I shall think of Bill, and be delighted.
-Bill was so soothing. So was the French River. It is worth an
-Englishman's while to know of it--worth his private as well as his
-Imperial while. American sportsmen seem to know it well. They come
-fishing up it in fair numbers earlier in the year, and they come
-shooting later--deer and partridge and cariboo. The partridge
-shooting is said to be some of the finest in Canada.
-
-The French explorers also knew the French River, for it was by this
-route that they first found their way to Lake Huron when, by reason
-of Bill's ancestors being out on the war-path, seeking scalps, they
-found Lake Ontario impossible of crossing. In width it varies
-considerably. Sometimes it narrows to rapids, at others it broadens
-to over a mile across, and is divided into channels by steep islands.
-The scenery of it is as changeful as its channel. Now the banks are
-built in sheer stone, a hundred feet high; again they rise terrace by
-terrace, smooth as if men had made them; a little later they are
-nothing but a {98} chaos of strewn rock. Sometimes the firs
-predominate, sometimes the birches, pale green still these latter, or
-yellowing in the fall. Then a splash of cherry colour or crimson
-shows a maple on its way to winter. There are reedy backwaters where
-great pike lie; and natural weirs, below which the rock bass wait for
-their food; the deep pools hold pickerel or catfish. Everywhere the
-air exhilarates, and along the wider reaches we used to meet a wind
-like a sea-wind that put the river in waves and set them tippling
-into the bows of the canoe.
-
-For the most part we trolled, six or seven miles upstream from
-Pickerel landing, using an artificial minnow or feathered double
-spoon, which latter seemed to attract pike, bass, and pickerel,
-though the last, like the cat-fish, preferred a worm. However, it is
-a dull fish, the pickerel, hardly worth catching. Not so the
-cat-fish. A six-pounder of this variety can be very strenuous
-indeed, and the only drawback to it is, as an American we met
-remarked, you would have to shut your eyes before you could eat it.
-Certainly it is one of the most grotesque and hideous of freshwater
-fish, having four slimy tendrils growing from the sides of its mouth,
-with pig's eyes between. The bass is a fine eater. We got {99} bass
-up to four pounds, and if it is not mean to mention such a matter in
-connection with so sporting a fish, you know that when you have
-landed one you have landed a glorious supper. Those suppers over the
-camp fire, which Bill could set roaring within three minutes--so much
-timber and touchwood lies everywhere--what would one not give to
-enjoy the like in England? In an artificial sort of way you can do
-so. Here one is in the wilds as they were from the beginning--except
-that the Indian is cooking for the white man instead of cooking the
-white man for fun.
-
-What a delight it was, too, to go to bed on a couch of fir boughs,
-with the wind rustling through the birches, to the soothing sound of
-Bill, stretched at the foot of the tent, spitting gently into the
-night. It was a soothing sound, until I awoke one night to find that
-Bill had drawn the flap of the tent tight, but was still spitting--I
-do not know whither.
-
-We spent four days on the French River, and our catch averaged over
-twelve pounds a day. It would have been much more if we had fished
-for every sort of fish and taken no photographs. As it was we took a
-good many photographs, and spent most of our time trying to lure the
-maskinongé. It is {100} the king-fish of these waters--a sort of
-pike--but with the leaping powers of a salmon and the heart of a
-tiger. Bill used to madden us with tales of how the last party he
-had guided had landed twenty maskinongés in three days. We fished
-and fished, and then I, trolling with a spoon, hooked one. We saw
-him almost instantly take a great white leap into the sun, thirty
-yards from the canoe. Then Bill paddled gently for the nearest shore
-at which one could land him, and I played him the while with such
-care ... Oh, my maskinongé, never to be mine! I got him to the
-bank--a flat piece of rock with a kindly slope to the water. Perhaps
-he was not more than fifteen pounds in weight. Perhaps he was. Bill
-said not. But then Bill had not hooked him; and in fact it was Bill
-who lost him. Anyway, fifteen pounds is fifteen pounds, even if they
-do run to forty. Yes, it was Bill that lost him. I stick to
-that--though I admit that we had all been stupid enough to come out
-without a gaff. So it came about that, though I drew him ever so
-gingerly to the rock, yet--yet as Bill made a lunge at him to get him
-up--my maskinongé leaped once more--and broke the line!
-
-There for a second he lay, all dazed and {101} silvery, in the
-shallow water--then woke up and vanished, spoon and all!...
-
-Bill vowed that the line was too weak; but what line would have stood
-it?
-
-No matter--though I did not say 'no matter' at the time. Some day
-perhaps I shall go back to the French River. For fifty pounds a man
-could get there from England, spend three weeks in fishing, and
-return again to the old country--a five-weeks trip in all--and know,
-maybe, the best August and September of his life. Yes, I hope to go
-back and catch maskinongé, and listen once more to the wind in the
-birches, and go to sleep again to the sound of Bill spitting--for
-choice into the night.
-
-
-
-
-{102}
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-SUPERFICIAL REFLECTIONS AT SUDBURY
-
-Coming away from the French River, we spent a night at Sudbury, which
-lies in the midst of 'rich deposits of nickeliferous pyrrhotite.'
-Had I a brain capable of appreciating nickeliferous pyrrhotite, I
-should have got more pleasure out of this prosperous mining town than
-I did. My chief recollections of it are that it was unattractive,
-that everybody looked prosperous in it, that trucks were shunted
-under my bedroom window all night long, and that the hotel proprietor
-forgot to wake us at the time we had requested, with the result that
-we got to the station breakfastless, about half an hour after the
-train was due to start. Luckily it was late. I do not care for
-missing trains at any time, but to have missed that train at Sudbury
-would have been singularly annoying. There was, in effect, nothing
-of interest in Sudbury if you were not interested in nickeliferous
-pyrrhotite. I know that I should not {103} make such a remark.
-_Humani nihil a me alienum_ should be every writer's motto. But it
-is one thing to possess a motto, another to act upon it after trucks
-have been shunted under one's window all night, and one stands
-breakfastless on a dull station very early in the morning, waiting
-for a train that will not come.
-
-Let me recall what sort of humanity was about. There was a stout,
-middle-aged Indian guide, who told us the finest trout fishing in
-Canada was to be had a few miles from Sudbury. He was the most
-cheerful Indian I saw in Canada--really a cheerful man--creased with
-smiles. There were miners looking out for jobs or leaving
-them--mostly spitting. They were all young men. I only saw about
-four old men in the whole Dominion. I do not know if Canadians are
-shut up after a certain age, or do not grow to it, or retire like
-butterflies to end their days far from the ken of man. So that there
-was nothing surprising in there being only young men at the station.
-More surprising was the amount of nationalities that seemed to be
-represented among them. They seemed of every race and yet very
-alike. I suppose a miner is a miner, whatever his nationality, just
-as a mahout is a mahout. In the strange worlds both these kinds of
-experts {104} live in, the one sort in the bowels of the earth, the
-other on the necks of elephants, our little international
-distinctions would tend to become of less importance. If a man is a
-miner, he may also be a Belgian or a German or a Yorkshireman--but
-his real country is subterranean: he is before all things a citizen
-of the underworld. I do not know if one would get to recognise a
-miner in Canada quite so easily as one gets to recognise a miner at
-home--for miners there shift about more than in England, and spend
-more time, therefore, in the upper world; which stamps men
-differently. Still, though tales of new finds in new countries,
-where wages will be almost incredibly high, constantly reach them,
-and tempt them forth, after all they emerge from one part of the dark
-earth only to plunge into another--passing the between-time
-above-ground magnificently; but less magnificently than their wives.
-The prices paid by miners' wives for their hats at some of the big
-stores would startle the more extravagant of our own smart set. I
-believe there were some lumbermen in the station too, taking their
-ease, but I had not then grown to know the look of a lumberjack as I
-did later. The chief thing about him is his magnificent
-complexion--enviable of women. Canada {105} is not generous in the
-matter of complexions, and one usually hears that the dry winds of
-the winter time are accountable for making them poor, especially on
-the plains. The hot stoves of the shacks are a still more likely
-cause. Why then should the lumbermen have such incomparable skins?
-Partly because they are men in 'the pink of condition'--so long as
-they work (their condition out of it is best realised by a perusal of
-_Woodsmen of the West_, one of the few fine local studies of a real
-type of Canadian life that have yet been written); partly because
-their work is in the woods which are windless and not dry.
-
-Tokens of the lumbering life--besides the complexion--are jollity, a
-freedom from care amounting to something even more delightful than
-irresponsibility, an air of equality with something of superiority in
-it--indeed, with a good deal of superiority in it--and a childlike
-loquaciousness or an equally childlike dislike of talk. These last
-two qualities are both, I fancy, Canadian in general. One is
-generally told that the Canadians are ready talkers, will always
-address a stranger in the train, will be inquisitive and
-self-revealing to an extent unimagined by the Englishman. Mr.
-Kipling remarked, I remember, in his Canadian {106} letters that you
-will learn from an Englishman in two years less than you will learn
-from a Canadian in two minutes. Mr. Kipling is perhaps the best
-boaster Canada ever drew to herself. My own experience in the matter
-of Canadian conversation is that a lot depends upon the individual.
-Introductions are certainly not waited for, and on a journey one may
-chat with strangers to one's heart's content. But it must be borne
-in mind that the traveller _par excellence_ in Canada is the
-commercial traveller whose business it is to talk. Off the line--and
-on it, where other travellers are concerned--one finds men with a
-gift of silence that can at times be disheartening. It is natural
-that this should be so. Men in remote places lose the use of their
-tongues. All men are not talkers, indeed I think the great majority
-of men in any country are not talkers. When Canadians do talk, it
-must be admitted that they excel us, or their working-men do. Their
-working-men are not only ready, but also, superficially at any rate,
-remarkably well-informed about things outside their own particular
-job. They know what is being talked of, the prices of things, the
-value of land, astonishingly well. All Canadians know something
-about land; and about what he knows, {107} the Canadian is not
-deprecating. Precisely for this reason, perhaps, the more educated
-men among them are at times considerably less interesting than ours.
-It is not that their conversational topics are few, but that they are
-circumscribed. The personal and dogmatic element enters into them,
-with the result that the subject discussed seems incapable of
-extension, and tends to become circular. I have met quite young men
-who were bores, and bores not only in essence, but in manner, like
-the clergymen of our comic papers. I do not know why it is, but I do
-know that it is sad. It may be that there are not enough women in
-Canada to prevent it. Men are so patient they will stand
-anything--even a bore. But where women abound, a man may not be
-tiresome either in his clothes or his conversation....
-
-I believe the train at Sudbury was almost an hour late, which is why
-I have gone on so long noting trifles at large. When it did come in,
-somewhere about 8 A.M., we discovered that it was full up, and people
-had been standing in the first-class carriages all night. They had
-mostly breakfasted since, and the first-class carriage we got into
-was littered from end to end with bun-bags and sandwich-papers and
-orange peel, and all the refuse that results {108} from picnics in
-trains. Tired parents and sleepy children were piled above this
-flotsam in an atmosphere hard to endure. Yet everybody was cheerful,
-and though we both wished in our hearts that we could have got
-'sleepers' entitling us to Pullman accommodation, we were both
-grateful--or ought to have been grateful--that we were privileged to
-witness the contented spirit with which these representatives of the
-great Dominion bore their trials. Not a grumble--oh, my brother
-Englishman, not a grumble! Think of it.
-
-
-
-
-{109}
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-THROUGH THE HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO
-
-I sat in the tail of the train smoking, while Ontario dropped behind,
-league after league of thin trees growing out of the rock, of rock
-growing out of bog or lake, of bog or lake covering all solid things.
-Sometimes the trees were green and dark; sometimes green and light;
-sometimes nothing but scorched trunks--black skeletons of trees left
-by a forest fire which had killed everything within reach like a
-beast of prey, but consumed only the tender parts.
-
-Somebody, as we swung over a typical piece of muskeg country--black
-and juicy bogland covered with a foot maybe of clear water--began to
-tell a story of a train that had run off the rails and plunged head
-first into just such a place. It had been a long train, he said; a
-goods train, and it had gone down and down. When he saw it, the last
-truck only stuck out of the muskeg. We listened respectfully. It
-{110} was at least a well-found story, illustrating the difficulties
-the engineers had had in laying the lines across a treacherous ooze
-that nothing seemed to fill or make firm.
-
-What will become of this one-thousand-mile stretch of swamped
-rock-land? Nobody knows. There it lies separating East from West,
-as land impassable, unnavigable as water. Firs and minerals, these
-are the only things to be expected from it. Firs tend to grow less,
-but the minerals of course may in the end so count that no one will
-wish the country other than the rock it is. All along the line the
-railway authorities have up the names of stations, as though there
-really were stations there, and, even more, as though there were
-villages or towns which those stations served. You are carried past
-a hundred such stations--names on a board and nothing more at all,
-unless it be a solitary wooden shack in which some railway
-subordinate passes his life seeing that the line is clear. The gangs
-of workers, Galicians or Italians, who do repairs along the line,
-camp out; you see their camps now and then, temporary settlements in
-this No Man's Land.
-
-'_Pays mélancolique et marécageux!_' So Pierre Loti named Les
-Landes, and the description fits this country too, though I doubt if
-{111} melancholy is a word to be found in a Canadian's vocabulary.
-'Pretty poor stuff' a Canadian might allow it to be, but would
-immediately begin to talk of the fish in its waters, the big game to
-be got among the woods, and the mining possibilities it would reveal
-as soon as prospectors and syndicates got together. There never was
-a people less born to be depressed than the Canadians; nor do I think
-they will ever produce a Pierre Loti.
-
-For my part, I began to find this country most fascinating when I
-started to think of its effect upon the history of Canada. It is
-easy to see that its very impenetrability hindered for a long time
-the growth of the West. Where there was no road there was no way for
-progress, and the great wheatlands were shut up beyond it, while
-Eastern Canada developed. What is less easy to see is the effect
-such a waste must have when the country on the other side has been
-populated and fertilised. A little time ago people began to think
-that East and West would simply reverse their order of importance.
-They said, 'Quebec and Ontario have depreciated in value. The rich
-land of Ontario has been ruined, why should any one stay there when
-in the West there is limitless wheatland to settle on?' {112} But the
-trackless country still lay between--distance is not annihilated by a
-single railroad, nor by a dozen railroads. Quebeckers did not move
-West much. Ontarian farmers began to find that exhausted land could
-be renovated by scientific methods. If the plains had adjoined their
-farms, they would not have bothered to try those methods, but the
-muskeg and rock lay between. Some of them went West, but not all;
-they did not like it that the West was being settled from the States
-and Europe. In any case the West would have been an unfamiliar
-country--the American and English immigrants only made it more
-so--and the boasts of the West roused Eastern pride. Was the West
-best? Ontarians looked about them and found that not only could
-their present farms be improved but that there lay still in their own
-particular country virgin land that needed only to be cleared and
-worked. Already there is the new Ontario, north of the old Ontario,
-offering fresh fields and pastures new for the Canadian born who
-didn't mind clearing land as well as working it. It is land upon
-which the average immigrant is lost, upon which the average Ontarian
-is at home. Thus begins a northern movement which may spread any
-distance.
-
-{113}
-
-I have not said, and would not say, that the rock and water of
-Ontario account for this northern movement, for the fact that people
-are beginning to say, 'This East and West business is overdone.
-Canada is not a thin, straight line from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
-but a country stretching north to Hudson Bay, having the depth of the
-States almost, if a race spreads hardy enough to inhabit it.' The
-immediate cause of the northern movement was the discovery that wheat
-was as hardy as men, if not hardier, and would grow more north than
-an old-time settler ever dreamed of. The movement began in the
-North-West. All I would say is that if the waste country had not
-lain between the Ontarian farmer and the West he would have rushed
-with the rest, and the balance of importance would have shifted
-altogether westward. As it is, Ontarian farmers thrive again; new
-Ontario thrives excellently in a score of ways; the Canadian-born
-prosper in that part of Canada where they are--and always have
-been--most massed and most solidly Canadian. The West is a medley of
-races; and if it had suddenly become dominant by reason of its vastly
-superior prosperity, a people that could definitely be called
-Canadian would have been still further to seek than it is. {114}
-Canada, in effect, would have had to restart becoming a nation.
-
-All that day the rock and bog and timber kept dropping behind the
-train, and it was sunset before we came to the shore of Lake
-Superior. A thunderous glow hung over the lake, glimmering on the
-great granite cliffs. It was dark before we came to Port
-Arthur--proud possessor of the largest elevator in the world, and
-fierce rival of Fort William. In the morning we were in Manitoba.
-
-
-
-
-{115}
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE OLD TIMERS OF KILDONAN AND THE NEW
- TIMERS OF WINNIPEG
-
-Winnipeg introduces the West. 'If you like Winnipeg,' I had been
-told before I got there, 'you will like the West.' I had been
-somewhat disheartened by this information. I had pictured Winnipeg
-as a smoke-laden city of mean and narrow streets, set off with board
-walks and wooden shacks of various sizes. I knew that I should not
-like Winnipeg if it were like that. Well, it is not like that. Main
-Street, which follows exactly the lines of the old Hudson Bay
-Company's trail, is a hundred and thirty-two feet wide, and the other
-streets are in proportion. Above is the immensely clear and lofty
-Canadian sky. The wooden shacks are not there, and you will have to
-go far to find the board walks. True, the buildings are, on the
-whole, less impressive than the streets, but there are some
-magnificent blocks rising several stories; and if you take an {116}
-observation-car to go and see the sights of Winnipeg, you will find
-yourself brought to spots where further fine blocks are rising; and
-with the eye of the imagination you will behold Winnipeg as
-splendidly lofty as New York. I am not sure that for a place as warm
-as Winnipeg in summer and as cold in winter (I have heard the very
-truest Canadians say that they have been nearly frozen there in
-winter) the laying out of the town in so spacious a style is ideal.
-Streets narrower and more easily screened from the sun and wind would
-have seemed more comfortable to begin with. But then Winnipeg is
-growing, growing, growing; and it may be that some day even Main
-Street will seem shut in when it has its skyscrapers.
-
-Certainly it is a mistake to have preconceptions of Canada. I found
-Winnipeg spacious instead of mean. I next found that instead of
-consisting of elevators and all the apparatus connected with the
-storage of wheat, it was all banks and cinematograph parlours. There
-were, it is true, shops and such things sandwiched in between. I
-recall a jeweller's shop containing the suitable and attractive
-placard in its window--'Marriage Licences for Sale Here.' It is
-true, too, that banks and cinematograph {117} shows are not
-unconnected with wheat. In the banks you store the dollars you have
-made out of wheat; at the cinematograph shows you circulate them.
-But really there was an almost incredible number of these
-institutions.
-
-Of the two kinds of business I felt that personally I would rather
-own a moving picture show. Winnipegers are, I feel sure, easy to
-amuse. And they look exceedingly prosperous. The air of prosperity
-struck me as more obvious in Winnipeg than in any other part of
-Canada. This may have been due in part to the ladies' hats. I saw
-some wonderful hats in Winnipeg. Of course there are some women who
-seem born to wear wonderful hats. Whatever they put on seems
-wonderful. But in Winnipeg this art of wearing wonders seemed almost
-universal. Ladies who might otherwise have passed for school
-teachers--so serene and even precise was their general bearing--were
-to be seen in hats that would be astounding either on Hampstead Heath
-or in Covent Garden opera. I was told the hats come direct either
-from London or Paris, and form an important part of the Steamship
-Companies' freights, since they are charged for not by weight but by
-their superficial area. I thought to myself, {118} after I had seen
-a few samples of them, what sleepless nights the creators of these
-marvels must pass in the fear that they can never again rival, much
-less surpass, the last consignment to the Wheat City.
-
-The men too have a prosperous appearance--always new hats, new coats,
-new cigars; and I was so much impressed by it that I began to study
-their faces to see if some new type--with the Croesus gift--had been
-developed in this western place. If they had all looked alike, or
-had not all looked prosperous, it would have been simpler. But they
-all looked different--more different than Londoners--as they
-would--for here all the nations of the earth are gathered, and over a
-score of languages are taught in the schools (just think of it!); and
-among these different faces one saw the old familiar aspects--the
-shrewd and the foolish, the strong-mouthed and the weak, the
-bluffer's and that of the man who counts. Clearly, they were not all
-amazing organisers, or men with the grit and the brains that must
-take them to the top. Not any more were so, I mean, than you would
-see in any big place. No, it was the economic conditions, not the
-men, which were changed.
-
-Yet there is one thing noticeable in most of {119} the faces one sees
-here. It is a general air of buoyancy--of greater expectation and,
-therewith, of greater self-satisfaction--in a good sense--than one
-sees at home. Just as the London clerk's face might be made to
-read!--'I am merely a city clerk on £50 a year--I shall never rise
-much higher, and I hope I may keep my place,' so the Winnipeg clerk's
-face might be taken to announce--'At present I'm helping along the
-Dominion Elevator Company. Luckily for them they're a go-ahead lot.
-I guess, though, they'll have to raise my salary soon, pretty good
-though it is now. If they don't, they'll have to look for another
-man. There are plenty of jobs waiting for me.'
-
-If it is the truth, what could be better?
-
-That there are more jobs than men in the West seems undeniable,
-though most of them of course are on the land. I had the pleasure of
-a talk with Mr. Bruce Walker, through whose hands all the immigrants
-to the West pass. Mr. Bruce Walker's office is in the station, which
-is one of the sights of the West, when an immigrant train arrives.
-For Winnipeg is their distributing centre, and in the station, when
-the train comes in, you may see more types of men and women than a
-year's travel in Europe would give you, and you may hear {120} more
-different languages being spoken than went to the unmaking of the
-tower of Babel. To place all these people, men, women and children,
-in positions suited to their capacities, before the small sums of
-money with which they have arrived in the New World have given out,
-would seem to be a task which Napoleon might have shrunk from. But
-Mr. Bruce Walker appeared quite undismayed. Although in the first
-six months of 1910 the immigration from Great Britain alone had
-increased 98 per cent. over any other corresponding period, he had
-found no difficulty in dealing with it. He admitted that it meant
-increase of work for himself and his staff, but that was nothing, he
-said, so long as there were more jobs than men. 'And there are more
-jobs,' he said. 'It's amazing. But the extent to which Canada can
-absorb men seems endless.' He told me many excellent and amusing
-stories of the difficulties that arise in connection with the
-new-comers, but I have no space for them here.
-
-The chief criticism to be directed against the Canadian Government's
-methods in dealing with immigrants is, I think, that it encourages on
-to the land men who are in some cases wasted there. It is natural
-that it should {121} place immigrants on the land as far as possible.
-The land is there, apparently endlessly absorbent. It offers,
-superficially, work that any strong and able-bodied man should be
-capable of doing. Again, that Canadian theory that a man should be
-ready to turn his hand to anything, encourages the Canadian
-Government to believe that it is justified in turning the hands of
-immigrants to the work that most obviously wants doing. On the other
-side, it has to be remembered that while a man may be capable of
-turning his hand to anything, he is probably much more capable of
-turning his hand to the work he has been trained to; and not only
-that, but he is wasted to a large extent if he is not doing it. I am
-thinking particularly of the skilled workmen who emigrate to Canada
-from England. Turn them on to land and they may do fairly well; but
-turn them on to the work they are used to, and they will do much
-better. I do not say that the Canadian Government is bound to find
-for such men the work for which they are fitted; but in so far as
-they undertake to find work for immigrants, they should as far as
-possible find the right work. That jealousy which causes the United
-States to put obstacles in the way of the skilled immigrant who {122}
-comes into the country, should not be encouraged in Canada. It is
-absurd to suppose that Canada is already stocked with skilled
-workmen, and I repeat it is waste to use men, who are skilled, in
-work to which they are wholly unaccustomed. Moreover, though these
-skilled artisans may in many cases only spend a certain time on the
-land (after which they find the job which they want and are
-accustomed to), yet in many other cases they may be so sickened by
-their time on the land, doing unaccustomed work badly, that they
-either become wastrels, or leave Canada altogether, believing it to
-be no country for workers like themselves, and saying so with all the
-bitterness of men who were capable of succeeding but did actually
-fail. Another point to which the immigration department might give
-all the attention it can spare, is that of making it as simple as
-possible for decent immigrants to be joined at the earliest
-opportunity by their wives and families. The lack of women in Canada
-is a curse which there is no disguising. For one thing, to have a
-country full only of able-bodied men without wives or families is to
-give it an air of prosperity which is unreal. For another, it is to
-leave it without any of the ambitions which cause the majority of men
-{123} to save the money they make, and lay the foundations of a
-civilised nation. The other objections are obvious. A wise
-Government policy might go far towards making the period of
-separation between an immigrant and his wife shorter.
-
-Later on, to get a contrast with Winnipeg, I went out to see Kildonan
-with a friend. It is the village where the Old-timers--the crofters
-from the highlands, whom Lord Selkirk brought out in 1812 to colonise
-the land--finally settled down. They had hard years enough; trouble
-with the Indians, great trouble with the rival fur company. The
-fur-traders could see in the farmers only men who would reduce the
-wild and spoil their own industry. Only after years were their
-disputes settled. Kildonan is three miles out from Winnipeg by
-electric-car--along a dusty road fenced with wire from the fat black
-land. The crofters must have rejoiced to see that loam. Nowadays it
-has mostly been turned to market-gardening for the supplying of
-Winnipeg, and the farmers have shifted further West. We turned down
-a country lane, shaded with maple woods and golden birches, and came
-presently to the banks of the Red River. Over on the other side,
-standing among light trees, stood Kildonan {124} Church, the oldest
-church in Western Canada. We crossed by the ferry, and walked up
-into the churchyard. It is not large, but it is full, and everywhere
-you read the familiar Scottish names--Macleod--Black--Ferguson and
-the rest. The death among infants in those days seems to have been
-great--naturally enough--for Kildonan then was far from civilisation
-and doctor's help; and so, many small, unconscious settlers spent
-only a few days or weeks in the new land. But there were others that
-lived long. One of the most interesting gravestones commemorated the
-death of a settler who had come out from Kildonan, Sutherlandshire,
-at the age of nine. This in the year 1815--the year of Waterloo. He
-had lived to be past ninety. For his epitaph some one had chosen
-those noble words from the Epistle to the Hebrews: 'He looked for a
-city which hath foundations--whose maker and builder is God.'
-
-I think it cannot matter now that the old man died before the great
-Canadian boom came, before Winnipeg had become the biggest
-wheat-centre of the world, before he could realise, who looked for a
-city which hath foundations, that even in his life he had attained to
-'God's own country.'
-
-
-
-
-{125}
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-A PRAIRIE TOWN AND THE PRAIRIE POLICE
-
-Any one who knows the plains of Canada is aware that they rise in
-three tiers, the rise having a westward trend, and that the scenery
-of them varies as greatly as does the vegetation. Any one who has
-only been through the Canadian plains in the train is under the
-impression that, save for a bit of rolling country here and there in
-the distance, they are as level as a billiard table; and that, except
-that parts are cultivated and other parts are not, they look the same
-almost from start to finish.
-
-The moral is obvious. Do not suppose that from the train you can see
-even the surface of the world.
-
-This seemingly endless flat land, then, holds hills and gullies,
-rivers and lakes--everything indeed but trees. But what am I saying?
-There are heaps of trees in reality. Only they have a habit of
-concealing themselves, and {126} those who want to see them in haste
-should perhaps take a guide.
-
-There is more monotony in the towns of the plains, I think, than in
-the plains themselves. Not but what these towns must have
-differences known to their inhabitants. A man who lived in Moosejaw
-might conceivably deny that he could feel equally at home in Regina.
-A citizen of Regina would not dream of admitting that he could find
-his way blindfold about Moosejaw. Nevertheless all these little
-towns are singularly alike in construction. It is reasonable that
-they should be. They are all centres of a country engaged in a
-single great industry--the raising of wheat. Other things are
-raised, but in such small quantities, comparatively, that they do not
-count. And the people engaged in this great industry of
-wheat-raising are on a particular equality as regards the work they
-do, the leisure they have, and the tastes that result from the
-combination of that work and leisure. Some are richer, some poorer,
-some are wise, some foolish, but mostly they are working together
-pretty hard. The towns represent the places where they come after
-their work to bargain and be amused. Moreover, as I suggested in a
-previous chapter, the model for all other towns of the plains has
-{127} always been Winnipeg, and Winnipeg is the embodiment of the
-notion that a city may be a finer city than Chicago if it only tries
-hard enough.
-
-Architecturally, Winnipeg looks as though it always has allowed, and
-always will allow, for its own expansion. Other great cities have
-grown up anyhow, usually on lines that suggest that their greatness
-was thrust upon them unexpectedly. Winnipeg too has grown
-big--beyond all expectation one would have thought--yet it suggests
-in its lines that it never felt, even in those far-off days when Main
-Street was the Hudson Bay trail, that it would be anything but
-tremendous. Very likely it is an accident that Winnipeg did possess
-this power of expanding and Winnipegers did not deliberately foresee
-and provide for its future vastness. Be this as it may, the towns of
-the plains are not going to leave anything to chance. They are so
-planned, that when the time comes they will be ready to outdo
-Winnipeg. They rather expect to outdo Winnipeg. They even warn you
-that they will. Here is an example. I got out at some little
-station on the plains--let us call it Thebes. I don't think there is
-a Thebes in existence, but if not, it will come along soon, {128} for
-the classics as well as the Indian languages are being ransacked to
-provide names for Canada's thousands of new-born towns. I prefer the
-classical or Indian-named towns to those that bear hybrid titles like
-Higgsville. I saw at once that Thebes consisted of about twenty
-shacks and a store. It was all there, just outside the station, and
-beyond was level prairie again, with one or two farmhouses on the
-horizon--wooden boxes, like bathing-machines off their wheels to look
-at.
-
-I should not have been impressed by the greatness of Thebes, present
-or future, had I not, just by the ticket office, come upon a great
-placard, calling attention to a plan of the district marked off in
-square blocks in red and black cross lines. Beneath were two
-fanciful spheres, side by side, such as statisticians use--a large
-one marked Winnipeg, a smaller one marked Thebes: also, the following
-notification:--
-
- 'In 1870 Winnipeg had 240 inhabitants.
- In 1910 Winnipeg has 180,000 inhabitants.
- In 1910 Thebes has 74 inhabitants.
- How many will Thebes have in 1925?
- Buy a Thebes town lot.'
-
-
-It may be that the method is an American one, recalling that by which
-Martin Chuzzlewit {129} was persuaded to buy a lot in Eden city. An
-old-fashioned Englishman, straight from the old country, might even
-now be scared by it, and decide on the strength of it not to become a
-citizen of Thebes. He need not be scared. He can dislike the
-advertisement if he chooses, but he should bear in mind that by just
-such advertisements men were attracted to prosperity in the States as
-much as to adversity--even in the Dickens period--that real cities as
-well as sham ones were built up by them, and that anyway most of the
-Canadian land thus advertised is of an easily ascertainable value.
-He should remember, too, that a man nowadays, certainly in the new
-world, is not presumed to take every advertisement he sees as Bible
-truth. A smart advertisement, such as the Thebes one, is to a
-Canadian or American simply a proof that whoever it is wishes to sell
-Thebes town lots is a go-ahead person who clearly wants to do
-business, who probably knows how business ought to be done, who is
-likely to come to the point of doing it more quickly and ably than a
-man who won't even take the trouble to attract attention. No doubt
-the purchase of town lots is bound to be a speculative business.
-These little prairie villages may or may not become {130} Winnipegs.
-Of the particular chances a man must satisfy himself. That there are
-chances is a certainty; and the advertiser is only clothing that
-certainty in what he considers an attractive garb.
-
-I am very far from delighting in the 'plush of speech,' as Meredith
-called the language of the advertisers. Apart altogether from the
-fact that Canadians have not as yet learnt the art of understatement,
-the plush of speech is far too common in Canada. I suppose it was to
-be expected. Hard by lie the United States whose advertisers have,
-in a very few years, done more to blazon all the horrors of which the
-English tongue is capable than their great writers have done to point
-out its beauties. Their example has spread. So that in Canada, too,
-a barber's is announced as 'A Tonsorial Saloon'; a hat shop is 'A Bon
-Ton Millinery Parlour.' There may be some magic attraction in the
-words. The desire for a hat in the heart of a woman is not a
-definitely economic want; perhaps to be able to get a hat from a
-millinery parlour may strengthen that want. Only I know that
-speaking for myself, I would not willingly have my hair shortened
-oftener than was necessary, even if a tonsorial palace should be open
-to me for the process.
-
-{131}
-
-To go back to the prairie towns, their future is ever before them,
-and their citizens talk of them in the same proud, fond spirit as
-that in which a mother will discuss the career of the
-creature-in-the-perambulator, which for the ordinary person is too
-embryo to be distinguished as either a boy or a girl. Already, of
-course, the prairie towns are of all sizes, though you must never
-judge them by the size they are. Take Regina. It is a capital city,
-but the usual definition of a line--only reversed--best describes it.
-It has breadth without length. Its streets, which are called
-avenues, are astonishingly wide, the more astonishingly, because as
-soon as you start to walk along them they come to an end in prairie.
-I thought a notice which caught my eye as I wandered through the town
-rather characteristic. The notice was pasted outside a half-built
-block. It ran:--
-
-'These premises will be open by September 5.'
-
-It was long past 5th September, and those premises were not going to
-be open for some weeks to come. The roof was not on yet, and in fact
-I think the fourth wall had to go up. Still, when they were opened,
-they would be fine and solid. You could see that. It is the same
-with many of these western towns {132} themselves. Some day they,
-too, are going to be fine and solid, but they are not really open
-yet, though a good deal of business is being done, with the roof
-still, so to speak, off, and the fourth wall still to go up. On the
-outskirts of Regina, for example, there are some 1911 Exhibition
-buildings which look rather larger than Regina itself. That is
-enterprise.
-
-I stayed a whole day in Regina because I wanted to see the barracks
-of the famous North-West Mounted Police. It was a very hot day, and
-I was not sure where the barracks were, so I went into a hotel,
-partly to find out, partly to have a drink. The hotel was cool and
-pleasant, and after a little while a well-dressed gentleman came over
-and began chatting. We talked of various things, and then he asked
-me if I would not like to have my suit pressed for Sunday, as he
-would do it for a dollar. I said I should like it very well, but I
-had not time for it as I had to go out to the police barracks.
-
-'You don't think of joining them, do you?' he inquired with much
-disdain.
-
-'Why?' I asked.
-
-'You're a fool if you do,' he said; 'there's too much discipline
-about them. You spend {133} your whole time saluting every one you
-see if you're in the police. I know what it is. I was two years in
-the American Navy.'
-
-I did not inform the ex-naval clothes-presser that I'd rather belong
-to the police than press clothes, nor, indeed, did I waste any
-further time upon him, and I only mention him because he is one of
-the less valuable American types that find their way into Canada, and
-also because he was the only man I met who had a word to say against
-the mounted police.
-
-The sun can be very hot on the prairie, and it was very hot that
-afternoon when I did at last set out for a two-miles' tramp to the
-barracks. Nobody was walking that way except myself, and nobody was
-even riding. There was a fine dust about, and I needed brushing as
-well as pressing before I reached my destination. When I did get
-there, the courteous welcome of the second-in-command caused me to
-forget that the way had been long, or that anything greatly mattered
-except to hear about the North-West Mounted Police from the officer
-who was good enough to show me all round, from the horse-hospital to
-the prison cells. The latter were the least inviting part of the
-barracks, and I decided on the spot that if I committed a crime I
-would {134} not select the North-West of Canada for the scene of it.
-
-I doubt if Canada, or England, has anything to be prouder of than the
-North-West Mounted Police. Some of their deeds have been told from
-time to time--that of the mounted policeman, for example, who brought
-a homicidally-disposed maniac down hundreds of miles from the frozen
-country, saved his charge from frost-bite, and lost his own reason in
-the process; that of the corporal who went into the camp where
-Sitting Bull sat armed with all his braves about him, and gave him a
-quarter of an hour to clear over the border. But under a hundred
-less-known acts the same spirit has run--the spirit of the one
-representative of justice triumphant over incredible odds.
-
-'It's made possible,' said my guide, 'partly because we have men who
-regard every capture they're told off to make as a matter of personal
-honour, partly because people know that if a man commits a crime, we
-get him in the end. We go on till we do. Sitting Bull knew that if
-he killed our corporal we'd hang him and every man with him. So he
-went.'
-
-All kinds of men are represented in the mounted police, but this
-officer told me that the recruit they liked best to get was 'the
-{135} young man with blood in him,' from an English public school or
-university, as much as from anywhere; fond of riding and shooting,
-and not lost when he is acting alone hundreds of miles from
-headquarters. The district patrolled, remember, by five hundred men
-is not much smaller than Europe minus Russia. Wanting that kind of
-man, the authorities see to it that, in barracks at all events, he is
-comfortable, and very little in the way of the accommodation for
-these police could be improved upon.
-
-The most historic part of the barracks is that window through which
-Louis Riel stepped out--to drop with the rope round his neck. I was
-shown it hurriedly. It is the capture of their man, not his
-execution, that is these policemen's pride. Their record shows that
-almost always they take him alive, with no struggle--a strange thing,
-and one more proof of the reputation the police have built up for
-themselves. 'What is the use of struggling with these men?' seems to
-be the natural thought in the mind of the pursued; and no doubt much
-bloodshed is saved as a result of it. I learnt a lot of stray
-Canadian facts that afternoon. I learnt that the immigrants known
-under the somewhat vague heading of 'Galicians' are at present
-considered the leading {136} toughs, owing to their habit of using
-their knives at random. Galicians mean roughly all those who come
-from central Europe, and would, of course, include Letts. So that it
-is not, apparently, merely the climate of England that induces in
-these particular aliens a homicidal mania. It would be interesting
-to know the opinion of a North-West Mounted Policeman on 'the Battle
-of London.' Another thing I learnt was that a hundred miles a day is
-no unusual distance for one of these policemen to cover on horseback,
-and that of all the districts patrolled by them that in the
-neighbourhood of the North Pole is most sought after. They do not
-believe in English stirrups and girths any more than they believe in
-the British truncheon. They do believe in sobriety. The man with
-the drinking habit cannot continue, so I was told, a mounted
-policeman.
-
-As I walked back into Regina, I remember seeing in one of the
-principal streets a second notice which struck me as quaint. The
-notice was:--
-
-'Please do not spit on the side-walks.'
-
-The quaintness of it consisted in the last three words. 'Please do
-not spit' one could understand. I should like to see that notice up
-almost anywhere in Canada, since the habit it {137} deprecates is
-almost universal. It is worst, perhaps, in a smoking compartment,
-where it is difficult to get one's legs away from the neighbourhood
-of spittoons. I have sat for hours feeling all the emotions of the
-son of William Tell while the apple was still balanced on his head,
-and his father was in the act to shoot. But it is an uncivilised,
-unhealthy, absolutely unnecessary habit anywhere. That is why, for a
-public authority to suggest that it may be done, provided it is not
-done on the side-walks, is quaint. It should either be ignored or
-penalised. When one reads, as one does so often in the papers, of
-the ravages made by tuberculosis in Canada, it almost looks as if
-offenders should be penalised. Certainly they should not be politely
-requested to spit a few inches more to the left or the right. And
-why provide them with spittoons?
-
-
-
-
-{138}
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-IN CALGARY
-
-Alberta is at present the _débutante_ of the Dominion.
-
-Countries, like cities, used to grow up and, if we stick to our
-metaphor, 'come out' anyhow. It is true there were people called
-statesmen who had at times bright ideas concerning the commonweal
-which they tried to put into practice, and sometimes succeeded in
-putting into practice, with not unsatisfactory results. But the
-commonweal they had in mind was a limited one. It was not truly
-'common,' either in respect of the people whose weal was considered,
-or in respect of the weal it was desired to affect. Statesmen, in
-fact, thought usually only of a particular section or part of the
-population of their country and also thought only of a particular
-aspect of that section's welfare--usually either its soul or its
-prestige; very rarely its material prosperity.
-
-Things have not altogether changed. Things {139} don't. Statesmen
-still consider particular classes rather than the nation as a whole,
-and their notions of what weal means are still limited notions. But
-there is this difference. That aspect of the commonweal which can be
-referred to somewhat vaguely as material prosperity now bulks very
-large in their minds, and, as a result of it, the idea is beginning
-to prevail that not only can cities be planned before they are built,
-but that whole provinces can and should be encouraged to grow in
-certain thought-out directions.
-
-In the old world the new idea is likely to work slowly and somewhat
-obscurely. Cities and countries have already grown up there in the
-old-and-anyhow style; and grown-up things, like grown-up people, are
-not easily changed. In England, for example, we may think that large
-properties are a mistake; but they will not, with anything that can
-be called celerity, be turned into small holdings. So with our
-cities. There they are--fully grown and fully stocked with vested
-interests. The possessors of those interests cannot see in any
-proposed change the vast improvement that the non-possessors see in
-it. The most that can be expected in England in the immediate future
-is that, slowly and imperceptibly, certain {140} outrageous mistakes
-of the past will be remedied, and that where new developments are
-essential, they shall be the result of ideas, rather than of
-confusions. The Town-Planning Bill is, I imagine, a case in point.
-The most conservative people are beginning to see that in itself an
-idea is not a vicious thing and may even produce a good result.
-
-In the new world (and perhaps in the German Empire too) the notion of
-planning the future of town or country instead of leaving it to luck
-is having much swifter and more demonstrable effects. On the
-Canadian plains, as I have pointed out, towns are being laid out
-largely with an eye to their future. The same thing is being done
-for the countryside. It, too, is being planned with an eye to its
-future. It is not growing up just anyhow; it is being made to grow
-in particular directions.
-
-How much this is the idea of statesmen, of the public officials, that
-is to say, of the Dominion; and how much it is due to the managers of
-private companies and enterprises, historians will some day be able
-to decide. I incline to the view that at present the big railway
-companies represent far the most influential force in Canada, and
-that they, without any of the outward paraphernalia of office, {141}
-are deciding what Canada is to be for a good many years to come.
-
-Naturally they work from what may be called the railway point of
-view. Their notion of a Canadian commonweal takes the form,
-therefore, of a country in which a settled and prosperous population
-lives along the lines of the railroads, and is so distributed that
-there shall be no uninhabited spaces through which the running of
-trains will cease to be a paying proposition. There are bound, of
-course, to be some intervals of the kind. The highlands of Ontario
-form such a gap in the system of the Canadian Pacific Railway. That
-gap is not easy to fill: Alberta is.
-
-A few years ago Alberta was far from being a profitable country
-through which to run trains. Cattle-ranching maintained the thinnest
-of populations, and the leagues of sunburnt plains east of Calgary
-seemed to offer few chances to a more numerous class of settler. Any
-one who had prophesied then that they would shortly be crowded with
-wheat-farmers would have been laughed at. But they are being
-crowded, comparatively crowded, now. And the credit for this must be
-given those who started the Bow River irrigation works. No doubt
-there are other reasons for the rise of Alberta. The {142}
-discoverers of new wheats have helped it; so have the American
-farmers who, by spoiling the land across the line, created a demand
-for new land. But the irrigation works are the main factor, and when
-the Octopus, as the Canadian Pacific Railway is not uncommonly
-called, is had up for judgment, these and many other of their
-achievements will help them to make a stout defence. True, it is
-their own land they are irrigating; it is passengers and freight for
-themselves that they want to secure; but, whatever the motive, they
-are advertising and causing to be populated and cultivated hundreds
-of square miles on either side of their own particular land which
-might otherwise have lain waste for many years.
-
-It may be said--Where is the plan in this? Where is it any different
-from the schemes of any railway country in the old world. The
-difference is that in the old world as a rule the railway company
-follows trade, and runs only through populous parts where that trade
-is to be got; whereas in Canada, railway companies lay their lines
-through the desert, so to speak, and then start to fill it in an
-orderly and profitable manner. Alberta at present is being planned
-into existence. It is not booming simply on its own merits, great
-though these {143} may be. It lay fallow for many years. For all
-one knows, other parts of Canada may have more of a future. But they
-are not being boomed as Alberta is, because the time has not yet come
-when they must, in the opinion of the railway companies, be filled in.
-
-The need for the filling in of Alberta is one of the reasons why
-Calgary has sprung up so quickly. A few years ago Calgary had no
-future to speak of. Men not as yet middle-aged, can remember camping
-in Calgary in tents. There was only one place to dance in, and
-ranchers used to take turns at entering it. Now Calgary is a
-stone-built town of solid appearance, and still more solid
-importance. Like so many other Canadian towns, it is more important
-than it looks. It looks bustling enough, but hardly important.
-There are no buildings of a size to take the eye. The hotels are
-singularly inadequate. They are not only not comfortable enough for
-their guests, but they are not large enough. I had occasion to visit
-Calgary twice within a week, and each time I got the last bed in a
-different hotel, and tried to be thankful for it, but did not
-succeed. I suppose that prosperity has overtaken it at such a pace
-that it has not had time as yet to consider its responsibilities.
-{144} A town which permits one of its best hotels to place three
-double beds in one bedroom--and perhaps as many as nine guests in the
-three double beds--may already be great, but it has not realised its
-greatness.
-
-Calgary differs from the prairie towns which lie between it and
-Winnipeg, in that it is not really a prairie town, but a town on the
-edge of the prairie. It looks at the mountains; and it is built of
-the grey stone that is found near by; the Chinook winds that sweep it
-and make its climate comparatively mild, are mountain winds; and it
-stands on the Bow River, which is a mountain river, swift and clear,
-and blue with the blue that is melted from snowfields. This is none
-of your turbid streams like the Assiniboine or the Red River. All
-rivers must run to the plains at last, but the Bow River does not
-seem to belong to them, though it feeds them more than most. In the
-old days Calgary, such as it was, owed everything to the hills. The
-cattle-ranchers settled round there because the Chinook winds,
-scatterers of the snow, made outdoor grazing possible for their
-cattle during months when Manitoba and Saskatchewan were deep in
-frozen drifts. And since it was just at the foot of the mountains,
-the miners in the mountains {145} used it as a supply centre. It is
-still a centre for ranchers and miners; but its real importance is
-that it has become the headquarters of that prairie which produced
-once, perhaps, half a ton of hay to the acre, and now yields the
-finest wheat in the world. If any statues are to be put up in the
-town--and it would be as well to wait for a native sculptor of
-talent--they should be the statues of the men who constructed the
-irrigation works.
-
-Later on, but this is a smaller matter perhaps, I should like to see
-a statue put up to the man who will make it possible for the bars of
-Calgary to be allowed to remain open between the hours of 7 P.M. on
-Saturday, and 7 A.M. on Monday. At present they are shut during
-those hours, which means, I take it, that Calgarians, if admitted,
-would drink more than was good for them. The person therefore, to
-whom the suggested statue should be raised, would be the man who made
-the Calgarian attitude towards the drink question more civilised. I
-know that the problem is not peculiar to Calgary or to Canada. It
-may even be that Canada for a new country does more to solve it than
-most. I recollect than when I got back to England, one of the first
-things that caught my eye was an {146} interview given to a local
-paper by a leading Hertfordshire man, who had also just returned from
-travelling through Canada. He assured the interviewer that, having
-been from end to end of Canada, he had never once seen a man the
-worse for liquor. It must have been a delightful, but perhaps unique
-experience. I had not his good fortune, and having talked with many
-decent Canadians, seldom fanatics, and rarely indeed total
-abstainers, who nevertheless deplored the prevalence of the drink
-evil in the West, I cannot think that that Hertfordshire traveller's
-happy blindness is a thing to be imitated. Drink takes another
-form--perhaps a less vicious one--in a new country; but it ruins more
-good men than it does in an old one.
-
-
-
-
-{147}
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE AMERICANISATION QUESTION
-
-There is vague talk at times about the Americanisation of Canada.
-Very dismal people talk about its Americanisation by force of arms.
-Minor pessimists think the change will come about peaceably. How can
-the Canadians--they ask--continue to assert themselves for ever
-against the constant influx from the other side?
-
-Monsieur André Siegfried, in that most lucid and excellent book, _Les
-Deux Races en Canada_, considers this question a little, but the very
-fact that he has called the book _Les Deux Races en Canada_, shows
-that he considers the question premature. The two races he treats of
-are not the Canadians and the Americans, but the French Canadians and
-the Canadians who are not French. Certainly these two peoples are at
-present, and must for a considerable time to come, be considered the
-two main races of the Dominion. They {148} are still for all
-practical purposes separate without being hostile; and it is quite
-possible that one of these may Canadianise the other before any real
-Americanisation makes itself felt. Should the French Canadians get
-the upper hand, it is pretty certain that American influence would
-get a set-back of perhaps centuries. Yet English writers as a rule
-never seem to consider this contingency. Perhaps if they did, they
-would begin to think that they would rather see Canada Americanised
-than Gallicised.
-
-Still the Americanisation may happen, and it is at least an
-interesting possibility. Let us consider the task that lies before
-the Americans. They will have to absorb--
-
-(1) The French Canadians.
-
-(2) The Canadian born, who are not French.
-
-(3) The English who have immigrated.
-
-(4) Foreign immigrants; _e.g._ Scandinavians, Galicians, Italians,
-Doukhobors--all that strange assortment of people who have flowed in
-from the poorer countries of Europe.
-
-The Americans themselves represent at present only a small fifth in
-this conglomeration of nations. Still, they have this in their
-favour, that they start in while Canada is still an unfixed nation.
-French Canadians--a small {149} third--only number about three
-millions. Non-French Canadians about the same. The whole population
-is under ten millions. It may in fifty years be ten times that
-number. So that anything may happen.
-
-Meanwhile, many effective American influences are at work. Their
-order of effectiveness is not easy to define, but when one considers
-their representatives of business enterprise, capital, journalism and
-farming at work in the country, one can see that the Americans are
-likely to go far.
-
-What is their present value to the Dominion? Take American farmers.
-They are an undoubted gain to Canada in so far as they possess
-energy, capital, a knowledge of the local conditions, versatility and
-adaptability. I hardly know if it is an example of their versatility
-or their adaptability, but as soon as they cross over the line,
-American farmers who were Tariff Reformers instantly become Free
-Traders. It is not, of course, that they have adopted nobler
-principles in their new country. It is merely that, having become
-Canadians, they have now to support Canadian manufactures, and pay
-more for their farming machines and shoddy clothes. Naturally they
-think tariffs a mistake.
-
-{150}
-
-Setting aside for a moment this political elasticity as of doubtful
-value, Canadians may still wonder if the American farmer is all gain
-to them. Is it an objection, for example, that the American
-introduces the purely commercial spirit into farming? Not entirely.
-Not certainly so far as love of gain induces promptness and
-enterprise. It is, however, an objection if it destroys that love of
-the land which causes the English farmer to stick by his farm,
-generation after generation. Perhaps American farmers have not that
-land love in any case. If they had, they would not have crossed the
-line. In most cases, they have crossed it to make money--more money.
-It may be argued that the English farmers come further for the same
-purpose, but that is not really the case. English farmers who come
-are mostly men who were tenants, and find themselves either not
-making money or expecting to have their rents raised if they do. Or
-they are the sons of farmers who have not the capital to start
-farming in the old country, or cannot get the land. The American
-farmer is usually quite ready to admit that he is in Canada to make
-money, and his enemies will admit for him that though this ideal may
-lead him to adopt new methods {151} of farming which are good, it
-also induces him to adopt that very old method of farming which
-consists of getting all you can out of the land, putting nothing into
-it, selling it to a fool and moving on to fresh land--which is a bad
-method. Any one who is acquainted with the States at all, knows how
-at present people there are awakening to the viciousness of this
-practice. All their papers and speakers are full of the wastefulness
-which Americans practised in the last century thinking it to be
-smartness. Fine land, they say, was spoilt by it; forests were
-annihilated; water supplies were overdrawn; people were made
-restless. It was getting rich quick at the expense of posterity, and
-it bred in Americans a nomadic spirit, and an imprudence in
-considering the future, which has become a menace.
-
-Canadians cannot altogether condemn the American farmer, for just
-these methods spoilt so much of the land in Ontario; and only now are
-their farmers beginning to improve on them. Still, they would do
-well to indicate to American farmers that they are welcome only as
-improvers and not as wasters of the new country. The trouble is to
-give an effective indication of that kind. Settlement of the land is
-still reckoned, especially by the {152} railway companies, as the
-first of virtues, covering a multitude of sins; though even they, I
-think, are recognising a little that the English farmer, whose aim is
-not an immediate fortune, but a home which he can retain for his life
-and hand over to his children after him, is not to be scorned as he
-was a few years ago. The ready-made farms, made possible by the
-irrigation work of the Canadian Pacific Railway, are the chief
-example of the attempts made to draw the Englishman. 'We hope,' said
-one of the Canadian Pacific Railway officials, speaking a few months
-ago before the London Chamber of Commerce, 'that the Englishmen on
-these farms will leaven the lot.' A few years ago, compliments of
-that sort were not being offered to the English farmer in Canada.
-Probably he was not so good a type as comes in now. But it is to be
-remembered that the English immigrant has always had more adaptations
-to make than the American. To the American from the northern States,
-Canada is the country he is used to--only a little more north. The
-Englishman finds a new soil, new climate, new manners, and new
-methods. I should say that man for man, the English farmer knows at
-least as much as the American about farming, and {153} a great deal
-more than the average Canadian. But when he goes out to Canada he
-has to put this knowledge behind him and learn afresh--a difficult
-thing for a conservative race. The American can hold on to what he
-knows and simply go ahead. The accident of birth has given him a
-fine start over the Englishman.
-
-The same advantage belongs to other Americans in Canada. Business
-men, capitalists, journalists have only had to cross a non-existent
-line, instead of an undeniable ocean. When Canadians complain that
-Englishmen take no interest even in those Canadian schemes for which
-they have found the money, they forget that capitalists cannot always
-be close to their investments. I repeat, the Atlantic is not a thing
-to be denied, nor is it fair to call the English mere moneylenders
-because they have not always personally accompanied their loans. At
-least they have shown themselves trustful of the men on the spot.
-
-Nevertheless, I think that Canada has every reason to be grateful for
-the able business men whom the States have sent her. That negro
-porter at the Niagara Hotel who said that Canadians were a stupid
-people, and would have done nothing without the {154} Americans, was
-taking rather a spread-eagle view of the facts. Still there is no
-doubt that American brains have been--and still are--of great service
-to Canada; nor can I see that they can be charged with Americanising
-tendencies. Business men are nearly always cosmopolitan in their
-achievements, whatever their motives may be.
-
-It is rather different with American journalists. They can hardly as
-yet be charged with being citizens of the world, and where their
-influence penetrates, an American trend is noticeable. They are
-beginning to leave their mark in Canada. Canadian papers are
-numerous and creditable, but an American atmosphere broods over them.
-The most trivial incident is magnified by headlines, which repeat
-three times over in large type and increasingly pompous language all
-and more than all that follows in the news space. I am not talking
-of the best Canadian newspapers but of the average ones. If their
-methods are American, so very largely are the matters they deal with.
-In some small up-country Canadian journal one will find the leading
-columns occupied with the account of some dinner given, say, by Mrs.
-Van So-and-So of New York, wife of the Coffin King, {155} with full
-accounts of the costumes, menu, etc.,--wearisome and vulgar matter,
-staringly of no interest whatever to the bucolic readers of the
-journal in question. But it was all very cheaply wired from the
-States: whereas news from England would be costly in the extreme.
-The result is that Canadians--in spite of their local sagacity--are
-at least as ignorant of the things that happen in Great Britain and
-Europe as we are of what is happening in Canada. Often I have felt
-while the Canadian-born were talking to me of the 'Old Country,'
-talking of it too, not only in a loyal, but a fond and even wistful
-manner--that they had in their minds a picture of it that would
-probably have fitted England better in the fourteenth century than it
-does now. A poor, worn-out, tottering old country is what they are
-thinking of; and nothing would amaze some of them more than to see
-modern England as it is.
-
-Why should they have got this idea into their heads? Largely, I
-suppose, because the new with them is necessarily best. The old
-things were put up anyhow by men in a hurry and they are always
-superseded by better things. The very epithet 'old' connotes badness
-to a Canadian. Then, again, it is a {156} country of young men, and
-young men are apt to favour youth, which they hardly associate with
-England. No country--not even Spain--can be as antique and
-ramshackle as many of them undoubtedly believe England to be.
-Birmingham and Manchester are on paper such very ancient cities
-compared with Regina and Moosejaw that the untravelled Canadian
-thinks pityingly of the former; whereas he considers the latter
-infinitely up-to-date and important, and would be hurt to know that
-we have in England hundreds of little prosperous country towns very
-like them, of which the ordinary Englishman hardly knows the names
-and, if he did, would think no more of than he would think of Regina
-and Moosejaw.
-
-I would not seek to minimise that Canadian pride and optimism which
-finds such satisfaction in everything that they build. Pride and
-optimism are valuable assets to any country. All I would suggest is
-that they should realise that the English habit of grumbling and
-self-depreciation does not indicate that all Englishmen live in a
-tottering old realm, doing nothing but decay and grumble.
-
-Here we come back to newspapers. Most people derive their facts from
-newspapers nowadays, and if Canadians find that everything {157} of
-importance happens in the new world, whereas in the old world nothing
-happens except an occasional sensational murder or the deposition of
-a third-class king, they cannot infer that Europe is still an
-important continent, and that perhaps the most important country in
-it is England. What is to enlighten them? I suppose the receipt of
-more news from Europe.
-
-Probably the All Red Cable would do much in this direction. News has
-to be cheap or it is not news (the converse proposition that news if
-it is cheap must be news, is not true). Much also might be done by
-private enterprise. English publishers could do more to push their
-wares. So could English magazine proprietors. Most of the books and
-magazines one can get in a hurry in Canada are American. English
-Cabinet Ministers might now and again make a tour in the Dominion and
-explain to Canadians some of those political principles in which at
-home they have such fervid belief. It may be that the Americanising
-tendency is too strong for any of these suggestions to be of much
-avail in combating it. Reciprocity treaties between the States and
-Canada may inevitably result in closer union, though I never could
-feel that it was a marked human characteristic to pine for
-fellow-citizenship with the man whom {158} one supplies with bread in
-return for a reaping-machine. Trade relations may result in that
-mystic fraternal sentiment by which nations come together, though
-hitherto in the world's history men have never shown any very frantic
-desire for a heart-to-heart intimacy with their tradespeople.
-'Utility, Reciprocity, Fraternity' sounds rather a cold cry by which
-to rally two great people together.[1]
-
-
-[1] This chapter was written before the Reciprocity business flamed
-forth. I return to the subject later.
-
-
-When all is said and done, and there are a hundred other pros and
-cons which might be considered, the chief obstacle to the
-Americanisation of Canada is climate. Canada is north and America is
-south; and those two show less inclination to rush together than even
-east and west. Of course it is not extremes of north and south that
-are represented in the two countries;--along the boundary the
-climates are not dissimilar. Yet it seems to me that while Canada is
-bound to be mainly a country of northern peoples, Americans are fast
-becoming more and more southernised, I do not mean in the old sense
-of becoming languid and effeminate and semi-tropical, but
-southernised in just the same way as the French from being Norsemen
-have become southernised. Have {159} you seen prints of old Paris
-when it was a Gothic city? If you have, you will realise the
-completeness of the change that has come over it. It spreads itself
-to the sun now, faces to the Midi, and some such change might easily
-come over New York, Chicago, and the rest of those at present
-northern cities. Already the typical American is far from being the
-son of a grim and dour Pilgrim Father. Rather he is lively and
-energetic--with a temperament always on tiptoe--logical and apt to be
-materialistic, yet sentimental and passionate too. You find such a
-temperament among the French and Italians of northern Italy. It is
-the sun working on them. Even the stolid German and the moody
-Scandinavian feels it when he gets to the States, and thaws--into an
-American.
-
-It is not so in Canada. The northern immigrants there remain silent
-and frosty, though the touch of fortune makes them perhaps more
-genial. Canada will never become a southern country, even though its
-northern parts are rendered temperate by the cutting down of timber
-and constant ploughing. No, I think Canadians will remain a hardy
-and somewhat dour race, slow-moving on the whole, but industrious and
-virtuous, suspicious of talkers and hustlers; so suspicious, too, of
-free {160} thought and new morals as to lay themselves open maybe to
-the charge of hypocrisy; given at times to self-distrust and
-self-depreciation, but for the most part steadfast, and holding in
-their hearts the belief that there is no place like Canada and no men
-like the inhabitants thereof.
-
-In short, they are as likely as not to end by becoming Anglicised.
-
-
-
-
-{161}
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-AMONG THE READY-MADE FARMS
-
-There was a time when Englishmen got a very bad name in Canada. It
-was not to be wondered at. For a long time English youths, who came
-to be known as Remittance Men, used to be shipped out by relations
-anxious only to get rid of them. These helped to create an opinion
-that Englishmen were more remarkable for their drinking than their
-working powers; and when to them was added shipload after shipload of
-unemployables from yet lower classes, Canadians began to get
-impatient of English immigrants. It was not logical of them to
-suppose that these were favourable specimens of our working-classes;
-it is never logical to suppose that the best men of a country are
-ready to leave it. Logic, however, is difficult to insist on under
-these circumstances, and though there were plenty of Englishmen even
-then, and even more Scots perhaps, who were obviously as good as any
-farmers on the {162} prairie, the bad name of the English clung to
-them. That is all, or nearly all, changed now; and the project
-connected with those farms, which came to be known in the English
-papers as the Ready-made farms, proved that the Canadian Pacific
-Railway Company at any rate, which is the biggest landowner in
-Canada, was ready to welcome English farmers to the land, if they
-could get the right sort. Readers will perhaps remember that the
-idea of the company was to provide farms ploughed, irrigated, sowed,
-and furnished with house and out-buildings, into which English
-colonists, having been handed the front-door key, could
-enter--straight from England--as well equipped almost as settlers who
-had lived there for years. The purchase money was to be spread over
-a certain term, after which the land would become the property of the
-farmers.
-
-The plan saves all that intermediate period during which the ordinary
-homesteader has to set up his shack, sink his well, and generally
-unsettle himself over the tedious work of settling in. Good farmers
-are not necessarily born pioneers; and since the prairie in winter,
-when work is slack, does not show a very hospitable climate to
-new-comers and those unaccustomed to it, it generally happens that
-{163} the English immigrant has to waste the spring and perhaps the
-whole working season in the unremunerative business of settling in.
-The Ready-made farms were intended to save all this time and trouble,
-and they were at once filled--in the spring of 1910--by specially
-picked men from the old country. The men were not all necessarily
-farmers, but they were, hypothetically, at any rate, men of
-intelligence and grit.
-
-I wanted to see how they were getting on after six months of this new
-life on the prairie. For that purpose I took train from Calgary with
-a friend, back along the line to Strathmore, which is forty miles
-east, and is the station for Nightingale, as this first colony of
-ready-made farmers has been named. Strathmore itself is not
-peculiarly beautiful or peculiarly interesting, though it has a
-demonstration farm which is. We went over the demonstration farm
-with Professor Eliott, its manager, who struck me as one of the
-keenest and most interesting men of the West. What he does not know
-of the productivity of the prairie is probably not worth knowing; and
-his experience seems to be at the service of any farmer who has the
-intelligence to apply for it. He showed us his barns and splendid
-teams of horses and leviathan oats, and the little trees which he has
-planted {164} in this country where it was thought no trees would
-grow, and which he believes will change the face of it in a few
-years. We were full of the future of the prairie when we got back to
-Strathmore, and put up for the night in the last bedroom of the one
-and only hotel. The two of us were lucky to get that last bedroom
-containing a double bed to ourselves, for more often even than in
-Calgary six people sleep in such a room and are very glad of the
-accommodation. So I was told. It shows how things move in Alberta;
-what a hustle there is upon the country.
-
-We tossed for the bed, and I got it, and the other man took two
-blankets and the floor. I slept very well, especially after a
-mounted policeman came in and threw out two gentlemen next door who
-were, as the hotel boy tersely put it, 'seeing snakes together.' My
-friend slept less well. The room was small, not much bigger than the
-bed, and we could not get the window to stay open. It had not been
-constructed with a view to admitting fresh air. Still, after
-breakfast in a dark chamber, where about thirty guests of every
-profession and clothing (but all land-seekers) ate in silence, we
-started pretty fit for Nightingale in a two-horse rig.
-
-{165}
-
-I wish I could describe the prairie. Harvesting was over, so that in
-any case the leagues of golden wheat which you read about in
-advertisements were not visible. It was another kind of monotony
-altogether that we drove through--a kind I cannot begin to suggest
-the charm of. It was a kind of bare, rolling, sunburnt country, with
-a high sea-wind blowing through it, and waves of dust and an endless
-sky. Intensely wearisome or intensely refreshing it must be,
-according to a man's temperament; and going there from trees and
-hills must be like changing from a room with patterned paper to one
-with whitewashed walls. And then the soil, light and fertile,
-stoneless, ready for the plough--the farmer wants no variety of that.
-
-We drove fourteen miles, as far as I can remember, to get to
-Nightingale, and it was all bad driving. Alberta seems to want roads
-badly. In the old ranching days roads mattered less. The prairie
-was a ready-made riding country, and nothing was produced or needed
-that could not, so to speak, go of itself across country. 'I never
-owned a plough the seventeen years I was there,' a retired rancher
-told me proudly. 'It was a fine country then.' But it is a fine
-country now, too, and going to be finer still when it has roads. At
-present even {166} the roadways are changing. Once you could go
-everywhere. Now from day to day a new farmer takes up a new piece of
-land, and what was the road is enclosed by a wire fence.
-
-One of the most inspiriting farms we passed was that of a man who had
-been out from Cheshire only three months. He was now a chicken
-rancher--kept fowls, as we say; and in his brief occupation had got
-up--off a quarter block--eighty tons of hay, besides winning
-thirty-eight prizes at Albertan poultry shows. This would seem to
-show that Alberta is not yet rich in pure bred fowls. The Cheshire
-chicken rancher said he hoped to show the people round what a good
-table bird ought to look like. He was already a Canadian in all but
-accent. May he prosper!
-
-After talking with him we drove on again towards Nightingale in the
-same sea-wind along the same bad roads. The sameness of the country
-was amazing; nor should I have known in the end that we had come to
-Nightingale but for the man driving us. 'See that avenue?' he said.
-'The shacks standing along that are the farms. It seems more
-sociable being along a road.' 'Certainly,' I said. So it is more
-sociable to live along a road, provided you know it is a road. I
-{167} didn't, but the colonists did, and that was the main thing. We
-found those we visited apparently contented and undoubtedly hopeful.
-Canada has the gift of making men hopeful. Though it had been in
-this part a very poor year, owing to drought, and though the
-irrigation had not been properly ready (but accidents will happen,
-and the company was charging only a nominal rent as a result of this)
-the farmers seemed as cheery as they would have been dismal in
-England. The crops had been poor, but they would do for
-chicken-feed. A bumper year was a sure thing some time or other.
-The future held no clouds. They were going to study Canadian methods
-suited to the country. I rubbed my eyes. These sentiments were
-being enunciated by an English farmer, who was meanwhile giving us a
-most hospitable English lunch. He was going to tell more people to
-come out. It was the finest farming land possible, once you get the
-water on it. Only one must take local advice how to run things. It
-was no good standing out, and knowing better than people on the spot,
-as one of the colonists was doing. He, I gathered, was the only man
-regarded as likely to do badly, being determined to stick to the
-methods of his English forebears. His leading {168} wrongheadedness
-was in declining to believe that the winter was going to be or could
-be as long and as hard as people said, and he had not got in half the
-food needful for his cattle.
-
-I suppose, but for that winter, the prairie would be the most
-sought-after country in the world. But for that winter, however, it
-would not possess the amazing friable soil it does. As has been
-remarked, one cannot have everything all the time. The winter is
-very severe, and there should be no disguising of the fact, nor
-indeed any exaggerating of it. Formerly its hardships were no doubt
-exaggerated. People had no use for a hard winter. Nowadays leisured
-people go in search of it--on the understanding, however, that it
-shall be made easy for them. They would like it less if they had to
-work in it in a below zero temperature, twenty or thirty miles from
-anywhere. I do not say that work under such conditions should or
-would disgust healthy and energetic men, provided they were prepared
-for it. It might even delight them. But it should be prepared for.
-English farmers in particular should be made to understand the
-drawbacks as well as the advantages of the new land they are going
-to. Honesty is in fact the best {169} emigration policy. Given
-that, it is tolerably certain that these transplanted English farmers
-are going to find it more than worth while to have settled in
-Nightingale or any of the newer prairie colonies, and what is
-more--Canada is going to find it more than worth while to have them
-settled there.
-
-
-
-
-{170}
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-INTO THE ROCKIES WITH A DEFENDER OF THE FAITH
-
-For several days I had seen the Rockies far off--a black and jagged
-coil of mountains, that seemed at times almost to be moving like some
-prehistoric great scaly beast on its endless crawl across the plains.
-Now I was to see them near by--some part of them at least. What has
-any man seen in that ocean of mountains but a few drops?
-
-At the unpleasing hour of 3.30 A.M. I disengaged myself from one of
-the three double beds with which my room in the hotel was furnished,
-washed slightly, dressed completely, and walked to the station.
-Calgary was quiet at last. There had been a sound of revelry by
-night. A man with a tenor voice had been singing songs in some
-adjacent room to the hotel up to 3.30. But his songs and the vamped
-accompaniment to them had ceased now, and peace prevailed. I don't
-{171} remember to have passed any one on the way to the station.
-There were two or three sleepy-eyed people lounging about there;
-there always seem to be a few in Canadian stations, no matter what
-the hour. I think they must be out-of-works who keep their spirits
-up by listening to the squeaking and clash of shunting trucks, and
-the letting off of steam, and the great clang of the bells that are
-sounded from the engines as a trans-continental train comes in--all
-those sounds of life and hustle that are dear to the Canadian soul.
-
-[Illustration: MOUNT LEFROY. CANADIAN ROCKIES.]
-
-The train I was waiting for entered slowly with the usual peal of
-bells. All the blinds were drawn in the sleeping-carriages; and the
-only sign of life from them was the protruded woolly head, here and
-there, of a negro car conductor. I think I was the only person who
-got in.
-
-'What a lot of people,' I said to myself as I sat down in an empty
-smoking compartment, and shivering lit a pipe, 'would envy the
-prospects of a man about to spend days and perhaps weeks in the heart
-of the Rockies.' 'What a lot of people,' myself replied to me,
-'would see the Rockies further before they got out of bed at this
-unholy hour.'
-
-{172}
-
-My pipe held the balance between us and gradually soothed the
-rebellious part of me. It was still too dark to see anything, and
-there was nothing to be done but wait patiently for the dawn. I
-could not but regret that I was missing the scenery of the foothills,
-for which those who have lived among them seem to have a peculiar
-affection. But I was consoled by the entry a little later of two
-fellow-passengers, who had evidently been disturbed in their sleep
-and wanted smoke and conversation. Strange and various types one
-sees in a Westbound train. The West is still--even to the Canadian
-born--the Unknown and the Happy Hunting-grounds and Eldorado and
-Ultima Thule and the Blessed Isles. West is where the farmer's son
-of spirit goes to seek fresh lands, where the prospector goes to find
-gold, where successful men go because they want to be more
-successful, or maybe because they want to retire and enjoy
-themselves, and they have heard that West there is a climate which
-hardly includes winter, and has none at all of that fierce break-up
-of winter which makes the plains in parts trying to the toughest
-constitution; where the failures go because they have tried all other
-places, and the last is {173} West. All sorts of other men may be
-seen going West too--bank clerks and lumbermen, commercial travellers
-and engineers, tourists and politicians, trappers and amateurs of
-sport. But I never saw a more strangely assorted pair than these two
-men who came into the smoking compartment where I sat as the train
-mounted the foothills.
-
-One was a very old man. I do not know what his profession was, but
-his clothes and himself were equally weather-stained and dirty. He
-had the coarsest snow-white hair hanging in cords about his neck and
-cheeks and mouth, which gave him the appearance of a vicious old
-billy-goat. He was, I discovered, a moderately vicious old man. The
-other was a lumberjack--hardly more than a boy, sturdy, and
-strikingly handsome, with the clearest blue eyes and a complexion
-that a woman would give a fortune for. The old man--as they came in
-together--was already engaged in telling the young one what you might
-call a backwoods smoking-room story, and he went on with others even
-thicker, over which the young one betrayed the hugest amusement.
-What particularly won his laughter and admiration was the fact that
-so elderly a person should enter into such topics with {174} so much
-zest. I can still hear him repeating, 'There ain't many fellows as
-old as you, Daddy, that 'ud be such sports. No, sir.'
-
-And the old man would grin and chuckle at the compliment, and become
-more highly improper in the warmth of the boy's praise. He became
-indeed so elevated by it--especially after the boy had got up once or
-twice and executed a brief step-dance to mark the exuberance of his
-delight--that, thinking to gain even more glory by being still more
-startling, he dropped the subject of women and took up that of
-religion. It seemed he was an atheist of the old three-shots-a-penny
-variety, and he went for Christianity hot and strong. He had, it
-must be admitted, a perfectly skilled command of the old cheap
-arguments, and marshalled them in good order. Only, the unexpected
-happened. The boy, who had not minded being boyishly wicked, was
-plainly shocked by this new thing, and he said so in language so warm
-that a minister of the faith he was defending would have felt
-positively faint to hear it. The old man, surprised and still more
-annoyed, brought out further iconoclastic arguments, excellently
-directed. It is true any theologian could have warded them off
-easily enough. Any {175} debater could have. But it was clear that
-the boy had never argued in his life. That didn't matter. He was
-not going to sit there and listen to that sort of thing. He got
-indeed quite hopelessly confused; intellectually he was tripped time
-and again; he deferred with a lamb's innocence to the old man's
-boasts of having perused Persian literature, Hebrew literature, all
-the books that have to do with Buddhism and Zoroastrianism (I am
-afraid I did not believe any of this); he allowed that so much
-learning and thought must be a fine thing, but not an inch did he
-yield of his creed. And the more the old man got at him with
-arguments the more sulphurous grew the boy's language. I have never
-known so queer a Defender of the Faith as that lumberjack--or in a
-way a more successful one. His manner was childlike, his words
-unprintable; he made a muddle whenever he attempted to follow the
-simplest of the old villain's inferences. Yet never the least shake
-could his opponent give him, and his dogged reiteration of the
-statement that 'A man by ---- could only stick to the ---- faith that
-he had, and Daddy was a ---- fool to think his that ---- arguments
-made any difference'--wore the old free-thinker out in {176} the end.
-He did not give in, but he gave up: a wiser but, it is to be feared,
-not a better old man.
-
-Meanwhile we were getting into the hills, and my first impressions
-were rather of great rocks than of mountains. Most people, I
-suppose, come upon the Rockies first from the east, and they seem
-tremendous if only for the reason that one has come upon them after
-days spent in those plains which, even while they rise, rise
-imperceptibly. But tremendous as they seem from the east, they must
-be far more so from the north, and far more beautiful from the west.
-On the east the mountains have less height than on the north. Their
-timber is poor by comparison with the trees that grow further west;
-their valleys have little of the luxuriance of the Pacific valleys.
-One feels a certain coldness and hardness about them, and after a
-little while there seems almost a monotony of corrugated peaks, all
-thrown together and slanting eastward. They are striking enough even
-so, and the view from the train, especially when one considers that
-railways are run through mountains by the easiest route not by the
-finest, and that grades have to be counted before landscapes, cannot
-disappoint anybody.
-
-[Illustration: A TRAIL IN THE ROCKIES]
-
-{177}
-
-Comparisons with the Alps and the Himalayas should be kept till the
-Rockies have been seen at closer quarters. The finest view I ever
-had of the Rockies was from a mountain in the Selkirks, at a height
-of over ten thousand feet, and over a hundred miles from the nearest
-railway. There I forgot to make comparisons, which after all are
-somewhat useless. It is easy to say that the Alps are softer and
-more pictorial--showing that deep blue sky above their snows, which
-is rarely if ever to be seen in the Rockies. The Canadian skies are
-too lofty and distant ever to seem to be resting even on the topmost
-snowfields. The Himalayas again have giants unparalleled.
-Kinchinjunga, leaning out of the clouds, cannot be matched among the
-Rockies. But the Rockies--well, the Rockies are different. As yet
-we are only just getting to Banff.
-
-
-
-
-{178}
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-A HOT BATH IN BANFF
-
-Everybody stops at Banff. The popular places of the world are not
-necessarily the most beautiful; and even if they start beautiful,
-they are not rendered more so by the accretion in their midst of a
-large number of even first-class hotels. Perhaps first-class hotels
-increase the feeling for beauty. Indeed the sole defence of luxury
-worth consideration is that it has this effect. Without luxury,
-would there exist such an appreciator of beauty as d'Annunzio, to
-name but one? Pardon, I am getting away from Banff.
-
-It is a very beautiful watering-place at the foot of mountains. It
-is not spoilt yet, and it will be difficult to spoil it. The air is
-superb. I learnt that just as I was getting into it on my way from
-the station. I seemed to be the only person walking into it that
-morning--except for a local Canadian who was going in to his work.
-It was still very {179} early in the morning, and distinctly cold,
-and I said to this Canadian workman:
-
-'It's pretty cold at Banff.'
-
-'It's the finest air in Canada,' he replied, with that characteristic
-touch of resentment of anything that might be taken as a criticism of
-his native heath, which every Canadian invariably shows. 'Yes, sir,
-it's the finest air in Canada, and they're putting down concrete
-sidewalks.'
-
-He was, as a matter of fact, engaged in that work himself, and after
-I had expressed a proper admiration of it, he became friendly enough
-and directed me to the hotel I wanted to stay in.
-
-I wish it had not rained at Banff while I was there. It was an
-unusually cold and early rain, and it prevented me from seeing many
-of the sights of the place. The motor boat, which as a rule runs
-several times a day up the Bow River, did not run at all while I was
-there, and so I did not see this lovely valley. Nor did I take much
-stock of the buffaloes of the National Park, which are one of the
-greatest features of Banff, one that tourists with cameras always
-make for first. Rain was the reason of my abstention. On the other
-hand, the rain was the immediate {180} cause of my spending a most
-delightful afternoon in a hot sulphur swimming-bath. There are three
-such baths in Banff, and I chose the upper one, walking two miles up
-a winding road, whose woods were beginning to show all the reds of
-autumn, to get to it. I found that it was an open-air bath, fed by a
-sulphur stream that trickles steaming down the face of a mountain,
-and since no one had been tempted there on so gloomy a day, I had it
-all to myself, and swam up and down in water that varied from 110° to
-95° for an hour or more, looking at the hilltops opposite, and the
-mists that rose and sank about them. The rain and the cold mattered
-nothing so long as I swam there, wondering if luxury could go further
-in this world of ours. For there I was lapped about with all the
-warmth and peace that come to the beach-comber or the lotus-eater,
-and yet drinking in the brisk mountain air and feeling the challenge
-of the hills. It was to combine the emotions of a man climbing the
-Alps with the emotions of a man squatting in a Turkish bath; and only
-when the latter threatened to become rather the stronger of the two,
-did I get out, feeling weak but fresh. I had the pleasure while
-dressing of reading in a printed advertisement {181} of the baths
-that I had been curing myself of rheumatism, sciatica, asthma,
-anæmia, insomnia and, I fancy, any other disease I might happen to
-have latent. Certainly I felt well and uncommonly drowsy when I got
-back to the hotel. Indeed those who intend to explore Banff with
-energy would be well advised to postpone the baths till their last
-day. There is plenty to explore. The National Park alone is 5400
-square miles in extent, and encloses half a dozen subsidiary ranges
-of the Rocky Mountains; and if Banff is to be regarded as the centre
-for mountain climbing, fishing, and big game hunting, there is of
-course no end to it. Guide-books mention in a vague way that it is
-such a centre--which only means that if you want to do any of these
-things from a highly civilised and comfortable hotel, you had better
-make Banff your stopping place. Good climbing is to be had quite
-near, but whether the same is to be said for shooting or fishing
-depends upon whether anything short of the best in these matters is
-good. You cannot expect fish and big game to remain centralised.
-Particularly is this the case with big game. They avoid the centre
-of things, and prefer to keep on the circumference. In these sort of
-matters {182} guide-books are very little use. Nowhere do conditions
-change more rapidly than in Canada, and the man who wants big-horn or
-big trout will have to make for the circumference too. But there he
-will neither expect nor find first-class hotels.
-
-Speaking of first-class hotels, I took part--quite an unwilling
-part--in an incident that goes to show some of the difficulties
-attendant upon trying to run them in Canada. Frankly, except for
-those run by the Canadian Pacific Railway, there are practically
-none. It is not to be wondered at. Cookery is an art, like
-literature or music, not greatly encouraged in a new country. Take
-waiters again. Though the wages they make are good and the standard
-of waiting expected from them is rarely the highest, I believe they
-are a perennial difficulty to hotel proprietors. On the trains and
-in the big towns in the East one usually finds that the waiters are
-Englishmen not long out; and they are so not because they have
-acquired the science of waiting in the old country (as one might
-suppose, since it is usually well learnt there), but because they
-have not as yet acquired that Canadian spirit which makes anything
-savouring of domestic service--or even of undue courtesy as from man
-to {183} man--distasteful to the Canadian born, who, in any case,
-dislikes working for uncertainly long hours. Englishmen, it has to
-be admitted, are not particularly zealous for long and uncertain
-hours of work either in these days; and therefore it generally
-happens that as soon as the newcomer is the least acclimatised, he,
-too, drops waiting if he has taken it up. In the East a freshly
-arrived immigrant takes his place; but in the West there is no such
-constant supply of spare white men. The result is that Western
-hotels are more or less driven to employ as waiters either women or
-Japanese and Chinese boys.
-
-The hotel I stayed in at Banff had a staff of the former. Heaven
-knows we have women waiters enough in England, but in Canada I do not
-think heaven can know.... As soon as I came in to breakfast in the
-morning I became aware of a sharp-featured maiden with eyeglasses and
-tight lips and stiff white cuffs--very much the type of the Girton
-girl in the older times--who was clearly in charge of the room, and
-meant to let every one know it. I shrank down at the nearest table,
-and in a hushed voice requested and received my breakfast from one of
-the waitresses who were theoretically in attendance. She was very
-kindly, {184} only she brought me tea instead of coffee. I wanted
-coffee. I felt it was taking a risk, but as a man at his breakfast
-usually prefers his own fancy to other people's, I looked about
-delicately to see if I could catch my waitress's eye and induce her
-to change the pot. By bad fortune I merely caught the eye of the
-sharp young lady who, coming up and learning from my unwilling lips
-that I had been given the wrong drink, said imperiously:
-
-'Kindly tell me which of the girls gave you this!'
-
-Now I had not particularly noticed the girl who had been good enough
-to help me--an inexcusable carelessness--which the sharp young woman
-evidently interpreted as a desire to fence with her, for while I
-hesitated she went on:
-
-'I'll tell you why I want to know. There's some game on this
-morning----'
-
-'Oh,' I said, 'yes.'
-
-'And I'm not going to stand it,' said the sharp young woman fiercely.
-'I fired two of the girls yesterday, and I don't mind if I fire the
-lot, so if you'll tell me which of them brought you this I'll see to
-her straight away.'
-
-'I'm afraid I should not know her again,' I said hastily. A scene of
-strife around my {185} unlucky person, while breakfast got cold and
-all the other guests at the other tables looked on, was terrible to
-my fancy. The sharp one seemed most disappointed.
-
-'I wish you could,' she said. 'I'd fix her right now.'
-
-'Quite impossible,' I murmured, hoping that I was speaking the truth.
-Not so far off there was a young woman, standing chatting genially
-with two men at another table, who might have brought me that tea.
-
-'Oh, well, of course if you can't,' said the sharp one, and presently
-brought me coffee with her own fair white-cuffed hands. I thanked
-her warmly, and she went away; after which I was rewarded for my
-supposed chivalry by the young woman who had been entertaining those
-other two men coming up to me and saying in a sweet voice:
-
-'I say, I'm awfully sorry that I brought you that tea instead of
-coffee. The fact is we're awfully rushed this morning.'
-
-'Not at all,' I said, 'don't think of it,' and hoped inwardly that
-she would go away before the sharp one spotted her and bore down upon
-us. She did not seem so rushed as she had said.
-
-'Sure you won't have anything else now?' she persisted in the
-kindliest way.
-
-{186}
-
-'No, thank you,' I said, and seeing, I suppose, that I was not an
-entertaining person, she flitted gracefully away to a third table
-where another male sat, to whom I heard her whisper in passing--on
-the way to further chat with the other two men:
-
-'Now, mind you don't forget to meet me outside the hotel at six
-sharp!'
-
-My sympathies almost went out to the sharp-visaged spinster, for
-really there were quite a number of guests looking about them for
-food while the rushed staff chatted freely and pleasantly with such
-male visitors as seemed by their bearing to be worthy of being
-fascinated. This at breakfast-time--breakfast-time when an
-Englishman at all events wants food and would not be put off by the
-conversation of Cleopatra or Helen of Troy. Canadians may be a more
-gallant race at this hour of the day, but I am not sure of this. The
-preponderance of Japanese waiters as one gets further West seems to
-point to the fact that even they prefer food--at meal-times--to
-sentiment. The Japanese may demand high wages, and leave their
-places suddenly if they feel like it, but at least they do not
-threaten one with an emotional scene over one's morning coffee. Nor
-do I imagine that they require to be treated by their {187} employers
-with quite that reverential respect of which I remember seeing an
-example in a small hotel in the Columbia Valley. I was stopping at
-the hotel over Sunday with a friend, and as we wanted to go out for
-the day, we asked the manager if we could be supplied with some
-sandwiches for lunch. He was a mild and obliging young man, but his
-face fell.
-
-'I'll--I'll see what can be done,' he said, and I heard him go to the
-young lady who vouchsafed to wait at table occasionally in a superior
-way. 'My God!' I heard him say in an extremely humble voice to her,
-'I'm most awfully sorry to ask such a thing of you, but these chaps
-want to go out and take some sandwiches. I say, do you suppose it
-could be managed?'
-
-We got two sandwiches each as a result of his intercession, and in
-that mountain air we could have done with six times the number. But
-we realised from the manager's face when he brought them to us that
-the goddess who had provided them might, instead of doing so, have
-stalked straight out of the hotel for good.
-
-
-
-
-{188}
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-CANADA AND WOMAN
-
-Few books are complete nowadays without a chapter on the woman
-question. Man can be treated of in between; one would not as yet
-care to write a book without mentioning man in it. As a subsidiary
-agent for keeping the world going man is still not without his
-importance. But woman, as I have said, must have a chapter to
-herself. And since I unwittingly arrived on the last page at the
-subject of woman's work in Canada, I will pause--even on the
-threshold of the mountains--and go further into the matter.
-
-The most noticeable thing about woman in Western Canada is that she
-has not yet arrived there. If any one wished to get an idea of how
-the world would arrange itself supposing there were no women in it at
-all, they would have to go a little further north and west, into some
-of the British Columbian valleys or into the Yukon country, and look
-around.
-
-{189}
-
-What a simple world it seems. No clothes question, no washing, the
-simplest cookery, one man one plate (and that plate never washed),
-one knife for eating with or for skinning a grizzly bear, no carpets
-or curtains in the houses, no dustings or spring-cleanings, no
-knick-knacks to knock over or break, no flowers without or within
-except such as grow wild, no luxuries, in short, either to enjoy or
-to pay for, and a terrible amount of dirt. That is the physical
-aspect of the world without women.
-
-The spiritual side of it is less easy to arrive at. These bachelors
-you see in the backwoods are a silent people, lacking in
-self-consciousness, and, I daresay, in manners, but law-abiding and
-amiable and peculiarly handy. All men are handy who have not women
-to steal that talent from them; and most womenless men are silent
-too. One knows, of course, that bores may be found among men at
-times, but never chatterboxes. There is something to be said for the
-view that speech arose by women putting questions so often that men
-were driven, in sheer weariness, to make answers.
-
-Does it seem an unattractive life that these hardy bachelors have
-perforce to live? Perhaps. But you will not find them bemoaning
-{190} their lot. That is not the way of bachelors. We know they are
-to be pitied, but they do not pity themselves. Seriously, the
-trouble with these men is that they have none of those inducements to
-consider the future which make a man better than a machine. They
-take the world as it comes, which is well enough for themselves but
-not well enough for the world. I doubt if it is well for themselves
-really. True, they have nothing to worry them so long as they are in
-health. They can make big money when they choose and take holidays
-when they choose, conscious that when their money is spent they have
-only to set to again. Their wages are indeed to them little more
-than trinkgeld--and this means that those splendid workers have no
-real reward for their work, leave no successors to carry on the
-traditions of their toil, enrich only the bar-keepers and the rogues
-who live on the folly of honest men.
-
-Clearly the most honourable opening for women in Canada is marriage.
-Only wives are capable of putting down the drink curse, preventing
-the growth of a particularly odious plutocracy, establishing a
-permanent instead of a nomad population in the West. Nor might it be
-a bad thing (but for Anglo-Saxon {191} prejudices) if provincial
-governments there could start marriage offices, due attention being
-paid to eugenics. Even in so small a matter as the following, the
-presence of wives should make all the difference. All down the
-Columbia valley I found the cattle ranchers, who were bachelors,
-drinking tinned milk, while scores of cows ran wild and went dry.
-When I asked if it wasn't worth while to keep one cow milking, I was
-always told, 'No, we haven't time to bother about it,' till I came to
-the shack of a married Swede, whose wife had time to bother about it.
-In his shack tinned milk was anathema, as it should be everywhere.
-
-As prejudice would undoubtedly prevent the formation of governmental
-marriage offices, marriage can only be considered as an indirect
-opening for women. What are the directer openings? A great deal
-depends on what part of Canada immigrant women make for. In the East
-there is no such lack of women as in the West. The sexes are fairly
-balanced. In the big towns there is the usual demand for domestic
-servants, but not many more openings for educated Englishwomen than
-there are in big towns at home. There are a few more, because those
-cities are going at a faster pace than our English cities, and
-because all work there is {192} more valuable than in England. Women
-skilled in the arts that have to do with personal decoration, such as
-millinery, dressmaking, etc., could make their way there.
-
-Factory work in Canada is hardly worth going into here, the chief
-point about it being that wages are of course higher; nor did I
-notice any unusual professions engaging the attention of women,
-unless it were the checking of parcels and the playing in hotel
-orchestras, neither of which requires a man's strength.
-
-[Illustration: THE HALT. LAGGAN.]
-
-French Canada offers employment to but very few. Western Canadians
-sniff at the Habitants because they let their women work in the
-fields; haymaking and hoeing. But the idea of using women as outdoor
-workers is not so uncivilised as it looks to those unaccustomed to
-seeing it. Ethnologists are agreed nowadays that the tribes in which
-women do the fieldwork are not the least but the most civilised, and
-maintain that the position of women among such tribes is higher than
-among any others. Women began to work out-of-doors because the
-primitive peoples believed in a connection between their fertility
-and that of the earth; and where they do such work, women are always
-the keepers of the grain store--hold in their hands, that is to say,
-the {193} food upon which the life of the tribe depends. The most
-honourable primitive customs are not always the best in modern times,
-but there can be no doubt of the fertility of the French Canadians.
-
-As one goes West, woman becomes more of an indoor creature; and this
-may be due to the greater chivalry of their men folk. But one has to
-remember that the great charm of Canadian life, especially on the
-prairies, is an outdoor charm--working in the exhilarating air--not
-cooking over a hot stove indoors. One hears of a few cases in which
-women have taken up farming or vegetable-gardening and made a success
-of it, but no one could honestly say that the fortune awaiting women
-who take up such work is usually a great one. The work is too hard,
-especially in the winter time. Chicken-ranching is perhaps easier;
-but the real demand in the West is for women to do that housework
-which the men have not time for. At such work capable women can earn
-from three to five pounds a month with board and lodging; and while
-they are likely to find it rather harder--certainly not less
-hard--than similar work at home, it has compensations besides the
-money to be made by it. For one thing there is none of the odium
-that attaches {194} to it in the older countries. The cook is as
-good as her employer, who probably did the cook's work for years
-before the cook was to be had. It is natural that the work which
-most ladies have to do for themselves, because neither love nor money
-can obtain them substitutes, should lose its menial and unpleasant
-aspect, and the finest ladies in western Canada do it unashamed.
-Often their guests will help them to wash up, and even prepare the
-dinner. Personally, I found myself becoming quite expert at cleaning
-fish for a hostess who thereafter cooked it and dished it up, and yet
-appeared at table as fresh and elegant and apparently leisured as any
-lady who keeps a staff of servants in the old country. And I found
-as I got on that I rather liked cleaning fish.
-
-It stands to reason that the lady help is not wanted. The precise
-duties demanded of such a lady are always a little misty, but I
-imagine that they include a little sewing and a little reading, the
-ability to chat pleasantly, to be good-tempered (and possibly a
-Protestant), to feed the canary, and, at a pinch, even to clean out
-its cage. None of these talents are needed in a new country, and I
-heard of forty women who were on the books of an employment {195}
-office in Calgary, all wanting to be lady helps and all likely to go
-on wanting it till Doomsday.
-
-One hears a good deal of discussion (not in Canada) of the openings
-in the colonies for educated women. There is an English
-committee--the Committee of Colonial Intelligence for Educated
-Women--which, 'recognising the crying need of our colonies for the
-best type of educated women,' undertakes to furnish them with
-detailed, practical and up-to-date information, before advising them
-to go out. This committee hopes later on to found settlements in the
-colonies, where training, suitable to the needs of each colony, can
-be given, and centres can be formed to which the girls can return in
-the intervals of employment. There is much sense both in the
-recognition of the need for educated women in the colonies and in the
-perception that the most educated woman will be lost there unless she
-is prepared to be practical. The truth is that that same
-adaptability which is required of men in Canada is required of women
-also. They must first suit the country before they can hope to leave
-their mark on it. Educated women can leave their mark there by their
-inward, not by their outward, superiority.
-
-Centres to which the girls can go in the first {196} place, and to
-which they can return in the intervals of employment, are an
-excellent idea, and one which central or local government authorities
-in Canada would do well to support. Of course the Young Women's
-Christian Association already gives much help in this direction, but
-it cannot be expected to have branches everywhere. New towns and
-settlements are planned and put through very quickly in Canada, and
-wherever they result in creating a demand for women's work, some such
-centre for girls as near the railway depot as possible should be
-started. For one thing it would facilitate the engagement of girls,
-for another it would attract a better class. Probably the best
-openings of all for women in Canada--educated women, I mean--are in
-the big cities of the furthest West. In Vancouver and Victoria
-wealthy people reside who can afford to pay for such luxuries as
-private school-mistresses and governesses. And the supply of women
-is not so great there. Women also seem to be more employed there as
-hotel manageresses and under-manageresses, and as cashiers in hotels
-and offices. I never heard of women being real estate agents, but in
-a profession in which the arts of persuasion play a leading part,
-there seems no reason why they {197} should not shine. Of bachelor
-girls, living their own lives, I have also never heard in the West.
-They could hardly have the hearts to do it with so many bachelor men
-wasting their lives around them.
-
-On the whole, the position of woman in Canada is one of honourable
-toil lightened by the high consideration in which they are held.
-They have hardly as yet obtained that dominant super-man eminence
-which American women are said to occupy. That is, perhaps, because
-they have not gone in so much for that culture and social
-fastidiousness by the lack of which in themselves some American
-husbands are made to feel their inferiority. On the other hand they
-seem to keep their men folk contented, and remain contented with
-them. Divorce is, I believe, uncommon in Canada.
-
-
-
-
-{198}
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-THE LAKES AMONG THE CLOUDS
-
-Who thinks the Rockies only of a forbidding magnificence, of a
-grandeur always dark and fierce? Let him go to Lake Louise. The
-only phrase I know that fits it is that German one--_märchenhaft
-schön_--lovely as a scene of fairyland. Coming upon it suddenly, on
-a moonlight night, it seems so unlooked-for, so exquisite, that one
-says to oneself, 'Surely it will vanish like a dream.'
-
-[Illustration: LAKE LOUISE, LAGGAN, ALBERTA]
-
-It is quite a little lake, shut in for the most part by hills. The
-hills are wooded at their base, and wooded high up--wooded, indeed,
-right into the clouds; but higher still they turn to bare walls of
-rock or snow-strewn peaks, where the snow and the flowers grow side
-by side. Up among the heights other little lakes lie--the Lakes in
-the Clouds, they are called--and sometimes they are in the clouds and
-sometimes not, and they are coloured like thick opals and moonstones,
-and you can see {199} the tall, slim firs growing at the bottom as if
-they were real trees and not only reflections. I think it is the
-colours of these lakes that are so fairy-like. People may say of the
-Rockies that they never give the contrast of white snow-fields and
-deep blue sky that is so marked in the Swiss and Italian Alps, but
-what of that? The colours they do yield are, in truth, far more
-delicate and varied--perhaps because the Canadian skies are so much
-loftier and farther away--and, if you do not believe it, go and look
-at the waters of Lake Louise. They are distilled from peacocks'
-tails and paved with mother-of-pearl, and into them rush those wild
-blues that are only mixed in the heart of glaciers.
-
-Across the end of the lake stretches the hotel garden--green turf
-crossed by one great border of Iceland poppies, golden and orange,
-fringing the water front. One other plant I should have liked to see
-growing there--the opal anchusa. Its colour is so exactly the colour
-of the lake, in sun and in shadow. Still, more colour is hardly
-needed anywhere round Lake Louise. As I have said, the very snows
-are gay when you get to them, and pied with flowers, as old English
-meadows used to be when old English poets used that word, before
-{200} scientific farming came in and determined that flowers were
-weeds and killed them. And I had thought of these valleys as black
-and frowning, full of melancholy noises among the trees, rather than
-windless and radiant.
-
-The station for Lake Louise is Laggan, and the time to arrive there
-is in the evening, just before the moon rises. It does not matter if
-the drive up from the station is accomplished in the dark. The road
-is wooded and beautiful, but do not wish for the moon till the last
-bend of it leads you suddenly on to the lake. Then wish for the moon
-hard. Or, if you want to make sure of it, and the moon (though it
-seems always magical in its uprising) follows laws like other things
-and will not rise unless it is due to, make cold calculations some
-time ahead, and be sure they are right. There never could be
-anything better worth timing than moonrise on Lake Louise.
-
-If the poppied air that was fabled to pervade certain lovely places
-in the old world hung about this region, there would be no coming
-away from it. You would remain gazing drowsily for ever at the lake
-like the lover on the Greek urn that Keats described. But all around
-are the mountains which distil an air keen and exhilarating, so that
-before you know {201} it you are set walking, or riding or
-climbing--in some way adventuring forth. Some people adventure forth
-in a carriage, but that is rather too like going out to battle in
-evening clothes.
-
-Myself, having but two days at my disposal--which I could very well
-have spent looking across the Iceland poppies at the lake--was urged
-by the air and a sense of duty to take a long walk the first day and
-a longish ride the second. For this second expedition I hired a
-mountain pony and decided to reach the Moraine Lake, which lies at
-the end of The Valley of the Ten Peaks. It was my first experience
-of a Rocky Mountain pony, and I will state at once that it was an
-unfavourable one. There exist, no doubt, a few excellent mountain
-ponies. I bestrode one or two later in different places. But this
-first one was so dispiriting that he warped my mind concerning the
-whole breed. The truth is that mountain ponies, being intended for
-the average tourist who seems to be not much of a rider, are both
-bred and trained to go no faster, and exhibit no more spirit than a
-bath-chair man. Not theirs to trot or canter, even if a smooth
-stretch of road present itself. Enough if they move steadily up
-mountain trails and along mountain {202} ledges and down precipitous
-tracks in a manner designed to make the tourist feel that mules are
-stumbling creatures by comparison. Enough in one way but not in
-another, for to emulate a baser creature corrupts the best-bred pony
-in the world. Ponies have that much of humanity in them. Besides,
-it is not worth while to breed the best ponies for such work; and,
-further and anyway, a mountain pony is, so to say, a contradiction in
-species. A pony as much as a horse is a creature of the plains;
-place him in the mountains and he becomes something
-different--scarcely a pony at all. He is then an animal that picks
-up his feet in a marvellous way, is free from mountain sickness and
-the faintness that comes from high altitudes, and carries a pack or a
-person on his back. But he is no longer the friend of man. He is
-merely the tool of the tourist.
-
-We started downhill--that pony and I--directly after lunch.
-Words--words--words. I mounted that pony directly after lunch. The
-road led downhill in the first instance. I tried to start the pony
-in that direction. That is a truer description of what actually
-happened. But after I had got his head set towards the Ten Peaks
-Valley, he slewed it round again. We had not by any means {203}
-started. 'He is frightened of the hill,' I thought to myself, and
-redirected his head, encouraging him with words and reins. I had no
-whip. The owners of these hired mountain ponies seem to think whips
-unnecessary, and, indeed, they are very little use. I tried one cut
-from the roadside some five minutes later. We had by that time made
-about a hundred yards. I beat him also with his own reins and my
-heels, and we accomplished about a quarter of a mile downhill, going
-delicately. I said to myself, 'Patience. The descent will soon be
-over. The road then rises. We shall see a different animal.'
-
-What I saw when we came, by sideways and prolonged efforts, to the
-first part of the ascent, was that, greatly as that pony hated a
-down-hill grade, far more did he loathe an uphill one. We mounted it
-at what seemed to be a mile an hour or less, and I groaned to think
-that we had eight or nine to accomplish before we got to the lake,
-and the same in returning. By late afternoon I judged we had made
-the half distance and were still going weakly. I had cut two or
-three different sticks by now, and encouraged the pony with different
-words from those I had used at the start. He woke up once or twice
-and trotted for a moment. {204} The road was not really steep for
-most of the way; where it was steep I walked, dragging the pony
-behind me. He did not seem to mind whether I was on his back or off,
-provided no motion was required of him. I found it was cooler work
-to get off and pull him than to propel him from the saddle. Always
-he stood still for choice.
-
-The road was good--good underfoot and good to observe from. On our
-left lay a broad valley, and on our right the hills. I should love
-to have paused voluntarily and absorbed the views, but in point of
-fact I only paused in passion to cut whips; the pony, meanwhile,
-grazing. He knew the road to the Moraine Lake better than I did, and
-he contested every inch of it.
-
-I think I was aware long before the Ten Peaks came into sight that I
-should not reach the lake that day--or perhaps ever; but I was
-determined that I would at least see where it lay, though the sun set.
-
-We came within sight of it at last. Before then the Ten Peaks had
-come into line one by one till there they stood, ten white peaks all
-in a row. At their base I thought I saw the lake lying, very still
-and cold among its ice-worn pebbles.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS.]
-
-{205}
-
-If I did not see it, if it was but a mirage, I do not greatly care.
-I achieved something more that afternoon than the mere sight of a
-lake. I got that pony back to the hotel almost in time for dinner.
-I was pretty stiff in the arms. It was not to be wondered at.
-Hauling a pony nine miles is no light work.
-
-
-
-
-{206}
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-A SOLITARY RIDE INTO THE YOHO VALLEY
-
-Emerald Lake is beautiful, but less beautiful, I think, than Lake
-Louise. It is more like a lake among mountains, and less like a lake
-in a dream. I went to it because I wanted to get into the Yoho
-Valley, if only for a day, and the trail from Emerald Lake into the
-Yoho is, I had heard, the most picturesque of all. Even
-superficially to see the valley takes four days, and I had left
-myself with only one, so that it was in a deprecating spirit that I
-asked the manageress of the lake chalet if I could at least get
-within sight of the valley and back before dark. She said that if I
-started at two o'clock punctually, on a pony, the thing could just be
-done. I said that I had tried one or two mountain ponies, and did
-not care about them when I was in a hurry.
-
-[Illustration: ON THE TRAIL, YOHO VALLEY.]
-
-'Oh, but I'll give you a slicker,' said the manageress. 'You see
-there's no run on {207} the ponies at present, and I'll ask the man
-to give you his very best. He'll just get you there and back in
-time.'
-
-I thanked her and said I would try the slicker; and, half an hour
-later, the slicker and I were skirting the wooded shore of the
-Emerald Lake at what was, for a mountain pony, quite a fast trot. We
-were alone together. There were a few guests at the chalet, but the
-lateness of the season and the snow-clouds that loomed on the horizon
-had deterred any of them from starting on the Yoho Valley trip that
-day. Earlier in the year, there would have been quite a party riding
-together with a guide in the direction I was taking, for there are
-four camps in the valley, placed at picturesque points an easy day's
-ride apart, where you may rest and sleep, one night beneath a
-waterfall, the next on the edge of a glacier, with the ponies
-tethered round, and the camp-fires crackling pleasantly, so that you
-feel that you are pioneering, but pioneering luxuriously.
-
-But now, as I have said, it was late in the season, and the
-snow-clouds were holding themselves in the sky ready for further
-attacks, and a keen wind was beginning to rise, so that no one else
-thought the Yoho Valley {208} tempting enough, and it was certain I
-should have it all to myself if I got there.
-
-The trail was not difficult to follow. There, at the end of the
-lake, was a mountain pass visible from the chalet, and the thin white
-line that screwed about among the rocks and trees was the trail. The
-slicker trotted. He trotted through the wood that borders the lake;
-he trotted through a wonderful pebbled valley beyond it which might
-have been a sea beach (only everywhere slim spruces, like sharp,
-green, tenpenny nails, grew out of the pebbles); and he trotted up
-the first stretch of trail leading to the pass ahead of us. Then for
-an hour or more the slicker climbed as steadily as a Swiss guide.
-The trail was less than a yard wide and metalled with rolling stones,
-and though it wound continually, its most generous spirals left it,
-to my fancy, almost sheer. We wound with it, past boulders and
-hanging trees and little cataracts that shot through air from some
-invisible lips of stone above--between shadowy crags and over
-unprotected places where the sun glared. In the end the slicker
-brought me to the pass itself, and we rode into a dark wood there,
-and the trees grew bigger and bigger, and the trail grew stickier and
-stickier, and the {209} pass ended suddenly, and below, far, far
-below, was the Yoho Valley.
-
-The story of the boy who cried 'wolf' when there was no wolf is a
-familiar one, but much more familiar in everyday life is the story of
-the man who cries 'lion' when there is no lion. You know him and you
-don't believe him. You know that, moved by the immoderate enthusiasm
-which is the chief qualification for the profession of writing, he is
-doing his level best to make you believe that the object he is
-presenting to you is a lion, for the simple reason that if you
-believe it, you will be more attracted by it and him. Canada, being
-a much-advertised country at present, is full of lions. 'The finest
-view in Canada. Yes, sir.' How often I heard that remark! How
-often it turned out to be an overstatement. How distrustfully I came
-to listen to it.
-
-Was it, then, that for some months I had imbibed the Canadian air,
-that when I reached the Rockies I too was carried away, and became as
-immoderately enthusiastic as any Canadian? I do not know. I merely
-have to confess that I was carried away, that I have already cried
-'lion' more than once, and that I must do so once again now that I
-have got to the Yoho Valley. Baedeker saves his own dignity--and
-{210} that of literature--by using an asterisk at these critical
-points, or two asterisks if his emotions are very poignant. But I,
-who have to fill paper, must use words. Well, I am not afraid of
-exaggerating the beauties of the Yoho. This valley of enormous trees
-spiring up from unseen gorges to wellnigh unseen heights; of
-cataracts that fall in foam a thousand feet; of massed innumerable
-glaciers; this valley into which it seems you could drop all
-Switzerland, and still look down--is not easily overpraised. The
-difficulty is to praise it at all adequately.
-
-It seemed to me as I rode on along the high trail that sometimes
-edged out to the gulf below and sometimes swerved back from it, that
-one of the wonders of the valley was a thing that in smaller places
-would have made for disappointment, and that is that it lies, and
-always has lain, outside the human radius. It has none of those
-connections with men that set us thrilling in other parts. No
-Hannibal ever led his army by this route across these mountains. No
-hardy tribesmen watched the approach of an enemy among its crags, or
-bred among them a race of mountaineers. No gods dwelt on its
-heights, and no poets ever came near to sing them. History {211} has
-nothing to tell of it. Little hills and little valleys have their
-stories and their songs, their memories and their miracles. They are
-haunted still with those forgotten mysteries which stir men's fancies
-more deeply than things remembered or discovered can. This valley
-walled about with mountains has been above and beyond men's ken from
-the beginning of the world: and now that men have come into it, they
-find nothing to discover in it except its vastness and immunity from
-the touch of men. It strikes one even now as not only devoid of
-human adjuncts but needless of them. A man no more looks for legends
-there than he would look for them in the centre of a typhoon.
-
-I suppose that men did pass through it--even before the valley became
-a known part of the world, and even a sight for tourists. It was
-not, as the phrase goes, untrodden by the foot of man. A few
-prospectors must have passed this way from time to time many years
-ago. Some may have died there for all one knows. Indian hunters,
-too, would enter the valley in pursuit of game. But no one possessed
-it; no one gave it the human air: or, if they did, the records are
-lost. Prospectors tell us only of their finds, nothing {212} of
-their lives. Of the Indians, some one someday may, perhaps, find
-some traces. At present their white brothers are little troubled by
-them or their history or their origin. Canadians are content to
-think of them as a primitive, decaying people who came from God knows
-where to a country they never realised was God's. It will be easier
-to forget them than to understand them, these strange men with faces
-no more expressive than wood, who, if they ever came to the Yoho
-Valley, must have passed through it more like trees walking among the
-trees than like men that stop and wonder, and leave a habitation and
-a name.
-
-Shadowy, disregardable creatures, then, as uninfluential as the
-slicker and myself, may have roamed the valley in times past and left
-no more traces upon it. We two realising, I trust, our minuteness
-and unimportance, went on, as it turned out, far beyond the point
-intended for our afternoon's excursion. In contemplation of the
-valley I had given the slicker the rein, and he, poor pony, no doubt
-thought that he was bound for the first camp, there to rest the night
-in the ordinary course. Presently I found him, his two front feet
-planted firmly together, sliding down the {213} slipperiest piece of
-trail we had yet encountered, sliding and sliding till we had got to
-the very bottom of the valley--whereupon I discovered that we had
-indeed attained the first camp.
-
-It was a queer, unexpected sight--a few little lean-to tents and a
-couple of log huts, standing side by side on a flat piece of the
-valley floor, just beyond the spray of a cascade that dropped from
-ledge to ledge of the mountain opposite, starting so high up that it
-seemed to spring from the sky. The place seemed deserted, but while
-the slicker and I paused to look about us, out of the biggest tent
-there came a small, silent, yellow figure. It did not speak to me,
-but only stared, and I, having stared back for a little and having
-wondered if it were some gnome peculiar to the valley, suddenly saw
-that it had a pigtail, and remembered that I had been told that there
-was a Chinese cook in every camp.
-
-'Is this the first camp?' I therefore asked.
-
-'Yup!'
-
-'Can you give me some tea?'
-
-'Yup!' he repeated, and vanished into the tent whence he had come.
-
-By the time I had tethered the slicker on the grassiest spot I could
-find, that boy had {214} tea ready. He stared at me while I ate it,
-stared at me when I paid him for it, and stared at me when, having
-offered the slicker some bread and sugar in vain, I remounted him and
-set him on the homeward trail. I had not a watch with me. But it
-was evident from the position of the sun that we had very little
-daylight left for the return ride. Dusk, indeed, came on just as we
-reached the other side of the pass, with a mountain side still to
-descend. Dusk and an exceedingly cold wind--in the face of which
-that corkscrew trail seemed doubly steep. It was one of those
-occasions when vowing candles to one's patron saint might have added
-to one's peace of mind. But I have no patron saint and could but
-give the reins to the slicker, and he rewarded me for my trust by not
-falling down till we had actually accomplished the descent and were
-on the pebbled beach. Then, in the pitch-dark night, we both rolled
-over together. A match, lighted with difficulty, revealed the fact
-that neither of us was injured; and so, very steadily and cautiously,
-we moved on to the chalet, where we arrived to find dinner finished.
-But we had seen splendid things, the slicker and I.
-
-
-
-
-{215}
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-THE FRUIT-LANDS OF LAKE WINDERMERE
-
-It would have been harder to leave the Rockies if I had not been
-bound for the Selkirks, which have this advantage over the Rockies,
-that they are perhaps less known. That part I was bound for is,
-indeed, not known at all to tourists, and very little known to
-anybody. The known part of the range lies round Glacier House, and
-includes Mount Abbott, the Great Illecillewaet Glacier, Mount Sir
-Donald, etc., which high places the railway has now made accessible
-for tourists who can climb. The part I was to see lies to the
-south-east, at the head of the Columbia Valley, and is at present a
-hundred miles from the nearest railway station.
-
-First of all I took train to Golden. If you take a map of Canada and
-follow the trans-continental line westward, you will see that it
-emerges from the Rockies at Golden. Golden is a little mining town
-lying in the Columbia {216} Valley, with the Rockies on one side of
-it and the Selkirks on the other. It was chiefly to see this
-valley--one of the most fertile in British Columbia, but at present
-unopened--that I got out at Golden with a friend. An excursion into
-the Selkirks was to depend upon the time at our disposal. We had
-been told that near Lake Windermere, at a place called Wilmer, there
-was a great irrigation scheme in progress, which would shortly result
-in 60,000 acres of dry belt-land being ready for fruit-farming.
-This, when the rail from Kamloops to Golden was completed, would make
-the Columbia Valley as famous for its fruit as the Okanagan. We both
-wanted to see it. My friend wanted to buy land. The problem was how
-to get up the valley.
-
-[Illustration: THE DEVIL'S FINGERS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS.]
-
-There were, we found, five different ways of doing the eighty miles
-from Golden to Wilmer.
-
-1. The first was to wait for that day of the week on which the
-stage-coach ran. It took two days to do the distance, and was very
-convenient if we did not mind waiting in Golden a few days first.
-But we were in a hurry.
-
-2. This way was by river-boat--a delightful trip. But there were
-one or two objections to it. The water of the Columbia was very
-{217} low at this time of the year, the sand-banks were numerous, and
-the boat had gone up some days before and nobody knew when it would
-get down again. We gave up the boat.
-
-3. The third way, which we decided should be ours, was to go up in
-the only motor which Golden possessed. This would cost fifty
-dollars, but the journey there would only take about seven hours.
-When we had decided upon this, we went to the proprietor of the motor
-and found that the car was already out for an indefinite number of
-days.
-
-4. This way was to walk the eighty miles--a plan I favoured and
-tried on the way back, as I shall describe. But my friend could not
-fancy it. Statelier than myself, he had to carry five more stones
-with him.
-
-5. This was the way we took. We hired a two-horse rig which
-undertook to do the journey in the same time as the stage--but for
-twenty dollars apiece instead of five.
-
-We started from Golden on a Monday morning in the two-horse rig,
-driven by a young American. He had been in the United States navy,
-and also in Alberta, farming, but he had had no luck with his farm,
-having started with too small a capital to tide over {218} the two
-bad seasons which he had met there. He told us that he found Canada
-very similar to the States--neither much better nor worse; and he
-took his own luck there philosophically. He seemed to me altogether
-a capable man, whose fortune might have been all the other way.
-Anyway he drove excellently and was not a grumbler, like the American
-ex-sailor I met at Regina.
-
-Nothing could have been more beautiful than the late September
-morning when we started out of Golden. A spreading village of pretty
-poplar-lined avenues and pleasant bungalows, Golden explained its own
-name as we went. The wooded hills on either side were all splashed
-with autumn yellows, and the sun, striking down through a grove of
-silver poplars which shuts off the south end of the village, made it
-all seem shot with gold. It is a mining village, but compared with
-the usual mining village of Great Britain it seemed as Eden to the
-Inferno.
-
-Coming out of it we struck what is the dominant scenery of the
-valley--the blue Columbia winding in and out, sometimes wooded to its
-brim, sometimes sweeping over into open marshland, but always with
-the hills lightly wooded, facing one another across it, and behind
-{219} them the white peaks hung with snow. At every mile or two a
-silvery creek, sometimes a mere ribbon of water, sometimes almost a
-river, rushed down to join the Columbia below; by the side of these
-creeks mostly would be the cleared land which small ranchers had
-settled, and where they had gone on living presumably on what they
-could grow off their own places, since the chances of reaching a
-market became obviously more difficult at every mile. Every wind of
-the road--and it mostly follows the river--gave views that were
-always changing and beautiful.
-
-It was on the second day of our driving that the appearance of the
-valley grew different. The creeks became rarer; the soil drier.
-Instead of silver poplars rising among a tangled underbush, there
-were now jack-pines growing out of a burnt-up sward. We might have
-been going through some English park in the south country, and some
-one had evidently thought this before, for a man we met driving told
-us that this part of the valley was known as the Park. Passing
-through it we came at last to the real dry belt. Those who know the
-Okanagan would no doubt find it less strange, but it amazed me to
-find a country among these mountains almost Egyptian in its colouring
-and {220} texture. Drier and drier became the soil; the trees became
-sparser and sparser; there was now no underwood at all. The straight
-firs rose clear out of sandy hills and hollows. Sandy they might
-appear, but this was not sand in the vulgar sense. It was glacial
-silt--bottomless drifts of powdered clay that has slipped down from
-the mountains and piled and sloped itself into 'benches' above the
-river.
-
-We had to cross the river to get to Wilmer, which is the headquarters
-of the irrigation. Headquarters sounds imposing; and in a few years,
-doubtless, Wilmer will be imposing, but at present it consists of a
-few shacks, two small stores, a dirty little hotel (in the bar of
-which a man was shot the day after we left), and one presiding genius
-who has made Wilmer what it is and also what it will be shortly.
-Need I say that it was a Scot who years ago saw the far-reaching
-value of this land, conceived the idea of irrigating it, and
-personally superintended the carrying out of his conception? I don't
-know that I need. I came to the conclusion before I left Canada that
-Scots, more than any other race, were at the bottom, and generally
-also at the top, of most of the enterprises that were being carried
-out there. No {221} one talks of the Scotticisation of Canada.
-Perhaps Scots do not proselytise. Perhaps they do not find any other
-people worthy of being taken into their community. They prefer to
-remain an international oligarchy, managing others but not admitting
-them to equal rights. They effect their intentions by usually
-working alone and always sticking together. A paradoxical people.
-It is amazing to think that at the beginning of the eighteenth
-century the Scottish Highlander was regarded by the average
-Englishman in much the same light as we now regard the Hottentot or
-the Andaman Islander, a hopelessly idle and uncouthly impossible
-person, destined to remain a barbarian for ever. _Dis aliter visum_.
-The Highlander now directs the Empire, distinguishing himself in that
-respect even more than his Lowland brother. Yet only two hundred
-years have passed since he was outside the pale.
-
-My friend knew Mr. Randolph Bruce, the Highlander who presides over
-the Columbia Valley Irrigation Works, and will, it seems to me, rank
-as one of the many makers of Canada, and Mr. Bruce most hospitably
-put us up while we were in Wilmer, and showed us what he has done and
-what he means to do. What he means to do is to create a town on the
-shores {222} of Lake Windermere, and he drove us down there to show
-us the lake, which is not the least like its English original, but
-very beautiful nevertheless, lying as it does clear and still among
-the sand-hills, a belt of autumn-tinted trees around it, and, above,
-the hills and the snows. It looked like some African lake stretched
-at the feet of the Mountains of the Moon. It looked as if it might
-lie thus for centuries, silent and untouched by the hands of men.
-But it was a Canadian lake, and though it might seem to be at the
-very back of the world, it was shortly to have a town built on its
-shores. Mr. Bruce showed us the town site, the hotel site, the site
-of the bowling-green and the polo ground. I rather think he showed
-us the race-course that was going to be. I saw it all the more
-clearly because Mr. Bruce also showed us the work already actually
-accomplished--the canals and ditches that brought the upper mountain
-lakes down on to the benches of friable clay that were to grow the
-apples we shall eat in England a few years hence. It is all
-extraordinarily interesting, seeing this town of the future and these
-fruit-lands of the future--of which my friend bought twenty acres,
-which were to be named after him. The Columbia River ran just below
-the {223} bench-land he bought, and I wished I had some capital handy
-that I might buy the adjoining plot, that I might also grow fruit
-there and have a portion of the fair Dominion named after me. If the
-Windermere race-course had already been in existence, and a race
-being run, I should have backed one of the horses against all my
-principles, and laid out the proceeds in a fruit-farm.
-
-
-
-
-{224}
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-THE SELKIRKS--A GRIZZLY-BEAR COUNTRY
-
-Behind Wilmer lies a part of the Selkirks which is known only to a
-few ranchers in the neighbourhood, and is scarcely accessible except
-from this point. We had spent two days in the neighbourhood of Lake
-Windermere, and on the third, though each of us was booked to be
-hundreds of miles further on our way by the end of the week, and
-heaven only knew how we were even going to reach Golden again, for we
-had let the rig go back and the boat was reported stuck somewhere on
-the Columbia River, we neither of us could resist an offer that was
-made us of an opportunity to climb Iron Top Mountain, which was
-somewhere at the back of this alluring country.
-
-The offer came from a Mr. Starboard. In Canada you will sometimes
-find, several hundreds of miles from civilisation, some strenuous and
-capable man whom you would think civilisation needed and would
-require. But the wilds in {225} Canada are more important. Mr.
-Starboard had come to these parts originally as a prospector and
-miner, but the mine he had come to had shut down--not for lack of
-silver and lead in it, but for lack of transport facilities;
-whereupon Mr. Starboard, fascinated by one of these valleys, had
-started horse-breeding there, occupying what time was left from
-clearing his land in making roads through the mountains and hunting
-big game. Dropping in at Mr. Bruce's casually one morning, he asked
-us if we should like to see the best view he knew of in the Selkirks.
-We said we should; and each, equipped with a toothbrush and a comb,
-was driven out to Starboard's ranch for lunch.
-
-Travelling in the remoter parts of Canada gives you strange table
-companions. You never know quite what company you will meet, though
-you can generally count upon its being interesting. While we were
-being driven up the Columbia Valley a few days before, we had heard
-from various homesteaders that there was 'a big German bug' staying
-up in the mountains with his friends, trying for bear. 'They call
-him the Land Crab,' our informant would usually add for further
-elucidation of the big bug's official position. On arriving at Mr.
-Starboard's ranch we found that the big bug {226} in question was, in
-the commoner prose of Europe, the Landgraf of Hesse with two
-equerries and a small retinue. For a motley collection, the party
-that sat down to lunch that day in the chief room of Starboard's
-ranch would be difficult to beat. There was the Landgraf himself and
-his German companions, a well-known Canadian official, three
-valets--these all neatly dressed--Mrs. Starboard quite wonderfully
-frocked, as the fashion papers say, Mr. Starboard in ranching
-costume, and ourselves who had slept in our clothes for several days.
-The waiters were a Japanese and a Chinese. We fed off bear, shot by
-one of the Germans, who had been most successful in their hunting
-both of bear and goat.
-
-Bear, by the way, was only one among other delicacies. Its taste is
-rather like that of Christmas beef stewed in the gravy of a goose.
-Vegetarians would not care about it; but after living on little else
-for two days I can answer for its being both appetising and
-sustaining, particularly in high altitudes. After lunch, four of us,
-Mr. Starboard, the railway man, my friend, and myself started for
-Iron Top Mountain, which lay seventeen miles off along a trail that
-rose steeply most of the way. The ponies were excellent ones, better
-even than {227} the slicker. Mr. Starboard had specially picked
-them, because he wanted to see if they could be got to carry us to
-the top of the mountain, a little over ten thousand feet. He had
-never taken ponies as high before, and doubted if the test had ever
-been made in Canada, though I fancy ponies have done as much or more
-in the Himalayas.
-
-We did fourteen miles that afternoon, following at first the bank of
-a blue foaming stream, then turning eastward up a steeper valley
-through which a smaller stream flowed. The trail was far better than
-many roads in French Canada or on the prairie, and had been
-constructed by Mr. Starboard himself to provide access to a silver
-and lead mine which had been shut down for some time. It seemed
-extraordinary that in a country so wild and remote there should be
-any trail at all, but miners go anywhere. A man who has to find his
-way into the earth makes no difficulty about finding his way across
-it.
-
-It was a day, half sunshine and half mist, and the mountains would
-sometimes be shut entirely in shrouds of vapour, sometimes would
-reveal slanted white tops cut off in mid-air by the fog below,
-sometimes would clear altogether, so that one could see everything on
-them, {228} from the snowslides down which the grizzlies travel to
-the narrow tracks of the goats. As we mounted, the valley grew
-steeper and steeper, and the trail wound more and more. We passed
-one place where, earlier in the year, there had been a terrific slide
-of snow half a mile in width. The huge firs still lay where they had
-fallen, shattered and splintered before it. Half-way down, the
-avalanche had met a great pinnacle of rock that had stood the shock
-unmoved, and caused the snow to part to left and to right, where it
-had hewn two lanes of almost equal breadth through the trees. It was
-just near here that Mr. Starboard showed me a grizzly's track, and
-told me that he had seen no less than seventeen of these bears in the
-last fortnight. He said that their numbers were increasing yearly in
-that neighbourhood. A little later a porcupine crossed the trail
-ahead of us, and lurched unwieldily into the undergrowth. The trees
-grew close together all the way, except where we passed a great
-stretch of mountainside where a forest fire had raged, and even there
-the scorched trunks still stood, gibbeted skeletons of trees.
-
-We put up for the night in a deserted mining camp, almost a village
-it was, with wooden shacks likely to be used again when the Kamloops
-{229} to Golden Railway is completed and it is worth while getting
-the stuff out of the mine.
-
-Up there it had begun to freeze hard, but a big fire and much bear,
-which the railway man fried over it with skill, kept us warm enough
-till we went to bed under many blankets in one of the shacks.
-
-It was bitterly chill--the start in the early morning--after a
-breakfast of cold bear; and very soon after we set out we got into
-snow, and the trees ceased, and the ponies' flanks began to heave
-steadily. The morning was as bright as it was cold, however, and
-Mount Farnham, shaped like a chimney-pot, glittered right over us on
-the left. I remarked to Mr. Starboard what a nasty mountain it
-looked for climbing purposes, whereupon he astonished me by saying he
-had been up it.
-
-'You went up to see if it could be done?' I said, thinking I had
-struck a keen climber in the European sense of the word.
-
-'No,' said Mr. Starboard simply; 'you would not catch me going up a
-place like that for the climb. I went there because I thought there
-was silver and lead there.'
-
-The ponies were now beginning to show their respective stamina, two
-of them going right ahead, and the one that carried my friend {230}
-getting slower and slower. We had got by this time into a sort of
-rocky amphitheatre where the snow lay thicker, and just as I passed
-under a little cascade congealed into fantastic icicles as it spouted
-from a cleft, I heard a noise in my rear, and turned to see my friend
-and his pony doing Catherine wheels in the snow together. Luckily
-they fell--and rolled--softly and rose uninjured; but very soon after
-that the ponies had to be left. We turned them loose on a platform
-of rock which was, Mr. Starboard said, just short of ten thousand
-feet up. Only a few hundred more remained to be done, which we
-accomplished on foot through knee-deep snow, gaining the summit just
-in time.
-
-For the first time I got a view of the Rockies. We looked down a
-long, narrow, purple valley that ran at right angles to the Columbia
-River, over the first hills beyond Wilmer, into a sea of mountains.
-I had heard that phrase--a sea of mountains--applied to the Rockies
-before, but I had not realised its fitness before.
-
-[Illustration: A SENTINEL OF THE ROCKIES.]
-
-There it was, a sea of white caps frozen eternally in the very moment
-when they had stormed the sky.
-
-For just five minutes we gazed, and then a mist settled down on them,
-and, where we were, {231} immediately a bitter wind began to blow and
-caused us to make for the ponies hurriedly. As we rode down the
-frozen trail we startled some ptarmigan, which rose and fluttered
-above the snow like big white butterflies.
-
-
-
-
-{232}
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-AN EIGHTY-MILE WALK THROUGH THE COLUMBIA VALLEY
-
-We got back to Wilmer the following morning, and the problem then
-was--how to reach Golden again. The boat was due up the river some
-time in the day, but sandbanks do not encourage punctuality. I had
-my suspicions of that boat, and in any case, even if it arrived that
-day, it would certainly not start back again till the morning
-following. I did not want to wait for it at Wilmer, and decided
-instead that I would start walking down the valley at once and pick
-the boat up at Spellamacheen, forty miles downstream, some time next
-day. My friend was as suspicious of the walk as I was of the boat;
-and since he had heard that some men were likely to turn up that day
-in a motor from Golden who might give him a lift back in case the
-boat failed, he decided to wait for them.
-
-So we parted, and rather late in the day--at {233} noon, to be
-exact--I set out on my walk. Forty miles is not much of a walk. It
-can be done in ten hours very easily--in eight if you make up your
-mind to it. I decided I would take nine hours over it and waste no
-time. I did not stop for lunch in Athelmer--where one crosses the
-Columbia--but merely bought some chocolate and a pound of apples, and
-hurried on.
-
-About a mile out of Athelmer I ate the apples, because they were a
-nuisance to carry, and wished I could as easily get rid of my heavy
-overcoat, which had its pockets stuffed with toilet and sleeping
-accessories just like a suit-case. I also wished that I had on boots
-that I had ever tried walking in. Still I did six or seven miles in
-the first hour and a half, and then I realised that two things
-destructive to fast walking were about to happen. One was
-footsoreness and the other was rain. Both came upon me a few minutes
-later, and both increased steadily hour after hour. The valley which
-had looked so beautiful in all the reds of autumn, as we drove
-through it in the sunlight, was now filled with a clammy mist; and
-the road which had seemed a fine road for the horses in fine weather
-now struck me as offensively sticky, and my pace declined {234} to
-something under three miles an hour. I consoled myself for a little
-with the thought that I was getting an experience of autumn in the
-Columbia Valley. Afterwards I decided that I would gladly do without
-it. I could have imagined it just as well. The road was like glue
-and my coat had increased in weight several pounds. To balance this
-as far as possible, I sat on a wet spruce tree that had fallen by the
-side of the road and ate my packet of chocolate; after which I moved
-on at a very sober pace. I began to doubt if I should get to
-Spellamacheen that night; and the doubt soon increased to a certainty
-that I should not. Then I remembered that on the drive out we had
-passed a place called Dolans, only twenty-eight miles from Wilmer. I
-did some mental arithmetic which seemed to prove that even Dolans was
-a terrible distance off, and I tried a little running, but it was not
-of a kind to win a Marathon race. Running through glue when you are
-footsore is trying work. Nevertheless by six o'clock I calculated I
-was only about three miles from Dolans, which rejoiced me, until the
-horrid thought cropped up--if I got in after the supper hour, should
-I get any supper?
-
-It was by no means certain in that valley.
-
-{235}
-
-Providence a few minutes later sent a buggy, driven by a small,
-glum-looking man up behind me, and the glum-looking man said 'Care to
-drive?' I said 'Yes,' and found he was bound for Dolans like myself.
-We got there about seven o'clock. The rancher and his wife were in;
-also another wayfarer like ourselves, who had arrived a few minutes
-before us. He was an elderly man, with a great shock of iron-grey
-hair, who was driving into Golden in a farm-cart from some place
-several days distant. He had the strangest pair in his cart--a
-little brown mare of about fourteen hands, and a great lanky horse
-the height of a giraffe.
-
-We were all given a good meal, and ate it in silence, and sat in
-silence to digest it. Canadians in these valleys are often that way;
-it is due not to unsociability but to disuse of their tongues.
-Possibly to ruminate is the better way, but silence can be
-oppressive, and if you start a conversation and the other people only
-reflect upon your words, they may be weighing them as if they were
-gold, but you are not sure enough of this to be elated. I was rather
-glad to be shown to my bed, which was in a barn (but the blankets
-were clean, Mr. Dolans said), pretty early. {236} Mr. Dolans sat on
-the bed for a bit, and advised me to buy the ranch. I promised to
-think the matter over, and went to sleep instead in a nice atmosphere
-of hay, and got up for six o'clock breakfast. The other two had
-already driven off; but the rain had ceased, and though the road was
-a mud slide, I started for Spellamacheen in high hopes of catching
-the boat in spite of being footsore.
-
-I need not have worried myself, for when I got there at 12.30, I
-learnt that the boat had just passed on its way up to Wilmer, and was
-not likely to be down again for two or three days.
-
-Spellamacheen consists of a rest-house ranch in full view of a
-semicircle of snowclad mountains, but I was a little disheartened in
-spite of the view. I particularly wanted to catch the midnight train
-from Golden to Vancouver, and now I realised that to do this I should
-have to walk the rest of the way--another forty miles. From two
-o'clock to twelve is ten hours. If I did four miles an hour, I
-should catch the train to a nicety.
-
-When I am resting on a walk I am always singularly optimistic. I was
-stiff after lunch--partly from the unusual exercise, partly from
-sleeping in wet clothes, and my feet {237} were sorer than ever, but
-I set out for Golden, confident that I should catch that train. A
-young man with a bundle on his back, who had got into Spellamacheen
-just ahead of me, offered to hike with me. He also was for Golden,
-but thought twenty miles more that day would satisfy him.
-
-He was a pleasant and conversational young man, and told me that he
-was from New Brunswick, but had for the last eight months been at
-work digging the ditches for the Columbia Valley Irrigation Company.
-He had had enough of it, he said; in fact too much. Compared with
-New Brunswick, British Columbia was no catch at all, and he meant to
-go back home. Frenchmen are not fonder of their 'patrie' than are
-the Canadian-born. He brimmed over, did that young man, with praises
-of New Brunswick--brimmed over very intelligently, telling me about
-the Reversible Falls of St. John and the conditions of farming in the
-province with a clearness which few Englishmen of his class could
-emulate. He said that he would only get one and a half dollars a day
-instead of two and a half, but then one and a half would go much
-further there than two and a half in British Columbia. You could
-live better on it, and life was easier {238} there. British Columbia
-was too rough: he allowed there was no pioneer about him. He had got
-tired of the Columbia Valley months before, and had started to come
-out of it in July, but had only got as far as Athelmer. There he had
-gone to a hotel for the night, and had got drinking, and somehow
-before he knew it all the money he had saved during his months of
-digging had been drunk. So he had gone back to the ditches. But he
-meant to get out of the valley this time. I gathered that even this
-time it had been a near shave, for having again got as far as the
-hotel, he had found a lot of fellows drinking what he called
-'Schlampagne.' He supposed there must have been a hundred bottles of
-schlampagne drunk last night, and whisky afterwards, but he himself
-had been very careful and had taken gin instead. You never knew, he
-said, what the whisky would be made of, but if you drank from a
-bottle of gin marked English, it was all right. He felt a bit funny
-inside to-day, but seemed quite cheerful about it because he had won
-away from the hotel, and was pretty sure now to get back to New
-Brunswick, after which he would not go pioneering again. He doubted,
-however, if we were likely to get to Golden that day. There was
-{239} a place called M'Kie's we could put up at eighteen miles on, or
-if we felt like it, another called Petersen's--eight miles further.
-I said I wanted to catch the midnight train from Golden, and was
-going to walk on by night: at which he said he would do the same. He
-repeated that he was funny inside and footsore, but he thought he
-could do it. We would get to M'Kie's for supper, or rather get M'Kie
-to make us up a supper, which we would eat upon the road, and we
-should thus get into Golden in good time. He was sure we were going
-at least four miles an hour.
-
-I was sure we were scarcely doing three, and by the time we did get
-to M'Kie's, just before dark, we were both so sure that a rest would
-do us good that we thought we would eat our supper there after all.
-
-M'Kie's was a shack just off the road, with a huge puma-skin nailed
-to the verandah. Inside was a very old woman, who said that we could
-get our tea all right, but M'Kie wasn't in yet, and we'd better wait
-for him. So we sat down in the road, and I paddled in an icy creek
-that went foaming by the house door. Then the old woman asked us in
-and chatted to us while she cooked the meal. M'Kie turning up, we
-fell to, and {240} M'Kie entertained us with trapping stories. It
-seemed he was half-trapper, half-rancher, and the big skin we had
-seen outside he had got only a few days before. The mountain lion
-had come down right into the sheepfold, and his two dogs had treed
-it, and a single bullet had brought it down. It was the biggest skin
-that he had ever seen, and measured ten feet six from tip to tail.
-It certainly was a large skin, but a puma's tail counts for a good
-deal. M'Kie had also shot a bear in the sheepfold the week before,
-and he talked so much about cinnamons and grizzlies, which seemed
-very plentiful round there, that the New Brunswicker insisted on our
-having his opinion as to whether they ever attacked unarmed men
-walking by night. M'Kie thought not. So we started on again,
-somewhat reassured, along what promised to be an uncommonly dark road.
-
-The sky was all clouded over, and it was now 8.30, and there was no
-chance whatever of my catching the midnight train, since twenty miles
-still remained to be accomplished, and our limp condition made even
-three miles an hour hard. But we walked on, mostly because I now
-wanted to get the morning train at eleven o'clock, and I felt that if
-we {241} went back to M'Kie's and stopped the night, I should be so
-stiff that I could not walk at all next day. The New Brunswicker
-sportingly said that he would go on for as long as he could anyhow,
-though he wasn't bent on any particular train; and for some four
-mortal hours we splashed along through mud and water in what was the
-next thing to pitch darkness. To add to the discomfort, a high,
-cold, and very wet wind began to blow, and there was every prospect
-of rain soon descending in torrents. It was at this point, I think,
-that our thoughts began to turn to Petersen's. The New Brunswicker
-remarked that if we had passed Petersen's there was nowhere to stop
-at between where we were and Golden; but if we had not passed
-Petersen's, we might rest there a few minutes and perhaps get some
-milk to drink. Soon after this we felt sure that we had passed
-Petersen's in the dark; and though neither of us admitted it, I think
-our respective hearts sank. We decided to rest a little, which we
-did, and we rested again a few minutes later without deciding to do
-it. As we got up from a brief smoke on a fallen log the rain began
-to pelt down, and we saw a light just off the road.
-
-I own I should have wanted to stop at {242} Petersen's anyhow, even
-if the New Brunswicker had not confessed that he could not go any
-further: but I don't know that I should have had his perseverance in
-knocking Petersen's up. There certainly was a light there. But I
-was convinced that everybody inside was deep in sleep. The New
-Brunswicker thought somebody might be up, and after knocking vainly
-for ten minutes at the front door of the house he went round to the
-back, while I sat on the doorstep, wondering what fifteen miles in
-that black rain would be like.
-
-A couple of minutes later, the New Brunswicker appeared triumphant.
-The Petersens, he said, were up--in their kitchen--and thither we
-limped, much relieved. They were the kindest people--Swedes, both of
-them, and kept a milk cow, and gave us milk and buttermilk. They
-said they were sorry they hadn't a bed to offer us, but we could have
-the kitchen. Fastidious travellers might have thought the kitchen
-untidy and stuffy, and even the New Brunswicker before he went to
-sleep on the floor on his blankets, with some old clothes that we
-found hanging on the walls over our legs--even he got a broom (after
-the Petersens had gone to bed) and swept a clean space {243} for us
-to lie on. But at least it was warm, and a haven of luxury compared
-with the road.
-
-Personally, I know that I was very sorry to have to get up off that
-floor at 4 A.M., when that industrious old lady, Mrs. Petersen, came
-in again to relight the stove and to prepare breakfast. She was
-followed presently by her husband and son and a hired man, while from
-the barn there issued forth not only that shock-headed old man with
-the queer rig whom I had seen at Dolans, but no less than five other
-men who had been working in different parts of the valley, and were
-hiking out before the winter should come. These had all spent their
-night in the barn, which seems to be a privileged resting-place for
-travellers in this part of the country.
-
-Mrs. Petersen had to get breakfast for some dozen people, and an odd
-company we were, all unkempt and unshaven, and most of us looking,
-truthfully enough, as if we had slept for some months in our clothes.
-We all did a wash before breakfast, however. Two of the men at table
-were socialists, and we had a desultory conversation on that subject
-while we were not occupied in eating Mrs. Petersen's bacon and eggs.
-Nobody seemed much to dispute the socialist position, but {244} this
-might have been because nobody was greatly interested in it. I
-remember that the socialists thought that capital ought to be done
-away with, but Mr. Petersen, who no doubt had a small amount himself
-and kept a hired man, thought it was a useful thing, and should be
-retained. Everybody went off directly the meal was finished, except
-ourselves, who lingered because the New Brunswicker had boldly
-requested the shock-headed old man to drive us in to Golden in his
-farm-cart, and we went to help harness the little mare and the big
-giraffe.
-
-It was still raining heavily when we started, and it rained just as
-heavily all the way into Golden. I never was so damped in my life,
-and this was due not merely to the rain, but because the farm-cart
-was so full of the old man's things (he seemed to be moving his house
-in it) that the only place available in it for me was a sack of hay.
-The cart had stood out all night in the rain, and the sack of hay was
-wet through, which made it like a sponge, so that the more I dried
-off the top of it the more moisture I seemed to absorb from the under
-part. The little mare and the big horse made about two and a half
-miles an hour, and if I could have walked, {245} I should have done
-so, for now again the eleven o'clock train seemed in danger of
-getting off from Golden without me. Indeed it was half-past eleven
-before we got to Golden, and, resigned to despair, I accompanied the
-New Brunswicker into an inn, where I thought I should have to wait
-again for the midnight train. We ordered beer in the bar, and as I
-was explaining to the proprietor what a nuisance it was to have
-missed the train, he put down his glass and said, 'Wait a minute,'
-and went to the telephone. He came back to inform me that the train
-had just been signalled, being very late. He thought I should just
-have time to catch it if I rushed.
-
-
-
-
-{246}
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-FROM GOLDEN TO THE COAST
-
-I managed to get that train, and also a half bottle of rye whisky on
-the way to it, and sank into a seat in the smoking compartment, where
-I sat all soaked and miserable, supping my rye whisky at intervals
-and half dozing until two grizzly-bear hunters got in a few stations
-down the line. They were very wonderfully arrayed in moccasins and
-Arctic socks and turned-up overalls and sweaters and cartridge belts;
-and though they were modest enough in their bearing, and did not talk
-about their exploits until they were asked questions, the whole
-compartment was soon eagerly chatting of nothing but grizzly bears.
-The two hunters, who were amateurs of the sport, had been up in the
-mountains alone, a three days' portage from the railroad, and had got
-three grizzlies, and would have got more, they said, but that heavy
-falls of snow had forced them to decamp. They spoke like good
-shots--which does not {247} mean that they said they were good
-shots--and they seemed very keen on their sport, which they claimed
-to be the most dangerous and exacting in the world; nor would they
-listen to my meek suggestion that the Bengal tiger would compare
-favourably with the grizzly.
-
-'It's a cat,' one of them said sniffily; 'you shoot it off elephants.'
-
-I said that I knew Anglo-Indians who went after tigers on foot, and I
-also argued that even in the case of shooting from elephants the
-combination of a charging tiger and a restive elephant offered
-opportunity of showing one's nerve to be in order such as is not to
-be despised, especially if the howdah happens to have been inexpertly
-fixed and slides at the critical moment. They allowed that there
-might be something in this, but persisted that in any case
-tiger-hunting was done at ease, with natives to do all the portering,
-whereas grizzly-bear hunters like themselves had to carry everything
-with them, and camp in the snow, and shoot on mountain-sides, down
-which a grizzly bear would charge at a man quicker than a racehorse.
-They gave graphic descriptions of charges of grizzly bears, with
-their back legs flying ahead of their front ones. The {248} last
-bear they had bagged had dropped, they said, within twenty paces of
-them, after being rolled over three times.
-
-I fancy they spoke reasonably enough, and that the pursuit of the
-grizzly--certainly if done without a guide--is as good a test of a
-man's nerve as any other. As to the merits of the grizzly considered
-as a brute likely to do for you if you do not previously do for it,
-and compared with such others as the tiger, the buffalo, the
-rhinoceros, the elephant, or the lion, there is no arriving at any
-final conclusion. African hunters never seem agreed about the
-comparative merits of the last three; while one Indian sportsman
-supports the buffalo, another will support the tiger. Not having any
-experience of the grizzly bear myself, I can only say that, judging
-from what I have heard, he must be accounted big enough game for
-anybody. There is no doubt that most of the old trappers have a
-wholesome respect for him, and the longer they are after him, the
-greater, as a rule, their respect grows. His pace, when charging, is
-said to be something terrific, and, downhill, it always charges as
-soon as hit, its back legs flying out before it at a nightmare speed.
-Add that it seems less easy to drop finally than any other animal,
-that your fingers {249} may be frozen to the trigger in the intervals
-of shooting, and that a single blow from one of its front paws is
-strong enough to claw the face out of an ox, and it will be seen that
-it is no contemptible foe. On the other hand, experts seem agreed
-that it rarely if ever charges uphill, and if shot from above is
-therefore comparatively harmless. If a man could always pick his
-position for shooting, this would reduce the value of the grizzly
-bear as a sporting animal; but obviously the hunter cannot always
-choose. Any one who has been on a snowslide will realise that. From
-the point of view of an unarmed person, the grizzly bear would seem
-to be rather less dangerous than he is sometimes made out to be. You
-will often hear that grizzly bears will attack a man at sight. The
-truth seems to be that--as is the case with any other bears--attacks
-are only to be feared either from female grizzlies with cubs, or from
-a grizzly of either sex, if the intruder is so placed as to appear to
-the grizzly's eyes to be cutting off its retreat to its lair. Of
-course no unarmed man would elect to put himself in either of these
-positions, and equally naturally he might unwittingly do so--in which
-case it would be better not to be that man, though I believe there is
-an {250} authentic story of a lumberman who, returning alone from his
-work, was suddenly attacked by two grizzlies, and managed to kill
-both of them with his axe, though the second mauled him badly.
-Authentic or not, and one grizzly or two, it is pretty certain that
-few people would care to try a similar encounter.
-
-Afterwards the conversation shifted to timber-wolves and the Yukon.
-One of the passengers scoffed at the notion of a dog being able to
-kill a timber-wolf, as happens in one of Mr. Jack London's novels. A
-northern timber-wolf, according to this critic, is at least twice the
-size of the European wolf, with a disproportionately large and
-powerful jaw--a single snap from which would polish off any dog. Two
-or three of the biggest dogs known could hardly even hold a
-timber-wolf much less kill it. I dare say there was more in this
-criticism than in one I heard later, anent Mr. Maurice Hewlett. A
-very solemn fruit-rancher was ploughing wearily through one of Mr.
-Hewlett's earlier romances, and he looked up presently to say it was
-funny the sort of yarns these writing chaps seemed to believe in.
-There was a girl in the book who milked a wild deer. He had seen
-plenty of deer in his time, but none of them had seemed to fancy
-coming close enough to {251} be milked. If a chap wanted to write
-about the country he ought to know it right through like Mr. Service.
-Had we read Service's poems? Several of the men in the compartment
-evidently had read them; and, indeed, Mr. Service's poems concerning
-the Yukon seemed to have reached the heights of popularity. I think
-it is due in part to the fascination which the north exercises on all
-sorts and conditions of Canadians, not only because it stands for
-romance and mystery, but because a sort of idea is gaining ground
-that these inhospitable and well-nigh polar regions only await a
-sufficiently hardy type of colonist to have as great a boom almost as
-some of the more southern districts. The idea exists not only among
-business-like estate-agents, who see themselves in fancy selling
-Arctic blocks to this expected race, but among quite disinterested
-and patriotic people, who talk of it, as Mr. Service himself does, as
-a strong man's land. A few peculiarly strong men may survive there;
-and it is excusable for a poet to regard them as super-men--Canada's
-noblest type. As a matter of fact it is at least as romantic to
-weave halos about the heads of the crowd that seeks the Yukon country
-as it is to make one's heroine milk a wild deer. A certain praise
-{252} is always due to pioneers, and the struggle with nature at its
-cruellest and most wild is not a bad test of an individual's
-character; but for respectable ranchers and fruit-growers (who have
-never been to the Yukon themselves, but have struggled with nature
-quite as valiantly elsewhere) to talk enthusiastically about the
-great lone land as the country for breeding men is absurd. Canadians
-may be able to colonise further north than they have done at present,
-and their descendants will, no doubt, be a fine and hardy race. But
-there is a point in the north just as there is a point in the south
-beyond which no white man's country lies. If any strong men are
-going to perpetuate their families beyond that northern point, they
-are going to be strong Esquimaux--not strong Canadians. Esquimaux
-already do quite a lot of grappling with nature in lone lands, but
-they are not the heroes of Mr. Service's poems. I don't wish to
-labour the point, but this northern strong man business seems to me
-entirely overdone. There is always going to be romance attached to
-the uninhabitable country, and adventurous young men will get there;
-but the theory that these are the people of whom Canada has
-peculiarly to be proud will not do. Adam Gordon's bush-riders {253}
-had a certain merit; so had Mr. Kipling's gentlemen-rankers; so have
-Mr. Service's prospectors; but none of them ever forwarded
-civilisation very greatly. The fact is, there are true and admirable
-pioneers, men like Hudson and Thompson, of whom Canada has had
-plenty; and there are pioneers of doubtful value like those in Mr.
-Service's poems. These latter are picturesque enough in verse,
-especially in Mr. Service's verse, which catches the fascination of
-the north at times admirably, but the others are the men worth
-boasting about.
-
-The rain persisted while we sat talking of all these matters, and the
-mountains were hung about with a clammy vapour which spoilt the view
-from the train. I should like to have stopped at Glacier, which is
-the usual centre for the better-known Selkirks, of which many of the
-giants have been climbed only within the last six or seven years, but
-I had not time, and they all swam by in the mist, which changed into
-dusk as we reached Revelstoke. There a number of lumberjacks filled
-up the carriage, and were very cheery and conversational all night.
-Having slept only two hours the night before, I should not have
-minded being able to get a sleeper, but they were all taken; and
-{254} indeed there were not even seats enough to go all round, though
-it was a first-class carriage. In any case the lumberjacks in my
-part of the carriage would have prevented sleep. Sometimes they
-would sit down for a few minutes and tell stories, then they would
-dart off to have a look at a carriage-load of Doukhobors who were on
-in front and seemed rather better than a show to judge by the
-lumbermen's guffaws when they came back from these trips. Canadian
-trains may not always be restful, but they are generally
-entertaining. The distances traversed are so great that people
-cannot afford to sit in them in hunched silence. They have to
-unbend, and some of them unbend thoroughly. That is why, though the
-ordinary traveller has to pass through great tracts of land in the
-train, he is not losing local colour to quite the extent one loses it
-in an European train. Some one in the carriage is sure to know
-something about the district one is passing through and to be ready
-to talk about it. The smoking compartment becomes an animated
-club-room in which conversation becomes general on any subject.
-There is no better place for a discussion of political problems, and
-I fancy a great many Canadians reserve their consideration of these
-for {255} the time they have to spend in the train. Certainly they
-grow very keen in the train, and I have heard the warmest arguments
-and the most libellous denunciations of leading Canadian statesmen
-hurled freely about among men who had never set eyes on one another
-before. And there are plenty of other arguments with which to pass
-the time. As we got to Sicamous Junction, for example, we took on
-board two fruit-growers, one of whom was a 'wet' grower and the other
-a 'dry.' A wet fruit-grower is a man who does not irrigate his
-fruit-land, and a dry fruit-grower is one who, having settled in the
-dry belt, has to irrigate. As fierce a debate was started between
-these two as ever you heard between exponents of wet and dry
-fly-fishing.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE SELKIRKS. THE RETURN FROM THE HUNT.]
-
-As far as fruit-raising is concerned, the 'dry' men appear to have
-the advantage. Their contention is that they can turn off the water
-so as to leave their trees dry for the winter when frost at wet roots
-is so fatal; while they can turn the water on whenever it is wanted
-for swelling the fruit. In addition, the dry belt country gets a
-longer season of sunshine, which is more favourable for the growth of
-the earlier and finer dessert apples. It seems curious that none of
-our finest-flavoured apples, {256} such as Cox's Orange Pippin or
-Ribston Pippin, seem to come to perfection in Canada; and I found
-British Columbian fruit-growers very anxious that English people
-should appreciate this fact, and also get to know which are the
-British Columbian apples most worth asking for in England, as though
-some of the older orchards are still growing comparatively worthless
-apples, the new ones are being planted only with a few best kinds,
-which are as wine to water. One of these best kinds, by the way, is
-called Wine-sap; two of the other selectest varieties being Jonathan
-and Winter Banana. The latter is said to have a strong banana
-flavour. It is worth the English public's while, if it is going in
-largely for British Columbian apples, to encourage only the growing
-of the best, and that is to be done by demanding only the best from
-our own greengrocers by name. It is just as simple to plant a good
-apple tree as it is to plant a bad one, and there is no reason why
-the world in general should not eat only the best apples. So long as
-people are contented to look only at the colour of the fruit, which
-is no criterion whatever, and to pay their greengrocers' price for an
-unnamed sort, the best apples will not be for sale, and one will go
-on being provided with {257} highly-coloured samples that taste like
-inferior turnips.
-
-The weather picked up in the morning, and I was able to see some of
-the beauties of the great Fraser River, though I somehow missed the
-Chinamen washing for gold, Indians spearing salmon, bright red, split
-salmon drying on frames, Chinese cabins and Indian villages with
-their beflagged graveyards, which are said to be visible from the car
-windows. Perhaps I was talking too much.
-
-
-
-
-{258}
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-A LITTLE ABOUT VANCOUVER CITY
-
-A diminutive Japanese who picked up my fairly heavy trunk, slung it
-over his shoulder and walked down the platform with it as though it
-were nothing but a shawl, was the first person I met in Vancouver,
-reminding me that that land-locked sea below was the Pacific, which
-white men do not own but only share with the brown and yellow
-Orientals. I wonder--will the day come when the latter want an ocean
-all to themselves? And are there, in view of this contingency, plans
-of this intricate coast among the Japanese naval archives? They knew
-the other side pretty well before the war began with Russia, and they
-are not a people to leave things to chance. The yellow men have
-known the Pacific coast from San Francisco to Vancouver as long as
-the white men, and put in a great deal of work there and eaten much
-humble pie, and also realised by the constant {259} rise in their
-wages--ten times anything their own country offers--that the white
-man is strangely lost without them. They had no flair for colonising
-half a century ago, when the rush was made for the Pacific coast, but
-they have it now.
-
-Vancouver is very beautifully situated. The ground sloping to the
-shut sea, girt with those huge, straight trees that give a sense of
-luxuriance to this northern Pacific coast which no tropic country can
-excel, is a perfect situation for a big city. Vancouver is a big
-city. It is so big that many people are afraid for its immediate
-future. They say that it is already far bigger than it has any right
-to be, and that by the dubiously beneficent aid of innumerable real
-estate men, it is increasing at a pace that is bound to end in
-disaster. The slump had been expected in 1909, it was expected last
-year, it is expected this year. Some year it will come; and if I
-were a patriotic and hard-working inhabitant of Vancouver, I should
-then head a deputation which had for its purpose the dumping in the
-sea of a large number of the real estate agents who swarm hungrily in
-the place. There is a big street entirely filled with their offices,
-and the mark of them is {260} everywhere. Mr. A. G. Bradley, in that
-encyclopædic work _Canada in the Twentieth Century_, jeers at the
-English for their distrust of the real estate man, who, he thinks,
-serves a useful and necessary purpose. Better go to the real estate
-man, says Mr. Bradley, if you want to buy land, than to the bar
-loafer. There is a great deal in that. In individual cases they are
-excellent men. But, collected together in vast numbers, as in
-Vancouver, they can do mischief in a way the bar loafer never can,
-and that is by so magnifying the importance of the buying and selling
-of land, that people take to it in exchange for work, and falsely
-imagine that enormous prosperity is coming to a place which is in
-reality doing nothing but changing its land at fancy and speculative
-prices, expecting the prosperity somehow and some day to follow of
-itself.
-
-I suppose Seattle, with less justification, is in very much the same
-case. Both, besides being ports with great expectations, happen to
-be the last place, so to speak, in their respective countries; and
-there is something magnetic in the attraction of a last place.
-Thither drifts that very considerable population which, by getting on
-geographically, almost persuades itself that it is getting on
-materially. Having {261} attained the limit, it stays there and does
-as little as it can. Such people give a city a false air of
-greatness, and are, in fact, a surplus population with nothing to do
-but bid up land against one another.
-
-Of course there are plenty of genuine citizens in Vancouver, with all
-the enterprise and intelligence that help to make cities great.
-Practically, too, the greatness of Vancouver is in the end assured.
-It is already a magnificent port, having a big trade with the East,
-but nothing to what it will have. The Panama Canal will make it the
-centre, by sea, of the world. Again, it is the terminus of the
-Canadian Pacific Railway, and is destined, every one says, to become
-the terminus of the Grand Trunk, and any other railroad that wants to
-outlet on the Pacific. Wheat has begun to come through it from the
-prairie that used to go west to Montreal. The new reciprocity treaty
-will divert some of this freight to the south, no doubt, but that
-remains to be seen. In any case, besides being a port, Vancouver
-will remain the business capital of a province endlessly rich in
-minerals and timber, and increasingly rich in fruit- and farm-land.
-Some day, therefore, Vancouver will extend to those remote spots
-{262} where already town lots are being disposed of. Some day.
-Only, a big city should not live upon its future; and the sale of
-such lots miles off in the backwoods to people who, having bought
-them, cannot pay for them or cannot put up houses on them, or cannot
-afford to live in those houses even if they put them up, because
-there is nothing for them to do there and their money has run
-out--this sort of sale, while it enriches the real estate man, does
-not enrich anybody else. Moreover, it creates a restless spirit
-among those genuine farmers out in the country who would honestly be
-farming their land, if real estate agents would leave them alone, and
-not persuade them that it is just as profitable a game to hang about
-waiting for opportunities to sell their farms in plots. Of course
-they, like most other people who get as far as Vancouver, are not
-mere innocents. Sellers and buyers are probably equally aware of the
-risks they run; but where a tide of speculation sets in, the
-shrewdest people seem ready to take the most absurd risks. And the
-slump has taken so long in coming, and the possibilities of Vancouver
-seem so immense, that speculation in land has become a perfect
-fascination.
-
-{263}
-
-'What will it be worth next year?'
-
-That is the formula you constantly see at the end of an advertisement
-of some town lot--five miles, perhaps, from anywhere. The correct
-answer varies. If the slump does not come off next year, the lot may
-be worth double what is being asked for it now. If the slump does
-come off it will be worth a twentieth, perhaps, of what was given for
-it. Slump or no slump, this method of building up a city is
-unsatisfactory. Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg--these have become great
-as the centres of comparatively populous provinces, in which wealth
-has been gradually and carefully created by agricultural and
-industrial enterprises established on a firm basis. The jobs have
-been waiting for the men. In Vancouver alone, of all big Canadian
-cities, the men are waiting for the jobs, or, what is worse, waiting
-in the belief that money comes anyhow, and that jobs are not the
-prerequisite of money-making. I do not wish to give the impression
-that Vancouver is full of unemployed people, still less of
-unemployable ones; merely that many of the people there employed are
-not engaged in the undertakings that ensure the continuity of a
-city's prosperity.
-
-{264}
-
-Certainly any picture of Vancouver that made it out gloomy would be a
-mistake. Nothing could be livelier than its streets and its people;
-and if the slump does not come, and the Jeremiahs are wrong,
-Vancouver citizens will be justified of any amount of exultation.
-Already they have most of the things that make citizens pleased and
-proud--a beautiful site, fine streets, the most splendid of public
-parks, water-ways innumerable in front, and, behind, a country good
-to look at and rich in potentialities. Vancouver's industries, even
-if they do not justify the size of the place, are important and
-prosperous; and its propinquity to the salmon fisheries and vast
-timber tracts of British Columbia is something which alone would make
-a great town. In tone it is new world compared with Victoria, but
-old world compared with Seattle. There are many English people
-there. Living is high. No coin under five cents is, of course, in
-use, and when you start the day by paying that sum for a newspaper
-marked one cent, you find it difficult to beat down prices during the
-rest of the day. Apropos of newspapers, I was told of a very
-successful strike among the paper-boys of Vancouver some little time
-ago. Many people must have heard {265} of it, but it is worth
-retelling. The strike was headed by a youthful organiser, popularly
-known as Reddy, from the colour of his hair. Reddy was alleged to be
-thirteen years of age at the time, but Pitt was not so much older
-when he became Prime Minister of Great Britain. Holding the firm
-conviction that he and his fellow-workers were entitled to at least
-two cents out of the five for every paper sold (I am not sure of my
-figures), Reddy proclaimed a strike, and conducted it so successfully
-that the newspaper proprietors of Vancouver were compelled to wait
-upon him humbly, and yield in every particular to his demands. Among
-historic strikes this seems worthy of a place.
-
-
-
-
-{266}
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-THE HAPPY FARMERS OF THE ISLAND
-
-There are no lotus-lands attached to the Dominion, and will not be,
-unless we make over to it at some date the West Indies. But because
-Vancouver Island has a climate excelling that of any other part of
-Canada, and a beauty of scenery not surpassed anywhere; because also
-the men who have settled there have reckoned these possessions dearer
-than other things, such as the fat soil of the prairie and the chance
-of growing quickly rich, Canadians of the mainland are given at times
-to lay a charge of lotus-eating against them. I think the charge is
-an unfair one. Life may be less strenuous on the island, and there
-are men there, no doubt, who take their work there over easily.
-Against this has to be set the fact that the work that does go on in
-Vancouver Island goes on all the year round, that the colonists are
-men with an eye to the far future as well as to the immediate {267}
-one (they have, that is to say, an English ideal of permanent
-residence instead of the notion of getting what they can from the
-place and decamping), and that in their hands, if the island is not
-being developed as fast as it might be, it is at least safe from
-spoliation and waste. Some day, when the mainland Canadians have
-time to consider the amenities of a country life as well as the
-necessities, they will find themselves going to the island for hints.
-
-As one crosses from Vancouver, the beauty of the straits prepares one
-a little for the beauty of the island which, so far as I saw it, has
-no bare or ugly places. Its coast-line has the contour of the
-Scandinavian fiords, but its charm is greater, owing to the luxuriant
-growth of the tall and splendid trees. Right to the edge of these
-rock-bound sea-water lakes the forest grows--Douglas firs, surely the
-finest of all straight-growing trees, cedar and maple, jack-pine and
-arbutus, and at their feet, flowers and mosses and saxifrages.
-Arriving at Victoria, I went straight through to Duncans, and,
-looking from the train, was reminded by the greenness of the land,
-freshened by the delicate rain that was falling, of the mountainous
-parts of Ceylon--which impression was strengthened by the fact of the
-{268} smoking-compartment being crowded with Orientals of all sorts,
-mostly Chinese, but Japanese too and some Indians, all seeming very
-much at their ease among the white men. It was a harmonious sight;
-but what, I wondered, would an Anglo-Indian say if he found himself
-condemned to sit with his cheroot among this riff-raff of natives?
-and what chance of any agreement on questions affecting our Indian
-Empire between the officials of India and these Westerners who admit
-the Oriental to an equality with themselves?
-
-I was bound on a visit to friends who had a farm on Quamichan Lake,
-and found a buggy waiting for me at Duncans station, driven by an
-elderly man who had all the Canadian optimism, in spite of the fact
-that he had, in 1882, sold for a song the whole of Edmonton, then in
-his possession. Another of the missed millionaires of Canada. He
-brought me in the dark to my friends' farm, and when I looked out of
-my window next morning, I almost believed myself to be back in
-England. A little lake lay two fields below--a fresh-water lake
-still and reedy, with woods or orchards sloping to its edge, and in
-the distance a ring of hills. It might be Grasmere transported to
-some warmer county such as Devonshire; {269} but Devonshire never
-grew such stately trees, nor has England anywhere mountains wooded
-like these to their peaks. A heat-mist lay on the water, and the
-apples in the orchard seemed the reddest I had ever seen. Only the
-grass was not English grass, though it was greener than most of the
-grass of the new world. All round the lake were farms, belonging
-largely to Englishmen, dairy-farming or fruit-farming, making use of
-science and co-operation, but not sacrificing beauty to utility.
-Perhaps they could not spoil the island if they tried. The trees are
-so dominant and stately that every piece of cleared land seems to
-look at once like a part of an old English park.
-
-It should have been called New England, this beautiful country which
-has so many English people in it, which carries on so much of the
-English tradition and sentiment, and which has even the English
-pheasant. I saw thousands of pheasants during the days I spent
-there. They were put down on the island not so very many years ago,
-and they have increased enormously. The deer were already there, and
-you may see them in the orchards, unless they are very high-fenced,
-at almost any time in the early morning. And there are {270} grouse
-and partridges in plenty too, and beasts that England no longer
-possesses--the coon and the puma, and the bear and the wolverine. To
-see the salmon leaping all across Cowichan Bay, on a bright October
-morning, is a sight for sore eyes, if they happen to be an angler's.
-To drive along the roads is to realise instantly that they are the
-best roads in the Dominion. Duncans is particularly English, even
-for Vancouver Island. I think it is vanity and a certain cause of
-vexation to expect in the new world a conformity to the ways of the
-old, which necessary differences of living--the indispensable growth
-of new habits, some of them better than the old--render in time
-impossible. Those who expect such a conformity are usually the first
-to forget that the old country changes too, and that it is we, as
-often as those across the sea, who have forgotten the ancient order
-and taken on the new, generally without thought, and often without
-reason. Though it is absurd to expect to find Canada a replica in
-ideas and habits of the old world, it is nevertheless pleasant to
-come upon a community there which, without holding itself too much
-apart from its neighbours or standing out against what is
-progressive, does represent some peculiarly {271} English qualities
-at their best. That is, perhaps, why the island makes a particular
-appeal to the man newly out from home. I certainly do not think its
-inhabitants are to be charged with stiffness and unadaptability. Men
-who have taken on the new life, and work in a spirit of optimism not
-less than that shown elsewhere, are rather to be admired than
-otherwise if they have retained, and even insist on, what is good in
-the old. And a love of sport and beauty and sociability, and even of
-leisure, is a good thing, especially when it is found among men who
-do their own work as these men do, and more especially when found
-among women who work as the women of the island do. The work is the
-best of all, but all work and no play turns many people--and not a
-few Canadians--not merely into dull folk, but into narrow-minded and
-backward ones, who will some day have all the unpleasantness of being
-rudely awakened to the fact.
-
-No doubt there are some ne'er-do-weels on the island, but the great
-majority of those I met seemed to me to be capable men, likely to do
-well by what is the most beautiful, and will some day be, perhaps,
-the most valuable part of the Empire.
-
-
-
-
-{272}
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
- A CHAT WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF BRITISH
- COLUMBIA AND A BIG FIRE AT VICTORIA
-
-As everybody knows who has been in Canada, there are two hotel
-systems in vogue there. By the one system you pay for your room and
-board separately, and this is called the European plan. By the other
-you take your meals and lodging at a fixed price, and that is called
-the American plan.
-
-In much the same way one might say there are two systems of life in
-Canada, and indeed elsewhere. By the one you distinguish between
-your work and your play, and treat each as a separate item. By the
-other you mix the two up, and are apt to consider yourself a
-strenuous person. I don't know that it is fair to describe these
-respectively as the American and the European system of life; but I
-am pretty certain that whether you apply the systems to life or to a
-hotel, the results produced by them are not on the whole very
-different. {273} Applying them to life, the main distinction seems
-to be that the exponents of the strenuous or American method--those
-who get their fun out of their work and their holidays out of their
-forced travel, or their compulsory rest by doctor's orders--are
-frequently led to confuse the appearance of work with the reality,
-and to be disentitled to wear that air of superiority which, in the
-presence of confessed believers of leisure, they too frequently
-assume. For, when all is said and done, leisure is as necessary to
-man as work, and everybody takes it, whatever he may think.
-
-Vancouver laughs at Victoria for its dead-aliveness and want of
-hustle. Victoria smiles at Vancouver for its restlessness and
-superfluity of energy.
-
-Now you see the point of my aphorism. I do not propose to hold the
-balance between these distinguished cities. Both have their peculiar
-merits; and if Vancouver is likely in years to come to leave Victoria
-far behind in the race for industrial supremacy, Victoria is none the
-less likely to remain ahead of Vancouver in culture and the arts. At
-present I should judge that Victoria is distinctly the steadier city
-of the two. Speculation in land is the exception rather than the
-rule; prices go {274} up steadily, and the land is bought by
-intending residents. At which point I will abandon comparisons,
-which are the more absurd because the destinies of the two towns are
-so widely different. Vancouver is a great port on the mainland of
-Canada, connecting it with Asia, the western States, South America,
-and whatever countries will henceforth export merchandise via the
-Panama Canal. Victoria is the political capital of British Columbia,
-with all the prestige that attaches to such a position and the finest
-climate in the Dominion. Not that it is only that. Some of its
-inhabitants consider that its prospects are immeasurably superior to
-those of Seattle, 'since the riches of Vancouver Island' (I quote
-from a local pamphlet), 'in their entirety incomparably more valuable
-than the gold-mines of Alaska, are directly tributary to the British
-Columbia capital.'
-
-There is a great deal in this, though one has to remember that those
-riches will take many years to develop. The drawback to the
-immediate development of Vancouver Island is that it is covered with
-enormous timber. Reciprocity with the States is likely to give a
-fillip to the lumber industry, and the clearing of the land will then
-go on far quicker than {275} hitherto. True, lumbermen do not
-actually clear the land; they leave the stumps behind them, and all
-the poorer trees. But they undoubtedly open the land up. Moreover,
-the revival of Esquimalt as a naval base will revive the prestige of
-Victoria, and create more work, besides inducing railwaymen to press
-on into the island.
-
-I stopped there on my way back, partly to see the town itself, partly
-because I wished to see Mr. Richard M'Bride. The town disappointed
-me just a little. It commands a magnificent view of the mountains on
-the mainland, and the country all round is beautiful. But the villas
-and gardens, which one hears so much praised, struck me as a little
-commonplace. Perhaps it is that I like a town to be a town and a
-garden to be a garden; whereas Victoria is a sort of garden city,
-grateful no doubt to those eyes that are accustomed to the
-utilitarian towns of the West, but altogether lacking in
-architectural fineness. The Parliament Buildings are good, and would
-be very good if those responsible for their maintenance would remove
-the inscription 'Canada' from across the front of them. In its
-coloured lettering it looks like the icing-sugar mottoes you see
-inscribed on birthday cakes.
-
-{276}
-
-But let a more enthusiastic pen than mine (again I fall back on that
-local pamphlet) describe Victoria as it appears to Victorians.
-
-'If there are sights more beautiful than the Olympian Mountains from
-Beacon Hill, or the windings of the Gorge as the waters come in from
-the sea between waving battlements of plumy firs, then eyes have not
-seen them. If there is a sweeter song than the skylark's matin
-melodies high up from Cadboro Bay, then ears have not heard it. If
-there be more bewildering loveliness than clusters about the shaded
-and flower-gemmed gardens of Victorian homes looking seaward, then
-poets have not written it in imperishable numbers, nor minstrels
-celebrated it in well-remembered song. If there be a city of dreams,
-even the fabled Atlantis of antiquity, or vision of Babylonian towers
-set in hanging gardens, and redolent of strange odours of musk and
-myrrh, or fairy casements opening out to perilous seas forlorn, then
-never one approached in splendour this jewel of all time, ringed by
-the azure seas and sentinelled by everlasting hills.... A bird's
-song drops like the sudden peal of a bell. Outside are broad
-boulevards, grey with powdery macadam, stretching towards the
-bustling city; highways of progress and {277} modernity, now scrolled
-by the flight of a whizzing automobile, now echoing with the staccato
-sound of hurrying hoof-beats. Inside are flowers and brooding
-hedges, the sheen of close-cropped grasses and sun-lacquered
-tree-trunks--rest, peace, and sweet seclusion.'
-
-After this it comes almost as a relief to know from the same pamphlet
-that 'the climate of Victoria is best expressed in figures.' There
-is a great deal to be said for figures.
-
-There is a very good, small, natural-history museum in a wing
-attached to the Parliament Buildings, but it is absurdly small. The
-collection of Indian curios is remarkably inadequate, and merely
-tempts the visitor to ask when Canadians are going to devote some of
-the money they are undoubtedly making to a genuine study and
-collection of the remains of their predecessors in the land. Indians
-are not dying out as fast as some people suppose; but their crafts
-are, and so are their creeds and all that appertains to them. It
-would be easy even now to create a magnificent Indian museum, but it
-will become less and less easy as the years go by. Relics of Indian
-times are constantly being picked up by men travelling in
-out-of-the-way parts, or unearthed during railroad and other {278}
-excavations, and if it were known that the authorities would be glad
-to receive them and would perhaps pay the cost of their carriage to
-some centre, there is no doubt that many valuable finds would be
-forwarded to them. The making of museums, just like the building of
-ships, is a branch of empire work which should not be neglected; and
-Victorians are eminently the people to recognise this.
-
-It was in his rooms in Parliament Buildings that Mr. M'Bride
-conversed with me on the subject of British Columbia. You hear
-people say in Canada, that if ever that astutest of party leaders,
-Sir Wilfrid Laurier, goes out of office with his Liberals, Mr.
-M'Bride will shortly after become Prime Minister of the Dominion--as
-Conservative leader, be it understood. He is not a great orator, and
-he has no scheme even for a party millennium. That, however, in
-Canada is a strength rather than a weakness. Politicians are not
-expected in Canada to bring about the millennium: indeed, so far as I
-could make out, the average Canadian is of opinion that when the
-millennium comes, it will be noticeable for an absence of
-politicians. They have not our reverence for these great men. But
-on the other hand, they require from them evidence of qualities which
-{279} may or may not be present in our ministers. One is a readiness
-to seize opportunity as it comes. Another is, to have a practical
-understanding of the ways of finance. Yet a third is, to be in touch
-with men and things--the sort of quality we mean, however vaguely,
-when we raise the cry of a Cabinet of Business Men. All these
-qualities Mr. M'Bride possesses, together with that readiness to seem
-agreeable which is almost a necessity to a public man.
-
-Mr. M'Bride confined his conversation with me to British Columbia--a
-big enough subject for a short interview. I wished to know if the
-survey of the province was being carried out as quickly as possible.
-In a vast country like British Columbia, it seems one of the most
-important things. The right to acquire land must be made simple and
-certain. Mr. M'Bride declared that surveying was going on as fast as
-men and money could do it, and referred me to the surveyor-general
-for details. I wish I could go further into the subject, but there
-is no space for it here. Then we got on to education, and Mr.
-M'Bride asked me to assure the working men of England that the
-education facilities of British Columbia were as fine as any to be
-got anywhere. {280} Perhaps this is so, though I heard some
-criticism of the public schools from another eminent Victorian. It
-is easier, perhaps, to be enthusiastic than to be unanimous about any
-given system of education. To take but one small point, the
-co-education of boys and girls is a thing upon which people are not
-agreed even in British Columbia.
-
-I was on the steamboat, ready to start for Vancouver, when the great
-fire of 1910 broke out in the town. With a considerable wind blowing
-it seemed to me not improbable that the whole of Victoria would be
-burnt down that night, and I had sufficient of the journalistic
-instinct to leave my things to go on by the boat and to go back
-myself to watch the blaze. Luckily the wind dropped and the fire was
-kept to one quarter, and I rather regretted my haste when I found
-myself stranded in Victoria at three o'clock in the morning. Still,
-it was worth while to have been there, if only to observe the working
-of the Canadian mind in a crisis of this sort. In England you would
-have heard ejaculations of horror and much sympathy expressed with
-those who were bound to suffer by the fire. The Victorian crowd took
-it quite differently. 'This'll create more work,' said one {281} man
-fervidly. 'Just what the town needed,' said another enthusiast.
-'We'll be able to have a better-looking street there after this.
-Those shops weren't good enough.' I even heard some of the men who
-had rushed out of their burning offices talking keenly and proudly of
-the sort of buildings they'd have to start putting up next day--much
-better buildings. Presumably they were insured, but even so men in
-the old country would have been a little shocked and perturbed, and
-regretful of the old rooms they were accustomed to. I fell asleep,
-when I had found a hotel, almost oppressed by the optimism of Canada.
-
-
-
-
-{282}
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-BACK THROUGH OTTAWA
-
-It was just before sunrise that I first saw Ottawa. I was on my way
-back from Vancouver, and had spent four successive days in the train,
-getting out only for minutes at a time to stamp about platforms where
-the train waited long enough to permit of such exercise.
-
-Such days, varied only by meals for which one is always looking, but
-never hungry, tend to become monotonous, even though one spends them
-mostly in the observation car. The fact is, observation pure and
-simple is one of the most difficult things possible to a member of
-the human tribe--as hard as doing compulsory jig-saws; and reading
-humorous American magazines, one after the other, is an alternative
-that also requires the strong mind. If I must travel long distances
-by train, I want to be the engine-driver.
-
-The country, I thought, looked less attractive {283} as I repassed it
-now than it looked before, and I put this down to the freeze-up,
-which had come unusually early, people kept saying, and gave to the
-land a black and ruffled look, like a sick bird's. Later it would be
-beautiful again in snow, and the life and work of the season of snow
-would begin. Meanwhile, people in the little northerly stations we
-passed had the appearance of having stopped work. You saw them
-standing about--always with their backs to buildings to get out of
-the shrivelling wind. I suppose in most of these places there is a
-between-time in which nobody can work.
-
-Nothing much was doing in Ottawa when I got out there, but that of
-course was due to the earliness of the hour. It was so early that
-when I reached a hotel they told me breakfast was not to be had for
-some time yet, and so, since I was too wide-awake to go to sleep
-again, I thought I would spend the hour looking at the Dominion
-Parliament Buildings. Perhaps it was the too early hour, perhaps it
-was the coldness of the wind blowing round that bluff above the river
-on which the famous buildings stand--but I could feel none of that
-satisfaction, when I looked at them, which great architecture gives.
-The {284} situation is fine, but not the buildings. Anthony Trollope
-has written of them:--'As regards purity of art and manliness of
-conception, the work is entitled to the very highest praise.... I
-know no modern Gothic purer of its kind or less sullied with
-fictitious ornamentation'--but I think he must have breakfasted
-handsomely first. Some one else, but I forget who, and it does not
-matter, has described the buildings as 'a noble pile,' which seems to
-hit the mark, if, as I fancy, that mid-Victorian expression suggests
-something on so large a scale, which has obviously cost such a lot of
-money, that vague admiration is the least of the emotions which
-should be produced by a sight of it. 'A noble pile,' then, let them
-remain, especially since, seen from some distance, with the beautiful
-river below and a spacious country stretched before them, they
-possess a certain imposing appearance. Closer up, one is less
-impressed. There is a long-backed unmeaning set to the buildings, as
-though the architects had found concentration a vexation, and had
-decided to extend instead. Still, they might have elaborated
-painfully, and they did not--except for those little turrets on the
-side-buildings, surmounted by railings which one associates chiefly
-with {285} the London area. Area railings are meant, I suppose, to
-prevent errand-boys from falling into the areas, but there can be few
-errands to the roof of the Parliament Buildings. In passing, I did
-not like those hundreds of silly little windows that peep all round:
-one, as it were, for every official to peep from.
-
-Reflection should serve to temper criticism, however. The year 1867,
-in which the Dominion Parliament required its Houses, was not one of
-brilliant achievement in the architectural world; and when it is
-remembered that Canada itself was also a new country, the wonder is
-that nothing worse was built. Only a few years before, we in England
-had been transfixed with admiration of the Crystal Palace; Royal
-Academicians were above criticism, and 'almost too great to live';
-bright in the sun gleamed the Albert Memorial. We ruled the waves,
-but not the arts; and 'our daughter of the snows' took over our large
-ideas and our little taste in building.
-
-Whether she took over our political ideas is another matter, upon
-which I pondered as I contemplated those Parliament Buildings. There
-stood the House in which Sir John Macdonald evolved that
-east-and-west policy which seemed such an empire-cementing thing;
-{286} where Sir Wilfrid Laurier teaches the world how to lead a
-party; where not as yet had been ratified that Reciprocity Agreement
-with America which has been agitating our statesmen so much this
-year, though, even as I gazed, it must have been in course of
-construction. Would an Imperial Parliament sit there some day, I
-wondered, and direct the affairs of the British Empire from what
-would be, not so long hence, a far more central and important spot
-than Westminster? I could not quite imagine it. I could not even
-like the idea, as some Imperialists at any price can. Home Rule for
-England is one of the policies I shall always stand for, I believe;
-even when Canadians have that grasp of Imperial affairs which we in
-England impute to them--by comparison, we generally mean, with our
-own English political opponents--that grasp which, as a matter of
-fact, is much less common among them at present than it is among us,
-whether we be Liberals or Conservatives.
-
-I wish our party political system allowed of our minimising the zeal
-and intelligence of the side opposed to us without magnifying those
-qualities in a third party which, in strict reality, it scarcely
-possesses. I wish, for example, that Tariff Reformers could deride
-{287} the Imperialistic attitude of Free Traders (and vice versa)
-without declaring that Canadians could in this matter teach us all
-lessons. For the truth is that Canadians could not give lessons to
-either in this matter. They have an Imperial sentiment all right,
-but they do not worry over it as we do. Take that question of
-Preference which has been making us all so hot for several years now.
-It never troubled Canadians at all. They thought that there was a
-good deal in it from a business point of view, and they were prepared
-to try it--and did so. But they never for a moment fancied or
-perturbed themselves with thinking that, either with or without it,
-the Empire would totter to its fall. Our fervours left them entirely
-cool; and in that business-like state of coolness, after duly
-granting us Preference, they have, equally duly in their opinion, set
-out to establish reciprocity with the States. The only thing likely
-to make them hot in this matter is the suggestion that they have been
-lacking in Imperial spirit. Of course they had been lacking in that
-early, romantic, self-immolating and fantastically quaint, Imperial
-spirit which we attributed to them--just to make our own Little
-Englanders try and feel ashamed; but, equally again, they {288} never
-had it, and would not dream of claiming it even if they could be made
-to understand what our devotees meant by it. To forgo trade in order
-to uphold the flag would not appeal to a Canadian--mainly for the
-reason that the idea would strike him as grotesque.
-
-In the matter of this Reciprocity Agreement, then, I think it is we
-who are wrong if we make it a reproach to the Canadians. It may or
-may not be a sound economic proceeding, but it is entered upon
-without prejudice to Imperial sentiment. Only if we first assume
-that all Canadians have been burning for years past with the same
-zeal for an Imperial Zollverein that has animated our own Tariff
-Reformers, can we now credit them with cooling off and backsliding.
-But such an assumption would be a very great mistake. All
-assumptions that Canadians view our political problems from our point
-of view are great mistakes. They no more do so than we view theirs
-from their point of view. We do not. Nothing struck me more
-forcibly than the fact that what causes us political turmoil in Great
-Britain is viewed with complete coolness in Canada, and that what
-Canadians are keen after remains unknown to us. While I was there, I
-kept seeing letters {289} in English papers (reproduced
-sometimes--but very briefly--in Canadian papers) saying that Canada
-was whole-hearted for Tariff Reform, or that Canadian Free Traders
-were sweeping the country; whereas the fact was and is, that these
-two terms (whatever might in reality be the state of Canadian
-parties) never conveyed in the least in Canada what we mean by them,
-and therefore conveyed no truth that could be understood of both
-peoples equally.
-
-Does this inter-Imperial lack of comprehension threaten the future of
-the Empire? It might seem so at first. Lack of understanding
-between fellow-citizens cannot be a good thing in itself. But it has
-this merit, that it makes real interference on either side a rare
-thing. If we understood--or believed we understood--what was for the
-future welfare of Canada, it is doubtful if we could refrain from
-pointing it out, even if we could refrain from insisting upon it. If
-the Canadians thought themselves capable of directing us in the right
-way--say in the management of India--they would feel urged to give
-their opinion, and Anglo-Indian officials, having this last straw
-added to their backs, would strike _en masse_. As it is, we let each
-other's real problems {290} alone, and are satisfied with our own
-solutions of them. Imperial Conferences are necessary because in
-some matters the Empire must work together, having the same
-interests. Cables and Dreadnoughts are cases in point. That Great
-Britain still bears the main expenditure in all such matters is
-proof, if proof be needed, that what American papers somewhat
-unkindly call 'British Island Politics' are, still, more Imperial
-than the politics of any other part of the Empire. We pay and we ask
-for little in return, and the Empire will go on, even now that Canada
-has become a nation. Only some mistake could, I think, part us--a
-mistake as big as that which parted us from the United States--and we
-are not likely to make it; nor is Canada likely to wish for it,
-however great she may picture and make her own destiny. But that she
-will want to rule entirely in her own house is certain. Canadians
-themselves--the voters I mean--are not likely for a long time to wish
-for much more than they have in the way of national liberty. I do
-not think they would much worry as to whether their ambassador at
-Washington, for example, was appointed from Ottawa or from London.
-The results in either case would be likely to be very similar, {291}
-and in any case, as I have said, Canadians are not obsessed at
-present with politics. But it has to be remembered that besides
-Canadian voters, there are Canadian politicians, and since it is in
-the nature of politicians to be at least as ambitious as other
-people, it is natural that Canadian politicians should want in their
-own hands all the important posts that are to be had. Just at
-present Canadians take such a disrespectful view of politicians in
-general--which is unfair no doubt to their own political
-representatives, but natural perhaps in a new country which has not
-too much time to reflect upon the real benefactions politicians may
-confer, and rather fancies, from isolated examples, that 'graft' is
-what they are usually after--that they are not likely to demand of
-their own accord more power to the hand of their own statesmen. But
-the accord of voters depends in due course upon the persuasive powers
-of candidates, and I foresee the candidates persuading pretty hard in
-the near future: all of which will make work for Imperial Conferences
-of the near future, but not, it is to be hoped, impossible work.
-
-I find that having represented myself as reflecting upon Canadian
-politics outside the {292} Dominion Parliament Buildings, I have
-altogether omitted Canadian politics in favour of Imperial
-considerations. Beyond showing, or rather trying to show, that
-Canadian politics--the things that really interest Canadians--are not
-in the least what we are accustomed to think them, I have got no
-further at all. Still, that--if I have shown it--is something, for
-it may suggest to some gentle reader that an Empire is not a simple,
-extended Great Britain, in which every one thinks precisely the same
-things to be of the same immediate importance; of which all the
-emotions and reflections may be realised in full by a perusal, let us
-say, of the Standard of Empire.
-
-And so I remove myself from that bluff above the river at Ottawa to
-my hotel, and thence to divers parts of that charming town, which
-looked then--for Parliament was not sitting--something like Oxford
-out of term; and thence to the train carrying me back to Montreal and
-Quebec.
-
-Afterwards came the return across the Atlantic to a country smaller
-than Canada--(less than a week of steaming, my friends), in company
-with Canadians who were returning to see what the old place was like
-after many years. I think they would not be {293} ill-pleased with
-it, small as it is by comparison. I hope they found behind it some
-of the qualities which, as it seems to me, are to be found also in
-THE FAIR DOMINION, making it to my eyes yet more fair.
-
-
-
-
-{294}
-
-INDEX
-
-
-ABBOTT, MOUNT, 215.
-
-Alaska, 274.
-
-Alberta, 13, 138, 141, 142, 143, 164, 165, 217.
-
-Alps, the, 177, 180, 199.
-
-Angell, Norman, 68.
-
-Annunzio, Gabriel d', 178.
-
-Anticosti, 16.
-
-Archangel, 13.
-
-Athelmer, 233, 238.
-
-
-
-BAIE ST. PAUL, 40.
-
-Banff, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 183.
-
-Beacon Hill, 276.
-
-Beaupré, 47, 48, 49, 50.
-
-Beaupré, Ste. Anne de, 48, 51, 53.
-
-Bears, Grizzly, 246-50.
-
-Belle Isle, 16.
-
-Birmingham, 156.
-
-Blondin, 90.
-
-Bourassa, Mr., 30, 31, 33, 85, 86.
-
-Bourne, Archbishop, 17.
-
-Bow River, 141, 144, 179.
-
-Bradley, A. G., 31.
-
-British Columbia, 188, 216, 237, 238, 256, 274, 279.
-
-Bruce, Randolph, 221, 222, 225.
-
-Brussels, 88.
-
-
-
-CADBORO' BAY, 276.
-
-Calgary, 141, 143, 144, 145, 163, 164, 170, 195.
-
-Canadian Pacific Railway, 18, 141, 142, 152, 162, 182, 261.
-
-Cartier, 40.
-
-Ceylon, 267.
-
-Champlain, 35, 42.
-
-Chicago, 159.
-
-Chicoutimi, 39, 43.
-
-Chuzzlewit, Martin, 128.
-
-Colonial Intelligence for Educated Women, Committee of, 195.
-
-Columbia River, 218, 219, 222, 224, 230, 233.
-
-Columbia Valley, 215, 216, 225, 234, 238.
-
-Cooper, Fenimore, 92.
-
-Covent Garden, 117.
-
-
-
-DICKENS, CHARLES, 29, 90.
-
-Dufferin Terrace, 26, 27, 28.
-
-Duncans, 267, 268, 270.
-
-
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-EDEN CITY, 129.
-
-Edmonton, 268.
-
-Eliott, Professor, 163.
-
-Emerald Lake, 206.
-
-_Empress of Britain_, S.S., 1.
-
-Eucharistic Congress, the, 17, 77, 78, 79.
-
-
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-FARNHAM, MOUNT, 229.
-
-Fort William, 114.
-
-Fraser River, 257.
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-Free Trade, 29, 149, 287.
-
-French River, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 99, 101, 102.
-
-
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-GLACIER HOUSE, 215.
-
-Glasgow, 73.
-
-Golden, 215, 216, 217, 218, 224, 232, 236, 237, 238, 239, 241, 244.
-
-Gordon, Adam, 252.
-
-Grand Trunk Railway, 261.
-
-Grasmere, 268.
-
-
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-HAMMERSMITH, 94.
-
-Hampstead Heath, 117.
-
-Heights of Abraham, 34.
-
-Hennepin, Father Louis, 89.
-
-Hesse, Landgraf of, 226.
-
-Hewlett, Maurice, 250.
-
-Higgsville, 128.
-
-Himalayas, the, 177, 227.
-
-Home Rule, 31.
-
-Hoogly, the, 44.
-
-Howells, W. D., 90.
-
-Hudson Bay Company, 115.
-
-
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-IMPERIALISM, 33, 36, 287, 290.
-
-Illecillewaet Glacier, the Great, 215.
-
-Iron Top Mountain, 224.
-
-Irrigation Company, Columbia Valley, 237.
-
-Irrigation Works, Columbia Valley, 221.
-
-
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-KAMLOOPS, 216, 229.
-
-Keats, John, 200.
-
-Kildonan, 123, 124.
-
-Kinchinjunga, 177.
-
-Kipling, Rudyard, 105, 106, 253.
-
-
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-LACHINE RAPIDS, 77.
-
-Laggan, 200.
-
-Laurentian Mountains, 27.
-
-Laurier, Sir Wilfrid, 278, 286.
-
-Liverpool, 1.
-
-
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-LONDON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, 152.
-
-London, 73, 86, 117, 118, 119, 285.
-
-Loti, Pierre, 110, 111.
-
-Louise, Lake, 198, 199, 200, 206.
-
-Lourdes, 47.
-
-
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-MACDONALD, SIR JOHN, 285.
-
-Manchester, 156.
-
-Manitoba, 114, 144.
-
-Marseilles, 77.
-
-Maskinongé, 93, 96, 99, 100.
-
-M'Bride, Richard, 275, 278, 279.
-
-Meredith, George, 130.
-
-Montmorency Falls, 38, 39, 49, 50.
-
-Montreal, 17, 34, 45, 56, 64, 66, 67, 68, 69, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76,
-77, 79, 80, 81, 84, 292.
-
-Moosejaw, 126, 156.
-
-Moraine Lake, 201, 204.
-
-Murray Bay, 40.
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-Muskoka Lakes, 92.
-
-
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-NAPOLEON, 120.
-
-National Park, 179, 181.
-
-New Brunswick, 32, 237, 238, 242.
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-New York, 39, 51, 154, 159.
-
-Niagara Falls, 38, 89, 90.
-
-Nightingale, 163, 165, 166.
-
-North Pole, 136.
-
-Nottingham, 28.
-
-Nova Scotia, 32.
-
-
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-OJIBWAY, AN, 96, 97, 99, 100.
-
-Okanagan, 216, 219.
-
-Olympian Mountains, 276.
-
-Ontario, 8, 13, 32, 33, 45, 85, 109, 111, 112, 113, 141, 151.
-
-Orléans, Ile d', 40.
-
-Ottawa, 84, 282, 283, 292.
-
-Oxford, 77, 292.
-
-
-
-PANAMA CANAL, 261, 274.
-
-Paris, 77, 117, 158.
-
-Parkman, Francis, 41, 42.
-
-Parnell, Charles Stewart, 31.
-
-Peterborough, 8, 81.
-
-Pickerel, 95, 98.
-
-Pitt, William, 265.
-
-Police, North-West Mounted, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136.
-
-Port Arthur, 114.
-
-
-
-QUAMICHAN LAKE, 268.
-
-Quebec, 18, 20, 22, 26, 28, 31, 32, 34, 37, 38, 39, 45, 49, 50, 53,
-56, 60, 61, 64, 111, 112, 292.
-
-
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-REVELSTOKE, 253.
-
-Red River, 123, 144.
-
-'Reddy,' 265.
-
-Regina, 82, 126, 131, 132, 136, 156, 218.
-
-Remittance Men, 161.
-
-Rockefeller, 23.
-
-Rockies, the, 170, 171, 177, 181, 198, 209, 215, 216, 230.
-
-Rome, 34, 79.
-
-Roosevelt, Theodore, 45.
-
-Russia, 135.
-
-
-
-SAGUENAY, 37, 39, 41, 43, 44, 46.
-
-San Francisco, 258.
-
-St. Irénée, 40.
-
-St. John, Reversible Falls of, 237.
-
-St. Laurent, 67, 68.
-
-St. Lawrence, 16, 26, 34, 39, 40, 44, 57.
-
-St. Malo, 41.
-
-Saskatchewan, 144.
-
-Seattle, 260, 264, 274.
-
-Selkirk, Lord, 123.
-
-Selkirks, the, 215, 216, 224, 225, 253.
-
-Siegfried, André, 18, 147.
-
-Sir Donald, Mount, 215.
-
-Spain, 156.
-
-Spillamacheen, 232, 234, 237.
-
-Strathmore, 163, 164.
-
-Sudbury, 102, 107.
-
-Superior, Lake, 114.
-
-
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-TADOUSAC, 40, 41, 42, 44.
-
-Tariff Reform, 149, 286, 288.
-
-Thames, 94.
-
-Thebes, 127, 128, 129.
-
-Toronto, 29, 65, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 91, 92, 93.
-
-Town Planning Bill, 140.
-
-Trachoma, 3.
-
-Trinité, Cap, 43, 44.
-
-Trollope, Anthony, 284.
-
-
-
-ULSTER, 33.
-
-
-
-VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS, 201, 202, 204.
-
-Vancouver, 196, 236, 258, 259, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 267, 273,
-274, 282.
-
-Vancouver Island, 266-71, 274.
-
-Vannutelli, Cardinal, 78.
-
-Victoria, 196, 267, 273, 275, 277, 280.
-
-
-
-WALKER, BRUCE, 119, 120.
-
-Webb, Captain, 90.
-
-Wilmer, 216, 220, 221, 224, 232, 236.
-
-Windermere, Lake, 222, 223.
-
-Winnipeg, 8, 84, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 123, 124, 127, 128, 130,
-144.
-
-Wolfe, General, 34, 35, 39.
-
-Wood, Major, 34.
-
-World's Fair, the, 82, 83, 87, 88.
-
-
-
-YOHO VALLEY, 206, 207, 209, 210.
-
-Young Women's Christian Association, 196.
-
-Yukon, 188, 250, 251, 252.
-
-
-
-
- Printed by T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty
- at the Edinburgh University Press
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Dominion, by R. E. Vernède
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Fair Dominion
- A Record of Canadian Impressions
-
-Author: R. E. Vernède
-
-Illustrator: Cyrus Cuneo
-
-Release Date: August 3, 2020 [EBook #62844]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FAIR DOMINION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-cover"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-cover.jpg" alt="Cover art" />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-front"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="LOOKING FROM LAKE AGNES DOWN ON LAKES MIRROR AND LOUISE." />
-<br />
-LOOKING FROM LAKE AGNES DOWN ON LAKES MIRROR AND LOUISE.
-</p>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE FAIR DOMINION<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- A RECORD OF CANADIAN IMPRESSIONS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- R. E. VERNÈDE<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- AUTHOR OF<br />
- 'THE PURSUIT OF MR. FAVIEL,' 'MERIEL OF THE MOORS,' ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- With 12 Illustrations in Colour<br />
- from Drawings by<br />
- CYRUS CUNEO<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON<br />
- KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER &amp; CO., LTD.<br />
- DRYDEN HOUSE, GERRARD STREET, W.<br />
- 1911<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pv"></a>v}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-PREFACE
-</p>
-
-<p>
-You know how long ago, in the earlier-than-Victorian
-days, the country cousin, in order to
-see life, went up to the Metropolis. A terrible
-journey it was, but well worth the labour and
-anxiety. Accounts are still extant of how the
-bustle and noise of the streets amazed him, of
-how endless the houses seemed, how startled
-he was by the glittering, clattering folk, how
-innocent and countrified he felt by comparison
-with them. Nowadays, though the London
-we know is to that old London as a vast and
-sleepless city to a small somnolent town, the
-country cousin is no longer carried off his feet
-by a visit to it. It is not vast enough or noisy
-enough or new enough to impress him. Perhaps
-no single city ever will be again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Canada! Some Winnipeg school teachers
-who came over recently to see London, told
-a journalist that it seemed so quiet
-compared with Canadian cities. 'In our cities,'
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pvi"></a>vi}</span>
-they said, 'it is impossible to escape from the
-noise of the streets.' ... Yet the streets and
-the cities are not really the things that impress
-one most in Canada. The amazing things are
-the forests and the fields, the prairies and the
-lakes and the mountains: all the illimitable
-space and the irrepressible men who are closing
-it in and giving it names for us to know it by.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clearly the English country cousin who wishes
-to be impressed should go to Canada. It is as
-easy to reach as London was in the old days,
-and there are no highwaymen. He will come
-back&mdash;if he comes back&mdash;with many stories to
-tell his friends of the wonders he has seen and
-of the still more incredible things that will
-soon be visible. That is at least my position.
-I went out originally for the <i>Bystander</i>, which
-wanted its Canadian news, like all its other
-news, up-to-date and not too solemn, and I am
-indebted to the editor of that journal for
-permission to make use in parts of the articles
-I sent him for this book, in which, by the way,
-I have still endeavoured to avoid solemnity.
-For some reason or other, many writers upon
-Canada do fall into a solemn and portentous
-way of describing the country&mdash;with the result
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pvii"></a>vii}</span>
-that people who know nothing of the facts say
-to themselves, 'This is indeed an important
-Dominion, but dull.' As a matter of fact, of
-course, Canada is a highly exciting country&mdash;from
-its grizzly bears to its political problems&mdash;and
-having spent delightful months in various
-parts, some well known, others, such as the
-French River, the Columbia Valley, and the
-Selkirks, very little known; riding in trains or
-on mountain ponies, sometimes trying to catch
-maskinongés (a tigerish kind of pike),
-sometimes trying to catch prime ministers (who
-cannot be described in such a general way)&mdash;I
-have tried to set down my impressions as
-incompletely as I received them. Never, I
-hope, have I fallen into the error of describing
-exactly how many salmon are canned in the
-Dominion, or what Sir Wilfrid Laurier should
-do if he really wishes to remain a great party
-leader. The errors I have fallen into will be
-obvious, and I need not run through them here....
-As for criticisms&mdash;if now and then I stop
-to make some&mdash;if I start saying, 'Canada is a
-great country, nevertheless, we do some things
-just as well or better at home,' no Canadian
-need mind. Country cousins have said just
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pviii"></a>viii}</span>
-that sort of thing from all time. Every
-cousin&mdash;even the most countrified&mdash;makes some
-reservations in favour of his own place; he would
-not be worth entertaining otherwise. If the
-criticisms are pointless, Canadians may say,
-'What can you expect from a country cousin?' If
-there is something in them, they will be
-entitled to remark, 'This English country
-cousin shows some intelligence. But then
-he has been to Canada&mdash;the centre of things.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pix"></a>ix}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-CONTENTS
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHAP.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-I. <a href="#chap01">THE START FROM LIVERPOOL</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-II. <a href="#chap02">THE STEERAGE PASSAGE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-III. <a href="#chap03">LANDING IN CANADA</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-IV. <a href="#chap04">A FAIRLY LONG DAY IN QUEBEC</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-V. <a href="#chap05">THE ATTRACTION OF THE SAGUENAY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VI. <a href="#chap06">STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRÉ AND A TRAVELLER'S VOW</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VII. <a href="#chap07">A HABITANT VILLAGE AND ITS NOTAIRE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VIII. <a href="#chap08">GLIMPSES OF MONTREAL</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-IX. <a href="#chap09">TORONTO, NIAGARA FALLS, AND A NEGRO PORTER</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-X. <a href="#chap10">MASKINONGÉ FISHING ON THE FRENCH RIVER</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XI. <a href="#chap11">SOME SUPERFICIAL REFLECTIONS AT SUDBURY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XII. <a href="#chap12">THROUGH THE HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XIII. <a href="#chap13">THE OLD TIMERS OF KILDONAN AND THE NEW TIMERS OF WINNIPEG</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XIV. <a href="#chap14">A PRAIRIE TOWN AND THE PRAIRIE POLICE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XV. <a href="#chap15">IN CALGARY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Px"></a>x}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XVI. <a href="#chap16">THE AMERICANISATION QUESTION</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XVII. <a href="#chap17">AMONG THE READY-MADE FARMS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XVIII. <a href="#chap18">INTO THE ROCKIES WITH A DEFENDER OF THE FAITH</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XIX. <a href="#chap19">A HOT BATH IN BANFF</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XX. <a href="#chap20">CANADA AND WOMAN</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXI. <a href="#chap21">THE LAKES AMONG THE CLOUDS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXII. <a href="#chap22">A SOLITARY RIDE INTO THE YOHO VALLEY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXIII. <a href="#chap23">THE FRUIT-LANDS OF LAKE WINDERMERE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXIV. <a href="#chap24">THE SELKIRKS&mdash;A GRIZZLY-BEAR COUNTRY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXV. <a href="#chap24">AN EIGHTY-MILE WALK THROUGH THE COLUMBIA VALLEY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXVI. <a href="#chap26">FROM GOLDEN TO THE COAST</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXVII. <a href="#chap27">A LITTLE ABOUT VANCOUVER CITY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXVIII. <a href="#chap28">THE HAPPY FARMERS OF THE ISLAND</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXIX. <a href="#chap29">A CHAT WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF<br />
-BRITISH COLUMBIA AND A BIG FIRE AT VICTORIA</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XXX. <a href="#chap30">BACK THROUGH OTTAWA</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#index">INDEX</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pxi"></a>xi}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-front">LOOKING FROM LAKE AGNES DOWN ON LAKES MIRROR AND LOUISE</a> ... Frontispiece
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-028">CHATEAU FRONTENAC FROM THE OLD RAMPARTS. DAY. QUEBEC</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-032">CHATEAU FRONTENAC AND DUFFERIN TERRACE. NIGHT. QUEBEC</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-170">MOUNT LEFROY. CANADIAN ROCKIES</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-176">A TRAIL IN THE ROCKIES</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-192">THE HALT. SADDLEBACK. LAGGAN</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-198">LAKE LOUISE. LAGGAN. ALBERTA</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-204">IN THE VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-206">ON THE TRAIL, YOHO VALLEY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-216">THE DEVIL'S FINGERS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-230">A SENTINEL OF THE ROCKIES</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-254">IN THE SELKIRKS. THE RETURN FROM THE HUNT</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P1"></a>1}</span></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE FAIR DOMINION
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I
-<br /><br />
-THE START FROM LIVERPOOL
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Canada and its wonders might lie before us,
-yet it was not all joy there at the Liverpool
-docks, where we waited our opportunity to
-go on board S.S. <i>Empress of Britain</i>. For
-one thing, the sun on that August day of last
-year was so unusually warm that standing
-about with a bag amongst crowds of people
-who were seeing other people off was hard
-work; for another, I had left behind me in my
-Hertfordshire home my bull-mastiff, forlorn
-ever since I had begun packing, and not a bit
-deceived by the bone she had been supplied
-with at parting. Even while she had gnawed it,
-she had whined. All those other people already
-on the great ship, the people in the bows&mdash;the
-emigrants&mdash;were leaving more even than
-a bull-mastiff: friends&mdash;for who knew how
-long?&mdash;their parents in England perhaps for
-ever. Here were thoughts to obscure the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P2"></a>2}</span>
-pleasure of those who were making for a new
-world, thoughts to sadden those who, whether
-by their own choice or not, were staying behind.
-Less than my bull-mastiff could they be either
-deceived or solaced. True, they might remember
-that this is the way a great Empire is made.
-We talk of the Empire often enough. But
-then we who talk of it are rarely those who
-make it or suffer for it; and perhaps we are
-therefore more easily consoled by a great idea
-than they.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Luckily going on board ship has to be a
-bustling business. My two companions and I,
-who had been promised a four-berth third-class
-cabin between us, had to bustle quite a
-lot&mdash;to different gangways from which we were
-rapidly sent back and into various queues,
-which turned out, after we had waited in them
-for some time, to be composed of some other
-class of passenger. We were extremely heated
-before we found ourselves in the end about to
-be passed up a gangway at which the medical
-inspection of a group of Scandinavians was
-at the moment going on. Scandinavian seems
-to be a roomy word which covers all Swedes,
-Norwegians, Danes, Lapps; and no foreigners
-not coming under this category are carried
-by the 'Empress' boats.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P3"></a>3}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The theory seems to be in regard to them
-that they are the only right and proper
-shipmates for English emigrants going to Canada.
-They were being pretty carefully examined
-all the same, men and women alike. The
-doctors' attention seemed to centre on their
-heads and eyelids. Hats were pulled off as
-they came level with them, and tow-coloured
-hair was grasped and peered into apparently
-with satisfactory results, for only a couple of
-elderly people were held back for a few minutes;
-and they I fancy had not passed the eye test,
-and were therefore not free from suspicion
-of having trachoma&mdash;a not uncommon North
-European disease supposed to cause total blindness,
-which is least of all to be desired in a new
-country. The two detained Scandinavians were
-re-examined and passed, after which our turn
-came. I think we all three felt a little uneasy
-in the eyelids as we advanced upon the doctor,
-but we need not have been anxious, for after
-a swift glance at us he reassured us by grinning
-and saying, 'There's nothing wrong with you,
-I should say,'&mdash;and so we passed on board.
-For the next hour or two we were part of a
-whirl of confused humanity. There is always
-a tendency among landsmen to become sheepish
-at sea, and in the steerage there were nine
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P4"></a>4}</span>
-hundred of us, most of whom had never been
-at sea before. So we rushed together and got
-jammed down companionways and in passages
-which even on so big a liner as this could not
-hold us all abreast, and scrummed to find the
-numbers of our berths from the steward, and
-flung ourselves in masses upon our baggage,
-and pressed pell-mell to the sides of the ship to
-wave good-bye, and formed a solid tossing
-square saloonwards when bells rang and we
-thought they might mean meals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course there must have been even then
-self-possessed passengers, who knew what they
-were about and only seemed to be lost with
-the crowd, and to be vaguely trying to muddle
-through. Canadians returning to their own
-country were conspicuous later by reason of
-their cool bearing and air of knowing their way
-about the world. And the invisible discipline
-of the ship that was to turn us all later into
-reasonable and orderly individuals was no
-doubt already at work. But the impression
-any one looking down on us that first evening
-would have received would have been the
-impression of a scurrying crowd, fancifully and
-variously dressed for its Atlantic voyage&mdash;clerks
-in pink shirts and high collars and
-bowler hats, peasants in smocks, women in the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P5"></a>5}</span>
-very latest flapping head-gear, or bareheaded
-and shawled, infants either terribly smart or
-mere bundles of old clothes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Up on the first-class deck superior people
-were walking calmly about with just the right
-clothes and manners for such a small event
-as crossing the Atlantic must have been to
-most of them. Occasionally one of these
-upper folk would come to the rails, lean over
-and smilingly stare at us: wondering perhaps
-at our confusion. But then all our fortunes
-were embarked on the ship, and only a little
-part of theirs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I went to sleep that night on a clean
-straw mattress in a lower berth, with a pleasant
-air blowing in through the port-hole in the
-passage, we were, I suppose, out to sea, and the
-air was Atlantic air, and no longer that of the
-old country.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P6"></a>6}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II
-<br /><br />
-THE STEERAGE PASSAGE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Apart from its other merits the steerage has
-this to its credit&mdash;every one is very friendly
-and affable. No one required an introduction
-before entering into conversation, and the
-suspicion that we might be making the acquaintance
-of some doubtful and inferior person who
-would perhaps presume upon it later did not
-worry any of us. I sat at a delightful table.
-Some one who knew the ins and outs of a
-steerage passage had advised me to go in to
-meals with the first 'rush,' instead of waiting
-for the second or third. His theory was that
-the first relay got the pick of the food. So
-my two friends and I had taken care to answer
-the very first call to the saloon, which happened
-to be for high tea, and, seating ourselves at
-random, found that we were thereby
-self-condemned to take every meal in the same
-order&mdash;including breakfast at the unaccustomed
-and somewhat dispiriting hour of 7 A.M.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P7"></a>7}</span>
-I do not know that it greatly mattered. In
-the cabin next ours there were several small
-children, who appeared to wake and weep
-about 4 A.M., and either to throw themselves
-or be thrown out of their berths on to the
-floor a little later. Their lamentations then
-became so considerable, that we were not
-sorry to rise and go elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Besides the three of us, there were at our
-table the following:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(1) A Norwegian peasant. Going on to the
-land. Quiet and rapid in his eating.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(2) Another Norwegian peasant, also going
-on to the land. He must have arrived on
-board very hungry, and he remained so
-throughout the voyage. He used to help himself to
-butter with his egg spoon, after he had finished
-most of his egg with it. Moreover, he would
-rise and stretch a red and dusky arm all down
-the table, if he sighted something appetising
-afar off. As we had a most excellent table
-steward, whose waiting could not have been
-beaten in the first-class, we all rather resented
-this behaviour, and I&mdash;as his next door
-neighbour&mdash;was deputed to hold him courteously
-in his seat until the desired eatables could be
-passed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(3) A Durham miner going to a mine in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P8"></a>8}</span>
-northern Ontario. A cheery red-faced person.
-He had bought a revolver before starting for
-Canada, because friends had told him that
-they were rough sort of places up there. I
-afterwards stayed a night in a mining town,
-and the only row that I heard was caused by
-a young Salvation Army girl, who beat a drum
-violently for hours outside the bar. We
-advised the miner to practise with his revolver
-in some isolated spot, these weapons being
-tricky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(4) A small shy cockney boy who was going
-out to his dad at Winnipeg. I don't know
-what his dad was, but I should think a clerk
-of sorts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(5) A brass metal worker from the North.
-Going to a job in Peterborough. A quiet
-pleasant young man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(6) A chauffeur who had also been in the
-Royal Engineers. Had been in the South
-African War, and told stories about it much
-more interesting than those you see in books.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(7) A horse-breaker, with whom I spent
-many hours learning about bits and bridles
-and shoes. He was the only married man
-among these seven. He hoped to bring his
-wife and family out within the year, and was
-not going to be happy until he did, even though
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P9"></a>9}</span>
-the kids would have to be vaccinated, and
-he had most conscientious objections to this
-process.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All these men&mdash;even the Norwegian with
-his egg-spoon habits&mdash;would be, I could not
-help thinking, a distinct gain to any country.
-I fancy too that they represented the steerage
-generally. Of course there were other types.
-I remember some characteristic Londoners
-of the less worthy sort&mdash;gummy-faced youths
-in dirty clothes that had been smart. There
-was one in particular, whom the horse-breaker
-would refer to as 'that lad that goes about in
-what was once a soot o' clothes,' who had a
-perfect genius for card tricks and making music
-on a comb. His career in Canada, judging
-by criticisms passed upon him by returning
-Canadians, was likely to be brief and unsuccessful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The food&mdash;to turn to what is always of
-considerable interest on a voyage&mdash;was good but
-solid. Pea soup, followed by pork chops and
-plum-pudding, makes an excellent dinner when
-you are hungry. Everybody was hungry the
-first day and also the last three days. In
-between there was a cessation of appetites.
-The sea was never in the least rough, but there
-was some slight motion on the second day out,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P10"></a>10}</span>
-and the majority of the nine hundred had
-probably never been to sea before. The strange
-affliction took them unawares, and they did
-not know how to deal with it. Where they
-were first seized, there they remained and were
-ill. The sides of the ship which appealed to
-more experienced travellers did not allure
-them. It was during this affliction that a
-device which had struck me as a most excellent
-idea upon going on board seemed in practice
-less good. This was a railed-in sand-pit which
-the paternal company had constructed between
-decks for the entertainment of the emigrant
-children. I had seen a dozen or more at a
-time playing in it with every manifestation of
-delight. Even now while they were ailing
-there, they did not seem to mind it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everywhere one went on that day of tribulation
-one had to walk warily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Afterwards the sea settled down into a mill
-pond, and every one began to wear a cheerful
-and hopeful look. In the evenings, and
-sometimes in the afternoons as well, some of the
-Scandinavians would produce concertinas and
-violins, and the whole of them would dance
-their folk-dances for hours. It was
-extraordinary how gracefully they danced&mdash;the squat
-fair-haired women and the big men heavily
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P11"></a>11}</span>
-clothed and booted. There was an attempt
-on the part of some of the English people to
-take part in these dances, but they soon realised
-their inferiority, and gave it up in favour
-of sports and concerts. The sports, though
-highly successful in themselves, led to a slight
-contretemps when the Bishop of London, who
-happened to be on board, came over by request
-to distribute the prizes. The Scandinavians,
-who quite wrongly thought they had been left
-out of the sports, seized the opportunity afforded
-by the bishop's address (which was concerned
-with our future in Canada), to form in Indian
-file, with a concertinist at their head, and
-march round and round the platform on which
-the bishop stood, making a deafening noise.
-It looked for a little as if there might be a
-scuffle between them and the prize-winners,
-but peace prevailed, though we were all
-prevented from hearing what was no doubt very
-sound advice. Apart from this, there was no
-horseplay to speak of until the last night but
-one, when a rowdy set, headed by a fat
-Yorkshireman, chose to throw bottles about in the
-dark, down in that part of the ship where
-about fifty men were berthed together. For
-this the ringleader was hauled before the
-captain and properly threatened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P12"></a>12}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our concerts went with less éclat. They
-were held in the dining-saloon, and there were
-usually good audiences. It seemed however
-that we had only one accompanist, whose
-command of the piano was limited, and in any
-case self-consciousness invariably got the better
-of the performers at the last moment. Either
-they would not come forward at all when
-their turn arrived, or else, having come forward,
-they turned very red, wavered through a few
-notes and then lost their voices altogether.
-Our best English concertina player, a fat little
-Lancashire engineer, had his instrument seized
-with the strangest noises halfway through
-'Variations on the Harmonica,' and after a
-manly effort to restrain them, failed and had
-to retire in haste. We generally bridged over
-these recurring gaps in the programme by
-singing 'Yip i addy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was so fine most of the voyage, that one
-could be quite happy on deck doing nothing
-at all but resting and strolling and talking. A
-few of the girls skipped occasionally and some
-of the men boxed: there was no real zeal for
-deck games. The voyage was too short, and
-with the new life and the new world at the
-end of it we all wanted to find out from one
-another what we knew&mdash;or at least what we
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P13"></a>13}</span>
-thought&mdash;Canada would be like. We stood
-in some awe of returning Canadians who talked
-of dollars as if they were pence, and we wondered
-if we should get jobs as easily as people said
-we should. Almost every type of worker was
-represented among us, and many types of
-people.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chief among my own particular acquaintances
-made on the boat were a young lady-help
-from Alberta, two Russian Jews from
-Archangel, a Norwegian farm hand from
-somewhere near the Arctic circle, two miners from
-Ontario, and three small boys belonging to
-Perth, Scotland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I do not know how the Russian Jews came
-to be on the boat. They had some Finnish,
-and I suppose slipped in with the Scandinavians.
-They also spoke a few words of
-German, which was the language we misused
-together. They were brothers, good-looking
-men with charming manners. The elder wore
-a frock coat and a bowler hat, and looked
-a romantic Shylock. The other was clothed
-in a smock, and was hatless. They said
-they had fled from the strife of Russia, and
-they wished particularly to know if Canada
-was a free country. The younger man was an
-ironworker and made penny puzzles in iron
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P14"></a>14}</span>
-which, so far as I could make out, the elder
-brother invented. They had one puzzle with
-them, but it was very complicated, and I was
-afraid that the sale of such things in Canada
-might be limited, unless Canadians fancied
-bewildering themselves over intricate ironwork
-during the long winters. Still those two
-fugitives rolled Russian cigarettes very well too,
-which should earn them a living.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Norwegian was a simple youth in a queer
-hat, which afterwards blew off into the sea
-much to his sorrow. He was very bent on
-acquiring the English language during the
-voyage, not having any of it to start with. I
-used to sit with him on one side and the small
-Perthshire boys on the other, while we translated
-Scottish into Norwegian and back again. The
-Scotch boys would inquire of me what 'hat'
-was in Norse, and I would point to the queer
-head-gear above-mentioned, and ask its owner
-to name its Norwegian equivalent. One of
-the things that stumped me&mdash;being a mere
-Englishman&mdash;was a question put by the smallest
-Perth boy: 'Whit is gollasses in Norwegian?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It took me some time to find out what gollasses
-were in English, and I don't know how to spell
-them now.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P15"></a>15}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III
-<br /><br />
-LANDING IN CANADA
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was while we were still out to sea that I
-first realised what Canada might be like, and
-how different from England. We had been
-steaming for five days, and hitherto the Atlantic
-had seemed a familiar and still English sea.
-The sky above, the air around, even the vast
-slowly heaving waters and the set of the sun
-one might see from an English cliff. But on
-this last day but one, which was a day of hot
-sun, the sky seemed to have risen immeasurably
-higher than in England and to have
-become incredibly clearer, except where little
-white rugged clouds were set. Snow clouds
-in a perfect winter's sky, I should have said,
-if I had known myself to be at home; yet the
-air round the ship was of the very balmiest
-summer. We should never get such a sky and
-such an air together in England, and we were
-all stimulated by it and began to forget England
-and think more of Canada. We wondered
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P16"></a>16}</span>
-when we were going to see the lights of Belle
-Isle, and somebody said we should pass an
-island called Anticosti, and we began to look
-out for Anticosti, and anybody who knew
-anything about Anticosti was listened to like an
-oracle. Not that anybody did know much&mdash;even
-those who had crossed to and fro
-several times. After all there was no reason
-why they should, for Atlantic liners do not stop
-there, and there is not much to be seen in
-passing. Still we weighed the words of those who
-had passed it carefully, and decided to see
-what we could of it so that we might also be
-regarded as oracles next time we came that
-way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though we had not seen Canada, yet we had
-received a favourable impression of it, which
-was lucky, because the next day, when we had
-got into the St. Lawrence, it came on to sleet
-and vapour. We of the steerage, who had
-brought up our boxes and babies almost before
-breakfast, so as to be ready to land at the
-earliest moment, had to content ourselves
-with sitting on them between decks (on the
-boxes, for choice, but the babies would get in
-the way too), and watch the little white villages
-and tinned church spires and dark woods of
-French Canada drive past the portholes in the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P17"></a>17}</span>
-mist. We should like to have been on deck
-seeing more of our new home, breathing some
-of its bracing air; but the rain was incessant.
-Heavens, but it got stuffy too on that lower
-deck. Nine hundred of us in our best clothes
-and our overcoats&mdash;holding on to bundles and
-kids, and sweating. It got so stuffy, that I
-took the opportunity of crossing in the rain
-to the first-class, and hunting out two people
-to whom I had introductions. One was the
-Canadian Minister for Emigration, who had
-already been over to inspect us in a paternal
-sort of way and declared that we were 'a
-particularly good lot'&mdash;very different, he
-hinted, from the sort of English emigrants
-who used to be shipped over, and got Englishmen
-a bad name in the new country for years.
-His gratification at our general excellence was
-so natural that I did not broach the question
-of whether Canada's gain was England's loss.
-I hope it was not. I suppose we can afford
-to lose even good men, provided we are not
-going to lose them really, but only station
-them at a different spot along the great road
-of the Empire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The other person I was anxious to see was
-Archbishop Bourne, who was going out to the
-Eucharistic Congress at Montreal. We
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P18"></a>18}</span>
-discussed that extraordinarily lucid book of
-Monsieur André Siegfried, which deals with
-the race question in Canada. The archbishop
-admitted its value, though he thought it
-unfair in parts. He was assured, for example,
-that the unsocial attitude of the Irish and
-French Canadian Catholics towards one another
-as well as towards those of another religion
-was fast disappearing, nor did he seem to think
-that the Church any longer tended to frustrate
-enterprise by keeping its members under its
-wing in the East. Many Catholics were going
-West nowadays, and after the Congress he
-himself was going West in the spirit of the
-times. Perhaps he was right about the
-<i>rapprochement</i> of the Irish and French Catholics,
-though men on the spot maintain that their
-unsociability is largely due to the fact that
-both have a singular yearning for State employment
-and the employment will not always
-go round.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was still raining when I recrossed to the
-steerage, and it was still raining when we got
-into the Canadian Pacific Railway dock at
-about 5 P.M. I was standing beside the
-horse-breaker at the time, and the first thing that
-caught his eye in Quebec was the shape of
-the telegraph poles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P19"></a>19}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, look at them,' he said, 'they're all
-crooked!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A little later, he commented on the slowness
-with which the French-Canadian porters were
-getting the baggage off the boat. 'They may
-have this here hustle on them that they talk
-of,' he said, 'but I've seen that done a lot
-quicker in London.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was more loyalty to the old country than
-disloyalty to the new that prompted the
-remark, in which there was perhaps some
-justification. A Canadian who was standing
-by seemed to think so at any rate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is only French Canada,' he said, 'wait
-till you get West.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still we all of us had to wait a bit in French
-Canada anyhow. We did not get through the
-emigration sheds till 9.30 P.M., and then there
-was one's baggage to be got through the
-Customs after. Not that there was much in
-that, the officials being most amiable. But
-we none of us much enjoyed the emigrant
-inspection. It is necessary and desirable no
-doubt, but we felt that we had been inspected
-pretty often already on board the boat, and
-we had been up since daylight, and we were
-hungry and miserable, and hot in the sheds
-and cold out of them, and the babies fractious,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P20"></a>20}</span>
-and everybody shoving and pushing, and we
-felt like some sheep at sheep-dog trials which
-have to be driven through pen after pen, and
-would go so much faster if they only knew how,
-and the dogs didn't press them. However it
-was all accomplished at last, and then the
-emigrants got into the westbound train that
-was waiting for them. First and second-class
-passengers had long since vanished in carriages
-to such abodes of luxury as the Cháteau
-Frontenac and the rest of the leading hotels.
-Now there were no carriages left. And we
-heard that a hundred people at least had been
-turned away from the Château Frontenac, so
-full was it; and since in any case we wished to
-start our Canadian impressions from a humbler
-standpoint, we set out in the rain for a Quebec
-inn which some of the Canadians returning in
-the steerage had told us of. I suppose we had
-a good deal more than a mile to go through
-the rain carrying bags, along those awful roads
-from the docks. I know something about those
-roads, because I not only walked along them
-that night, but next morning I drove a dray
-along them. I had gone back to the docks to
-get my trunk which I had had to leave there,
-and the dray was the only thing I could get
-to drive up in. Soon after we had started
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P21"></a>21}</span>
-I said to the driver&mdash;a merry-faced French
-Canadian&mdash;'Il trotte bien,' referring to the
-horse, and he was so pleased with the
-compliment, or the French perhaps, that he handed
-me the reins and let me drive the rest of the
-way through the stone piles and mud that
-appeared to form the roads in lower Quebec.
-In return for the reins I had lent him my
-tobacco pouch; and when the horse leapt an
-extra deep hole, he would stop filling his pipe
-and hold me in round the waist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To go back to the inn&mdash;I suppose it was ten
-o'clock before we got there. A few men sat
-smoking, with their feet against the wall in the
-entrance room where the office was; and after
-we had waited about for ten minutes or so,
-one of them told us if we wanted to see the
-clerk we'd better ring a bell. We did so, and
-presently a youth turned up and patronisingly
-accorded us rooms for the night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is there any chance of getting a meal
-to-night?' we inquired, somewhat damped
-by his unenthusiastic reception. (I may say
-that I never met an office clerk in a Canadian
-hotel who did seem keen on welcoming guests.
-That is one of the differences between the old
-world and the new.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yup, there's a café downstairs,' said the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P22"></a>22}</span>
-youth, as he lit a cigar and sat down to read a
-newspaper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We went downstairs, and there in a narrow
-little room behind a long counter which had
-plates of sausage rolls, under meat covers to
-keep them from the flies, upon it, and little
-high stools upon which you sit in discomfort
-to eat the sausage rolls quickly in front of it,
-we found a small pale-faced boy who said
-'Sure!' in the cheeriest way when we
-repeated our question about food. Five
-minutes later he had produced from a stove
-which he was almost too small to reach fried
-bacon and eggs and coffee, and while we sat
-and ate these good things, he gave us advice
-about the future. He evidently knew without
-asking that we were emigrants from the old
-country, and he supposed we wanted jobs. He
-recommended waiting as a start&mdash;waiting in
-a hotel. Waiting was not, he said, much of
-a thing to stick at; but there was pretty good
-money to be made at it in the season. Lots
-of tourists gave good tips&mdash;especially in
-Quebec&mdash;and you could save money as a waiter if
-you tried. He himself was from the States,
-but he liked Quebec well enough. Of course
-it was not as hustling as further west, and not
-to be compared to the States. If a man
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P23"></a>23}</span>
-had ideas, the States was the place for him.
-There were more opportunities for a man with
-ideas in the States than there were in Canada.
-We asked him how much a man with ideas
-could reckon upon making in the States, and
-he said such a man could reckon upon making
-as much as five dollars a day. It did not
-seem an overwhelming amount to my aspiring
-mind&mdash;not for a man with ideas. Perhaps
-that is because one has heard of so many
-millionaires down in the States, beginning with
-Mr. Rockefeller. But then again, perhaps
-millionaires are not men with ideas themselves
-so much as men who know how to use the
-ideas of others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having started on money, the boy gave us
-a lecture on the Canadian coinage, the
-advantages of the decimal system, where copper
-money held good and why&mdash;all in a way that
-would have done credit to a financial expert.
-We thought him an amazing boy to be frying
-eggs and bacon behind a counter in a small
-café: only you don't just stick to one groove
-in Canada. At least you ought not to, as the
-boy himself told us. Englishmen were like
-that, but it didn't do in the States or Canada.
-A man should have several strings to his bow,
-and be ready to turn his hand to anything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P24"></a>24}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Refreshed by our supper and his advice, we
-adjourned to the bar which was handy, and
-got further enlightenment from the barman
-there. He was a French Canadian, very
-dapper in a stiff white shirt and patent leather
-boots. Money was also his theme. He told
-us he made forty cents an hour, and meant
-to get up to seventy-five cents pretty soon.
-That was good money to get, but he was worth
-it, and if the boss didn't think so he would
-try some other boss who did. It was no good
-a man's sitting down and taking less money
-than he was worth. A man would not get
-anywhere if he did that sort of thing. He
-certainly mixed cocktails at a lightning pace,
-and all the time he chatted he strode up and
-down behind the bar like a caged jackal. He
-gave me my first idea of that un-English
-restlessness&mdash;American, I suppose, in its origin&mdash;which
-is beginning to spread so rapidly through
-Canada. In America I fancy they are beginning
-to distrust it a little. Too much enterprise
-may lead to an unsettled condition that is not
-much better than stagnation. Farm hands
-tend to leave their employers at critical
-moments, just for the sake of novelty. Farmers
-themselves are so anxious to get on that they
-take what they can out of the land, and move
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P25"></a>25}</span>
-to new farms, leaving the old ruined. It may
-be that in a newer country like Canada enterprise
-is less perilous. That remains to be seen.
-We retired to bed at midnight, sleepier even
-than men from the old country are reputed
-to be.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P26"></a>26}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV
-<br /><br />
-A FAIRLY LONG DAY IN QUEBEC
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Quebec city is full of charms and memories.
-I am no lover of cities when they have grown
-so great that no one knows any longer what
-site they were built on, or what sort of a
-country is buried beneath them. Their streets
-may teem with people and their buildings be
-very splendid, but if they have shut off the
-landscape altogether I cannot admire them.
-Quebec will never be one of those cities,
-however great she may grow. Quebec stands on
-a hill, and just as a city on a hill cannot be hid,
-so too it cannot hide from those who live in
-it the country round, nor even the country it
-stands on. Always there will be in Quebec a
-sense of steepness. The cliffs still climb even
-where they are crowded with houses. And
-the air that reaches Quebec is the air of the
-hills. Always too&mdash;from Dufferin Terrace at
-least&mdash;there will be visible the sweep of the
-St. Lawrence, the dark crawl to the north-east
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P27"></a>27}</span>
-of the Laurentian Mountains, and the
-clear and immensely lofty Canadian skies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I spent the whole of my first day in Quebec
-on Dufferin Terrace, except for that journey
-down to the docks. Once I was on the terrace,
-I forgot how bad the roads had been. You
-might drive a thousand miles through stones
-and mud, and forget them all the moment you
-set foot on Dufferin Terrace. Everything you
-see from it is beautiful, from the Château
-Frontenac behind&mdash;surely the most picturesque
-and most picturesquely situated hotel in the
-world&mdash;to the wind on the river below. Most
-beautiful of all the things I saw was the moon
-starting to rise behind Port Levis. It started
-in the trees, and at first I thought it was a
-forest fire. There was nothing but red flame
-that spread and spread among the trees at
-first. Suddenly it shot up into a round ball
-of glowing orange, so that I knew it was the
-moon long before it turned silver, high up, and
-made a glimmering pathway across the river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During this moonrise the band was playing
-on the terrace, and all Quebec was strolling
-up and down or standing listening to the
-music, as is its custom on summer evenings.
-The scene on the terrace has often enough
-been described&mdash;with its mingling of many
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P28"></a>28}</span>
-types, American tourists and Dominican friars,
-habitants from far villages, and business men
-from the centre of things, archbishops and
-Members of Parliament, and ships' stewards
-and commercial travellers, and freshly arrived
-immigrants and old market women. The fair
-Quebeckers love the terrace as much as their
-men folk, and I saw several pretty faces among
-them and many pretty figures. They know
-how to walk, these French Canadian ladies,
-and also how to dress&mdash;the latter an art which
-has still to be achieved by the women of the
-West.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-028"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-028.jpg" alt="CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC, QUEBEC, FROM THE OLD RAMPARTS." />
-<br />
-CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC, QUEBEC, FROM THE OLD RAMPARTS.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The terrace besides being gay is very friendly
-too. My two companions of the voyage had
-gone on that morning, being in a hurry to reach
-the prairie; but I found several new friends on
-the terrace in the course of the day. One was
-a young working man from England, who had
-brought his child on to the terrace to play when
-I first met him. He was so well-dressed and
-prosperous looking that I should never have
-guessed he was only a shoe-leather cutter, as
-he told me he was. But then he had been
-out in Quebec for five years, and he was making
-twenty-five dollars a week instead of the
-thirty-two shillings a week he used to make in
-Nottingham at the same trade. He said he
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P29"></a>29}</span>
-had been sorry to leave England, but you
-were more of a man in Canada. There were
-not twenty men after one job&mdash;that was the
-difference. Consequently, if your boss offered
-to give you any dirt, you could tell him to go
-to Hell. I suppose we should have counted
-him a wicked and dangerous Socialist in
-England, but there is no doubt that he is a
-typical Canadian citizen, and the kind of man
-they want there. Another acquaintance I
-picked up was a commercial traveller from
-Toronto&mdash;a stout tubby energetic man, who
-asked me, almost with tears in his eyes, why
-England would not give up Free Trade and
-study Canadian needs? He was particularly
-keen on English manufacturers studying
-Canadian needs, and he put the matter in quite
-a novel light as far as I was concerned. His
-argument was that we made things in England
-too well. What was the use, he demanded,
-of making good durable things when Canadians
-did not want them? It only meant that the
-States jumped in with inferior goods more
-suited to the moment. He assured me that
-Canada was a new country, and Canadians
-did not want to buy things that would last
-hundreds of years. Take furniture, machinery,
-anything&mdash;Canadians only wanted stuff that
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P30"></a>30}</span>
-would last them a year or two, after which they
-could scrap it and get something new. That
-kept the money in circulation. Anyway, he
-insisted, a thing was no good if it was better
-than what a customer required. I had not
-thought of things in that way before, and it
-was interesting to hear him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My third acquaintance was a member of
-the Quebec Parliament, who started to chat
-quite informally, and having ascertained that
-I was fresh from the old country took me to
-his house, that I might drink Scotch whisky,
-and be informed that French Canadians loved
-the King and hated the Boer War. I think
-when a French Canadian does not know you
-well, he will always make these two
-admissions&mdash;but not any more&mdash;lest you should be
-unsympathetic or he should give himself away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That is why, since the position of French
-Canadians in Canadian politics will some day
-be of the greatest importance, we ought all to
-be thankful for the existence of Mr. Bourassa.
-Mr. Bourassa is represented&mdash;by his opponents&mdash;as
-the violent leader of a small faction of
-French Canadians, as a trial to moderate men
-of all sorts, including the majority of his own
-French-Canadian fellow-citizens. All this is
-very true. In Canadian politics, as they stand
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P31"></a>31}</span>
-at present, Mr. Bourassa stands for just that
-and very little more. Politically he is an
-extremist and a nuisance. But disregarding
-for a moment immediate practical politics,
-Mr. Bourassa stands for much more than that&mdash;stands
-indeed for the real essence of French
-Canada. He is the French Canadian in action,
-shouting on the house-tops what most of them
-prefer to dream of by the fire-side, insisting
-upon bringing forward ideas which the others
-would leave to be brought forward by chance
-or in the lapse of time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He has been called the Parnell of Canada,
-but these international metaphors are
-generally calculated to mislead. The most that
-Parnell ever demanded was Home Rule for
-Ireland&mdash;that small part of Great Britain, that
-fraction of the Empire. Mr. Bourassa does not
-only want Home Rule for Quebec. He wants
-it for Canada; only the Canada he sees thus
-self-ruling is a Canada permeated by French
-Canadianism. If Parnell had wanted Home
-Rule, so that England, Scotland, and Wales
-might be ruled from Dublin, he would have
-attained to something of the completeness of
-Mr. Bourassa's policy. Mr. Bradley, whose
-book on <i>Canada in the Twentieth Century</i> is
-as complete as any one book on Canada could
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P32"></a>32}</span>
-be, and as up-to-date as any&mdash;allowing for the
-fact that Canada changes yearly&mdash;declared in
-in it, some years ago, that the French
-Canadians realised that for them to populate
-the North-West was a dream to be given up.
-It may be a dream, but I doubt if it is given
-up: and the dreams of a population more
-prolific than any other on the face of the earth
-may some day become realities. What is
-against these dreams? The influx of English
-immigrants? The rush for the land of
-American farmers? But these are only temporary
-obstacles. The Americans may go back again.
-They often do. The English immigrants are
-largely unmarried young men, and there are
-no women in the West. They are making
-ready the land, but the inheritors of it have yet
-to appear. It is not strange if Mr. Bourassa
-sees those inheritors among his own people&mdash;only
-it is not yet their time, not for many years
-yet&mdash;not for so many years yet that it seems
-almost unpractical and absurd to look forward
-to it. Even such a faith as that which
-Mr. Bourassa has confessed to in regard to the
-Eastern provinces&mdash;Quebec, Ontario, Nova
-Scotia, New Brunswick&mdash;that 'In fifteen years
-they will have become French in language and
-Roman Catholic in faith,' seems highly unpractical.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P33"></a>33}</span>
-Ontario is not likely to become Roman
-Catholic any faster than Ulster. But on the
-other hand it will only increase in its
-anti-Frenchness and its anti-Roman Catholicism
-in so far as it is upheld and influenced by
-Imperialism. Imperialism to Mr. Bourassa is
-that bogey which goes about linking up all
-those small non-conforming, hustling, militant
-and materialistic communities which unaided
-would come into the Catholic French-Canadian
-fold. It is that odious system which
-prevents other nations within the Empire&mdash;such
-as French Canada&mdash;from developing
-along their own natural lines. It is
-something which easily causes Mr. Bourassa to
-forget that England and Englishmen&mdash;representing
-a distant sovereignty which keeps the
-world's peace&mdash;have been a boon and a blessing
-to French Canadians rather than otherwise;
-and causes him to remember that they may in
-a moment become an imminent sovereignty&mdash;imposing
-conscription, war, chapels (things
-that the Ontarian takes to like a duck to
-water) upon the whole Canadian community.
-Such impositions would not only strengthen
-the non-French Canadians, and ruin the natural
-progress-to-power of the French Canadians;
-but they would topple down like a house of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P34"></a>34}</span>
-cards those splendid dreams which might in a
-French-Canadianised Canada become realities.
-What dreams? Rome shifted to Montreal for
-one, and the Vatican gardens of the future
-sweeping down to the St. Lawrence. The
-whole vast wealth of the Dominion diverted
-to the carrying out of those traditions which
-are neither French nor English but Canadian
-... started four hundred years before by
-the captains and the priests, voyageurs and
-martyrs, who in an age of unbelief went forth
-in response to miraculous signs for the
-furtherance of the glory of God.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-032"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-032.jpg" alt="CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC AND DUFFERIN TERRACE. NIGHT. QUEBEC." />
-<br />
-CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC AND DUFFERIN TERRACE. NIGHT. QUEBEC.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I said that Quebec was full of memories.
-It is well to remember that most of these are
-French-Canadian memories. The Englishman,
-at home or touring, thinks most naturally of
-Wolfe in connection with Quebec, and thinks
-with pride how that fight on the Plains of
-Abraham marked, in Major Wood's words,
-'three of the mightiest epochs of modern
-times&mdash;the death of Greater France, the coming of
-age of Greater Britain, and the birth of the
-United States.' The splendid daring climb
-of the English army, the romantic fevered
-valour of its general, the suddenness and
-completeness of the reversal of positions, unite
-to make us think that never was a more glorious
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P35"></a>35}</span>
-event, or one better calculated to appeal to
-men of the New World. But do not let us
-forget that for French Canadians&mdash;great event
-as it was, severing their allegiance to France
-for ever on the one hand, leaving them free
-men as never before on the other&mdash;it was only
-one event in a new world that was already for
-them (but not for us) three hundred years old.
-'Here Wolfe fell.' But here also, long before
-Wolfe fell, Champlain stood, and French
-captains led valiant men on expeditions against
-strange insidious foes, and the Cross was carried
-onwards by the priests, and amid mystic voices
-and divinations, and slaughterings and
-endurances, the faith prevailed and the character
-of the people was formed. They have no
-hankering for France&mdash;these people to whom
-Wolfe's battle seems but one out of many.
-France, they think, has forsaken the Church.
-But they are French still&mdash;these people&mdash;and
-amazingly conservative in their customs and
-their creed. We may tell them that England&mdash;which
-sent out Wolfe&mdash;has given them material
-prosperity, equality under the law, the means
-of justice. They will reply, or rather they will
-silently think, and only an occasional Nationalist
-will dare to say:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We owe nothing to Great Britain. England
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P36"></a>36}</span>
-did not take Canada for love, or to plant the
-Cross of religion as the French did, but in order
-to plant their trading posts and make money.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gratitude is not a virtue nations take pride
-in possessing; they are indeed seldom nations
-until they have forgotten to be grateful. I
-suppose French Canadians are on their way
-to forgetting to be grateful to England for
-what she did in times past, but it is not because
-they have any real quarrel with England, or
-desire to injure her. Merely because they feel
-that from England exudes that Imperialism
-which appeals in no way from the past, and
-menaces, they think, their future.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P37"></a>37}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V
-<br /><br />
-THE ATTRACTION OF THE SAGUENAY
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Almost directly one lands in Canada, one feels
-the desire to move west. It is not that the
-east fails to attract and interest, or that a
-man might not spend many years in Quebec
-province alone, and still have seen little of its
-vast, wild, northern parts. Again there is the
-Evangeline country, little known for all that
-it is 'storied.' But the tide is west just at
-present. Everybody asks everybody else&mdash;Have
-you been West, or Are you going West?
-And every one who has been West or is going
-feels himself to be in the movement. Some
-day no doubt the tide will set back again,
-or flow both ways equally. To-day it flows
-westward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I should have been sorry, however, if I had
-not gone eastward at least as far as the Saguenay,
-and I am duly grateful to the American who, so
-to speak, irritated me into going there. He was
-a thin, pale youth, somewhat bald from
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P38"></a>38}</span>
-clutching at his hair, who sat next to me at dinner my
-third day at Quebec. He announced to the
-table at large that he was travelling for his
-pleasure, but to judge from his strained face,
-travelling for his pleasure was one of the
-hardest jobs he had tried. He had been
-doing Quebec, and he gave all Canadians
-present to understand that Quebec had made
-him very very tired. Look at the trips around
-too. Look at the Montmorency Falls. Had
-anybody present seen Niagara? Well, if
-anybody had seen Niagara, the Montmorency
-Falls could only make him tired. One or two
-Canadians present bent lower to their food.
-But on the whole Canadians do not readily
-enter into argument, and half Niagara Falls
-is Canadian too, so that finding no opponents
-the youth proceeded triumphantly to give the
-relative proportions in figures of the two falls.
-As he directed them chiefly at me, I felt bound
-to say that I had seen falls about a tenth the
-size of either which had struck me as worth
-going to see. He then said that he guessed I
-was from England. I said this was so.
-Thereupon he told me that everybody in England
-was asleep. I suggested that sleep was better
-than insomnia, and shocked by my soporific
-levity, he advised me to go and have a look at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P39"></a>39}</span>
-New York if I wanted to know how things
-could hum. I said I supposed that New York
-was a fairly busy place. A silly remark&mdash;only
-he happened to be a New Yorker, and all that
-tiredness left him. I learnt so much about
-the busyness of New York that I have hardly
-forgotten it all yet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Afterwards, but some time afterwards, when
-the American had left the table, a Scottish
-Canadian asked me if I had done the Saguenay
-trip, and when I said that I had not done it,
-he strongly advised me not to miss it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It's the finest trip in Canada. Yes, sir.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I decided to go. It takes just two days
-from the start at Quebec to Chicoutimi and
-back, and you go in a spacious sort of
-houseboat which paddles along at just the right
-pace, first on one side of the river then on the
-other, stopping to load and unload at the little
-villages along the St. Lawrence. There to the
-left&mdash;a great sheet of silver hung from the
-cliff&mdash;were the Montmorency Falls, which had made
-that young American tired. A hundred and
-twenty years ago Queen Victoria's father
-occupied the Kent house, hard by the Falls,
-now a hotel. Wolfe lay ill for two weeks in
-a farm close by; probably on no other sick-bed
-in the world were plans so big with fate
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P40"></a>40}</span>
-conceived. Then the Ile d'Orléans floats by&mdash;that
-fertile island which Cartier named after
-the Grape God four hundred years ago, because
-of the vines that grew there. All this waterway
-is history, French-Canadian history mostly.
-With a fine mist hung over the river, concealing
-the few modern spires and roofs, you can
-see the country to-day just as Cartier saw it
-when he came sailing up. Neither four hundred
-nor four thousand years will serve to modernise
-the banks of the St. Lawrence. Take that
-thirty-mile stretch where the Laurentides climb
-sheer from the water. That is what Cartier
-saw&mdash;nothing different. No houses, no people;
-only the grey rock growing out of the green
-trees, and the grey sky overhead. Lower down,
-with the sun shining as it did for us, Cartier
-would see, if he came sailing up to-day, all
-those picturesque French-Canadian villages
-which have sprung up along the shore&mdash;Baie
-St. Paul, St. Irénée, Murray Bay, Tadousac,
-with the white farms of the Habitants, and the
-summer homes of the Quebeckers and Montrealers,
-and the shining spires of the churches,
-and the wooden piers jutting far out into the
-river. Those piers are particularly cheerful
-places. There are always gangs of porters
-waiting to run out freight from the hold, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P41"></a>41}</span>
-a gathering of ladies in gay frocks who want
-to greet friends on board, and heaps of little
-habitants playing about or smoking their pipes.
-The habitant appears to start his pipe at the
-age of eight or nine years, judging from those
-who frequent the piers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think I was the only Englishman on board
-that boat. Most of the passengers were
-Americans, but cheerful ones&mdash;not like that young
-man at the hotel&mdash;and we were all very keen
-on seeing everything, so that it became dusk
-much too soon for most of us. We got to
-Tadousac just about dusk, which I was
-particularly sorry for, since of all the places we
-passed, it held the most memories. In 1600
-the whole fur trade of Canada centred round
-this benighted little spot, and the men of
-St. Malo were the rivals of the Basques for the
-black foxes trapped by the Indians of that
-date. I should like to have seen this queer
-little port by daylight, but I suppose for most
-purposes Parkman's description holds good, and
-cannot easily be beaten:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A desolation of barren mountain closes
-round it, betwixt whose ribs of rugged granite,
-bristling with savins, birches, and firs, the
-Saguenay rolls its gloomy waters from the
-northern wilderness. Centuries of civilisation
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P42"></a>42}</span>
-have not tamed the wildness of the place;
-and still, in grim repose, the mountains hold
-their guard around the waveless lake that
-glistens in their shadow, and doubles, in its
-sullen mirror, crag, precipice and forest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I know that Parkman goes on to say that
-when Champlain landed here in April 1608
-he found the lodges of an Indian camp, which
-he marked in his plan of Tadousac. When we
-landed, there were also a few shacks in much
-the same spot, and in one of the best lighted
-of them hung a placard to this effect:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- THE ONLY REAL INDIAN<br />
- BUY WORK FROM HIM.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The lodges Champlain saw belonged to an
-Algonquin horde, 'Denizens of surrounding
-wilds, and gatherers of their only harvest&mdash;skins
-of the moose, cariboo, and bear; fur of the
-beaver, marten, otter, fox, wild cat, and lynx.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Other days, other harvests. From the shack
-of the Only Real Indian I saw one stout tourist
-issue forth (a Chicago pork-packer he must have
-been, if persons ever correspond to their
-professions), laden with three toy bows and arrows,
-as many miniature canoes, and what appeared
-to be a couple of patchwork bedspreads. That
-the descendant of braves should live by making
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P43"></a>43}</span>
-patchwork bedspreads seemed too much, even
-though I had given up as illusions the Red
-Indians of my boyhood. Far rather would I
-at that moment have seen the stout tourist
-come forth, either scalpless himself, or dangling
-at his ample belt the raven locks of the Only
-Real Indian.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the night we went on to Chicoutimi, but
-saw nothing of that, being asleep. We had
-sung songs, American songs&mdash;'John Brown's
-Body,' 'Marching through Georgia,' etc., till
-a late hour of the night; and in any case the
-bracing river air would have insured sleep.
-Only in the morning as we came down the
-Saguenay again did I wake to its beauty and
-strangeness. Men have learnt to tunnel through
-rocks at last, but the Saguenay learnt this art
-for itself thousands of years ago. A wide water
-tunnel through the sheer rock, a roofless tunnel,
-open to the sky, that is the Saguenay&mdash;most
-magnificent at the point where Cap Trinité
-looms up, a wall of darkness fifteen hundred
-feet high.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is a curious fact that famous landscapes
-always produce a remarkable frivolity in the
-human tourist visiting them. Perhaps it is
-man's instinct to assert himself against nature.
-When the boat draws opposite Cap Trinité,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P44"></a>44}</span>
-stewards produce buckets of stones and passengers
-are invited to try and hit the Cap with the
-stones from impossible distances. I do not
-know that it greatly added to the pleasure of
-the trip, but we all tried to hit the cliff with the
-stones and most of us failed, and had to content
-ourselves with drawing echoes from it. After
-that we went on, and some of the white whales
-which are characteristic of the Saguenay began
-to appear, and experienced travellers explained
-that they were not really white whales but a
-sort of white porpoise. Once again, as we
-passed it, Tadousac was invisible, but this time
-because a white fog had wrapped it round. So
-silently we turned out of the Saguenay into
-the St. Lawrence. I think the silence of the
-Saguenay was what had most impressed me.
-Not very long before I had steamed down the
-Hoogly where by day the kites wheel and shriek
-overhead, and the air buzzes with insects'
-sounds, and all night the jackals scream&mdash;a
-noisy river, full of treacherous sandbanks, its
-shores green with the bright poisonous green
-of the East. The Saguenay, unique as it is in
-many ways, seemed by the contrast of its deepness
-and silence, and by the fresh darkness of
-the rocks and trees that shut it in, to be
-peculiarly a river of the West. I do not know if it
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P45"></a>45}</span>
-would have made the somewhat bald young
-American tired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is only fair to say that his attitude about
-Quebec is not at all characteristic of his
-fellow-countrymen. For most Americans, Quebec
-province (and still more perhaps the woods of
-Ontario) is becoming almost as popular a
-playground as Switzerland is for Englishmen.
-Camping out has become a great craze among
-Americans, and if the camping out can be done
-amid unspoilt natural surroundings, close to
-rivers where one can fish and woods where one
-can hunt, an ideal holiday is assured them. I
-forget who it was who said that much of the
-old American versatility and nobility had
-disappeared since the American boys left off
-whittling sticks, but in any case the desire to
-whittle sticks is renewed again among them,
-from Mr. Roosevelt downwards. And in
-Canada this whittling of sticks&mdash;this return to
-nature&mdash;can easily be accomplished. For the
-north is still there, unexploited. In Quebec
-province, fishing and hunting clubs of Quebec
-and Montreal have secured the rights over vast
-tracts of country. So vast are those tracts
-that one or two clubs, I was told, have not even
-set eyes on all the trout streams they preserve.
-This may be an exaggeration, though probably
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P46"></a>46}</span>
-not a great one. There remains&mdash;especially in
-Ontario&mdash;much water and wood that any one
-may sport in unlicensed, or get access to by
-permission of the local hotel proprietor. Some
-of the Americans on the boat had been fishing
-in Quebec streams and told me of excellent
-sport they had had, so that I began to wonder
-why no Englishmen ever came this way. The
-voyage to Canada is a little further than that
-to Norway, but there are more fish in Canada.
-And there is certainly only one Saguenay in the
-world.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P47"></a>47}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI
-<br /><br />
-STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRÉ AND A TRAVELLER'S VOW
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Ste. Anne de Beaupré is usually referred to
-as the Lourdes of Canada. When a metaphor
-of this sort is used it usually means that the
-spot referred to is in some way inferior to the
-original. In the case of Ste. Anne de Beaupré,
-the inferiority is not, I believe, in the matter of
-the number of miracles wrought there, but in
-the matter of general picturesqueness.
-Ste. Anne de Beaupré is not nearly so picturesque as
-Lourdes. If you wish to palliate this fact, you
-say, as one writer has said, that 'The beauty
-of modern architecture mingles at Beaupré
-with the remains of a hoary past.' If you do
-not wish to palliate it, you say, as I do, that
-Ste. Anne de Beaupré is not in the least
-picturesque. I did not particularly care for the
-modern architecture, and the hoary past is not
-particularly in evidence. Do not suppose me
-to say that Beaupré has not a hoary past.
-Red Indians, long before the days of railroads,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P48"></a>48}</span>
-travelled thither to pray at the feet of
-Ste. Anne. Breton seamen, who belong only to
-tradition, promised a shrine to Ste. Anne, if
-she would save them from shipwreck. They
-erected the first chapel. The second and
-larger chapel was built as far back as 1657, and
-miracles were quite frequent from then onwards.
-Nevertheless, the basilica is quite new, and so is
-the whole appearance of the place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I visited it in company with a French-Canadian
-commercial traveller. He was a
-great big good-looking youth with curly hair
-and blue eyes, and he travelled in corsets or
-something of that sort for a Montreal firm.
-I could not help thinking that many ladies
-would buy corsets from him or anything else
-whether they wanted them or not, because of
-his charming boyish manner and his good
-looks. He asked me to go to Ste. Anne de
-Beaupré with him. He said that he supposed
-that I was not a Catholic, but that did not
-matter. He wished to go to the good
-Ste. Anne, and it would be a good thing to go.
-He had been several times before, but he had
-not been for several years. He could easily
-take the afternoon off, and first of all we would
-go by the electric train to the good Ste. Anne,
-and then on the way back we would step off
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P49"></a>49}</span>
-at the Falls station, and see the Montmorency
-Falls, and also the Zoo that is there. It would
-be great fun to see the Zoo. He had not seen
-the Zoo for several years, and the animals would
-be very interesting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we took an afternoon electric train.
-There are electric trains for pilgrims, of whom
-a hundred thousand at least are said to visit
-the shrine yearly, and there are also electric
-trains for tourists. We took a tourist train,
-and having secured one of the little handbooks
-supplied by the electric company, had the
-gratification of knowing that even if the car
-was pretty full it was, so the company claimed,
-run at a greater rate of speed than any other
-electric service.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At times in Canada I found myself getting
-very slack in attempting descriptions of things
-simply because some company that had rights
-of transport over the particular district had,
-so to speak, thrust into my hand some pamphlet
-in which all the description was done for me.
-Thus it was in the case of the district line
-between Quebec and Ste. Anne de Beaupré. 'It
-is difficult,' I read in the electric company's
-handbook which we had secured, 'to describe
-in words the dainty beauty of the scenery along
-this route.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P50"></a>50}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is a nuisance,' I said to my companion,
-'because words are the only things I could
-describe it in.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is much better to smoke,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we smoked; and now I tell you straight
-out of that illogical pamphlet, that 'The route
-from Quebec to Ste. Anne may be compared to
-a splendid panorama. There are shady woodlands
-and green pastures, undulating hills and
-sparkling rivers, whose banks are lined with
-pretty villages, the tinned spires of the parish
-churches rising above the rest of the houses,
-sparkling in the sun.' There, a little
-ungrammatically, you have the scene 'to which,'
-adds my pamphlet, 'the Falls of Montmorency
-river add a touch of grandeur.' Ste. Anne de
-Beaupré itself is twenty-one miles from Quebec.
-We went straight from the station into the
-church, where the first thing to catch the eye
-are the votive offerings and particularly the
-crutches, walking-sticks, and other appliances
-left there by pilgrims who, having been cured
-of their infirmities by miracle, had no further
-use for these material aids. It is difficult to
-arrange such things in any way that can be
-called artistic, and since the general effect is
-nothing but ugly it might be wise for the church
-officials also to dispense with such material
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P51"></a>51}</span>
-aids to faith. Apart from these the most
-striking object is the miraculous statue. It
-stands on a pedestal ten feet high and twelve
-feet from the communion rails. The pedestal
-was the gift of a New York lady, the statue
-itself was presented by a Belgian family. At
-the foot of it many people were kneeling. A
-mass was being said and the church was very
-full, and every time a petitioner got up from
-his knees from the feet of the statue another
-moved down the aisle and took his or her place.
-I suppose we were in the church fully half an
-hour before my companion found an opportunity
-to go and kneel at the feet of the good
-Ste. Anne, and having watched him there, I got
-up from my place and went out into the village.
-It was rather a depressing village, full of small
-hotels and restaurants and shops stocked with
-miraculous souvenirs. I suppose more rubbish
-is sold in this line than in any other. After
-inspecting a variety of it, I bought a bottle of
-cider and a local cigar and sat on a fence
-smoking until my friend reappeared. He came
-out most subdued and grave&mdash;not in the least
-the boisterous person who had gone in&mdash;and
-said we would now go back. As we had to wait
-half an hour for a returning train, I suggested
-that we should go and have some more cider,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P52"></a>52}</span>
-but he said no, he would rather drink from the
-holy spring. 'Although this water,' said my
-pamphlet, 'has always been known to be there,
-it is only within the last thirty or thirty-five
-years that the pilgrims began to make a pious
-use of it. What particular occasion gave rise
-to this confidence, or when this practice first
-spread among the people, cannot be positively
-asserted. However it may be, it is undeniable
-that faith in the water from the fountain has
-become general, and the use of it, from motives
-of devotion, often produces effects of a
-marvellous nature.' Unfortunately, the fountain was
-not working, owing, I expect, to the water
-having got low in the dry weather, and my friend
-had to go without his drink. He said, however,
-that it did not matter, and remained in a grave,
-aloof state all the way back in the train as far
-as the Falls station, and indeed till we got to
-the Zoo in the Kent house grounds. There,
-the exertion of trying to get the beavers to
-cease working and come out and show themselves
-to me&mdash;an exertion finally crowned
-with success, for the fat, furry, silent creatures
-came out and sat on a log for us&mdash;livened him
-up a bit. But he fell into a muse again in
-front of the cage containing the timber wolf,
-and remained there so long that I was almost
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P53"></a>53}</span>
-overcome by the smell of this ferocious animal.
-I got him away at last, and I do not think
-he spoke after that until we got to Quebec
-and were walking from the station to our
-inn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have made a vow,' he then said suddenly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What sort of vow?' I inquired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I made it this afternoon,' he said, 'to the
-good Ste. Anne&mdash;never any more to drink
-whisky.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It's not a bad vow to have made,' I said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' he said seriously, 'whisky is very
-terrible stuff. I shall never drink it again.
-When I drink it it goes very quickly to my
-head. Soon I am tight. That will not do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Much better not to drink it certainly,' I
-agreed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' he continued vehemently. 'I am
-married. You did not guess that perhaps?
-Also it is only recently that I have gone "on
-the road." If the company I work for hears
-that I go about and get tight, I shall at once
-be fired. So I shall not drink any more whisky.
-Never. That is why I made the vow to the
-good Ste. Anne.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We walked in silence the rest of the way to
-the inn, and I reflected on the nature of vows.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P54"></a>54}</span>
-It seemed very possible that a vow like this
-might easily be a help to my companion.
-He was obviously not what is called a strong
-character. It is strange how often a charm of
-manner goes with a weakness of the will.
-And commercial travelling&mdash;particularly
-perhaps in Canada&mdash;lays a man open to the
-temptations of drink. If he went on drinking,
-it would probably mean the ruin of the young
-girl he had married. Only one has always the
-feeling that a vow is only a partial aid to
-keeping upright, just as a stick is to walking.
-A man may lean too heavily on either.
-Moreover, the making of a vow, while it may
-strengthen a man temporarily in one direction
-tends to leave him unbalanced in other
-directions. It makes him feel so strong perhaps
-in one part of him that he forgets other parts
-where he is weak. I rather think that the last
-part of these somewhat superficial reflections
-upon vows occurred to me later in the evening,
-and not as we were walking home. We had
-had supper by that time, and my companion
-had drunk a good deal of water during the meal&mdash;a
-beverage, by the way, which is not particularly
-safe either here or in any other Canadian
-town. At times he had been depressed by it,
-at times elevated. After we had smoked
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P55"></a>55}</span>
-together and he had grown more and more
-restless, he jumped up and said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let us go out for a walk.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where to?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, up on to the terrace,' he said. 'I tell
-you,' he went on excitedly, 'where I will take
-you. There is a special place up there that I
-know very well. It is where one meets the
-girls. We will go there to-night and meet the
-girls.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Really, I could have given a very good
-exposition of the temptation offered by vows
-at that moment when he suggested this
-Sentimental Journey.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P56"></a>56}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII
-<br /><br />
-A HABITANT VILLAGE AND ITS NOTAIRE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'Il trotte bien.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The second time I made use of this simple
-compliment I was again being driven by a
-French Canadian, and again it was on an
-extraordinarily bad road. But the vehicle
-was a sulky, and the road was a country
-road&mdash;about halfway between Quebec and Montreal.
-I had been already two days in the Habitant
-country which the ordinary Englishman misses.
-Tourists in particular will go through French
-Canada too fast. Their first stop after Quebec
-is Montreal, and the guide-books help them to
-believe that they have lost nothing. It may
-be that they do lose nothing in the way of
-spectacular views or big hotels, but on the
-other hand they have undoubtedly lost the
-peaceful charm of many a Laurentian village,
-and they have seen nothing at all of the life
-of the French-Canadian farmer. That is a
-pity for the English tourist, because they too,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P57"></a>57}</span>
-the Habitants, belong to the Empire, and we
-ought to know them for what they are apart
-from their politics&mdash;courteous, solid,
-essentially prudent folk, often well to do, but with
-no disposition to make a show of themselves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had spent my two days at the villa of a
-most hospitable French lady, in one of the
-older villages on the St. Lawrence. It was
-not exactly a beautiful village&mdash;rather
-ramshackle in fact&mdash;but remarkably peaceful, and
-the great smooth river running by must give
-it a perennial charm, such as comes from having
-the sea near. I had missed my train going
-from that village, and had passed the time by
-taking lunch at a little inn near the station.
-It was Friday, and the landlord gave me pike
-and eggs for lunch. I had seen my pike and
-several others lying in a sandy ditch near,
-passing a sort of amphibious life in it, until
-Friday and a guest should make it necessary
-for one of them to go into the frying pan.
-The landlord came and chatted with me while
-I had lunch, and was grieved to find that I
-was not a Catholic. I was English, but not
-Catholic? I said that was so, and he shook
-his head sorrowfully. But there were Catholics
-in England, he asked a little later. I said, Oh
-yes, certainly. Many? I said that there
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P58"></a>58}</span>
-must be a good many, but I could not tell
-him the exact numbers. Would a tenth of
-the English at least be Catholics, he next
-demanded? I said I thought at least that
-number, but I left him, I fear, a disappointed
-man. He had hoped more from England
-than that, and even my strenuous praise of
-the fried pike did not draw a smile from him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My compliment about the horse drawing
-the sulky&mdash;to go back to that drive, obtained
-a better response. The driver replied in the
-French tongue: 'Monsieur, he trots very well,
-particularly in considering that he has the
-age of twenty-eight years.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I said that this was wonderful, and the
-driver replied that it was, but that in French
-Canada such wonders did happen. He was
-intensely patriotic, and this made the drive
-more interesting. He was all for French-Canadian
-things, excepting, I think, the roads,
-which were indeed nothing but ruts, some
-of the ruts being less deep than the others,
-and being selected accordingly for the greater
-convenience of our ancient steed. I liked his
-patriotism. It was at once so genuine and so
-complete. For example, when I said that I
-had not seen any Jersey cows on the farms
-we had passed, the driver said: 'No. The
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P59"></a>59}</span>
-cow of Jersey is a good cow and gives much
-milk. But the Canadian cow is a better cow
-and gives still more milk.' I was unable to
-make out what the prevailing milch-cow was
-in that part. Canada has, I believe, begun
-to swear by the Holstein, but this can hardly
-as yet be claimed as the Canadian cow. Still
-it passed the time very pleasantly to have my
-driver so enthusiastic, and of what should a
-man speak well, if not of his own country?
-He articulated his French very slowly and
-distinctly, so that I was able to understand
-him more easily than I should have understood
-a European Frenchman. I was surprised
-at this, because one is usually told that French
-Canadians talk so queerly that they are very
-hard to follow. Perhaps my obvious inferiority
-in the language caused those Habitants I met
-to adapt themselves to my necessity. I can
-only say that from a few days' experience of
-conversation with all sorts and conditions, I
-carried away the impression that French-Canadian
-was a very clear and easy language.
-As for the country, I should call it serene and
-spacious in aspect rather than fine. The
-farmhouses are pleasant enough and comfortable
-within, but their immediate surroundings are
-apt to be untidy. Very seldom of course
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P60"></a>60}</span>
-does one see a flower garden, and vegetables
-do not make amends for the lack of flowers.
-On the other hand, the tobacco patch that is
-so frequently to be seen in the neighbourhood of
-the small farms is pleasant to look at, especially
-for one who thinks much of smoke. There is
-not much satisfaction to the eye in the small
-wired fields, nor would either the farming or
-the soil startle an English farmer. I think
-that the maple woods are the one thing that he
-would regard with real envy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nevertheless, no one would have denied that
-it was a really pretty village, to which my
-driver brought me at last in the sulky. It
-was built all round an old church in a sort of
-dell, behind which the land rose steeply to a
-wood of maples. I had been given an introduction
-to the curé, and we drove to his house
-by the church, only to be told by the sexton
-(I think it was the sexton) that Monsieur le
-Curé had, much to his regret, been called to
-Quebec, but had begged that I would go over
-to the notaire, who would be pleased to show
-me everything that was to be seen. We went
-to the notaire. I think he was the
-postmaster too&mdash;at any rate he lived in the post
-office, and a very kindly old gentleman he
-was. I do not know one I have liked more
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P61"></a>61}</span>
-on so short an acquaintance, though he did
-start by giving me Canadian wine to drink. It
-was a sort of port or sherry&mdash;or both mixed&mdash;and
-was made, I think he said, in Montreal.
-It had the genuine oily taste, but also a smack
-of vinegar. That in itself would not have
-mattered so much, if the notaire had not said
-it was best drunk with a little water, and
-provided me with water from a saline spring
-which had its source in his backyard. These
-saline springs seem not uncommon in Canada,
-and must be considered as a distinct asset.
-But not mixed with port. Some local tobacco
-which was very good, as indeed much of the
-tobacco grown in Quebec province seems to be,
-took the taste away, and after that the notaire
-proposed that he should take me out to see
-one of the huts where they boil down the maple
-water in the early spring. He told me that
-my own horse and driver should rest, and that
-we should go on the carriage of Monsieur
-Blanc which was, it appeared, already in
-waiting, together with Monsieur Blanc
-himself. Monsieur Blanc was the local miller,
-and solely for the purpose of showing the
-village to a stranger from England he had put
-himself to all this trouble. After we had all
-bowed to one another and exchanged
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P62"></a>62}</span>
-compliments, we started for the maple wood, and all
-the way the notaire explained to me the economy
-of the village. It appeared that the farms
-round averaged eighty acres of arable land,
-and a man and his son would work one of that
-size. Each farmer would also have rights of
-grazing on pasture land which was held in
-common&mdash;not to mention his piece of maple
-wood. All the farmers belonged to a co-operative
-farmers' society, which saved much when
-purchasing seeds, implements, and so forth.
-The notaire himself was secretary of this
-society. I believe he was also secretary of
-pretty well everything that mattered, and
-might be regarded as the business uncle of the
-parish in which the curé was spiritual father.
-As we drove along, avoiding roads as much
-as possible, because the fields were so much
-more level, he greeted everybody and
-everybody greeted him, stopping their field work
-for the purpose. Jules left hay-making to
-show us the shortest cut to the nearest hut;
-Antoine fetched the key. It was a tiny wooden
-shack, the one we inspected&mdash;standing in the
-middle of the trees&mdash;with just room in it for
-the heating apparatus and the boilers to boil
-the maple water in. The cups which are
-attached to the trees in the early spring, when
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P63"></a>63}</span>
-the sap begins to run&mdash;the tapping is done
-high up&mdash;hung along the wooden walls. The
-notaire explained the whole process to me.
-In the spring, when all is sleet and slush and
-nothing can be done on the farm, the farmer
-and perhaps his wife come up into the wood,
-and tap the trees and boil the water up until
-the syrup is formed. It takes them days,
-very cold days, and they camp out in the hut,
-though it hardly seemed possible that there
-should be room for them. But it is all very
-healthy and pleasant, and they drink so much
-of the syrup, while they are working, that
-they usually go back to their farms very 'fat
-and salubrious.' So the notaire said, and he
-also assured me that seven years before another
-English visitor who spoke French very badly
-(he put it much more politely than that though)
-had come to the village in the spring, and slept
-in one of the huts for days, and helped make
-the sugar and enjoyed himself thoroughly. I
-told the notaire I could quite believe it and
-wished I had come in the spring too. I am
-not sure that I shall not go back in the spring
-some day, for the simplicity of the place was
-fascinating, even though the railway had come
-closer, and land had doubled in value, and the
-farmers were more scientific than they used to
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P64"></a>64}</span>
-be and made more money, though even so&mdash;as
-the notaire earnestly declared&mdash;they would
-would never spend it on show. I remarked
-that the notaire, even while he was recounting
-these modern innovations, such as wealth, was
-not carried away by the glory of them as a
-Westerner would be. He took a simple pride
-in the fact that the village marched forward,
-but he was prouder still that it remained
-modest. And when we got back to the post
-office, he told me that what he liked best was
-the simplicity of it all. People used to ask
-him sometimes why he who spoke English
-and Latin and Greek, for he had been five
-years at college, qualifying to become a notaire,
-should be content to live in such a small
-out-of-the-way place, instead of setting up in
-Quebec or Montreal. They could not understand
-that to be one's own master, and not to
-be rushed hither and thither at the beck of
-clients, contented him, especially in a place
-where the farmers looked upon him as their
-friend, and he could play the organ in the
-village church. He made me understand it
-very well, even though his English was rusty
-(for I think the syrup-making Englishman
-had been the last he had talked with), and he
-had a scholarly dislike to using any but the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P65"></a>65}</span>
-right word, and he would sometimes bring up
-a dozen wrong ones and reject them, before
-our united efforts found the only one that
-conveyed his precise meaning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think I understood, and many times on
-the way back, seated behind the twenty-eight
-year-old horse, I said to myself, that altogether
-the notaire was a very fine old gentleman, and
-if there were many such to be found in the
-French Canadian villages, I hoped they would
-not change too soon. To make the money
-circulate&mdash;after the fashion of the Toronto
-drummer&mdash;is a virtue no doubt; but courtesy
-and simplicity and prudence are also virtues
-that not the greatest country that is yet to
-come will find itself able to dispense with.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P66"></a>66}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII
-<br /><br />
-GLIMPSES OF MONTREAL
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Just as a man who knows mountains can in
-a little time describe the character of a
-mountain that is new to him, so a man who knows
-the country in general will soon find himself
-becoming acquainted with new country. It
-is not so with cities. Only a long residence
-in it will reveal the character of a city. I
-suppose that is because man is more subtle
-than nature. A clay land is always a clay
-land; it produces the same crops, the same
-weeds, the same men. But who will undertake
-to say what a city on a clay land produces?
-Only the man who has long been familiar with
-the particular city, and he probably will not
-even be aware that it stands on clay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This is preparatory to saying that being a
-stranger to Montreal, I did not find out much
-about it in the few days I was there, and I
-will not pretend that I did. It is, I suppose,
-architecturally, far the most beautiful city in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P67"></a>67}</span>
-the Dominion, and indeed in the Western
-Hemisphere, and for that very reason appears
-less strange to European eyes than most other
-Canadian towns. I would not suggest that all
-European towns are architecturally beautiful,
-or that Montreal is anything but Canadian
-inwardly. Superficially it looks like some fine
-French town. It also smells French.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'But them thereon didst only breathe<br />
- And sentst it back to me,<br />
- Since when it blows and smells, I swear,<br />
- Not of itself but thee.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Thus England might address France on the
-subject of Montreal, though indeed France
-did more than breathe on Montreal. I would
-not be taken to suggest that the smell is a
-malodorous one&mdash;merely French. You get
-just that smell in summer in any French town
-from Rouen to Marseilles, and it is probably
-due to nothing but the sun being at the right
-temperature to bring out the mingled scent
-of omelettes and road grit, cigarettes, <i>apéritifs</i>,
-and washing in sufficient strength to attract
-the sensitive British nose. As for Montreal's
-French appearance&mdash;the city is by all accounts
-strictly divided into a French East-end and
-an English West-end, St. Laurent being the
-dividing line. But when I passed west of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P68"></a>68}</span>
-St. Laurent, and hundreds of French men and
-French women and French children continued
-to file past me, and I asked my way many
-times in English and was not understood, I
-began to doubt the reality of that dividing
-line. It seems a pity that there should be one,
-but there is of course, and it runs through
-Canada as well as Montreal. Race and religion
-and language combine to keep that line marked
-out, and it only becomes faint in business
-quarters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The time has gone by for great commercial
-undertakings to be conducted by means of
-gesticulations or by the aid of an interpreter.
-Master and man must speak the same language,
-at any rate outwardly. Therefore all clerks
-learn English, which is also American; and I
-take it that statistics, if they were kept, would
-show many more French Canadians speaking
-English every year&mdash;whatever they may be
-thinking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So commerce, long the butt of moralists,
-takes its part among the moral influences of
-the world. Already writers like Mr. Angell
-have begun to assure us that it alone&mdash;by
-reason of its enormous and far-reaching
-interests&mdash;can keep international war at a
-distance: here is an example of how it
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P69"></a>69}</span>
-increases peace within a nation. In the end,
-perhaps, Mammon himself may appear, purged
-of his grossness upon the canonical list&mdash;St. Mammon!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Montreal has, so I am told, sixty-four
-millionaires&mdash;real, not dollar millionaires; self-made,
-not descended millionaires; strenuous, not idle
-millionaires. Most of them live in Sherbrooke
-Street, or near it, on the way up to the Mountain.
-It is a fine wide road with an extraordinary
-variety of houses in it. You cannot point to
-any one house and say this is the sort of house a
-millionaire builds, for the next one is quite
-different, and so is the next and the next.
-It is natural that Canadians should be more
-original in their house-building than our
-millionaires. They are more original men
-altogether. They have made their money in a
-more original way, and when they have made
-it, they have to think out original methods of
-spending it&mdash;unlike ours, who find the etiquette
-of it all ready made for them, and a practised
-set of people who want nothing more than to
-be able to help millionaires scatter their money
-in the only correct and fashionable way. You
-have to think everything out for yourself in
-Canada, even to the spending of your money.
-That is, if you have the money in large quantities.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P70"></a>70}</span>
-For the ordinary person the inherent slipperiness
-of the dollar suffices, and he will find
-that it will circulate itself without his worrying.
-The diversity of house-building, such as may
-be found in Sherbrooke Street, should give
-encouragement to Canadian architects, but
-does, as a matter of fact, let in the American
-architects as well. I could not feel that they
-had altogether succeeded in this street&mdash;certainly
-not half so well as they have succeeded
-in some of the business buildings, especially
-the interior of the Bank of Montreal&mdash;but that
-is not surprising. Architects must have their
-motives, and the reasons that went to the
-building of some of the stately private houses
-of Europe have ceased to exist now. The most
-that a man can demand from his house&mdash;certainly
-in Canada&mdash;is that it shall be luxurious.
-Nobody is going to keep retainers there.
-The three hundred servants even that went to
-make up the household of an Elizabethan
-nobleman could not be had in Canada either for
-love or money. Those three hundred serve in
-the bank or the shops&mdash;not in the houses&mdash;and
-it is there that the big man works also.
-Slowly we come to the right proportions of
-things; nor am I suggesting that the private
-houses of the Canadian millionaires are in the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P71"></a>71}</span>
-least lacking in size. They are as large as they
-need be, if not larger; and where they did not
-altogether succeed was, I thought, in the
-attempt made with some of them to achieve
-importance by rococo effects. The road itself,
-curiously enough, was rather bad and rutty;
-I began to think, seeing it, that there is some
-strange influence at work in French Canada
-which prevents a road from ever being first-rate.
-It may be that since roads there are only
-needed in summer, for a half year instead
-of a whole one, the care and affection we lavish
-upon them is not necessary. The good snow
-comes and turns Sherbrooke Street into a
-sleigh-bearing thoroughfare only comparable with
-those of St. Petersburg. The ruts are drifted
-up and vanish&mdash;why bother about them?
-It is a good enough explanation. If another is
-needed, it may be that there is money to be
-made&mdash;by those in charge of the keeping up of
-the roads&mdash;by the simple method of not keeping
-them up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Montreal has slums as well as Sherbrooke
-Street, which seems to show that sixty-four
-millionaires are no real guarantee of a city's
-perfectness. I heard about those slums from
-the editor of one of Montreal's leading
-newspapers. The subject arose out of a question
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P72"></a>72}</span>
-I put him as to whether he could tell me the
-difference between Conservatives and Liberals
-in Canada. Some people maintain that the
-difference even in England is so slight as to be
-unreal. To a Canadian who is not much of a
-politician (but is, of course, either a Liberal
-or a Conservative), the question amounts to
-being a catch question. He has to think for a
-long time before he answers. This editor, who
-was a Liberal, took it quite coolly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh,' he said, 'Liberals here are very much
-like Liberals in the old country; we stand for
-Social Reform and the interests of the People.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he told me about the slums in Montreal.
-But for these I should have felt doubtful about
-the parallel, even though it was drawn by so
-eminent an authority as the editor of a newspaper.
-For, naturally, at present in most parts
-of Canada there is no People (with our own
-English capital P) to stand for, just as there are
-no peers and no Constitution. Where there
-are slums, there may be a People to be represented.
-The more is the pity that there should
-be slums. Why does Montreal possess them?
-Largely, I suppose, for the reason that any very
-great city possesses them. There are landlords
-who can make money out of them, there are
-people so poor that they will live in them;
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P73"></a>73}</span>
-and their poverty is accounted for by the fact
-that cities draw the destitute as the moon the
-tides. It seems against reason that Canada,
-capable of absorbing hundreds of thousands of
-immigrants, calling for them to be absorbed,
-so long as they are able men, should have any
-destitute to be drawn to the cities; but it has
-to be remembered that no immigration laws
-can really prevent a percentage of incapables
-arriving. They may not be incapables as such,
-but they are incapables on the land, which is
-indeed in Canada endlessly absorbent, but
-absorbent only of those who have in them in
-some way the land-spirit. To expect the land
-to take on hordes of the city-bred without ever
-failing is to dream. It would be easier for the
-sea to swallow men clothed in cork jackets.
-Some are bound to be rejected, and they turn
-to the cities. But the cities of a New World
-cannot absorb indefinite numbers of men;
-London or Glasgow cannot. The work is not
-there for them&mdash;not for all of them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Canadian winter also has to be remembered
-as a factor driving men to cities like
-Montreal. Even good men on the land cannot
-always during the winter obtain work on the
-farms; or think that the little they can make
-there is not worth while. So they, too, make
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P74"></a>74}</span>
-for the cities, not always to their own
-improving. This problem of the Canadian winter
-is one that has still to be reckoned with, and no
-doubt the Canadians will solve it in due
-course&mdash;perhaps by some extension of the Russian
-methods whereby the peasant of the summer
-becomes the handicraftsman of the winter.
-It is not the winter itself that is at fault in
-Canada, as used to be thought; it is the method
-of dealing with it. The Canadian may not mind
-the hard, cold months&mdash;may even boast of
-them, but he cannot ignore them. And the
-solution of the winter problem seems to be that
-though Canada is marked out as an agricultural
-country, it must also equally become a
-manufacturing one, so that men&mdash;who cannot
-hibernate like dormice&mdash;may be able to work the
-year through. The whitest nation is that
-nation whose leisure is got by choice not by
-compulsion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There must be local reasons, too, for Montreal
-slums, but these a visitor is not happy in
-describing. Municipal mismanagement is
-unfortunately not exclusive to Europe; and my
-editor gave me examples of it in Montreal
-which were impressive without being novel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He also pointed out that there were forty
-thousand Jews in Montreal, as though that
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P75"></a>75}</span>
-might have something to do with her slums.
-Others point out that the Catholic Church,
-which believes that the poor must be always
-with us, is supreme in Montreal; poverty and
-the faith, they say, go always together. I think
-it is truest to argue that, while all these things
-are in their degree contributory, it is not fair
-to fix on any one of them as the chief cause of
-the ill. One thing is certain. Montreal's slums
-are not typical of Canada, but of a great city.
-No great city has as yet found itself completely,
-and the greater it is, the less soluble are its
-problems of poverty. It may be that they can
-be resolved only by the great cities ceasing to
-exist in the form we know them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile it looks as though the welfare
-of employees is not being neglected by the
-leading directors of industry. Take, for
-example, the Angus Shops, which are larger than
-any other engineering shops in the world.
-Here are built these huge houses of cranks and
-pistons, the railway engines of the Canadian
-Pacific, that hustle one from end to end of the
-Dominion; here also are turned out all else
-that appertains to the biggest railway company
-in existence. In these shops a system has been
-introduced which might be called a Bourneville
-system, only Canadianised. The management
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P76"></a>76}</span>
-refers to it as Welfare Work, and it consists
-mainly in certain methods whereby the men
-can obtain good food&mdash;while they are working&mdash;at
-low prices, apprentices are helped to an
-education, the cost of 'holiday homes' is
-defrayed, and so on. Very sensibly the management
-admits the system to be a part of a business
-plan, which it finds remunerative. The idea
-that beneficence plays a leading part in it is
-almost scouted; indeed it would not be easy
-to persuade Canadian working-men that their
-bosses were doing things from charity. I went
-over the shops, and found them built on a vast
-and airy scale. Not being an engineering sort
-of person, I usually feel, when I invade a
-machinery place, like some unfortunate beetle
-that has strayed into a beehive, and may at any
-moment be attacked by the busy and alarming
-creatures that are buzzing about there. As I
-watched the huge engines, swung like bags of
-feathers from the roof, some black demon
-would heave showers of sparks at me, and when
-I started back, another would come raiding out
-with red-hot tongs. I admired respectfully.
-But I am one of those who can enjoy my
-honey just as much without knowing just
-how it was made. Still, here was a big bit
-of Montreal, and what miles of French houses
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P77"></a>77}</span>
-with green shutters one drove past to get
-to it!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It would be absurd to suggest that poverty
-or slums are conspicuous things in Montreal.
-The average tourist will see none of them, but
-only many beautiful things&mdash;from the Bank of
-Montreal to the Cathedral, from the Lachine
-Rapids to the Mountain. I will not describe
-shooting the Rapids, it has been so often done.
-I wish I could describe the view from the
-Mountain. It is the most beautiful view of a
-city that can be seen. Marseilles from her hill
-is beautiful, so is Paris from Champigny.
-From neither of these, nor from any hill that
-I know of, is there so complete a view of so fair
-a city. The Mountain is wooded, and through
-the arches of the trees you gain a score of
-changing outlooks; but from the edge you see
-all Montreal&mdash;houses and streets and spires,
-each roof and gate, each chimney and window&mdash;so
-it seems. And beyond, the great river,
-and beyond, and on every side&mdash;Canada. If
-there were a mountain above Oxford,
-something like this might be seen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was up this wooded steep to Fletcher's
-field, where an altar had been set up, that the
-great Eucharistic procession of 1910 wound its
-way. I was in Montreal just before this event,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P78"></a>78}</span>
-for which the Montrealers had spent months
-preparing, and I realised a little why Montreal
-hopes some day to be the New Rome. The
-whole city was in a fervour of enthusiasm. A
-society had been formed for the special purpose
-of growing flowers to line the way along which
-the Cardinal-legate would walk, and gifts of
-money for the same purpose had been received
-from every part of Canada. The papers, of
-course, were full of every detail about Church
-dignitaries arriving or about to arrive. Nor
-were the shops behindhand. 'Eucharistic
-Congress! House decoration at moderate prices'
-was everywhere placarded; and papal flags and
-papal arms were to be had cheap. There were
-Congress sales, too, and you could buy Congress
-'creations' from the dressmakers, Congress
-hats from the milliners, Congress boots from the
-bootmakers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the day that Cardinal Vannutelli arrived,
-in a dismal and violent downpour of rain, all
-Montreal in macintoshes was to be seen
-dashing for the Bonsecours wharf to offer its
-respectful greetings to the papal legate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Will the Montrealers' dream of providing the
-New Rome ever be achieved? Who can say?
-Rome, though Italians may become subversive
-of the faith, will perhaps stand for ever. If it
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P79"></a>79}</span>
-ceased, as the centre of the Catholic faith,
-Montreal might certainly claim to take its
-place. It is already the centre of
-French-Canadian Catholicism; it might become the
-religious centre of Canada. There is no
-certainty that Catholicism will persist in Canada
-only among the French Canadians. It seems
-equally possible that Rome will prevail among
-non-French Canadians. Both in Canada and
-the States her strides forward have been
-enormous&mdash;comparable perhaps only to the
-steps taken in other directions by Free Thought
-in Europe. Is it that Catholicism makes
-peculiar appeal in a new country, or that in
-these new countries the propagation of the
-faith has been great and unceasing? These
-are debatable questions (though undebatable,
-I think, is the statement that in the New
-World Rome has a marvellous history of things
-attempted splendidly and achieved without
-reproach). I will not debate, then, but rather
-return to the Mountain and ask you to picture
-the great Eucharistic procession moving slowly
-up to it&mdash;up to the altar built there in the
-open, under the high and clear Canadian skies&mdash;all
-the inhabitants of a mighty city moving
-with it, till the city itself is left behind and
-all that is low and earthly left for the moment
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P80"></a>80}</span>
-with it. Then you will have in your mind one
-picture of Montreal at least not unworthy of
-it. It will be a picture of Montreal at its best
-and highest&mdash;a city of the faithful&mdash;near to their
-Mountain.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P81"></a>81}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX
-<br /><br />
-TORONTO, NIAGARA FALLS, AND A NEGRO PORTER
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-From Montreal to Toronto is a pleasant run
-through a southern part of Canada. One
-passes orchards and woods and Smith's Falls,
-where bricks are made, and Peterborough,
-which has the largest hydraulic lift-lock in
-the world. The Union railway station at
-Toronto, when I got there, was a seething mass
-of people and baggage, with an occasional
-railway official hidden in the vortex. I spent
-an hour trying to put a bag into the parcel-room,
-and after that gave up trying. Canadians
-are singularly patient in matters of this kind.
-Laden with heavy bags, they will collect in
-crowds outside the small window of a
-parcel-room, and burdened thus will wait there for
-hours without a murmur, while the youth
-inside lounges about at his leisure. My temper
-has frequently been stretched to the limit in
-Germany when I have had to wait perhaps ten
-minutes for a penny stamp while the Prussian
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P82"></a>82}</span>
-postal official behind the glass slit curled his
-moustaches in imitation of the Kaiser. I think
-the methods at that parcel-room in Toronto
-were even more trying. I will admit that it
-was Labour Day, and that Toronto was also in
-the throes of the World's Fair. But in a city
-of that size one would expect some preparation
-to be made for forthcoming throes. The truth
-seems to be that throughout Canada important
-events, attracting immense crowds, are brought
-off without any extra provision being made.
-Montreal managed to contain its Congress
-hordes pretty well, but Toronto during the
-World's Fair had a general air about it of sleeping
-six in a bed, if it slept at all. I kept coming
-across the same sort of thing at other places.
-Calgary, I remember, looked for the few days
-I was there like the Old Kent Road on a
-Saturday night, so crowded was it with people who
-had come in to witness the return to its native
-heath of a victorious football team. Regina
-was overrun with the Canadian bankers who,
-in massive formation, were touring the North-West.
-In one or two small places in the Rockies
-enormous trainloads of Canada's leading
-merchants, who were inspecting British Columbia
-with an eye to its future, were deposited
-for a day in passing, and caused as much
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P83"></a>83}</span>
-confusion as the canoe-loads of savages must have
-done when they descended on Robinson Crusoe's
-island.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Labour Day is in the New World very different
-from what it is with us. In Canada, if you
-like, you may for three hundred and sixty-four
-days labour and do all that you have to do, but
-the three hundred and sixty-fifth is Labour Day,
-and no manner of work&mdash;except transportation&mdash;may
-be done that day. Transport work is
-necessary, because by way of observing Labour
-Day it is the thing to go somewhere in great
-multitudes, preferably by rail, and pursue the
-sort of pleasure that is only to be obtained by
-those who seek it multitudinously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Toronto was on this occasion a chosen spot
-for people to rollick in. This, added to the fact
-that the World's Fair was also in progress,
-prevented me from being able to get a room
-for the night, though I applied at five different
-hotels. At the sixth, which was full of excited
-commercial travellers, I was granted a bed on
-a top landing. I did not mind so much because
-I was seeing Toronto in a lively state.
-Ordinarily, I imagine, Toronto is the least bit too
-decorous, not devoid of cheerfulness, but not
-joyous either. There is nothing Parisian about
-Toronto, you would say. This stands to reason,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P84"></a>84}</span>
-because if there is any Parisian air in Canada at
-all it belongs to Montreal, and Toronto would
-be the last place to imitate Montreal in any
-manner. The extraordinary rivalry that exists
-between the great East Canadian cities never
-leads to imitation. On the plains it is different.
-Winnipeg is the great model for all the little
-towns on the plains. But while Quebec resents
-the idea that Montreal is a much more important
-city than itself, and Montreal regrets that
-the seat of Government should be at so small
-a place as Ottawa, and Toronto considers
-Montreal ill-balanced in spite of its wealth,
-each of them would only consent to expand
-its own real superiority along its own
-particular lines and in its own particular manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still on Labour Night Toronto was quite gay.
-It did not look like the Boston of Canada at
-all, though it has substantial grounds, I read
-somewhere, for making this claim. I could
-realise that it was entitled to make this claim
-if it wanted to. If one shut one's eyes to the
-crowds, one could feel an air of brisk sobriety
-permeating it; and everything that one reads
-about it goes to show that a brisk sobriety is
-what it aims at. It keeps the Sabbath, for
-example, most strictly, though it hustles or
-almost hustles the rest of the week. I should
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P85"></a>85}</span>
-guess Toronto places briskness next to
-godliness, not a very bad second either. Its
-industries and its opulence are too well known
-to be worth detailing here. What struck me
-as most interesting about Toronto was that it
-seemed to represent more than any other place
-in Canada what we mean in England when we
-talk of Canadians. We do not mean the
-French Canadians of Quebec Province, nor the
-American Canadians and English public-school
-boys who are to be found in such numbers in
-Alberta and the plains. The sort of people we
-are thinking of are people who have been born
-in Canada, who have even spent generations
-there, but are, nevertheless, British by descent
-and British in tongue. There are people of
-this sort in other parts of Canada. The
-inhabitants of the Maritime Provinces are such,
-in spite of the fact that Mr. Bourassa has
-claimed that within fifteen years they will
-have become French in language and Roman
-Catholic in faith. Mr. Bourassa has made the
-same claim, to be sure, with regard to the
-inhabitants of Ontario. In the meantime, it
-would be truer to describe the inhabitants of
-Ontario as Canadians in the English sense.
-And Toronto is their capital. It is, of course,
-the home of the United Empire Loyalists who
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P86"></a>86}</span>
-settled here when the States broke away from
-our rule. The temper that made any rule but
-England's and any liberty that was not English
-liberty unendurable still remains, and I think
-Mr. Bourassa will have his work cut out to
-Gallicise them. Still even the sternest
-traditions of loyalty do not prevent&mdash;nay, even
-encourage&mdash;a certain change in the character
-of a people.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is probable that Ontarians are less English
-now than they were, just as Quebeckers are
-less French. Which have the right to be
-held more essentially Canadian may be
-questioned, but I repeat that when we
-in England talk of Canadians we have in
-mind a type of men to which the Ontarians
-correspond more than any others. It would
-be absurd, no doubt, to look for the English
-type in a metropolis like London, and perhaps
-it is absurd to look for the Ontarian type in a
-metropolis like Toronto. But it is less absurd,
-I think, and anyhow I did look for it there.
-What did I find? Well, I hope elsewhere to
-go cautiously and delicately into this matter
-of what a typical Canadian is like. Here I
-will only say that if you can imagine a
-Lowland Scot, cautious and self-possessed,
-outwardly resisting American exuberance and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P87"></a>87}</span>
-extravagance, but inwardly by slow degrees
-absorbing&mdash;and thereby moderating&mdash;that
-hustling spirit of which these things are
-manifestations, you have something not unlike the
-Canadian of Toronto. Remember that Toronto
-is the southern gateway of Canada. It fronts
-on the States. It deals with the States.
-Between it and the States there is constant
-intercourse. It pursues the same industries,
-following in many cases the same methods.
-Many American managers of men are to be
-found in Toronto. It is not unnatural that
-some of the American spirit should dwell there
-also, and even tend to breed there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now for the Fair. Fairing is a pretty old
-thing, and I have done a good deal of it, but
-fairing at Toronto struck me as being
-somehow new. I do not mean in the way of the
-exhibits one saw. They were nothing out of
-the way to any one who has seen the more
-famous exhibitions of the Old World, and the
-arrangements struck me as poor. The grounds
-by the lake are fairly extensive, but the
-buildings are second-rate. I thought when I saw
-the fruit exhibit in one of them that the whole
-display was little better than at a little English
-village flower show. But the keenness of the
-crowd visiting the ground! There was the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P88"></a>88}</span>
-novelty. They did not glimpse at things in
-our blasé European way, and then sink into seats
-to listen to the band. They did listen to the
-band, but that was because the band was part of
-the show; and they wanted to do the show, every
-inch of it. Whole families camped for the day
-on the grounds. They brought meals with
-them in paper bags and boxes to fortify
-themselves lest they should drop before they had
-seen everything. Not that there was any lack
-of smartness either. The ladies had on their
-best hats and frocks, and the Canadian best in
-these respects is very fine. But one did not
-suspect them, as one would have suspected
-ladies at the White City or the Brussels
-Exhibition, of being there merely to show themselves
-off. Their frocks were in honour of the Fair.
-The Fair was the thing. It was a scene of the
-greatest enthusiasm under a tolerably hot sun.
-I had been asked to note if any English firms
-had taken the trouble to exhibit, and I am
-bound to say that I saw very few. It seems
-a pity when one considers the sort of people
-who visit the Fair&mdash;not merely a crowd amusing
-itself for an hour or two with glancing at the
-exhibits, but a crowd trying to find out what
-there was to buy&mdash;a crowd with dollars in its
-pockets and plenty of dollars in its banks.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P89"></a>89}</span>
-I dare say there are difficulties in the way.
-There was not, for example, indefinite room
-for more exhibits, nor are Canadian
-manufacturers, with rumours of reduced tariffs
-going about, to be presumed eager to encourage
-competitors. Still, it seemed a pity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I clove my way to bed that night on the top
-landing through a horde of keen commercial
-travellers joyfully discussing all the business
-the exhibition would bring them. Next day
-I went to Niagara, by steamer, across the great
-lake. Toronto owes at least half its greatness
-to the Falls, and there should be, but I do
-not think there is, a really big monument to
-their discoverer, Father Louis Hennepin. Very
-likely, though, the discovery of Niagara was
-its own reward, especially for so inquisitive a
-man as that friar. He has himself confessed
-how, in the old days, when he was only a begging
-friar, sent by the Superior of his Order to beg
-for alms at the seaport of Calais, he used, in
-his curiosity, to hide himself behind tavern
-doors and listen to the sailors within telling of
-their voyages, while their tobacco smoke was
-wafted out and made him 'very sick at the
-stomach.' In the end he was the first white
-man to see the Falls, in the winter of 1687....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were framed in a most gorgeous sunset
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P90"></a>90}</span>
-when I saw them on an August day. The
-green and white foam swooped from a mountain
-of clouds all grey and gold&mdash;clouds piled
-fantastically into the furthest sky. No one
-seeing them in such a light could be disappointed
-with them, but I would forbid any more writers
-to write about them. Every man should be
-his own poet where the greater sights of the
-world are concerned. On second thoughts it
-is permissible to read Mr. Howells on the
-subject, and even Dickens, provided one is never
-likely to see them with one's own eyes. I saw
-the Falls at sunset, by starlight, and in the
-sunrise, and I can commend them at all these times.
-The river that drowned Captain Webb and was
-crossed by Blondin on the tight-rope, though
-extraordinary in its way, seemed to me
-comparatively unbeautiful and uninteresting. Any
-big sea on the Atlantic or Pacific is a finer sight
-and grips a man harder. I like a river quiet
-myself. Moreover, the villas above Niagara
-River give the landscape a domestic air in
-which its mad swirl seems only like an attempt
-to show off malignantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of my pleasantest recollections of Niagara
-is a conversation I had with the porter at the
-hotel where I stopped on the Canadian side.
-He was an American negro, extremely urbane
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P91"></a>91}</span>
-and chatty. He told me that he guessed I
-was an Englishman. It was pretty easy, he
-said, to tell that. I did not feel sure whether
-to feel flattered or not, but I felt sure later,
-when he introduced me to the lift-boy&mdash;a typical
-little stunted anæmic street arab from one of
-our northern cities&mdash;with a wave of the hand
-and the remark, 'Thar's one of your
-fellow-countrymen.' Afterwards, in self-defence, I
-steered the conversation towards Canada, and
-the porter, who regarded himself as an American
-citizen only, told me that the Canadians were
-a slow, stupid people, who could not be trusted
-of themselves to do anything but cultivate a
-little land badly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look at Toronto,' he said; 'do you think
-there'd be any hustle in that place if the
-Canadians had been left to themselves? No,
-sah. But we came along and lent them our
-brains and our enterprise, and I guess now it's
-a big fine city.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P92"></a>92}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X
-<br /><br />
-MASKINONGÉ FISHING ON THE FRENCH RIVER
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A friend, acquainted with Canada, met me in
-Toronto, and I told him I was tired of cities
-and thought of going to the Muskoka Lakes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What do you expect to get there?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Scenery,' I said&mdash;'camping, fishing. A
-Fenimore Cooper existence in the backwoods. Isn't
-it to be had there?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The scenery's all right,' he said, 'and you
-can camp out of course, and there are some
-fish. But if you mean you want a quiet,
-unconventional life&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do for a few days,' I said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You'd better go further than the Muskoka
-district, then,' he said. 'It's beginning to be
-rather a fashionable camping-ground&mdash;quite
-pleasant in its way. If you care to see
-charming American maidens in expensive frocks
-falling out of canoes just on purpose to be
-able to change into frocks still more expensive,
-the Muskoka country is the place for you. If
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P93"></a>93}</span>
-not, you had better come with me and fish for
-maskinongés on the French River.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I did not know where the French River was
-or what maskinongés were, or how you caught
-them; but I said 'Yes,' being very tired of
-cities, and we took the night train from Toronto,
-and at 4.30 A.M. dropped off it on to a bridge
-that spanned a deep, big river. The dawn
-was exceedingly cold and grey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Literally we dropped off the train, for it did
-not stop but only slowed down, and after us
-the negro porter dropped our bags and tackle.
-A minute later the train had vanished, and we
-were left alone on the bridge, staring at the
-rocky, wooded cliffs that rose on either bank.
-Rock, wood, and water indeed met the eye
-wherever one looked. It seemed a country
-where Nature had once built mountains, savage
-and sparsely wooded mountains in the midst
-of a great inland sea, then in a cataclysmal
-mood had dashed them to pieces in every
-direction. And as the boulders and splinters of
-boulders flew, some fell in circles and made
-little lakes out of the great sea; some fell in
-heaped cliffs and banks, between which the sea
-was squeezed into winding, forking streams;
-some fell and sank and left the sea a shallow
-swamp above them; some fell and stood up
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P94"></a>94}</span>
-out of the water and became islands of dry
-rock. Every splinter that flew bore in some
-crack of it a seed of spruce or fir or birch,
-which grew; so that all this barren rock and
-waste of water became crowned with trees.
-I dare say any geologist could explain exactly
-what did happen. I am merely explaining
-what appears to have happened, when you
-look at it the first time with eyes still full of
-sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the French River at which we were
-gazing, and it looked at this point somewhat
-wider than the Thames at Hammersmith. It
-was flat and full with a good current; and
-my friend made some remark about never
-having been given to understand, when he
-was at school in England, that there was such
-a river at all&mdash;much less that it was finer than
-the Thames.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I doubt if one would find it marked on an
-English school map even now,' he continued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know, I'm sure,' I replied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Doesn't it show how disgracefully ignorant
-we are of Canada?' he demanded in the
-hollow tones of an Imperial enthusiast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' I agreed. I daresay I should have
-agreed anyhow. It was disgraceful that we
-neither of us had known anything about the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P95"></a>95}</span>
-French River. But the reason I agreed so
-quickly was that, if I had not done so, he was
-capable of proving to me that such gross
-ignorance, if persisted in, will some day prove
-fatal to the Empire. Whereas I merely wanted
-breakfast. Any one who has been dropped off
-a train at 4.30 on a misty morning in the sort
-of country I have described will sympathise
-with me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Luckily the dawn soon became a little less
-grey, and presently we beheld a wooden shack
-standing on a crag some quarter of a mile up
-stream, with a dozen canoes moored below
-it. Presently also&mdash;and this was more to the
-point&mdash;some one in the shack became aware
-of us standing on the bridge, and put out in
-an old boat fitted with a motor to fetch us. An
-hour later we were enjoying breakfast inside
-the shack, which is really a hotel of sorts, and
-its proprietor, Mr. Fenton, was explaining to
-us all about the fishing to be had on the French
-River. For five dollars&mdash;or nine for two
-persons, he would supply us with a canoe, an
-Indian guide, a tent, provisions, and a hundred
-miles or so of first-class fishing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now for the benefit of all benighted Englishmen
-who do not know the French River or
-Mr. Fenton of Pickerel, but would like to make
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P96"></a>96}</span>
-their acquaintance and that of the maskinongé,
-let me enlarge upon my existence for
-the next few days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Let me begin with Bill. Bill was our Indian
-guide. He was an Ojibway. Youthful, well
-built, reserved in manner, he paddled us on
-the average eight hours, cooked three meals,
-and set up or took down our tent in an
-incredibly short time every day. When either
-of us caught a fish, Bill laughed; when we
-did not, he stared into space. He laughed
-pretty often, for we caught quite a number of
-fish. It seemed unavoidable on the French
-River. Occasionally, in answer to questions,
-Bill spoke. He spoke English. Once or twice
-he spoke on his own account. I remember
-his saying that he preferred eggs to fish. I
-do not know how much Bill thought. Accustomed
-to connect such outward reserve and
-dignity as Bill showed with a philosophic mind,
-I fancied for quite a long time that Bill must
-think a great deal. I doubt it now. Those
-who have studied the Red Indian in his native
-haunts have discovered, I believe, that though
-his mind works in mysterious ways, it does
-work; but not quickly, or with superhuman
-gravity or discernment. As for that look of
-reserve&mdash;it indicates no more brain-work or
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P97"></a>97}</span>
-brain-power than the look of reserve on the
-face of an alligator. When I read hereafter
-that the hero of a book has a reserved face
-and an imperturbable manner (he so very often
-has in the novels of ladies) I shall think of
-Bill, and be delighted. Bill was so soothing.
-So was the French River. It is worth an
-Englishman's while to know of it&mdash;worth his
-private as well as his Imperial while. American
-sportsmen seem to know it well. They come
-fishing up it in fair numbers earlier in the year,
-and they come shooting later&mdash;deer and partridge
-and cariboo. The partridge shooting
-is said to be some of the finest in Canada.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The French explorers also knew the French
-River, for it was by this route that they
-first found their way to Lake Huron when,
-by reason of Bill's ancestors being out on the
-war-path, seeking scalps, they found Lake
-Ontario impossible of crossing. In width it
-varies considerably. Sometimes it narrows
-to rapids, at others it broadens to over a mile
-across, and is divided into channels by steep
-islands. The scenery of it is as changeful as
-its channel. Now the banks are built in sheer
-stone, a hundred feet high; again they rise
-terrace by terrace, smooth as if men had made
-them; a little later they are nothing but a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P98"></a>98}</span>
-chaos of strewn rock. Sometimes the firs
-predominate, sometimes the birches, pale green
-still these latter, or yellowing in the fall. Then
-a splash of cherry colour or crimson shows a
-maple on its way to winter. There are reedy
-backwaters where great pike lie; and natural
-weirs, below which the rock bass wait for their
-food; the deep pools hold pickerel or catfish.
-Everywhere the air exhilarates, and along
-the wider reaches we used to meet a wind like
-a sea-wind that put the river in waves and set
-them tippling into the bows of the canoe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the most part we trolled, six or seven
-miles upstream from Pickerel landing, using
-an artificial minnow or feathered double spoon,
-which latter seemed to attract pike, bass, and
-pickerel, though the last, like the cat-fish,
-preferred a worm. However, it is a dull fish,
-the pickerel, hardly worth catching. Not so
-the cat-fish. A six-pounder of this variety
-can be very strenuous indeed, and the only
-drawback to it is, as an American we met
-remarked, you would have to shut your eyes
-before you could eat it. Certainly it is one
-of the most grotesque and hideous of freshwater
-fish, having four slimy tendrils growing
-from the sides of its mouth, with pig's eyes
-between. The bass is a fine eater. We got
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P99"></a>99}</span>
-bass up to four pounds, and if it is not mean to
-mention such a matter in connection with so
-sporting a fish, you know that when you have
-landed one you have landed a glorious supper.
-Those suppers over the camp fire, which Bill
-could set roaring within three minutes&mdash;so much
-timber and touchwood lies everywhere&mdash;what
-would one not give to enjoy the like in England?
-In an artificial sort of way you can do so.
-Here one is in the wilds as they were from the
-beginning&mdash;except that the Indian is cooking
-for the white man instead of cooking the white
-man for fun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What a delight it was, too, to go to bed on a
-couch of fir boughs, with the wind rustling
-through the birches, to the soothing sound
-of Bill, stretched at the foot of the tent, spitting
-gently into the night. It was a soothing
-sound, until I awoke one night to find that
-Bill had drawn the flap of the tent tight, but
-was still spitting&mdash;I do not know whither.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We spent four days on the French River,
-and our catch averaged over twelve pounds a
-day. It would have been much more if we
-had fished for every sort of fish and taken
-no photographs. As it was we took a good
-many photographs, and spent most of our
-time trying to lure the maskinongé. It is
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P100"></a>100}</span>
-the king-fish of these waters&mdash;a sort of
-pike&mdash;but with the leaping powers of a salmon and
-the heart of a tiger. Bill used to madden
-us with tales of how the last party he had
-guided had landed twenty maskinongés in
-three days. We fished and fished, and then
-I, trolling with a spoon, hooked one. We saw
-him almost instantly take a great white leap
-into the sun, thirty yards from the canoe.
-Then Bill paddled gently for the nearest
-shore at which one could land him, and I
-played him the while with such care ... Oh,
-my maskinongé, never to be mine! I got
-him to the bank&mdash;a flat piece of rock with a
-kindly slope to the water. Perhaps he was
-not more than fifteen pounds in weight.
-Perhaps he was. Bill said not. But then Bill
-had not hooked him; and in fact it was
-Bill who lost him. Anyway, fifteen pounds is
-fifteen pounds, even if they do run to forty.
-Yes, it was Bill that lost him. I stick to
-that&mdash;though I admit that we had all been
-stupid enough to come out without a gaff. So
-it came about that, though I drew him ever
-so gingerly to the rock, yet&mdash;yet as Bill made
-a lunge at him to get him up&mdash;my maskinongé
-leaped once more&mdash;and broke the line!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There for a second he lay, all dazed and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P101"></a>101}</span>
-silvery, in the shallow water&mdash;then woke up
-and vanished, spoon and all!...
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bill vowed that the line was too weak; but
-what line would have stood it?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No matter&mdash;though I did not say 'no
-matter' at the time. Some day perhaps I
-shall go back to the French River. For fifty
-pounds a man could get there from England,
-spend three weeks in fishing, and return again
-to the old country&mdash;a five-weeks trip in all&mdash;and
-know, maybe, the best August and September
-of his life. Yes, I hope to go back and catch
-maskinongé, and listen once more to the wind
-in the birches, and go to sleep again to the
-sound of Bill spitting&mdash;for choice into the
-night.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P102"></a>102}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI
-<br /><br />
-SUPERFICIAL REFLECTIONS AT SUDBURY
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Coming away from the French River, we spent
-a night at Sudbury, which lies in the midst of
-'rich deposits of nickeliferous pyrrhotite.' Had
-I a brain capable of appreciating nickeliferous
-pyrrhotite, I should have got more pleasure
-out of this prosperous mining town than I did.
-My chief recollections of it are that it was
-unattractive, that everybody looked prosperous
-in it, that trucks were shunted under my bedroom
-window all night long, and that the hotel
-proprietor forgot to wake us at the time we
-had requested, with the result that we got to
-the station breakfastless, about half an hour
-after the train was due to start. Luckily it
-was late. I do not care for missing trains at
-any time, but to have missed that train at
-Sudbury would have been singularly annoying.
-There was, in effect, nothing of interest
-in Sudbury if you were not interested in
-nickeliferous pyrrhotite. I know that I should not
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P103"></a>103}</span>
-make such a remark. <i>Humani nihil a me
-alienum</i> should be every writer's motto. But
-it is one thing to possess a motto, another to
-act upon it after trucks have been shunted
-under one's window all night, and one stands
-breakfastless on a dull station very early in the
-morning, waiting for a train that will not come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Let me recall what sort of humanity was
-about. There was a stout, middle-aged Indian
-guide, who told us the finest trout fishing in
-Canada was to be had a few miles from
-Sudbury. He was the most cheerful Indian I saw
-in Canada&mdash;really a cheerful man&mdash;creased with
-smiles. There were miners looking out for
-jobs or leaving them&mdash;mostly spitting. They
-were all young men. I only saw about four
-old men in the whole Dominion. I do not
-know if Canadians are shut up after a certain
-age, or do not grow to it, or retire like butterflies
-to end their days far from the ken of man.
-So that there was nothing surprising in there
-being only young men at the station. More
-surprising was the amount of nationalities that
-seemed to be represented among them. They
-seemed of every race and yet very alike. I
-suppose a miner is a miner, whatever his
-nationality, just as a mahout is a mahout. In the
-strange worlds both these kinds of experts
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P104"></a>104}</span>
-live in, the one sort in the bowels of the earth,
-the other on the necks of elephants, our little
-international distinctions would tend to become
-of less importance. If a man is a miner, he
-may also be a Belgian or a German or a
-Yorkshireman&mdash;but his real country is subterranean:
-he is before all things a citizen of the
-underworld. I do not know if one would get to
-recognise a miner in Canada quite so easily
-as one gets to recognise a miner at home&mdash;for
-miners there shift about more than in England,
-and spend more time, therefore, in the upper
-world; which stamps men differently. Still,
-though tales of new finds in new countries,
-where wages will be almost incredibly high,
-constantly reach them, and tempt them forth,
-after all they emerge from one part of the dark
-earth only to plunge into another&mdash;passing the
-between-time above-ground magnificently; but
-less magnificently than their wives. The prices
-paid by miners' wives for their hats at some
-of the big stores would startle the more
-extravagant of our own smart set. I believe there
-were some lumbermen in the station too,
-taking their ease, but I had not then grown
-to know the look of a lumberjack as I did
-later. The chief thing about him is his
-magnificent complexion&mdash;enviable of women. Canada
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P105"></a>105}</span>
-is not generous in the matter of complexions,
-and one usually hears that the dry winds of
-the winter time are accountable for making
-them poor, especially on the plains. The hot
-stoves of the shacks are a still more likely
-cause. Why then should the lumbermen have
-such incomparable skins? Partly because they
-are men in 'the pink of condition'&mdash;so long
-as they work (their condition out of it is best
-realised by a perusal of <i>Woodsmen of the West</i>,
-one of the few fine local studies of a real type
-of Canadian life that have yet been written);
-partly because their work is in the woods which
-are windless and not dry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tokens of the lumbering life&mdash;besides the
-complexion&mdash;are jollity, a freedom from care
-amounting to something even more delightful
-than irresponsibility, an air of equality with
-something of superiority in it&mdash;indeed, with a
-good deal of superiority in it&mdash;and a childlike
-loquaciousness or an equally childlike dislike
-of talk. These last two qualities are both, I
-fancy, Canadian in general. One is generally
-told that the Canadians are ready talkers,
-will always address a stranger in the train,
-will be inquisitive and self-revealing to an
-extent unimagined by the Englishman. Mr. Kipling
-remarked, I remember, in his Canadian
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P106"></a>106}</span>
-letters that you will learn from an Englishman
-in two years less than you will learn from a
-Canadian in two minutes. Mr. Kipling is
-perhaps the best boaster Canada ever drew to
-herself. My own experience in the matter of
-Canadian conversation is that a lot depends
-upon the individual. Introductions are
-certainly not waited for, and on a journey one may
-chat with strangers to one's heart's content.
-But it must be borne in mind that the traveller
-<i>par excellence</i> in Canada is the commercial
-traveller whose business it is to talk. Off the
-line&mdash;and on it, where other travellers are
-concerned&mdash;one finds men with a gift of silence
-that can at times be disheartening. It is
-natural that this should be so. Men in remote
-places lose the use of their tongues. All men
-are not talkers, indeed I think the great majority
-of men in any country are not talkers. When
-Canadians do talk, it must be admitted that
-they excel us, or their working-men do. Their
-working-men are not only ready, but also,
-superficially at any rate, remarkably
-well-informed about things outside their own
-particular job. They know what is being talked
-of, the prices of things, the value of land,
-astonishingly well. All Canadians know
-something about land; and about what he knows,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P107"></a>107}</span>
-the Canadian is not deprecating. Precisely
-for this reason, perhaps, the more educated men
-among them are at times considerably less
-interesting than ours. It is not that their
-conversational topics are few, but that they are
-circumscribed. The personal and dogmatic
-element enters into them, with the result that the
-subject discussed seems incapable of extension,
-and tends to become circular. I have met quite
-young men who were bores, and bores not only
-in essence, but in manner, like the clergymen
-of our comic papers. I do not know why it is,
-but I do know that it is sad. It may be that
-there are not enough women in Canada to
-prevent it. Men are so patient they will
-stand anything&mdash;even a bore. But where
-women abound, a man may not be tiresome
-either in his clothes or his conversation....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I believe the train at Sudbury was almost
-an hour late, which is why I have gone on so
-long noting trifles at large. When it did come
-in, somewhere about 8 A.M., we discovered
-that it was full up, and people had been standing
-in the first-class carriages all night. They
-had mostly breakfasted since, and the first-class
-carriage we got into was littered from end to
-end with bun-bags and sandwich-papers and
-orange peel, and all the refuse that results
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P108"></a>108}</span>
-from picnics in trains. Tired parents and
-sleepy children were piled above this flotsam
-in an atmosphere hard to endure. Yet
-everybody was cheerful, and though we both wished
-in our hearts that we could have got 'sleepers'
-entitling us to Pullman accommodation, we
-were both grateful&mdash;or ought to have been
-grateful&mdash;that we were privileged to witness
-the contented spirit with which these
-representatives of the great Dominion bore their
-trials. Not a grumble&mdash;oh, my brother
-Englishman, not a grumble! Think of it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P109"></a>109}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII
-<br /><br />
-THROUGH THE HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-I sat in the tail of the train smoking, while
-Ontario dropped behind, league after league
-of thin trees growing out of the rock, of rock
-growing out of bog or lake, of bog or lake
-covering all solid things. Sometimes the trees
-were green and dark; sometimes green and
-light; sometimes nothing but scorched trunks&mdash;black
-skeletons of trees left by a forest fire
-which had killed everything within reach like
-a beast of prey, but consumed only the tender
-parts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Somebody, as we swung over a typical piece
-of muskeg country&mdash;black and juicy bogland
-covered with a foot maybe of clear water&mdash;began
-to tell a story of a train that had run off
-the rails and plunged head first into just such
-a place. It had been a long train, he said;
-a goods train, and it had gone down and down.
-When he saw it, the last truck only stuck out
-of the muskeg. We listened respectfully. It
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P110"></a>110}</span>
-was at least a well-found story, illustrating the
-difficulties the engineers had had in laying the
-lines across a treacherous ooze that nothing
-seemed to fill or make firm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What will become of this one-thousand-mile
-stretch of swamped rock-land? Nobody knows.
-There it lies separating East from West, as land
-impassable, unnavigable as water. Firs and
-minerals, these are the only things to be
-expected from it. Firs tend to grow less, but the
-minerals of course may in the end so count that
-no one will wish the country other than the
-rock it is. All along the line the railway
-authorities have up the names of stations, as
-though there really were stations there, and,
-even more, as though there were villages or
-towns which those stations served. You are
-carried past a hundred such stations&mdash;names
-on a board and nothing more at all, unless it
-be a solitary wooden shack in which some
-railway subordinate passes his life seeing that the
-line is clear. The gangs of workers, Galicians
-or Italians, who do repairs along the line,
-camp out; you see their camps now and then,
-temporary settlements in this No Man's Land.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Pays mélancolique et marécageux!</i>' So
-Pierre Loti named Les Landes, and the description
-fits this country too, though I doubt if
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P111"></a>111}</span>
-melancholy is a word to be found in a Canadian's
-vocabulary. 'Pretty poor stuff' a Canadian
-might allow it to be, but would immediately
-begin to talk of the fish in its waters, the big
-game to be got among the woods, and the
-mining possibilities it would reveal as soon as
-prospectors and syndicates got together. There
-never was a people less born to be depressed
-than the Canadians; nor do I think they will
-ever produce a Pierre Loti.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For my part, I began to find this country
-most fascinating when I started to think of
-its effect upon the history of Canada. It is
-easy to see that its very impenetrability
-hindered for a long time the growth of the
-West. Where there was no road there was no
-way for progress, and the great wheatlands
-were shut up beyond it, while Eastern Canada
-developed. What is less easy to see is the
-effect such a waste must have when the country
-on the other side has been populated and
-fertilised. A little time ago people began to
-think that East and West would simply reverse
-their order of importance. They said, 'Quebec
-and Ontario have depreciated in value. The
-rich land of Ontario has been ruined, why
-should any one stay there when in the West
-there is limitless wheatland to settle on?'
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P112"></a>112}</span>
-But the trackless country still lay between&mdash;distance
-is not annihilated by a single railroad,
-nor by a dozen railroads. Quebeckers did not
-move West much. Ontarian farmers began to
-find that exhausted land could be renovated
-by scientific methods. If the plains had
-adjoined their farms, they would not have bothered
-to try those methods, but the muskeg and
-rock lay between. Some of them went West,
-but not all; they did not like it that the West
-was being settled from the States and Europe.
-In any case the West would have been an
-unfamiliar country&mdash;the American and English
-immigrants only made it more so&mdash;and the
-boasts of the West roused Eastern pride. Was
-the West best? Ontarians looked about them
-and found that not only could their present
-farms be improved but that there lay still in
-their own particular country virgin land that
-needed only to be cleared and worked. Already
-there is the new Ontario, north of the old
-Ontario, offering fresh fields and pastures
-new for the Canadian born who didn't mind
-clearing land as well as working it. It is land
-upon which the average immigrant is lost, upon
-which the average Ontarian is at home. Thus
-begins a northern movement which may spread
-any distance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P113"></a>113}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have not said, and would not say, that the
-rock and water of Ontario account for this
-northern movement, for the fact that people
-are beginning to say, 'This East and West
-business is overdone. Canada is not a thin,
-straight line from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
-but a country stretching north to Hudson
-Bay, having the depth of the States almost,
-if a race spreads hardy enough to inhabit it.' The
-immediate cause of the northern movement
-was the discovery that wheat was as hardy as
-men, if not hardier, and would grow more
-north than an old-time settler ever dreamed of.
-The movement began in the North-West. All
-I would say is that if the waste country had
-not lain between the Ontarian farmer and the
-West he would have rushed with the rest, and
-the balance of importance would have shifted
-altogether westward. As it is, Ontarian farmers
-thrive again; new Ontario thrives excellently
-in a score of ways; the Canadian-born prosper
-in that part of Canada where they are&mdash;and
-always have been&mdash;most massed and most
-solidly Canadian. The West is a medley of
-races; and if it had suddenly become dominant
-by reason of its vastly superior prosperity, a
-people that could definitely be called Canadian
-would have been still further to seek than it is.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P114"></a>114}</span>
-Canada, in effect, would have had to restart
-becoming a nation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All that day the rock and bog and timber
-kept dropping behind the train, and it was
-sunset before we came to the shore of Lake
-Superior. A thunderous glow hung over the
-lake, glimmering on the great granite cliffs.
-It was dark before we came to Port Arthur&mdash;proud
-possessor of the largest elevator in the
-world, and fierce rival of Fort William. In the
-morning we were in Manitoba.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P115"></a>115}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII
-<br /><br />
- THE OLD TIMERS OF KILDONAN AND THE NEW<br />
- TIMERS OF WINNIPEG<br />
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Winnipeg introduces the West. 'If you like
-Winnipeg,' I had been told before I got there,
-'you will like the West.' I had been somewhat
-disheartened by this information. I had
-pictured Winnipeg as a smoke-laden city of mean
-and narrow streets, set off with board walks
-and wooden shacks of various sizes. I knew
-that I should not like Winnipeg if it were like
-that. Well, it is not like that. Main Street,
-which follows exactly the lines of the old
-Hudson Bay Company's trail, is a hundred and
-thirty-two feet wide, and the other streets
-are in proportion. Above is the immensely
-clear and lofty Canadian sky. The wooden
-shacks are not there, and you will have to go
-far to find the board walks. True, the buildings
-are, on the whole, less impressive than the
-streets, but there are some magnificent blocks
-rising several stories; and if you take an
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P116"></a>116}</span>
-observation-car to go and see the sights of
-Winnipeg, you will find yourself brought to
-spots where further fine blocks are rising;
-and with the eye of the imagination you will
-behold Winnipeg as splendidly lofty as New
-York. I am not sure that for a place as warm
-as Winnipeg in summer and as cold in winter
-(I have heard the very truest Canadians say that
-they have been nearly frozen there in winter)
-the laying out of the town in so spacious a
-style is ideal. Streets narrower and more
-easily screened from the sun and wind would
-have seemed more comfortable to begin with.
-But then Winnipeg is growing, growing,
-growing; and it may be that some day even Main
-Street will seem shut in when it has its
-skyscrapers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Certainly it is a mistake to have preconceptions
-of Canada. I found Winnipeg spacious
-instead of mean. I next found that instead
-of consisting of elevators and all the apparatus
-connected with the storage of wheat, it was
-all banks and cinematograph parlours. There
-were, it is true, shops and such things
-sandwiched in between. I recall a jeweller's shop
-containing the suitable and attractive placard
-in its window&mdash;'Marriage Licences for Sale
-Here.' It is true, too, that banks and cinematograph
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P117"></a>117}</span>
-shows are not unconnected with
-wheat. In the banks you store the dollars
-you have made out of wheat; at the cinematograph
-shows you circulate them. But really
-there was an almost incredible number of these
-institutions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of the two kinds of business I felt that
-personally I would rather own a moving picture
-show. Winnipegers are, I feel sure, easy to
-amuse. And they look exceedingly prosperous.
-The air of prosperity struck me as more obvious
-in Winnipeg than in any other part of Canada.
-This may have been due in part to the ladies'
-hats. I saw some wonderful hats in Winnipeg.
-Of course there are some women who seem
-born to wear wonderful hats. Whatever they
-put on seems wonderful. But in Winnipeg
-this art of wearing wonders seemed almost
-universal. Ladies who might otherwise have
-passed for school teachers&mdash;so serene and even
-precise was their general bearing&mdash;were to be
-seen in hats that would be astounding either
-on Hampstead Heath or in Covent Garden
-opera. I was told the hats come direct either
-from London or Paris, and form an important
-part of the Steamship Companies' freights,
-since they are charged for not by weight but
-by their superficial area. I thought to myself,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P118"></a>118}</span>
-after I had seen a few samples of them, what
-sleepless nights the creators of these marvels
-must pass in the fear that they can never again
-rival, much less surpass, the last consignment
-to the Wheat City.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men too have a prosperous appearance&mdash;always
-new hats, new coats, new cigars;
-and I was so much impressed by it that I
-began to study their faces to see if some new
-type&mdash;with the Croesus gift&mdash;had been developed
-in this western place. If they had all looked
-alike, or had not all looked prosperous, it would
-have been simpler. But they all looked
-different&mdash;more different than Londoners&mdash;as they
-would&mdash;for here all the nations of the earth
-are gathered, and over a score of languages
-are taught in the schools (just think of it!);
-and among these different faces one saw the
-old familiar aspects&mdash;the shrewd and the
-foolish, the strong-mouthed and the weak,
-the bluffer's and that of the man who counts.
-Clearly, they were not all amazing organisers,
-or men with the grit and the brains that must
-take them to the top. Not any more were so,
-I mean, than you would see in any big place.
-No, it was the economic conditions, not the
-men, which were changed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet there is one thing noticeable in most of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P119"></a>119}</span>
-the faces one sees here. It is a general air of
-buoyancy&mdash;of greater expectation and, therewith,
-of greater self-satisfaction&mdash;in a good
-sense&mdash;than one sees at home. Just as the
-London clerk's face might be made to read!&mdash;'I
-am merely a city clerk on £50 a year&mdash;I
-shall never rise much higher, and I hope I may
-keep my place,' so the Winnipeg clerk's face
-might be taken to announce&mdash;'At present I'm
-helping along the Dominion Elevator Company.
-Luckily for them they're a go-ahead lot. I
-guess, though, they'll have to raise my salary
-soon, pretty good though it is now. If they
-don't, they'll have to look for another man.
-There are plenty of jobs waiting for me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If it is the truth, what could be better?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That there are more jobs than men in the
-West seems undeniable, though most of them
-of course are on the land. I had the pleasure
-of a talk with Mr. Bruce Walker, through whose
-hands all the immigrants to the West pass.
-Mr. Bruce Walker's office is in the station,
-which is one of the sights of the West, when
-an immigrant train arrives. For Winnipeg is
-their distributing centre, and in the station,
-when the train comes in, you may see more
-types of men and women than a year's travel
-in Europe would give you, and you may hear
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P120"></a>120}</span>
-more different languages being spoken than
-went to the unmaking of the tower of Babel.
-To place all these people, men, women and
-children, in positions suited to their capacities,
-before the small sums of money with which
-they have arrived in the New World have given
-out, would seem to be a task which Napoleon
-might have shrunk from. But Mr. Bruce
-Walker appeared quite undismayed. Although
-in the first six months of 1910 the immigration
-from Great Britain alone had increased 98 per
-cent. over any other corresponding period, he
-had found no difficulty in dealing with it. He
-admitted that it meant increase of work for
-himself and his staff, but that was nothing, he
-said, so long as there were more jobs than men.
-'And there are more jobs,' he said. 'It's
-amazing. But the extent to which Canada
-can absorb men seems endless.' He told me
-many excellent and amusing stories of the
-difficulties that arise in connection with the
-new-comers, but I have no space for them
-here.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The chief criticism to be directed against
-the Canadian Government's methods in dealing
-with immigrants is, I think, that it encourages
-on to the land men who are in some cases
-wasted there. It is natural that it should
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P121"></a>121}</span>
-place immigrants on the land as far as possible.
-The land is there, apparently endlessly absorbent.
-It offers, superficially, work that any strong
-and able-bodied man should be capable of
-doing. Again, that Canadian theory that a
-man should be ready to turn his hand to
-anything, encourages the Canadian Government
-to believe that it is justified in turning the
-hands of immigrants to the work that most
-obviously wants doing. On the other side, it
-has to be remembered that while a man may be
-capable of turning his hand to anything, he
-is probably much more capable of turning his
-hand to the work he has been trained to; and
-not only that, but he is wasted to a large extent
-if he is not doing it. I am thinking
-particularly of the skilled workmen who emigrate to
-Canada from England. Turn them on to
-land and they may do fairly well; but turn
-them on to the work they are used to, and
-they will do much better. I do not say that
-the Canadian Government is bound to find
-for such men the work for which they are
-fitted; but in so far as they undertake to find
-work for immigrants, they should as far as
-possible find the right work. That jealousy
-which causes the United States to put obstacles
-in the way of the skilled immigrant who
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P122"></a>122}</span>
-comes into the country, should not be encouraged
-in Canada. It is absurd to suppose that
-Canada is already stocked with skilled workmen,
-and I repeat it is waste to use men, who
-are skilled, in work to which they are wholly
-unaccustomed. Moreover, though these skilled
-artisans may in many cases only spend a
-certain time on the land (after which they find
-the job which they want and are accustomed
-to), yet in many other cases they may be so
-sickened by their time on the land, doing
-unaccustomed work badly, that they either
-become wastrels, or leave Canada altogether,
-believing it to be no country for workers like
-themselves, and saying so with all the bitterness
-of men who were capable of succeeding
-but did actually fail. Another point to which
-the immigration department might give all
-the attention it can spare, is that of making
-it as simple as possible for decent immigrants
-to be joined at the earliest opportunity by their
-wives and families. The lack of women in
-Canada is a curse which there is no disguising.
-For one thing, to have a country full only of
-able-bodied men without wives or families is
-to give it an air of prosperity which is unreal.
-For another, it is to leave it without any of
-the ambitions which cause the majority of men
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P123"></a>123}</span>
-to save the money they make, and lay the
-foundations of a civilised nation. The other
-objections are obvious. A wise Government
-policy might go far towards making the period
-of separation between an immigrant and his
-wife shorter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Later on, to get a contrast with Winnipeg,
-I went out to see Kildonan with a friend. It
-is the village where the Old-timers&mdash;the crofters
-from the highlands, whom Lord Selkirk brought
-out in 1812 to colonise the land&mdash;finally settled
-down. They had hard years enough; trouble
-with the Indians, great trouble with the rival
-fur company. The fur-traders could see in the
-farmers only men who would reduce the wild
-and spoil their own industry. Only after years
-were their disputes settled. Kildonan is three
-miles out from Winnipeg by electric-car&mdash;along
-a dusty road fenced with wire from the fat
-black land. The crofters must have rejoiced
-to see that loam. Nowadays it has mostly
-been turned to market-gardening for the
-supplying of Winnipeg, and the farmers have
-shifted further West. We turned down a
-country lane, shaded with maple woods and
-golden birches, and came presently to the banks
-of the Red River. Over on the other side,
-standing among light trees, stood Kildonan
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P124"></a>124}</span>
-Church, the oldest church in Western Canada.
-We crossed by the ferry, and walked up into
-the churchyard. It is not large, but it is full,
-and everywhere you read the familiar Scottish
-names&mdash;Macleod&mdash;Black&mdash;Ferguson and the
-rest. The death among infants in those days
-seems to have been great&mdash;naturally enough&mdash;for
-Kildonan then was far from civilisation
-and doctor's help; and so, many small, unconscious
-settlers spent only a few days or weeks
-in the new land. But there were others that
-lived long. One of the most interesting
-gravestones commemorated the death of a settler
-who had come out from Kildonan, Sutherlandshire,
-at the age of nine. This in the year
-1815&mdash;the year of Waterloo. He had lived to
-be past ninety. For his epitaph some one
-had chosen those noble words from the Epistle
-to the Hebrews: 'He looked for a city which
-hath foundations&mdash;whose maker and builder
-is God.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think it cannot matter now that the old
-man died before the great Canadian boom came,
-before Winnipeg had become the biggest
-wheat-centre of the world, before he could realise,
-who looked for a city which hath foundations,
-that even in his life he had attained to 'God's
-own country.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P125"></a>125}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV
-<br /><br />
-A PRAIRIE TOWN AND THE PRAIRIE POLICE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Any one who knows the plains of Canada is
-aware that they rise in three tiers, the rise
-having a westward trend, and that the scenery
-of them varies as greatly as does the
-vegetation. Any one who has only been through the
-Canadian plains in the train is under the
-impression that, save for a bit of rolling country
-here and there in the distance, they are as
-level as a billiard table; and that, except
-that parts are cultivated and other parts are
-not, they look the same almost from start to
-finish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The moral is obvious. Do not suppose that
-from the train you can see even the surface of
-the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This seemingly endless flat land, then, holds
-hills and gullies, rivers and lakes&mdash;everything
-indeed but trees. But what am I saying?
-There are heaps of trees in reality. Only they
-have a habit of concealing themselves, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P126"></a>126}</span>
-those who want to see them in haste should
-perhaps take a guide.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is more monotony in the towns of the
-plains, I think, than in the plains themselves.
-Not but what these towns must have differences
-known to their inhabitants. A man who
-lived in Moosejaw might conceivably deny
-that he could feel equally at home in Regina.
-A citizen of Regina would not dream of admitting
-that he could find his way blindfold about
-Moosejaw. Nevertheless all these little towns
-are singularly alike in construction. It is
-reasonable that they should be. They are
-all centres of a country engaged in a single
-great industry&mdash;the raising of wheat. Other
-things are raised, but in such small quantities,
-comparatively, that they do not count. And
-the people engaged in this great industry of
-wheat-raising are on a particular equality as
-regards the work they do, the leisure they have,
-and the tastes that result from the combination
-of that work and leisure. Some are richer,
-some poorer, some are wise, some foolish, but
-mostly they are working together pretty hard.
-The towns represent the places where they
-come after their work to bargain and be amused.
-Moreover, as I suggested in a previous chapter,
-the model for all other towns of the plains has
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P127"></a>127}</span>
-always been Winnipeg, and Winnipeg is the
-embodiment of the notion that a city may be
-a finer city than Chicago if it only tries hard
-enough.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Architecturally, Winnipeg looks as though
-it always has allowed, and always will allow,
-for its own expansion. Other great cities have
-grown up anyhow, usually on lines that suggest
-that their greatness was thrust upon them
-unexpectedly. Winnipeg too has grown
-big&mdash;beyond all expectation one would have
-thought&mdash;yet it suggests in its lines that it
-never felt, even in those far-off days when
-Main Street was the Hudson Bay trail, that
-it would be anything but tremendous. Very
-likely it is an accident that Winnipeg did
-possess this power of expanding and Winnipegers
-did not deliberately foresee and provide
-for its future vastness. Be this as it
-may, the towns of the plains are not going to
-leave anything to chance. They are so planned,
-that when the time comes they will be ready
-to outdo Winnipeg. They rather expect to
-outdo Winnipeg. They even warn you that
-they will. Here is an example. I got out
-at some little station on the plains&mdash;let us call
-it Thebes. I don't think there is a Thebes in
-existence, but if not, it will come along soon,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P128"></a>128}</span>
-for the classics as well as the Indian languages
-are being ransacked to provide names for
-Canada's thousands of new-born towns. I
-prefer the classical or Indian-named towns to
-those that bear hybrid titles like Higgsville.
-I saw at once that Thebes consisted of about
-twenty shacks and a store. It was all there,
-just outside the station, and beyond was level
-prairie again, with one or two farmhouses on
-the horizon&mdash;wooden boxes, like bathing-machines
-off their wheels to look at.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I should not have been impressed by the
-greatness of Thebes, present or future, had I
-not, just by the ticket office, come upon a
-great placard, calling attention to a plan of
-the district marked off in square blocks in red
-and black cross lines. Beneath were two
-fanciful spheres, side by side, such as
-statisticians use&mdash;a large one marked Winnipeg, a
-smaller one marked Thebes: also, the following
-notification:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 'In 1870 Winnipeg had 240 inhabitants.<br />
- In 1910 Winnipeg has 180,000 inhabitants.<br />
- In 1910 Thebes has 74 inhabitants.<br />
- How many will Thebes have in 1925?<br />
- Buy a Thebes town lot.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It may be that the method is an American
-one, recalling that by which Martin Chuzzlewit
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P129"></a>129}</span>
-was persuaded to buy a lot in Eden city. An
-old-fashioned Englishman, straight from the
-old country, might even now be scared by it,
-and decide on the strength of it not to become
-a citizen of Thebes. He need not be scared.
-He can dislike the advertisement if he
-chooses, but he should bear in mind that by
-just such advertisements men were attracted
-to prosperity in the States as much as to
-adversity&mdash;even in the Dickens period&mdash;that
-real cities as well as sham ones were built up
-by them, and that anyway most of the Canadian
-land thus advertised is of an easily ascertainable
-value. He should remember, too, that
-a man nowadays, certainly in the new world,
-is not presumed to take every advertisement
-he sees as Bible truth. A smart advertisement,
-such as the Thebes one, is to a Canadian or
-American simply a proof that whoever it is
-wishes to sell Thebes town lots is a go-ahead
-person who clearly wants to do business, who
-probably knows how business ought to be
-done, who is likely to come to the point of
-doing it more quickly and ably than a man
-who won't even take the trouble to attract
-attention. No doubt the purchase of town lots
-is bound to be a speculative business. These
-little prairie villages may or may not become
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P130"></a>130}</span>
-Winnipegs. Of the particular chances a man
-must satisfy himself. That there are chances
-is a certainty; and the advertiser is only
-clothing that certainty in what he considers
-an attractive garb.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I am very far from delighting in the 'plush
-of speech,' as Meredith called the language of
-the advertisers. Apart altogether from the
-fact that Canadians have not as yet learnt the
-art of understatement, the plush of speech is
-far too common in Canada. I suppose it was
-to be expected. Hard by lie the United States
-whose advertisers have, in a very few years,
-done more to blazon all the horrors of which
-the English tongue is capable than their
-great writers have done to point out its beauties.
-Their example has spread. So that in Canada,
-too, a barber's is announced as 'A Tonsorial
-Saloon'; a hat shop is 'A Bon Ton Millinery
-Parlour.' There may be some magic attraction
-in the words. The desire for a hat in
-the heart of a woman is not a definitely economic
-want; perhaps to be able to get a hat from a
-millinery parlour may strengthen that want.
-Only I know that speaking for myself, I would
-not willingly have my hair shortened oftener
-than was necessary, even if a tonsorial palace
-should be open to me for the process.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P131"></a>131}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To go back to the prairie towns, their future
-is ever before them, and their citizens talk of
-them in the same proud, fond spirit as that in
-which a mother will discuss the career of the
-creature-in-the-perambulator, which for the
-ordinary person is too embryo to be distinguished
-as either a boy or a girl. Already, of
-course, the prairie towns are of all sizes, though
-you must never judge them by the size they are.
-Take Regina. It is a capital city, but the usual
-definition of a line&mdash;only reversed&mdash;best
-describes it. It has breadth without length.
-Its streets, which are called avenues, are
-astonishingly wide, the more astonishingly,
-because as soon as you start to walk along them
-they come to an end in prairie. I thought a
-notice which caught my eye as I wandered
-through the town rather characteristic. The
-notice was pasted outside a half-built block.
-It ran:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'These premises will be open by September 5.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was long past 5th September, and those
-premises were not going to be open for some
-weeks to come. The roof was not on yet, and
-in fact I think the fourth wall had to go up.
-Still, when they were opened, they would be
-fine and solid. You could see that. It is the
-same with many of these western towns
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P132"></a>132}</span>
-themselves. Some day they, too, are going to be
-fine and solid, but they are not really open
-yet, though a good deal of business is being
-done, with the roof still, so to speak, off,
-and the fourth wall still to go up. On the
-outskirts of Regina, for example, there are
-some 1911 Exhibition buildings which look
-rather larger than Regina itself. That is
-enterprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I stayed a whole day in Regina because I
-wanted to see the barracks of the famous
-North-West Mounted Police. It was a very
-hot day, and I was not sure where the barracks
-were, so I went into a hotel, partly to find out,
-partly to have a drink. The hotel was cool and
-pleasant, and after a little while a well-dressed
-gentleman came over and began chatting.
-We talked of various things, and then he asked
-me if I would not like to have my suit pressed
-for Sunday, as he would do it for a dollar. I
-said I should like it very well, but I had not
-time for it as I had to go out to the police
-barracks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You don't think of joining them, do you?'
-he inquired with much disdain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You're a fool if you do,' he said; 'there's
-too much discipline about them. You spend
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P133"></a>133}</span>
-your whole time saluting every one you see if
-you're in the police. I know what it is. I
-was two years in the American Navy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I did not inform the ex-naval clothes-presser
-that I'd rather belong to the police than press
-clothes, nor, indeed, did I waste any further
-time upon him, and I only mention him because
-he is one of the less valuable American types
-that find their way into Canada, and also
-because he was the only man I met who had a
-word to say against the mounted police.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sun can be very hot on the prairie, and
-it was very hot that afternoon when I did at
-last set out for a two-miles' tramp to the
-barracks. Nobody was walking that way
-except myself, and nobody was even riding.
-There was a fine dust about, and I needed
-brushing as well as pressing before I reached
-my destination. When I did get there, the
-courteous welcome of the second-in-command
-caused me to forget that the way had been
-long, or that anything greatly mattered except
-to hear about the North-West Mounted Police
-from the officer who was good enough to show
-me all round, from the horse-hospital to the
-prison cells. The latter were the least
-inviting part of the barracks, and I decided on
-the spot that if I committed a crime I would
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P134"></a>134}</span>
-not select the North-West of Canada for the
-scene of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I doubt if Canada, or England, has anything
-to be prouder of than the North-West Mounted
-Police. Some of their deeds have been told from
-time to time&mdash;that of the mounted policeman,
-for example, who brought a homicidally-disposed
-maniac down hundreds of miles from the frozen
-country, saved his charge from frost-bite, and
-lost his own reason in the process; that of the
-corporal who went into the camp where Sitting
-Bull sat armed with all his braves about him, and
-gave him a quarter of an hour to clear over the
-border. But under a hundred less-known acts
-the same spirit has run&mdash;the spirit of the one
-representative of justice triumphant over
-incredible odds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It's made possible,' said my guide, 'partly
-because we have men who regard every capture
-they're told off to make as a matter of personal
-honour, partly because people know that if a
-man commits a crime, we get him in the end.
-We go on till we do. Sitting Bull knew that
-if he killed our corporal we'd hang him and
-every man with him. So he went.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All kinds of men are represented in the
-mounted police, but this officer told me that
-the recruit they liked best to get was 'the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P135"></a>135}</span>
-young man with blood in him,' from an English
-public school or university, as much as from
-anywhere; fond of riding and shooting, and
-not lost when he is acting alone hundreds of
-miles from headquarters. The district patrolled,
-remember, by five hundred men is not much
-smaller than Europe minus Russia. Wanting
-that kind of man, the authorities see to it that,
-in barracks at all events, he is comfortable,
-and very little in the way of the accommodation
-for these police could be improved upon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most historic part of the barracks is
-that window through which Louis Riel stepped
-out&mdash;to drop with the rope round his neck.
-I was shown it hurriedly. It is the capture of
-their man, not his execution, that is these
-policemen's pride. Their record shows that
-almost always they take him alive, with no
-struggle&mdash;a strange thing, and one more proof
-of the reputation the police have built up for
-themselves. 'What is the use of struggling
-with these men?' seems to be the natural
-thought in the mind of the pursued; and no
-doubt much bloodshed is saved as a result of it.
-I learnt a lot of stray Canadian facts that
-afternoon. I learnt that the immigrants known
-under the somewhat vague heading of 'Galicians'
-are at present considered the leading
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P136"></a>136}</span>
-toughs, owing to their habit of using their
-knives at random. Galicians mean roughly
-all those who come from central Europe, and
-would, of course, include Letts. So that it is
-not, apparently, merely the climate of England
-that induces in these particular aliens a
-homicidal mania. It would be interesting to know
-the opinion of a North-West Mounted Policeman
-on 'the Battle of London.' Another thing
-I learnt was that a hundred miles a day is no
-unusual distance for one of these policemen to
-cover on horseback, and that of all the districts
-patrolled by them that in the neighbourhood of
-the North Pole is most sought after. They do
-not believe in English stirrups and girths any
-more than they believe in the British truncheon.
-They do believe in sobriety. The man with
-the drinking habit cannot continue, so I was
-told, a mounted policeman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I walked back into Regina, I remember
-seeing in one of the principal streets a second
-notice which struck me as quaint. The notice
-was:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Please do not spit on the side-walks.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quaintness of it consisted in the last three
-words. 'Please do not spit' one could
-understand. I should like to see that notice up
-almost anywhere in Canada, since the habit it
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P137"></a>137}</span>
-deprecates is almost universal. It is worst,
-perhaps, in a smoking compartment, where it
-is difficult to get one's legs away from the
-neighbourhood of spittoons. I have sat for
-hours feeling all the emotions of the son of
-William Tell while the apple was still balanced
-on his head, and his father was in the act to
-shoot. But it is an uncivilised, unhealthy,
-absolutely unnecessary habit anywhere. That
-is why, for a public authority to suggest that
-it may be done, provided it is not done on
-the side-walks, is quaint. It should either be
-ignored or penalised. When one reads, as one
-does so often in the papers, of the ravages
-made by tuberculosis in Canada, it almost looks
-as if offenders should be penalised. Certainly
-they should not be politely requested to spit a
-few inches more to the left or the right. And
-why provide them with spittoons?
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P138"></a>138}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV
-<br /><br />
-IN CALGARY
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Alberta is at present the <i>débutante</i> of the
-Dominion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Countries, like cities, used to grow up and,
-if we stick to our metaphor, 'come out'
-anyhow. It is true there were people called
-statesmen who had at times bright ideas
-concerning the commonweal which they tried
-to put into practice, and sometimes succeeded
-in putting into practice, with not unsatisfactory
-results. But the commonweal they had
-in mind was a limited one. It was not truly
-'common,' either in respect of the people whose
-weal was considered, or in respect of the weal
-it was desired to affect. Statesmen, in fact,
-thought usually only of a particular section or
-part of the population of their country and also
-thought only of a particular aspect of that
-section's welfare&mdash;usually either its soul or its
-prestige; very rarely its material prosperity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Things have not altogether changed. Things
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P139"></a>139}</span>
-don't. Statesmen still consider particular
-classes rather than the nation as a whole,
-and their notions of what weal means are still
-limited notions. But there is this difference.
-That aspect of the commonweal which can be
-referred to somewhat vaguely as material
-prosperity now bulks very large in their minds,
-and, as a result of it, the idea is beginning
-to prevail that not only can cities be planned
-before they are built, but that whole provinces
-can and should be encouraged to grow in
-certain thought-out directions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the old world the new idea is likely to
-work slowly and somewhat obscurely. Cities
-and countries have already grown up there
-in the old-and-anyhow style; and grown-up
-things, like grown-up people, are not easily
-changed. In England, for example, we may
-think that large properties are a mistake;
-but they will not, with anything that can be
-called celerity, be turned into small holdings.
-So with our cities. There they are&mdash;fully grown
-and fully stocked with vested interests. The
-possessors of those interests cannot see in any
-proposed change the vast improvement that
-the non-possessors see in it. The most that
-can be expected in England in the immediate
-future is that, slowly and imperceptibly, certain
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P140"></a>140}</span>
-outrageous mistakes of the past will be remedied,
-and that where new developments are essential,
-they shall be the result of ideas, rather than
-of confusions. The Town-Planning Bill is, I
-imagine, a case in point. The most conservative
-people are beginning to see that in itself
-an idea is not a vicious thing and may even
-produce a good result.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the new world (and perhaps in the German
-Empire too) the notion of planning the future
-of town or country instead of leaving it to luck
-is having much swifter and more demonstrable
-effects. On the Canadian plains, as I have
-pointed out, towns are being laid out largely
-with an eye to their future. The same thing
-is being done for the countryside. It, too, is
-being planned with an eye to its future. It is
-not growing up just anyhow; it is being made
-to grow in particular directions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How much this is the idea of statesmen, of
-the public officials, that is to say, of the
-Dominion; and how much it is due to the
-managers of private companies and enterprises,
-historians will some day be able to decide. I
-incline to the view that at present the big
-railway companies represent far the most
-influential force in Canada, and that they, without
-any of the outward paraphernalia of office,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P141"></a>141}</span>
-are deciding what Canada is to be for a good
-many years to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Naturally they work from what may be called
-the railway point of view. Their notion of a
-Canadian commonweal takes the form, therefore,
-of a country in which a settled and prosperous
-population lives along the lines of the
-railroads, and is so distributed that there shall
-be no uninhabited spaces through which the
-running of trains will cease to be a paying
-proposition. There are bound, of course, to be
-some intervals of the kind. The highlands of
-Ontario form such a gap in the system of the
-Canadian Pacific Railway. That gap is not
-easy to fill: Alberta is.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few years ago Alberta was far from being a
-profitable country through which to run trains.
-Cattle-ranching maintained the thinnest of
-populations, and the leagues of sunburnt plains
-east of Calgary seemed to offer few chances to a
-more numerous class of settler. Any one who
-had prophesied then that they would shortly
-be crowded with wheat-farmers would have
-been laughed at. But they are being crowded,
-comparatively crowded, now. And the credit
-for this must be given those who started the
-Bow River irrigation works. No doubt there
-are other reasons for the rise of Alberta. The
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P142"></a>142}</span>
-discoverers of new wheats have helped it;
-so have the American farmers who, by spoiling
-the land across the line, created a demand for
-new land. But the irrigation works are the
-main factor, and when the Octopus, as the
-Canadian Pacific Railway is not uncommonly
-called, is had up for judgment, these and many
-other of their achievements will help them to
-make a stout defence. True, it is their own land
-they are irrigating; it is passengers and freight
-for themselves that they want to secure; but,
-whatever the motive, they are advertising and
-causing to be populated and cultivated hundreds
-of square miles on either side of their own
-particular land which might otherwise have
-lain waste for many years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may be said&mdash;Where is the plan in this?
-Where is it any different from the schemes of
-any railway country in the old world. The
-difference is that in the old world as a rule the
-railway company follows trade, and runs only
-through populous parts where that trade is to
-be got; whereas in Canada, railway companies
-lay their lines through the desert, so to speak,
-and then start to fill it in an orderly and
-profitable manner. Alberta at present is being
-planned into existence. It is not booming
-simply on its own merits, great though these
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P143"></a>143}</span>
-may be. It lay fallow for many years. For
-all one knows, other parts of Canada may have
-more of a future. But they are not being
-boomed as Alberta is, because the time has
-not yet come when they must, in the opinion
-of the railway companies, be filled in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The need for the filling in of Alberta is one
-of the reasons why Calgary has sprung up so
-quickly. A few years ago Calgary had no
-future to speak of. Men not as yet
-middle-aged, can remember camping in Calgary in
-tents. There was only one place to dance in,
-and ranchers used to take turns at entering it.
-Now Calgary is a stone-built town of solid
-appearance, and still more solid importance.
-Like so many other Canadian towns, it is
-more important than it looks. It looks
-bustling enough, but hardly important. There
-are no buildings of a size to take the eye. The
-hotels are singularly inadequate. They are not
-only not comfortable enough for their guests,
-but they are not large enough. I had
-occasion to visit Calgary twice within a week,
-and each time I got the last bed in a different
-hotel, and tried to be thankful for it, but did
-not succeed. I suppose that prosperity has
-overtaken it at such a pace that it has not
-had time as yet to consider its responsibilities.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P144"></a>144}</span>
-A town which permits one of its best hotels
-to place three double beds in one bedroom&mdash;and
-perhaps as many as nine guests in the
-three double beds&mdash;may already be great,
-but it has not realised its greatness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Calgary differs from the prairie towns which
-lie between it and Winnipeg, in that it is not
-really a prairie town, but a town on the edge
-of the prairie. It looks at the mountains;
-and it is built of the grey stone that is found
-near by; the Chinook winds that sweep it
-and make its climate comparatively mild,
-are mountain winds; and it stands on the
-Bow River, which is a mountain river, swift
-and clear, and blue with the blue that is melted
-from snowfields. This is none of your turbid
-streams like the Assiniboine or the Red River.
-All rivers must run to the plains at last, but
-the Bow River does not seem to belong to
-them, though it feeds them more than most.
-In the old days Calgary, such as it was, owed
-everything to the hills. The cattle-ranchers
-settled round there because the Chinook winds,
-scatterers of the snow, made outdoor grazing
-possible for their cattle during months when
-Manitoba and Saskatchewan were deep in
-frozen drifts. And since it was just at the
-foot of the mountains, the miners in the mountains
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P145"></a>145}</span>
-used it as a supply centre. It is still
-a centre for ranchers and miners; but its real
-importance is that it has become the
-headquarters of that prairie which produced once,
-perhaps, half a ton of hay to the acre, and now
-yields the finest wheat in the world. If any
-statues are to be put up in the town&mdash;and
-it would be as well to wait for a native sculptor
-of talent&mdash;they should be the statues of the
-men who constructed the irrigation works.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Later on, but this is a smaller matter
-perhaps, I should like to see a statue put up to
-the man who will make it possible for the
-bars of Calgary to be allowed to remain open
-between the hours of 7 P.M. on Saturday,
-and 7 A.M. on Monday. At present they are
-shut during those hours, which means, I take
-it, that Calgarians, if admitted, would drink
-more than was good for them. The person
-therefore, to whom the suggested statue should
-be raised, would be the man who made the
-Calgarian attitude towards the drink question
-more civilised. I know that the problem is
-not peculiar to Calgary or to Canada. It
-may even be that Canada for a new country
-does more to solve it than most. I recollect
-than when I got back to England, one of the
-first things that caught my eye was an
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P146"></a>146}</span>
-interview given to a local paper by a leading
-Hertfordshire man, who had also just returned
-from travelling through Canada. He assured
-the interviewer that, having been from end
-to end of Canada, he had never once seen a
-man the worse for liquor. It must have been
-a delightful, but perhaps unique experience.
-I had not his good fortune, and having talked
-with many decent Canadians, seldom fanatics,
-and rarely indeed total abstainers, who
-nevertheless deplored the prevalence of the drink
-evil in the West, I cannot think that that
-Hertfordshire traveller's happy blindness is
-a thing to be imitated. Drink takes another
-form&mdash;perhaps a less vicious one&mdash;in a new
-country; but it ruins more good men than
-it does in an old one.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P147"></a>147}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI
-<br /><br />
-THE AMERICANISATION QUESTION
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-There is vague talk at times about the
-Americanisation of Canada. Very dismal
-people talk about its Americanisation by force
-of arms. Minor pessimists think the change
-will come about peaceably. How can the
-Canadians&mdash;they ask&mdash;continue to assert
-themselves for ever against the constant influx
-from the other side?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Monsieur André Siegfried, in that most
-lucid and excellent book, <i>Les Deux Races en
-Canada</i>, considers this question a little, but
-the very fact that he has called the book
-<i>Les Deux Races en Canada</i>, shows that he
-considers the question premature. The two
-races he treats of are not the Canadians and
-the Americans, but the French Canadians and
-the Canadians who are not French. Certainly
-these two peoples are at present, and must for
-a considerable time to come, be considered
-the two main races of the Dominion. They
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P148"></a>148}</span>
-are still for all practical purposes separate
-without being hostile; and it is quite possible
-that one of these may Canadianise the other
-before any real Americanisation makes itself
-felt. Should the French Canadians get the
-upper hand, it is pretty certain that American
-influence would get a set-back of perhaps
-centuries. Yet English writers as a rule
-never seem to consider this contingency.
-Perhaps if they did, they would begin to think
-that they would rather see Canada
-Americanised than Gallicised.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still the Americanisation may happen, and
-it is at least an interesting possibility. Let
-us consider the task that lies before the
-Americans. They will have to absorb&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(1) The French Canadians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(2) The Canadian born, who are not French.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(3) The English who have immigrated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(4) Foreign immigrants; <i>e.g.</i> Scandinavians,
-Galicians, Italians, Doukhobors&mdash;all that
-strange assortment of people who have flowed
-in from the poorer countries of Europe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Americans themselves represent at
-present only a small fifth in this conglomeration
-of nations. Still, they have this in their favour,
-that they start in while Canada is still an
-unfixed nation. French Canadians&mdash;a small
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P149"></a>149}</span>
-third&mdash;only number about three millions.
-Non-French Canadians about the same. The whole
-population is under ten millions. It may in
-fifty years be ten times that number. So
-that anything may happen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile, many effective American influences
-are at work. Their order of effectiveness
-is not easy to define, but when one
-considers their representatives of business
-enterprise, capital, journalism and farming
-at work in the country, one can see that the
-Americans are likely to go far.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What is their present value to the Dominion?
-Take American farmers. They are an
-undoubted gain to Canada in so far as they
-possess energy, capital, a knowledge of the
-local conditions, versatility and adaptability.
-I hardly know if it is an example of their
-versatility or their adaptability, but as soon as
-they cross over the line, American farmers
-who were Tariff Reformers instantly become
-Free Traders. It is not, of course, that they
-have adopted nobler principles in their new
-country. It is merely that, having become
-Canadians, they have now to support Canadian
-manufactures, and pay more for their
-farming machines and shoddy clothes. Naturally
-they think tariffs a mistake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P150"></a>150}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Setting aside for a moment this political
-elasticity as of doubtful value, Canadians may
-still wonder if the American farmer is all
-gain to them. Is it an objection, for example,
-that the American introduces the purely
-commercial spirit into farming? Not entirely.
-Not certainly so far as love of gain induces
-promptness and enterprise. It is, however, an
-objection if it destroys that love of the land
-which causes the English farmer to stick by
-his farm, generation after generation.
-Perhaps American farmers have not that land
-love in any case. If they had, they would
-not have crossed the line. In most cases,
-they have crossed it to make money&mdash;more
-money. It may be argued that the English
-farmers come further for the same purpose,
-but that is not really the case. English
-farmers who come are mostly men who were
-tenants, and find themselves either not making
-money or expecting to have their rents raised
-if they do. Or they are the sons of farmers
-who have not the capital to start farming in
-the old country, or cannot get the land. The
-American farmer is usually quite ready to
-admit that he is in Canada to make money,
-and his enemies will admit for him that though
-this ideal may lead him to adopt new methods
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P151"></a>151}</span>
-of farming which are good, it also induces
-him to adopt that very old method of farming
-which consists of getting all you can out of
-the land, putting nothing into it, selling it
-to a fool and moving on to fresh land&mdash;which
-is a bad method. Any one who is acquainted
-with the States at all, knows how at present
-people there are awakening to the viciousness
-of this practice. All their papers and speakers
-are full of the wastefulness which Americans
-practised in the last century thinking it to be
-smartness. Fine land, they say, was spoilt
-by it; forests were annihilated; water supplies
-were overdrawn; people were made restless.
-It was getting rich quick at the expense of
-posterity, and it bred in Americans a nomadic
-spirit, and an imprudence in considering the
-future, which has become a menace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Canadians cannot altogether condemn the
-American farmer, for just these methods spoilt
-so much of the land in Ontario; and only
-now are their farmers beginning to improve on
-them. Still, they would do well to indicate
-to American farmers that they are welcome
-only as improvers and not as wasters of the
-new country. The trouble is to give an
-effective indication of that kind. Settlement of
-the land is still reckoned, especially by the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P152"></a>152}</span>
-railway companies, as the first of virtues,
-covering a multitude of sins; though even
-they, I think, are recognising a little that
-the English farmer, whose aim is not an
-immediate fortune, but a home which he can retain
-for his life and hand over to his children
-after him, is not to be scorned as he was a
-few years ago. The ready-made farms, made
-possible by the irrigation work of the Canadian
-Pacific Railway, are the chief example of the
-attempts made to draw the Englishman. 'We
-hope,' said one of the Canadian Pacific Railway
-officials, speaking a few months ago before the
-London Chamber of Commerce, 'that the
-Englishmen on these farms will leaven the lot.' A
-few years ago, compliments of that sort were
-not being offered to the English farmer in
-Canada. Probably he was not so good a type
-as comes in now. But it is to be remembered
-that the English immigrant has always had
-more adaptations to make than the American.
-To the American from the northern States,
-Canada is the country he is used to&mdash;only
-a little more north. The Englishman finds
-a new soil, new climate, new manners, and
-new methods. I should say that man for
-man, the English farmer knows at least as
-much as the American about farming, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P153"></a>153}</span>
-a great deal more than the average Canadian.
-But when he goes out to Canada he has to
-put this knowledge behind him and learn
-afresh&mdash;a difficult thing for a conservative
-race. The American can hold on to what
-he knows and simply go ahead. The accident
-of birth has given him a fine start over the
-Englishman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The same advantage belongs to other Americans
-in Canada. Business men, capitalists,
-journalists have only had to cross a
-non-existent line, instead of an undeniable ocean.
-When Canadians complain that Englishmen
-take no interest even in those Canadian schemes
-for which they have found the money, they
-forget that capitalists cannot always be close
-to their investments. I repeat, the Atlantic is
-not a thing to be denied, nor is it fair to call
-the English mere moneylenders because they
-have not always personally accompanied their
-loans. At least they have shown themselves
-trustful of the men on the spot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nevertheless, I think that Canada has every
-reason to be grateful for the able business
-men whom the States have sent her. That
-negro porter at the Niagara Hotel who said
-that Canadians were a stupid people, and
-would have done nothing without the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P154"></a>154}</span>
-Americans, was taking rather a spread-eagle view
-of the facts. Still there is no doubt that
-American brains have been&mdash;and still are&mdash;of
-great service to Canada; nor can I see
-that they can be charged with Americanising
-tendencies. Business men are nearly always
-cosmopolitan in their achievements, whatever
-their motives may be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is rather different with American
-journalists. They can hardly as yet be charged
-with being citizens of the world, and where
-their influence penetrates, an American trend
-is noticeable. They are beginning to leave
-their mark in Canada. Canadian papers are
-numerous and creditable, but an American
-atmosphere broods over them. The most
-trivial incident is magnified by headlines,
-which repeat three times over in large type
-and increasingly pompous language all and
-more than all that follows in the news space.
-I am not talking of the best Canadian
-newspapers but of the average ones. If their
-methods are American, so very largely are
-the matters they deal with. In some small
-up-country Canadian journal one will find
-the leading columns occupied with the account
-of some dinner given, say, by Mrs. Van
-So-and-So of New York, wife of the Coffin King,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P155"></a>155}</span>
-with full accounts of the costumes, menu,
-etc.,&mdash;wearisome and vulgar matter, staringly
-of no interest whatever to the bucolic readers
-of the journal in question. But it was all
-very cheaply wired from the States: whereas
-news from England would be costly in the
-extreme. The result is that Canadians&mdash;in
-spite of their local sagacity&mdash;are at least as
-ignorant of the things that happen in Great
-Britain and Europe as we are of what is
-happening in Canada. Often I have felt
-while the Canadian-born were talking to me
-of the 'Old Country,' talking of it too, not
-only in a loyal, but a fond and even wistful
-manner&mdash;that they had in their minds a
-picture of it that would probably have fitted
-England better in the fourteenth century than
-it does now. A poor, worn-out, tottering old
-country is what they are thinking of; and
-nothing would amaze some of them more
-than to see modern England as it is.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why should they have got this idea into
-their heads? Largely, I suppose, because the
-new with them is necessarily best. The old
-things were put up anyhow by men in a hurry
-and they are always superseded by better
-things. The very epithet 'old' connotes
-badness to a Canadian. Then, again, it is a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P156"></a>156}</span>
-country of young men, and young men are apt
-to favour youth, which they hardly associate
-with England. No country&mdash;not even Spain&mdash;can
-be as antique and ramshackle as many
-of them undoubtedly believe England to be.
-Birmingham and Manchester are on paper
-such very ancient cities compared with Regina
-and Moosejaw that the untravelled Canadian
-thinks pityingly of the former; whereas he
-considers the latter infinitely up-to-date and
-important, and would be hurt to know that we
-have in England hundreds of little prosperous
-country towns very like them, of which the
-ordinary Englishman hardly knows the names
-and, if he did, would think no more of than he
-would think of Regina and Moosejaw.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I would not seek to minimise that Canadian
-pride and optimism which finds such satisfaction
-in everything that they build. Pride
-and optimism are valuable assets to any
-country. All I would suggest is that they
-should realise that the English habit of
-grumbling and self-depreciation does not indicate
-that all Englishmen live in a tottering old
-realm, doing nothing but decay and grumble.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here we come back to newspapers. Most
-people derive their facts from newspapers
-nowadays, and if Canadians find that everything
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P157"></a>157}</span>
-of importance happens in the new world,
-whereas in the old world nothing happens
-except an occasional sensational murder or the
-deposition of a third-class king, they cannot
-infer that Europe is still an important continent,
-and that perhaps the most important country in
-it is England. What is to enlighten them?
-I suppose the receipt of more news from Europe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Probably the All Red Cable would do much
-in this direction. News has to be cheap or it is
-not news (the converse proposition that news
-if it is cheap must be news, is not true). Much
-also might be done by private enterprise.
-English publishers could do more to push their
-wares. So could English magazine proprietors.
-Most of the books and magazines one can get
-in a hurry in Canada are American. English
-Cabinet Ministers might now and again make
-a tour in the Dominion and explain to Canadians
-some of those political principles in which at
-home they have such fervid belief. It may be
-that the Americanising tendency is too strong
-for any of these suggestions to be of much
-avail in combating it. Reciprocity treaties
-between the States and Canada may inevitably
-result in closer union, though I never could feel
-that it was a marked human characteristic to
-pine for fellow-citizenship with the man whom
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P158"></a>158}</span>
-one supplies with bread in return for a
-reaping-machine. Trade relations may result in that
-mystic fraternal sentiment by which nations
-come together, though hitherto in the world's
-history men have never shown any very frantic
-desire for a heart-to-heart intimacy with their
-tradespeople. 'Utility, Reciprocity, Fraternity'
-sounds rather a cold cry by which to rally two
-great people together.[<a id="chap16fn1text"></a><a href="#chap16fn1">1</a>]
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap16fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap16fn1text">1</a>] This chapter was written before the
-Reciprocity business flamed
-forth. I return to the subject later.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-When all is said and done, and there are a
-hundred other pros and cons which might be
-considered, the chief obstacle to the Americanisation
-of Canada is climate. Canada is north
-and America is south; and those two show less
-inclination to rush together than even east and
-west. Of course it is not extremes of north
-and south that are represented in the two
-countries;&mdash;along the boundary the climates
-are not dissimilar. Yet it seems to me that
-while Canada is bound to be mainly a country
-of northern peoples, Americans are fast becoming
-more and more southernised, I do not mean
-in the old sense of becoming languid and
-effeminate and semi-tropical, but southernised
-in just the same way as the French from being
-Norsemen have become southernised. Have
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P159"></a>159}</span>
-you seen prints of old Paris when it was a Gothic
-city? If you have, you will realise the
-completeness of the change that has come over it.
-It spreads itself to the sun now, faces to the
-Midi, and some such change might easily come
-over New York, Chicago, and the rest of those
-at present northern cities. Already the typical
-American is far from being the son of a grim
-and dour Pilgrim Father. Rather he is lively
-and energetic&mdash;with a temperament always on
-tiptoe&mdash;logical and apt to be materialistic, yet
-sentimental and passionate too. You find such
-a temperament among the French and Italians
-of northern Italy. It is the sun working on
-them. Even the stolid German and the moody
-Scandinavian feels it when he gets to the States,
-and thaws&mdash;into an American.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not so in Canada. The northern immigrants
-there remain silent and frosty, though
-the touch of fortune makes them perhaps
-more genial. Canada will never become a
-southern country, even though its northern
-parts are rendered temperate by the cutting
-down of timber and constant ploughing. No,
-I think Canadians will remain a hardy and
-somewhat dour race, slow-moving on the whole,
-but industrious and virtuous, suspicious of
-talkers and hustlers; so suspicious, too, of free
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P160"></a>160}</span>
-thought and new morals as to lay themselves
-open maybe to the charge of hypocrisy; given
-at times to self-distrust and self-depreciation,
-but for the most part steadfast, and holding in
-their hearts the belief that there is no place
-like Canada and no men like the inhabitants
-thereof.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In short, they are as likely as not to end by
-becoming Anglicised.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P161"></a>161}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII
-<br /><br />
-AMONG THE READY-MADE FARMS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-There was a time when Englishmen got a very
-bad name in Canada. It was not to be wondered
-at. For a long time English youths, who came
-to be known as Remittance Men, used to be
-shipped out by relations anxious only to get
-rid of them. These helped to create an opinion
-that Englishmen were more remarkable for
-their drinking than their working powers;
-and when to them was added shipload after
-shipload of unemployables from yet lower
-classes, Canadians began to get impatient of
-English immigrants. It was not logical of
-them to suppose that these were favourable
-specimens of our working-classes; it is never
-logical to suppose that the best men of a
-country are ready to leave it. Logic, however, is
-difficult to insist on under these circumstances,
-and though there were plenty of Englishmen
-even then, and even more Scots perhaps, who
-were obviously as good as any farmers on the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P162"></a>162}</span>
-prairie, the bad name of the English clung to
-them. That is all, or nearly all, changed now;
-and the project connected with those farms,
-which came to be known in the English papers
-as the Ready-made farms, proved that the
-Canadian Pacific Railway Company at any rate,
-which is the biggest landowner in Canada, was
-ready to welcome English farmers to the land,
-if they could get the right sort. Readers will
-perhaps remember that the idea of the company
-was to provide farms ploughed, irrigated, sowed,
-and furnished with house and out-buildings,
-into which English colonists, having been handed
-the front-door key, could enter&mdash;straight from
-England&mdash;as well equipped almost as settlers
-who had lived there for years. The purchase
-money was to be spread over a certain term,
-after which the land would become the property
-of the farmers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The plan saves all that intermediate period
-during which the ordinary homesteader has
-to set up his shack, sink his well, and generally
-unsettle himself over the tedious work of
-settling in. Good farmers are not necessarily
-born pioneers; and since the prairie in winter,
-when work is slack, does not show a very
-hospitable climate to new-comers and those
-unaccustomed to it, it generally happens that
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P163"></a>163}</span>
-the English immigrant has to waste the spring
-and perhaps the whole working season in the
-unremunerative business of settling in. The
-Ready-made farms were intended to save all
-this time and trouble, and they were at once
-filled&mdash;in the spring of 1910&mdash;by specially picked
-men from the old country. The men were not
-all necessarily farmers, but they were, hypothetically,
-at any rate, men of intelligence and grit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wanted to see how they were getting on
-after six months of this new life on the prairie.
-For that purpose I took train from Calgary
-with a friend, back along the line to Strathmore,
-which is forty miles east, and is the station for
-Nightingale, as this first colony of ready-made
-farmers has been named. Strathmore itself is
-not peculiarly beautiful or peculiarly interesting,
-though it has a demonstration farm which is.
-We went over the demonstration farm with
-Professor Eliott, its manager, who struck me
-as one of the keenest and most interesting men
-of the West. What he does not know of the
-productivity of the prairie is probably not
-worth knowing; and his experience seems to be
-at the service of any farmer who has the
-intelligence to apply for it. He showed us his
-barns and splendid teams of horses and leviathan
-oats, and the little trees which he has planted
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P164"></a>164}</span>
-in this country where it was thought no trees
-would grow, and which he believes will change
-the face of it in a few years. We were full of
-the future of the prairie when we got back to
-Strathmore, and put up for the night in the last
-bedroom of the one and only hotel. The two
-of us were lucky to get that last bedroom
-containing a double bed to ourselves, for more
-often even than in Calgary six people sleep
-in such a room and are very glad of the
-accommodation. So I was told. It shows how things
-move in Alberta; what a hustle there is upon
-the country.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We tossed for the bed, and I got it, and the
-other man took two blankets and the floor.
-I slept very well, especially after a mounted
-policeman came in and threw out two
-gentlemen next door who were, as the hotel boy
-tersely put it, 'seeing snakes together.' My
-friend slept less well. The room was small,
-not much bigger than the bed, and we could not
-get the window to stay open. It had not been
-constructed with a view to admitting fresh air.
-Still, after breakfast in a dark chamber, where
-about thirty guests of every profession and
-clothing (but all land-seekers) ate in silence,
-we started pretty fit for Nightingale in a
-two-horse rig.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P165"></a>165}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish I could describe the prairie. Harvesting
-was over, so that in any case the leagues of
-golden wheat which you read about in advertisements
-were not visible. It was another kind
-of monotony altogether that we drove through&mdash;a
-kind I cannot begin to suggest the charm of.
-It was a kind of bare, rolling, sunburnt country,
-with a high sea-wind blowing through it, and
-waves of dust and an endless sky. Intensely
-wearisome or intensely refreshing it must be,
-according to a man's temperament; and going
-there from trees and hills must be like changing
-from a room with patterned paper to one with
-whitewashed walls. And then the soil, light
-and fertile, stoneless, ready for the
-plough&mdash;the farmer wants no variety of that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We drove fourteen miles, as far as I can
-remember, to get to Nightingale, and it was
-all bad driving. Alberta seems to want roads
-badly. In the old ranching days roads mattered
-less. The prairie was a ready-made riding
-country, and nothing was produced or needed
-that could not, so to speak, go of itself across
-country. 'I never owned a plough the seventeen
-years I was there,' a retired rancher told
-me proudly. 'It was a fine country then.' But
-it is a fine country now, too, and going to
-be finer still when it has roads. At present even
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P166"></a>166}</span>
-the roadways are changing. Once you could
-go everywhere. Now from day to day a new
-farmer takes up a new piece of land, and what
-was the road is enclosed by a wire fence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of the most inspiriting farms we passed
-was that of a man who had been out from
-Cheshire only three months. He was now a
-chicken rancher&mdash;kept fowls, as we say; and
-in his brief occupation had got up&mdash;off a quarter
-block&mdash;eighty tons of hay, besides winning
-thirty-eight prizes at Albertan poultry shows.
-This would seem to show that Alberta is not
-yet rich in pure bred fowls. The Cheshire
-chicken rancher said he hoped to show the
-people round what a good table bird ought to
-look like. He was already a Canadian in all
-but accent. May he prosper!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After talking with him we drove on again
-towards Nightingale in the same sea-wind along
-the same bad roads. The sameness of the
-country was amazing; nor should I have known
-in the end that we had come to Nightingale
-but for the man driving us. 'See that
-avenue?' he said. 'The shacks standing
-along that are the farms. It seems more
-sociable being along a road.' 'Certainly,' I
-said. So it is more sociable to live along a
-road, provided you know it is a road. I
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P167"></a>167}</span>
-didn't, but the colonists did, and that was the
-main thing. We found those we visited
-apparently contented and undoubtedly hopeful.
-Canada has the gift of making men hopeful.
-Though it had been in this part a very poor
-year, owing to drought, and though the irrigation
-had not been properly ready (but accidents
-will happen, and the company was charging
-only a nominal rent as a result of this) the
-farmers seemed as cheery as they would have
-been dismal in England. The crops had been
-poor, but they would do for chicken-feed.
-A bumper year was a sure thing some time or
-other. The future held no clouds. They were
-going to study Canadian methods suited to
-the country. I rubbed my eyes. These
-sentiments were being enunciated by an English
-farmer, who was meanwhile giving us a most
-hospitable English lunch. He was going to
-tell more people to come out. It was the
-finest farming land possible, once you get the
-water on it. Only one must take local advice
-how to run things. It was no good standing
-out, and knowing better than people on the
-spot, as one of the colonists was doing. He, I
-gathered, was the only man regarded as likely
-to do badly, being determined to stick to the
-methods of his English forebears. His leading
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P168"></a>168}</span>
-wrongheadedness was in declining to believe
-that the winter was going to be or could be as
-long and as hard as people said, and he had not
-got in half the food needful for his cattle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I suppose, but for that winter, the prairie
-would be the most sought-after country in
-the world. But for that winter, however,
-it would not possess the amazing friable soil
-it does. As has been remarked, one cannot
-have everything all the time. The winter
-is very severe, and there should be no disguising
-of the fact, nor indeed any exaggerating
-of it. Formerly its hardships were no
-doubt exaggerated. People had no use for
-a hard winter. Nowadays leisured people go
-in search of it&mdash;on the understanding,
-however, that it shall be made easy for them.
-They would like it less if they had to work
-in it in a below zero temperature, twenty
-or thirty miles from anywhere. I do not
-say that work under such conditions should
-or would disgust healthy and energetic men,
-provided they were prepared for it. It might
-even delight them. But it should be
-prepared for. English farmers in particular
-should be made to understand the drawbacks
-as well as the advantages of the new land they
-are going to. Honesty is in fact the best
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P169"></a>169}</span>
-emigration policy. Given that, it is
-tolerably certain that these transplanted English
-farmers are going to find it more than worth
-while to have settled in Nightingale or any
-of the newer prairie colonies, and what is
-more&mdash;Canada is going to find it more than
-worth while to have them settled there.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P170"></a>170}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII
-<br /><br />
-INTO THE ROCKIES WITH A DEFENDER OF THE FAITH
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-For several days I had seen the Rockies far
-off&mdash;a black and jagged coil of mountains,
-that seemed at times almost to be moving
-like some prehistoric great scaly beast on
-its endless crawl across the plains. Now I
-was to see them near by&mdash;some part of them
-at least. What has any man seen in that
-ocean of mountains but a few drops?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the unpleasing hour of 3.30 A.M. I
-disengaged myself from one of the three double
-beds with which my room in the hotel was
-furnished, washed slightly, dressed completely,
-and walked to the station. Calgary was
-quiet at last. There had been a sound of
-revelry by night. A man with a tenor voice
-had been singing songs in some adjacent
-room to the hotel up to 3.30. But his songs
-and the vamped accompaniment to them had
-ceased now, and peace prevailed. I don't
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P171"></a>171}</span>
-remember to have passed any one on the
-way to the station. There were two or three
-sleepy-eyed people lounging about there;
-there always seem to be a few in Canadian
-stations, no matter what the hour. I think
-they must be out-of-works who keep their
-spirits up by listening to the squeaking and
-clash of shunting trucks, and the letting off
-of steam, and the great clang of the bells
-that are sounded from the engines as a
-trans-continental train comes in&mdash;all those sounds
-of life and hustle that are dear to the Canadian
-soul.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-170"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-170.jpg" alt="MOUNT LEFROY. CANADIAN ROCKIES." />
-<br />
-MOUNT LEFROY. CANADIAN ROCKIES.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The train I was waiting for entered slowly
-with the usual peal of bells. All the blinds
-were drawn in the sleeping-carriages; and
-the only sign of life from them was the
-protruded woolly head, here and there, of a negro
-car conductor. I think I was the only person
-who got in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a lot of people,' I said to myself as
-I sat down in an empty smoking compartment,
-and shivering lit a pipe, 'would envy
-the prospects of a man about to spend days
-and perhaps weeks in the heart of the Rockies.' 'What
-a lot of people,' myself replied to me,
-'would see the Rockies further before they
-got out of bed at this unholy hour.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P172"></a>172}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My pipe held the balance between us and
-gradually soothed the rebellious part of me.
-It was still too dark to see anything, and there
-was nothing to be done but wait patiently
-for the dawn. I could not but regret that
-I was missing the scenery of the foothills, for
-which those who have lived among them
-seem to have a peculiar affection. But I
-was consoled by the entry a little later of
-two fellow-passengers, who had evidently
-been disturbed in their sleep and wanted
-smoke and conversation. Strange and various
-types one sees in a Westbound train. The
-West is still&mdash;even to the Canadian born&mdash;the
-Unknown and the Happy Hunting-grounds
-and Eldorado and Ultima Thule and the
-Blessed Isles. West is where the farmer's
-son of spirit goes to seek fresh lands, where
-the prospector goes to find gold, where
-successful men go because they want to be more
-successful, or maybe because they want to
-retire and enjoy themselves, and they have
-heard that West there is a climate which hardly
-includes winter, and has none at all of that
-fierce break-up of winter which makes the
-plains in parts trying to the toughest
-constitution; where the failures go because they
-have tried all other places, and the last is
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P173"></a>173}</span>
-West. All sorts of other men may be seen
-going West too&mdash;bank clerks and lumbermen,
-commercial travellers and engineers, tourists
-and politicians, trappers and amateurs of sport.
-But I never saw a more strangely assorted
-pair than these two men who came into the
-smoking compartment where I sat as the
-train mounted the foothills.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One was a very old man. I do not know
-what his profession was, but his clothes and
-himself were equally weather-stained and dirty.
-He had the coarsest snow-white hair hanging
-in cords about his neck and cheeks and mouth,
-which gave him the appearance of a vicious
-old billy-goat. He was, I discovered, a
-moderately vicious old man. The other was a
-lumberjack&mdash;hardly more than a boy, sturdy,
-and strikingly handsome, with the clearest
-blue eyes and a complexion that a woman
-would give a fortune for. The old man&mdash;as
-they came in together&mdash;was already engaged
-in telling the young one what you might call
-a backwoods smoking-room story, and he
-went on with others even thicker, over which
-the young one betrayed the hugest amusement.
-What particularly won his laughter
-and admiration was the fact that so elderly
-a person should enter into such topics with
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P174"></a>174}</span>
-so much zest. I can still hear him repeating,
-'There ain't many fellows as old as you,
-Daddy, that 'ud be such sports. No, sir.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the old man would grin and chuckle
-at the compliment, and become more highly
-improper in the warmth of the boy's praise.
-He became indeed so elevated by it&mdash;especially
-after the boy had got up once or twice
-and executed a brief step-dance to mark the
-exuberance of his delight&mdash;that, thinking to
-gain even more glory by being still more
-startling, he dropped the subject of women
-and took up that of religion. It seemed he
-was an atheist of the old three-shots-a-penny
-variety, and he went for Christianity hot
-and strong. He had, it must be admitted,
-a perfectly skilled command of the old cheap
-arguments, and marshalled them in good order.
-Only, the unexpected happened. The boy,
-who had not minded being boyishly wicked,
-was plainly shocked by this new thing, and he
-said so in language so warm that a minister
-of the faith he was defending would have
-felt positively faint to hear it. The old man,
-surprised and still more annoyed, brought
-out further iconoclastic arguments, excellently
-directed. It is true any theologian could
-have warded them off easily enough. Any
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P175"></a>175}</span>
-debater could have. But it was clear that
-the boy had never argued in his life. That
-didn't matter. He was not going to sit there
-and listen to that sort of thing. He got indeed
-quite hopelessly confused; intellectually he
-was tripped time and again; he deferred
-with a lamb's innocence to the old man's
-boasts of having perused Persian literature,
-Hebrew literature, all the books that have
-to do with Buddhism and Zoroastrianism (I
-am afraid I did not believe any of this); he
-allowed that so much learning and thought
-must be a fine thing, but not an inch did he
-yield of his creed. And the more the old
-man got at him with arguments the more
-sulphurous grew the boy's language. I have
-never known so queer a Defender of the
-Faith as that lumberjack&mdash;or in a way a more
-successful one. His manner was childlike, his
-words unprintable; he made a muddle whenever
-he attempted to follow the simplest of
-the old villain's inferences. Yet never the
-least shake could his opponent give him, and
-his dogged reiteration of the statement that
-'A man by &mdash;&mdash; could only stick to the &mdash;&mdash;
-faith that he had, and Daddy was a &mdash;&mdash; fool
-to think his that &mdash;&mdash; arguments made any
-difference'&mdash;wore the old free-thinker out in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P176"></a>176}</span>
-the end. He did not give in, but he gave up: a
-wiser but, it is to be feared, not a better old man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile we were getting into the hills,
-and my first impressions were rather of great
-rocks than of mountains. Most people, I
-suppose, come upon the Rockies first from the
-east, and they seem tremendous if only for
-the reason that one has come upon them
-after days spent in those plains which, even
-while they rise, rise imperceptibly. But
-tremendous as they seem from the east, they
-must be far more so from the north, and far
-more beautiful from the west. On the east
-the mountains have less height than on the
-north. Their timber is poor by comparison
-with the trees that grow further west; their
-valleys have little of the luxuriance of the
-Pacific valleys. One feels a certain coldness
-and hardness about them, and after a little
-while there seems almost a monotony of
-corrugated peaks, all thrown together and
-slanting eastward. They are striking enough
-even so, and the view from the train,
-especially when one considers that railways are
-run through mountains by the easiest route
-not by the finest, and that grades have to be
-counted before landscapes, cannot disappoint
-anybody.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-176"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-176.jpg" alt="A TRAIL IN THE ROCKIES" />
-<br />
-A TRAIL IN THE ROCKIES
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P177"></a>177}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Comparisons with the Alps and the Himalayas
-should be kept till the Rockies have
-been seen at closer quarters. The finest view
-I ever had of the Rockies was from a mountain
-in the Selkirks, at a height of over ten
-thousand feet, and over a hundred miles from
-the nearest railway. There I forgot to make
-comparisons, which after all are somewhat
-useless. It is easy to say that the Alps are
-softer and more pictorial&mdash;showing that deep
-blue sky above their snows, which is rarely
-if ever to be seen in the Rockies. The Canadian
-skies are too lofty and distant ever to seem
-to be resting even on the topmost snowfields.
-The Himalayas again have giants unparalleled.
-Kinchinjunga, leaning out of the clouds,
-cannot be matched among the Rockies. But
-the Rockies&mdash;well, the Rockies are different.
-As yet we are only just getting to Banff.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P178"></a>178}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX
-<br /><br />
-A HOT BATH IN BANFF
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Everybody stops at Banff. The popular
-places of the world are not necessarily the
-most beautiful; and even if they start
-beautiful, they are not rendered more so by the
-accretion in their midst of a large number of
-even first-class hotels. Perhaps first-class
-hotels increase the feeling for beauty. Indeed
-the sole defence of luxury worth consideration
-is that it has this effect. Without luxury,
-would there exist such an appreciator of
-beauty as d'Annunzio, to name but one?
-Pardon, I am getting away from Banff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is a very beautiful watering-place at the
-foot of mountains. It is not spoilt yet, and
-it will be difficult to spoil it. The air is
-superb. I learnt that just as I was getting
-into it on my way from the station. I seemed
-to be the only person walking into it that
-morning&mdash;except for a local Canadian who
-was going in to his work. It was still very
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P179"></a>179}</span>
-early in the morning, and distinctly cold,
-and I said to this Canadian workman:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It's pretty cold at Banff.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It's the finest air in Canada,' he replied,
-with that characteristic touch of resentment
-of anything that might be taken as a criticism
-of his native heath, which every Canadian
-invariably shows. 'Yes, sir, it's the finest air
-in Canada, and they're putting down concrete
-sidewalks.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was, as a matter of fact, engaged in that
-work himself, and after I had expressed a
-proper admiration of it, he became friendly
-enough and directed me to the hotel I wanted
-to stay in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish it had not rained at Banff while I
-was there. It was an unusually cold and
-early rain, and it prevented me from seeing
-many of the sights of the place. The motor
-boat, which as a rule runs several times a day
-up the Bow River, did not run at all while
-I was there, and so I did not see this lovely
-valley. Nor did I take much stock of the
-buffaloes of the National Park, which are
-one of the greatest features of Banff, one that
-tourists with cameras always make for first.
-Rain was the reason of my abstention. On
-the other hand, the rain was the immediate
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P180"></a>180}</span>
-cause of my spending a most delightful
-afternoon in a hot sulphur swimming-bath. There
-are three such baths in Banff, and I chose
-the upper one, walking two miles up a
-winding road, whose woods were beginning to
-show all the reds of autumn, to get to it. I
-found that it was an open-air bath, fed by
-a sulphur stream that trickles steaming down
-the face of a mountain, and since no one had
-been tempted there on so gloomy a day, I
-had it all to myself, and swam up and down
-in water that varied from 110° to 95° for an
-hour or more, looking at the hilltops opposite,
-and the mists that rose and sank about them.
-The rain and the cold mattered nothing so
-long as I swam there, wondering if luxury
-could go further in this world of ours. For
-there I was lapped about with all the warmth
-and peace that come to the beach-comber
-or the lotus-eater, and yet drinking in the
-brisk mountain air and feeling the challenge
-of the hills. It was to combine the emotions
-of a man climbing the Alps with the emotions
-of a man squatting in a Turkish bath; and
-only when the latter threatened to become
-rather the stronger of the two, did I get out,
-feeling weak but fresh. I had the pleasure
-while dressing of reading in a printed advertisement
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P181"></a>181}</span>
-of the baths that I had been curing
-myself of rheumatism, sciatica, asthma, anæmia,
-insomnia and, I fancy, any other disease I
-might happen to have latent. Certainly I
-felt well and uncommonly drowsy when I
-got back to the hotel. Indeed those who
-intend to explore Banff with energy would
-be well advised to postpone the baths till
-their last day. There is plenty to explore.
-The National Park alone is 5400 square miles
-in extent, and encloses half a dozen subsidiary
-ranges of the Rocky Mountains; and if Banff
-is to be regarded as the centre for mountain
-climbing, fishing, and big game hunting, there
-is of course no end to it. Guide-books
-mention in a vague way that it is such a
-centre&mdash;which only means that if you want to do
-any of these things from a highly civilised
-and comfortable hotel, you had better make
-Banff your stopping place. Good climbing is
-to be had quite near, but whether the same
-is to be said for shooting or fishing depends
-upon whether anything short of the best in
-these matters is good. You cannot expect
-fish and big game to remain centralised.
-Particularly is this the case with big game. They
-avoid the centre of things, and prefer to keep
-on the circumference. In these sort of matters
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P182"></a>182}</span>
-guide-books are very little use. Nowhere
-do conditions change more rapidly than in
-Canada, and the man who wants big-horn
-or big trout will have to make for the
-circumference too. But there he will neither expect
-nor find first-class hotels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Speaking of first-class hotels, I took part&mdash;quite
-an unwilling part&mdash;in an incident that
-goes to show some of the difficulties attendant
-upon trying to run them in Canada. Frankly,
-except for those run by the Canadian Pacific
-Railway, there are practically none. It is not
-to be wondered at. Cookery is an art, like
-literature or music, not greatly encouraged in
-a new country. Take waiters again. Though
-the wages they make are good and the standard
-of waiting expected from them is rarely the
-highest, I believe they are a perennial difficulty
-to hotel proprietors. On the trains and in the
-big towns in the East one usually finds that
-the waiters are Englishmen not long out;
-and they are so not because they have acquired
-the science of waiting in the old country (as
-one might suppose, since it is usually well
-learnt there), but because they have not as yet
-acquired that Canadian spirit which makes
-anything savouring of domestic service&mdash;or
-even of undue courtesy as from man to
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P183"></a>183}</span>
-man&mdash;distasteful to the Canadian born, who, in any
-case, dislikes working for uncertainly long
-hours. Englishmen, it has to be admitted,
-are not particularly zealous for long and
-uncertain hours of work either in these days;
-and therefore it generally happens that as soon
-as the newcomer is the least acclimatised, he,
-too, drops waiting if he has taken it up. In
-the East a freshly arrived immigrant takes his
-place; but in the West there is no such constant
-supply of spare white men. The result is that
-Western hotels are more or less driven to
-employ as waiters either women or Japanese and
-Chinese boys.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The hotel I stayed in at Banff had a staff of
-the former. Heaven knows we have women
-waiters enough in England, but in Canada I
-do not think heaven can know.... As soon as
-I came in to breakfast in the morning I became
-aware of a sharp-featured maiden with
-eyeglasses and tight lips and stiff white
-cuffs&mdash;very much the type of the Girton girl in the
-older times&mdash;who was clearly in charge of the
-room, and meant to let every one know it.
-I shrank down at the nearest table, and in a
-hushed voice requested and received my
-breakfast from one of the waitresses who were
-theoretically in attendance. She was very kindly,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P184"></a>184}</span>
-only she brought me tea instead of coffee. I
-wanted coffee. I felt it was taking a risk, but
-as a man at his breakfast usually prefers his
-own fancy to other people's, I looked about
-delicately to see if I could catch my waitress's
-eye and induce her to change the pot. By bad
-fortune I merely caught the eye of the sharp
-young lady who, coming up and learning from
-my unwilling lips that I had been given the
-wrong drink, said imperiously:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Kindly tell me which of the girls gave you this!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now I had not particularly noticed the girl
-who had been good enough to help me&mdash;an
-inexcusable carelessness&mdash;which the sharp
-young woman evidently interpreted as a desire
-to fence with her, for while I hesitated she
-went on:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I'll tell you why I want to know. There's
-some game on this morning&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh,' I said, 'yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I'm not going to stand it,' said the
-sharp young woman fiercely. 'I fired two of
-the girls yesterday, and I don't mind if I fire
-the lot, so if you'll tell me which of them
-brought you this I'll see to her straight away.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I'm afraid I should not know her again,'
-I said hastily. A scene of strife around my
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P185"></a>185}</span>
-unlucky person, while breakfast got cold and
-all the other guests at the other tables looked
-on, was terrible to my fancy. The sharp one
-seemed most disappointed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I wish you could,' she said. 'I'd fix her
-right now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Quite impossible,' I murmured, hoping that
-I was speaking the truth. Not so far off there
-was a young woman, standing chatting genially
-with two men at another table, who might have
-brought me that tea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, well, of course if you can't,' said the
-sharp one, and presently brought me coffee with
-her own fair white-cuffed hands. I thanked
-her warmly, and she went away; after which
-I was rewarded for my supposed chivalry by
-the young woman who had been entertaining
-those other two men coming up to me and
-saying in a sweet voice:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I say, I'm awfully sorry that I brought you
-that tea instead of coffee. The fact is we're
-awfully rushed this morning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not at all,' I said, 'don't think of it,' and
-hoped inwardly that she would go away before
-the sharp one spotted her and bore down upon
-us. She did not seem so rushed as she had said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sure you won't have anything else now?'
-she persisted in the kindliest way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P186"></a>186}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, thank you,' I said, and seeing, I suppose,
-that I was not an entertaining person, she
-flitted gracefully away to a third table where
-another male sat, to whom I heard her whisper
-in passing&mdash;on the way to further chat with
-the other two men:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, mind you don't forget to meet me
-outside the hotel at six sharp!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My sympathies almost went out to the
-sharp-visaged spinster, for really there were quite
-a number of guests looking about them for
-food while the rushed staff chatted freely and
-pleasantly with such male visitors as seemed
-by their bearing to be worthy of being
-fascinated. This at breakfast-time&mdash;breakfast-time
-when an Englishman at all events wants food
-and would not be put off by the conversation
-of Cleopatra or Helen of Troy. Canadians may
-be a more gallant race at this hour of the day,
-but I am not sure of this. The preponderance
-of Japanese waiters as one gets further West
-seems to point to the fact that even they
-prefer food&mdash;at meal-times&mdash;to sentiment. The
-Japanese may demand high wages, and leave
-their places suddenly if they feel like it, but at
-least they do not threaten one with an emotional
-scene over one's morning coffee. Nor do I
-imagine that they require to be treated by their
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P187"></a>187}</span>
-employers with quite that reverential respect
-of which I remember seeing an example in a
-small hotel in the Columbia Valley. I was
-stopping at the hotel over Sunday with a
-friend, and as we wanted to go out for the day,
-we asked the manager if we could be supplied
-with some sandwiches for lunch. He was a
-mild and obliging young man, but his face fell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I'll&mdash;I'll see what can be done,' he said,
-and I heard him go to the young lady who
-vouchsafed to wait at table occasionally in a
-superior way. 'My God!' I heard him say
-in an extremely humble voice to her, 'I'm
-most awfully sorry to ask such a thing of you,
-but these chaps want to go out and take some
-sandwiches. I say, do you suppose it could be
-managed?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We got two sandwiches each as a result of
-his intercession, and in that mountain air we
-could have done with six times the number.
-But we realised from the manager's face when
-he brought them to us that the goddess who
-had provided them might, instead of doing so,
-have stalked straight out of the hotel for good.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P188"></a>188}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX
-<br /><br />
-CANADA AND WOMAN
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Few books are complete nowadays without a
-chapter on the woman question. Man can be
-treated of in between; one would not as yet
-care to write a book without mentioning man
-in it. As a subsidiary agent for keeping the
-world going man is still not without his
-importance. But woman, as I have said, must
-have a chapter to herself. And since I
-unwittingly arrived on the last page at the subject
-of woman's work in Canada, I will pause&mdash;even
-on the threshold of the mountains&mdash;and
-go further into the matter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most noticeable thing about woman
-in Western Canada is that she has not yet
-arrived there. If any one wished to get an idea
-of how the world would arrange itself supposing
-there were no women in it at all, they would
-have to go a little further north and west,
-into some of the British Columbian valleys or
-into the Yukon country, and look around.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P189"></a>189}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What a simple world it seems. No clothes
-question, no washing, the simplest cookery,
-one man one plate (and that plate never
-washed), one knife for eating with or for
-skinning a grizzly bear, no carpets or curtains in
-the houses, no dustings or spring-cleanings, no
-knick-knacks to knock over or break, no flowers
-without or within except such as grow wild, no
-luxuries, in short, either to enjoy or to pay for,
-and a terrible amount of dirt. That is the
-physical aspect of the world without women.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The spiritual side of it is less easy to arrive
-at. These bachelors you see in the backwoods
-are a silent people, lacking in self-consciousness,
-and, I daresay, in manners, but law-abiding
-and amiable and peculiarly handy. All men
-are handy who have not women to steal that
-talent from them; and most womenless men
-are silent too. One knows, of course, that
-bores may be found among men at times, but
-never chatterboxes. There is something to
-be said for the view that speech arose by
-women putting questions so often that men
-were driven, in sheer weariness, to make
-answers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Does it seem an unattractive life that these
-hardy bachelors have perforce to live?
-Perhaps. But you will not find them bemoaning
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P190"></a>190}</span>
-their lot. That is not the way of bachelors.
-We know they are to be pitied, but they do
-not pity themselves. Seriously, the trouble
-with these men is that they have none of those
-inducements to consider the future which
-make a man better than a machine. They take
-the world as it comes, which is well enough
-for themselves but not well enough for the
-world. I doubt if it is well for themselves
-really. True, they have nothing to worry them
-so long as they are in health. They can make
-big money when they choose and take holidays
-when they choose, conscious that when their
-money is spent they have only to set to again.
-Their wages are indeed to them little more
-than trinkgeld&mdash;and this means that those
-splendid workers have no real reward for their
-work, leave no successors to carry on the
-traditions of their toil, enrich only the
-bar-keepers and the rogues who live on the folly
-of honest men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clearly the most honourable opening for
-women in Canada is marriage. Only wives
-are capable of putting down the drink curse,
-preventing the growth of a particularly odious
-plutocracy, establishing a permanent instead
-of a nomad population in the West. Nor might
-it be a bad thing (but for Anglo-Saxon
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P191"></a>191}</span>
-prejudices) if provincial governments there could
-start marriage offices, due attention being paid
-to eugenics. Even in so small a matter as the
-following, the presence of wives should make
-all the difference. All down the Columbia
-valley I found the cattle ranchers, who were
-bachelors, drinking tinned milk, while scores
-of cows ran wild and went dry. When I asked
-if it wasn't worth while to keep one cow milking,
-I was always told, 'No, we haven't time to
-bother about it,' till I came to the shack of a
-married Swede, whose wife had time to bother
-about it. In his shack tinned milk was
-anathema, as it should be everywhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As prejudice would undoubtedly prevent the
-formation of governmental marriage offices,
-marriage can only be considered as an indirect
-opening for women. What are the directer
-openings? A great deal depends on what part
-of Canada immigrant women make for. In the
-East there is no such lack of women as in the
-West. The sexes are fairly balanced. In the
-big towns there is the usual demand for domestic
-servants, but not many more openings for
-educated Englishwomen than there are in big
-towns at home. There are a few more, because
-those cities are going at a faster pace than our
-English cities, and because all work there is
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P192"></a>192}</span>
-more valuable than in England. Women skilled
-in the arts that have to do with personal
-decoration, such as millinery, dressmaking, etc.,
-could make their way there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Factory work in Canada is hardly worth going
-into here, the chief point about it being that
-wages are of course higher; nor did I notice
-any unusual professions engaging the attention
-of women, unless it were the checking of parcels
-and the playing in hotel orchestras, neither of
-which requires a man's strength.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-192"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-192.jpg" alt="THE HALT. LAGGAN." />
-<br />
-THE HALT. LAGGAN.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-French Canada offers employment to but
-very few. Western Canadians sniff at the
-Habitants because they let their women work
-in the fields; haymaking and hoeing. But
-the idea of using women as outdoor workers is
-not so uncivilised as it looks to those
-unaccustomed to seeing it. Ethnologists are agreed
-nowadays that the tribes in which women do
-the fieldwork are not the least but the most
-civilised, and maintain that the position of
-women among such tribes is higher than among
-any others. Women began to work out-of-doors
-because the primitive peoples believed
-in a connection between their fertility and that
-of the earth; and where they do such work,
-women are always the keepers of the grain
-store&mdash;hold in their hands, that is to say, the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P193"></a>193}</span>
-food upon which the life of the tribe depends.
-The most honourable primitive customs are not
-always the best in modern times, but there
-can be no doubt of the fertility of the French
-Canadians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As one goes West, woman becomes more of
-an indoor creature; and this may be due to the
-greater chivalry of their men folk. But one
-has to remember that the great charm of
-Canadian life, especially on the prairies, is an
-outdoor charm&mdash;working in the exhilarating
-air&mdash;not cooking over a hot stove indoors.
-One hears of a few cases in which women have
-taken up farming or vegetable-gardening and
-made a success of it, but no one could honestly
-say that the fortune awaiting women who take
-up such work is usually a great one. The work
-is too hard, especially in the winter time.
-Chicken-ranching is perhaps easier; but the
-real demand in the West is for women to do that
-housework which the men have not time for.
-At such work capable women can earn from
-three to five pounds a month with board and
-lodging; and while they are likely to find it
-rather harder&mdash;certainly not less hard&mdash;than
-similar work at home, it has compensations
-besides the money to be made by it. For one
-thing there is none of the odium that attaches
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P194"></a>194}</span>
-to it in the older countries. The cook is as
-good as her employer, who probably did the
-cook's work for years before the cook was to be
-had. It is natural that the work which most
-ladies have to do for themselves, because
-neither love nor money can obtain them
-substitutes, should lose its menial and unpleasant
-aspect, and the finest ladies in western
-Canada do it unashamed. Often their guests
-will help them to wash up, and even prepare
-the dinner. Personally, I found myself
-becoming quite expert at cleaning fish for a hostess
-who thereafter cooked it and dished it up, and
-yet appeared at table as fresh and elegant and
-apparently leisured as any lady who keeps a
-staff of servants in the old country. And I
-found as I got on that I rather liked cleaning
-fish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It stands to reason that the lady help is not
-wanted. The precise duties demanded of such
-a lady are always a little misty, but I imagine
-that they include a little sewing and a little
-reading, the ability to chat pleasantly, to be
-good-tempered (and possibly a Protestant),
-to feed the canary, and, at a pinch, even to
-clean out its cage. None of these talents are
-needed in a new country, and I heard of forty
-women who were on the books of an employment
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P195"></a>195}</span>
-office in Calgary, all wanting to be lady helps
-and all likely to go on wanting it till Doomsday.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One hears a good deal of discussion (not in
-Canada) of the openings in the colonies for
-educated women. There is an English
-committee&mdash;the Committee of Colonial Intelligence
-for Educated Women&mdash;which, 'recognising the
-crying need of our colonies for the best type of
-educated women,' undertakes to furnish them
-with detailed, practical and up-to-date
-information, before advising them to go out. This
-committee hopes later on to found settlements
-in the colonies, where training, suitable to the
-needs of each colony, can be given, and centres
-can be formed to which the girls can return
-in the intervals of employment. There is
-much sense both in the recognition of the need
-for educated women in the colonies and in the
-perception that the most educated woman will
-be lost there unless she is prepared to be
-practical. The truth is that that same
-adaptability which is required of men in Canada
-is required of women also. They must first
-suit the country before they can hope to leave
-their mark on it. Educated women can leave
-their mark there by their inward, not by their
-outward, superiority.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Centres to which the girls can go in the first
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P196"></a>196}</span>
-place, and to which they can return in the
-intervals of employment, are an excellent idea,
-and one which central or local government
-authorities in Canada would do well to support.
-Of course the Young Women's Christian Association
-already gives much help in this direction,
-but it cannot be expected to have branches
-everywhere. New towns and settlements are
-planned and put through very quickly in
-Canada, and wherever they result in creating
-a demand for women's work, some such centre
-for girls as near the railway depot as possible
-should be started. For one thing it would
-facilitate the engagement of girls, for another
-it would attract a better class. Probably the
-best openings of all for women in Canada&mdash;educated
-women, I mean&mdash;are in the big cities
-of the furthest West. In Vancouver and
-Victoria wealthy people reside who can afford
-to pay for such luxuries as private
-school-mistresses and governesses. And the supply
-of women is not so great there. Women also
-seem to be more employed there as hotel
-manageresses and under-manageresses, and as
-cashiers in hotels and offices. I never heard
-of women being real estate agents, but in a
-profession in which the arts of persuasion play
-a leading part, there seems no reason why they
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P197"></a>197}</span>
-should not shine. Of bachelor girls, living
-their own lives, I have also never heard in the
-West. They could hardly have the hearts to
-do it with so many bachelor men wasting their
-lives around them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the whole, the position of woman in
-Canada is one of honourable toil lightened by
-the high consideration in which they are held.
-They have hardly as yet obtained that dominant
-super-man eminence which American women
-are said to occupy. That is, perhaps, because
-they have not gone in so much for that culture
-and social fastidiousness by the lack of which in
-themselves some American husbands are made
-to feel their inferiority. On the other hand
-they seem to keep their men folk contented,
-and remain contented with them. Divorce is,
-I believe, uncommon in Canada.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P198"></a>198}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI
-<br /><br />
-THE LAKES AMONG THE CLOUDS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Who thinks the Rockies only of a forbidding
-magnificence, of a grandeur always dark and
-fierce? Let him go to Lake Louise. The
-only phrase I know that fits it is that German
-one&mdash;<i>märchenhaft schön</i>&mdash;lovely as a scene of
-fairyland. Coming upon it suddenly, on a
-moonlight night, it seems so unlooked-for, so
-exquisite, that one says to oneself, 'Surely it
-will vanish like a dream.'
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-198"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-198.jpg" alt="LAKE LOUISE, LAGGAN, ALBERTA" />
-<br />
-LAKE LOUISE, LAGGAN, ALBERTA
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is quite a little lake, shut in for the most
-part by hills. The hills are wooded at their
-base, and wooded high up&mdash;wooded, indeed,
-right into the clouds; but higher still they turn
-to bare walls of rock or snow-strewn peaks,
-where the snow and the flowers grow side by
-side. Up among the heights other little lakes
-lie&mdash;the Lakes in the Clouds, they are
-called&mdash;and sometimes they are in the clouds and
-sometimes not, and they are coloured like
-thick opals and moonstones, and you can see
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P199"></a>199}</span>
-the tall, slim firs growing at the bottom as if
-they were real trees and not only reflections.
-I think it is the colours of these lakes that are
-so fairy-like. People may say of the Rockies
-that they never give the contrast of white
-snow-fields and deep blue sky that is so marked
-in the Swiss and Italian Alps, but what of
-that? The colours they do yield are, in truth,
-far more delicate and varied&mdash;perhaps because
-the Canadian skies are so much loftier and
-farther away&mdash;and, if you do not believe it, go
-and look at the waters of Lake Louise. They
-are distilled from peacocks' tails and paved
-with mother-of-pearl, and into them rush those
-wild blues that are only mixed in the heart of
-glaciers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Across the end of the lake stretches the hotel
-garden&mdash;green turf crossed by one great border
-of Iceland poppies, golden and orange, fringing
-the water front. One other plant I should
-have liked to see growing there&mdash;the opal
-anchusa. Its colour is so exactly the colour
-of the lake, in sun and in shadow. Still, more
-colour is hardly needed anywhere round Lake
-Louise. As I have said, the very snows are
-gay when you get to them, and pied with
-flowers, as old English meadows used to be
-when old English poets used that word, before
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P200"></a>200}</span>
-scientific farming came in and determined that
-flowers were weeds and killed them. And I
-had thought of these valleys as black and
-frowning, full of melancholy noises among the trees,
-rather than windless and radiant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The station for Lake Louise is Laggan, and
-the time to arrive there is in the evening, just
-before the moon rises. It does not matter if
-the drive up from the station is accomplished
-in the dark. The road is wooded and beautiful,
-but do not wish for the moon till the last bend
-of it leads you suddenly on to the lake. Then
-wish for the moon hard. Or, if you want to
-make sure of it, and the moon (though it seems
-always magical in its uprising) follows laws
-like other things and will not rise unless it is
-due to, make cold calculations some time
-ahead, and be sure they are right. There never
-could be anything better worth timing than
-moonrise on Lake Louise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If the poppied air that was fabled to pervade
-certain lovely places in the old world hung
-about this region, there would be no coming
-away from it. You would remain gazing
-drowsily for ever at the lake like the lover on
-the Greek urn that Keats described. But all
-around are the mountains which distil an air
-keen and exhilarating, so that before you know
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P201"></a>201}</span>
-it you are set walking, or riding or climbing&mdash;in
-some way adventuring forth. Some people
-adventure forth in a carriage, but that is
-rather too like going out to battle in evening
-clothes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Myself, having but two days at my disposal&mdash;which
-I could very well have spent looking
-across the Iceland poppies at the lake&mdash;was
-urged by the air and a sense of duty to take a
-long walk the first day and a longish ride the
-second. For this second expedition I hired a
-mountain pony and decided to reach the
-Moraine Lake, which lies at the end of The
-Valley of the Ten Peaks. It was my first
-experience of a Rocky Mountain pony, and I will
-state at once that it was an unfavourable one.
-There exist, no doubt, a few excellent mountain
-ponies. I bestrode one or two later in different
-places. But this first one was so dispiriting
-that he warped my mind concerning the whole
-breed. The truth is that mountain ponies,
-being intended for the average tourist who
-seems to be not much of a rider, are both bred
-and trained to go no faster, and exhibit no
-more spirit than a bath-chair man. Not theirs
-to trot or canter, even if a smooth stretch of
-road present itself. Enough if they move
-steadily up mountain trails and along mountain
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P202"></a>202}</span>
-ledges and down precipitous tracks in a manner
-designed to make the tourist feel that mules
-are stumbling creatures by comparison. Enough
-in one way but not in another, for to emulate
-a baser creature corrupts the best-bred pony
-in the world. Ponies have that much of
-humanity in them. Besides, it is not worth
-while to breed the best ponies for such work;
-and, further and anyway, a mountain pony is,
-so to say, a contradiction in species. A pony
-as much as a horse is a creature of the plains;
-place him in the mountains and he becomes
-something different&mdash;scarcely a pony at all.
-He is then an animal that picks up his feet
-in a marvellous way, is free from mountain
-sickness and the faintness that comes from high
-altitudes, and carries a pack or a person on his
-back. But he is no longer the friend of man.
-He is merely the tool of the tourist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We started downhill&mdash;that pony and I&mdash;directly
-after lunch. Words&mdash;words&mdash;words.
-I mounted that pony directly after lunch.
-The road led downhill in the first instance. I
-tried to start the pony in that direction. That
-is a truer description of what actually
-happened. But after I had got his head set
-towards the Ten Peaks Valley, he slewed it
-round again. We had not by any means
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P203"></a>203}</span>
-started. 'He is frightened of the hill,' I
-thought to myself, and redirected his head,
-encouraging him with words and reins. I
-had no whip. The owners of these hired
-mountain ponies seem to think whips unnecessary,
-and, indeed, they are very little use.
-I tried one cut from the roadside some five
-minutes later. We had by that time made
-about a hundred yards. I beat him also with
-his own reins and my heels, and we accomplished
-about a quarter of a mile downhill,
-going delicately. I said to myself, 'Patience.
-The descent will soon be over. The road then
-rises. We shall see a different animal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What I saw when we came, by sideways and
-prolonged efforts, to the first part of the ascent,
-was that, greatly as that pony hated a down-hill
-grade, far more did he loathe an uphill one.
-We mounted it at what seemed to be a mile
-an hour or less, and I groaned to think that we
-had eight or nine to accomplish before we got
-to the lake, and the same in returning. By
-late afternoon I judged we had made the half
-distance and were still going weakly. I had
-cut two or three different sticks by now, and
-encouraged the pony with different words
-from those I had used at the start. He woke
-up once or twice and trotted for a moment.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P204"></a>204}</span>
-The road was not really steep for most of the
-way; where it was steep I walked, dragging
-the pony behind me. He did not seem to mind
-whether I was on his back or off, provided no
-motion was required of him. I found it was
-cooler work to get off and pull him than to
-propel him from the saddle. Always he stood
-still for choice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The road was good&mdash;good underfoot and
-good to observe from. On our left lay a broad
-valley, and on our right the hills. I should
-love to have paused voluntarily and absorbed
-the views, but in point of fact I only paused
-in passion to cut whips; the pony, meanwhile,
-grazing. He knew the road to the Moraine
-Lake better than I did, and he contested every
-inch of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think I was aware long before the Ten
-Peaks came into sight that I should not reach
-the lake that day&mdash;or perhaps ever; but I
-was determined that I would at least see where
-it lay, though the sun set.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We came within sight of it at last. Before
-then the Ten Peaks had come into line one by
-one till there they stood, ten white peaks all
-in a row. At their base I thought I saw the
-lake lying, very still and cold among its
-ice-worn pebbles.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-204"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-204.jpg" alt="IN THE VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS." />
-<br />
-IN THE VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P205"></a>205}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If I did not see it, if it was but a mirage, I
-do not greatly care. I achieved something
-more that afternoon than the mere sight of a
-lake. I got that pony back to the hotel almost
-in time for dinner. I was pretty stiff in the
-arms. It was not to be wondered at. Hauling
-a pony nine miles is no light work.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P206"></a>206}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXII
-<br /><br />
-A SOLITARY RIDE INTO THE YOHO VALLEY
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Emerald Lake is beautiful, but less beautiful,
-I think, than Lake Louise. It is more like a
-lake among mountains, and less like a lake in
-a dream. I went to it because I wanted to
-get into the Yoho Valley, if only for a day,
-and the trail from Emerald Lake into the
-Yoho is, I had heard, the most picturesque
-of all. Even superficially to see the valley
-takes four days, and I had left myself with
-only one, so that it was in a deprecating spirit
-that I asked the manageress of the lake chalet
-if I could at least get within sight of the valley
-and back before dark. She said that if I
-started at two o'clock punctually, on a pony,
-the thing could just be done. I said that I
-had tried one or two mountain ponies, and
-did not care about them when I was in a
-hurry.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-206"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-206.jpg" alt="ON THE TRAIL, YOHO VALLEY." />
-<br />
-ON THE TRAIL, YOHO VALLEY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, but I'll give you a slicker,' said the
-manageress. 'You see there's no run on
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P207"></a>207}</span>
-the ponies at present, and I'll ask the man
-to give you his very best. He'll just get
-you there and back in time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I thanked her and said I would try the
-slicker; and, half an hour later, the slicker
-and I were skirting the wooded shore of the
-Emerald Lake at what was, for a mountain
-pony, quite a fast trot. We were alone together.
-There were a few guests at the chalet, but
-the lateness of the season and the snow-clouds
-that loomed on the horizon had deterred
-any of them from starting on the Yoho Valley
-trip that day. Earlier in the year, there
-would have been quite a party riding together
-with a guide in the direction I was taking,
-for there are four camps in the valley, placed
-at picturesque points an easy day's ride apart,
-where you may rest and sleep, one night
-beneath a waterfall, the next on the edge
-of a glacier, with the ponies tethered round,
-and the camp-fires crackling pleasantly, so
-that you feel that you are pioneering, but
-pioneering luxuriously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now, as I have said, it was late in
-the season, and the snow-clouds were holding
-themselves in the sky ready for further attacks,
-and a keen wind was beginning to rise, so
-that no one else thought the Yoho Valley
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P208"></a>208}</span>
-tempting enough, and it was certain I should
-have it all to myself if I got there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The trail was not difficult to follow. There,
-at the end of the lake, was a mountain pass
-visible from the chalet, and the thin white
-line that screwed about among the rocks and
-trees was the trail. The slicker trotted. He
-trotted through the wood that borders the
-lake; he trotted through a wonderful pebbled
-valley beyond it which might have been a
-sea beach (only everywhere slim spruces, like
-sharp, green, tenpenny nails, grew out of the
-pebbles); and he trotted up the first stretch
-of trail leading to the pass ahead of us. Then
-for an hour or more the slicker climbed as
-steadily as a Swiss guide. The trail was
-less than a yard wide and metalled with rolling
-stones, and though it wound continually, its
-most generous spirals left it, to my fancy,
-almost sheer. We wound with it, past boulders
-and hanging trees and little cataracts that
-shot through air from some invisible lips of
-stone above&mdash;between shadowy crags and over
-unprotected places where the sun glared. In
-the end the slicker brought me to the pass
-itself, and we rode into a dark wood there,
-and the trees grew bigger and bigger, and
-the trail grew stickier and stickier, and the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P209"></a>209}</span>
-pass ended suddenly, and below, far, far below,
-was the Yoho Valley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The story of the boy who cried 'wolf' when
-there was no wolf is a familiar one, but much
-more familiar in everyday life is the story of
-the man who cries 'lion' when there is no lion.
-You know him and you don't believe him.
-You know that, moved by the immoderate
-enthusiasm which is the chief qualification
-for the profession of writing, he is doing his
-level best to make you believe that the object
-he is presenting to you is a lion, for the simple
-reason that if you believe it, you will be more
-attracted by it and him. Canada, being a
-much-advertised country at present, is full of
-lions. 'The finest view in Canada. Yes,
-sir.' How often I heard that remark! How often
-it turned out to be an overstatement. How
-distrustfully I came to listen to it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was it, then, that for some months I had
-imbibed the Canadian air, that when I reached
-the Rockies I too was carried away, and became
-as immoderately enthusiastic as any Canadian?
-I do not know. I merely have to confess that
-I was carried away, that I have already cried
-'lion' more than once, and that I must do so
-once again now that I have got to the Yoho
-Valley. Baedeker saves his own dignity&mdash;and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P210"></a>210}</span>
-that of literature&mdash;by using an asterisk at these
-critical points, or two asterisks if his emotions
-are very poignant. But I, who have to fill
-paper, must use words. Well, I am not afraid
-of exaggerating the beauties of the Yoho.
-This valley of enormous trees spiring up from
-unseen gorges to wellnigh unseen heights;
-of cataracts that fall in foam a thousand
-feet; of massed innumerable glaciers; this
-valley into which it seems you could drop all
-Switzerland, and still look down&mdash;is not easily
-overpraised. The difficulty is to praise it
-at all adequately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed to me as I rode on along the
-high trail that sometimes edged out to the
-gulf below and sometimes swerved back from
-it, that one of the wonders of the valley was
-a thing that in smaller places would have
-made for disappointment, and that is that
-it lies, and always has lain, outside the human
-radius. It has none of those connections
-with men that set us thrilling in other parts.
-No Hannibal ever led his army by this route
-across these mountains. No hardy tribesmen
-watched the approach of an enemy among
-its crags, or bred among them a race of
-mountaineers. No gods dwelt on its heights, and
-no poets ever came near to sing them. History
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P211"></a>211}</span>
-has nothing to tell of it. Little hills and little
-valleys have their stories and their songs,
-their memories and their miracles. They are
-haunted still with those forgotten mysteries
-which stir men's fancies more deeply than
-things remembered or discovered can. This
-valley walled about with mountains has been
-above and beyond men's ken from the beginning
-of the world: and now that men have
-come into it, they find nothing to discover
-in it except its vastness and immunity from
-the touch of men. It strikes one even now
-as not only devoid of human adjuncts but
-needless of them. A man no more looks for
-legends there than he would look for them
-in the centre of a typhoon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I suppose that men did pass through it&mdash;even
-before the valley became a known part
-of the world, and even a sight for tourists.
-It was not, as the phrase goes, untrodden by
-the foot of man. A few prospectors must
-have passed this way from time to time many
-years ago. Some may have died there for
-all one knows. Indian hunters, too, would
-enter the valley in pursuit of game. But
-no one possessed it; no one gave it the human
-air: or, if they did, the records are lost.
-Prospectors tell us only of their finds, nothing
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P212"></a>212}</span>
-of their lives. Of the Indians, some one
-someday may, perhaps, find some traces. At
-present their white brothers are little troubled
-by them or their history or their origin.
-Canadians are content to think of them as
-a primitive, decaying people who came from
-God knows where to a country they never
-realised was God's. It will be easier to forget
-them than to understand them, these strange
-men with faces no more expressive than wood,
-who, if they ever came to the Yoho Valley,
-must have passed through it more like trees
-walking among the trees than like men that
-stop and wonder, and leave a habitation and
-a name.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shadowy, disregardable creatures, then, as
-uninfluential as the slicker and myself, may
-have roamed the valley in times past and
-left no more traces upon it. We two realising,
-I trust, our minuteness and unimportance,
-went on, as it turned out, far beyond the point
-intended for our afternoon's excursion. In
-contemplation of the valley I had given the
-slicker the rein, and he, poor pony, no doubt
-thought that he was bound for the first camp,
-there to rest the night in the ordinary course.
-Presently I found him, his two front feet
-planted firmly together, sliding down the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P213"></a>213}</span>
-slipperiest piece of trail we had yet encountered,
-sliding and sliding till we had got to
-the very bottom of the valley&mdash;whereupon
-I discovered that we had indeed attained
-the first camp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a queer, unexpected sight&mdash;a few
-little lean-to tents and a couple of log huts,
-standing side by side on a flat piece of the
-valley floor, just beyond the spray of a
-cascade that dropped from ledge to ledge of the
-mountain opposite, starting so high up that
-it seemed to spring from the sky. The place
-seemed deserted, but while the slicker and
-I paused to look about us, out of the biggest
-tent there came a small, silent, yellow figure.
-It did not speak to me, but only stared, and
-I, having stared back for a little and having
-wondered if it were some gnome peculiar to
-the valley, suddenly saw that it had a pigtail,
-and remembered that I had been told that
-there was a Chinese cook in every camp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is this the first camp?' I therefore asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yup!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can you give me some tea?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yup!' he repeated, and vanished into
-the tent whence he had come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the time I had tethered the slicker on
-the grassiest spot I could find, that boy had
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P214"></a>214}</span>
-tea ready. He stared at me while I ate it,
-stared at me when I paid him for it, and stared
-at me when, having offered the slicker some
-bread and sugar in vain, I remounted him
-and set him on the homeward trail. I had
-not a watch with me. But it was evident
-from the position of the sun that we had
-very little daylight left for the return ride.
-Dusk, indeed, came on just as we reached the
-other side of the pass, with a mountain side
-still to descend. Dusk and an exceedingly
-cold wind&mdash;in the face of which that corkscrew
-trail seemed doubly steep. It was one
-of those occasions when vowing candles to
-one's patron saint might have added to one's
-peace of mind. But I have no patron saint
-and could but give the reins to the slicker,
-and he rewarded me for my trust by not
-falling down till we had actually accomplished
-the descent and were on the pebbled beach.
-Then, in the pitch-dark night, we both rolled
-over together. A match, lighted with difficulty,
-revealed the fact that neither of us was
-injured; and so, very steadily and cautiously,
-we moved on to the chalet, where we arrived
-to find dinner finished. But we had seen
-splendid things, the slicker and I.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P215"></a>215}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIII
-<br /><br />
-THE FRUIT-LANDS OF LAKE WINDERMERE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It would have been harder to leave the Rockies
-if I had not been bound for the Selkirks, which
-have this advantage over the Rockies, that
-they are perhaps less known. That part I
-was bound for is, indeed, not known at all to
-tourists, and very little known to anybody.
-The known part of the range lies round Glacier
-House, and includes Mount Abbott, the Great
-Illecillewaet Glacier, Mount Sir Donald, etc.,
-which high places the railway has now made
-accessible for tourists who can climb. The
-part I was to see lies to the south-east, at
-the head of the Columbia Valley, and is at
-present a hundred miles from the nearest
-railway station.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-First of all I took train to Golden. If you
-take a map of Canada and follow the trans-continental
-line westward, you will see that
-it emerges from the Rockies at Golden. Golden
-is a little mining town lying in the Columbia
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P216"></a>216}</span>
-Valley, with the Rockies on one side of it and
-the Selkirks on the other. It was chiefly to
-see this valley&mdash;one of the most fertile in
-British Columbia, but at present unopened&mdash;that
-I got out at Golden with a friend. An
-excursion into the Selkirks was to depend
-upon the time at our disposal. We had been
-told that near Lake Windermere, at a place
-called Wilmer, there was a great irrigation
-scheme in progress, which would shortly result
-in 60,000 acres of dry belt-land being ready
-for fruit-farming. This, when the rail from
-Kamloops to Golden was completed, would
-make the Columbia Valley as famous for its
-fruit as the Okanagan. We both wanted to
-see it. My friend wanted to buy land. The
-problem was how to get up the valley.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-216"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-216.jpg" alt="THE DEVIL'S FINGERS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS." />
-<br />
-THE DEVIL'S FINGERS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were, we found, five different ways of
-doing the eighty miles from Golden to Wilmer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-1. The first was to wait for that day of the
-week on which the stage-coach ran. It took
-two days to do the distance, and was very
-convenient if we did not mind waiting in
-Golden a few days first. But we were in a
-hurry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-2. This way was by river-boat&mdash;a delightful
-trip. But there were one or two objections
-to it. The water of the Columbia was very
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P217"></a>217}</span>
-low at this time of the year, the sand-banks
-were numerous, and the boat had gone up
-some days before and nobody knew when
-it would get down again. We gave up the
-boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-3. The third way, which we decided should
-be ours, was to go up in the only motor which
-Golden possessed. This would cost fifty dollars,
-but the journey there would only take about
-seven hours. When we had decided upon
-this, we went to the proprietor of the motor
-and found that the car was already out for
-an indefinite number of days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-4. This way was to walk the eighty
-miles&mdash;a plan I favoured and tried on the way
-back, as I shall describe. But my friend
-could not fancy it. Statelier than myself,
-he had to carry five more stones with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-5. This was the way we took. We hired
-a two-horse rig which undertook to do the
-journey in the same time as the stage&mdash;but
-for twenty dollars apiece instead of five.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We started from Golden on a Monday
-morning in the two-horse rig, driven by a
-young American. He had been in the United
-States navy, and also in Alberta, farming, but
-he had had no luck with his farm, having
-started with too small a capital to tide over
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P218"></a>218}</span>
-the two bad seasons which he had met there.
-He told us that he found Canada very similar
-to the States&mdash;neither much better nor worse;
-and he took his own luck there philosophically.
-He seemed to me altogether a capable man,
-whose fortune might have been all the other
-way. Anyway he drove excellently and was
-not a grumbler, like the American ex-sailor I
-met at Regina.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing could have been more beautiful
-than the late September morning when we
-started out of Golden. A spreading village of
-pretty poplar-lined avenues and pleasant
-bungalows, Golden explained its own name as we
-went. The wooded hills on either side were all
-splashed with autumn yellows, and the sun,
-striking down through a grove of silver poplars
-which shuts off the south end of the village,
-made it all seem shot with gold. It is a mining
-village, but compared with the usual mining
-village of Great Britain it seemed as Eden to
-the Inferno.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Coming out of it we struck what is the
-dominant scenery of the valley&mdash;the blue
-Columbia winding in and out, sometimes wooded
-to its brim, sometimes sweeping over into open
-marshland, but always with the hills lightly
-wooded, facing one another across it, and behind
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P219"></a>219}</span>
-them the white peaks hung with snow. At
-every mile or two a silvery creek, sometimes a
-mere ribbon of water, sometimes almost a river,
-rushed down to join the Columbia below;
-by the side of these creeks mostly would be
-the cleared land which small ranchers had
-settled, and where they had gone on living
-presumably on what they could grow off their
-own places, since the chances of reaching a
-market became obviously more difficult at
-every mile. Every wind of the road&mdash;and it
-mostly follows the river&mdash;gave views that were
-always changing and beautiful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was on the second day of our driving that
-the appearance of the valley grew different.
-The creeks became rarer; the soil drier.
-Instead of silver poplars rising among a tangled
-underbush, there were now jack-pines growing
-out of a burnt-up sward. We might have
-been going through some English park in the
-south country, and some one had evidently
-thought this before, for a man we met driving
-told us that this part of the valley was known
-as the Park. Passing through it we came at
-last to the real dry belt. Those who know the
-Okanagan would no doubt find it less strange,
-but it amazed me to find a country among these
-mountains almost Egyptian in its colouring and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P220"></a>220}</span>
-texture. Drier and drier became the soil;
-the trees became sparser and sparser; there
-was now no underwood at all. The straight
-firs rose clear out of sandy hills and hollows.
-Sandy they might appear, but this was not
-sand in the vulgar sense. It was glacial
-silt&mdash;bottomless drifts of powdered clay that has
-slipped down from the mountains and piled
-and sloped itself into 'benches' above the
-river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had to cross the river to get to Wilmer,
-which is the headquarters of the irrigation.
-Headquarters sounds imposing; and in a few
-years, doubtless, Wilmer will be imposing, but
-at present it consists of a few shacks, two
-small stores, a dirty little hotel (in the bar of
-which a man was shot the day after we left),
-and one presiding genius who has made Wilmer
-what it is and also what it will be shortly.
-Need I say that it was a Scot who years ago
-saw the far-reaching value of this land, conceived
-the idea of irrigating it, and personally
-superintended the carrying out of his conception?
-I don't know that I need. I came to the
-conclusion before I left Canada that Scots, more
-than any other race, were at the bottom, and
-generally also at the top, of most of the
-enterprises that were being carried out there. No
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P221"></a>221}</span>
-one talks of the Scotticisation of Canada.
-Perhaps Scots do not proselytise. Perhaps
-they do not find any other people worthy of
-being taken into their community. They prefer
-to remain an international oligarchy, managing
-others but not admitting them to equal rights.
-They effect their intentions by usually working
-alone and always sticking together. A paradoxical
-people. It is amazing to think that at
-the beginning of the eighteenth century the
-Scottish Highlander was regarded by the average
-Englishman in much the same light as we now
-regard the Hottentot or the Andaman Islander,
-a hopelessly idle and uncouthly impossible
-person, destined to remain a barbarian for ever.
-<i>Dis aliter visum</i>. The Highlander now directs
-the Empire, distinguishing himself in that
-respect even more than his Lowland brother.
-Yet only two hundred years have passed since
-he was outside the pale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My friend knew Mr. Randolph Bruce, the
-Highlander who presides over the Columbia
-Valley Irrigation Works, and will, it seems to
-me, rank as one of the many makers of Canada,
-and Mr. Bruce most hospitably put us up while
-we were in Wilmer, and showed us what he has
-done and what he means to do. What he
-means to do is to create a town on the shores
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P222"></a>222}</span>
-of Lake Windermere, and he drove us down
-there to show us the lake, which is not the
-least like its English original, but very beautiful
-nevertheless, lying as it does clear and still
-among the sand-hills, a belt of autumn-tinted
-trees around it, and, above, the hills and the
-snows. It looked like some African lake
-stretched at the feet of the Mountains of the
-Moon. It looked as if it might lie thus for
-centuries, silent and untouched by the hands
-of men. But it was a Canadian lake, and
-though it might seem to be at the very back of
-the world, it was shortly to have a town built
-on its shores. Mr. Bruce showed us the town
-site, the hotel site, the site of the
-bowling-green and the polo ground. I rather think
-he showed us the race-course that was going
-to be. I saw it all the more clearly because
-Mr. Bruce also showed us the work already
-actually accomplished&mdash;the canals and ditches
-that brought the upper mountain lakes down
-on to the benches of friable clay that were to
-grow the apples we shall eat in England a few
-years hence. It is all extraordinarily interesting,
-seeing this town of the future and these
-fruit-lands of the future&mdash;of which my friend bought
-twenty acres, which were to be named after
-him. The Columbia River ran just below the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P223"></a>223}</span>
-bench-land he bought, and I wished I had some
-capital handy that I might buy the adjoining
-plot, that I might also grow fruit there and have
-a portion of the fair Dominion named after me.
-If the Windermere race-course had already been
-in existence, and a race being run, I should have
-backed one of the horses against all my
-principles, and laid out the proceeds in a fruit-farm.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap24"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P224"></a>224}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIV
-<br /><br />
-THE SELKIRKS&mdash;A GRIZZLY-BEAR COUNTRY
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Behind Wilmer lies a part of the Selkirks which
-is known only to a few ranchers in the neighbourhood,
-and is scarcely accessible except from
-this point. We had spent two days in the
-neighbourhood of Lake Windermere, and on the
-third, though each of us was booked to be
-hundreds of miles further on our way by the
-end of the week, and heaven only knew how we
-were even going to reach Golden again, for we
-had let the rig go back and the boat was
-reported stuck somewhere on the Columbia
-River, we neither of us could resist an offer that
-was made us of an opportunity to climb Iron
-Top Mountain, which was somewhere at the
-back of this alluring country.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The offer came from a Mr. Starboard. In
-Canada you will sometimes find, several hundreds
-of miles from civilisation, some strenuous and
-capable man whom you would think civilisation
-needed and would require. But the wilds in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P225"></a>225}</span>
-Canada are more important. Mr. Starboard
-had come to these parts originally as a prospector
-and miner, but the mine he had come to had
-shut down&mdash;not for lack of silver and lead in it,
-but for lack of transport facilities; whereupon
-Mr. Starboard, fascinated by one of these
-valleys, had started horse-breeding there,
-occupying what time was left from clearing his
-land in making roads through the mountains
-and hunting big game. Dropping in at
-Mr. Bruce's casually one morning, he asked us if we
-should like to see the best view he knew of in
-the Selkirks. We said we should; and each,
-equipped with a toothbrush and a comb, was
-driven out to Starboard's ranch for lunch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Travelling in the remoter parts of Canada
-gives you strange table companions. You
-never know quite what company you will meet,
-though you can generally count upon its being
-interesting. While we were being driven up
-the Columbia Valley a few days before, we had
-heard from various homesteaders that there was
-'a big German bug' staying up in the mountains
-with his friends, trying for bear. 'They
-call him the Land Crab,' our informant would
-usually add for further elucidation of the big
-bug's official position. On arriving at
-Mr. Starboard's ranch we found that the big bug
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P226"></a>226}</span>
-in question was, in the commoner prose of
-Europe, the Landgraf of Hesse with two
-equerries and a small retinue. For a motley
-collection, the party that sat down to lunch
-that day in the chief room of Starboard's
-ranch would be difficult to beat. There was
-the Landgraf himself and his German
-companions, a well-known Canadian official, three
-valets&mdash;these all neatly dressed&mdash;Mrs. Starboard
-quite wonderfully frocked, as the fashion
-papers say, Mr. Starboard in ranching costume,
-and ourselves who had slept in our clothes for
-several days. The waiters were a Japanese
-and a Chinese. We fed off bear, shot by one
-of the Germans, who had been most successful
-in their hunting both of bear and goat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bear, by the way, was only one among other
-delicacies. Its taste is rather like that of
-Christmas beef stewed in the gravy of a goose.
-Vegetarians would not care about it; but after
-living on little else for two days I can answer
-for its being both appetising and sustaining,
-particularly in high altitudes. After lunch,
-four of us, Mr. Starboard, the railway man,
-my friend, and myself started for Iron Top
-Mountain, which lay seventeen miles off along
-a trail that rose steeply most of the way. The
-ponies were excellent ones, better even than
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P227"></a>227}</span>
-the slicker. Mr. Starboard had specially picked
-them, because he wanted to see if they could be
-got to carry us to the top of the mountain, a
-little over ten thousand feet. He had never
-taken ponies as high before, and doubted if the
-test had ever been made in Canada, though I
-fancy ponies have done as much or more in the
-Himalayas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We did fourteen miles that afternoon, following
-at first the bank of a blue foaming stream,
-then turning eastward up a steeper valley
-through which a smaller stream flowed. The
-trail was far better than many roads in French
-Canada or on the prairie, and had been
-constructed by Mr. Starboard himself to provide
-access to a silver and lead mine which had been
-shut down for some time. It seemed extraordinary
-that in a country so wild and remote
-there should be any trail at all, but miners go
-anywhere. A man who has to find his way
-into the earth makes no difficulty about finding
-his way across it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a day, half sunshine and half mist,
-and the mountains would sometimes be shut
-entirely in shrouds of vapour, sometimes would
-reveal slanted white tops cut off in mid-air by
-the fog below, sometimes would clear altogether,
-so that one could see everything on them,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P228"></a>228}</span>
-from the snowslides down which the grizzlies
-travel to the narrow tracks of the goats. As
-we mounted, the valley grew steeper and steeper,
-and the trail wound more and more. We passed
-one place where, earlier in the year, there had
-been a terrific slide of snow half a mile in width.
-The huge firs still lay where they had fallen,
-shattered and splintered before it. Half-way
-down, the avalanche had met a great pinnacle
-of rock that had stood the shock unmoved, and
-caused the snow to part to left and to right,
-where it had hewn two lanes of almost equal
-breadth through the trees. It was just near
-here that Mr. Starboard showed me a grizzly's
-track, and told me that he had seen no less than
-seventeen of these bears in the last fortnight.
-He said that their numbers were increasing
-yearly in that neighbourhood. A little later a
-porcupine crossed the trail ahead of us, and
-lurched unwieldily into the undergrowth. The
-trees grew close together all the way, except
-where we passed a great stretch of mountainside
-where a forest fire had raged, and even
-there the scorched trunks still stood, gibbeted
-skeletons of trees.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We put up for the night in a deserted mining
-camp, almost a village it was, with wooden
-shacks likely to be used again when the Kamloops
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P229"></a>229}</span>
-to Golden Railway is completed and it is
-worth while getting the stuff out of the mine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Up there it had begun to freeze hard, but a
-big fire and much bear, which the railway man
-fried over it with skill, kept us warm enough
-till we went to bed under many blankets in one
-of the shacks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was bitterly chill&mdash;the start in the early
-morning&mdash;after a breakfast of cold bear; and
-very soon after we set out we got into snow,
-and the trees ceased, and the ponies' flanks
-began to heave steadily. The morning was as
-bright as it was cold, however, and Mount
-Farnham, shaped like a chimney-pot, glittered
-right over us on the left. I remarked to
-Mr. Starboard what a nasty mountain it looked for
-climbing purposes, whereupon he astonished
-me by saying he had been up it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You went up to see if it could be done?'
-I said, thinking I had struck a keen climber in
-the European sense of the word.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' said Mr. Starboard simply; 'you
-would not catch me going up a place like that
-for the climb. I went there because I thought
-there was silver and lead there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The ponies were now beginning to show their
-respective stamina, two of them going right
-ahead, and the one that carried my friend
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P230"></a>230}</span>
-getting slower and slower. We had got by this
-time into a sort of rocky amphitheatre where
-the snow lay thicker, and just as I passed
-under a little cascade congealed into fantastic
-icicles as it spouted from a cleft, I heard a noise
-in my rear, and turned to see my friend and his
-pony doing Catherine wheels in the snow
-together. Luckily they fell&mdash;and rolled&mdash;softly
-and rose uninjured; but very soon after that
-the ponies had to be left. We turned them
-loose on a platform of rock which was,
-Mr. Starboard said, just short of ten thousand feet
-up. Only a few hundred more remained to be
-done, which we accomplished on foot through
-knee-deep snow, gaining the summit just in
-time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the first time I got a view of the Rockies.
-We looked down a long, narrow, purple valley
-that ran at right angles to the Columbia River,
-over the first hills beyond Wilmer, into a sea of
-mountains. I had heard that phrase&mdash;a sea
-of mountains&mdash;applied to the Rockies before,
-but I had not realised its fitness before.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-230"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-230.jpg" alt="A SENTINEL OF THE ROCKIES." />
-<br />
-A SENTINEL OF THE ROCKIES.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There it was, a sea of white caps frozen
-eternally in the very moment when they had
-stormed the sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For just five minutes we gazed, and then a
-mist settled down on them, and, where we were,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P231"></a>231}</span>
-immediately a bitter wind began to blow and
-caused us to make for the ponies hurriedly. As
-we rode down the frozen trail we startled some
-ptarmigan, which rose and fluttered above the
-snow like big white butterflies.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap25"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P232"></a>232}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXV
-<br /><br />
-AN EIGHTY-MILE WALK THROUGH THE COLUMBIA VALLEY
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-We got back to Wilmer the following morning,
-and the problem then was&mdash;how to reach
-Golden again. The boat was due up the
-river some time in the day, but sandbanks
-do not encourage punctuality. I had my
-suspicions of that boat, and in any case, even
-if it arrived that day, it would certainly not
-start back again till the morning following.
-I did not want to wait for it at Wilmer, and
-decided instead that I would start walking
-down the valley at once and pick the boat
-up at Spellamacheen, forty miles downstream,
-some time next day. My friend was as
-suspicious of the walk as I was of the boat; and
-since he had heard that some men were likely
-to turn up that day in a motor from Golden
-who might give him a lift back in case the
-boat failed, he decided to wait for them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we parted, and rather late in the day&mdash;at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P233"></a>233}</span>
-noon, to be exact&mdash;I set out on my walk.
-Forty miles is not much of a walk. It can
-be done in ten hours very easily&mdash;in eight
-if you make up your mind to it. I decided
-I would take nine hours over it and waste
-no time. I did not stop for lunch in Athelmer&mdash;where
-one crosses the Columbia&mdash;but merely
-bought some chocolate and a pound of apples,
-and hurried on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About a mile out of Athelmer I ate the
-apples, because they were a nuisance to carry,
-and wished I could as easily get rid of my
-heavy overcoat, which had its pockets stuffed
-with toilet and sleeping accessories just like
-a suit-case. I also wished that I had on boots
-that I had ever tried walking in. Still I did
-six or seven miles in the first hour and a half,
-and then I realised that two things
-destructive to fast walking were about to happen.
-One was footsoreness and the other was rain.
-Both came upon me a few minutes later, and
-both increased steadily hour after hour. The
-valley which had looked so beautiful in all
-the reds of autumn, as we drove through it
-in the sunlight, was now filled with a clammy
-mist; and the road which had seemed a fine
-road for the horses in fine weather now struck
-me as offensively sticky, and my pace declined
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P234"></a>234}</span>
-to something under three miles an hour. I
-consoled myself for a little with the thought
-that I was getting an experience of autumn
-in the Columbia Valley. Afterwards I decided
-that I would gladly do without it. I could
-have imagined it just as well. The road was
-like glue and my coat had increased in weight
-several pounds. To balance this as far as
-possible, I sat on a wet spruce tree that had
-fallen by the side of the road and ate my
-packet of chocolate; after which I moved
-on at a very sober pace. I began to doubt
-if I should get to Spellamacheen that night;
-and the doubt soon increased to a certainty
-that I should not. Then I remembered that
-on the drive out we had passed a place called
-Dolans, only twenty-eight miles from Wilmer.
-I did some mental arithmetic which seemed
-to prove that even Dolans was a terrible
-distance off, and I tried a little running, but it
-was not of a kind to win a Marathon race.
-Running through glue when you are footsore
-is trying work. Nevertheless by six o'clock
-I calculated I was only about three miles
-from Dolans, which rejoiced me, until the
-horrid thought cropped up&mdash;if I got in after
-the supper hour, should I get any supper?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was by no means certain in that valley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P235"></a>235}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Providence a few minutes later sent a buggy,
-driven by a small, glum-looking man up behind
-me, and the glum-looking man said 'Care
-to drive?' I said 'Yes,' and found he was
-bound for Dolans like myself. We got there
-about seven o'clock. The rancher and his wife
-were in; also another wayfarer like ourselves,
-who had arrived a few minutes before us. He
-was an elderly man, with a great shock of
-iron-grey hair, who was driving into Golden
-in a farm-cart from some place several days
-distant. He had the strangest pair in his
-cart&mdash;a little brown mare of about fourteen
-hands, and a great lanky horse the height of
-a giraffe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were all given a good meal, and ate
-it in silence, and sat in silence to digest it.
-Canadians in these valleys are often that
-way; it is due not to unsociability but to
-disuse of their tongues. Possibly to ruminate is
-the better way, but silence can be oppressive,
-and if you start a conversation and the other
-people only reflect upon your words, they
-may be weighing them as if they were gold,
-but you are not sure enough of this to be elated.
-I was rather glad to be shown to my bed,
-which was in a barn (but the blankets were
-clean, Mr. Dolans said), pretty early.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P236"></a>236}</span>
-Mr. Dolans sat on the bed for a bit, and advised
-me to buy the ranch. I promised to think
-the matter over, and went to sleep instead
-in a nice atmosphere of hay, and got up for
-six o'clock breakfast. The other two had
-already driven off; but the rain had ceased,
-and though the road was a mud slide, I started
-for Spellamacheen in high hopes of catching
-the boat in spite of being footsore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I need not have worried myself, for when
-I got there at 12.30, I learnt that the boat had
-just passed on its way up to Wilmer, and was
-not likely to be down again for two or three
-days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Spellamacheen consists of a rest-house ranch
-in full view of a semicircle of snowclad
-mountains, but I was a little disheartened in spite
-of the view. I particularly wanted to catch
-the midnight train from Golden to Vancouver,
-and now I realised that to do this I should
-have to walk the rest of the way&mdash;another
-forty miles. From two o'clock to twelve is
-ten hours. If I did four miles an hour, I
-should catch the train to a nicety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I am resting on a walk I am always
-singularly optimistic. I was stiff after
-lunch&mdash;partly from the unusual exercise, partly
-from sleeping in wet clothes, and my feet
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P237"></a>237}</span>
-were sorer than ever, but I set out for Golden,
-confident that I should catch that train. A
-young man with a bundle on his back, who
-had got into Spellamacheen just ahead of
-me, offered to hike with me. He also was for
-Golden, but thought twenty miles more that
-day would satisfy him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a pleasant and conversational young
-man, and told me that he was from New
-Brunswick, but had for the last eight months
-been at work digging the ditches for the
-Columbia Valley Irrigation Company. He
-had had enough of it, he said; in fact too
-much. Compared with New Brunswick, British
-Columbia was no catch at all, and he meant
-to go back home. Frenchmen are not fonder
-of their 'patrie' than are the Canadian-born.
-He brimmed over, did that young man, with
-praises of New Brunswick&mdash;brimmed over very
-intelligently, telling me about the Reversible
-Falls of St. John and the conditions of
-farming in the province with a clearness which
-few Englishmen of his class could emulate.
-He said that he would only get one and a half
-dollars a day instead of two and a half, but
-then one and a half would go much further
-there than two and a half in British Columbia.
-You could live better on it, and life was easier
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P238"></a>238}</span>
-there. British Columbia was too rough: he
-allowed there was no pioneer about him. He
-had got tired of the Columbia Valley months
-before, and had started to come out of it in
-July, but had only got as far as Athelmer.
-There he had gone to a hotel for the night, and
-had got drinking, and somehow before he knew
-it all the money he had saved during his months
-of digging had been drunk. So he had gone
-back to the ditches. But he meant to get
-out of the valley this time. I gathered that
-even this time it had been a near shave, for
-having again got as far as the hotel, he had
-found a lot of fellows drinking what he called
-'Schlampagne.' He supposed there must have
-been a hundred bottles of schlampagne drunk
-last night, and whisky afterwards, but he
-himself had been very careful and had taken
-gin instead. You never knew, he said, what
-the whisky would be made of, but if you
-drank from a bottle of gin marked English,
-it was all right. He felt a bit funny inside
-to-day, but seemed quite cheerful about it
-because he had won away from the hotel,
-and was pretty sure now to get back to New
-Brunswick, after which he would not go
-pioneering again. He doubted, however, if we were
-likely to get to Golden that day. There was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P239"></a>239}</span>
-a place called M'Kie's we could put up at
-eighteen miles on, or if we felt like it, another
-called Petersen's&mdash;eight miles further. I said
-I wanted to catch the midnight train from
-Golden, and was going to walk on by night:
-at which he said he would do the same. He
-repeated that he was funny inside and
-footsore, but he thought he could do it. We
-would get to M'Kie's for supper, or rather
-get M'Kie to make us up a supper, which
-we would eat upon the road, and we should
-thus get into Golden in good time. He was
-sure we were going at least four miles an hour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was sure we were scarcely doing three,
-and by the time we did get to M'Kie's, just
-before dark, we were both so sure that a rest
-would do us good that we thought we would
-eat our supper there after all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-M'Kie's was a shack just off the road, with
-a huge puma-skin nailed to the verandah.
-Inside was a very old woman, who said that
-we could get our tea all right, but M'Kie wasn't
-in yet, and we'd better wait for him. So
-we sat down in the road, and I paddled in an
-icy creek that went foaming by the house
-door. Then the old woman asked us in
-and chatted to us while she cooked the
-meal. M'Kie turning up, we fell to, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P240"></a>240}</span>
-M'Kie entertained us with trapping stories.
-It seemed he was half-trapper, half-rancher,
-and the big skin we had seen outside he had
-got only a few days before. The mountain
-lion had come down right into the sheepfold,
-and his two dogs had treed it, and a single
-bullet had brought it down. It was the biggest
-skin that he had ever seen, and measured
-ten feet six from tip to tail. It certainly
-was a large skin, but a puma's tail counts
-for a good deal. M'Kie had also shot a bear
-in the sheepfold the week before, and he talked
-so much about cinnamons and grizzlies, which
-seemed very plentiful round there, that the
-New Brunswicker insisted on our having his
-opinion as to whether they ever attacked
-unarmed men walking by night. M'Kie thought
-not. So we started on again, somewhat
-reassured, along what promised to be an
-uncommonly dark road.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sky was all clouded over, and it was
-now 8.30, and there was no chance whatever
-of my catching the midnight train, since
-twenty miles still remained to be accomplished,
-and our limp condition made even three miles
-an hour hard. But we walked on, mostly
-because I now wanted to get the morning
-train at eleven o'clock, and I felt that if we
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P241"></a>241}</span>
-went back to M'Kie's and stopped the night,
-I should be so stiff that I could not walk at
-all next day. The New Brunswicker
-sportingly said that he would go on for as long
-as he could anyhow, though he wasn't bent
-on any particular train; and for some four
-mortal hours we splashed along through mud
-and water in what was the next thing to pitch
-darkness. To add to the discomfort, a high,
-cold, and very wet wind began to blow, and
-there was every prospect of rain soon descending
-in torrents. It was at this point, I think,
-that our thoughts began to turn to Petersen's.
-The New Brunswicker remarked that if we
-had passed Petersen's there was nowhere
-to stop at between where we were and Golden;
-but if we had not passed Petersen's, we might
-rest there a few minutes and perhaps get
-some milk to drink. Soon after this we felt
-sure that we had passed Petersen's in the
-dark; and though neither of us admitted
-it, I think our respective hearts sank. We
-decided to rest a little, which we did, and
-we rested again a few minutes later without
-deciding to do it. As we got up from a brief
-smoke on a fallen log the rain began to pelt
-down, and we saw a light just off the road.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I own I should have wanted to stop at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P242"></a>242}</span>
-Petersen's anyhow, even if the New
-Brunswicker had not confessed that he could not
-go any further: but I don't know that I
-should have had his perseverance in
-knocking Petersen's up. There certainly was a
-light there. But I was convinced that
-everybody inside was deep in sleep. The New
-Brunswicker thought somebody might be up, and
-after knocking vainly for ten minutes at the
-front door of the house he went round to
-the back, while I sat on the doorstep, wondering
-what fifteen miles in that black rain would
-be like.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A couple of minutes later, the New
-Brunswicker appeared triumphant. The Petersens,
-he said, were up&mdash;in their kitchen&mdash;and thither
-we limped, much relieved. They were the
-kindest people&mdash;Swedes, both of them, and
-kept a milk cow, and gave us milk and
-buttermilk. They said they were sorry they hadn't
-a bed to offer us, but we could have the kitchen.
-Fastidious travellers might have thought the
-kitchen untidy and stuffy, and even the New
-Brunswicker before he went to sleep on the
-floor on his blankets, with some old clothes
-that we found hanging on the walls over our
-legs&mdash;even he got a broom (after the Petersens
-had gone to bed) and swept a clean space
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P243"></a>243}</span>
-for us to lie on. But at least it was warm,
-and a haven of luxury compared with the road.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Personally, I know that I was very sorry
-to have to get up off that floor at 4 A.M., when
-that industrious old lady, Mrs. Petersen, came
-in again to relight the stove and to prepare
-breakfast. She was followed presently by her
-husband and son and a hired man, while from
-the barn there issued forth not only that
-shock-headed old man with the queer rig whom
-I had seen at Dolans, but no less than five
-other men who had been working in different
-parts of the valley, and were hiking out before
-the winter should come. These had all spent
-their night in the barn, which seems to be a
-privileged resting-place for travellers in this
-part of the country.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mrs. Petersen had to get breakfast for some
-dozen people, and an odd company we were,
-all unkempt and unshaven, and most of us
-looking, truthfully enough, as if we had slept
-for some months in our clothes. We all
-did a wash before breakfast, however. Two of
-the men at table were socialists, and we had
-a desultory conversation on that subject
-while we were not occupied in eating
-Mrs. Petersen's bacon and eggs. Nobody seemed
-much to dispute the socialist position, but
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P244"></a>244}</span>
-this might have been because nobody was
-greatly interested in it. I remember that
-the socialists thought that capital ought to
-be done away with, but Mr. Petersen, who
-no doubt had a small amount himself and
-kept a hired man, thought it was a useful
-thing, and should be retained. Everybody
-went off directly the meal was finished, except
-ourselves, who lingered because the New
-Brunswicker had boldly requested the shock-headed
-old man to drive us in to Golden in his
-farm-cart, and we went to help harness the little
-mare and the big giraffe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was still raining heavily when we started,
-and it rained just as heavily all the way into
-Golden. I never was so damped in my life,
-and this was due not merely to the rain, but
-because the farm-cart was so full of the old
-man's things (he seemed to be moving his
-house in it) that the only place available
-in it for me was a sack of hay. The cart
-had stood out all night in the rain, and the
-sack of hay was wet through, which made
-it like a sponge, so that the more I dried off
-the top of it the more moisture I seemed to
-absorb from the under part. The little mare
-and the big horse made about two and a half
-miles an hour, and if I could have walked,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P245"></a>245}</span>
-I should have done so, for now again the
-eleven o'clock train seemed in danger of
-getting off from Golden without me. Indeed it
-was half-past eleven before we got to Golden,
-and, resigned to despair, I accompanied the
-New Brunswicker into an inn, where I thought
-I should have to wait again for the midnight
-train. We ordered beer in the bar, and as
-I was explaining to the proprietor what a
-nuisance it was to have missed the train,
-he put down his glass and said, 'Wait a
-minute,' and went to the telephone. He came
-back to inform me that the train had just
-been signalled, being very late. He thought
-I should just have time to catch it if I rushed.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap26"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P246"></a>246}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVI
-<br /><br />
-FROM GOLDEN TO THE COAST
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-I managed to get that train, and also a half
-bottle of rye whisky on the way to it, and sank
-into a seat in the smoking compartment, where
-I sat all soaked and miserable, supping my
-rye whisky at intervals and half dozing until
-two grizzly-bear hunters got in a few stations
-down the line. They were very wonderfully
-arrayed in moccasins and Arctic socks and
-turned-up overalls and sweaters and cartridge
-belts; and though they were modest enough
-in their bearing, and did not talk about their
-exploits until they were asked questions, the
-whole compartment was soon eagerly chatting
-of nothing but grizzly bears. The two hunters,
-who were amateurs of the sport, had been up
-in the mountains alone, a three days' portage
-from the railroad, and had got three grizzlies,
-and would have got more, they said, but that
-heavy falls of snow had forced them to decamp.
-They spoke like good shots&mdash;which does not
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P247"></a>247}</span>
-mean that they said they were good shots&mdash;and
-they seemed very keen on their sport,
-which they claimed to be the most dangerous
-and exacting in the world; nor would they
-listen to my meek suggestion that the Bengal
-tiger would compare favourably with the grizzly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It's a cat,' one of them said sniffily; 'you
-shoot it off elephants.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I said that I knew Anglo-Indians who went
-after tigers on foot, and I also argued that even
-in the case of shooting from elephants the
-combination of a charging tiger and a restive
-elephant offered opportunity of showing one's
-nerve to be in order such as is not to be despised,
-especially if the howdah happens to have been
-inexpertly fixed and slides at the critical
-moment. They allowed that there might be
-something in this, but persisted that in any
-case tiger-hunting was done at ease, with
-natives to do all the portering, whereas
-grizzly-bear hunters like themselves had to carry
-everything with them, and camp in the snow,
-and shoot on mountain-sides, down which a
-grizzly bear would charge at a man quicker
-than a racehorse. They gave graphic descriptions
-of charges of grizzly bears, with their back
-legs flying ahead of their front ones. The
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P248"></a>248}</span>
-last bear they had bagged had dropped, they
-said, within twenty paces of them, after being
-rolled over three times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I fancy they spoke reasonably enough, and
-that the pursuit of the grizzly&mdash;certainly if
-done without a guide&mdash;is as good a test of a
-man's nerve as any other. As to the merits
-of the grizzly considered as a brute likely to do
-for you if you do not previously do for it,
-and compared with such others as the tiger,
-the buffalo, the rhinoceros, the elephant, or
-the lion, there is no arriving at any final
-conclusion. African hunters never seem agreed
-about the comparative merits of the last three;
-while one Indian sportsman supports the buffalo,
-another will support the tiger. Not having any
-experience of the grizzly bear myself, I can only
-say that, judging from what I have heard, he
-must be accounted big enough game for anybody.
-There is no doubt that most of the old
-trappers have a wholesome respect for him,
-and the longer they are after him, the greater,
-as a rule, their respect grows. His pace,
-when charging, is said to be something terrific,
-and, downhill, it always charges as soon as hit,
-its back legs flying out before it at a nightmare
-speed. Add that it seems less easy to drop
-finally than any other animal, that your fingers
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P249"></a>249}</span>
-may be frozen to the trigger in the intervals
-of shooting, and that a single blow from one
-of its front paws is strong enough to claw the
-face out of an ox, and it will be seen that it is
-no contemptible foe. On the other hand,
-experts seem agreed that it rarely if ever charges
-uphill, and if shot from above is therefore
-comparatively harmless. If a man could always
-pick his position for shooting, this would reduce
-the value of the grizzly bear as a sporting
-animal; but obviously the hunter cannot
-always choose. Any one who has been on a
-snowslide will realise that. From the point of
-view of an unarmed person, the grizzly bear
-would seem to be rather less dangerous than
-he is sometimes made out to be. You will
-often hear that grizzly bears will attack a
-man at sight. The truth seems to be that&mdash;as
-is the case with any other bears&mdash;attacks
-are only to be feared either from female grizzlies
-with cubs, or from a grizzly of either sex, if
-the intruder is so placed as to appear to the
-grizzly's eyes to be cutting off its retreat to
-its lair. Of course no unarmed man would
-elect to put himself in either of these positions,
-and equally naturally he might unwittingly
-do so&mdash;in which case it would be better not to
-be that man, though I believe there is an
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P250"></a>250}</span>
-authentic story of a lumberman who, returning
-alone from his work, was suddenly attacked
-by two grizzlies, and managed to kill both of
-them with his axe, though the second mauled
-him badly. Authentic or not, and one grizzly
-or two, it is pretty certain that few people
-would care to try a similar encounter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Afterwards the conversation shifted to
-timber-wolves and the Yukon. One of the passengers
-scoffed at the notion of a dog being able to
-kill a timber-wolf, as happens in one of
-Mr. Jack London's novels. A northern timber-wolf,
-according to this critic, is at least twice the
-size of the European wolf, with a disproportionately
-large and powerful jaw&mdash;a single snap
-from which would polish off any dog. Two or
-three of the biggest dogs known could hardly
-even hold a timber-wolf much less kill it. I
-dare say there was more in this criticism than
-in one I heard later, anent Mr. Maurice Hewlett.
-A very solemn fruit-rancher was ploughing
-wearily through one of Mr. Hewlett's earlier
-romances, and he looked up presently to say
-it was funny the sort of yarns these writing
-chaps seemed to believe in. There was a girl
-in the book who milked a wild deer. He had
-seen plenty of deer in his time, but none of them
-had seemed to fancy coming close enough to
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P251"></a>251}</span>
-be milked. If a chap wanted to write about
-the country he ought to know it right through
-like Mr. Service. Had we read Service's
-poems? Several of the men in the compartment
-evidently had read them; and, indeed,
-Mr. Service's poems concerning the Yukon
-seemed to have reached the heights of popularity.
-I think it is due in part to the fascination
-which the north exercises on all sorts and
-conditions of Canadians, not only because it
-stands for romance and mystery, but because
-a sort of idea is gaining ground that these
-inhospitable and well-nigh polar regions only
-await a sufficiently hardy type of colonist to
-have as great a boom almost as some of the
-more southern districts. The idea exists not
-only among business-like estate-agents, who
-see themselves in fancy selling Arctic blocks
-to this expected race, but among quite
-disinterested and patriotic people, who talk of it,
-as Mr. Service himself does, as a strong man's
-land. A few peculiarly strong men may survive
-there; and it is excusable for a poet to regard
-them as super-men&mdash;Canada's noblest type.
-As a matter of fact it is at least as romantic
-to weave halos about the heads of the crowd
-that seeks the Yukon country as it is to make
-one's heroine milk a wild deer. A certain praise
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P252"></a>252}</span>
-is always due to pioneers, and the struggle with
-nature at its cruellest and most wild is not a
-bad test of an individual's character; but for
-respectable ranchers and fruit-growers (who
-have never been to the Yukon themselves, but
-have struggled with nature quite as valiantly
-elsewhere) to talk enthusiastically about the
-great lone land as the country for breeding men
-is absurd. Canadians may be able to colonise
-further north than they have done at present,
-and their descendants will, no doubt, be a
-fine and hardy race. But there is a point in
-the north just as there is a point in the south
-beyond which no white man's country lies.
-If any strong men are going to perpetuate
-their families beyond that northern point, they
-are going to be strong Esquimaux&mdash;not strong
-Canadians. Esquimaux already do quite a
-lot of grappling with nature in lone lands, but
-they are not the heroes of Mr. Service's poems.
-I don't wish to labour the point, but this
-northern strong man business seems to me
-entirely overdone. There is always going to
-be romance attached to the uninhabitable
-country, and adventurous young men will
-get there; but the theory that these are the
-people of whom Canada has peculiarly to be
-proud will not do. Adam Gordon's bush-riders
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P253"></a>253}</span>
-had a certain merit; so had Mr. Kipling's
-gentlemen-rankers; so have Mr. Service's
-prospectors; but none of them ever forwarded
-civilisation very greatly. The fact is, there are
-true and admirable pioneers, men like
-Hudson and Thompson, of whom Canada has had
-plenty; and there are pioneers of doubtful
-value like those in Mr. Service's poems. These
-latter are picturesque enough in verse,
-especially in Mr. Service's verse, which catches the
-fascination of the north at times admirably,
-but the others are the men worth boasting
-about.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rain persisted while we sat talking of all
-these matters, and the mountains were hung about
-with a clammy vapour which spoilt the view
-from the train. I should like to have stopped
-at Glacier, which is the usual centre for the
-better-known Selkirks, of which many of the
-giants have been climbed only within the last
-six or seven years, but I had not time, and
-they all swam by in the mist, which changed
-into dusk as we reached Revelstoke. There a
-number of lumberjacks filled up the carriage,
-and were very cheery and conversational all
-night. Having slept only two hours the night
-before, I should not have minded being able
-to get a sleeper, but they were all taken; and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P254"></a>254}</span>
-indeed there were not even seats enough to go
-all round, though it was a first-class carriage.
-In any case the lumberjacks in my part of the
-carriage would have prevented sleep.
-Sometimes they would sit down for a few minutes
-and tell stories, then they would dart off to
-have a look at a carriage-load of Doukhobors
-who were on in front and seemed rather better
-than a show to judge by the lumbermen's
-guffaws when they came back from these trips.
-Canadian trains may not always be restful,
-but they are generally entertaining. The
-distances traversed are so great that people
-cannot afford to sit in them in hunched silence.
-They have to unbend, and some of them
-unbend thoroughly. That is why, though the
-ordinary traveller has to pass through great
-tracts of land in the train, he is not losing
-local colour to quite the extent one loses it in
-an European train. Some one in the carriage
-is sure to know something about the district
-one is passing through and to be ready to talk
-about it. The smoking compartment becomes
-an animated club-room in which conversation
-becomes general on any subject. There is
-no better place for a discussion of political
-problems, and I fancy a great many Canadians
-reserve their consideration of these for
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P255"></a>255}</span>
-the time they have to spend in the train.
-Certainly they grow very keen in the train, and I
-have heard the warmest arguments and the
-most libellous denunciations of leading
-Canadian statesmen hurled freely about among men
-who had never set eyes on one another before.
-And there are plenty of other arguments with
-which to pass the time. As we got to Sicamous
-Junction, for example, we took on board two
-fruit-growers, one of whom was a 'wet' grower
-and the other a 'dry.' A wet fruit-grower is
-a man who does not irrigate his fruit-land,
-and a dry fruit-grower is one who, having
-settled in the dry belt, has to irrigate. As
-fierce a debate was started between these two
-as ever you heard between exponents of wet
-and dry fly-fishing.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-254"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-254.jpg" alt="IN THE SELKIRKS. THE RETURN FROM THE HUNT." />
-<br />
-IN THE SELKIRKS. THE RETURN FROM THE HUNT.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As far as fruit-raising is concerned, the 'dry'
-men appear to have the advantage. Their
-contention is that they can turn off the water
-so as to leave their trees dry for the winter
-when frost at wet roots is so fatal; while they
-can turn the water on whenever it is wanted
-for swelling the fruit. In addition, the dry
-belt country gets a longer season of sunshine,
-which is more favourable for the growth of
-the earlier and finer dessert apples. It seems
-curious that none of our finest-flavoured apples,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P256"></a>256}</span>
-such as Cox's Orange Pippin or Ribston Pippin,
-seem to come to perfection in Canada; and I
-found British Columbian fruit-growers very
-anxious that English people should appreciate
-this fact, and also get to know which are the
-British Columbian apples most worth asking
-for in England, as though some of the older
-orchards are still growing comparatively
-worthless apples, the new ones are being planted
-only with a few best kinds, which are as wine to
-water. One of these best kinds, by the way,
-is called Wine-sap; two of the other selectest
-varieties being Jonathan and Winter Banana.
-The latter is said to have a strong banana
-flavour. It is worth the English public's while,
-if it is going in largely for British Columbian
-apples, to encourage only the growing of the
-best, and that is to be done by demanding only
-the best from our own greengrocers by name.
-It is just as simple to plant a good apple tree
-as it is to plant a bad one, and there is no
-reason why the world in general should not
-eat only the best apples. So long as people
-are contented to look only at the colour of
-the fruit, which is no criterion whatever, and
-to pay their greengrocers' price for an
-unnamed sort, the best apples will not be for
-sale, and one will go on being provided with
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P257"></a>257}</span>
-highly-coloured samples that taste like inferior
-turnips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The weather picked up in the morning, and
-I was able to see some of the beauties of the
-great Fraser River, though I somehow missed
-the Chinamen washing for gold, Indians spearing
-salmon, bright red, split salmon drying on
-frames, Chinese cabins and Indian villages
-with their beflagged graveyards, which are said
-to be visible from the car windows. Perhaps
-I was talking too much.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap27"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P258"></a>258}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVII
-<br /><br />
-A LITTLE ABOUT VANCOUVER CITY
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A diminutive Japanese who picked up my
-fairly heavy trunk, slung it over his shoulder
-and walked down the platform with it as
-though it were nothing but a shawl, was the
-first person I met in Vancouver, reminding
-me that that land-locked sea below was the
-Pacific, which white men do not own but
-only share with the brown and yellow
-Orientals. I wonder&mdash;will the day come when
-the latter want an ocean all to themselves?
-And are there, in view of this contingency,
-plans of this intricate coast among the Japanese
-naval archives? They knew the other side
-pretty well before the war began with Russia,
-and they are not a people to leave things
-to chance. The yellow men have known the
-Pacific coast from San Francisco to
-Vancouver as long as the white men, and put
-in a great deal of work there and eaten much
-humble pie, and also realised by the constant
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P259"></a>259}</span>
-rise in their wages&mdash;ten times anything their
-own country offers&mdash;that the white man is
-strangely lost without them. They had no
-flair for colonising half a century ago, when
-the rush was made for the Pacific coast, but
-they have it now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vancouver is very beautifully situated. The
-ground sloping to the shut sea, girt with those
-huge, straight trees that give a sense of
-luxuriance to this northern Pacific coast which no
-tropic country can excel, is a perfect
-situation for a big city. Vancouver is a big city.
-It is so big that many people are afraid for
-its immediate future. They say that it is
-already far bigger than it has any right to
-be, and that by the dubiously beneficent
-aid of innumerable real estate men, it is
-increasing at a pace that is bound to end in
-disaster. The slump had been expected in
-1909, it was expected last year, it is expected
-this year. Some year it will come; and if
-I were a patriotic and hard-working inhabitant
-of Vancouver, I should then head a
-deputation which had for its purpose the
-dumping in the sea of a large number of the real
-estate agents who swarm hungrily in the
-place. There is a big street entirely filled
-with their offices, and the mark of them is
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P260"></a>260}</span>
-everywhere. Mr. A. G. Bradley, in that
-encyclopædic work <i>Canada in the Twentieth
-Century</i>, jeers at the English for their distrust
-of the real estate man, who, he thinks, serves
-a useful and necessary purpose. Better go to
-the real estate man, says Mr. Bradley, if you
-want to buy land, than to the bar loafer.
-There is a great deal in that. In individual
-cases they are excellent men. But, collected
-together in vast numbers, as in Vancouver,
-they can do mischief in a way the bar loafer
-never can, and that is by so magnifying the
-importance of the buying and selling of land,
-that people take to it in exchange for work,
-and falsely imagine that enormous prosperity
-is coming to a place which is in reality doing
-nothing but changing its land at fancy and
-speculative prices, expecting the prosperity
-somehow and some day to follow of itself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I suppose Seattle, with less justification,
-is in very much the same case. Both, besides
-being ports with great expectations, happen
-to be the last place, so to speak, in their
-respective countries; and there is something
-magnetic in the attraction of a last place. Thither
-drifts that very considerable population which,
-by getting on geographically, almost persuades
-itself that it is getting on materially. Having
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P261"></a>261}</span>
-attained the limit, it stays there and does
-as little as it can. Such people give a city
-a false air of greatness, and are, in fact, a
-surplus population with nothing to do but bid
-up land against one another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course there are plenty of genuine citizens
-in Vancouver, with all the enterprise and
-intelligence that help to make cities great.
-Practically, too, the greatness of Vancouver
-is in the end assured. It is already a
-magnificent port, having a big trade with the East,
-but nothing to what it will have. The Panama
-Canal will make it the centre, by sea, of the
-world. Again, it is the terminus of the
-Canadian Pacific Railway, and is destined,
-every one says, to become the terminus of the
-Grand Trunk, and any other railroad that
-wants to outlet on the Pacific. Wheat has
-begun to come through it from the prairie
-that used to go west to Montreal. The new
-reciprocity treaty will divert some of this
-freight to the south, no doubt, but that
-remains to be seen. In any case, besides
-being a port, Vancouver will remain the
-business capital of a province endlessly rich in
-minerals and timber, and increasingly rich
-in fruit- and farm-land. Some day, therefore,
-Vancouver will extend to those remote spots
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P262"></a>262}</span>
-where already town lots are being disposed
-of. Some day. Only, a big city should not
-live upon its future; and the sale of such
-lots miles off in the backwoods to people
-who, having bought them, cannot pay for
-them or cannot put up houses on them, or
-cannot afford to live in those houses even
-if they put them up, because there is nothing
-for them to do there and their money has
-run out&mdash;this sort of sale, while it enriches
-the real estate man, does not enrich anybody
-else. Moreover, it creates a restless spirit
-among those genuine farmers out in the country
-who would honestly be farming their land,
-if real estate agents would leave them alone,
-and not persuade them that it is just as profitable
-a game to hang about waiting for opportunities
-to sell their farms in plots. Of course
-they, like most other people who get as far
-as Vancouver, are not mere innocents. Sellers
-and buyers are probably equally aware of
-the risks they run; but where a tide of
-speculation sets in, the shrewdest people seem
-ready to take the most absurd risks. And
-the slump has taken so long in coming, and
-the possibilities of Vancouver seem so
-immense, that speculation in land has become
-a perfect fascination.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P263"></a>263}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What will it be worth next year?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That is the formula you constantly see
-at the end of an advertisement of some town
-lot&mdash;five miles, perhaps, from anywhere. The
-correct answer varies. If the slump does
-not come off next year, the lot may be worth
-double what is being asked for it now. If
-the slump does come off it will be worth a
-twentieth, perhaps, of what was given for
-it. Slump or no slump, this method of
-building up a city is unsatisfactory. Montreal,
-Toronto, Winnipeg&mdash;these have become great
-as the centres of comparatively populous
-provinces, in which wealth has been gradually
-and carefully created by agricultural and
-industrial enterprises established on a firm basis.
-The jobs have been waiting for the men.
-In Vancouver alone, of all big Canadian cities,
-the men are waiting for the jobs, or, what
-is worse, waiting in the belief that money
-comes anyhow, and that jobs are not the
-prerequisite of money-making. I do not wish
-to give the impression that Vancouver is
-full of unemployed people, still less of
-unemployable ones; merely that many of the
-people there employed are not engaged in
-the undertakings that ensure the continuity
-of a city's prosperity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P264"></a>264}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Certainly any picture of Vancouver that
-made it out gloomy would be a mistake. Nothing
-could be livelier than its streets and its
-people; and if the slump does not come, and
-the Jeremiahs are wrong, Vancouver citizens
-will be justified of any amount of exultation.
-Already they have most of the things that make
-citizens pleased and proud&mdash;a beautiful site,
-fine streets, the most splendid of public parks,
-water-ways innumerable in front, and, behind,
-a country good to look at and rich in
-potentialities. Vancouver's industries, even if they
-do not justify the size of the place, are
-important and prosperous; and its propinquity
-to the salmon fisheries and vast timber tracts
-of British Columbia is something which alone
-would make a great town. In tone it is new
-world compared with Victoria, but old world
-compared with Seattle. There are many
-English people there. Living is high. No
-coin under five cents is, of course, in use, and
-when you start the day by paying that sum
-for a newspaper marked one cent, you find
-it difficult to beat down prices during the
-rest of the day. Apropos of newspapers,
-I was told of a very successful strike among
-the paper-boys of Vancouver some little
-time ago. Many people must have heard
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P265"></a>265}</span>
-of it, but it is worth retelling. The strike
-was headed by a youthful organiser, popularly
-known as Reddy, from the colour of his
-hair. Reddy was alleged to be thirteen years
-of age at the time, but Pitt was not so much
-older when he became Prime Minister of Great
-Britain. Holding the firm conviction that he
-and his fellow-workers were entitled to at
-least two cents out of the five for every paper
-sold (I am not sure of my figures), Reddy
-proclaimed a strike, and conducted it so
-successfully that the newspaper proprietors of
-Vancouver were compelled to wait upon him
-humbly, and yield in every particular to
-his demands. Among historic strikes this
-seems worthy of a place.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap28"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P266"></a>266}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-<br /><br />
-THE HAPPY FARMERS OF THE ISLAND
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-There are no lotus-lands attached to the
-Dominion, and will not be, unless we make
-over to it at some date the West Indies.
-But because Vancouver Island has a climate
-excelling that of any other part of Canada,
-and a beauty of scenery not surpassed
-anywhere; because also the men who have settled
-there have reckoned these possessions dearer
-than other things, such as the fat soil of the
-prairie and the chance of growing quickly
-rich, Canadians of the mainland are given
-at times to lay a charge of lotus-eating against
-them. I think the charge is an unfair one.
-Life may be less strenuous on the island,
-and there are men there, no doubt, who take
-their work there over easily. Against this has
-to be set the fact that the work that does go
-on in Vancouver Island goes on all the year
-round, that the colonists are men with an
-eye to the far future as well as to the immediate
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P267"></a>267}</span>
-one (they have, that is to say, an English
-ideal of permanent residence instead of the
-notion of getting what they can from the
-place and decamping), and that in their hands,
-if the island is not being developed as fast as
-it might be, it is at least safe from spoliation
-and waste. Some day, when the mainland
-Canadians have time to consider the amenities
-of a country life as well as the necessities, they
-will find themselves going to the island for hints.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As one crosses from Vancouver, the beauty of
-the straits prepares one a little for the beauty
-of the island which, so far as I saw it, has no
-bare or ugly places. Its coast-line has the
-contour of the Scandinavian fiords, but its charm
-is greater, owing to the luxuriant growth
-of the tall and splendid trees. Right to the
-edge of these rock-bound sea-water lakes
-the forest grows&mdash;Douglas firs, surely the
-finest of all straight-growing trees, cedar
-and maple, jack-pine and arbutus, and at
-their feet, flowers and mosses and saxifrages.
-Arriving at Victoria, I went straight through
-to Duncans, and, looking from the train, was
-reminded by the greenness of the land, freshened
-by the delicate rain that was falling, of the
-mountainous parts of Ceylon&mdash;which impression
-was strengthened by the fact of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P268"></a>268}</span>
-smoking-compartment being crowded with Orientals of
-all sorts, mostly Chinese, but Japanese too
-and some Indians, all seeming very much
-at their ease among the white men. It was
-a harmonious sight; but what, I wondered,
-would an Anglo-Indian say if he found
-himself condemned to sit with his cheroot among
-this riff-raff of natives? and what chance
-of any agreement on questions affecting our
-Indian Empire between the officials of India
-and these Westerners who admit the Oriental
-to an equality with themselves?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was bound on a visit to friends who had
-a farm on Quamichan Lake, and found a buggy
-waiting for me at Duncans station, driven by
-an elderly man who had all the Canadian
-optimism, in spite of the fact that he had,
-in 1882, sold for a song the whole of Edmonton,
-then in his possession. Another of the missed
-millionaires of Canada. He brought me in the
-dark to my friends' farm, and when I looked
-out of my window next morning, I almost
-believed myself to be back in England. A
-little lake lay two fields below&mdash;a fresh-water
-lake still and reedy, with woods or orchards
-sloping to its edge, and in the distance a ring
-of hills. It might be Grasmere transported
-to some warmer county such as Devonshire;
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P269"></a>269}</span>
-but Devonshire never grew such stately trees,
-nor has England anywhere mountains wooded
-like these to their peaks. A heat-mist lay
-on the water, and the apples in the orchard
-seemed the reddest I had ever seen. Only
-the grass was not English grass, though it
-was greener than most of the grass of the
-new world. All round the lake were farms,
-belonging largely to Englishmen, dairy-farming
-or fruit-farming, making use of science
-and co-operation, but not sacrificing beauty
-to utility. Perhaps they could not spoil the
-island if they tried. The trees are so dominant
-and stately that every piece of cleared land
-seems to look at once like a part of an old
-English park.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It should have been called New England,
-this beautiful country which has so many
-English people in it, which carries on so much
-of the English tradition and sentiment, and
-which has even the English pheasant. I saw
-thousands of pheasants during the days I spent
-there. They were put down on the island not
-so very many years ago, and they have
-increased enormously. The deer were already
-there, and you may see them in the orchards,
-unless they are very high-fenced, at almost
-any time in the early morning. And there are
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P270"></a>270}</span>
-grouse and partridges in plenty too, and beasts
-that England no longer possesses&mdash;the coon
-and the puma, and the bear and the wolverine.
-To see the salmon leaping all across Cowichan
-Bay, on a bright October morning, is a sight
-for sore eyes, if they happen to be an angler's.
-To drive along the roads is to realise instantly
-that they are the best roads in the Dominion.
-Duncans is particularly English, even for
-Vancouver Island. I think it is vanity and
-a certain cause of vexation to expect in the
-new world a conformity to the ways of the
-old, which necessary differences of living&mdash;the
-indispensable growth of new habits, some
-of them better than the old&mdash;render in time
-impossible. Those who expect such a conformity
-are usually the first to forget that the
-old country changes too, and that it is we,
-as often as those across the sea, who have
-forgotten the ancient order and taken on the
-new, generally without thought, and often
-without reason. Though it is absurd to expect
-to find Canada a replica in ideas and habits
-of the old world, it is nevertheless pleasant
-to come upon a community there which,
-without holding itself too much apart from its
-neighbours or standing out against what is
-progressive, does represent some peculiarly
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P271"></a>271}</span>
-English qualities at their best. That is, perhaps,
-why the island makes a particular appeal to
-the man newly out from home. I certainly
-do not think its inhabitants are to be charged
-with stiffness and unadaptability. Men who
-have taken on the new life, and work in a spirit
-of optimism not less than that shown elsewhere,
-are rather to be admired than otherwise
-if they have retained, and even insist on,
-what is good in the old. And a love of sport
-and beauty and sociability, and even of leisure,
-is a good thing, especially when it is found
-among men who do their own work as these
-men do, and more especially when found
-among women who work as the women of
-the island do. The work is the best of all,
-but all work and no play turns many people&mdash;and
-not a few Canadians&mdash;not merely into
-dull folk, but into narrow-minded and backward
-ones, who will some day have all the
-unpleasantness of being rudely awakened to
-the fact.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No doubt there are some ne'er-do-weels
-on the island, but the great majority of those
-I met seemed to me to be capable men, likely
-to do well by what is the most beautiful,
-and will some day be, perhaps, the most
-valuable part of the Empire.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap29"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P272"></a>272}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIX
-<br /><br />
- A CHAT WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF BRITISH<br />
- COLUMBIA AND A BIG FIRE AT VICTORIA<br />
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-As everybody knows who has been in Canada,
-there are two hotel systems in vogue there.
-By the one system you pay for your room and
-board separately, and this is called the European
-plan. By the other you take your meals and
-lodging at a fixed price, and that is called the
-American plan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In much the same way one might say there are
-two systems of life in Canada, and indeed
-elsewhere. By the one you distinguish between
-your work and your play, and treat each as a
-separate item. By the other you mix the two
-up, and are apt to consider yourself a
-strenuous person. I don't know that it is fair to
-describe these respectively as the American and
-the European system of life; but I am pretty
-certain that whether you apply the systems
-to life or to a hotel, the results produced by
-them are not on the whole very different.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P273"></a>273}</span>
-Applying them to life, the main distinction
-seems to be that the exponents of the strenuous
-or American method&mdash;those who get their fun
-out of their work and their holidays out of their
-forced travel, or their compulsory rest by
-doctor's orders&mdash;are frequently led to confuse
-the appearance of work with the reality, and
-to be disentitled to wear that air of superiority
-which, in the presence of confessed believers
-of leisure, they too frequently assume. For,
-when all is said and done, leisure is as necessary
-to man as work, and everybody takes it, whatever
-he may think.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vancouver laughs at Victoria for its
-dead-aliveness and want of hustle. Victoria smiles
-at Vancouver for its restlessness and
-superfluity of energy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now you see the point of my aphorism. I
-do not propose to hold the balance between
-these distinguished cities. Both have their
-peculiar merits; and if Vancouver is likely in
-years to come to leave Victoria far behind in
-the race for industrial supremacy, Victoria is
-none the less likely to remain ahead of Vancouver
-in culture and the arts. At present I
-should judge that Victoria is distinctly the
-steadier city of the two. Speculation in land
-is the exception rather than the rule; prices go
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P274"></a>274}</span>
-up steadily, and the land is bought by intending
-residents. At which point I will abandon
-comparisons, which are the more absurd because
-the destinies of the two towns are so widely
-different. Vancouver is a great port on the
-mainland of Canada, connecting it with Asia,
-the western States, South America, and
-whatever countries will henceforth export
-merchandise via the Panama Canal. Victoria is the
-political capital of British Columbia, with all
-the prestige that attaches to such a position and
-the finest climate in the Dominion. Not that
-it is only that. Some of its inhabitants
-consider that its prospects are immeasurably
-superior to those of Seattle, 'since the riches
-of Vancouver Island' (I quote from a local
-pamphlet), 'in their entirety incomparably
-more valuable than the gold-mines of Alaska,
-are directly tributary to the British Columbia
-capital.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is a great deal in this, though one has
-to remember that those riches will take many
-years to develop. The drawback to the
-immediate development of Vancouver Island is
-that it is covered with enormous timber.
-Reciprocity with the States is likely to give
-a fillip to the lumber industry, and the clearing
-of the land will then go on far quicker than
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P275"></a>275}</span>
-hitherto. True, lumbermen do not actually
-clear the land; they leave the stumps behind
-them, and all the poorer trees. But they
-undoubtedly open the land up. Moreover, the
-revival of Esquimalt as a naval base will
-revive the prestige of Victoria, and create
-more work, besides inducing railwaymen to
-press on into the island.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I stopped there on my way back, partly to
-see the town itself, partly because I wished
-to see Mr. Richard M'Bride. The town
-disappointed me just a little. It commands a
-magnificent view of the mountains on the
-mainland, and the country all round is
-beautiful. But the villas and gardens, which one
-hears so much praised, struck me as a little
-commonplace. Perhaps it is that I like a
-town to be a town and a garden to be a garden;
-whereas Victoria is a sort of garden city,
-grateful no doubt to those eyes that are accustomed
-to the utilitarian towns of the West, but
-altogether lacking in architectural fineness.
-The Parliament Buildings are good, and would
-be very good if those responsible for their
-maintenance would remove the inscription
-'Canada' from across the front of them. In its
-coloured lettering it looks like the icing-sugar
-mottoes you see inscribed on birthday cakes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P276"></a>276}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But let a more enthusiastic pen than mine
-(again I fall back on that local pamphlet)
-describe Victoria as it appears to Victorians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If there are sights more beautiful than the
-Olympian Mountains from Beacon Hill, or the
-windings of the Gorge as the waters come
-in from the sea between waving battlements of
-plumy firs, then eyes have not seen them.
-If there is a sweeter song than the skylark's
-matin melodies high up from Cadboro Bay,
-then ears have not heard it. If there be more
-bewildering loveliness than clusters about the
-shaded and flower-gemmed gardens of Victorian
-homes looking seaward, then poets have not
-written it in imperishable numbers, nor minstrels
-celebrated it in well-remembered song. If
-there be a city of dreams, even the fabled
-Atlantis of antiquity, or vision of Babylonian
-towers set in hanging gardens, and redolent
-of strange odours of musk and myrrh, or fairy
-casements opening out to perilous seas forlorn,
-then never one approached in splendour this
-jewel of all time, ringed by the azure seas and
-sentinelled by everlasting hills.... A bird's
-song drops like the sudden peal of a bell.
-Outside are broad boulevards, grey with
-powdery macadam, stretching towards the
-bustling city; highways of progress and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P277"></a>277}</span>
-modernity, now scrolled by the flight of a
-whizzing automobile, now echoing with the
-staccato sound of hurrying hoof-beats. Inside
-are flowers and brooding hedges, the sheen of
-close-cropped grasses and sun-lacquered
-tree-trunks&mdash;rest, peace, and sweet seclusion.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After this it comes almost as a relief to know
-from the same pamphlet that 'the climate of
-Victoria is best expressed in figures.' There is
-a great deal to be said for figures.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is a very good, small, natural-history
-museum in a wing attached to the Parliament
-Buildings, but it is absurdly small. The
-collection of Indian curios is remarkably inadequate,
-and merely tempts the visitor to ask when
-Canadians are going to devote some of the
-money they are undoubtedly making to a
-genuine study and collection of the remains
-of their predecessors in the land. Indians
-are not dying out as fast as some people
-suppose; but their crafts are, and so are their
-creeds and all that appertains to them. It
-would be easy even now to create a magnificent
-Indian museum, but it will become
-less and less easy as the years go by. Relics
-of Indian times are constantly being picked
-up by men travelling in out-of-the-way parts,
-or unearthed during railroad and other
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P278"></a>278}</span>
-excavations, and if it were known that the authorities
-would be glad to receive them and would
-perhaps pay the cost of their carriage to some
-centre, there is no doubt that many valuable
-finds would be forwarded to them. The
-making of museums, just like the building
-of ships, is a branch of empire work which
-should not be neglected; and Victorians are
-eminently the people to recognise this.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in his rooms in Parliament Buildings
-that Mr. M'Bride conversed with me
-on the subject of British Columbia. You
-hear people say in Canada, that if ever that
-astutest of party leaders, Sir Wilfrid Laurier,
-goes out of office with his Liberals, Mr. M'Bride
-will shortly after become Prime Minister of
-the Dominion&mdash;as Conservative leader, be it
-understood. He is not a great orator, and
-he has no scheme even for a party millennium.
-That, however, in Canada is a strength rather
-than a weakness. Politicians are not expected in
-Canada to bring about the millennium: indeed,
-so far as I could make out, the average Canadian
-is of opinion that when the millennium comes,
-it will be noticeable for an absence of
-politicians. They have not our reverence for these
-great men. But on the other hand, they
-require from them evidence of qualities which
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P279"></a>279}</span>
-may or may not be present in our ministers.
-One is a readiness to seize opportunity as
-it comes. Another is, to have a practical
-understanding of the ways of finance. Yet
-a third is, to be in touch with men and
-things&mdash;the sort of quality we mean, however
-vaguely, when we raise the cry of a Cabinet
-of Business Men. All these qualities
-Mr. M'Bride possesses, together with that
-readiness to seem agreeable which is almost a
-necessity to a public man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. M'Bride confined his conversation with
-me to British Columbia&mdash;a big enough subject
-for a short interview. I wished to know if
-the survey of the province was being carried
-out as quickly as possible. In a vast country
-like British Columbia, it seems one of the
-most important things. The right to acquire
-land must be made simple and certain.
-Mr. M'Bride declared that surveying was going
-on as fast as men and money could do it,
-and referred me to the surveyor-general for
-details. I wish I could go further into the
-subject, but there is no space for it here. Then
-we got on to education, and Mr. M'Bride
-asked me to assure the working men of England
-that the education facilities of British Columbia
-were as fine as any to be got anywhere.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P280"></a>280}</span>
-Perhaps this is so, though I heard some criticism
-of the public schools from another eminent
-Victorian. It is easier, perhaps, to be
-enthusiastic than to be unanimous about any given
-system of education. To take but one small
-point, the co-education of boys and girls is
-a thing upon which people are not agreed
-even in British Columbia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was on the steamboat, ready to start
-for Vancouver, when the great fire of 1910
-broke out in the town. With a considerable
-wind blowing it seemed to me not improbable
-that the whole of Victoria would be burnt
-down that night, and I had sufficient of the
-journalistic instinct to leave my things to
-go on by the boat and to go back myself to
-watch the blaze. Luckily the wind dropped
-and the fire was kept to one quarter, and I
-rather regretted my haste when I found
-myself stranded in Victoria at three o'clock in
-the morning. Still, it was worth while to have
-been there, if only to observe the working
-of the Canadian mind in a crisis of this sort.
-In England you would have heard ejaculations
-of horror and much sympathy expressed
-with those who were bound to suffer by the
-fire. The Victorian crowd took it quite
-differently. 'This'll create more work,' said one
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P281"></a>281}</span>
-man fervidly. 'Just what the town needed,'
-said another enthusiast. 'We'll be able to
-have a better-looking street there after this.
-Those shops weren't good enough.' I even
-heard some of the men who had rushed out
-of their burning offices talking keenly and
-proudly of the sort of buildings they'd have
-to start putting up next day&mdash;much better
-buildings. Presumably they were insured, but
-even so men in the old country would have
-been a little shocked and perturbed, and
-regretful of the old rooms they were
-accustomed to. I fell asleep, when I had found a
-hotel, almost oppressed by the optimism of
-Canada.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap30"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P282"></a>282}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXX
-<br /><br />
-BACK THROUGH OTTAWA
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was just before sunrise that I first saw
-Ottawa. I was on my way back from
-Vancouver, and had spent four successive days
-in the train, getting out only for minutes
-at a time to stamp about platforms where
-the train waited long enough to permit of
-such exercise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such days, varied only by meals for which
-one is always looking, but never hungry,
-tend to become monotonous, even though
-one spends them mostly in the observation
-car. The fact is, observation pure and simple
-is one of the most difficult things possible
-to a member of the human tribe&mdash;as hard
-as doing compulsory jig-saws; and reading
-humorous American magazines, one after the
-other, is an alternative that also requires
-the strong mind. If I must travel long
-distances by train, I want to be the engine-driver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The country, I thought, looked less attractive
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P283"></a>283}</span>
-as I repassed it now than it looked before,
-and I put this down to the freeze-up, which
-had come unusually early, people kept saying,
-and gave to the land a black and ruffled look,
-like a sick bird's. Later it would be beautiful
-again in snow, and the life and work of the
-season of snow would begin. Meanwhile,
-people in the little northerly stations we passed
-had the appearance of having stopped work.
-You saw them standing about&mdash;always with
-their backs to buildings to get out of the
-shrivelling wind. I suppose in most of these
-places there is a between-time in which nobody
-can work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing much was doing in Ottawa when
-I got out there, but that of course was due to
-the earliness of the hour. It was so early
-that when I reached a hotel they told me
-breakfast was not to be had for some time
-yet, and so, since I was too wide-awake to
-go to sleep again, I thought I would spend
-the hour looking at the Dominion Parliament
-Buildings. Perhaps it was the too early hour,
-perhaps it was the coldness of the wind
-blowing round that bluff above the river on which
-the famous buildings stand&mdash;but I could feel
-none of that satisfaction, when I looked at
-them, which great architecture gives. The
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P284"></a>284}</span>
-situation is fine, but not the buildings. Anthony
-Trollope has written of them:&mdash;'As regards
-purity of art and manliness of conception, the
-work is entitled to the very highest praise....
-I know no modern Gothic purer of its kind or
-less sullied with fictitious ornamentation'&mdash;but
-I think he must have breakfasted handsomely
-first. Some one else, but I forget who, and
-it does not matter, has described the buildings
-as 'a noble pile,' which seems to hit the
-mark, if, as I fancy, that mid-Victorian
-expression suggests something on so large a scale,
-which has obviously cost such a lot of money,
-that vague admiration is the least of the
-emotions which should be produced by a
-sight of it. 'A noble pile,' then, let them
-remain, especially since, seen from some
-distance, with the beautiful river below and a
-spacious country stretched before them, they
-possess a certain imposing appearance. Closer
-up, one is less impressed. There is a
-long-backed unmeaning set to the buildings, as
-though the architects had found concentration
-a vexation, and had decided to extend
-instead. Still, they might have elaborated
-painfully, and they did not&mdash;except for those
-little turrets on the side-buildings, surmounted
-by railings which one associates chiefly with
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P285"></a>285}</span>
-the London area. Area railings are meant,
-I suppose, to prevent errand-boys from falling
-into the areas, but there can be few errands
-to the roof of the Parliament Buildings. In
-passing, I did not like those hundreds of silly
-little windows that peep all round: one, as it
-were, for every official to peep from.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Reflection should serve to temper criticism,
-however. The year 1867, in which the
-Dominion Parliament required its Houses, was
-not one of brilliant achievement in the
-architectural world; and when it is remembered
-that Canada itself was also a new country,
-the wonder is that nothing worse was built.
-Only a few years before, we in England had
-been transfixed with admiration of the Crystal
-Palace; Royal Academicians were above
-criticism, and 'almost too great to live';
-bright in the sun gleamed the Albert Memorial.
-We ruled the waves, but not the arts; and
-'our daughter of the snows' took over our
-large ideas and our little taste in building.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether she took over our political ideas is
-another matter, upon which I pondered as
-I contemplated those Parliament Buildings.
-There stood the House in which Sir John
-Macdonald evolved that east-and-west policy
-which seemed such an empire-cementing thing;
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P286"></a>286}</span>
-where Sir Wilfrid Laurier teaches the world
-how to lead a party; where not as yet had
-been ratified that Reciprocity Agreement with
-America which has been agitating our
-statesmen so much this year, though, even as I
-gazed, it must have been in course of
-construction. Would an Imperial Parliament sit there
-some day, I wondered, and direct the affairs
-of the British Empire from what would be,
-not so long hence, a far more central and
-important spot than Westminster? I could not
-quite imagine it. I could not even like the
-idea, as some Imperialists at any price can.
-Home Rule for England is one of the policies
-I shall always stand for, I believe; even when
-Canadians have that grasp of Imperial affairs
-which we in England impute to them&mdash;by
-comparison, we generally mean, with our own
-English political opponents&mdash;that grasp which,
-as a matter of fact, is much less common among
-them at present than it is among us, whether
-we be Liberals or Conservatives.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish our party political system allowed
-of our minimising the zeal and intelligence
-of the side opposed to us without magnifying
-those qualities in a third party which, in
-strict reality, it scarcely possesses. I wish, for
-example, that Tariff Reformers could deride
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P287"></a>287}</span>
-the Imperialistic attitude of Free Traders (and
-vice versa) without declaring that Canadians
-could in this matter teach us all lessons. For
-the truth is that Canadians could not give
-lessons to either in this matter. They have
-an Imperial sentiment all right, but they do
-not worry over it as we do. Take that
-question of Preference which has been making us
-all so hot for several years now. It never
-troubled Canadians at all. They thought that
-there was a good deal in it from a business
-point of view, and they were prepared to try
-it&mdash;and did so. But they never for a moment
-fancied or perturbed themselves with thinking
-that, either with or without it, the Empire
-would totter to its fall. Our fervours left
-them entirely cool; and in that business-like
-state of coolness, after duly granting us
-Preference, they have, equally duly in their opinion,
-set out to establish reciprocity with the States.
-The only thing likely to make them hot in
-this matter is the suggestion that they have
-been lacking in Imperial spirit. Of course
-they had been lacking in that early, romantic,
-self-immolating and fantastically quaint,
-Imperial spirit which we attributed to
-them&mdash;just to make our own Little Englanders try
-and feel ashamed; but, equally again, they
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P288"></a>288}</span>
-never had it, and would not dream of claiming
-it even if they could be made to understand
-what our devotees meant by it. To forgo
-trade in order to uphold the flag would not
-appeal to a Canadian&mdash;mainly for the reason
-that the idea would strike him as grotesque.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the matter of this Reciprocity Agreement,
-then, I think it is we who are wrong if we
-make it a reproach to the Canadians. It
-may or may not be a sound economic
-proceeding, but it is entered upon without
-prejudice to Imperial sentiment. Only if we
-first assume that all Canadians have been
-burning for years past with the same zeal
-for an Imperial Zollverein that has animated
-our own Tariff Reformers, can we now credit
-them with cooling off and backsliding. But
-such an assumption would be a very great
-mistake. All assumptions that Canadians view
-our political problems from our point of view
-are great mistakes. They no more do so
-than we view theirs from their point of view.
-We do not. Nothing struck me more forcibly
-than the fact that what causes us political
-turmoil in Great Britain is viewed with
-complete coolness in Canada, and that what
-Canadians are keen after remains unknown
-to us. While I was there, I kept seeing letters
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P289"></a>289}</span>
-in English papers (reproduced sometimes&mdash;but
-very briefly&mdash;in Canadian papers) saying
-that Canada was whole-hearted for Tariff
-Reform, or that Canadian Free Traders were
-sweeping the country; whereas the fact was
-and is, that these two terms (whatever might
-in reality be the state of Canadian parties)
-never conveyed in the least in Canada what
-we mean by them, and therefore conveyed
-no truth that could be understood of both
-peoples equally.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Does this inter-Imperial lack of comprehension
-threaten the future of the Empire? It
-might seem so at first. Lack of understanding
-between fellow-citizens cannot be a good
-thing in itself. But it has this merit, that
-it makes real interference on either side a
-rare thing. If we understood&mdash;or believed we
-understood&mdash;what was for the future welfare
-of Canada, it is doubtful if we could refrain
-from pointing it out, even if we could refrain
-from insisting upon it. If the Canadians
-thought themselves capable of directing us in
-the right way&mdash;say in the management of
-India&mdash;they would feel urged to give their opinion,
-and Anglo-Indian officials, having this last straw
-added to their backs, would strike <i>en masse</i>.
-As it is, we let each other's real problems
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P290"></a>290}</span>
-alone, and are satisfied with our own solutions
-of them. Imperial Conferences are necessary
-because in some matters the Empire
-must work together, having the same interests.
-Cables and Dreadnoughts are cases in point.
-That Great Britain still bears the main
-expenditure in all such matters is proof, if proof
-be needed, that what American papers
-somewhat unkindly call 'British Island Politics'
-are, still, more Imperial than the politics
-of any other part of the Empire. We pay
-and we ask for little in return, and the Empire
-will go on, even now that Canada has become
-a nation. Only some mistake could, I think,
-part us&mdash;a mistake as big as that which parted
-us from the United States&mdash;and we are not
-likely to make it; nor is Canada likely to
-wish for it, however great she may picture
-and make her own destiny. But that she
-will want to rule entirely in her own house
-is certain. Canadians themselves&mdash;the voters
-I mean&mdash;are not likely for a long time to wish
-for much more than they have in the way
-of national liberty. I do not think they would
-much worry as to whether their ambassador
-at Washington, for example, was appointed
-from Ottawa or from London. The results
-in either case would be likely to be very similar,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P291"></a>291}</span>
-and in any case, as I have said, Canadians
-are not obsessed at present with politics. But
-it has to be remembered that besides Canadian
-voters, there are Canadian politicians, and
-since it is in the nature of politicians to be
-at least as ambitious as other people, it is
-natural that Canadian politicians should want
-in their own hands all the important posts
-that are to be had. Just at present Canadians
-take such a disrespectful view of politicians in
-general&mdash;which is unfair no doubt to their
-own political representatives, but natural
-perhaps in a new country which has not too
-much time to reflect upon the real
-benefactions politicians may confer, and rather
-fancies, from isolated examples, that 'graft'
-is what they are usually after&mdash;that they are
-not likely to demand of their own accord
-more power to the hand of their own
-statesmen. But the accord of voters depends in
-due course upon the persuasive powers of
-candidates, and I foresee the candidates
-persuading pretty hard in the near future: all
-of which will make work for Imperial Conferences
-of the near future, but not, it is to be
-hoped, impossible work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I find that having represented myself as
-reflecting upon Canadian politics outside the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P292"></a>292}</span>
-Dominion Parliament Buildings, I have
-altogether omitted Canadian politics in favour
-of Imperial considerations. Beyond showing,
-or rather trying to show, that Canadian
-politics&mdash;the things that really interest
-Canadians&mdash;are not in the least what we are
-accustomed to think them, I have got no further
-at all. Still, that&mdash;if I have shown it&mdash;is
-something, for it may suggest to some gentle
-reader that an Empire is not a simple, extended
-Great Britain, in which every one thinks
-precisely the same things to be of the same
-immediate importance; of which all the emotions
-and reflections may be realised in full by a
-perusal, let us say, of the Standard of Empire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so I remove myself from that bluff
-above the river at Ottawa to my hotel, and
-thence to divers parts of that charming town,
-which looked then&mdash;for Parliament was not
-sitting&mdash;something like Oxford out of term;
-and thence to the train carrying me back to
-Montreal and Quebec.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Afterwards came the return across the
-Atlantic to a country smaller than Canada&mdash;(less
-than a week of steaming, my friends),
-in company with Canadians who were returning
-to see what the old place was like after
-many years. I think they would not be
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P293"></a>293}</span>
-ill-pleased with it, small as it is by comparison.
-I hope they found behind it some of the qualities
-which, as it seems to me, are to be found
-also in THE FAIR DOMINION, making it to my
-eyes yet more fair.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="index"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P294"></a>294}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-INDEX
-</h3>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-ABBOTT, MOUNT, <a href="#P215">215</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Alaska, <a href="#P274">274</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Alberta, <a href="#P13">13</a>, <a href="#P138">138</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P142">142</a>, <a href="#P143">143</a>,
-<a href="#P164">164</a>, <a href="#P165">165</a>, <a href="#P217">217</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Alps, the, <a href="#P177">177</a>, <a href="#P180">180</a>, <a href="#P199">199</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Angell, Norman, <a href="#P68">68</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Annunzio, Gabriel d', <a href="#P178">178</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Anticosti, <a href="#P16">16</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Archangel, <a href="#P13">13</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Athelmer, <a href="#P233">233</a>, <a href="#P238">238</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-BAIE ST. PAUL, <a href="#P40">40</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Banff, <a href="#P177">177</a>, <a href="#P178">178</a>, <a href="#P179">179</a>, <a href="#P180">180</a>, <a href="#P181">181</a>,
-<a href="#P183">183</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Beacon Hill, <a href="#P276">276</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Beaupré, <a href="#P47">47</a>, <a href="#P48">48</a>, <a href="#P49">49</a>, <a href="#P50">50</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Beaupré, Ste. Anne de, <a href="#P48">48</a>, <a href="#P51">51</a>,
-<a href="#P53">53</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bears, Grizzly, <a href="#P246">246-50</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Belle Isle, <a href="#P16">16</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Birmingham, <a href="#P156">156</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Blondin, <a href="#P90">90</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bourassa, Mr., <a href="#P30">30</a>, <a href="#P31">31</a>, <a href="#P33">33</a>, <a href="#P85">85</a>, <a href="#P86">86</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bourne, Archbishop, <a href="#P17">17</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bow River, <a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P179">179</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bradley, A. G., <a href="#P31">31</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-British Columbia, <a href="#P188">188</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>,
-<a href="#P238">238</a>, <a href="#P256">256</a>, <a href="#P274">274</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bruce, Randolph, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P222">222</a>, <a href="#P225">225</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Brussels, <a href="#P88">88</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-CADBORO' BAY, <a href="#P276">276</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Calgary, <a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P143">143</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P145">145</a>,
-<a href="#P163">163</a>, <a href="#P164">164</a>, <a href="#P170">170</a>, <a href="#P195">195</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Canadian Pacific Railway, <a href="#P18">18</a>,
-<a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P142">142</a>, <a href="#P152">152</a>, <a href="#P162">162</a>, <a href="#P182">182</a>, <a href="#P261">261</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cartier, <a href="#P40">40</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ceylon, <a href="#P267">267</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Champlain, <a href="#P35">35</a>, <a href="#P42">42</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Chicago, <a href="#P159">159</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Chicoutimi, <a href="#P39">39</a>, <a href="#P43">43</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Chuzzlewit, Martin, <a href="#P128">128</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Colonial Intelligence for
-Educated Women, Committee of,
-<a href="#P195">195</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Columbia River, <a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P222">222</a>,
-<a href="#P224">224</a>, <a href="#P230">230</a>, <a href="#P233">233</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Columbia Valley, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P225">225</a>,
-<a href="#P234">234</a>, <a href="#P238">238</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cooper, Fenimore, <a href="#P92">92</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Covent Garden, <a href="#P117">117</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-DICKENS, CHARLES, <a href="#P29">29</a>, <a href="#P90">90</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dufferin Terrace, <a href="#P26">26</a>, <a href="#P27">27</a>, <a href="#P28">28</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Duncans, <a href="#P267">267</a>, <a href="#P268">268</a>, <a href="#P270">270</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-EDEN CITY, <a href="#P129">129</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Edmonton, <a href="#P268">268</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Eliott, Professor, <a href="#P163">163</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Emerald Lake, <a href="#P206">206</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-<i>Empress of Britain</i>, S.S., <a href="#P1">1</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Eucharistic Congress, the, <a href="#P17">17</a>,
-<a href="#P77">77</a>, <a href="#P78">78</a>, <a href="#P79">79</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-FARNHAM, MOUNT, <a href="#P229">229</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Fort William, <a href="#P114">114</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Fraser River, <a href="#P257">257</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Free Trade, <a href="#P29">29</a>, <a href="#P149">149</a>, <a href="#P287">287</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-French River, <a href="#P92">92</a>, <a href="#P93">93</a>, <a href="#P94">94</a>, <a href="#P95">95</a>,
-<a href="#P96">96</a>, <a href="#P97">97</a>, <a href="#P99">99</a>, <a href="#P101">101</a>, <a href="#P102">102</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-GLACIER HOUSE, <a href="#P215">215</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Glasgow, <a href="#P73">73</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Golden, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P217">217</a>, <a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>,
-<a href="#P232">232</a>, <a href="#P236">236</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P238">238</a>, <a href="#P239">239</a>, <a href="#P241">241</a>, <a href="#P244">244</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gordon, Adam, <a href="#P252">252</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Grand Trunk Railway, <a href="#P261">261</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Grasmere, <a href="#P268">268</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-HAMMERSMITH, <a href="#P94">94</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hampstead Heath, <a href="#P117">117</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Heights of Abraham, <a href="#P34">34</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hennepin, Father Louis, <a href="#P89">89</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hesse, Landgraf of, <a href="#P226">226</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hewlett, Maurice, <a href="#P250">250</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Higgsville, <a href="#P128">128</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Himalayas, the, <a href="#P177">177</a>, <a href="#P227">227</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Home Rule, <a href="#P31">31</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hoogly, the, <a href="#P44">44</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Howells, W. D., <a href="#P90">90</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hudson Bay Company, <a href="#P115">115</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-IMPERIALISM, <a href="#P33">33</a>, <a href="#P36">36</a>, <a href="#P287">287</a>, <a href="#P290">290</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Illecillewaet Glacier, the Great,
-<a href="#P215">215</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Iron Top Mountain, <a href="#P224">224</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Irrigation Company, Columbia
-Valley, <a href="#P237">237</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Irrigation Works, Columbia
-Valley, <a href="#P221">221</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-KAMLOOPS, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Keats, John, <a href="#P200">200</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kildonan, <a href="#P123">123</a>, <a href="#P124">124</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kinchinjunga, <a href="#P177">177</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kipling, Rudyard, <a href="#P105">105</a>, <a href="#P106">106</a>,
-<a href="#P253">253</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-LACHINE RAPIDS, <a href="#P77">77</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Laggan, <a href="#P200">200</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Laurentian Mountains, <a href="#P27">27</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Laurier, Sir Wilfrid, <a href="#P278">278</a>, <a href="#P286">286</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Liverpool, <a href="#P1">1</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-LONDON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, <a href="#P152">152</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-London, <a href="#P73">73</a>, <a href="#P86">86</a>, <a href="#P117">117</a>, <a href="#P118">118</a>, <a href="#P119">119</a>,
-<a href="#P285">285</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Loti, Pierre, <a href="#P110">110</a>, <a href="#P111">111</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Louise, Lake, <a href="#P198">198</a>, <a href="#P199">199</a>, <a href="#P200">200</a>, <a href="#P206">206</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lourdes, <a href="#P47">47</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-MACDONALD, SIR JOHN, <a href="#P285">285</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Manchester, <a href="#P156">156</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Manitoba, <a href="#P114">114</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Marseilles, <a href="#P77">77</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Maskinongé, <a href="#P93">93</a>, <a href="#P96">96</a>, <a href="#P99">99</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-M'Bride, Richard, <a href="#P275">275</a>, <a href="#P278">278</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Meredith, George, <a href="#P130">130</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Montmorency Falls, <a href="#P38">38</a>, <a href="#P39">39</a>, <a href="#P49">49</a>,
-<a href="#P50">50</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Montreal, <a href="#P17">17</a>, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P45">45</a>, <a href="#P56">56</a>, <a href="#P64">64</a>, <a href="#P66">66</a>,
-<a href="#P67">67</a>, <a href="#P68">68</a>, <a href="#P69">69</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P73">73</a>, <a href="#P74">74</a>, <a href="#P75">75</a>,
-<a href="#P76">76</a>, <a href="#P77">77</a>, <a href="#P79">79</a>, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P81">81</a>, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P292">292</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Moosejaw, <a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P156">156</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Moraine Lake, <a href="#P201">201</a>, <a href="#P204">204</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Murray Bay, <a href="#P40">40</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Muskoka Lakes, <a href="#P92">92</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-NAPOLEON, <a href="#P120">120</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-National Park, <a href="#P179">179</a>, <a href="#P181">181</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-New Brunswick, <a href="#P32">32</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P238">238</a>,
-<a href="#P242">242</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-New York, <a href="#P39">39</a>, <a href="#P51">51</a>, <a href="#P154">154</a>, <a href="#P159">159</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Niagara Falls, <a href="#P38">38</a>, <a href="#P89">89</a>, <a href="#P90">90</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nightingale, <a href="#P163">163</a>, <a href="#P165">165</a>, <a href="#P166">166</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-North Pole, <a href="#P136">136</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nottingham, <a href="#P28">28</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nova Scotia, <a href="#P32">32</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-OJIBWAY, AN, <a href="#P96">96</a>, <a href="#P97">97</a>, <a href="#P99">99</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Okanagan, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Olympian Mountains, <a href="#P276">276</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ontario, <a href="#P8">8</a>, <a href="#P13">13</a>, <a href="#P32">32</a>, <a href="#P33">33</a>, <a href="#P45">45</a>, <a href="#P85">85</a>,
-<a href="#P109">109</a>, <a href="#P111">111</a>, <a href="#P112">112</a>, <a href="#P113">113</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P151">151</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Orléans, Ile d', <a href="#P40">40</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ottawa, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P283">283</a>, <a href="#P292">292</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Oxford, <a href="#P77">77</a>, <a href="#P292">292</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-PANAMA CANAL, <a href="#P261">261</a>, <a href="#P274">274</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Paris, <a href="#P77">77</a>, <a href="#P117">117</a>, <a href="#P158">158</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Parkman, Francis, <a href="#P41">41</a>, <a href="#P42">42</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Parnell, Charles Stewart, <a href="#P31">31</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Peterborough, <a href="#P8">8</a>, <a href="#P81">81</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pickerel, <a href="#P95">95</a>, <a href="#P98">98</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pitt, William, <a href="#P265">265</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Police, North-West Mounted,
-<a href="#P132">132</a>, <a href="#P133">133</a>, <a href="#P134">134</a>, <a href="#P135">135</a>, <a href="#P136">136</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Port Arthur, <a href="#P114">114</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-QUAMICHAN LAKE, <a href="#P268">268</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Quebec, <a href="#P18">18</a>, <a href="#P20">20</a>, <a href="#P22">22</a>, <a href="#P26">26</a>, <a href="#P28">28</a>, <a href="#P31">31</a>,
-<a href="#P32">32</a>, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P37">37</a>, <a href="#P38">38</a>, <a href="#P39">39</a>, <a href="#P45">45</a>, <a href="#P49">49</a>, <a href="#P50">50</a>,
-<a href="#P53">53</a>, <a href="#P56">56</a>, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P61">61</a>, <a href="#P64">64</a>, <a href="#P111">111</a>, <a href="#P112">112</a>,
-<a href="#P292">292</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-REVELSTOKE, <a href="#P253">253</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Red River, <a href="#P123">123</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-'Reddy,' <a href="#P265">265</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Regina, <a href="#P82">82</a>, <a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>, <a href="#P132">132</a>, <a href="#P136">136</a>,
-<a href="#P156">156</a>, <a href="#P218">218</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Remittance Men, <a href="#P161">161</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rockefeller, <a href="#P23">23</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rockies, the, <a href="#P170">170</a>, <a href="#P171">171</a>, <a href="#P177">177</a>, <a href="#P181">181</a>,
-<a href="#P198">198</a>, <a href="#P209">209</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P230">230</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rome, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P79">79</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Roosevelt, Theodore, <a href="#P45">45</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Russia, <a href="#P135">135</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-SAGUENAY, <a href="#P37">37</a>, <a href="#P39">39</a>, <a href="#P41">41</a>, <a href="#P43">43</a>, <a href="#P44">44</a>,
-<a href="#P46">46</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-San Francisco, <a href="#P258">258</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-St. Irénée, <a href="#P40">40</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-St. John, Reversible Falls of,
-<a href="#P237">237</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-St. Laurent, <a href="#P67">67</a>, <a href="#P68">68</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-St. Lawrence, <a href="#P16">16</a>, <a href="#P26">26</a>, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P39">39</a>, <a href="#P40">40</a>,
-<a href="#P44">44</a>, <a href="#P57">57</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-St. Malo, <a href="#P41">41</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Saskatchewan, <a href="#P144">144</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Seattle, <a href="#P260">260</a>, <a href="#P264">264</a>, <a href="#P274">274</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Selkirk, Lord, <a href="#P123">123</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Selkirks, the, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>, <a href="#P225">225</a>,
-<a href="#P253">253</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Siegfried, André, <a href="#P18">18</a>, <a href="#P147">147</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sir Donald, Mount, <a href="#P215">215</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Spain, <a href="#P156">156</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Spillamacheen, <a href="#P232">232</a>, <a href="#P234">234</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Strathmore, <a href="#P163">163</a>, <a href="#P164">164</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sudbury, <a href="#P102">102</a>, <a href="#P107">107</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Superior, Lake, <a href="#P114">114</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-TADOUSAC, <a href="#P40">40</a>, <a href="#P41">41</a>, <a href="#P42">42</a>, <a href="#P44">44</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Tariff Reform, <a href="#P149">149</a>, <a href="#P286">286</a>, <a href="#P288">288</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Thames, <a href="#P94">94</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Thebes, <a href="#P127">127</a>, <a href="#P128">128</a>, <a href="#P129">129</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Toronto, <a href="#P29">29</a>, <a href="#P65">65</a>, <a href="#P81">81</a>, <a href="#P82">82</a>, <a href="#P83">83</a>, <a href="#P84">84</a>,
-<a href="#P85">85</a>, <a href="#P86">86</a>, <a href="#P87">87</a>, <a href="#P91">91</a>, <a href="#P92">92</a>, <a href="#P93">93</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Town Planning Bill, <a href="#P140">140</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Trachoma, <a href="#P3">3</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Trinité, Cap, <a href="#P43">43</a>, <a href="#P44">44</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Trollope, Anthony, <a href="#P284">284</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-ULSTER, <a href="#P33">33</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS, <a href="#P201">201</a>,
-<a href="#P202">202</a>, <a href="#P204">204</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vancouver, <a href="#P196">196</a>, <a href="#P236">236</a>, <a href="#P258">258</a>, <a href="#P259">259</a>,
-<a href="#P261">261</a>, <a href="#P262">262</a>, <a href="#P263">263</a>, <a href="#P264">264</a>, <a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P267">267</a>,
-<a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P274">274</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vancouver Island, <a href="#P266">266-71</a>, <a href="#P274">274</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vannutelli, Cardinal, <a href="#P78">78</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Victoria, <a href="#P196">196</a>, <a href="#P267">267</a>, <a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P275">275</a>, <a href="#P277">277</a>,
-<a href="#P280">280</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-WALKER, BRUCE, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P120">120</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Webb, Captain, <a href="#P90">90</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wilmer, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P220">220</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>,
-<a href="#P232">232</a>, <a href="#P236">236</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Windermere, Lake, <a href="#P222">222</a>, <a href="#P223">223</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Winnipeg, <a href="#P8">8</a>, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P115">115</a>, <a href="#P116">116</a>, <a href="#P117">117</a>,
-<a href="#P118">118</a>, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P123">123</a>, <a href="#P124">124</a>, <a href="#P127">127</a>, <a href="#P128">128</a>,
-<a href="#P130">130</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wolfe, General, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P35">35</a>, <a href="#P39">39</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wood, Major, <a href="#P34">34</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-World's Fair, the, <a href="#P82">82</a>, <a href="#P83">83</a>, <a href="#P87">87</a>,
-<a href="#P88">88</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-YOHO VALLEY, <a href="#P206">206</a>, <a href="#P207">207</a>, <a href="#P209">209</a>,
-<a href="#P210">210</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Young Women's Christian Association, <a href="#P196">196</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Yukon, <a href="#P188">188</a>, <a href="#P250">250</a>, <a href="#P251">251</a>, <a href="#P252">252</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p>
- Printed by T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty<br />
- at the Edinburgh University Press<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Dominion, by R. E. Vernede
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Fair Dominion
- A Record of Canadian Impressions
-
-Author: R. E. Vernede
-
-Illustrator: Cyrus Cuneo
-
-Release Date: August 3, 2020 [EBook #62844]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FAIR DOMINION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover art]
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: LOOKING FROM LAKE AGNES DOWN ON LAKES MIRROR AND
-LOUISE.]
-
-
-
-
- THE FAIR DOMINION
-
- A RECORD OF CANADIAN IMPRESSIONS
-
-
- BY
-
- R. E. VERNEDE
-
- AUTHOR OF
- 'THE PURSUIT OF MR. FAVIEL,' 'MERIEL OF THE MOORS,' ETC.
-
-
-
- With 12 Illustrations in Colour
- from Drawings by
- CYRUS CUNEO
-
-
-
- LONDON
- KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRUeBNER & CO., LTD.
- DRYDEN HOUSE, GERRARD STREET, W.
- 1911
-
-
-
-
-
-{v}
-
-PREFACE
-
-You know how long ago, in the earlier-than-Victorian days, the
-country cousin, in order to see life, went up to the Metropolis. A
-terrible journey it was, but well worth the labour and anxiety.
-Accounts are still extant of how the bustle and noise of the streets
-amazed him, of how endless the houses seemed, how startled he was by
-the glittering, clattering folk, how innocent and countrified he felt
-by comparison with them. Nowadays, though the London we know is to
-that old London as a vast and sleepless city to a small somnolent
-town, the country cousin is no longer carried off his feet by a visit
-to it. It is not vast enough or noisy enough or new enough to
-impress him. Perhaps no single city ever will be again.
-
-But Canada! Some Winnipeg school teachers who came over recently to
-see London, told a journalist that it seemed so quiet compared with
-Canadian cities. 'In our cities,' {vi} they said, 'it is impossible
-to escape from the noise of the streets.' ... Yet the streets and the
-cities are not really the things that impress one most in Canada.
-The amazing things are the forests and the fields, the prairies and
-the lakes and the mountains: all the illimitable space and the
-irrepressible men who are closing it in and giving it names for us to
-know it by.
-
-Clearly the English country cousin who wishes to be impressed should
-go to Canada. It is as easy to reach as London was in the old days,
-and there are no highwaymen. He will come back--if he comes
-back--with many stories to tell his friends of the wonders he has
-seen and of the still more incredible things that will soon be
-visible. That is at least my position. I went out originally for
-the _Bystander_, which wanted its Canadian news, like all its other
-news, up-to-date and not too solemn, and I am indebted to the editor
-of that journal for permission to make use in parts of the articles I
-sent him for this book, in which, by the way, I have still
-endeavoured to avoid solemnity. For some reason or other, many
-writers upon Canada do fall into a solemn and portentous way of
-describing the country--with the result {vii} that people who know
-nothing of the facts say to themselves, 'This is indeed an important
-Dominion, but dull.' As a matter of fact, of course, Canada is a
-highly exciting country--from its grizzly bears to its political
-problems--and having spent delightful months in various parts, some
-well known, others, such as the French River, the Columbia Valley,
-and the Selkirks, very little known; riding in trains or on mountain
-ponies, sometimes trying to catch maskinonges (a tigerish kind of
-pike), sometimes trying to catch prime ministers (who cannot be
-described in such a general way)--I have tried to set down my
-impressions as incompletely as I received them. Never, I hope, have
-I fallen into the error of describing exactly how many salmon are
-canned in the Dominion, or what Sir Wilfrid Laurier should do if he
-really wishes to remain a great party leader. The errors I have
-fallen into will be obvious, and I need not run through them here....
-As for criticisms--if now and then I stop to make some--if I start
-saying, 'Canada is a great country, nevertheless, we do some things
-just as well or better at home,' no Canadian need mind. Country
-cousins have said just {viii} that sort of thing from all time.
-Every cousin--even the most countrified--makes some reservations in
-favour of his own place; he would not be worth entertaining
-otherwise. If the criticisms are pointless, Canadians may say, 'What
-can you expect from a country cousin?' If there is something in
-them, they will be entitled to remark, 'This English country cousin
-shows some intelligence. But then he has been to Canada--the centre
-of things.'
-
-
-
-
-{ix}
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAP.
-
-I. THE START FROM LIVERPOOL
-
-II. THE STEERAGE PASSAGE
-
-III. LANDING IN CANADA
-
-IV. A FAIRLY LONG DAY IN QUEBEC
-
-V. THE ATTRACTION OF THE SAGUENAY
-
-VI. STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRE AND A TRAVELLER'S VOW
-
-VII. A HABITANT VILLAGE AND ITS NOTAIRE
-
-VIII. GLIMPSES OF MONTREAL
-
-IX. TORONTO, NIAGARA FALLS, AND A NEGRO PORTER
-
-X. MASKINONGE FISHING ON THE FRENCH RIVER
-
-XI. SOME SUPERFICIAL REFLECTIONS AT SUDBURY
-
-XII. THROUGH THE HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO
-
-XIII. THE OLD TIMERS OF KILDONAN AND THE NEW TIMERS OF WINNIPEG
-
-XIV. A PRAIRIE TOWN AND THE PRAIRIE POLICE
-
-XV. IN CALGARY
-
-{x}
-
-XVI. THE AMERICANISATION QUESTION
-
-XVII. AMONG THE READY-MADE FARMS
-
-XVIII. INTO THE ROCKIES WITH A DEFENDER OF THE FAITH
-
-XIX. A HOT BATH IN BANFF
-
-XX. CANADA AND WOMAN
-
-XXI. THE LAKES AMONG THE CLOUDS
-
-XXII. A SOLITARY RIDE INTO THE YOHO VALLEY
-
-XXIII. THE FRUIT-LANDS OF LAKE WINDERMERE
-
-XXIV. THE SELKIRKS--A GRIZZLY-BEAR COUNTRY
-
-XXV. AN EIGHTY-MILE WALK THROUGH THE COLUMBIA VALLEY
-
-XXVI. FROM GOLDEN TO THE COAST
-
-XXVII. A LITTLE ABOUT VANCOUVER CITY
-
-XXVIII. THE HAPPY FARMERS OF THE ISLAND
-
-XXIX. A CHAT WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF
- BRITISH COLUMBIA AND A BIG FIRE AT VICTORIA
-
-XXX. BACK THROUGH OTTAWA
-
-INDEX
-
-
-
-
-{xi}
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-LOOKING FROM LAKE AGNES DOWN ON LAKES MIRROR AND LOUISE ...
-Frontispiece
-
-CHATEAU FRONTENAC FROM THE OLD RAMPARTS. DAY. QUEBEC
-
-CHATEAU FRONTENAC AND DUFFERIN TERRACE. NIGHT. QUEBEC
-
-MOUNT LEFROY. CANADIAN ROCKIES
-
-A TRAIL IN THE ROCKIES
-
-THE HALT. SADDLEBACK. LAGGAN
-
-LAKE LOUISE. LAGGAN. ALBERTA
-
-IN THE VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS
-
-ON THE TRAIL, YOHO VALLEY
-
-THE DEVIL'S FINGERS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS
-
-A SENTINEL OF THE ROCKIES
-
-IN THE SELKIRKS. THE RETURN FROM THE HUNT
-
-
-
-
-{1}
-
-THE FAIR DOMINION
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE START FROM LIVERPOOL
-
-Canada and its wonders might lie before us, yet it was not all joy
-there at the Liverpool docks, where we waited our opportunity to go
-on board S.S. _Empress of Britain_. For one thing, the sun on that
-August day of last year was so unusually warm that standing about
-with a bag amongst crowds of people who were seeing other people off
-was hard work; for another, I had left behind me in my Hertfordshire
-home my bull-mastiff, forlorn ever since I had begun packing, and not
-a bit deceived by the bone she had been supplied with at parting.
-Even while she had gnawed it, she had whined. All those other people
-already on the great ship, the people in the bows--the
-emigrants--were leaving more even than a bull-mastiff: friends--for
-who knew how long?--their parents in England perhaps for ever. Here
-were thoughts to obscure the {2} pleasure of those who were making
-for a new world, thoughts to sadden those who, whether by their own
-choice or not, were staying behind. Less than my bull-mastiff could
-they be either deceived or solaced. True, they might remember that
-this is the way a great Empire is made. We talk of the Empire often
-enough. But then we who talk of it are rarely those who make it or
-suffer for it; and perhaps we are therefore more easily consoled by a
-great idea than they.
-
-Luckily going on board ship has to be a bustling business. My two
-companions and I, who had been promised a four-berth third-class
-cabin between us, had to bustle quite a lot--to different gangways
-from which we were rapidly sent back and into various queues, which
-turned out, after we had waited in them for some time, to be composed
-of some other class of passenger. We were extremely heated before we
-found ourselves in the end about to be passed up a gangway at which
-the medical inspection of a group of Scandinavians was at the moment
-going on. Scandinavian seems to be a roomy word which covers all
-Swedes, Norwegians, Danes, Lapps; and no foreigners not coming under
-this category are carried by the 'Empress' boats.
-
-{3}
-
-The theory seems to be in regard to them that they are the only right
-and proper shipmates for English emigrants going to Canada. They
-were being pretty carefully examined all the same, men and women
-alike. The doctors' attention seemed to centre on their heads and
-eyelids. Hats were pulled off as they came level with them, and
-tow-coloured hair was grasped and peered into apparently with
-satisfactory results, for only a couple of elderly people were held
-back for a few minutes; and they I fancy had not passed the eye test,
-and were therefore not free from suspicion of having trachoma--a not
-uncommon North European disease supposed to cause total blindness,
-which is least of all to be desired in a new country. The two
-detained Scandinavians were re-examined and passed, after which our
-turn came. I think we all three felt a little uneasy in the eyelids
-as we advanced upon the doctor, but we need not have been anxious,
-for after a swift glance at us he reassured us by grinning and
-saying, 'There's nothing wrong with you, I should say,'--and so we
-passed on board. For the next hour or two we were part of a whirl of
-confused humanity. There is always a tendency among landsmen to
-become sheepish at sea, and in the steerage there were nine {4}
-hundred of us, most of whom had never been at sea before. So we
-rushed together and got jammed down companionways and in passages
-which even on so big a liner as this could not hold us all abreast,
-and scrummed to find the numbers of our berths from the steward, and
-flung ourselves in masses upon our baggage, and pressed pell-mell to
-the sides of the ship to wave good-bye, and formed a solid tossing
-square saloonwards when bells rang and we thought they might mean
-meals.
-
-Of course there must have been even then self-possessed passengers,
-who knew what they were about and only seemed to be lost with the
-crowd, and to be vaguely trying to muddle through. Canadians
-returning to their own country were conspicuous later by reason of
-their cool bearing and air of knowing their way about the world. And
-the invisible discipline of the ship that was to turn us all later
-into reasonable and orderly individuals was no doubt already at work.
-But the impression any one looking down on us that first evening
-would have received would have been the impression of a scurrying
-crowd, fancifully and variously dressed for its Atlantic
-voyage--clerks in pink shirts and high collars and bowler hats,
-peasants in smocks, women in the {5} very latest flapping head-gear,
-or bareheaded and shawled, infants either terribly smart or mere
-bundles of old clothes.
-
-Up on the first-class deck superior people were walking calmly about
-with just the right clothes and manners for such a small event as
-crossing the Atlantic must have been to most of them. Occasionally
-one of these upper folk would come to the rails, lean over and
-smilingly stare at us: wondering perhaps at our confusion. But then
-all our fortunes were embarked on the ship, and only a little part of
-theirs.
-
-When I went to sleep that night on a clean straw mattress in a lower
-berth, with a pleasant air blowing in through the port-hole in the
-passage, we were, I suppose, out to sea, and the air was Atlantic
-air, and no longer that of the old country.
-
-
-
-
-{6}
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE STEERAGE PASSAGE
-
-Apart from its other merits the steerage has this to its
-credit--every one is very friendly and affable. No one required an
-introduction before entering into conversation, and the suspicion
-that we might be making the acquaintance of some doubtful and
-inferior person who would perhaps presume upon it later did not worry
-any of us. I sat at a delightful table. Some one who knew the ins
-and outs of a steerage passage had advised me to go in to meals with
-the first 'rush,' instead of waiting for the second or third. His
-theory was that the first relay got the pick of the food. So my two
-friends and I had taken care to answer the very first call to the
-saloon, which happened to be for high tea, and, seating ourselves at
-random, found that we were thereby self-condemned to take every meal
-in the same order--including breakfast at the unaccustomed and
-somewhat dispiriting hour of 7 A.M. {7} I do not know that it
-greatly mattered. In the cabin next ours there were several small
-children, who appeared to wake and weep about 4 A.M., and either to
-throw themselves or be thrown out of their berths on to the floor a
-little later. Their lamentations then became so considerable, that
-we were not sorry to rise and go elsewhere.
-
-Besides the three of us, there were at our table the following:--
-
-(1) A Norwegian peasant. Going on to the land. Quiet and rapid in
-his eating.
-
-(2) Another Norwegian peasant, also going on to the land. He must
-have arrived on board very hungry, and he remained so throughout the
-voyage. He used to help himself to butter with his egg spoon, after
-he had finished most of his egg with it. Moreover, he would rise and
-stretch a red and dusky arm all down the table, if he sighted
-something appetising afar off. As we had a most excellent table
-steward, whose waiting could not have been beaten in the first-class,
-we all rather resented this behaviour, and I--as his next door
-neighbour--was deputed to hold him courteously in his seat until the
-desired eatables could be passed him.
-
-(3) A Durham miner going to a mine in {8} northern Ontario. A cheery
-red-faced person. He had bought a revolver before starting for
-Canada, because friends had told him that they were rough sort of
-places up there. I afterwards stayed a night in a mining town, and
-the only row that I heard was caused by a young Salvation Army girl,
-who beat a drum violently for hours outside the bar. We advised the
-miner to practise with his revolver in some isolated spot, these
-weapons being tricky.
-
-(4) A small shy cockney boy who was going out to his dad at Winnipeg.
-I don't know what his dad was, but I should think a clerk of sorts.
-
-(5) A brass metal worker from the North. Going to a job in
-Peterborough. A quiet pleasant young man.
-
-(6) A chauffeur who had also been in the Royal Engineers. Had been
-in the South African War, and told stories about it much more
-interesting than those you see in books.
-
-(7) A horse-breaker, with whom I spent many hours learning about bits
-and bridles and shoes. He was the only married man among these
-seven. He hoped to bring his wife and family out within the year,
-and was not going to be happy until he did, even though {9} the kids
-would have to be vaccinated, and he had most conscientious objections
-to this process.
-
-All these men--even the Norwegian with his egg-spoon habits--would
-be, I could not help thinking, a distinct gain to any country. I
-fancy too that they represented the steerage generally. Of course
-there were other types. I remember some characteristic Londoners of
-the less worthy sort--gummy-faced youths in dirty clothes that had
-been smart. There was one in particular, whom the horse-breaker
-would refer to as 'that lad that goes about in what was once a soot
-o' clothes,' who had a perfect genius for card tricks and making
-music on a comb. His career in Canada, judging by criticisms passed
-upon him by returning Canadians, was likely to be brief and
-unsuccessful.
-
-The food--to turn to what is always of considerable interest on a
-voyage--was good but solid. Pea soup, followed by pork chops and
-plum-pudding, makes an excellent dinner when you are hungry.
-Everybody was hungry the first day and also the last three days. In
-between there was a cessation of appetites. The sea was never in the
-least rough, but there was some slight motion on the second day out,
-{10} and the majority of the nine hundred had probably never been to
-sea before. The strange affliction took them unawares, and they did
-not know how to deal with it. Where they were first seized, there
-they remained and were ill. The sides of the ship which appealed to
-more experienced travellers did not allure them. It was during this
-affliction that a device which had struck me as a most excellent idea
-upon going on board seemed in practice less good. This was a
-railed-in sand-pit which the paternal company had constructed between
-decks for the entertainment of the emigrant children. I had seen a
-dozen or more at a time playing in it with every manifestation of
-delight. Even now while they were ailing there, they did not seem to
-mind it.
-
-Everywhere one went on that day of tribulation one had to walk warily.
-
-Afterwards the sea settled down into a mill pond, and every one began
-to wear a cheerful and hopeful look. In the evenings, and sometimes
-in the afternoons as well, some of the Scandinavians would produce
-concertinas and violins, and the whole of them would dance their
-folk-dances for hours. It was extraordinary how gracefully they
-danced--the squat fair-haired women and the big men heavily {11}
-clothed and booted. There was an attempt on the part of some of the
-English people to take part in these dances, but they soon realised
-their inferiority, and gave it up in favour of sports and concerts.
-The sports, though highly successful in themselves, led to a slight
-contretemps when the Bishop of London, who happened to be on board,
-came over by request to distribute the prizes. The Scandinavians,
-who quite wrongly thought they had been left out of the sports,
-seized the opportunity afforded by the bishop's address (which was
-concerned with our future in Canada), to form in Indian file, with a
-concertinist at their head, and march round and round the platform on
-which the bishop stood, making a deafening noise. It looked for a
-little as if there might be a scuffle between them and the
-prize-winners, but peace prevailed, though we were all prevented from
-hearing what was no doubt very sound advice. Apart from this, there
-was no horseplay to speak of until the last night but one, when a
-rowdy set, headed by a fat Yorkshireman, chose to throw bottles about
-in the dark, down in that part of the ship where about fifty men were
-berthed together. For this the ringleader was hauled before the
-captain and properly threatened.
-
-{12}
-
-Our concerts went with less eclat. They were held in the
-dining-saloon, and there were usually good audiences. It seemed
-however that we had only one accompanist, whose command of the piano
-was limited, and in any case self-consciousness invariably got the
-better of the performers at the last moment. Either they would not
-come forward at all when their turn arrived, or else, having come
-forward, they turned very red, wavered through a few notes and then
-lost their voices altogether. Our best English concertina player, a
-fat little Lancashire engineer, had his instrument seized with the
-strangest noises halfway through 'Variations on the Harmonica,' and
-after a manly effort to restrain them, failed and had to retire in
-haste. We generally bridged over these recurring gaps in the
-programme by singing 'Yip i addy.'
-
-It was so fine most of the voyage, that one could be quite happy on
-deck doing nothing at all but resting and strolling and talking. A
-few of the girls skipped occasionally and some of the men boxed:
-there was no real zeal for deck games. The voyage was too short, and
-with the new life and the new world at the end of it we all wanted to
-find out from one another what we knew--or at least what we {13}
-thought--Canada would be like. We stood in some awe of returning
-Canadians who talked of dollars as if they were pence, and we
-wondered if we should get jobs as easily as people said we should.
-Almost every type of worker was represented among us, and many types
-of people.
-
-Chief among my own particular acquaintances made on the boat were a
-young lady-help from Alberta, two Russian Jews from Archangel, a
-Norwegian farm hand from somewhere near the Arctic circle, two miners
-from Ontario, and three small boys belonging to Perth, Scotland.
-
-I do not know how the Russian Jews came to be on the boat. They had
-some Finnish, and I suppose slipped in with the Scandinavians. They
-also spoke a few words of German, which was the language we misused
-together. They were brothers, good-looking men with charming
-manners. The elder wore a frock coat and a bowler hat, and looked a
-romantic Shylock. The other was clothed in a smock, and was hatless.
-They said they had fled from the strife of Russia, and they wished
-particularly to know if Canada was a free country. The younger man
-was an ironworker and made penny puzzles in iron {14} which, so far
-as I could make out, the elder brother invented. They had one puzzle
-with them, but it was very complicated, and I was afraid that the
-sale of such things in Canada might be limited, unless Canadians
-fancied bewildering themselves over intricate ironwork during the
-long winters. Still those two fugitives rolled Russian cigarettes
-very well too, which should earn them a living.
-
-The Norwegian was a simple youth in a queer hat, which afterwards
-blew off into the sea much to his sorrow. He was very bent on
-acquiring the English language during the voyage, not having any of
-it to start with. I used to sit with him on one side and the small
-Perthshire boys on the other, while we translated Scottish into
-Norwegian and back again. The Scotch boys would inquire of me what
-'hat' was in Norse, and I would point to the queer head-gear
-above-mentioned, and ask its owner to name its Norwegian equivalent.
-One of the things that stumped me--being a mere Englishman--was a
-question put by the smallest Perth boy: 'Whit is gollasses in
-Norwegian?'
-
-It took me some time to find out what gollasses were in English, and
-I don't know how to spell them now.
-
-
-
-
-{15}
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-LANDING IN CANADA
-
-It was while we were still out to sea that I first realised what
-Canada might be like, and how different from England. We had been
-steaming for five days, and hitherto the Atlantic had seemed a
-familiar and still English sea. The sky above, the air around, even
-the vast slowly heaving waters and the set of the sun one might see
-from an English cliff. But on this last day but one, which was a day
-of hot sun, the sky seemed to have risen immeasurably higher than in
-England and to have become incredibly clearer, except where little
-white rugged clouds were set. Snow clouds in a perfect winter's sky,
-I should have said, if I had known myself to be at home; yet the air
-round the ship was of the very balmiest summer. We should never get
-such a sky and such an air together in England, and we were all
-stimulated by it and began to forget England and think more of
-Canada. We wondered {16} when we were going to see the lights of
-Belle Isle, and somebody said we should pass an island called
-Anticosti, and we began to look out for Anticosti, and anybody who
-knew anything about Anticosti was listened to like an oracle. Not
-that anybody did know much--even those who had crossed to and fro
-several times. After all there was no reason why they should, for
-Atlantic liners do not stop there, and there is not much to be seen
-in passing. Still we weighed the words of those who had passed it
-carefully, and decided to see what we could of it so that we might
-also be regarded as oracles next time we came that way.
-
-Though we had not seen Canada, yet we had received a favourable
-impression of it, which was lucky, because the next day, when we had
-got into the St. Lawrence, it came on to sleet and vapour. We of the
-steerage, who had brought up our boxes and babies almost before
-breakfast, so as to be ready to land at the earliest moment, had to
-content ourselves with sitting on them between decks (on the boxes,
-for choice, but the babies would get in the way too), and watch the
-little white villages and tinned church spires and dark woods of
-French Canada drive past the portholes in the {17} mist. We should
-like to have been on deck seeing more of our new home, breathing some
-of its bracing air; but the rain was incessant. Heavens, but it got
-stuffy too on that lower deck. Nine hundred of us in our best
-clothes and our overcoats--holding on to bundles and kids, and
-sweating. It got so stuffy, that I took the opportunity of crossing
-in the rain to the first-class, and hunting out two people to whom I
-had introductions. One was the Canadian Minister for Emigration, who
-had already been over to inspect us in a paternal sort of way and
-declared that we were 'a particularly good lot'--very different, he
-hinted, from the sort of English emigrants who used to be shipped
-over, and got Englishmen a bad name in the new country for years.
-His gratification at our general excellence was so natural that I did
-not broach the question of whether Canada's gain was England's loss.
-I hope it was not. I suppose we can afford to lose even good men,
-provided we are not going to lose them really, but only station them
-at a different spot along the great road of the Empire.
-
-The other person I was anxious to see was Archbishop Bourne, who was
-going out to the Eucharistic Congress at Montreal. We {18} discussed
-that extraordinarily lucid book of Monsieur Andre Siegfried, which
-deals with the race question in Canada. The archbishop admitted its
-value, though he thought it unfair in parts. He was assured, for
-example, that the unsocial attitude of the Irish and French Canadian
-Catholics towards one another as well as towards those of another
-religion was fast disappearing, nor did he seem to think that the
-Church any longer tended to frustrate enterprise by keeping its
-members under its wing in the East. Many Catholics were going West
-nowadays, and after the Congress he himself was going West in the
-spirit of the times. Perhaps he was right about the _rapprochement_
-of the Irish and French Catholics, though men on the spot maintain
-that their unsociability is largely due to the fact that both have a
-singular yearning for State employment and the employment will not
-always go round.
-
-It was still raining when I recrossed to the steerage, and it was
-still raining when we got into the Canadian Pacific Railway dock at
-about 5 P.M. I was standing beside the horse-breaker at the time,
-and the first thing that caught his eye in Quebec was the shape of
-the telegraph poles.
-
-{19}
-
-'Why, look at them,' he said, 'they're all crooked!'
-
-A little later, he commented on the slowness with which the
-French-Canadian porters were getting the baggage off the boat. 'They
-may have this here hustle on them that they talk of,' he said, 'but
-I've seen that done a lot quicker in London.'
-
-It was more loyalty to the old country than disloyalty to the new
-that prompted the remark, in which there was perhaps some
-justification. A Canadian who was standing by seemed to think so at
-any rate.
-
-'This is only French Canada,' he said, 'wait till you get West.'
-
-Still we all of us had to wait a bit in French Canada anyhow. We did
-not get through the emigration sheds till 9.30 P.M., and then there
-was one's baggage to be got through the Customs after. Not that
-there was much in that, the officials being most amiable. But we
-none of us much enjoyed the emigrant inspection. It is necessary and
-desirable no doubt, but we felt that we had been inspected pretty
-often already on board the boat, and we had been up since daylight,
-and we were hungry and miserable, and hot in the sheds and cold out
-of them, and the babies fractious, {20} and everybody shoving and
-pushing, and we felt like some sheep at sheep-dog trials which have
-to be driven through pen after pen, and would go so much faster if
-they only knew how, and the dogs didn't press them. However it was
-all accomplished at last, and then the emigrants got into the
-westbound train that was waiting for them. First and second-class
-passengers had long since vanished in carriages to such abodes of
-luxury as the Chateau Frontenac and the rest of the leading hotels.
-Now there were no carriages left. And we heard that a hundred people
-at least had been turned away from the Chateau Frontenac, so full was
-it; and since in any case we wished to start our Canadian impressions
-from a humbler standpoint, we set out in the rain for a Quebec inn
-which some of the Canadians returning in the steerage had told us of.
-I suppose we had a good deal more than a mile to go through the rain
-carrying bags, along those awful roads from the docks. I know
-something about those roads, because I not only walked along them
-that night, but next morning I drove a dray along them. I had gone
-back to the docks to get my trunk which I had had to leave there, and
-the dray was the only thing I could get to drive up in. Soon after
-we had started {21} I said to the driver--a merry-faced French
-Canadian--'Il trotte bien,' referring to the horse, and he was so
-pleased with the compliment, or the French perhaps, that he handed me
-the reins and let me drive the rest of the way through the stone
-piles and mud that appeared to form the roads in lower Quebec. In
-return for the reins I had lent him my tobacco pouch; and when the
-horse leapt an extra deep hole, he would stop filling his pipe and
-hold me in round the waist.
-
-To go back to the inn--I suppose it was ten o'clock before we got
-there. A few men sat smoking, with their feet against the wall in
-the entrance room where the office was; and after we had waited about
-for ten minutes or so, one of them told us if we wanted to see the
-clerk we'd better ring a bell. We did so, and presently a youth
-turned up and patronisingly accorded us rooms for the night.
-
-'Is there any chance of getting a meal to-night?' we inquired,
-somewhat damped by his unenthusiastic reception. (I may say that I
-never met an office clerk in a Canadian hotel who did seem keen on
-welcoming guests. That is one of the differences between the old
-world and the new.)
-
-'Yup, there's a cafe downstairs,' said the {22} youth, as he lit a
-cigar and sat down to read a newspaper.
-
-We went downstairs, and there in a narrow little room behind a long
-counter which had plates of sausage rolls, under meat covers to keep
-them from the flies, upon it, and little high stools upon which you
-sit in discomfort to eat the sausage rolls quickly in front of it, we
-found a small pale-faced boy who said 'Sure!' in the cheeriest way
-when we repeated our question about food. Five minutes later he had
-produced from a stove which he was almost too small to reach fried
-bacon and eggs and coffee, and while we sat and ate these good
-things, he gave us advice about the future. He evidently knew
-without asking that we were emigrants from the old country, and he
-supposed we wanted jobs. He recommended waiting as a start--waiting
-in a hotel. Waiting was not, he said, much of a thing to stick at;
-but there was pretty good money to be made at it in the season. Lots
-of tourists gave good tips--especially in Quebec--and you could save
-money as a waiter if you tried. He himself was from the States, but
-he liked Quebec well enough. Of course it was not as hustling as
-further west, and not to be compared to the States. If a man {23}
-had ideas, the States was the place for him. There were more
-opportunities for a man with ideas in the States than there were in
-Canada. We asked him how much a man with ideas could reckon upon
-making in the States, and he said such a man could reckon upon making
-as much as five dollars a day. It did not seem an overwhelming
-amount to my aspiring mind--not for a man with ideas. Perhaps that
-is because one has heard of so many millionaires down in the States,
-beginning with Mr. Rockefeller. But then again, perhaps millionaires
-are not men with ideas themselves so much as men who know how to use
-the ideas of others.
-
-Having started on money, the boy gave us a lecture on the Canadian
-coinage, the advantages of the decimal system, where copper money
-held good and why--all in a way that would have done credit to a
-financial expert. We thought him an amazing boy to be frying eggs
-and bacon behind a counter in a small cafe: only you don't just stick
-to one groove in Canada. At least you ought not to, as the boy
-himself told us. Englishmen were like that, but it didn't do in the
-States or Canada. A man should have several strings to his bow, and
-be ready to turn his hand to anything.
-
-{24}
-
-Refreshed by our supper and his advice, we adjourned to the bar which
-was handy, and got further enlightenment from the barman there. He
-was a French Canadian, very dapper in a stiff white shirt and patent
-leather boots. Money was also his theme. He told us he made forty
-cents an hour, and meant to get up to seventy-five cents pretty soon.
-That was good money to get, but he was worth it, and if the boss
-didn't think so he would try some other boss who did. It was no good
-a man's sitting down and taking less money than he was worth. A man
-would not get anywhere if he did that sort of thing. He certainly
-mixed cocktails at a lightning pace, and all the time he chatted he
-strode up and down behind the bar like a caged jackal. He gave me my
-first idea of that un-English restlessness--American, I suppose, in
-its origin--which is beginning to spread so rapidly through Canada.
-In America I fancy they are beginning to distrust it a little. Too
-much enterprise may lead to an unsettled condition that is not much
-better than stagnation. Farm hands tend to leave their employers at
-critical moments, just for the sake of novelty. Farmers themselves
-are so anxious to get on that they take what they can out of the
-land, and move {25} to new farms, leaving the old ruined. It may be
-that in a newer country like Canada enterprise is less perilous.
-That remains to be seen. We retired to bed at midnight, sleepier
-even than men from the old country are reputed to be.
-
-
-
-
-{26}
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-A FAIRLY LONG DAY IN QUEBEC
-
-Quebec city is full of charms and memories. I am no lover of cities
-when they have grown so great that no one knows any longer what site
-they were built on, or what sort of a country is buried beneath them.
-Their streets may teem with people and their buildings be very
-splendid, but if they have shut off the landscape altogether I cannot
-admire them. Quebec will never be one of those cities, however great
-she may grow. Quebec stands on a hill, and just as a city on a hill
-cannot be hid, so too it cannot hide from those who live in it the
-country round, nor even the country it stands on. Always there will
-be in Quebec a sense of steepness. The cliffs still climb even where
-they are crowded with houses. And the air that reaches Quebec is the
-air of the hills. Always too--from Dufferin Terrace at least--there
-will be visible the sweep of the St. Lawrence, the dark crawl to the
-north-east {27} of the Laurentian Mountains, and the clear and
-immensely lofty Canadian skies.
-
-I spent the whole of my first day in Quebec on Dufferin Terrace,
-except for that journey down to the docks. Once I was on the
-terrace, I forgot how bad the roads had been. You might drive a
-thousand miles through stones and mud, and forget them all the moment
-you set foot on Dufferin Terrace. Everything you see from it is
-beautiful, from the Chateau Frontenac behind--surely the most
-picturesque and most picturesquely situated hotel in the world--to
-the wind on the river below. Most beautiful of all the things I saw
-was the moon starting to rise behind Port Levis. It started in the
-trees, and at first I thought it was a forest fire. There was
-nothing but red flame that spread and spread among the trees at
-first. Suddenly it shot up into a round ball of glowing orange, so
-that I knew it was the moon long before it turned silver, high up,
-and made a glimmering pathway across the river.
-
-During this moonrise the band was playing on the terrace, and all
-Quebec was strolling up and down or standing listening to the music,
-as is its custom on summer evenings. The scene on the terrace has
-often enough been described--with its mingling of many {28} types,
-American tourists and Dominican friars, habitants from far villages,
-and business men from the centre of things, archbishops and Members
-of Parliament, and ships' stewards and commercial travellers, and
-freshly arrived immigrants and old market women. The fair Quebeckers
-love the terrace as much as their men folk, and I saw several pretty
-faces among them and many pretty figures. They know how to walk,
-these French Canadian ladies, and also how to dress--the latter an
-art which has still to be achieved by the women of the West.
-
-[Illustration: CHATEAU FRONTENAC, QUEBEC, FROM THE OLD RAMPARTS.]
-
-The terrace besides being gay is very friendly too. My two
-companions of the voyage had gone on that morning, being in a hurry
-to reach the prairie; but I found several new friends on the terrace
-in the course of the day. One was a young working man from England,
-who had brought his child on to the terrace to play when I first met
-him. He was so well-dressed and prosperous looking that I should
-never have guessed he was only a shoe-leather cutter, as he told me
-he was. But then he had been out in Quebec for five years, and he
-was making twenty-five dollars a week instead of the thirty-two
-shillings a week he used to make in Nottingham at the same trade. He
-said he {29} had been sorry to leave England, but you were more of a
-man in Canada. There were not twenty men after one job--that was the
-difference. Consequently, if your boss offered to give you any dirt,
-you could tell him to go to Hell. I suppose we should have counted
-him a wicked and dangerous Socialist in England, but there is no
-doubt that he is a typical Canadian citizen, and the kind of man they
-want there. Another acquaintance I picked up was a commercial
-traveller from Toronto--a stout tubby energetic man, who asked me,
-almost with tears in his eyes, why England would not give up Free
-Trade and study Canadian needs? He was particularly keen on English
-manufacturers studying Canadian needs, and he put the matter in quite
-a novel light as far as I was concerned. His argument was that we
-made things in England too well. What was the use, he demanded, of
-making good durable things when Canadians did not want them? It only
-meant that the States jumped in with inferior goods more suited to
-the moment. He assured me that Canada was a new country, and
-Canadians did not want to buy things that would last hundreds of
-years. Take furniture, machinery, anything--Canadians only wanted
-stuff that {30} would last them a year or two, after which they could
-scrap it and get something new. That kept the money in circulation.
-Anyway, he insisted, a thing was no good if it was better than what a
-customer required. I had not thought of things in that way before,
-and it was interesting to hear him.
-
-My third acquaintance was a member of the Quebec Parliament, who
-started to chat quite informally, and having ascertained that I was
-fresh from the old country took me to his house, that I might drink
-Scotch whisky, and be informed that French Canadians loved the King
-and hated the Boer War. I think when a French Canadian does not know
-you well, he will always make these two admissions--but not any
-more--lest you should be unsympathetic or he should give himself away.
-
-That is why, since the position of French Canadians in Canadian
-politics will some day be of the greatest importance, we ought all to
-be thankful for the existence of Mr. Bourassa. Mr. Bourassa is
-represented--by his opponents--as the violent leader of a small
-faction of French Canadians, as a trial to moderate men of all sorts,
-including the majority of his own French-Canadian fellow-citizens.
-All this is very true. In Canadian politics, as they stand {31} at
-present, Mr. Bourassa stands for just that and very little more.
-Politically he is an extremist and a nuisance. But disregarding for
-a moment immediate practical politics, Mr. Bourassa stands for much
-more than that--stands indeed for the real essence of French Canada.
-He is the French Canadian in action, shouting on the house-tops what
-most of them prefer to dream of by the fire-side, insisting upon
-bringing forward ideas which the others would leave to be brought
-forward by chance or in the lapse of time.
-
-He has been called the Parnell of Canada, but these international
-metaphors are generally calculated to mislead. The most that Parnell
-ever demanded was Home Rule for Ireland--that small part of Great
-Britain, that fraction of the Empire. Mr. Bourassa does not only
-want Home Rule for Quebec. He wants it for Canada; only the Canada
-he sees thus self-ruling is a Canada permeated by French Canadianism.
-If Parnell had wanted Home Rule, so that England, Scotland, and Wales
-might be ruled from Dublin, he would have attained to something of
-the completeness of Mr. Bourassa's policy. Mr. Bradley, whose book
-on _Canada in the Twentieth Century_ is as complete as any one book
-on Canada could {32} be, and as up-to-date as any--allowing for the
-fact that Canada changes yearly--declared in in it, some years ago,
-that the French Canadians realised that for them to populate the
-North-West was a dream to be given up. It may be a dream, but I
-doubt if it is given up: and the dreams of a population more prolific
-than any other on the face of the earth may some day become
-realities. What is against these dreams? The influx of English
-immigrants? The rush for the land of American farmers? But these
-are only temporary obstacles. The Americans may go back again. They
-often do. The English immigrants are largely unmarried young men,
-and there are no women in the West. They are making ready the land,
-but the inheritors of it have yet to appear. It is not strange if
-Mr. Bourassa sees those inheritors among his own people--only it is
-not yet their time, not for many years yet--not for so many years yet
-that it seems almost unpractical and absurd to look forward to it.
-Even such a faith as that which Mr. Bourassa has confessed to in
-regard to the Eastern provinces--Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, New
-Brunswick--that 'In fifteen years they will have become French in
-language and Roman Catholic in faith,' seems highly unpractical.
-{33} Ontario is not likely to become Roman Catholic any faster than
-Ulster. But on the other hand it will only increase in its
-anti-Frenchness and its anti-Roman Catholicism in so far as it is
-upheld and influenced by Imperialism. Imperialism to Mr. Bourassa is
-that bogey which goes about linking up all those small
-non-conforming, hustling, militant and materialistic communities
-which unaided would come into the Catholic French-Canadian fold. It
-is that odious system which prevents other nations within the
-Empire--such as French Canada--from developing along their own
-natural lines. It is something which easily causes Mr. Bourassa to
-forget that England and Englishmen--representing a distant
-sovereignty which keeps the world's peace--have been a boon and a
-blessing to French Canadians rather than otherwise; and causes him to
-remember that they may in a moment become an imminent
-sovereignty--imposing conscription, war, chapels (things that the
-Ontarian takes to like a duck to water) upon the whole Canadian
-community. Such impositions would not only strengthen the non-French
-Canadians, and ruin the natural progress-to-power of the French
-Canadians; but they would topple down like a house of {34} cards
-those splendid dreams which might in a French-Canadianised Canada
-become realities. What dreams? Rome shifted to Montreal for one,
-and the Vatican gardens of the future sweeping down to the St.
-Lawrence. The whole vast wealth of the Dominion diverted to the
-carrying out of those traditions which are neither French nor English
-but Canadian ... started four hundred years before by the captains
-and the priests, voyageurs and martyrs, who in an age of unbelief
-went forth in response to miraculous signs for the furtherance of the
-glory of God.
-
-[Illustration: CHATEAU FRONTENAC AND DUFFERIN TERRACE. NIGHT.
-QUEBEC.]
-
-I said that Quebec was full of memories. It is well to remember that
-most of these are French-Canadian memories. The Englishman, at home
-or touring, thinks most naturally of Wolfe in connection with Quebec,
-and thinks with pride how that fight on the Plains of Abraham marked,
-in Major Wood's words, 'three of the mightiest epochs of modern
-times--the death of Greater France, the coming of age of Greater
-Britain, and the birth of the United States.' The splendid daring
-climb of the English army, the romantic fevered valour of its
-general, the suddenness and completeness of the reversal of
-positions, unite to make us think that never was a more glorious {35}
-event, or one better calculated to appeal to men of the New World.
-But do not let us forget that for French Canadians--great event as it
-was, severing their allegiance to France for ever on the one hand,
-leaving them free men as never before on the other--it was only one
-event in a new world that was already for them (but not for us) three
-hundred years old. 'Here Wolfe fell.' But here also, long before
-Wolfe fell, Champlain stood, and French captains led valiant men on
-expeditions against strange insidious foes, and the Cross was carried
-onwards by the priests, and amid mystic voices and divinations, and
-slaughterings and endurances, the faith prevailed and the character
-of the people was formed. They have no hankering for France--these
-people to whom Wolfe's battle seems but one out of many. France,
-they think, has forsaken the Church. But they are French
-still--these people--and amazingly conservative in their customs and
-their creed. We may tell them that England--which sent out
-Wolfe--has given them material prosperity, equality under the law,
-the means of justice. They will reply, or rather they will silently
-think, and only an occasional Nationalist will dare to say:--
-
-'We owe nothing to Great Britain. England {36} did not take Canada
-for love, or to plant the Cross of religion as the French did, but in
-order to plant their trading posts and make money.'
-
-Gratitude is not a virtue nations take pride in possessing; they are
-indeed seldom nations until they have forgotten to be grateful. I
-suppose French Canadians are on their way to forgetting to be
-grateful to England for what she did in times past, but it is not
-because they have any real quarrel with England, or desire to injure
-her. Merely because they feel that from England exudes that
-Imperialism which appeals in no way from the past, and menaces, they
-think, their future.
-
-
-
-
-{37}
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE ATTRACTION OF THE SAGUENAY
-
-Almost directly one lands in Canada, one feels the desire to move
-west. It is not that the east fails to attract and interest, or that
-a man might not spend many years in Quebec province alone, and still
-have seen little of its vast, wild, northern parts. Again there is
-the Evangeline country, little known for all that it is 'storied.'
-But the tide is west just at present. Everybody asks everybody
-else--Have you been West, or Are you going West? And every one who
-has been West or is going feels himself to be in the movement. Some
-day no doubt the tide will set back again, or flow both ways equally.
-To-day it flows westward.
-
-I should have been sorry, however, if I had not gone eastward at
-least as far as the Saguenay, and I am duly grateful to the American
-who, so to speak, irritated me into going there. He was a thin, pale
-youth, somewhat bald from {38} clutching at his hair, who sat next to
-me at dinner my third day at Quebec. He announced to the table at
-large that he was travelling for his pleasure, but to judge from his
-strained face, travelling for his pleasure was one of the hardest
-jobs he had tried. He had been doing Quebec, and he gave all
-Canadians present to understand that Quebec had made him very very
-tired. Look at the trips around too. Look at the Montmorency Falls.
-Had anybody present seen Niagara? Well, if anybody had seen Niagara,
-the Montmorency Falls could only make him tired. One or two
-Canadians present bent lower to their food. But on the whole
-Canadians do not readily enter into argument, and half Niagara Falls
-is Canadian too, so that finding no opponents the youth proceeded
-triumphantly to give the relative proportions in figures of the two
-falls. As he directed them chiefly at me, I felt bound to say that I
-had seen falls about a tenth the size of either which had struck me
-as worth going to see. He then said that he guessed I was from
-England. I said this was so. Thereupon he told me that everybody in
-England was asleep. I suggested that sleep was better than insomnia,
-and shocked by my soporific levity, he advised me to go and have a
-look at {39} New York if I wanted to know how things could hum. I
-said I supposed that New York was a fairly busy place. A silly
-remark--only he happened to be a New Yorker, and all that tiredness
-left him. I learnt so much about the busyness of New York that I
-have hardly forgotten it all yet.
-
-Afterwards, but some time afterwards, when the American had left the
-table, a Scottish Canadian asked me if I had done the Saguenay trip,
-and when I said that I had not done it, he strongly advised me not to
-miss it.
-
-'It's the finest trip in Canada. Yes, sir.'
-
-I decided to go. It takes just two days from the start at Quebec to
-Chicoutimi and back, and you go in a spacious sort of houseboat which
-paddles along at just the right pace, first on one side of the river
-then on the other, stopping to load and unload at the little villages
-along the St. Lawrence. There to the left--a great sheet of silver
-hung from the cliff--were the Montmorency Falls, which had made that
-young American tired. A hundred and twenty years ago Queen
-Victoria's father occupied the Kent house, hard by the Falls, now a
-hotel. Wolfe lay ill for two weeks in a farm close by; probably on
-no other sick-bed in the world were plans so big with fate {40}
-conceived. Then the Ile d'Orleans floats by--that fertile island
-which Cartier named after the Grape God four hundred years ago,
-because of the vines that grew there. All this waterway is history,
-French-Canadian history mostly. With a fine mist hung over the
-river, concealing the few modern spires and roofs, you can see the
-country to-day just as Cartier saw it when he came sailing up.
-Neither four hundred nor four thousand years will serve to modernise
-the banks of the St. Lawrence. Take that thirty-mile stretch where
-the Laurentides climb sheer from the water. That is what Cartier
-saw--nothing different. No houses, no people; only the grey rock
-growing out of the green trees, and the grey sky overhead. Lower
-down, with the sun shining as it did for us, Cartier would see, if he
-came sailing up to-day, all those picturesque French-Canadian
-villages which have sprung up along the shore--Baie St. Paul, St.
-Irenee, Murray Bay, Tadousac, with the white farms of the Habitants,
-and the summer homes of the Quebeckers and Montrealers, and the
-shining spires of the churches, and the wooden piers jutting far out
-into the river. Those piers are particularly cheerful places. There
-are always gangs of porters waiting to run out freight from the hold,
-and {41} a gathering of ladies in gay frocks who want to greet
-friends on board, and heaps of little habitants playing about or
-smoking their pipes. The habitant appears to start his pipe at the
-age of eight or nine years, judging from those who frequent the piers.
-
-I think I was the only Englishman on board that boat. Most of the
-passengers were Americans, but cheerful ones--not like that young man
-at the hotel--and we were all very keen on seeing everything, so that
-it became dusk much too soon for most of us. We got to Tadousac just
-about dusk, which I was particularly sorry for, since of all the
-places we passed, it held the most memories. In 1600 the whole fur
-trade of Canada centred round this benighted little spot, and the men
-of St. Malo were the rivals of the Basques for the black foxes
-trapped by the Indians of that date. I should like to have seen this
-queer little port by daylight, but I suppose for most purposes
-Parkman's description holds good, and cannot easily be beaten:--
-
-'A desolation of barren mountain closes round it, betwixt whose ribs
-of rugged granite, bristling with savins, birches, and firs, the
-Saguenay rolls its gloomy waters from the northern wilderness.
-Centuries of civilisation {42} have not tamed the wildness of the
-place; and still, in grim repose, the mountains hold their guard
-around the waveless lake that glistens in their shadow, and doubles,
-in its sullen mirror, crag, precipice and forest.'
-
-I know that Parkman goes on to say that when Champlain landed here in
-April 1608 he found the lodges of an Indian camp, which he marked in
-his plan of Tadousac. When we landed, there were also a few shacks
-in much the same spot, and in one of the best lighted of them hung a
-placard to this effect:--
-
- THE ONLY REAL INDIAN
- BUY WORK FROM HIM.
-
-
-The lodges Champlain saw belonged to an Algonquin horde, 'Denizens of
-surrounding wilds, and gatherers of their only harvest--skins of the
-moose, cariboo, and bear; fur of the beaver, marten, otter, fox, wild
-cat, and lynx.'
-
-Other days, other harvests. From the shack of the Only Real Indian I
-saw one stout tourist issue forth (a Chicago pork-packer he must have
-been, if persons ever correspond to their professions), laden with
-three toy bows and arrows, as many miniature canoes, and what
-appeared to be a couple of patchwork bedspreads. That the descendant
-of braves should live by making {43} patchwork bedspreads seemed too
-much, even though I had given up as illusions the Red Indians of my
-boyhood. Far rather would I at that moment have seen the stout
-tourist come forth, either scalpless himself, or dangling at his
-ample belt the raven locks of the Only Real Indian.
-
-In the night we went on to Chicoutimi, but saw nothing of that, being
-asleep. We had sung songs, American songs--'John Brown's Body,'
-'Marching through Georgia,' etc., till a late hour of the night; and
-in any case the bracing river air would have insured sleep. Only in
-the morning as we came down the Saguenay again did I wake to its
-beauty and strangeness. Men have learnt to tunnel through rocks at
-last, but the Saguenay learnt this art for itself thousands of years
-ago. A wide water tunnel through the sheer rock, a roofless tunnel,
-open to the sky, that is the Saguenay--most magnificent at the point
-where Cap Trinite looms up, a wall of darkness fifteen hundred feet
-high.
-
-It is a curious fact that famous landscapes always produce a
-remarkable frivolity in the human tourist visiting them. Perhaps it
-is man's instinct to assert himself against nature. When the boat
-draws opposite Cap Trinite, {44} stewards produce buckets of stones
-and passengers are invited to try and hit the Cap with the stones
-from impossible distances. I do not know that it greatly added to
-the pleasure of the trip, but we all tried to hit the cliff with the
-stones and most of us failed, and had to content ourselves with
-drawing echoes from it. After that we went on, and some of the white
-whales which are characteristic of the Saguenay began to appear, and
-experienced travellers explained that they were not really white
-whales but a sort of white porpoise. Once again, as we passed it,
-Tadousac was invisible, but this time because a white fog had wrapped
-it round. So silently we turned out of the Saguenay into the St.
-Lawrence. I think the silence of the Saguenay was what had most
-impressed me. Not very long before I had steamed down the Hoogly
-where by day the kites wheel and shriek overhead, and the air buzzes
-with insects' sounds, and all night the jackals scream--a noisy
-river, full of treacherous sandbanks, its shores green with the
-bright poisonous green of the East. The Saguenay, unique as it is in
-many ways, seemed by the contrast of its deepness and silence, and by
-the fresh darkness of the rocks and trees that shut it in, to be
-peculiarly a river of the West. I do not know if it {45} would have
-made the somewhat bald young American tired.
-
-It is only fair to say that his attitude about Quebec is not at all
-characteristic of his fellow-countrymen. For most Americans, Quebec
-province (and still more perhaps the woods of Ontario) is becoming
-almost as popular a playground as Switzerland is for Englishmen.
-Camping out has become a great craze among Americans, and if the
-camping out can be done amid unspoilt natural surroundings, close to
-rivers where one can fish and woods where one can hunt, an ideal
-holiday is assured them. I forget who it was who said that much of
-the old American versatility and nobility had disappeared since the
-American boys left off whittling sticks, but in any case the desire
-to whittle sticks is renewed again among them, from Mr. Roosevelt
-downwards. And in Canada this whittling of sticks--this return to
-nature--can easily be accomplished. For the north is still there,
-unexploited. In Quebec province, fishing and hunting clubs of Quebec
-and Montreal have secured the rights over vast tracts of country. So
-vast are those tracts that one or two clubs, I was told, have not
-even set eyes on all the trout streams they preserve. This may be an
-exaggeration, though probably {46} not a great one. There
-remains--especially in Ontario--much water and wood that any one may
-sport in unlicensed, or get access to by permission of the local
-hotel proprietor. Some of the Americans on the boat had been fishing
-in Quebec streams and told me of excellent sport they had had, so
-that I began to wonder why no Englishmen ever came this way. The
-voyage to Canada is a little further than that to Norway, but there
-are more fish in Canada. And there is certainly only one Saguenay in
-the world.
-
-
-
-
-{47}
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRE AND A TRAVELLER'S VOW
-
-Ste. Anne de Beaupre is usually referred to as the Lourdes of Canada.
-When a metaphor of this sort is used it usually means that the spot
-referred to is in some way inferior to the original. In the case of
-Ste. Anne de Beaupre, the inferiority is not, I believe, in the
-matter of the number of miracles wrought there, but in the matter of
-general picturesqueness. Ste. Anne de Beaupre is not nearly so
-picturesque as Lourdes. If you wish to palliate this fact, you say,
-as one writer has said, that 'The beauty of modern architecture
-mingles at Beaupre with the remains of a hoary past.' If you do not
-wish to palliate it, you say, as I do, that Ste. Anne de Beaupre is
-not in the least picturesque. I did not particularly care for the
-modern architecture, and the hoary past is not particularly in
-evidence. Do not suppose me to say that Beaupre has not a hoary
-past. Red Indians, long before the days of railroads, {48} travelled
-thither to pray at the feet of Ste. Anne. Breton seamen, who belong
-only to tradition, promised a shrine to Ste. Anne, if she would save
-them from shipwreck. They erected the first chapel. The second and
-larger chapel was built as far back as 1657, and miracles were quite
-frequent from then onwards. Nevertheless, the basilica is quite new,
-and so is the whole appearance of the place.
-
-I visited it in company with a French-Canadian commercial traveller.
-He was a great big good-looking youth with curly hair and blue eyes,
-and he travelled in corsets or something of that sort for a Montreal
-firm. I could not help thinking that many ladies would buy corsets
-from him or anything else whether they wanted them or not, because of
-his charming boyish manner and his good looks. He asked me to go to
-Ste. Anne de Beaupre with him. He said that he supposed that I was
-not a Catholic, but that did not matter. He wished to go to the good
-Ste. Anne, and it would be a good thing to go. He had been several
-times before, but he had not been for several years. He could easily
-take the afternoon off, and first of all we would go by the electric
-train to the good Ste. Anne, and then on the way back we would step
-off {49} at the Falls station, and see the Montmorency Falls, and
-also the Zoo that is there. It would be great fun to see the Zoo.
-He had not seen the Zoo for several years, and the animals would be
-very interesting.
-
-So we took an afternoon electric train. There are electric trains
-for pilgrims, of whom a hundred thousand at least are said to visit
-the shrine yearly, and there are also electric trains for tourists.
-We took a tourist train, and having secured one of the little
-handbooks supplied by the electric company, had the gratification of
-knowing that even if the car was pretty full it was, so the company
-claimed, run at a greater rate of speed than any other electric
-service.
-
-At times in Canada I found myself getting very slack in attempting
-descriptions of things simply because some company that had rights of
-transport over the particular district had, so to speak, thrust into
-my hand some pamphlet in which all the description was done for me.
-Thus it was in the case of the district line between Quebec and Ste.
-Anne de Beaupre. 'It is difficult,' I read in the electric company's
-handbook which we had secured, 'to describe in words the dainty
-beauty of the scenery along this route.'
-
-{50}
-
-'That is a nuisance,' I said to my companion, 'because words are the
-only things I could describe it in.'
-
-'It is much better to smoke,' said he.
-
-So we smoked; and now I tell you straight out of that illogical
-pamphlet, that 'The route from Quebec to Ste. Anne may be compared to
-a splendid panorama. There are shady woodlands and green pastures,
-undulating hills and sparkling rivers, whose banks are lined with
-pretty villages, the tinned spires of the parish churches rising
-above the rest of the houses, sparkling in the sun.' There, a little
-ungrammatically, you have the scene 'to which,' adds my pamphlet,
-'the Falls of Montmorency river add a touch of grandeur.' Ste. Anne
-de Beaupre itself is twenty-one miles from Quebec. We went straight
-from the station into the church, where the first thing to catch the
-eye are the votive offerings and particularly the crutches,
-walking-sticks, and other appliances left there by pilgrims who,
-having been cured of their infirmities by miracle, had no further use
-for these material aids. It is difficult to arrange such things in
-any way that can be called artistic, and since the general effect is
-nothing but ugly it might be wise for the church officials also to
-dispense with such material {51} aids to faith. Apart from these the
-most striking object is the miraculous statue. It stands on a
-pedestal ten feet high and twelve feet from the communion rails. The
-pedestal was the gift of a New York lady, the statue itself was
-presented by a Belgian family. At the foot of it many people were
-kneeling. A mass was being said and the church was very full, and
-every time a petitioner got up from his knees from the feet of the
-statue another moved down the aisle and took his or her place. I
-suppose we were in the church fully half an hour before my companion
-found an opportunity to go and kneel at the feet of the good Ste.
-Anne, and having watched him there, I got up from my place and went
-out into the village. It was rather a depressing village, full of
-small hotels and restaurants and shops stocked with miraculous
-souvenirs. I suppose more rubbish is sold in this line than in any
-other. After inspecting a variety of it, I bought a bottle of cider
-and a local cigar and sat on a fence smoking until my friend
-reappeared. He came out most subdued and grave--not in the least the
-boisterous person who had gone in--and said we would now go back. As
-we had to wait half an hour for a returning train, I suggested that
-we should go and have some more cider, {52} but he said no, he would
-rather drink from the holy spring. 'Although this water,' said my
-pamphlet, 'has always been known to be there, it is only within the
-last thirty or thirty-five years that the pilgrims began to make a
-pious use of it. What particular occasion gave rise to this
-confidence, or when this practice first spread among the people,
-cannot be positively asserted. However it may be, it is undeniable
-that faith in the water from the fountain has become general, and the
-use of it, from motives of devotion, often produces effects of a
-marvellous nature.' Unfortunately, the fountain was not working,
-owing, I expect, to the water having got low in the dry weather, and
-my friend had to go without his drink. He said, however, that it did
-not matter, and remained in a grave, aloof state all the way back in
-the train as far as the Falls station, and indeed till we got to the
-Zoo in the Kent house grounds. There, the exertion of trying to get
-the beavers to cease working and come out and show themselves to
-me--an exertion finally crowned with success, for the fat, furry,
-silent creatures came out and sat on a log for us--livened him up a
-bit. But he fell into a muse again in front of the cage containing
-the timber wolf, and remained there so long that I was almost {53}
-overcome by the smell of this ferocious animal. I got him away at
-last, and I do not think he spoke after that until we got to Quebec
-and were walking from the station to our inn.
-
-'I have made a vow,' he then said suddenly.
-
-'What sort of vow?' I inquired.
-
-'I made it this afternoon,' he said, 'to the good Ste. Anne--never
-any more to drink whisky.'
-
-'It's not a bad vow to have made,' I said.
-
-'No,' he said seriously, 'whisky is very terrible stuff. I shall
-never drink it again. When I drink it it goes very quickly to my
-head. Soon I am tight. That will not do.'
-
-'Much better not to drink it certainly,' I agreed.
-
-'Yes,' he continued vehemently. 'I am married. You did not guess
-that perhaps? Also it is only recently that I have gone "on the
-road." If the company I work for hears that I go about and get
-tight, I shall at once be fired. So I shall not drink any more
-whisky. Never. That is why I made the vow to the good Ste. Anne.'
-
-We walked in silence the rest of the way to the inn, and I reflected
-on the nature of vows. {54} It seemed very possible that a vow like
-this might easily be a help to my companion. He was obviously not
-what is called a strong character. It is strange how often a charm
-of manner goes with a weakness of the will. And commercial
-travelling--particularly perhaps in Canada--lays a man open to the
-temptations of drink. If he went on drinking, it would probably mean
-the ruin of the young girl he had married. Only one has always the
-feeling that a vow is only a partial aid to keeping upright, just as
-a stick is to walking. A man may lean too heavily on either.
-Moreover, the making of a vow, while it may strengthen a man
-temporarily in one direction tends to leave him unbalanced in other
-directions. It makes him feel so strong perhaps in one part of him
-that he forgets other parts where he is weak. I rather think that
-the last part of these somewhat superficial reflections upon vows
-occurred to me later in the evening, and not as we were walking home.
-We had had supper by that time, and my companion had drunk a good
-deal of water during the meal--a beverage, by the way, which is not
-particularly safe either here or in any other Canadian town. At
-times he had been depressed by it, at times elevated. After we had
-smoked {55} together and he had grown more and more restless, he
-jumped up and said:
-
-'Let us go out for a walk.'
-
-'Where to?' I asked.
-
-'Oh, up on to the terrace,' he said. 'I tell you,' he went on
-excitedly, 'where I will take you. There is a special place up there
-that I know very well. It is where one meets the girls. We will go
-there to-night and meet the girls.'
-
-Really, I could have given a very good exposition of the temptation
-offered by vows at that moment when he suggested this Sentimental
-Journey.
-
-
-
-
-{56}
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-A HABITANT VILLAGE AND ITS NOTAIRE
-
-'Il trotte bien.'
-
-The second time I made use of this simple compliment I was again
-being driven by a French Canadian, and again it was on an
-extraordinarily bad road. But the vehicle was a sulky, and the road
-was a country road--about halfway between Quebec and Montreal. I had
-been already two days in the Habitant country which the ordinary
-Englishman misses. Tourists in particular will go through French
-Canada too fast. Their first stop after Quebec is Montreal, and the
-guide-books help them to believe that they have lost nothing. It may
-be that they do lose nothing in the way of spectacular views or big
-hotels, but on the other hand they have undoubtedly lost the peaceful
-charm of many a Laurentian village, and they have seen nothing at all
-of the life of the French-Canadian farmer. That is a pity for the
-English tourist, because they too, {57} the Habitants, belong to the
-Empire, and we ought to know them for what they are apart from their
-politics--courteous, solid, essentially prudent folk, often well to
-do, but with no disposition to make a show of themselves.
-
-I had spent my two days at the villa of a most hospitable French
-lady, in one of the older villages on the St. Lawrence. It was not
-exactly a beautiful village--rather ramshackle in fact--but
-remarkably peaceful, and the great smooth river running by must give
-it a perennial charm, such as comes from having the sea near. I had
-missed my train going from that village, and had passed the time by
-taking lunch at a little inn near the station. It was Friday, and
-the landlord gave me pike and eggs for lunch. I had seen my pike and
-several others lying in a sandy ditch near, passing a sort of
-amphibious life in it, until Friday and a guest should make it
-necessary for one of them to go into the frying pan. The landlord
-came and chatted with me while I had lunch, and was grieved to find
-that I was not a Catholic. I was English, but not Catholic? I said
-that was so, and he shook his head sorrowfully. But there were
-Catholics in England, he asked a little later. I said, Oh yes,
-certainly. Many? I said that there {58} must be a good many, but I
-could not tell him the exact numbers. Would a tenth of the English
-at least be Catholics, he next demanded? I said I thought at least
-that number, but I left him, I fear, a disappointed man. He had
-hoped more from England than that, and even my strenuous praise of
-the fried pike did not draw a smile from him.
-
-My compliment about the horse drawing the sulky--to go back to that
-drive, obtained a better response. The driver replied in the French
-tongue: 'Monsieur, he trots very well, particularly in considering
-that he has the age of twenty-eight years.'
-
-I said that this was wonderful, and the driver replied that it was,
-but that in French Canada such wonders did happen. He was intensely
-patriotic, and this made the drive more interesting. He was all for
-French-Canadian things, excepting, I think, the roads, which were
-indeed nothing but ruts, some of the ruts being less deep than the
-others, and being selected accordingly for the greater convenience of
-our ancient steed. I liked his patriotism. It was at once so
-genuine and so complete. For example, when I said that I had not
-seen any Jersey cows on the farms we had passed, the driver said:
-'No. The {59} cow of Jersey is a good cow and gives much milk. But
-the Canadian cow is a better cow and gives still more milk.' I was
-unable to make out what the prevailing milch-cow was in that part.
-Canada has, I believe, begun to swear by the Holstein, but this can
-hardly as yet be claimed as the Canadian cow. Still it passed the
-time very pleasantly to have my driver so enthusiastic, and of what
-should a man speak well, if not of his own country? He articulated
-his French very slowly and distinctly, so that I was able to
-understand him more easily than I should have understood a European
-Frenchman. I was surprised at this, because one is usually told that
-French Canadians talk so queerly that they are very hard to follow.
-Perhaps my obvious inferiority in the language caused those Habitants
-I met to adapt themselves to my necessity. I can only say that from
-a few days' experience of conversation with all sorts and conditions,
-I carried away the impression that French-Canadian was a very clear
-and easy language. As for the country, I should call it serene and
-spacious in aspect rather than fine. The farmhouses are pleasant
-enough and comfortable within, but their immediate surroundings are
-apt to be untidy. Very seldom of course {60} does one see a flower
-garden, and vegetables do not make amends for the lack of flowers.
-On the other hand, the tobacco patch that is so frequently to be seen
-in the neighbourhood of the small farms is pleasant to look at,
-especially for one who thinks much of smoke. There is not much
-satisfaction to the eye in the small wired fields, nor would either
-the farming or the soil startle an English farmer. I think that the
-maple woods are the one thing that he would regard with real envy.
-
-Nevertheless, no one would have denied that it was a really pretty
-village, to which my driver brought me at last in the sulky. It was
-built all round an old church in a sort of dell, behind which the
-land rose steeply to a wood of maples. I had been given an
-introduction to the cure, and we drove to his house by the church,
-only to be told by the sexton (I think it was the sexton) that
-Monsieur le Cure had, much to his regret, been called to Quebec, but
-had begged that I would go over to the notaire, who would be pleased
-to show me everything that was to be seen. We went to the notaire.
-I think he was the postmaster too--at any rate he lived in the post
-office, and a very kindly old gentleman he was. I do not know one I
-have liked more {61} on so short an acquaintance, though he did start
-by giving me Canadian wine to drink. It was a sort of port or
-sherry--or both mixed--and was made, I think he said, in Montreal.
-It had the genuine oily taste, but also a smack of vinegar. That in
-itself would not have mattered so much, if the notaire had not said
-it was best drunk with a little water, and provided me with water
-from a saline spring which had its source in his backyard. These
-saline springs seem not uncommon in Canada, and must be considered as
-a distinct asset. But not mixed with port. Some local tobacco which
-was very good, as indeed much of the tobacco grown in Quebec province
-seems to be, took the taste away, and after that the notaire proposed
-that he should take me out to see one of the huts where they boil
-down the maple water in the early spring. He told me that my own
-horse and driver should rest, and that we should go on the carriage
-of Monsieur Blanc which was, it appeared, already in waiting,
-together with Monsieur Blanc himself. Monsieur Blanc was the local
-miller, and solely for the purpose of showing the village to a
-stranger from England he had put himself to all this trouble. After
-we had all bowed to one another and exchanged {62} compliments, we
-started for the maple wood, and all the way the notaire explained to
-me the economy of the village. It appeared that the farms round
-averaged eighty acres of arable land, and a man and his son would
-work one of that size. Each farmer would also have rights of grazing
-on pasture land which was held in common--not to mention his piece of
-maple wood. All the farmers belonged to a co-operative farmers'
-society, which saved much when purchasing seeds, implements, and so
-forth. The notaire himself was secretary of this society. I believe
-he was also secretary of pretty well everything that mattered, and
-might be regarded as the business uncle of the parish in which the
-cure was spiritual father. As we drove along, avoiding roads as much
-as possible, because the fields were so much more level, he greeted
-everybody and everybody greeted him, stopping their field work for
-the purpose. Jules left hay-making to show us the shortest cut to
-the nearest hut; Antoine fetched the key. It was a tiny wooden
-shack, the one we inspected--standing in the middle of the
-trees--with just room in it for the heating apparatus and the boilers
-to boil the maple water in. The cups which are attached to the trees
-in the early spring, when {63} the sap begins to run--the tapping is
-done high up--hung along the wooden walls. The notaire explained the
-whole process to me. In the spring, when all is sleet and slush and
-nothing can be done on the farm, the farmer and perhaps his wife come
-up into the wood, and tap the trees and boil the water up until the
-syrup is formed. It takes them days, very cold days, and they camp
-out in the hut, though it hardly seemed possible that there should be
-room for them. But it is all very healthy and pleasant, and they
-drink so much of the syrup, while they are working, that they usually
-go back to their farms very 'fat and salubrious.' So the notaire
-said, and he also assured me that seven years before another English
-visitor who spoke French very badly (he put it much more politely
-than that though) had come to the village in the spring, and slept in
-one of the huts for days, and helped make the sugar and enjoyed
-himself thoroughly. I told the notaire I could quite believe it and
-wished I had come in the spring too. I am not sure that I shall not
-go back in the spring some day, for the simplicity of the place was
-fascinating, even though the railway had come closer, and land had
-doubled in value, and the farmers were more scientific than they used
-to {64} be and made more money, though even so--as the notaire
-earnestly declared--they would would never spend it on show. I
-remarked that the notaire, even while he was recounting these modern
-innovations, such as wealth, was not carried away by the glory of
-them as a Westerner would be. He took a simple pride in the fact
-that the village marched forward, but he was prouder still that it
-remained modest. And when we got back to the post office, he told me
-that what he liked best was the simplicity of it all. People used to
-ask him sometimes why he who spoke English and Latin and Greek, for
-he had been five years at college, qualifying to become a notaire,
-should be content to live in such a small out-of-the-way place,
-instead of setting up in Quebec or Montreal. They could not
-understand that to be one's own master, and not to be rushed hither
-and thither at the beck of clients, contented him, especially in a
-place where the farmers looked upon him as their friend, and he could
-play the organ in the village church. He made me understand it very
-well, even though his English was rusty (for I think the syrup-making
-Englishman had been the last he had talked with), and he had a
-scholarly dislike to using any but the {65} right word, and he would
-sometimes bring up a dozen wrong ones and reject them, before our
-united efforts found the only one that conveyed his precise meaning.
-
-I think I understood, and many times on the way back, seated behind
-the twenty-eight year-old horse, I said to myself, that altogether
-the notaire was a very fine old gentleman, and if there were many
-such to be found in the French Canadian villages, I hoped they would
-not change too soon. To make the money circulate--after the fashion
-of the Toronto drummer--is a virtue no doubt; but courtesy and
-simplicity and prudence are also virtues that not the greatest
-country that is yet to come will find itself able to dispense with.
-
-
-
-
-{66}
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-GLIMPSES OF MONTREAL
-
-Just as a man who knows mountains can in a little time describe the
-character of a mountain that is new to him, so a man who knows the
-country in general will soon find himself becoming acquainted with
-new country. It is not so with cities. Only a long residence in it
-will reveal the character of a city. I suppose that is because man
-is more subtle than nature. A clay land is always a clay land; it
-produces the same crops, the same weeds, the same men. But who will
-undertake to say what a city on a clay land produces? Only the man
-who has long been familiar with the particular city, and he probably
-will not even be aware that it stands on clay.
-
-This is preparatory to saying that being a stranger to Montreal, I
-did not find out much about it in the few days I was there, and I
-will not pretend that I did. It is, I suppose, architecturally, far
-the most beautiful city in {67} the Dominion, and indeed in the
-Western Hemisphere, and for that very reason appears less strange to
-European eyes than most other Canadian towns. I would not suggest
-that all European towns are architecturally beautiful, or that
-Montreal is anything but Canadian inwardly. Superficially it looks
-like some fine French town. It also smells French.
-
- 'But them thereon didst only breathe
- And sentst it back to me,
- Since when it blows and smells, I swear,
- Not of itself but thee.'
-
-Thus England might address France on the subject of Montreal, though
-indeed France did more than breathe on Montreal. I would not be
-taken to suggest that the smell is a malodorous one--merely French.
-You get just that smell in summer in any French town from Rouen to
-Marseilles, and it is probably due to nothing but the sun being at
-the right temperature to bring out the mingled scent of omelettes and
-road grit, cigarettes, _aperitifs_, and washing in sufficient
-strength to attract the sensitive British nose. As for Montreal's
-French appearance--the city is by all accounts strictly divided into
-a French East-end and an English West-end, St. Laurent being the
-dividing line. But when I passed west of {68} St. Laurent, and
-hundreds of French men and French women and French children continued
-to file past me, and I asked my way many times in English and was not
-understood, I began to doubt the reality of that dividing line. It
-seems a pity that there should be one, but there is of course, and it
-runs through Canada as well as Montreal. Race and religion and
-language combine to keep that line marked out, and it only becomes
-faint in business quarters.
-
-The time has gone by for great commercial undertakings to be
-conducted by means of gesticulations or by the aid of an interpreter.
-Master and man must speak the same language, at any rate outwardly.
-Therefore all clerks learn English, which is also American; and I
-take it that statistics, if they were kept, would show many more
-French Canadians speaking English every year--whatever they may be
-thinking.
-
-So commerce, long the butt of moralists, takes its part among the
-moral influences of the world. Already writers like Mr. Angell have
-begun to assure us that it alone--by reason of its enormous and
-far-reaching interests--can keep international war at a distance:
-here is an example of how it {69} increases peace within a nation.
-In the end, perhaps, Mammon himself may appear, purged of his
-grossness upon the canonical list--St. Mammon!
-
-Montreal has, so I am told, sixty-four millionaires--real, not dollar
-millionaires; self-made, not descended millionaires; strenuous, not
-idle millionaires. Most of them live in Sherbrooke Street, or near
-it, on the way up to the Mountain. It is a fine wide road with an
-extraordinary variety of houses in it. You cannot point to any one
-house and say this is the sort of house a millionaire builds, for the
-next one is quite different, and so is the next and the next. It is
-natural that Canadians should be more original in their
-house-building than our millionaires. They are more original men
-altogether. They have made their money in a more original way, and
-when they have made it, they have to think out original methods of
-spending it--unlike ours, who find the etiquette of it all ready made
-for them, and a practised set of people who want nothing more than to
-be able to help millionaires scatter their money in the only correct
-and fashionable way. You have to think everything out for yourself
-in Canada, even to the spending of your money. That is, if you have
-the money in large quantities. {70} For the ordinary person the
-inherent slipperiness of the dollar suffices, and he will find that
-it will circulate itself without his worrying. The diversity of
-house-building, such as may be found in Sherbrooke Street, should
-give encouragement to Canadian architects, but does, as a matter of
-fact, let in the American architects as well. I could not feel that
-they had altogether succeeded in this street--certainly not half so
-well as they have succeeded in some of the business buildings,
-especially the interior of the Bank of Montreal--but that is not
-surprising. Architects must have their motives, and the reasons that
-went to the building of some of the stately private houses of Europe
-have ceased to exist now. The most that a man can demand from his
-house--certainly in Canada--is that it shall be luxurious. Nobody is
-going to keep retainers there. The three hundred servants even that
-went to make up the household of an Elizabethan nobleman could not be
-had in Canada either for love or money. Those three hundred serve in
-the bank or the shops--not in the houses--and it is there that the
-big man works also. Slowly we come to the right proportions of
-things; nor am I suggesting that the private houses of the Canadian
-millionaires are in the {71} least lacking in size. They are as
-large as they need be, if not larger; and where they did not
-altogether succeed was, I thought, in the attempt made with some of
-them to achieve importance by rococo effects. The road itself,
-curiously enough, was rather bad and rutty; I began to think, seeing
-it, that there is some strange influence at work in French Canada
-which prevents a road from ever being first-rate. It may be that
-since roads there are only needed in summer, for a half year instead
-of a whole one, the care and affection we lavish upon them is not
-necessary. The good snow comes and turns Sherbrooke Street into a
-sleigh-bearing thoroughfare only comparable with those of St.
-Petersburg. The ruts are drifted up and vanish--why bother about
-them? It is a good enough explanation. If another is needed, it may
-be that there is money to be made--by those in charge of the keeping
-up of the roads--by the simple method of not keeping them up.
-
-Montreal has slums as well as Sherbrooke Street, which seems to show
-that sixty-four millionaires are no real guarantee of a city's
-perfectness. I heard about those slums from the editor of one of
-Montreal's leading newspapers. The subject arose out of a question
-{72} I put him as to whether he could tell me the difference between
-Conservatives and Liberals in Canada. Some people maintain that the
-difference even in England is so slight as to be unreal. To a
-Canadian who is not much of a politician (but is, of course, either a
-Liberal or a Conservative), the question amounts to being a catch
-question. He has to think for a long time before he answers. This
-editor, who was a Liberal, took it quite coolly.
-
-'Oh,' he said, 'Liberals here are very much like Liberals in the old
-country; we stand for Social Reform and the interests of the People.'
-
-Then he told me about the slums in Montreal. But for these I should
-have felt doubtful about the parallel, even though it was drawn by so
-eminent an authority as the editor of a newspaper. For, naturally,
-at present in most parts of Canada there is no People (with our own
-English capital P) to stand for, just as there are no peers and no
-Constitution. Where there are slums, there may be a People to be
-represented. The more is the pity that there should be slums. Why
-does Montreal possess them? Largely, I suppose, for the reason that
-any very great city possesses them. There are landlords who can make
-money out of them, there are people so poor that they will live in
-them; {73} and their poverty is accounted for by the fact that cities
-draw the destitute as the moon the tides. It seems against reason
-that Canada, capable of absorbing hundreds of thousands of
-immigrants, calling for them to be absorbed, so long as they are able
-men, should have any destitute to be drawn to the cities; but it has
-to be remembered that no immigration laws can really prevent a
-percentage of incapables arriving. They may not be incapables as
-such, but they are incapables on the land, which is indeed in Canada
-endlessly absorbent, but absorbent only of those who have in them in
-some way the land-spirit. To expect the land to take on hordes of
-the city-bred without ever failing is to dream. It would be easier
-for the sea to swallow men clothed in cork jackets. Some are bound
-to be rejected, and they turn to the cities. But the cities of a New
-World cannot absorb indefinite numbers of men; London or Glasgow
-cannot. The work is not there for them--not for all of them.
-
-The Canadian winter also has to be remembered as a factor driving men
-to cities like Montreal. Even good men on the land cannot always
-during the winter obtain work on the farms; or think that the little
-they can make there is not worth while. So they, too, make {74} for
-the cities, not always to their own improving. This problem of the
-Canadian winter is one that has still to be reckoned with, and no
-doubt the Canadians will solve it in due course--perhaps by some
-extension of the Russian methods whereby the peasant of the summer
-becomes the handicraftsman of the winter. It is not the winter
-itself that is at fault in Canada, as used to be thought; it is the
-method of dealing with it. The Canadian may not mind the hard, cold
-months--may even boast of them, but he cannot ignore them. And the
-solution of the winter problem seems to be that though Canada is
-marked out as an agricultural country, it must also equally become a
-manufacturing one, so that men--who cannot hibernate like
-dormice--may be able to work the year through. The whitest nation is
-that nation whose leisure is got by choice not by compulsion.
-
-There must be local reasons, too, for Montreal slums, but these a
-visitor is not happy in describing. Municipal mismanagement is
-unfortunately not exclusive to Europe; and my editor gave me examples
-of it in Montreal which were impressive without being novel.
-
-He also pointed out that there were forty thousand Jews in Montreal,
-as though that {75} might have something to do with her slums.
-Others point out that the Catholic Church, which believes that the
-poor must be always with us, is supreme in Montreal; poverty and the
-faith, they say, go always together. I think it is truest to argue
-that, while all these things are in their degree contributory, it is
-not fair to fix on any one of them as the chief cause of the ill.
-One thing is certain. Montreal's slums are not typical of Canada,
-but of a great city. No great city has as yet found itself
-completely, and the greater it is, the less soluble are its problems
-of poverty. It may be that they can be resolved only by the great
-cities ceasing to exist in the form we know them.
-
-Meanwhile it looks as though the welfare of employees is not being
-neglected by the leading directors of industry. Take, for example,
-the Angus Shops, which are larger than any other engineering shops in
-the world. Here are built these huge houses of cranks and pistons,
-the railway engines of the Canadian Pacific, that hustle one from end
-to end of the Dominion; here also are turned out all else that
-appertains to the biggest railway company in existence. In these
-shops a system has been introduced which might be called a
-Bourneville system, only Canadianised. The management {76} refers to
-it as Welfare Work, and it consists mainly in certain methods whereby
-the men can obtain good food--while they are working--at low prices,
-apprentices are helped to an education, the cost of 'holiday homes'
-is defrayed, and so on. Very sensibly the management admits the
-system to be a part of a business plan, which it finds remunerative.
-The idea that beneficence plays a leading part in it is almost
-scouted; indeed it would not be easy to persuade Canadian working-men
-that their bosses were doing things from charity. I went over the
-shops, and found them built on a vast and airy scale. Not being an
-engineering sort of person, I usually feel, when I invade a machinery
-place, like some unfortunate beetle that has strayed into a beehive,
-and may at any moment be attacked by the busy and alarming creatures
-that are buzzing about there. As I watched the huge engines, swung
-like bags of feathers from the roof, some black demon would heave
-showers of sparks at me, and when I started back, another would come
-raiding out with red-hot tongs. I admired respectfully. But I am
-one of those who can enjoy my honey just as much without knowing just
-how it was made. Still, here was a big bit of Montreal, and what
-miles of French houses {77} with green shutters one drove past to get
-to it!
-
-It would be absurd to suggest that poverty or slums are conspicuous
-things in Montreal. The average tourist will see none of them, but
-only many beautiful things--from the Bank of Montreal to the
-Cathedral, from the Lachine Rapids to the Mountain. I will not
-describe shooting the Rapids, it has been so often done. I wish I
-could describe the view from the Mountain. It is the most beautiful
-view of a city that can be seen. Marseilles from her hill is
-beautiful, so is Paris from Champigny. From neither of these, nor
-from any hill that I know of, is there so complete a view of so fair
-a city. The Mountain is wooded, and through the arches of the trees
-you gain a score of changing outlooks; but from the edge you see all
-Montreal--houses and streets and spires, each roof and gate, each
-chimney and window--so it seems. And beyond, the great river, and
-beyond, and on every side--Canada. If there were a mountain above
-Oxford, something like this might be seen.
-
-It was up this wooded steep to Fletcher's field, where an altar had
-been set up, that the great Eucharistic procession of 1910 wound its
-way. I was in Montreal just before this event, {78} for which the
-Montrealers had spent months preparing, and I realised a little why
-Montreal hopes some day to be the New Rome. The whole city was in a
-fervour of enthusiasm. A society had been formed for the special
-purpose of growing flowers to line the way along which the
-Cardinal-legate would walk, and gifts of money for the same purpose
-had been received from every part of Canada. The papers, of course,
-were full of every detail about Church dignitaries arriving or about
-to arrive. Nor were the shops behindhand. 'Eucharistic Congress!
-House decoration at moderate prices' was everywhere placarded; and
-papal flags and papal arms were to be had cheap. There were Congress
-sales, too, and you could buy Congress 'creations' from the
-dressmakers, Congress hats from the milliners, Congress boots from
-the bootmakers.
-
-On the day that Cardinal Vannutelli arrived, in a dismal and violent
-downpour of rain, all Montreal in macintoshes was to be seen dashing
-for the Bonsecours wharf to offer its respectful greetings to the
-papal legate.
-
-Will the Montrealers' dream of providing the New Rome ever be
-achieved? Who can say? Rome, though Italians may become subversive
-of the faith, will perhaps stand for ever. If it {79} ceased, as the
-centre of the Catholic faith, Montreal might certainly claim to take
-its place. It is already the centre of French-Canadian Catholicism;
-it might become the religious centre of Canada. There is no
-certainty that Catholicism will persist in Canada only among the
-French Canadians. It seems equally possible that Rome will prevail
-among non-French Canadians. Both in Canada and the States her
-strides forward have been enormous--comparable perhaps only to the
-steps taken in other directions by Free Thought in Europe. Is it
-that Catholicism makes peculiar appeal in a new country, or that in
-these new countries the propagation of the faith has been great and
-unceasing? These are debatable questions (though undebatable, I
-think, is the statement that in the New World Rome has a marvellous
-history of things attempted splendidly and achieved without
-reproach). I will not debate, then, but rather return to the
-Mountain and ask you to picture the great Eucharistic procession
-moving slowly up to it--up to the altar built there in the open,
-under the high and clear Canadian skies--all the inhabitants of a
-mighty city moving with it, till the city itself is left behind and
-all that is low and earthly left for the moment {80} with it. Then
-you will have in your mind one picture of Montreal at least not
-unworthy of it. It will be a picture of Montreal at its best and
-highest--a city of the faithful--near to their Mountain.
-
-
-
-
-{81}
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-TORONTO, NIAGARA FALLS, AND A NEGRO PORTER
-
-From Montreal to Toronto is a pleasant run through a southern part of
-Canada. One passes orchards and woods and Smith's Falls, where
-bricks are made, and Peterborough, which has the largest hydraulic
-lift-lock in the world. The Union railway station at Toronto, when I
-got there, was a seething mass of people and baggage, with an
-occasional railway official hidden in the vortex. I spent an hour
-trying to put a bag into the parcel-room, and after that gave up
-trying. Canadians are singularly patient in matters of this kind.
-Laden with heavy bags, they will collect in crowds outside the small
-window of a parcel-room, and burdened thus will wait there for hours
-without a murmur, while the youth inside lounges about at his
-leisure. My temper has frequently been stretched to the limit in
-Germany when I have had to wait perhaps ten minutes for a penny stamp
-while the Prussian {82} postal official behind the glass slit curled
-his moustaches in imitation of the Kaiser. I think the methods at
-that parcel-room in Toronto were even more trying. I will admit that
-it was Labour Day, and that Toronto was also in the throes of the
-World's Fair. But in a city of that size one would expect some
-preparation to be made for forthcoming throes. The truth seems to be
-that throughout Canada important events, attracting immense crowds,
-are brought off without any extra provision being made. Montreal
-managed to contain its Congress hordes pretty well, but Toronto
-during the World's Fair had a general air about it of sleeping six in
-a bed, if it slept at all. I kept coming across the same sort of
-thing at other places. Calgary, I remember, looked for the few days
-I was there like the Old Kent Road on a Saturday night, so crowded
-was it with people who had come in to witness the return to its
-native heath of a victorious football team. Regina was overrun with
-the Canadian bankers who, in massive formation, were touring the
-North-West. In one or two small places in the Rockies enormous
-trainloads of Canada's leading merchants, who were inspecting British
-Columbia with an eye to its future, were deposited for a day in
-passing, and caused as much {83} confusion as the canoe-loads of
-savages must have done when they descended on Robinson Crusoe's
-island.
-
-Labour Day is in the New World very different from what it is with
-us. In Canada, if you like, you may for three hundred and sixty-four
-days labour and do all that you have to do, but the three hundred and
-sixty-fifth is Labour Day, and no manner of work--except
-transportation--may be done that day. Transport work is necessary,
-because by way of observing Labour Day it is the thing to go
-somewhere in great multitudes, preferably by rail, and pursue the
-sort of pleasure that is only to be obtained by those who seek it
-multitudinously.
-
-Toronto was on this occasion a chosen spot for people to rollick in.
-This, added to the fact that the World's Fair was also in progress,
-prevented me from being able to get a room for the night, though I
-applied at five different hotels. At the sixth, which was full of
-excited commercial travellers, I was granted a bed on a top landing.
-I did not mind so much because I was seeing Toronto in a lively
-state. Ordinarily, I imagine, Toronto is the least bit too decorous,
-not devoid of cheerfulness, but not joyous either. There is nothing
-Parisian about Toronto, you would say. This stands to reason, {84}
-because if there is any Parisian air in Canada at all it belongs to
-Montreal, and Toronto would be the last place to imitate Montreal in
-any manner. The extraordinary rivalry that exists between the great
-East Canadian cities never leads to imitation. On the plains it is
-different. Winnipeg is the great model for all the little towns on
-the plains. But while Quebec resents the idea that Montreal is a
-much more important city than itself, and Montreal regrets that the
-seat of Government should be at so small a place as Ottawa, and
-Toronto considers Montreal ill-balanced in spite of its wealth, each
-of them would only consent to expand its own real superiority along
-its own particular lines and in its own particular manner.
-
-Still on Labour Night Toronto was quite gay. It did not look like
-the Boston of Canada at all, though it has substantial grounds, I
-read somewhere, for making this claim. I could realise that it was
-entitled to make this claim if it wanted to. If one shut one's eyes
-to the crowds, one could feel an air of brisk sobriety permeating it;
-and everything that one reads about it goes to show that a brisk
-sobriety is what it aims at. It keeps the Sabbath, for example, most
-strictly, though it hustles or almost hustles the rest of the week.
-I should {85} guess Toronto places briskness next to godliness, not a
-very bad second either. Its industries and its opulence are too well
-known to be worth detailing here. What struck me as most interesting
-about Toronto was that it seemed to represent more than any other
-place in Canada what we mean in England when we talk of Canadians.
-We do not mean the French Canadians of Quebec Province, nor the
-American Canadians and English public-school boys who are to be found
-in such numbers in Alberta and the plains. The sort of people we are
-thinking of are people who have been born in Canada, who have even
-spent generations there, but are, nevertheless, British by descent
-and British in tongue. There are people of this sort in other parts
-of Canada. The inhabitants of the Maritime Provinces are such, in
-spite of the fact that Mr. Bourassa has claimed that within fifteen
-years they will have become French in language and Roman Catholic in
-faith. Mr. Bourassa has made the same claim, to be sure, with regard
-to the inhabitants of Ontario. In the meantime, it would be truer to
-describe the inhabitants of Ontario as Canadians in the English
-sense. And Toronto is their capital. It is, of course, the home of
-the United Empire Loyalists who {86} settled here when the States
-broke away from our rule. The temper that made any rule but
-England's and any liberty that was not English liberty unendurable
-still remains, and I think Mr. Bourassa will have his work cut out to
-Gallicise them. Still even the sternest traditions of loyalty do not
-prevent--nay, even encourage--a certain change in the character of a
-people.
-
-It is probable that Ontarians are less English now than they were,
-just as Quebeckers are less French. Which have the right to be held
-more essentially Canadian may be questioned, but I repeat that when
-we in England talk of Canadians we have in mind a type of men to
-which the Ontarians correspond more than any others. It would be
-absurd, no doubt, to look for the English type in a metropolis like
-London, and perhaps it is absurd to look for the Ontarian type in a
-metropolis like Toronto. But it is less absurd, I think, and anyhow
-I did look for it there. What did I find? Well, I hope elsewhere to
-go cautiously and delicately into this matter of what a typical
-Canadian is like. Here I will only say that if you can imagine a
-Lowland Scot, cautious and self-possessed, outwardly resisting
-American exuberance and {87} extravagance, but inwardly by slow
-degrees absorbing--and thereby moderating--that hustling spirit of
-which these things are manifestations, you have something not unlike
-the Canadian of Toronto. Remember that Toronto is the southern
-gateway of Canada. It fronts on the States. It deals with the
-States. Between it and the States there is constant intercourse. It
-pursues the same industries, following in many cases the same
-methods. Many American managers of men are to be found in Toronto.
-It is not unnatural that some of the American spirit should dwell
-there also, and even tend to breed there.
-
-Now for the Fair. Fairing is a pretty old thing, and I have done a
-good deal of it, but fairing at Toronto struck me as being somehow
-new. I do not mean in the way of the exhibits one saw. They were
-nothing out of the way to any one who has seen the more famous
-exhibitions of the Old World, and the arrangements struck me as poor.
-The grounds by the lake are fairly extensive, but the buildings are
-second-rate. I thought when I saw the fruit exhibit in one of them
-that the whole display was little better than at a little English
-village flower show. But the keenness of the crowd visiting the
-ground! There was the {88} novelty. They did not glimpse at things
-in our blase European way, and then sink into seats to listen to the
-band. They did listen to the band, but that was because the band was
-part of the show; and they wanted to do the show, every inch of it.
-Whole families camped for the day on the grounds. They brought meals
-with them in paper bags and boxes to fortify themselves lest they
-should drop before they had seen everything. Not that there was any
-lack of smartness either. The ladies had on their best hats and
-frocks, and the Canadian best in these respects is very fine. But
-one did not suspect them, as one would have suspected ladies at the
-White City or the Brussels Exhibition, of being there merely to show
-themselves off. Their frocks were in honour of the Fair. The Fair
-was the thing. It was a scene of the greatest enthusiasm under a
-tolerably hot sun. I had been asked to note if any English firms had
-taken the trouble to exhibit, and I am bound to say that I saw very
-few. It seems a pity when one considers the sort of people who visit
-the Fair--not merely a crowd amusing itself for an hour or two with
-glancing at the exhibits, but a crowd trying to find out what there
-was to buy--a crowd with dollars in its pockets and plenty of dollars
-in its banks. {89} I dare say there are difficulties in the way.
-There was not, for example, indefinite room for more exhibits, nor
-are Canadian manufacturers, with rumours of reduced tariffs going
-about, to be presumed eager to encourage competitors. Still, it
-seemed a pity.
-
-I clove my way to bed that night on the top landing through a horde
-of keen commercial travellers joyfully discussing all the business
-the exhibition would bring them. Next day I went to Niagara, by
-steamer, across the great lake. Toronto owes at least half its
-greatness to the Falls, and there should be, but I do not think there
-is, a really big monument to their discoverer, Father Louis Hennepin.
-Very likely, though, the discovery of Niagara was its own reward,
-especially for so inquisitive a man as that friar. He has himself
-confessed how, in the old days, when he was only a begging friar,
-sent by the Superior of his Order to beg for alms at the seaport of
-Calais, he used, in his curiosity, to hide himself behind tavern
-doors and listen to the sailors within telling of their voyages,
-while their tobacco smoke was wafted out and made him 'very sick at
-the stomach.' In the end he was the first white man to see the
-Falls, in the winter of 1687....
-
-They were framed in a most gorgeous sunset {90} when I saw them on an
-August day. The green and white foam swooped from a mountain of
-clouds all grey and gold--clouds piled fantastically into the
-furthest sky. No one seeing them in such a light could be
-disappointed with them, but I would forbid any more writers to write
-about them. Every man should be his own poet where the greater
-sights of the world are concerned. On second thoughts it is
-permissible to read Mr. Howells on the subject, and even Dickens,
-provided one is never likely to see them with one's own eyes. I saw
-the Falls at sunset, by starlight, and in the sunrise, and I can
-commend them at all these times. The river that drowned Captain Webb
-and was crossed by Blondin on the tight-rope, though extraordinary in
-its way, seemed to me comparatively unbeautiful and uninteresting.
-Any big sea on the Atlantic or Pacific is a finer sight and grips a
-man harder. I like a river quiet myself. Moreover, the villas above
-Niagara River give the landscape a domestic air in which its mad
-swirl seems only like an attempt to show off malignantly.
-
-One of my pleasantest recollections of Niagara is a conversation I
-had with the porter at the hotel where I stopped on the Canadian
-side. He was an American negro, extremely urbane {91} and chatty.
-He told me that he guessed I was an Englishman. It was pretty easy,
-he said, to tell that. I did not feel sure whether to feel flattered
-or not, but I felt sure later, when he introduced me to the
-lift-boy--a typical little stunted anaemic street arab from one of our
-northern cities--with a wave of the hand and the remark, 'Thar's one
-of your fellow-countrymen.' Afterwards, in self-defence, I steered
-the conversation towards Canada, and the porter, who regarded himself
-as an American citizen only, told me that the Canadians were a slow,
-stupid people, who could not be trusted of themselves to do anything
-but cultivate a little land badly.
-
-'Look at Toronto,' he said; 'do you think there'd be any hustle in
-that place if the Canadians had been left to themselves? No, sah.
-But we came along and lent them our brains and our enterprise, and I
-guess now it's a big fine city.'
-
-
-
-
-{92}
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-MASKINONGE FISHING ON THE FRENCH RIVER
-
-A friend, acquainted with Canada, met me in Toronto, and I told him I
-was tired of cities and thought of going to the Muskoka Lakes.
-
-'What do you expect to get there?' he asked.
-
-'Scenery,' I said--'camping, fishing. A Fenimore Cooper existence in
-the backwoods. Isn't it to be had there?'
-
-'The scenery's all right,' he said, 'and you can camp out of course,
-and there are some fish. But if you mean you want a quiet,
-unconventional life----'
-
-'I do for a few days,' I said.
-
-'You'd better go further than the Muskoka district, then,' he said.
-'It's beginning to be rather a fashionable camping-ground--quite
-pleasant in its way. If you care to see charming American maidens in
-expensive frocks falling out of canoes just on purpose to be able to
-change into frocks still more expensive, the Muskoka country is the
-place for you. If {93} not, you had better come with me and fish for
-maskinonges on the French River.'
-
-I did not know where the French River was or what maskinonges were,
-or how you caught them; but I said 'Yes,' being very tired of cities,
-and we took the night train from Toronto, and at 4.30 A.M. dropped
-off it on to a bridge that spanned a deep, big river. The dawn was
-exceedingly cold and grey.
-
-Literally we dropped off the train, for it did not stop but only
-slowed down, and after us the negro porter dropped our bags and
-tackle. A minute later the train had vanished, and we were left
-alone on the bridge, staring at the rocky, wooded cliffs that rose on
-either bank. Rock, wood, and water indeed met the eye wherever one
-looked. It seemed a country where Nature had once built mountains,
-savage and sparsely wooded mountains in the midst of a great inland
-sea, then in a cataclysmal mood had dashed them to pieces in every
-direction. And as the boulders and splinters of boulders flew, some
-fell in circles and made little lakes out of the great sea; some fell
-in heaped cliffs and banks, between which the sea was squeezed into
-winding, forking streams; some fell and sank and left the sea a
-shallow swamp above them; some fell and stood up {94} out of the
-water and became islands of dry rock. Every splinter that flew bore
-in some crack of it a seed of spruce or fir or birch, which grew; so
-that all this barren rock and waste of water became crowned with
-trees. I dare say any geologist could explain exactly what did
-happen. I am merely explaining what appears to have happened, when
-you look at it the first time with eyes still full of sleep.
-
-It was the French River at which we were gazing, and it looked at
-this point somewhat wider than the Thames at Hammersmith. It was
-flat and full with a good current; and my friend made some remark
-about never having been given to understand, when he was at school in
-England, that there was such a river at all--much less that it was
-finer than the Thames.
-
-'I doubt if one would find it marked on an English school map even
-now,' he continued.
-
-'I don't know, I'm sure,' I replied.
-
-'Doesn't it show how disgracefully ignorant we are of Canada?' he
-demanded in the hollow tones of an Imperial enthusiast.
-
-'Yes,' I agreed. I daresay I should have agreed anyhow. It was
-disgraceful that we neither of us had known anything about the {95}
-French River. But the reason I agreed so quickly was that, if I had
-not done so, he was capable of proving to me that such gross
-ignorance, if persisted in, will some day prove fatal to the Empire.
-Whereas I merely wanted breakfast. Any one who has been dropped off
-a train at 4.30 on a misty morning in the sort of country I have
-described will sympathise with me.
-
-Luckily the dawn soon became a little less grey, and presently we
-beheld a wooden shack standing on a crag some quarter of a mile up
-stream, with a dozen canoes moored below it. Presently also--and
-this was more to the point--some one in the shack became aware of us
-standing on the bridge, and put out in an old boat fitted with a
-motor to fetch us. An hour later we were enjoying breakfast inside
-the shack, which is really a hotel of sorts, and its proprietor, Mr.
-Fenton, was explaining to us all about the fishing to be had on the
-French River. For five dollars--or nine for two persons, he would
-supply us with a canoe, an Indian guide, a tent, provisions, and a
-hundred miles or so of first-class fishing.
-
-Now for the benefit of all benighted Englishmen who do not know the
-French River or Mr. Fenton of Pickerel, but would like to make {96}
-their acquaintance and that of the maskinonge, let me enlarge upon my
-existence for the next few days.
-
-Let me begin with Bill. Bill was our Indian guide. He was an
-Ojibway. Youthful, well built, reserved in manner, he paddled us on
-the average eight hours, cooked three meals, and set up or took down
-our tent in an incredibly short time every day. When either of us
-caught a fish, Bill laughed; when we did not, he stared into space.
-He laughed pretty often, for we caught quite a number of fish. It
-seemed unavoidable on the French River. Occasionally, in answer to
-questions, Bill spoke. He spoke English. Once or twice he spoke on
-his own account. I remember his saying that he preferred eggs to
-fish. I do not know how much Bill thought. Accustomed to connect
-such outward reserve and dignity as Bill showed with a philosophic
-mind, I fancied for quite a long time that Bill must think a great
-deal. I doubt it now. Those who have studied the Red Indian in his
-native haunts have discovered, I believe, that though his mind works
-in mysterious ways, it does work; but not quickly, or with superhuman
-gravity or discernment. As for that look of reserve--it indicates no
-more brain-work or {97} brain-power than the look of reserve on the
-face of an alligator. When I read hereafter that the hero of a book
-has a reserved face and an imperturbable manner (he so very often has
-in the novels of ladies) I shall think of Bill, and be delighted.
-Bill was so soothing. So was the French River. It is worth an
-Englishman's while to know of it--worth his private as well as his
-Imperial while. American sportsmen seem to know it well. They come
-fishing up it in fair numbers earlier in the year, and they come
-shooting later--deer and partridge and cariboo. The partridge
-shooting is said to be some of the finest in Canada.
-
-The French explorers also knew the French River, for it was by this
-route that they first found their way to Lake Huron when, by reason
-of Bill's ancestors being out on the war-path, seeking scalps, they
-found Lake Ontario impossible of crossing. In width it varies
-considerably. Sometimes it narrows to rapids, at others it broadens
-to over a mile across, and is divided into channels by steep islands.
-The scenery of it is as changeful as its channel. Now the banks are
-built in sheer stone, a hundred feet high; again they rise terrace by
-terrace, smooth as if men had made them; a little later they are
-nothing but a {98} chaos of strewn rock. Sometimes the firs
-predominate, sometimes the birches, pale green still these latter, or
-yellowing in the fall. Then a splash of cherry colour or crimson
-shows a maple on its way to winter. There are reedy backwaters where
-great pike lie; and natural weirs, below which the rock bass wait for
-their food; the deep pools hold pickerel or catfish. Everywhere the
-air exhilarates, and along the wider reaches we used to meet a wind
-like a sea-wind that put the river in waves and set them tippling
-into the bows of the canoe.
-
-For the most part we trolled, six or seven miles upstream from
-Pickerel landing, using an artificial minnow or feathered double
-spoon, which latter seemed to attract pike, bass, and pickerel,
-though the last, like the cat-fish, preferred a worm. However, it is
-a dull fish, the pickerel, hardly worth catching. Not so the
-cat-fish. A six-pounder of this variety can be very strenuous
-indeed, and the only drawback to it is, as an American we met
-remarked, you would have to shut your eyes before you could eat it.
-Certainly it is one of the most grotesque and hideous of freshwater
-fish, having four slimy tendrils growing from the sides of its mouth,
-with pig's eyes between. The bass is a fine eater. We got {99} bass
-up to four pounds, and if it is not mean to mention such a matter in
-connection with so sporting a fish, you know that when you have
-landed one you have landed a glorious supper. Those suppers over the
-camp fire, which Bill could set roaring within three minutes--so much
-timber and touchwood lies everywhere--what would one not give to
-enjoy the like in England? In an artificial sort of way you can do
-so. Here one is in the wilds as they were from the beginning--except
-that the Indian is cooking for the white man instead of cooking the
-white man for fun.
-
-What a delight it was, too, to go to bed on a couch of fir boughs,
-with the wind rustling through the birches, to the soothing sound of
-Bill, stretched at the foot of the tent, spitting gently into the
-night. It was a soothing sound, until I awoke one night to find that
-Bill had drawn the flap of the tent tight, but was still spitting--I
-do not know whither.
-
-We spent four days on the French River, and our catch averaged over
-twelve pounds a day. It would have been much more if we had fished
-for every sort of fish and taken no photographs. As it was we took a
-good many photographs, and spent most of our time trying to lure the
-maskinonge. It is {100} the king-fish of these waters--a sort of
-pike--but with the leaping powers of a salmon and the heart of a
-tiger. Bill used to madden us with tales of how the last party he
-had guided had landed twenty maskinonges in three days. We fished
-and fished, and then I, trolling with a spoon, hooked one. We saw
-him almost instantly take a great white leap into the sun, thirty
-yards from the canoe. Then Bill paddled gently for the nearest shore
-at which one could land him, and I played him the while with such
-care ... Oh, my maskinonge, never to be mine! I got him to the
-bank--a flat piece of rock with a kindly slope to the water. Perhaps
-he was not more than fifteen pounds in weight. Perhaps he was. Bill
-said not. But then Bill had not hooked him; and in fact it was Bill
-who lost him. Anyway, fifteen pounds is fifteen pounds, even if they
-do run to forty. Yes, it was Bill that lost him. I stick to
-that--though I admit that we had all been stupid enough to come out
-without a gaff. So it came about that, though I drew him ever so
-gingerly to the rock, yet--yet as Bill made a lunge at him to get him
-up--my maskinonge leaped once more--and broke the line!
-
-There for a second he lay, all dazed and {101} silvery, in the
-shallow water--then woke up and vanished, spoon and all!...
-
-Bill vowed that the line was too weak; but what line would have stood
-it?
-
-No matter--though I did not say 'no matter' at the time. Some day
-perhaps I shall go back to the French River. For fifty pounds a man
-could get there from England, spend three weeks in fishing, and
-return again to the old country--a five-weeks trip in all--and know,
-maybe, the best August and September of his life. Yes, I hope to go
-back and catch maskinonge, and listen once more to the wind in the
-birches, and go to sleep again to the sound of Bill spitting--for
-choice into the night.
-
-
-
-
-{102}
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-SUPERFICIAL REFLECTIONS AT SUDBURY
-
-Coming away from the French River, we spent a night at Sudbury, which
-lies in the midst of 'rich deposits of nickeliferous pyrrhotite.'
-Had I a brain capable of appreciating nickeliferous pyrrhotite, I
-should have got more pleasure out of this prosperous mining town than
-I did. My chief recollections of it are that it was unattractive,
-that everybody looked prosperous in it, that trucks were shunted
-under my bedroom window all night long, and that the hotel proprietor
-forgot to wake us at the time we had requested, with the result that
-we got to the station breakfastless, about half an hour after the
-train was due to start. Luckily it was late. I do not care for
-missing trains at any time, but to have missed that train at Sudbury
-would have been singularly annoying. There was, in effect, nothing
-of interest in Sudbury if you were not interested in nickeliferous
-pyrrhotite. I know that I should not {103} make such a remark.
-_Humani nihil a me alienum_ should be every writer's motto. But it
-is one thing to possess a motto, another to act upon it after trucks
-have been shunted under one's window all night, and one stands
-breakfastless on a dull station very early in the morning, waiting
-for a train that will not come.
-
-Let me recall what sort of humanity was about. There was a stout,
-middle-aged Indian guide, who told us the finest trout fishing in
-Canada was to be had a few miles from Sudbury. He was the most
-cheerful Indian I saw in Canada--really a cheerful man--creased with
-smiles. There were miners looking out for jobs or leaving
-them--mostly spitting. They were all young men. I only saw about
-four old men in the whole Dominion. I do not know if Canadians are
-shut up after a certain age, or do not grow to it, or retire like
-butterflies to end their days far from the ken of man. So that there
-was nothing surprising in there being only young men at the station.
-More surprising was the amount of nationalities that seemed to be
-represented among them. They seemed of every race and yet very
-alike. I suppose a miner is a miner, whatever his nationality, just
-as a mahout is a mahout. In the strange worlds both these kinds of
-experts {104} live in, the one sort in the bowels of the earth, the
-other on the necks of elephants, our little international
-distinctions would tend to become of less importance. If a man is a
-miner, he may also be a Belgian or a German or a Yorkshireman--but
-his real country is subterranean: he is before all things a citizen
-of the underworld. I do not know if one would get to recognise a
-miner in Canada quite so easily as one gets to recognise a miner at
-home--for miners there shift about more than in England, and spend
-more time, therefore, in the upper world; which stamps men
-differently. Still, though tales of new finds in new countries,
-where wages will be almost incredibly high, constantly reach them,
-and tempt them forth, after all they emerge from one part of the dark
-earth only to plunge into another--passing the between-time
-above-ground magnificently; but less magnificently than their wives.
-The prices paid by miners' wives for their hats at some of the big
-stores would startle the more extravagant of our own smart set. I
-believe there were some lumbermen in the station too, taking their
-ease, but I had not then grown to know the look of a lumberjack as I
-did later. The chief thing about him is his magnificent
-complexion--enviable of women. Canada {105} is not generous in the
-matter of complexions, and one usually hears that the dry winds of
-the winter time are accountable for making them poor, especially on
-the plains. The hot stoves of the shacks are a still more likely
-cause. Why then should the lumbermen have such incomparable skins?
-Partly because they are men in 'the pink of condition'--so long as
-they work (their condition out of it is best realised by a perusal of
-_Woodsmen of the West_, one of the few fine local studies of a real
-type of Canadian life that have yet been written); partly because
-their work is in the woods which are windless and not dry.
-
-Tokens of the lumbering life--besides the complexion--are jollity, a
-freedom from care amounting to something even more delightful than
-irresponsibility, an air of equality with something of superiority in
-it--indeed, with a good deal of superiority in it--and a childlike
-loquaciousness or an equally childlike dislike of talk. These last
-two qualities are both, I fancy, Canadian in general. One is
-generally told that the Canadians are ready talkers, will always
-address a stranger in the train, will be inquisitive and
-self-revealing to an extent unimagined by the Englishman. Mr.
-Kipling remarked, I remember, in his Canadian {106} letters that you
-will learn from an Englishman in two years less than you will learn
-from a Canadian in two minutes. Mr. Kipling is perhaps the best
-boaster Canada ever drew to herself. My own experience in the matter
-of Canadian conversation is that a lot depends upon the individual.
-Introductions are certainly not waited for, and on a journey one may
-chat with strangers to one's heart's content. But it must be borne
-in mind that the traveller _par excellence_ in Canada is the
-commercial traveller whose business it is to talk. Off the line--and
-on it, where other travellers are concerned--one finds men with a
-gift of silence that can at times be disheartening. It is natural
-that this should be so. Men in remote places lose the use of their
-tongues. All men are not talkers, indeed I think the great majority
-of men in any country are not talkers. When Canadians do talk, it
-must be admitted that they excel us, or their working-men do. Their
-working-men are not only ready, but also, superficially at any rate,
-remarkably well-informed about things outside their own particular
-job. They know what is being talked of, the prices of things, the
-value of land, astonishingly well. All Canadians know something
-about land; and about what he knows, {107} the Canadian is not
-deprecating. Precisely for this reason, perhaps, the more educated
-men among them are at times considerably less interesting than ours.
-It is not that their conversational topics are few, but that they are
-circumscribed. The personal and dogmatic element enters into them,
-with the result that the subject discussed seems incapable of
-extension, and tends to become circular. I have met quite young men
-who were bores, and bores not only in essence, but in manner, like
-the clergymen of our comic papers. I do not know why it is, but I do
-know that it is sad. It may be that there are not enough women in
-Canada to prevent it. Men are so patient they will stand
-anything--even a bore. But where women abound, a man may not be
-tiresome either in his clothes or his conversation....
-
-I believe the train at Sudbury was almost an hour late, which is why
-I have gone on so long noting trifles at large. When it did come in,
-somewhere about 8 A.M., we discovered that it was full up, and people
-had been standing in the first-class carriages all night. They had
-mostly breakfasted since, and the first-class carriage we got into
-was littered from end to end with bun-bags and sandwich-papers and
-orange peel, and all the refuse that results {108} from picnics in
-trains. Tired parents and sleepy children were piled above this
-flotsam in an atmosphere hard to endure. Yet everybody was cheerful,
-and though we both wished in our hearts that we could have got
-'sleepers' entitling us to Pullman accommodation, we were both
-grateful--or ought to have been grateful--that we were privileged to
-witness the contented spirit with which these representatives of the
-great Dominion bore their trials. Not a grumble--oh, my brother
-Englishman, not a grumble! Think of it.
-
-
-
-
-{109}
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-THROUGH THE HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO
-
-I sat in the tail of the train smoking, while Ontario dropped behind,
-league after league of thin trees growing out of the rock, of rock
-growing out of bog or lake, of bog or lake covering all solid things.
-Sometimes the trees were green and dark; sometimes green and light;
-sometimes nothing but scorched trunks--black skeletons of trees left
-by a forest fire which had killed everything within reach like a
-beast of prey, but consumed only the tender parts.
-
-Somebody, as we swung over a typical piece of muskeg country--black
-and juicy bogland covered with a foot maybe of clear water--began to
-tell a story of a train that had run off the rails and plunged head
-first into just such a place. It had been a long train, he said; a
-goods train, and it had gone down and down. When he saw it, the last
-truck only stuck out of the muskeg. We listened respectfully. It
-{110} was at least a well-found story, illustrating the difficulties
-the engineers had had in laying the lines across a treacherous ooze
-that nothing seemed to fill or make firm.
-
-What will become of this one-thousand-mile stretch of swamped
-rock-land? Nobody knows. There it lies separating East from West,
-as land impassable, unnavigable as water. Firs and minerals, these
-are the only things to be expected from it. Firs tend to grow less,
-but the minerals of course may in the end so count that no one will
-wish the country other than the rock it is. All along the line the
-railway authorities have up the names of stations, as though there
-really were stations there, and, even more, as though there were
-villages or towns which those stations served. You are carried past
-a hundred such stations--names on a board and nothing more at all,
-unless it be a solitary wooden shack in which some railway
-subordinate passes his life seeing that the line is clear. The gangs
-of workers, Galicians or Italians, who do repairs along the line,
-camp out; you see their camps now and then, temporary settlements in
-this No Man's Land.
-
-'_Pays melancolique et marecageux!_' So Pierre Loti named Les
-Landes, and the description fits this country too, though I doubt if
-{111} melancholy is a word to be found in a Canadian's vocabulary.
-'Pretty poor stuff' a Canadian might allow it to be, but would
-immediately begin to talk of the fish in its waters, the big game to
-be got among the woods, and the mining possibilities it would reveal
-as soon as prospectors and syndicates got together. There never was
-a people less born to be depressed than the Canadians; nor do I think
-they will ever produce a Pierre Loti.
-
-For my part, I began to find this country most fascinating when I
-started to think of its effect upon the history of Canada. It is
-easy to see that its very impenetrability hindered for a long time
-the growth of the West. Where there was no road there was no way for
-progress, and the great wheatlands were shut up beyond it, while
-Eastern Canada developed. What is less easy to see is the effect
-such a waste must have when the country on the other side has been
-populated and fertilised. A little time ago people began to think
-that East and West would simply reverse their order of importance.
-They said, 'Quebec and Ontario have depreciated in value. The rich
-land of Ontario has been ruined, why should any one stay there when
-in the West there is limitless wheatland to settle on?' {112} But the
-trackless country still lay between--distance is not annihilated by a
-single railroad, nor by a dozen railroads. Quebeckers did not move
-West much. Ontarian farmers began to find that exhausted land could
-be renovated by scientific methods. If the plains had adjoined their
-farms, they would not have bothered to try those methods, but the
-muskeg and rock lay between. Some of them went West, but not all;
-they did not like it that the West was being settled from the States
-and Europe. In any case the West would have been an unfamiliar
-country--the American and English immigrants only made it more
-so--and the boasts of the West roused Eastern pride. Was the West
-best? Ontarians looked about them and found that not only could
-their present farms be improved but that there lay still in their own
-particular country virgin land that needed only to be cleared and
-worked. Already there is the new Ontario, north of the old Ontario,
-offering fresh fields and pastures new for the Canadian born who
-didn't mind clearing land as well as working it. It is land upon
-which the average immigrant is lost, upon which the average Ontarian
-is at home. Thus begins a northern movement which may spread any
-distance.
-
-{113}
-
-I have not said, and would not say, that the rock and water of
-Ontario account for this northern movement, for the fact that people
-are beginning to say, 'This East and West business is overdone.
-Canada is not a thin, straight line from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
-but a country stretching north to Hudson Bay, having the depth of the
-States almost, if a race spreads hardy enough to inhabit it.' The
-immediate cause of the northern movement was the discovery that wheat
-was as hardy as men, if not hardier, and would grow more north than
-an old-time settler ever dreamed of. The movement began in the
-North-West. All I would say is that if the waste country had not
-lain between the Ontarian farmer and the West he would have rushed
-with the rest, and the balance of importance would have shifted
-altogether westward. As it is, Ontarian farmers thrive again; new
-Ontario thrives excellently in a score of ways; the Canadian-born
-prosper in that part of Canada where they are--and always have
-been--most massed and most solidly Canadian. The West is a medley of
-races; and if it had suddenly become dominant by reason of its vastly
-superior prosperity, a people that could definitely be called
-Canadian would have been still further to seek than it is. {114}
-Canada, in effect, would have had to restart becoming a nation.
-
-All that day the rock and bog and timber kept dropping behind the
-train, and it was sunset before we came to the shore of Lake
-Superior. A thunderous glow hung over the lake, glimmering on the
-great granite cliffs. It was dark before we came to Port
-Arthur--proud possessor of the largest elevator in the world, and
-fierce rival of Fort William. In the morning we were in Manitoba.
-
-
-
-
-{115}
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE OLD TIMERS OF KILDONAN AND THE NEW
- TIMERS OF WINNIPEG
-
-Winnipeg introduces the West. 'If you like Winnipeg,' I had been
-told before I got there, 'you will like the West.' I had been
-somewhat disheartened by this information. I had pictured Winnipeg
-as a smoke-laden city of mean and narrow streets, set off with board
-walks and wooden shacks of various sizes. I knew that I should not
-like Winnipeg if it were like that. Well, it is not like that. Main
-Street, which follows exactly the lines of the old Hudson Bay
-Company's trail, is a hundred and thirty-two feet wide, and the other
-streets are in proportion. Above is the immensely clear and lofty
-Canadian sky. The wooden shacks are not there, and you will have to
-go far to find the board walks. True, the buildings are, on the
-whole, less impressive than the streets, but there are some
-magnificent blocks rising several stories; and if you take an {116}
-observation-car to go and see the sights of Winnipeg, you will find
-yourself brought to spots where further fine blocks are rising; and
-with the eye of the imagination you will behold Winnipeg as
-splendidly lofty as New York. I am not sure that for a place as warm
-as Winnipeg in summer and as cold in winter (I have heard the very
-truest Canadians say that they have been nearly frozen there in
-winter) the laying out of the town in so spacious a style is ideal.
-Streets narrower and more easily screened from the sun and wind would
-have seemed more comfortable to begin with. But then Winnipeg is
-growing, growing, growing; and it may be that some day even Main
-Street will seem shut in when it has its skyscrapers.
-
-Certainly it is a mistake to have preconceptions of Canada. I found
-Winnipeg spacious instead of mean. I next found that instead of
-consisting of elevators and all the apparatus connected with the
-storage of wheat, it was all banks and cinematograph parlours. There
-were, it is true, shops and such things sandwiched in between. I
-recall a jeweller's shop containing the suitable and attractive
-placard in its window--'Marriage Licences for Sale Here.' It is
-true, too, that banks and cinematograph {117} shows are not
-unconnected with wheat. In the banks you store the dollars you have
-made out of wheat; at the cinematograph shows you circulate them.
-But really there was an almost incredible number of these
-institutions.
-
-Of the two kinds of business I felt that personally I would rather
-own a moving picture show. Winnipegers are, I feel sure, easy to
-amuse. And they look exceedingly prosperous. The air of prosperity
-struck me as more obvious in Winnipeg than in any other part of
-Canada. This may have been due in part to the ladies' hats. I saw
-some wonderful hats in Winnipeg. Of course there are some women who
-seem born to wear wonderful hats. Whatever they put on seems
-wonderful. But in Winnipeg this art of wearing wonders seemed almost
-universal. Ladies who might otherwise have passed for school
-teachers--so serene and even precise was their general bearing--were
-to be seen in hats that would be astounding either on Hampstead Heath
-or in Covent Garden opera. I was told the hats come direct either
-from London or Paris, and form an important part of the Steamship
-Companies' freights, since they are charged for not by weight but by
-their superficial area. I thought to myself, {118} after I had seen
-a few samples of them, what sleepless nights the creators of these
-marvels must pass in the fear that they can never again rival, much
-less surpass, the last consignment to the Wheat City.
-
-The men too have a prosperous appearance--always new hats, new coats,
-new cigars; and I was so much impressed by it that I began to study
-their faces to see if some new type--with the Croesus gift--had been
-developed in this western place. If they had all looked alike, or
-had not all looked prosperous, it would have been simpler. But they
-all looked different--more different than Londoners--as they
-would--for here all the nations of the earth are gathered, and over a
-score of languages are taught in the schools (just think of it!); and
-among these different faces one saw the old familiar aspects--the
-shrewd and the foolish, the strong-mouthed and the weak, the
-bluffer's and that of the man who counts. Clearly, they were not all
-amazing organisers, or men with the grit and the brains that must
-take them to the top. Not any more were so, I mean, than you would
-see in any big place. No, it was the economic conditions, not the
-men, which were changed.
-
-Yet there is one thing noticeable in most of {119} the faces one sees
-here. It is a general air of buoyancy--of greater expectation and,
-therewith, of greater self-satisfaction--in a good sense--than one
-sees at home. Just as the London clerk's face might be made to
-read!--'I am merely a city clerk on L50 a year--I shall never rise
-much higher, and I hope I may keep my place,' so the Winnipeg clerk's
-face might be taken to announce--'At present I'm helping along the
-Dominion Elevator Company. Luckily for them they're a go-ahead lot.
-I guess, though, they'll have to raise my salary soon, pretty good
-though it is now. If they don't, they'll have to look for another
-man. There are plenty of jobs waiting for me.'
-
-If it is the truth, what could be better?
-
-That there are more jobs than men in the West seems undeniable,
-though most of them of course are on the land. I had the pleasure of
-a talk with Mr. Bruce Walker, through whose hands all the immigrants
-to the West pass. Mr. Bruce Walker's office is in the station, which
-is one of the sights of the West, when an immigrant train arrives.
-For Winnipeg is their distributing centre, and in the station, when
-the train comes in, you may see more types of men and women than a
-year's travel in Europe would give you, and you may hear {120} more
-different languages being spoken than went to the unmaking of the
-tower of Babel. To place all these people, men, women and children,
-in positions suited to their capacities, before the small sums of
-money with which they have arrived in the New World have given out,
-would seem to be a task which Napoleon might have shrunk from. But
-Mr. Bruce Walker appeared quite undismayed. Although in the first
-six months of 1910 the immigration from Great Britain alone had
-increased 98 per cent. over any other corresponding period, he had
-found no difficulty in dealing with it. He admitted that it meant
-increase of work for himself and his staff, but that was nothing, he
-said, so long as there were more jobs than men. 'And there are more
-jobs,' he said. 'It's amazing. But the extent to which Canada can
-absorb men seems endless.' He told me many excellent and amusing
-stories of the difficulties that arise in connection with the
-new-comers, but I have no space for them here.
-
-The chief criticism to be directed against the Canadian Government's
-methods in dealing with immigrants is, I think, that it encourages on
-to the land men who are in some cases wasted there. It is natural
-that it should {121} place immigrants on the land as far as possible.
-The land is there, apparently endlessly absorbent. It offers,
-superficially, work that any strong and able-bodied man should be
-capable of doing. Again, that Canadian theory that a man should be
-ready to turn his hand to anything, encourages the Canadian
-Government to believe that it is justified in turning the hands of
-immigrants to the work that most obviously wants doing. On the other
-side, it has to be remembered that while a man may be capable of
-turning his hand to anything, he is probably much more capable of
-turning his hand to the work he has been trained to; and not only
-that, but he is wasted to a large extent if he is not doing it. I am
-thinking particularly of the skilled workmen who emigrate to Canada
-from England. Turn them on to land and they may do fairly well; but
-turn them on to the work they are used to, and they will do much
-better. I do not say that the Canadian Government is bound to find
-for such men the work for which they are fitted; but in so far as
-they undertake to find work for immigrants, they should as far as
-possible find the right work. That jealousy which causes the United
-States to put obstacles in the way of the skilled immigrant who {122}
-comes into the country, should not be encouraged in Canada. It is
-absurd to suppose that Canada is already stocked with skilled
-workmen, and I repeat it is waste to use men, who are skilled, in
-work to which they are wholly unaccustomed. Moreover, though these
-skilled artisans may in many cases only spend a certain time on the
-land (after which they find the job which they want and are
-accustomed to), yet in many other cases they may be so sickened by
-their time on the land, doing unaccustomed work badly, that they
-either become wastrels, or leave Canada altogether, believing it to
-be no country for workers like themselves, and saying so with all the
-bitterness of men who were capable of succeeding but did actually
-fail. Another point to which the immigration department might give
-all the attention it can spare, is that of making it as simple as
-possible for decent immigrants to be joined at the earliest
-opportunity by their wives and families. The lack of women in Canada
-is a curse which there is no disguising. For one thing, to have a
-country full only of able-bodied men without wives or families is to
-give it an air of prosperity which is unreal. For another, it is to
-leave it without any of the ambitions which cause the majority of men
-{123} to save the money they make, and lay the foundations of a
-civilised nation. The other objections are obvious. A wise
-Government policy might go far towards making the period of
-separation between an immigrant and his wife shorter.
-
-Later on, to get a contrast with Winnipeg, I went out to see Kildonan
-with a friend. It is the village where the Old-timers--the crofters
-from the highlands, whom Lord Selkirk brought out in 1812 to colonise
-the land--finally settled down. They had hard years enough; trouble
-with the Indians, great trouble with the rival fur company. The
-fur-traders could see in the farmers only men who would reduce the
-wild and spoil their own industry. Only after years were their
-disputes settled. Kildonan is three miles out from Winnipeg by
-electric-car--along a dusty road fenced with wire from the fat black
-land. The crofters must have rejoiced to see that loam. Nowadays it
-has mostly been turned to market-gardening for the supplying of
-Winnipeg, and the farmers have shifted further West. We turned down
-a country lane, shaded with maple woods and golden birches, and came
-presently to the banks of the Red River. Over on the other side,
-standing among light trees, stood Kildonan {124} Church, the oldest
-church in Western Canada. We crossed by the ferry, and walked up
-into the churchyard. It is not large, but it is full, and everywhere
-you read the familiar Scottish names--Macleod--Black--Ferguson and
-the rest. The death among infants in those days seems to have been
-great--naturally enough--for Kildonan then was far from civilisation
-and doctor's help; and so, many small, unconscious settlers spent
-only a few days or weeks in the new land. But there were others that
-lived long. One of the most interesting gravestones commemorated the
-death of a settler who had come out from Kildonan, Sutherlandshire,
-at the age of nine. This in the year 1815--the year of Waterloo. He
-had lived to be past ninety. For his epitaph some one had chosen
-those noble words from the Epistle to the Hebrews: 'He looked for a
-city which hath foundations--whose maker and builder is God.'
-
-I think it cannot matter now that the old man died before the great
-Canadian boom came, before Winnipeg had become the biggest
-wheat-centre of the world, before he could realise, who looked for a
-city which hath foundations, that even in his life he had attained to
-'God's own country.'
-
-
-
-
-{125}
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-A PRAIRIE TOWN AND THE PRAIRIE POLICE
-
-Any one who knows the plains of Canada is aware that they rise in
-three tiers, the rise having a westward trend, and that the scenery
-of them varies as greatly as does the vegetation. Any one who has
-only been through the Canadian plains in the train is under the
-impression that, save for a bit of rolling country here and there in
-the distance, they are as level as a billiard table; and that, except
-that parts are cultivated and other parts are not, they look the same
-almost from start to finish.
-
-The moral is obvious. Do not suppose that from the train you can see
-even the surface of the world.
-
-This seemingly endless flat land, then, holds hills and gullies,
-rivers and lakes--everything indeed but trees. But what am I saying?
-There are heaps of trees in reality. Only they have a habit of
-concealing themselves, and {126} those who want to see them in haste
-should perhaps take a guide.
-
-There is more monotony in the towns of the plains, I think, than in
-the plains themselves. Not but what these towns must have
-differences known to their inhabitants. A man who lived in Moosejaw
-might conceivably deny that he could feel equally at home in Regina.
-A citizen of Regina would not dream of admitting that he could find
-his way blindfold about Moosejaw. Nevertheless all these little
-towns are singularly alike in construction. It is reasonable that
-they should be. They are all centres of a country engaged in a
-single great industry--the raising of wheat. Other things are
-raised, but in such small quantities, comparatively, that they do not
-count. And the people engaged in this great industry of
-wheat-raising are on a particular equality as regards the work they
-do, the leisure they have, and the tastes that result from the
-combination of that work and leisure. Some are richer, some poorer,
-some are wise, some foolish, but mostly they are working together
-pretty hard. The towns represent the places where they come after
-their work to bargain and be amused. Moreover, as I suggested in a
-previous chapter, the model for all other towns of the plains has
-{127} always been Winnipeg, and Winnipeg is the embodiment of the
-notion that a city may be a finer city than Chicago if it only tries
-hard enough.
-
-Architecturally, Winnipeg looks as though it always has allowed, and
-always will allow, for its own expansion. Other great cities have
-grown up anyhow, usually on lines that suggest that their greatness
-was thrust upon them unexpectedly. Winnipeg too has grown
-big--beyond all expectation one would have thought--yet it suggests
-in its lines that it never felt, even in those far-off days when Main
-Street was the Hudson Bay trail, that it would be anything but
-tremendous. Very likely it is an accident that Winnipeg did possess
-this power of expanding and Winnipegers did not deliberately foresee
-and provide for its future vastness. Be this as it may, the towns of
-the plains are not going to leave anything to chance. They are so
-planned, that when the time comes they will be ready to outdo
-Winnipeg. They rather expect to outdo Winnipeg. They even warn you
-that they will. Here is an example. I got out at some little
-station on the plains--let us call it Thebes. I don't think there is
-a Thebes in existence, but if not, it will come along soon, {128} for
-the classics as well as the Indian languages are being ransacked to
-provide names for Canada's thousands of new-born towns. I prefer the
-classical or Indian-named towns to those that bear hybrid titles like
-Higgsville. I saw at once that Thebes consisted of about twenty
-shacks and a store. It was all there, just outside the station, and
-beyond was level prairie again, with one or two farmhouses on the
-horizon--wooden boxes, like bathing-machines off their wheels to look
-at.
-
-I should not have been impressed by the greatness of Thebes, present
-or future, had I not, just by the ticket office, come upon a great
-placard, calling attention to a plan of the district marked off in
-square blocks in red and black cross lines. Beneath were two
-fanciful spheres, side by side, such as statisticians use--a large
-one marked Winnipeg, a smaller one marked Thebes: also, the following
-notification:--
-
- 'In 1870 Winnipeg had 240 inhabitants.
- In 1910 Winnipeg has 180,000 inhabitants.
- In 1910 Thebes has 74 inhabitants.
- How many will Thebes have in 1925?
- Buy a Thebes town lot.'
-
-
-It may be that the method is an American one, recalling that by which
-Martin Chuzzlewit {129} was persuaded to buy a lot in Eden city. An
-old-fashioned Englishman, straight from the old country, might even
-now be scared by it, and decide on the strength of it not to become a
-citizen of Thebes. He need not be scared. He can dislike the
-advertisement if he chooses, but he should bear in mind that by just
-such advertisements men were attracted to prosperity in the States as
-much as to adversity--even in the Dickens period--that real cities as
-well as sham ones were built up by them, and that anyway most of the
-Canadian land thus advertised is of an easily ascertainable value.
-He should remember, too, that a man nowadays, certainly in the new
-world, is not presumed to take every advertisement he sees as Bible
-truth. A smart advertisement, such as the Thebes one, is to a
-Canadian or American simply a proof that whoever it is wishes to sell
-Thebes town lots is a go-ahead person who clearly wants to do
-business, who probably knows how business ought to be done, who is
-likely to come to the point of doing it more quickly and ably than a
-man who won't even take the trouble to attract attention. No doubt
-the purchase of town lots is bound to be a speculative business.
-These little prairie villages may or may not become {130} Winnipegs.
-Of the particular chances a man must satisfy himself. That there are
-chances is a certainty; and the advertiser is only clothing that
-certainty in what he considers an attractive garb.
-
-I am very far from delighting in the 'plush of speech,' as Meredith
-called the language of the advertisers. Apart altogether from the
-fact that Canadians have not as yet learnt the art of understatement,
-the plush of speech is far too common in Canada. I suppose it was to
-be expected. Hard by lie the United States whose advertisers have,
-in a very few years, done more to blazon all the horrors of which the
-English tongue is capable than their great writers have done to point
-out its beauties. Their example has spread. So that in Canada, too,
-a barber's is announced as 'A Tonsorial Saloon'; a hat shop is 'A Bon
-Ton Millinery Parlour.' There may be some magic attraction in the
-words. The desire for a hat in the heart of a woman is not a
-definitely economic want; perhaps to be able to get a hat from a
-millinery parlour may strengthen that want. Only I know that
-speaking for myself, I would not willingly have my hair shortened
-oftener than was necessary, even if a tonsorial palace should be open
-to me for the process.
-
-{131}
-
-To go back to the prairie towns, their future is ever before them,
-and their citizens talk of them in the same proud, fond spirit as
-that in which a mother will discuss the career of the
-creature-in-the-perambulator, which for the ordinary person is too
-embryo to be distinguished as either a boy or a girl. Already, of
-course, the prairie towns are of all sizes, though you must never
-judge them by the size they are. Take Regina. It is a capital city,
-but the usual definition of a line--only reversed--best describes it.
-It has breadth without length. Its streets, which are called
-avenues, are astonishingly wide, the more astonishingly, because as
-soon as you start to walk along them they come to an end in prairie.
-I thought a notice which caught my eye as I wandered through the town
-rather characteristic. The notice was pasted outside a half-built
-block. It ran:--
-
-'These premises will be open by September 5.'
-
-It was long past 5th September, and those premises were not going to
-be open for some weeks to come. The roof was not on yet, and in fact
-I think the fourth wall had to go up. Still, when they were opened,
-they would be fine and solid. You could see that. It is the same
-with many of these western towns {132} themselves. Some day they,
-too, are going to be fine and solid, but they are not really open
-yet, though a good deal of business is being done, with the roof
-still, so to speak, off, and the fourth wall still to go up. On the
-outskirts of Regina, for example, there are some 1911 Exhibition
-buildings which look rather larger than Regina itself. That is
-enterprise.
-
-I stayed a whole day in Regina because I wanted to see the barracks
-of the famous North-West Mounted Police. It was a very hot day, and
-I was not sure where the barracks were, so I went into a hotel,
-partly to find out, partly to have a drink. The hotel was cool and
-pleasant, and after a little while a well-dressed gentleman came over
-and began chatting. We talked of various things, and then he asked
-me if I would not like to have my suit pressed for Sunday, as he
-would do it for a dollar. I said I should like it very well, but I
-had not time for it as I had to go out to the police barracks.
-
-'You don't think of joining them, do you?' he inquired with much
-disdain.
-
-'Why?' I asked.
-
-'You're a fool if you do,' he said; 'there's too much discipline
-about them. You spend {133} your whole time saluting every one you
-see if you're in the police. I know what it is. I was two years in
-the American Navy.'
-
-I did not inform the ex-naval clothes-presser that I'd rather belong
-to the police than press clothes, nor, indeed, did I waste any
-further time upon him, and I only mention him because he is one of
-the less valuable American types that find their way into Canada, and
-also because he was the only man I met who had a word to say against
-the mounted police.
-
-The sun can be very hot on the prairie, and it was very hot that
-afternoon when I did at last set out for a two-miles' tramp to the
-barracks. Nobody was walking that way except myself, and nobody was
-even riding. There was a fine dust about, and I needed brushing as
-well as pressing before I reached my destination. When I did get
-there, the courteous welcome of the second-in-command caused me to
-forget that the way had been long, or that anything greatly mattered
-except to hear about the North-West Mounted Police from the officer
-who was good enough to show me all round, from the horse-hospital to
-the prison cells. The latter were the least inviting part of the
-barracks, and I decided on the spot that if I committed a crime I
-would {134} not select the North-West of Canada for the scene of it.
-
-I doubt if Canada, or England, has anything to be prouder of than the
-North-West Mounted Police. Some of their deeds have been told from
-time to time--that of the mounted policeman, for example, who brought
-a homicidally-disposed maniac down hundreds of miles from the frozen
-country, saved his charge from frost-bite, and lost his own reason in
-the process; that of the corporal who went into the camp where
-Sitting Bull sat armed with all his braves about him, and gave him a
-quarter of an hour to clear over the border. But under a hundred
-less-known acts the same spirit has run--the spirit of the one
-representative of justice triumphant over incredible odds.
-
-'It's made possible,' said my guide, 'partly because we have men who
-regard every capture they're told off to make as a matter of personal
-honour, partly because people know that if a man commits a crime, we
-get him in the end. We go on till we do. Sitting Bull knew that if
-he killed our corporal we'd hang him and every man with him. So he
-went.'
-
-All kinds of men are represented in the mounted police, but this
-officer told me that the recruit they liked best to get was 'the
-{135} young man with blood in him,' from an English public school or
-university, as much as from anywhere; fond of riding and shooting,
-and not lost when he is acting alone hundreds of miles from
-headquarters. The district patrolled, remember, by five hundred men
-is not much smaller than Europe minus Russia. Wanting that kind of
-man, the authorities see to it that, in barracks at all events, he is
-comfortable, and very little in the way of the accommodation for
-these police could be improved upon.
-
-The most historic part of the barracks is that window through which
-Louis Riel stepped out--to drop with the rope round his neck. I was
-shown it hurriedly. It is the capture of their man, not his
-execution, that is these policemen's pride. Their record shows that
-almost always they take him alive, with no struggle--a strange thing,
-and one more proof of the reputation the police have built up for
-themselves. 'What is the use of struggling with these men?' seems to
-be the natural thought in the mind of the pursued; and no doubt much
-bloodshed is saved as a result of it. I learnt a lot of stray
-Canadian facts that afternoon. I learnt that the immigrants known
-under the somewhat vague heading of 'Galicians' are at present
-considered the leading {136} toughs, owing to their habit of using
-their knives at random. Galicians mean roughly all those who come
-from central Europe, and would, of course, include Letts. So that it
-is not, apparently, merely the climate of England that induces in
-these particular aliens a homicidal mania. It would be interesting
-to know the opinion of a North-West Mounted Policeman on 'the Battle
-of London.' Another thing I learnt was that a hundred miles a day is
-no unusual distance for one of these policemen to cover on horseback,
-and that of all the districts patrolled by them that in the
-neighbourhood of the North Pole is most sought after. They do not
-believe in English stirrups and girths any more than they believe in
-the British truncheon. They do believe in sobriety. The man with
-the drinking habit cannot continue, so I was told, a mounted
-policeman.
-
-As I walked back into Regina, I remember seeing in one of the
-principal streets a second notice which struck me as quaint. The
-notice was:--
-
-'Please do not spit on the side-walks.'
-
-The quaintness of it consisted in the last three words. 'Please do
-not spit' one could understand. I should like to see that notice up
-almost anywhere in Canada, since the habit it {137} deprecates is
-almost universal. It is worst, perhaps, in a smoking compartment,
-where it is difficult to get one's legs away from the neighbourhood
-of spittoons. I have sat for hours feeling all the emotions of the
-son of William Tell while the apple was still balanced on his head,
-and his father was in the act to shoot. But it is an uncivilised,
-unhealthy, absolutely unnecessary habit anywhere. That is why, for a
-public authority to suggest that it may be done, provided it is not
-done on the side-walks, is quaint. It should either be ignored or
-penalised. When one reads, as one does so often in the papers, of
-the ravages made by tuberculosis in Canada, it almost looks as if
-offenders should be penalised. Certainly they should not be politely
-requested to spit a few inches more to the left or the right. And
-why provide them with spittoons?
-
-
-
-
-{138}
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-IN CALGARY
-
-Alberta is at present the _debutante_ of the Dominion.
-
-Countries, like cities, used to grow up and, if we stick to our
-metaphor, 'come out' anyhow. It is true there were people called
-statesmen who had at times bright ideas concerning the commonweal
-which they tried to put into practice, and sometimes succeeded in
-putting into practice, with not unsatisfactory results. But the
-commonweal they had in mind was a limited one. It was not truly
-'common,' either in respect of the people whose weal was considered,
-or in respect of the weal it was desired to affect. Statesmen, in
-fact, thought usually only of a particular section or part of the
-population of their country and also thought only of a particular
-aspect of that section's welfare--usually either its soul or its
-prestige; very rarely its material prosperity.
-
-Things have not altogether changed. Things {139} don't. Statesmen
-still consider particular classes rather than the nation as a whole,
-and their notions of what weal means are still limited notions. But
-there is this difference. That aspect of the commonweal which can be
-referred to somewhat vaguely as material prosperity now bulks very
-large in their minds, and, as a result of it, the idea is beginning
-to prevail that not only can cities be planned before they are built,
-but that whole provinces can and should be encouraged to grow in
-certain thought-out directions.
-
-In the old world the new idea is likely to work slowly and somewhat
-obscurely. Cities and countries have already grown up there in the
-old-and-anyhow style; and grown-up things, like grown-up people, are
-not easily changed. In England, for example, we may think that large
-properties are a mistake; but they will not, with anything that can
-be called celerity, be turned into small holdings. So with our
-cities. There they are--fully grown and fully stocked with vested
-interests. The possessors of those interests cannot see in any
-proposed change the vast improvement that the non-possessors see in
-it. The most that can be expected in England in the immediate future
-is that, slowly and imperceptibly, certain {140} outrageous mistakes
-of the past will be remedied, and that where new developments are
-essential, they shall be the result of ideas, rather than of
-confusions. The Town-Planning Bill is, I imagine, a case in point.
-The most conservative people are beginning to see that in itself an
-idea is not a vicious thing and may even produce a good result.
-
-In the new world (and perhaps in the German Empire too) the notion of
-planning the future of town or country instead of leaving it to luck
-is having much swifter and more demonstrable effects. On the
-Canadian plains, as I have pointed out, towns are being laid out
-largely with an eye to their future. The same thing is being done
-for the countryside. It, too, is being planned with an eye to its
-future. It is not growing up just anyhow; it is being made to grow
-in particular directions.
-
-How much this is the idea of statesmen, of the public officials, that
-is to say, of the Dominion; and how much it is due to the managers of
-private companies and enterprises, historians will some day be able
-to decide. I incline to the view that at present the big railway
-companies represent far the most influential force in Canada, and
-that they, without any of the outward paraphernalia of office, {141}
-are deciding what Canada is to be for a good many years to come.
-
-Naturally they work from what may be called the railway point of
-view. Their notion of a Canadian commonweal takes the form,
-therefore, of a country in which a settled and prosperous population
-lives along the lines of the railroads, and is so distributed that
-there shall be no uninhabited spaces through which the running of
-trains will cease to be a paying proposition. There are bound, of
-course, to be some intervals of the kind. The highlands of Ontario
-form such a gap in the system of the Canadian Pacific Railway. That
-gap is not easy to fill: Alberta is.
-
-A few years ago Alberta was far from being a profitable country
-through which to run trains. Cattle-ranching maintained the thinnest
-of populations, and the leagues of sunburnt plains east of Calgary
-seemed to offer few chances to a more numerous class of settler. Any
-one who had prophesied then that they would shortly be crowded with
-wheat-farmers would have been laughed at. But they are being
-crowded, comparatively crowded, now. And the credit for this must be
-given those who started the Bow River irrigation works. No doubt
-there are other reasons for the rise of Alberta. The {142}
-discoverers of new wheats have helped it; so have the American
-farmers who, by spoiling the land across the line, created a demand
-for new land. But the irrigation works are the main factor, and when
-the Octopus, as the Canadian Pacific Railway is not uncommonly
-called, is had up for judgment, these and many other of their
-achievements will help them to make a stout defence. True, it is
-their own land they are irrigating; it is passengers and freight for
-themselves that they want to secure; but, whatever the motive, they
-are advertising and causing to be populated and cultivated hundreds
-of square miles on either side of their own particular land which
-might otherwise have lain waste for many years.
-
-It may be said--Where is the plan in this? Where is it any different
-from the schemes of any railway country in the old world. The
-difference is that in the old world as a rule the railway company
-follows trade, and runs only through populous parts where that trade
-is to be got; whereas in Canada, railway companies lay their lines
-through the desert, so to speak, and then start to fill it in an
-orderly and profitable manner. Alberta at present is being planned
-into existence. It is not booming simply on its own merits, great
-though these {143} may be. It lay fallow for many years. For all
-one knows, other parts of Canada may have more of a future. But they
-are not being boomed as Alberta is, because the time has not yet come
-when they must, in the opinion of the railway companies, be filled in.
-
-The need for the filling in of Alberta is one of the reasons why
-Calgary has sprung up so quickly. A few years ago Calgary had no
-future to speak of. Men not as yet middle-aged, can remember camping
-in Calgary in tents. There was only one place to dance in, and
-ranchers used to take turns at entering it. Now Calgary is a
-stone-built town of solid appearance, and still more solid
-importance. Like so many other Canadian towns, it is more important
-than it looks. It looks bustling enough, but hardly important.
-There are no buildings of a size to take the eye. The hotels are
-singularly inadequate. They are not only not comfortable enough for
-their guests, but they are not large enough. I had occasion to visit
-Calgary twice within a week, and each time I got the last bed in a
-different hotel, and tried to be thankful for it, but did not
-succeed. I suppose that prosperity has overtaken it at such a pace
-that it has not had time as yet to consider its responsibilities.
-{144} A town which permits one of its best hotels to place three
-double beds in one bedroom--and perhaps as many as nine guests in the
-three double beds--may already be great, but it has not realised its
-greatness.
-
-Calgary differs from the prairie towns which lie between it and
-Winnipeg, in that it is not really a prairie town, but a town on the
-edge of the prairie. It looks at the mountains; and it is built of
-the grey stone that is found near by; the Chinook winds that sweep it
-and make its climate comparatively mild, are mountain winds; and it
-stands on the Bow River, which is a mountain river, swift and clear,
-and blue with the blue that is melted from snowfields. This is none
-of your turbid streams like the Assiniboine or the Red River. All
-rivers must run to the plains at last, but the Bow River does not
-seem to belong to them, though it feeds them more than most. In the
-old days Calgary, such as it was, owed everything to the hills. The
-cattle-ranchers settled round there because the Chinook winds,
-scatterers of the snow, made outdoor grazing possible for their
-cattle during months when Manitoba and Saskatchewan were deep in
-frozen drifts. And since it was just at the foot of the mountains,
-the miners in the mountains {145} used it as a supply centre. It is
-still a centre for ranchers and miners; but its real importance is
-that it has become the headquarters of that prairie which produced
-once, perhaps, half a ton of hay to the acre, and now yields the
-finest wheat in the world. If any statues are to be put up in the
-town--and it would be as well to wait for a native sculptor of
-talent--they should be the statues of the men who constructed the
-irrigation works.
-
-Later on, but this is a smaller matter perhaps, I should like to see
-a statue put up to the man who will make it possible for the bars of
-Calgary to be allowed to remain open between the hours of 7 P.M. on
-Saturday, and 7 A.M. on Monday. At present they are shut during
-those hours, which means, I take it, that Calgarians, if admitted,
-would drink more than was good for them. The person therefore, to
-whom the suggested statue should be raised, would be the man who made
-the Calgarian attitude towards the drink question more civilised. I
-know that the problem is not peculiar to Calgary or to Canada. It
-may even be that Canada for a new country does more to solve it than
-most. I recollect than when I got back to England, one of the first
-things that caught my eye was an {146} interview given to a local
-paper by a leading Hertfordshire man, who had also just returned from
-travelling through Canada. He assured the interviewer that, having
-been from end to end of Canada, he had never once seen a man the
-worse for liquor. It must have been a delightful, but perhaps unique
-experience. I had not his good fortune, and having talked with many
-decent Canadians, seldom fanatics, and rarely indeed total
-abstainers, who nevertheless deplored the prevalence of the drink
-evil in the West, I cannot think that that Hertfordshire traveller's
-happy blindness is a thing to be imitated. Drink takes another
-form--perhaps a less vicious one--in a new country; but it ruins more
-good men than it does in an old one.
-
-
-
-
-{147}
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE AMERICANISATION QUESTION
-
-There is vague talk at times about the Americanisation of Canada.
-Very dismal people talk about its Americanisation by force of arms.
-Minor pessimists think the change will come about peaceably. How can
-the Canadians--they ask--continue to assert themselves for ever
-against the constant influx from the other side?
-
-Monsieur Andre Siegfried, in that most lucid and excellent book, _Les
-Deux Races en Canada_, considers this question a little, but the very
-fact that he has called the book _Les Deux Races en Canada_, shows
-that he considers the question premature. The two races he treats of
-are not the Canadians and the Americans, but the French Canadians and
-the Canadians who are not French. Certainly these two peoples are at
-present, and must for a considerable time to come, be considered the
-two main races of the Dominion. They {148} are still for all
-practical purposes separate without being hostile; and it is quite
-possible that one of these may Canadianise the other before any real
-Americanisation makes itself felt. Should the French Canadians get
-the upper hand, it is pretty certain that American influence would
-get a set-back of perhaps centuries. Yet English writers as a rule
-never seem to consider this contingency. Perhaps if they did, they
-would begin to think that they would rather see Canada Americanised
-than Gallicised.
-
-Still the Americanisation may happen, and it is at least an
-interesting possibility. Let us consider the task that lies before
-the Americans. They will have to absorb--
-
-(1) The French Canadians.
-
-(2) The Canadian born, who are not French.
-
-(3) The English who have immigrated.
-
-(4) Foreign immigrants; _e.g._ Scandinavians, Galicians, Italians,
-Doukhobors--all that strange assortment of people who have flowed in
-from the poorer countries of Europe.
-
-The Americans themselves represent at present only a small fifth in
-this conglomeration of nations. Still, they have this in their
-favour, that they start in while Canada is still an unfixed nation.
-French Canadians--a small {149} third--only number about three
-millions. Non-French Canadians about the same. The whole population
-is under ten millions. It may in fifty years be ten times that
-number. So that anything may happen.
-
-Meanwhile, many effective American influences are at work. Their
-order of effectiveness is not easy to define, but when one considers
-their representatives of business enterprise, capital, journalism and
-farming at work in the country, one can see that the Americans are
-likely to go far.
-
-What is their present value to the Dominion? Take American farmers.
-They are an undoubted gain to Canada in so far as they possess
-energy, capital, a knowledge of the local conditions, versatility and
-adaptability. I hardly know if it is an example of their versatility
-or their adaptability, but as soon as they cross over the line,
-American farmers who were Tariff Reformers instantly become Free
-Traders. It is not, of course, that they have adopted nobler
-principles in their new country. It is merely that, having become
-Canadians, they have now to support Canadian manufactures, and pay
-more for their farming machines and shoddy clothes. Naturally they
-think tariffs a mistake.
-
-{150}
-
-Setting aside for a moment this political elasticity as of doubtful
-value, Canadians may still wonder if the American farmer is all gain
-to them. Is it an objection, for example, that the American
-introduces the purely commercial spirit into farming? Not entirely.
-Not certainly so far as love of gain induces promptness and
-enterprise. It is, however, an objection if it destroys that love of
-the land which causes the English farmer to stick by his farm,
-generation after generation. Perhaps American farmers have not that
-land love in any case. If they had, they would not have crossed the
-line. In most cases, they have crossed it to make money--more money.
-It may be argued that the English farmers come further for the same
-purpose, but that is not really the case. English farmers who come
-are mostly men who were tenants, and find themselves either not
-making money or expecting to have their rents raised if they do. Or
-they are the sons of farmers who have not the capital to start
-farming in the old country, or cannot get the land. The American
-farmer is usually quite ready to admit that he is in Canada to make
-money, and his enemies will admit for him that though this ideal may
-lead him to adopt new methods {151} of farming which are good, it
-also induces him to adopt that very old method of farming which
-consists of getting all you can out of the land, putting nothing into
-it, selling it to a fool and moving on to fresh land--which is a bad
-method. Any one who is acquainted with the States at all, knows how
-at present people there are awakening to the viciousness of this
-practice. All their papers and speakers are full of the wastefulness
-which Americans practised in the last century thinking it to be
-smartness. Fine land, they say, was spoilt by it; forests were
-annihilated; water supplies were overdrawn; people were made
-restless. It was getting rich quick at the expense of posterity, and
-it bred in Americans a nomadic spirit, and an imprudence in
-considering the future, which has become a menace.
-
-Canadians cannot altogether condemn the American farmer, for just
-these methods spoilt so much of the land in Ontario; and only now are
-their farmers beginning to improve on them. Still, they would do
-well to indicate to American farmers that they are welcome only as
-improvers and not as wasters of the new country. The trouble is to
-give an effective indication of that kind. Settlement of the land is
-still reckoned, especially by the {152} railway companies, as the
-first of virtues, covering a multitude of sins; though even they, I
-think, are recognising a little that the English farmer, whose aim is
-not an immediate fortune, but a home which he can retain for his life
-and hand over to his children after him, is not to be scorned as he
-was a few years ago. The ready-made farms, made possible by the
-irrigation work of the Canadian Pacific Railway, are the chief
-example of the attempts made to draw the Englishman. 'We hope,' said
-one of the Canadian Pacific Railway officials, speaking a few months
-ago before the London Chamber of Commerce, 'that the Englishmen on
-these farms will leaven the lot.' A few years ago, compliments of
-that sort were not being offered to the English farmer in Canada.
-Probably he was not so good a type as comes in now. But it is to be
-remembered that the English immigrant has always had more adaptations
-to make than the American. To the American from the northern States,
-Canada is the country he is used to--only a little more north. The
-Englishman finds a new soil, new climate, new manners, and new
-methods. I should say that man for man, the English farmer knows at
-least as much as the American about farming, and {153} a great deal
-more than the average Canadian. But when he goes out to Canada he
-has to put this knowledge behind him and learn afresh--a difficult
-thing for a conservative race. The American can hold on to what he
-knows and simply go ahead. The accident of birth has given him a
-fine start over the Englishman.
-
-The same advantage belongs to other Americans in Canada. Business
-men, capitalists, journalists have only had to cross a non-existent
-line, instead of an undeniable ocean. When Canadians complain that
-Englishmen take no interest even in those Canadian schemes for which
-they have found the money, they forget that capitalists cannot always
-be close to their investments. I repeat, the Atlantic is not a thing
-to be denied, nor is it fair to call the English mere moneylenders
-because they have not always personally accompanied their loans. At
-least they have shown themselves trustful of the men on the spot.
-
-Nevertheless, I think that Canada has every reason to be grateful for
-the able business men whom the States have sent her. That negro
-porter at the Niagara Hotel who said that Canadians were a stupid
-people, and would have done nothing without the {154} Americans, was
-taking rather a spread-eagle view of the facts. Still there is no
-doubt that American brains have been--and still are--of great service
-to Canada; nor can I see that they can be charged with Americanising
-tendencies. Business men are nearly always cosmopolitan in their
-achievements, whatever their motives may be.
-
-It is rather different with American journalists. They can hardly as
-yet be charged with being citizens of the world, and where their
-influence penetrates, an American trend is noticeable. They are
-beginning to leave their mark in Canada. Canadian papers are
-numerous and creditable, but an American atmosphere broods over them.
-The most trivial incident is magnified by headlines, which repeat
-three times over in large type and increasingly pompous language all
-and more than all that follows in the news space. I am not talking
-of the best Canadian newspapers but of the average ones. If their
-methods are American, so very largely are the matters they deal with.
-In some small up-country Canadian journal one will find the leading
-columns occupied with the account of some dinner given, say, by Mrs.
-Van So-and-So of New York, wife of the Coffin King, {155} with full
-accounts of the costumes, menu, etc.,--wearisome and vulgar matter,
-staringly of no interest whatever to the bucolic readers of the
-journal in question. But it was all very cheaply wired from the
-States: whereas news from England would be costly in the extreme.
-The result is that Canadians--in spite of their local sagacity--are
-at least as ignorant of the things that happen in Great Britain and
-Europe as we are of what is happening in Canada. Often I have felt
-while the Canadian-born were talking to me of the 'Old Country,'
-talking of it too, not only in a loyal, but a fond and even wistful
-manner--that they had in their minds a picture of it that would
-probably have fitted England better in the fourteenth century than it
-does now. A poor, worn-out, tottering old country is what they are
-thinking of; and nothing would amaze some of them more than to see
-modern England as it is.
-
-Why should they have got this idea into their heads? Largely, I
-suppose, because the new with them is necessarily best. The old
-things were put up anyhow by men in a hurry and they are always
-superseded by better things. The very epithet 'old' connotes badness
-to a Canadian. Then, again, it is a {156} country of young men, and
-young men are apt to favour youth, which they hardly associate with
-England. No country--not even Spain--can be as antique and
-ramshackle as many of them undoubtedly believe England to be.
-Birmingham and Manchester are on paper such very ancient cities
-compared with Regina and Moosejaw that the untravelled Canadian
-thinks pityingly of the former; whereas he considers the latter
-infinitely up-to-date and important, and would be hurt to know that
-we have in England hundreds of little prosperous country towns very
-like them, of which the ordinary Englishman hardly knows the names
-and, if he did, would think no more of than he would think of Regina
-and Moosejaw.
-
-I would not seek to minimise that Canadian pride and optimism which
-finds such satisfaction in everything that they build. Pride and
-optimism are valuable assets to any country. All I would suggest is
-that they should realise that the English habit of grumbling and
-self-depreciation does not indicate that all Englishmen live in a
-tottering old realm, doing nothing but decay and grumble.
-
-Here we come back to newspapers. Most people derive their facts from
-newspapers nowadays, and if Canadians find that everything {157} of
-importance happens in the new world, whereas in the old world nothing
-happens except an occasional sensational murder or the deposition of
-a third-class king, they cannot infer that Europe is still an
-important continent, and that perhaps the most important country in
-it is England. What is to enlighten them? I suppose the receipt of
-more news from Europe.
-
-Probably the All Red Cable would do much in this direction. News has
-to be cheap or it is not news (the converse proposition that news if
-it is cheap must be news, is not true). Much also might be done by
-private enterprise. English publishers could do more to push their
-wares. So could English magazine proprietors. Most of the books and
-magazines one can get in a hurry in Canada are American. English
-Cabinet Ministers might now and again make a tour in the Dominion and
-explain to Canadians some of those political principles in which at
-home they have such fervid belief. It may be that the Americanising
-tendency is too strong for any of these suggestions to be of much
-avail in combating it. Reciprocity treaties between the States and
-Canada may inevitably result in closer union, though I never could
-feel that it was a marked human characteristic to pine for
-fellow-citizenship with the man whom {158} one supplies with bread in
-return for a reaping-machine. Trade relations may result in that
-mystic fraternal sentiment by which nations come together, though
-hitherto in the world's history men have never shown any very frantic
-desire for a heart-to-heart intimacy with their tradespeople.
-'Utility, Reciprocity, Fraternity' sounds rather a cold cry by which
-to rally two great people together.[1]
-
-
-[1] This chapter was written before the Reciprocity business flamed
-forth. I return to the subject later.
-
-
-When all is said and done, and there are a hundred other pros and
-cons which might be considered, the chief obstacle to the
-Americanisation of Canada is climate. Canada is north and America is
-south; and those two show less inclination to rush together than even
-east and west. Of course it is not extremes of north and south that
-are represented in the two countries;--along the boundary the
-climates are not dissimilar. Yet it seems to me that while Canada is
-bound to be mainly a country of northern peoples, Americans are fast
-becoming more and more southernised, I do not mean in the old sense
-of becoming languid and effeminate and semi-tropical, but
-southernised in just the same way as the French from being Norsemen
-have become southernised. Have {159} you seen prints of old Paris
-when it was a Gothic city? If you have, you will realise the
-completeness of the change that has come over it. It spreads itself
-to the sun now, faces to the Midi, and some such change might easily
-come over New York, Chicago, and the rest of those at present
-northern cities. Already the typical American is far from being the
-son of a grim and dour Pilgrim Father. Rather he is lively and
-energetic--with a temperament always on tiptoe--logical and apt to be
-materialistic, yet sentimental and passionate too. You find such a
-temperament among the French and Italians of northern Italy. It is
-the sun working on them. Even the stolid German and the moody
-Scandinavian feels it when he gets to the States, and thaws--into an
-American.
-
-It is not so in Canada. The northern immigrants there remain silent
-and frosty, though the touch of fortune makes them perhaps more
-genial. Canada will never become a southern country, even though its
-northern parts are rendered temperate by the cutting down of timber
-and constant ploughing. No, I think Canadians will remain a hardy
-and somewhat dour race, slow-moving on the whole, but industrious and
-virtuous, suspicious of talkers and hustlers; so suspicious, too, of
-free {160} thought and new morals as to lay themselves open maybe to
-the charge of hypocrisy; given at times to self-distrust and
-self-depreciation, but for the most part steadfast, and holding in
-their hearts the belief that there is no place like Canada and no men
-like the inhabitants thereof.
-
-In short, they are as likely as not to end by becoming Anglicised.
-
-
-
-
-{161}
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-AMONG THE READY-MADE FARMS
-
-There was a time when Englishmen got a very bad name in Canada. It
-was not to be wondered at. For a long time English youths, who came
-to be known as Remittance Men, used to be shipped out by relations
-anxious only to get rid of them. These helped to create an opinion
-that Englishmen were more remarkable for their drinking than their
-working powers; and when to them was added shipload after shipload of
-unemployables from yet lower classes, Canadians began to get
-impatient of English immigrants. It was not logical of them to
-suppose that these were favourable specimens of our working-classes;
-it is never logical to suppose that the best men of a country are
-ready to leave it. Logic, however, is difficult to insist on under
-these circumstances, and though there were plenty of Englishmen even
-then, and even more Scots perhaps, who were obviously as good as any
-farmers on the {162} prairie, the bad name of the English clung to
-them. That is all, or nearly all, changed now; and the project
-connected with those farms, which came to be known in the English
-papers as the Ready-made farms, proved that the Canadian Pacific
-Railway Company at any rate, which is the biggest landowner in
-Canada, was ready to welcome English farmers to the land, if they
-could get the right sort. Readers will perhaps remember that the
-idea of the company was to provide farms ploughed, irrigated, sowed,
-and furnished with house and out-buildings, into which English
-colonists, having been handed the front-door key, could
-enter--straight from England--as well equipped almost as settlers who
-had lived there for years. The purchase money was to be spread over
-a certain term, after which the land would become the property of the
-farmers.
-
-The plan saves all that intermediate period during which the ordinary
-homesteader has to set up his shack, sink his well, and generally
-unsettle himself over the tedious work of settling in. Good farmers
-are not necessarily born pioneers; and since the prairie in winter,
-when work is slack, does not show a very hospitable climate to
-new-comers and those unaccustomed to it, it generally happens that
-{163} the English immigrant has to waste the spring and perhaps the
-whole working season in the unremunerative business of settling in.
-The Ready-made farms were intended to save all this time and trouble,
-and they were at once filled--in the spring of 1910--by specially
-picked men from the old country. The men were not all necessarily
-farmers, but they were, hypothetically, at any rate, men of
-intelligence and grit.
-
-I wanted to see how they were getting on after six months of this new
-life on the prairie. For that purpose I took train from Calgary with
-a friend, back along the line to Strathmore, which is forty miles
-east, and is the station for Nightingale, as this first colony of
-ready-made farmers has been named. Strathmore itself is not
-peculiarly beautiful or peculiarly interesting, though it has a
-demonstration farm which is. We went over the demonstration farm
-with Professor Eliott, its manager, who struck me as one of the
-keenest and most interesting men of the West. What he does not know
-of the productivity of the prairie is probably not worth knowing; and
-his experience seems to be at the service of any farmer who has the
-intelligence to apply for it. He showed us his barns and splendid
-teams of horses and leviathan oats, and the little trees which he has
-planted {164} in this country where it was thought no trees would
-grow, and which he believes will change the face of it in a few
-years. We were full of the future of the prairie when we got back to
-Strathmore, and put up for the night in the last bedroom of the one
-and only hotel. The two of us were lucky to get that last bedroom
-containing a double bed to ourselves, for more often even than in
-Calgary six people sleep in such a room and are very glad of the
-accommodation. So I was told. It shows how things move in Alberta;
-what a hustle there is upon the country.
-
-We tossed for the bed, and I got it, and the other man took two
-blankets and the floor. I slept very well, especially after a
-mounted policeman came in and threw out two gentlemen next door who
-were, as the hotel boy tersely put it, 'seeing snakes together.' My
-friend slept less well. The room was small, not much bigger than the
-bed, and we could not get the window to stay open. It had not been
-constructed with a view to admitting fresh air. Still, after
-breakfast in a dark chamber, where about thirty guests of every
-profession and clothing (but all land-seekers) ate in silence, we
-started pretty fit for Nightingale in a two-horse rig.
-
-{165}
-
-I wish I could describe the prairie. Harvesting was over, so that in
-any case the leagues of golden wheat which you read about in
-advertisements were not visible. It was another kind of monotony
-altogether that we drove through--a kind I cannot begin to suggest
-the charm of. It was a kind of bare, rolling, sunburnt country, with
-a high sea-wind blowing through it, and waves of dust and an endless
-sky. Intensely wearisome or intensely refreshing it must be,
-according to a man's temperament; and going there from trees and
-hills must be like changing from a room with patterned paper to one
-with whitewashed walls. And then the soil, light and fertile,
-stoneless, ready for the plough--the farmer wants no variety of that.
-
-We drove fourteen miles, as far as I can remember, to get to
-Nightingale, and it was all bad driving. Alberta seems to want roads
-badly. In the old ranching days roads mattered less. The prairie
-was a ready-made riding country, and nothing was produced or needed
-that could not, so to speak, go of itself across country. 'I never
-owned a plough the seventeen years I was there,' a retired rancher
-told me proudly. 'It was a fine country then.' But it is a fine
-country now, too, and going to be finer still when it has roads. At
-present even {166} the roadways are changing. Once you could go
-everywhere. Now from day to day a new farmer takes up a new piece of
-land, and what was the road is enclosed by a wire fence.
-
-One of the most inspiriting farms we passed was that of a man who had
-been out from Cheshire only three months. He was now a chicken
-rancher--kept fowls, as we say; and in his brief occupation had got
-up--off a quarter block--eighty tons of hay, besides winning
-thirty-eight prizes at Albertan poultry shows. This would seem to
-show that Alberta is not yet rich in pure bred fowls. The Cheshire
-chicken rancher said he hoped to show the people round what a good
-table bird ought to look like. He was already a Canadian in all but
-accent. May he prosper!
-
-After talking with him we drove on again towards Nightingale in the
-same sea-wind along the same bad roads. The sameness of the country
-was amazing; nor should I have known in the end that we had come to
-Nightingale but for the man driving us. 'See that avenue?' he said.
-'The shacks standing along that are the farms. It seems more
-sociable being along a road.' 'Certainly,' I said. So it is more
-sociable to live along a road, provided you know it is a road. I
-{167} didn't, but the colonists did, and that was the main thing. We
-found those we visited apparently contented and undoubtedly hopeful.
-Canada has the gift of making men hopeful. Though it had been in
-this part a very poor year, owing to drought, and though the
-irrigation had not been properly ready (but accidents will happen,
-and the company was charging only a nominal rent as a result of this)
-the farmers seemed as cheery as they would have been dismal in
-England. The crops had been poor, but they would do for
-chicken-feed. A bumper year was a sure thing some time or other.
-The future held no clouds. They were going to study Canadian methods
-suited to the country. I rubbed my eyes. These sentiments were
-being enunciated by an English farmer, who was meanwhile giving us a
-most hospitable English lunch. He was going to tell more people to
-come out. It was the finest farming land possible, once you get the
-water on it. Only one must take local advice how to run things. It
-was no good standing out, and knowing better than people on the spot,
-as one of the colonists was doing. He, I gathered, was the only man
-regarded as likely to do badly, being determined to stick to the
-methods of his English forebears. His leading {168} wrongheadedness
-was in declining to believe that the winter was going to be or could
-be as long and as hard as people said, and he had not got in half the
-food needful for his cattle.
-
-I suppose, but for that winter, the prairie would be the most
-sought-after country in the world. But for that winter, however, it
-would not possess the amazing friable soil it does. As has been
-remarked, one cannot have everything all the time. The winter is
-very severe, and there should be no disguising of the fact, nor
-indeed any exaggerating of it. Formerly its hardships were no doubt
-exaggerated. People had no use for a hard winter. Nowadays leisured
-people go in search of it--on the understanding, however, that it
-shall be made easy for them. They would like it less if they had to
-work in it in a below zero temperature, twenty or thirty miles from
-anywhere. I do not say that work under such conditions should or
-would disgust healthy and energetic men, provided they were prepared
-for it. It might even delight them. But it should be prepared for.
-English farmers in particular should be made to understand the
-drawbacks as well as the advantages of the new land they are going
-to. Honesty is in fact the best {169} emigration policy. Given
-that, it is tolerably certain that these transplanted English farmers
-are going to find it more than worth while to have settled in
-Nightingale or any of the newer prairie colonies, and what is
-more--Canada is going to find it more than worth while to have them
-settled there.
-
-
-
-
-{170}
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-INTO THE ROCKIES WITH A DEFENDER OF THE FAITH
-
-For several days I had seen the Rockies far off--a black and jagged
-coil of mountains, that seemed at times almost to be moving like some
-prehistoric great scaly beast on its endless crawl across the plains.
-Now I was to see them near by--some part of them at least. What has
-any man seen in that ocean of mountains but a few drops?
-
-At the unpleasing hour of 3.30 A.M. I disengaged myself from one of
-the three double beds with which my room in the hotel was furnished,
-washed slightly, dressed completely, and walked to the station.
-Calgary was quiet at last. There had been a sound of revelry by
-night. A man with a tenor voice had been singing songs in some
-adjacent room to the hotel up to 3.30. But his songs and the vamped
-accompaniment to them had ceased now, and peace prevailed. I don't
-{171} remember to have passed any one on the way to the station.
-There were two or three sleepy-eyed people lounging about there;
-there always seem to be a few in Canadian stations, no matter what
-the hour. I think they must be out-of-works who keep their spirits
-up by listening to the squeaking and clash of shunting trucks, and
-the letting off of steam, and the great clang of the bells that are
-sounded from the engines as a trans-continental train comes in--all
-those sounds of life and hustle that are dear to the Canadian soul.
-
-[Illustration: MOUNT LEFROY. CANADIAN ROCKIES.]
-
-The train I was waiting for entered slowly with the usual peal of
-bells. All the blinds were drawn in the sleeping-carriages; and the
-only sign of life from them was the protruded woolly head, here and
-there, of a negro car conductor. I think I was the only person who
-got in.
-
-'What a lot of people,' I said to myself as I sat down in an empty
-smoking compartment, and shivering lit a pipe, 'would envy the
-prospects of a man about to spend days and perhaps weeks in the heart
-of the Rockies.' 'What a lot of people,' myself replied to me,
-'would see the Rockies further before they got out of bed at this
-unholy hour.'
-
-{172}
-
-My pipe held the balance between us and gradually soothed the
-rebellious part of me. It was still too dark to see anything, and
-there was nothing to be done but wait patiently for the dawn. I
-could not but regret that I was missing the scenery of the foothills,
-for which those who have lived among them seem to have a peculiar
-affection. But I was consoled by the entry a little later of two
-fellow-passengers, who had evidently been disturbed in their sleep
-and wanted smoke and conversation. Strange and various types one
-sees in a Westbound train. The West is still--even to the Canadian
-born--the Unknown and the Happy Hunting-grounds and Eldorado and
-Ultima Thule and the Blessed Isles. West is where the farmer's son
-of spirit goes to seek fresh lands, where the prospector goes to find
-gold, where successful men go because they want to be more
-successful, or maybe because they want to retire and enjoy
-themselves, and they have heard that West there is a climate which
-hardly includes winter, and has none at all of that fierce break-up
-of winter which makes the plains in parts trying to the toughest
-constitution; where the failures go because they have tried all other
-places, and the last is {173} West. All sorts of other men may be
-seen going West too--bank clerks and lumbermen, commercial travellers
-and engineers, tourists and politicians, trappers and amateurs of
-sport. But I never saw a more strangely assorted pair than these two
-men who came into the smoking compartment where I sat as the train
-mounted the foothills.
-
-One was a very old man. I do not know what his profession was, but
-his clothes and himself were equally weather-stained and dirty. He
-had the coarsest snow-white hair hanging in cords about his neck and
-cheeks and mouth, which gave him the appearance of a vicious old
-billy-goat. He was, I discovered, a moderately vicious old man. The
-other was a lumberjack--hardly more than a boy, sturdy, and
-strikingly handsome, with the clearest blue eyes and a complexion
-that a woman would give a fortune for. The old man--as they came in
-together--was already engaged in telling the young one what you might
-call a backwoods smoking-room story, and he went on with others even
-thicker, over which the young one betrayed the hugest amusement.
-What particularly won his laughter and admiration was the fact that
-so elderly a person should enter into such topics with {174} so much
-zest. I can still hear him repeating, 'There ain't many fellows as
-old as you, Daddy, that 'ud be such sports. No, sir.'
-
-And the old man would grin and chuckle at the compliment, and become
-more highly improper in the warmth of the boy's praise. He became
-indeed so elevated by it--especially after the boy had got up once or
-twice and executed a brief step-dance to mark the exuberance of his
-delight--that, thinking to gain even more glory by being still more
-startling, he dropped the subject of women and took up that of
-religion. It seemed he was an atheist of the old three-shots-a-penny
-variety, and he went for Christianity hot and strong. He had, it
-must be admitted, a perfectly skilled command of the old cheap
-arguments, and marshalled them in good order. Only, the unexpected
-happened. The boy, who had not minded being boyishly wicked, was
-plainly shocked by this new thing, and he said so in language so warm
-that a minister of the faith he was defending would have felt
-positively faint to hear it. The old man, surprised and still more
-annoyed, brought out further iconoclastic arguments, excellently
-directed. It is true any theologian could have warded them off
-easily enough. Any {175} debater could have. But it was clear that
-the boy had never argued in his life. That didn't matter. He was
-not going to sit there and listen to that sort of thing. He got
-indeed quite hopelessly confused; intellectually he was tripped time
-and again; he deferred with a lamb's innocence to the old man's
-boasts of having perused Persian literature, Hebrew literature, all
-the books that have to do with Buddhism and Zoroastrianism (I am
-afraid I did not believe any of this); he allowed that so much
-learning and thought must be a fine thing, but not an inch did he
-yield of his creed. And the more the old man got at him with
-arguments the more sulphurous grew the boy's language. I have never
-known so queer a Defender of the Faith as that lumberjack--or in a
-way a more successful one. His manner was childlike, his words
-unprintable; he made a muddle whenever he attempted to follow the
-simplest of the old villain's inferences. Yet never the least shake
-could his opponent give him, and his dogged reiteration of the
-statement that 'A man by ---- could only stick to the ---- faith that
-he had, and Daddy was a ---- fool to think his that ---- arguments
-made any difference'--wore the old free-thinker out in {176} the end.
-He did not give in, but he gave up: a wiser but, it is to be feared,
-not a better old man.
-
-Meanwhile we were getting into the hills, and my first impressions
-were rather of great rocks than of mountains. Most people, I
-suppose, come upon the Rockies first from the east, and they seem
-tremendous if only for the reason that one has come upon them after
-days spent in those plains which, even while they rise, rise
-imperceptibly. But tremendous as they seem from the east, they must
-be far more so from the north, and far more beautiful from the west.
-On the east the mountains have less height than on the north. Their
-timber is poor by comparison with the trees that grow further west;
-their valleys have little of the luxuriance of the Pacific valleys.
-One feels a certain coldness and hardness about them, and after a
-little while there seems almost a monotony of corrugated peaks, all
-thrown together and slanting eastward. They are striking enough even
-so, and the view from the train, especially when one considers that
-railways are run through mountains by the easiest route not by the
-finest, and that grades have to be counted before landscapes, cannot
-disappoint anybody.
-
-[Illustration: A TRAIL IN THE ROCKIES]
-
-{177}
-
-Comparisons with the Alps and the Himalayas should be kept till the
-Rockies have been seen at closer quarters. The finest view I ever
-had of the Rockies was from a mountain in the Selkirks, at a height
-of over ten thousand feet, and over a hundred miles from the nearest
-railway. There I forgot to make comparisons, which after all are
-somewhat useless. It is easy to say that the Alps are softer and
-more pictorial--showing that deep blue sky above their snows, which
-is rarely if ever to be seen in the Rockies. The Canadian skies are
-too lofty and distant ever to seem to be resting even on the topmost
-snowfields. The Himalayas again have giants unparalleled.
-Kinchinjunga, leaning out of the clouds, cannot be matched among the
-Rockies. But the Rockies--well, the Rockies are different. As yet
-we are only just getting to Banff.
-
-
-
-
-{178}
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-A HOT BATH IN BANFF
-
-Everybody stops at Banff. The popular places of the world are not
-necessarily the most beautiful; and even if they start beautiful,
-they are not rendered more so by the accretion in their midst of a
-large number of even first-class hotels. Perhaps first-class hotels
-increase the feeling for beauty. Indeed the sole defence of luxury
-worth consideration is that it has this effect. Without luxury,
-would there exist such an appreciator of beauty as d'Annunzio, to
-name but one? Pardon, I am getting away from Banff.
-
-It is a very beautiful watering-place at the foot of mountains. It
-is not spoilt yet, and it will be difficult to spoil it. The air is
-superb. I learnt that just as I was getting into it on my way from
-the station. I seemed to be the only person walking into it that
-morning--except for a local Canadian who was going in to his work.
-It was still very {179} early in the morning, and distinctly cold,
-and I said to this Canadian workman:
-
-'It's pretty cold at Banff.'
-
-'It's the finest air in Canada,' he replied, with that characteristic
-touch of resentment of anything that might be taken as a criticism of
-his native heath, which every Canadian invariably shows. 'Yes, sir,
-it's the finest air in Canada, and they're putting down concrete
-sidewalks.'
-
-He was, as a matter of fact, engaged in that work himself, and after
-I had expressed a proper admiration of it, he became friendly enough
-and directed me to the hotel I wanted to stay in.
-
-I wish it had not rained at Banff while I was there. It was an
-unusually cold and early rain, and it prevented me from seeing many
-of the sights of the place. The motor boat, which as a rule runs
-several times a day up the Bow River, did not run at all while I was
-there, and so I did not see this lovely valley. Nor did I take much
-stock of the buffaloes of the National Park, which are one of the
-greatest features of Banff, one that tourists with cameras always
-make for first. Rain was the reason of my abstention. On the other
-hand, the rain was the immediate {180} cause of my spending a most
-delightful afternoon in a hot sulphur swimming-bath. There are three
-such baths in Banff, and I chose the upper one, walking two miles up
-a winding road, whose woods were beginning to show all the reds of
-autumn, to get to it. I found that it was an open-air bath, fed by a
-sulphur stream that trickles steaming down the face of a mountain,
-and since no one had been tempted there on so gloomy a day, I had it
-all to myself, and swam up and down in water that varied from 110 deg. to
-95 deg. for an hour or more, looking at the hilltops opposite, and the
-mists that rose and sank about them. The rain and the cold mattered
-nothing so long as I swam there, wondering if luxury could go further
-in this world of ours. For there I was lapped about with all the
-warmth and peace that come to the beach-comber or the lotus-eater,
-and yet drinking in the brisk mountain air and feeling the challenge
-of the hills. It was to combine the emotions of a man climbing the
-Alps with the emotions of a man squatting in a Turkish bath; and only
-when the latter threatened to become rather the stronger of the two,
-did I get out, feeling weak but fresh. I had the pleasure while
-dressing of reading in a printed advertisement {181} of the baths
-that I had been curing myself of rheumatism, sciatica, asthma,
-anaemia, insomnia and, I fancy, any other disease I might happen to
-have latent. Certainly I felt well and uncommonly drowsy when I got
-back to the hotel. Indeed those who intend to explore Banff with
-energy would be well advised to postpone the baths till their last
-day. There is plenty to explore. The National Park alone is 5400
-square miles in extent, and encloses half a dozen subsidiary ranges
-of the Rocky Mountains; and if Banff is to be regarded as the centre
-for mountain climbing, fishing, and big game hunting, there is of
-course no end to it. Guide-books mention in a vague way that it is
-such a centre--which only means that if you want to do any of these
-things from a highly civilised and comfortable hotel, you had better
-make Banff your stopping place. Good climbing is to be had quite
-near, but whether the same is to be said for shooting or fishing
-depends upon whether anything short of the best in these matters is
-good. You cannot expect fish and big game to remain centralised.
-Particularly is this the case with big game. They avoid the centre
-of things, and prefer to keep on the circumference. In these sort of
-matters {182} guide-books are very little use. Nowhere do conditions
-change more rapidly than in Canada, and the man who wants big-horn or
-big trout will have to make for the circumference too. But there he
-will neither expect nor find first-class hotels.
-
-Speaking of first-class hotels, I took part--quite an unwilling
-part--in an incident that goes to show some of the difficulties
-attendant upon trying to run them in Canada. Frankly, except for
-those run by the Canadian Pacific Railway, there are practically
-none. It is not to be wondered at. Cookery is an art, like
-literature or music, not greatly encouraged in a new country. Take
-waiters again. Though the wages they make are good and the standard
-of waiting expected from them is rarely the highest, I believe they
-are a perennial difficulty to hotel proprietors. On the trains and
-in the big towns in the East one usually finds that the waiters are
-Englishmen not long out; and they are so not because they have
-acquired the science of waiting in the old country (as one might
-suppose, since it is usually well learnt there), but because they
-have not as yet acquired that Canadian spirit which makes anything
-savouring of domestic service--or even of undue courtesy as from man
-to {183} man--distasteful to the Canadian born, who, in any case,
-dislikes working for uncertainly long hours. Englishmen, it has to
-be admitted, are not particularly zealous for long and uncertain
-hours of work either in these days; and therefore it generally
-happens that as soon as the newcomer is the least acclimatised, he,
-too, drops waiting if he has taken it up. In the East a freshly
-arrived immigrant takes his place; but in the West there is no such
-constant supply of spare white men. The result is that Western
-hotels are more or less driven to employ as waiters either women or
-Japanese and Chinese boys.
-
-The hotel I stayed in at Banff had a staff of the former. Heaven
-knows we have women waiters enough in England, but in Canada I do not
-think heaven can know.... As soon as I came in to breakfast in the
-morning I became aware of a sharp-featured maiden with eyeglasses and
-tight lips and stiff white cuffs--very much the type of the Girton
-girl in the older times--who was clearly in charge of the room, and
-meant to let every one know it. I shrank down at the nearest table,
-and in a hushed voice requested and received my breakfast from one of
-the waitresses who were theoretically in attendance. She was very
-kindly, {184} only she brought me tea instead of coffee. I wanted
-coffee. I felt it was taking a risk, but as a man at his breakfast
-usually prefers his own fancy to other people's, I looked about
-delicately to see if I could catch my waitress's eye and induce her
-to change the pot. By bad fortune I merely caught the eye of the
-sharp young lady who, coming up and learning from my unwilling lips
-that I had been given the wrong drink, said imperiously:
-
-'Kindly tell me which of the girls gave you this!'
-
-Now I had not particularly noticed the girl who had been good enough
-to help me--an inexcusable carelessness--which the sharp young woman
-evidently interpreted as a desire to fence with her, for while I
-hesitated she went on:
-
-'I'll tell you why I want to know. There's some game on this
-morning----'
-
-'Oh,' I said, 'yes.'
-
-'And I'm not going to stand it,' said the sharp young woman fiercely.
-'I fired two of the girls yesterday, and I don't mind if I fire the
-lot, so if you'll tell me which of them brought you this I'll see to
-her straight away.'
-
-'I'm afraid I should not know her again,' I said hastily. A scene of
-strife around my {185} unlucky person, while breakfast got cold and
-all the other guests at the other tables looked on, was terrible to
-my fancy. The sharp one seemed most disappointed.
-
-'I wish you could,' she said. 'I'd fix her right now.'
-
-'Quite impossible,' I murmured, hoping that I was speaking the truth.
-Not so far off there was a young woman, standing chatting genially
-with two men at another table, who might have brought me that tea.
-
-'Oh, well, of course if you can't,' said the sharp one, and presently
-brought me coffee with her own fair white-cuffed hands. I thanked
-her warmly, and she went away; after which I was rewarded for my
-supposed chivalry by the young woman who had been entertaining those
-other two men coming up to me and saying in a sweet voice:
-
-'I say, I'm awfully sorry that I brought you that tea instead of
-coffee. The fact is we're awfully rushed this morning.'
-
-'Not at all,' I said, 'don't think of it,' and hoped inwardly that
-she would go away before the sharp one spotted her and bore down upon
-us. She did not seem so rushed as she had said.
-
-'Sure you won't have anything else now?' she persisted in the
-kindliest way.
-
-{186}
-
-'No, thank you,' I said, and seeing, I suppose, that I was not an
-entertaining person, she flitted gracefully away to a third table
-where another male sat, to whom I heard her whisper in passing--on
-the way to further chat with the other two men:
-
-'Now, mind you don't forget to meet me outside the hotel at six
-sharp!'
-
-My sympathies almost went out to the sharp-visaged spinster, for
-really there were quite a number of guests looking about them for
-food while the rushed staff chatted freely and pleasantly with such
-male visitors as seemed by their bearing to be worthy of being
-fascinated. This at breakfast-time--breakfast-time when an
-Englishman at all events wants food and would not be put off by the
-conversation of Cleopatra or Helen of Troy. Canadians may be a more
-gallant race at this hour of the day, but I am not sure of this. The
-preponderance of Japanese waiters as one gets further West seems to
-point to the fact that even they prefer food--at meal-times--to
-sentiment. The Japanese may demand high wages, and leave their
-places suddenly if they feel like it, but at least they do not
-threaten one with an emotional scene over one's morning coffee. Nor
-do I imagine that they require to be treated by their {187} employers
-with quite that reverential respect of which I remember seeing an
-example in a small hotel in the Columbia Valley. I was stopping at
-the hotel over Sunday with a friend, and as we wanted to go out for
-the day, we asked the manager if we could be supplied with some
-sandwiches for lunch. He was a mild and obliging young man, but his
-face fell.
-
-'I'll--I'll see what can be done,' he said, and I heard him go to the
-young lady who vouchsafed to wait at table occasionally in a superior
-way. 'My God!' I heard him say in an extremely humble voice to her,
-'I'm most awfully sorry to ask such a thing of you, but these chaps
-want to go out and take some sandwiches. I say, do you suppose it
-could be managed?'
-
-We got two sandwiches each as a result of his intercession, and in
-that mountain air we could have done with six times the number. But
-we realised from the manager's face when he brought them to us that
-the goddess who had provided them might, instead of doing so, have
-stalked straight out of the hotel for good.
-
-
-
-
-{188}
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-CANADA AND WOMAN
-
-Few books are complete nowadays without a chapter on the woman
-question. Man can be treated of in between; one would not as yet
-care to write a book without mentioning man in it. As a subsidiary
-agent for keeping the world going man is still not without his
-importance. But woman, as I have said, must have a chapter to
-herself. And since I unwittingly arrived on the last page at the
-subject of woman's work in Canada, I will pause--even on the
-threshold of the mountains--and go further into the matter.
-
-The most noticeable thing about woman in Western Canada is that she
-has not yet arrived there. If any one wished to get an idea of how
-the world would arrange itself supposing there were no women in it at
-all, they would have to go a little further north and west, into some
-of the British Columbian valleys or into the Yukon country, and look
-around.
-
-{189}
-
-What a simple world it seems. No clothes question, no washing, the
-simplest cookery, one man one plate (and that plate never washed),
-one knife for eating with or for skinning a grizzly bear, no carpets
-or curtains in the houses, no dustings or spring-cleanings, no
-knick-knacks to knock over or break, no flowers without or within
-except such as grow wild, no luxuries, in short, either to enjoy or
-to pay for, and a terrible amount of dirt. That is the physical
-aspect of the world without women.
-
-The spiritual side of it is less easy to arrive at. These bachelors
-you see in the backwoods are a silent people, lacking in
-self-consciousness, and, I daresay, in manners, but law-abiding and
-amiable and peculiarly handy. All men are handy who have not women
-to steal that talent from them; and most womenless men are silent
-too. One knows, of course, that bores may be found among men at
-times, but never chatterboxes. There is something to be said for the
-view that speech arose by women putting questions so often that men
-were driven, in sheer weariness, to make answers.
-
-Does it seem an unattractive life that these hardy bachelors have
-perforce to live? Perhaps. But you will not find them bemoaning
-{190} their lot. That is not the way of bachelors. We know they are
-to be pitied, but they do not pity themselves. Seriously, the
-trouble with these men is that they have none of those inducements to
-consider the future which make a man better than a machine. They
-take the world as it comes, which is well enough for themselves but
-not well enough for the world. I doubt if it is well for themselves
-really. True, they have nothing to worry them so long as they are in
-health. They can make big money when they choose and take holidays
-when they choose, conscious that when their money is spent they have
-only to set to again. Their wages are indeed to them little more
-than trinkgeld--and this means that those splendid workers have no
-real reward for their work, leave no successors to carry on the
-traditions of their toil, enrich only the bar-keepers and the rogues
-who live on the folly of honest men.
-
-Clearly the most honourable opening for women in Canada is marriage.
-Only wives are capable of putting down the drink curse, preventing
-the growth of a particularly odious plutocracy, establishing a
-permanent instead of a nomad population in the West. Nor might it be
-a bad thing (but for Anglo-Saxon {191} prejudices) if provincial
-governments there could start marriage offices, due attention being
-paid to eugenics. Even in so small a matter as the following, the
-presence of wives should make all the difference. All down the
-Columbia valley I found the cattle ranchers, who were bachelors,
-drinking tinned milk, while scores of cows ran wild and went dry.
-When I asked if it wasn't worth while to keep one cow milking, I was
-always told, 'No, we haven't time to bother about it,' till I came to
-the shack of a married Swede, whose wife had time to bother about it.
-In his shack tinned milk was anathema, as it should be everywhere.
-
-As prejudice would undoubtedly prevent the formation of governmental
-marriage offices, marriage can only be considered as an indirect
-opening for women. What are the directer openings? A great deal
-depends on what part of Canada immigrant women make for. In the East
-there is no such lack of women as in the West. The sexes are fairly
-balanced. In the big towns there is the usual demand for domestic
-servants, but not many more openings for educated Englishwomen than
-there are in big towns at home. There are a few more, because those
-cities are going at a faster pace than our English cities, and
-because all work there is {192} more valuable than in England. Women
-skilled in the arts that have to do with personal decoration, such as
-millinery, dressmaking, etc., could make their way there.
-
-Factory work in Canada is hardly worth going into here, the chief
-point about it being that wages are of course higher; nor did I
-notice any unusual professions engaging the attention of women,
-unless it were the checking of parcels and the playing in hotel
-orchestras, neither of which requires a man's strength.
-
-[Illustration: THE HALT. LAGGAN.]
-
-French Canada offers employment to but very few. Western Canadians
-sniff at the Habitants because they let their women work in the
-fields; haymaking and hoeing. But the idea of using women as outdoor
-workers is not so uncivilised as it looks to those unaccustomed to
-seeing it. Ethnologists are agreed nowadays that the tribes in which
-women do the fieldwork are not the least but the most civilised, and
-maintain that the position of women among such tribes is higher than
-among any others. Women began to work out-of-doors because the
-primitive peoples believed in a connection between their fertility
-and that of the earth; and where they do such work, women are always
-the keepers of the grain store--hold in their hands, that is to say,
-the {193} food upon which the life of the tribe depends. The most
-honourable primitive customs are not always the best in modern times,
-but there can be no doubt of the fertility of the French Canadians.
-
-As one goes West, woman becomes more of an indoor creature; and this
-may be due to the greater chivalry of their men folk. But one has to
-remember that the great charm of Canadian life, especially on the
-prairies, is an outdoor charm--working in the exhilarating air--not
-cooking over a hot stove indoors. One hears of a few cases in which
-women have taken up farming or vegetable-gardening and made a success
-of it, but no one could honestly say that the fortune awaiting women
-who take up such work is usually a great one. The work is too hard,
-especially in the winter time. Chicken-ranching is perhaps easier;
-but the real demand in the West is for women to do that housework
-which the men have not time for. At such work capable women can earn
-from three to five pounds a month with board and lodging; and while
-they are likely to find it rather harder--certainly not less
-hard--than similar work at home, it has compensations besides the
-money to be made by it. For one thing there is none of the odium
-that attaches {194} to it in the older countries. The cook is as
-good as her employer, who probably did the cook's work for years
-before the cook was to be had. It is natural that the work which
-most ladies have to do for themselves, because neither love nor money
-can obtain them substitutes, should lose its menial and unpleasant
-aspect, and the finest ladies in western Canada do it unashamed.
-Often their guests will help them to wash up, and even prepare the
-dinner. Personally, I found myself becoming quite expert at cleaning
-fish for a hostess who thereafter cooked it and dished it up, and yet
-appeared at table as fresh and elegant and apparently leisured as any
-lady who keeps a staff of servants in the old country. And I found
-as I got on that I rather liked cleaning fish.
-
-It stands to reason that the lady help is not wanted. The precise
-duties demanded of such a lady are always a little misty, but I
-imagine that they include a little sewing and a little reading, the
-ability to chat pleasantly, to be good-tempered (and possibly a
-Protestant), to feed the canary, and, at a pinch, even to clean out
-its cage. None of these talents are needed in a new country, and I
-heard of forty women who were on the books of an employment {195}
-office in Calgary, all wanting to be lady helps and all likely to go
-on wanting it till Doomsday.
-
-One hears a good deal of discussion (not in Canada) of the openings
-in the colonies for educated women. There is an English
-committee--the Committee of Colonial Intelligence for Educated
-Women--which, 'recognising the crying need of our colonies for the
-best type of educated women,' undertakes to furnish them with
-detailed, practical and up-to-date information, before advising them
-to go out. This committee hopes later on to found settlements in the
-colonies, where training, suitable to the needs of each colony, can
-be given, and centres can be formed to which the girls can return in
-the intervals of employment. There is much sense both in the
-recognition of the need for educated women in the colonies and in the
-perception that the most educated woman will be lost there unless she
-is prepared to be practical. The truth is that that same
-adaptability which is required of men in Canada is required of women
-also. They must first suit the country before they can hope to leave
-their mark on it. Educated women can leave their mark there by their
-inward, not by their outward, superiority.
-
-Centres to which the girls can go in the first {196} place, and to
-which they can return in the intervals of employment, are an
-excellent idea, and one which central or local government authorities
-in Canada would do well to support. Of course the Young Women's
-Christian Association already gives much help in this direction, but
-it cannot be expected to have branches everywhere. New towns and
-settlements are planned and put through very quickly in Canada, and
-wherever they result in creating a demand for women's work, some such
-centre for girls as near the railway depot as possible should be
-started. For one thing it would facilitate the engagement of girls,
-for another it would attract a better class. Probably the best
-openings of all for women in Canada--educated women, I mean--are in
-the big cities of the furthest West. In Vancouver and Victoria
-wealthy people reside who can afford to pay for such luxuries as
-private school-mistresses and governesses. And the supply of women
-is not so great there. Women also seem to be more employed there as
-hotel manageresses and under-manageresses, and as cashiers in hotels
-and offices. I never heard of women being real estate agents, but in
-a profession in which the arts of persuasion play a leading part,
-there seems no reason why they {197} should not shine. Of bachelor
-girls, living their own lives, I have also never heard in the West.
-They could hardly have the hearts to do it with so many bachelor men
-wasting their lives around them.
-
-On the whole, the position of woman in Canada is one of honourable
-toil lightened by the high consideration in which they are held.
-They have hardly as yet obtained that dominant super-man eminence
-which American women are said to occupy. That is, perhaps, because
-they have not gone in so much for that culture and social
-fastidiousness by the lack of which in themselves some American
-husbands are made to feel their inferiority. On the other hand they
-seem to keep their men folk contented, and remain contented with
-them. Divorce is, I believe, uncommon in Canada.
-
-
-
-
-{198}
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-THE LAKES AMONG THE CLOUDS
-
-Who thinks the Rockies only of a forbidding magnificence, of a
-grandeur always dark and fierce? Let him go to Lake Louise. The
-only phrase I know that fits it is that German one--_maerchenhaft
-schoen_--lovely as a scene of fairyland. Coming upon it suddenly, on
-a moonlight night, it seems so unlooked-for, so exquisite, that one
-says to oneself, 'Surely it will vanish like a dream.'
-
-[Illustration: LAKE LOUISE, LAGGAN, ALBERTA]
-
-It is quite a little lake, shut in for the most part by hills. The
-hills are wooded at their base, and wooded high up--wooded, indeed,
-right into the clouds; but higher still they turn to bare walls of
-rock or snow-strewn peaks, where the snow and the flowers grow side
-by side. Up among the heights other little lakes lie--the Lakes in
-the Clouds, they are called--and sometimes they are in the clouds and
-sometimes not, and they are coloured like thick opals and moonstones,
-and you can see {199} the tall, slim firs growing at the bottom as if
-they were real trees and not only reflections. I think it is the
-colours of these lakes that are so fairy-like. People may say of the
-Rockies that they never give the contrast of white snow-fields and
-deep blue sky that is so marked in the Swiss and Italian Alps, but
-what of that? The colours they do yield are, in truth, far more
-delicate and varied--perhaps because the Canadian skies are so much
-loftier and farther away--and, if you do not believe it, go and look
-at the waters of Lake Louise. They are distilled from peacocks'
-tails and paved with mother-of-pearl, and into them rush those wild
-blues that are only mixed in the heart of glaciers.
-
-Across the end of the lake stretches the hotel garden--green turf
-crossed by one great border of Iceland poppies, golden and orange,
-fringing the water front. One other plant I should have liked to see
-growing there--the opal anchusa. Its colour is so exactly the colour
-of the lake, in sun and in shadow. Still, more colour is hardly
-needed anywhere round Lake Louise. As I have said, the very snows
-are gay when you get to them, and pied with flowers, as old English
-meadows used to be when old English poets used that word, before
-{200} scientific farming came in and determined that flowers were
-weeds and killed them. And I had thought of these valleys as black
-and frowning, full of melancholy noises among the trees, rather than
-windless and radiant.
-
-The station for Lake Louise is Laggan, and the time to arrive there
-is in the evening, just before the moon rises. It does not matter if
-the drive up from the station is accomplished in the dark. The road
-is wooded and beautiful, but do not wish for the moon till the last
-bend of it leads you suddenly on to the lake. Then wish for the moon
-hard. Or, if you want to make sure of it, and the moon (though it
-seems always magical in its uprising) follows laws like other things
-and will not rise unless it is due to, make cold calculations some
-time ahead, and be sure they are right. There never could be
-anything better worth timing than moonrise on Lake Louise.
-
-If the poppied air that was fabled to pervade certain lovely places
-in the old world hung about this region, there would be no coming
-away from it. You would remain gazing drowsily for ever at the lake
-like the lover on the Greek urn that Keats described. But all around
-are the mountains which distil an air keen and exhilarating, so that
-before you know {201} it you are set walking, or riding or
-climbing--in some way adventuring forth. Some people adventure forth
-in a carriage, but that is rather too like going out to battle in
-evening clothes.
-
-Myself, having but two days at my disposal--which I could very well
-have spent looking across the Iceland poppies at the lake--was urged
-by the air and a sense of duty to take a long walk the first day and
-a longish ride the second. For this second expedition I hired a
-mountain pony and decided to reach the Moraine Lake, which lies at
-the end of The Valley of the Ten Peaks. It was my first experience
-of a Rocky Mountain pony, and I will state at once that it was an
-unfavourable one. There exist, no doubt, a few excellent mountain
-ponies. I bestrode one or two later in different places. But this
-first one was so dispiriting that he warped my mind concerning the
-whole breed. The truth is that mountain ponies, being intended for
-the average tourist who seems to be not much of a rider, are both
-bred and trained to go no faster, and exhibit no more spirit than a
-bath-chair man. Not theirs to trot or canter, even if a smooth
-stretch of road present itself. Enough if they move steadily up
-mountain trails and along mountain {202} ledges and down precipitous
-tracks in a manner designed to make the tourist feel that mules are
-stumbling creatures by comparison. Enough in one way but not in
-another, for to emulate a baser creature corrupts the best-bred pony
-in the world. Ponies have that much of humanity in them. Besides,
-it is not worth while to breed the best ponies for such work; and,
-further and anyway, a mountain pony is, so to say, a contradiction in
-species. A pony as much as a horse is a creature of the plains;
-place him in the mountains and he becomes something
-different--scarcely a pony at all. He is then an animal that picks
-up his feet in a marvellous way, is free from mountain sickness and
-the faintness that comes from high altitudes, and carries a pack or a
-person on his back. But he is no longer the friend of man. He is
-merely the tool of the tourist.
-
-We started downhill--that pony and I--directly after lunch.
-Words--words--words. I mounted that pony directly after lunch. The
-road led downhill in the first instance. I tried to start the pony
-in that direction. That is a truer description of what actually
-happened. But after I had got his head set towards the Ten Peaks
-Valley, he slewed it round again. We had not by any means {203}
-started. 'He is frightened of the hill,' I thought to myself, and
-redirected his head, encouraging him with words and reins. I had no
-whip. The owners of these hired mountain ponies seem to think whips
-unnecessary, and, indeed, they are very little use. I tried one cut
-from the roadside some five minutes later. We had by that time made
-about a hundred yards. I beat him also with his own reins and my
-heels, and we accomplished about a quarter of a mile downhill, going
-delicately. I said to myself, 'Patience. The descent will soon be
-over. The road then rises. We shall see a different animal.'
-
-What I saw when we came, by sideways and prolonged efforts, to the
-first part of the ascent, was that, greatly as that pony hated a
-down-hill grade, far more did he loathe an uphill one. We mounted it
-at what seemed to be a mile an hour or less, and I groaned to think
-that we had eight or nine to accomplish before we got to the lake,
-and the same in returning. By late afternoon I judged we had made
-the half distance and were still going weakly. I had cut two or
-three different sticks by now, and encouraged the pony with different
-words from those I had used at the start. He woke up once or twice
-and trotted for a moment. {204} The road was not really steep for
-most of the way; where it was steep I walked, dragging the pony
-behind me. He did not seem to mind whether I was on his back or off,
-provided no motion was required of him. I found it was cooler work
-to get off and pull him than to propel him from the saddle. Always
-he stood still for choice.
-
-The road was good--good underfoot and good to observe from. On our
-left lay a broad valley, and on our right the hills. I should love
-to have paused voluntarily and absorbed the views, but in point of
-fact I only paused in passion to cut whips; the pony, meanwhile,
-grazing. He knew the road to the Moraine Lake better than I did, and
-he contested every inch of it.
-
-I think I was aware long before the Ten Peaks came into sight that I
-should not reach the lake that day--or perhaps ever; but I was
-determined that I would at least see where it lay, though the sun set.
-
-We came within sight of it at last. Before then the Ten Peaks had
-come into line one by one till there they stood, ten white peaks all
-in a row. At their base I thought I saw the lake lying, very still
-and cold among its ice-worn pebbles.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS.]
-
-{205}
-
-If I did not see it, if it was but a mirage, I do not greatly care.
-I achieved something more that afternoon than the mere sight of a
-lake. I got that pony back to the hotel almost in time for dinner.
-I was pretty stiff in the arms. It was not to be wondered at.
-Hauling a pony nine miles is no light work.
-
-
-
-
-{206}
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-A SOLITARY RIDE INTO THE YOHO VALLEY
-
-Emerald Lake is beautiful, but less beautiful, I think, than Lake
-Louise. It is more like a lake among mountains, and less like a lake
-in a dream. I went to it because I wanted to get into the Yoho
-Valley, if only for a day, and the trail from Emerald Lake into the
-Yoho is, I had heard, the most picturesque of all. Even
-superficially to see the valley takes four days, and I had left
-myself with only one, so that it was in a deprecating spirit that I
-asked the manageress of the lake chalet if I could at least get
-within sight of the valley and back before dark. She said that if I
-started at two o'clock punctually, on a pony, the thing could just be
-done. I said that I had tried one or two mountain ponies, and did
-not care about them when I was in a hurry.
-
-[Illustration: ON THE TRAIL, YOHO VALLEY.]
-
-'Oh, but I'll give you a slicker,' said the manageress. 'You see
-there's no run on {207} the ponies at present, and I'll ask the man
-to give you his very best. He'll just get you there and back in
-time.'
-
-I thanked her and said I would try the slicker; and, half an hour
-later, the slicker and I were skirting the wooded shore of the
-Emerald Lake at what was, for a mountain pony, quite a fast trot. We
-were alone together. There were a few guests at the chalet, but the
-lateness of the season and the snow-clouds that loomed on the horizon
-had deterred any of them from starting on the Yoho Valley trip that
-day. Earlier in the year, there would have been quite a party riding
-together with a guide in the direction I was taking, for there are
-four camps in the valley, placed at picturesque points an easy day's
-ride apart, where you may rest and sleep, one night beneath a
-waterfall, the next on the edge of a glacier, with the ponies
-tethered round, and the camp-fires crackling pleasantly, so that you
-feel that you are pioneering, but pioneering luxuriously.
-
-But now, as I have said, it was late in the season, and the
-snow-clouds were holding themselves in the sky ready for further
-attacks, and a keen wind was beginning to rise, so that no one else
-thought the Yoho Valley {208} tempting enough, and it was certain I
-should have it all to myself if I got there.
-
-The trail was not difficult to follow. There, at the end of the
-lake, was a mountain pass visible from the chalet, and the thin white
-line that screwed about among the rocks and trees was the trail. The
-slicker trotted. He trotted through the wood that borders the lake;
-he trotted through a wonderful pebbled valley beyond it which might
-have been a sea beach (only everywhere slim spruces, like sharp,
-green, tenpenny nails, grew out of the pebbles); and he trotted up
-the first stretch of trail leading to the pass ahead of us. Then for
-an hour or more the slicker climbed as steadily as a Swiss guide.
-The trail was less than a yard wide and metalled with rolling stones,
-and though it wound continually, its most generous spirals left it,
-to my fancy, almost sheer. We wound with it, past boulders and
-hanging trees and little cataracts that shot through air from some
-invisible lips of stone above--between shadowy crags and over
-unprotected places where the sun glared. In the end the slicker
-brought me to the pass itself, and we rode into a dark wood there,
-and the trees grew bigger and bigger, and the trail grew stickier and
-stickier, and the {209} pass ended suddenly, and below, far, far
-below, was the Yoho Valley.
-
-The story of the boy who cried 'wolf' when there was no wolf is a
-familiar one, but much more familiar in everyday life is the story of
-the man who cries 'lion' when there is no lion. You know him and you
-don't believe him. You know that, moved by the immoderate enthusiasm
-which is the chief qualification for the profession of writing, he is
-doing his level best to make you believe that the object he is
-presenting to you is a lion, for the simple reason that if you
-believe it, you will be more attracted by it and him. Canada, being
-a much-advertised country at present, is full of lions. 'The finest
-view in Canada. Yes, sir.' How often I heard that remark! How
-often it turned out to be an overstatement. How distrustfully I came
-to listen to it.
-
-Was it, then, that for some months I had imbibed the Canadian air,
-that when I reached the Rockies I too was carried away, and became as
-immoderately enthusiastic as any Canadian? I do not know. I merely
-have to confess that I was carried away, that I have already cried
-'lion' more than once, and that I must do so once again now that I
-have got to the Yoho Valley. Baedeker saves his own dignity--and
-{210} that of literature--by using an asterisk at these critical
-points, or two asterisks if his emotions are very poignant. But I,
-who have to fill paper, must use words. Well, I am not afraid of
-exaggerating the beauties of the Yoho. This valley of enormous trees
-spiring up from unseen gorges to wellnigh unseen heights; of
-cataracts that fall in foam a thousand feet; of massed innumerable
-glaciers; this valley into which it seems you could drop all
-Switzerland, and still look down--is not easily overpraised. The
-difficulty is to praise it at all adequately.
-
-It seemed to me as I rode on along the high trail that sometimes
-edged out to the gulf below and sometimes swerved back from it, that
-one of the wonders of the valley was a thing that in smaller places
-would have made for disappointment, and that is that it lies, and
-always has lain, outside the human radius. It has none of those
-connections with men that set us thrilling in other parts. No
-Hannibal ever led his army by this route across these mountains. No
-hardy tribesmen watched the approach of an enemy among its crags, or
-bred among them a race of mountaineers. No gods dwelt on its
-heights, and no poets ever came near to sing them. History {211} has
-nothing to tell of it. Little hills and little valleys have their
-stories and their songs, their memories and their miracles. They are
-haunted still with those forgotten mysteries which stir men's fancies
-more deeply than things remembered or discovered can. This valley
-walled about with mountains has been above and beyond men's ken from
-the beginning of the world: and now that men have come into it, they
-find nothing to discover in it except its vastness and immunity from
-the touch of men. It strikes one even now as not only devoid of
-human adjuncts but needless of them. A man no more looks for legends
-there than he would look for them in the centre of a typhoon.
-
-I suppose that men did pass through it--even before the valley became
-a known part of the world, and even a sight for tourists. It was
-not, as the phrase goes, untrodden by the foot of man. A few
-prospectors must have passed this way from time to time many years
-ago. Some may have died there for all one knows. Indian hunters,
-too, would enter the valley in pursuit of game. But no one possessed
-it; no one gave it the human air: or, if they did, the records are
-lost. Prospectors tell us only of their finds, nothing {212} of
-their lives. Of the Indians, some one someday may, perhaps, find
-some traces. At present their white brothers are little troubled by
-them or their history or their origin. Canadians are content to
-think of them as a primitive, decaying people who came from God knows
-where to a country they never realised was God's. It will be easier
-to forget them than to understand them, these strange men with faces
-no more expressive than wood, who, if they ever came to the Yoho
-Valley, must have passed through it more like trees walking among the
-trees than like men that stop and wonder, and leave a habitation and
-a name.
-
-Shadowy, disregardable creatures, then, as uninfluential as the
-slicker and myself, may have roamed the valley in times past and left
-no more traces upon it. We two realising, I trust, our minuteness
-and unimportance, went on, as it turned out, far beyond the point
-intended for our afternoon's excursion. In contemplation of the
-valley I had given the slicker the rein, and he, poor pony, no doubt
-thought that he was bound for the first camp, there to rest the night
-in the ordinary course. Presently I found him, his two front feet
-planted firmly together, sliding down the {213} slipperiest piece of
-trail we had yet encountered, sliding and sliding till we had got to
-the very bottom of the valley--whereupon I discovered that we had
-indeed attained the first camp.
-
-It was a queer, unexpected sight--a few little lean-to tents and a
-couple of log huts, standing side by side on a flat piece of the
-valley floor, just beyond the spray of a cascade that dropped from
-ledge to ledge of the mountain opposite, starting so high up that it
-seemed to spring from the sky. The place seemed deserted, but while
-the slicker and I paused to look about us, out of the biggest tent
-there came a small, silent, yellow figure. It did not speak to me,
-but only stared, and I, having stared back for a little and having
-wondered if it were some gnome peculiar to the valley, suddenly saw
-that it had a pigtail, and remembered that I had been told that there
-was a Chinese cook in every camp.
-
-'Is this the first camp?' I therefore asked.
-
-'Yup!'
-
-'Can you give me some tea?'
-
-'Yup!' he repeated, and vanished into the tent whence he had come.
-
-By the time I had tethered the slicker on the grassiest spot I could
-find, that boy had {214} tea ready. He stared at me while I ate it,
-stared at me when I paid him for it, and stared at me when, having
-offered the slicker some bread and sugar in vain, I remounted him and
-set him on the homeward trail. I had not a watch with me. But it
-was evident from the position of the sun that we had very little
-daylight left for the return ride. Dusk, indeed, came on just as we
-reached the other side of the pass, with a mountain side still to
-descend. Dusk and an exceedingly cold wind--in the face of which
-that corkscrew trail seemed doubly steep. It was one of those
-occasions when vowing candles to one's patron saint might have added
-to one's peace of mind. But I have no patron saint and could but
-give the reins to the slicker, and he rewarded me for my trust by not
-falling down till we had actually accomplished the descent and were
-on the pebbled beach. Then, in the pitch-dark night, we both rolled
-over together. A match, lighted with difficulty, revealed the fact
-that neither of us was injured; and so, very steadily and cautiously,
-we moved on to the chalet, where we arrived to find dinner finished.
-But we had seen splendid things, the slicker and I.
-
-
-
-
-{215}
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-THE FRUIT-LANDS OF LAKE WINDERMERE
-
-It would have been harder to leave the Rockies if I had not been
-bound for the Selkirks, which have this advantage over the Rockies,
-that they are perhaps less known. That part I was bound for is,
-indeed, not known at all to tourists, and very little known to
-anybody. The known part of the range lies round Glacier House, and
-includes Mount Abbott, the Great Illecillewaet Glacier, Mount Sir
-Donald, etc., which high places the railway has now made accessible
-for tourists who can climb. The part I was to see lies to the
-south-east, at the head of the Columbia Valley, and is at present a
-hundred miles from the nearest railway station.
-
-First of all I took train to Golden. If you take a map of Canada and
-follow the trans-continental line westward, you will see that it
-emerges from the Rockies at Golden. Golden is a little mining town
-lying in the Columbia {216} Valley, with the Rockies on one side of
-it and the Selkirks on the other. It was chiefly to see this
-valley--one of the most fertile in British Columbia, but at present
-unopened--that I got out at Golden with a friend. An excursion into
-the Selkirks was to depend upon the time at our disposal. We had
-been told that near Lake Windermere, at a place called Wilmer, there
-was a great irrigation scheme in progress, which would shortly result
-in 60,000 acres of dry belt-land being ready for fruit-farming.
-This, when the rail from Kamloops to Golden was completed, would make
-the Columbia Valley as famous for its fruit as the Okanagan. We both
-wanted to see it. My friend wanted to buy land. The problem was how
-to get up the valley.
-
-[Illustration: THE DEVIL'S FINGERS. ROCKY MOUNTAINS.]
-
-There were, we found, five different ways of doing the eighty miles
-from Golden to Wilmer.
-
-1. The first was to wait for that day of the week on which the
-stage-coach ran. It took two days to do the distance, and was very
-convenient if we did not mind waiting in Golden a few days first.
-But we were in a hurry.
-
-2. This way was by river-boat--a delightful trip. But there were
-one or two objections to it. The water of the Columbia was very
-{217} low at this time of the year, the sand-banks were numerous, and
-the boat had gone up some days before and nobody knew when it would
-get down again. We gave up the boat.
-
-3. The third way, which we decided should be ours, was to go up in
-the only motor which Golden possessed. This would cost fifty
-dollars, but the journey there would only take about seven hours.
-When we had decided upon this, we went to the proprietor of the motor
-and found that the car was already out for an indefinite number of
-days.
-
-4. This way was to walk the eighty miles--a plan I favoured and
-tried on the way back, as I shall describe. But my friend could not
-fancy it. Statelier than myself, he had to carry five more stones
-with him.
-
-5. This was the way we took. We hired a two-horse rig which
-undertook to do the journey in the same time as the stage--but for
-twenty dollars apiece instead of five.
-
-We started from Golden on a Monday morning in the two-horse rig,
-driven by a young American. He had been in the United States navy,
-and also in Alberta, farming, but he had had no luck with his farm,
-having started with too small a capital to tide over {218} the two
-bad seasons which he had met there. He told us that he found Canada
-very similar to the States--neither much better nor worse; and he
-took his own luck there philosophically. He seemed to me altogether
-a capable man, whose fortune might have been all the other way.
-Anyway he drove excellently and was not a grumbler, like the American
-ex-sailor I met at Regina.
-
-Nothing could have been more beautiful than the late September
-morning when we started out of Golden. A spreading village of pretty
-poplar-lined avenues and pleasant bungalows, Golden explained its own
-name as we went. The wooded hills on either side were all splashed
-with autumn yellows, and the sun, striking down through a grove of
-silver poplars which shuts off the south end of the village, made it
-all seem shot with gold. It is a mining village, but compared with
-the usual mining village of Great Britain it seemed as Eden to the
-Inferno.
-
-Coming out of it we struck what is the dominant scenery of the
-valley--the blue Columbia winding in and out, sometimes wooded to its
-brim, sometimes sweeping over into open marshland, but always with
-the hills lightly wooded, facing one another across it, and behind
-{219} them the white peaks hung with snow. At every mile or two a
-silvery creek, sometimes a mere ribbon of water, sometimes almost a
-river, rushed down to join the Columbia below; by the side of these
-creeks mostly would be the cleared land which small ranchers had
-settled, and where they had gone on living presumably on what they
-could grow off their own places, since the chances of reaching a
-market became obviously more difficult at every mile. Every wind of
-the road--and it mostly follows the river--gave views that were
-always changing and beautiful.
-
-It was on the second day of our driving that the appearance of the
-valley grew different. The creeks became rarer; the soil drier.
-Instead of silver poplars rising among a tangled underbush, there
-were now jack-pines growing out of a burnt-up sward. We might have
-been going through some English park in the south country, and some
-one had evidently thought this before, for a man we met driving told
-us that this part of the valley was known as the Park. Passing
-through it we came at last to the real dry belt. Those who know the
-Okanagan would no doubt find it less strange, but it amazed me to
-find a country among these mountains almost Egyptian in its colouring
-and {220} texture. Drier and drier became the soil; the trees became
-sparser and sparser; there was now no underwood at all. The straight
-firs rose clear out of sandy hills and hollows. Sandy they might
-appear, but this was not sand in the vulgar sense. It was glacial
-silt--bottomless drifts of powdered clay that has slipped down from
-the mountains and piled and sloped itself into 'benches' above the
-river.
-
-We had to cross the river to get to Wilmer, which is the headquarters
-of the irrigation. Headquarters sounds imposing; and in a few years,
-doubtless, Wilmer will be imposing, but at present it consists of a
-few shacks, two small stores, a dirty little hotel (in the bar of
-which a man was shot the day after we left), and one presiding genius
-who has made Wilmer what it is and also what it will be shortly.
-Need I say that it was a Scot who years ago saw the far-reaching
-value of this land, conceived the idea of irrigating it, and
-personally superintended the carrying out of his conception? I don't
-know that I need. I came to the conclusion before I left Canada that
-Scots, more than any other race, were at the bottom, and generally
-also at the top, of most of the enterprises that were being carried
-out there. No {221} one talks of the Scotticisation of Canada.
-Perhaps Scots do not proselytise. Perhaps they do not find any other
-people worthy of being taken into their community. They prefer to
-remain an international oligarchy, managing others but not admitting
-them to equal rights. They effect their intentions by usually
-working alone and always sticking together. A paradoxical people.
-It is amazing to think that at the beginning of the eighteenth
-century the Scottish Highlander was regarded by the average
-Englishman in much the same light as we now regard the Hottentot or
-the Andaman Islander, a hopelessly idle and uncouthly impossible
-person, destined to remain a barbarian for ever. _Dis aliter visum_.
-The Highlander now directs the Empire, distinguishing himself in that
-respect even more than his Lowland brother. Yet only two hundred
-years have passed since he was outside the pale.
-
-My friend knew Mr. Randolph Bruce, the Highlander who presides over
-the Columbia Valley Irrigation Works, and will, it seems to me, rank
-as one of the many makers of Canada, and Mr. Bruce most hospitably
-put us up while we were in Wilmer, and showed us what he has done and
-what he means to do. What he means to do is to create a town on the
-shores {222} of Lake Windermere, and he drove us down there to show
-us the lake, which is not the least like its English original, but
-very beautiful nevertheless, lying as it does clear and still among
-the sand-hills, a belt of autumn-tinted trees around it, and, above,
-the hills and the snows. It looked like some African lake stretched
-at the feet of the Mountains of the Moon. It looked as if it might
-lie thus for centuries, silent and untouched by the hands of men.
-But it was a Canadian lake, and though it might seem to be at the
-very back of the world, it was shortly to have a town built on its
-shores. Mr. Bruce showed us the town site, the hotel site, the site
-of the bowling-green and the polo ground. I rather think he showed
-us the race-course that was going to be. I saw it all the more
-clearly because Mr. Bruce also showed us the work already actually
-accomplished--the canals and ditches that brought the upper mountain
-lakes down on to the benches of friable clay that were to grow the
-apples we shall eat in England a few years hence. It is all
-extraordinarily interesting, seeing this town of the future and these
-fruit-lands of the future--of which my friend bought twenty acres,
-which were to be named after him. The Columbia River ran just below
-the {223} bench-land he bought, and I wished I had some capital handy
-that I might buy the adjoining plot, that I might also grow fruit
-there and have a portion of the fair Dominion named after me. If the
-Windermere race-course had already been in existence, and a race
-being run, I should have backed one of the horses against all my
-principles, and laid out the proceeds in a fruit-farm.
-
-
-
-
-{224}
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-THE SELKIRKS--A GRIZZLY-BEAR COUNTRY
-
-Behind Wilmer lies a part of the Selkirks which is known only to a
-few ranchers in the neighbourhood, and is scarcely accessible except
-from this point. We had spent two days in the neighbourhood of Lake
-Windermere, and on the third, though each of us was booked to be
-hundreds of miles further on our way by the end of the week, and
-heaven only knew how we were even going to reach Golden again, for we
-had let the rig go back and the boat was reported stuck somewhere on
-the Columbia River, we neither of us could resist an offer that was
-made us of an opportunity to climb Iron Top Mountain, which was
-somewhere at the back of this alluring country.
-
-The offer came from a Mr. Starboard. In Canada you will sometimes
-find, several hundreds of miles from civilisation, some strenuous and
-capable man whom you would think civilisation needed and would
-require. But the wilds in {225} Canada are more important. Mr.
-Starboard had come to these parts originally as a prospector and
-miner, but the mine he had come to had shut down--not for lack of
-silver and lead in it, but for lack of transport facilities;
-whereupon Mr. Starboard, fascinated by one of these valleys, had
-started horse-breeding there, occupying what time was left from
-clearing his land in making roads through the mountains and hunting
-big game. Dropping in at Mr. Bruce's casually one morning, he asked
-us if we should like to see the best view he knew of in the Selkirks.
-We said we should; and each, equipped with a toothbrush and a comb,
-was driven out to Starboard's ranch for lunch.
-
-Travelling in the remoter parts of Canada gives you strange table
-companions. You never know quite what company you will meet, though
-you can generally count upon its being interesting. While we were
-being driven up the Columbia Valley a few days before, we had heard
-from various homesteaders that there was 'a big German bug' staying
-up in the mountains with his friends, trying for bear. 'They call
-him the Land Crab,' our informant would usually add for further
-elucidation of the big bug's official position. On arriving at Mr.
-Starboard's ranch we found that the big bug {226} in question was, in
-the commoner prose of Europe, the Landgraf of Hesse with two
-equerries and a small retinue. For a motley collection, the party
-that sat down to lunch that day in the chief room of Starboard's
-ranch would be difficult to beat. There was the Landgraf himself and
-his German companions, a well-known Canadian official, three
-valets--these all neatly dressed--Mrs. Starboard quite wonderfully
-frocked, as the fashion papers say, Mr. Starboard in ranching
-costume, and ourselves who had slept in our clothes for several days.
-The waiters were a Japanese and a Chinese. We fed off bear, shot by
-one of the Germans, who had been most successful in their hunting
-both of bear and goat.
-
-Bear, by the way, was only one among other delicacies. Its taste is
-rather like that of Christmas beef stewed in the gravy of a goose.
-Vegetarians would not care about it; but after living on little else
-for two days I can answer for its being both appetising and
-sustaining, particularly in high altitudes. After lunch, four of us,
-Mr. Starboard, the railway man, my friend, and myself started for
-Iron Top Mountain, which lay seventeen miles off along a trail that
-rose steeply most of the way. The ponies were excellent ones, better
-even than {227} the slicker. Mr. Starboard had specially picked
-them, because he wanted to see if they could be got to carry us to
-the top of the mountain, a little over ten thousand feet. He had
-never taken ponies as high before, and doubted if the test had ever
-been made in Canada, though I fancy ponies have done as much or more
-in the Himalayas.
-
-We did fourteen miles that afternoon, following at first the bank of
-a blue foaming stream, then turning eastward up a steeper valley
-through which a smaller stream flowed. The trail was far better than
-many roads in French Canada or on the prairie, and had been
-constructed by Mr. Starboard himself to provide access to a silver
-and lead mine which had been shut down for some time. It seemed
-extraordinary that in a country so wild and remote there should be
-any trail at all, but miners go anywhere. A man who has to find his
-way into the earth makes no difficulty about finding his way across
-it.
-
-It was a day, half sunshine and half mist, and the mountains would
-sometimes be shut entirely in shrouds of vapour, sometimes would
-reveal slanted white tops cut off in mid-air by the fog below,
-sometimes would clear altogether, so that one could see everything on
-them, {228} from the snowslides down which the grizzlies travel to
-the narrow tracks of the goats. As we mounted, the valley grew
-steeper and steeper, and the trail wound more and more. We passed
-one place where, earlier in the year, there had been a terrific slide
-of snow half a mile in width. The huge firs still lay where they had
-fallen, shattered and splintered before it. Half-way down, the
-avalanche had met a great pinnacle of rock that had stood the shock
-unmoved, and caused the snow to part to left and to right, where it
-had hewn two lanes of almost equal breadth through the trees. It was
-just near here that Mr. Starboard showed me a grizzly's track, and
-told me that he had seen no less than seventeen of these bears in the
-last fortnight. He said that their numbers were increasing yearly in
-that neighbourhood. A little later a porcupine crossed the trail
-ahead of us, and lurched unwieldily into the undergrowth. The trees
-grew close together all the way, except where we passed a great
-stretch of mountainside where a forest fire had raged, and even there
-the scorched trunks still stood, gibbeted skeletons of trees.
-
-We put up for the night in a deserted mining camp, almost a village
-it was, with wooden shacks likely to be used again when the Kamloops
-{229} to Golden Railway is completed and it is worth while getting
-the stuff out of the mine.
-
-Up there it had begun to freeze hard, but a big fire and much bear,
-which the railway man fried over it with skill, kept us warm enough
-till we went to bed under many blankets in one of the shacks.
-
-It was bitterly chill--the start in the early morning--after a
-breakfast of cold bear; and very soon after we set out we got into
-snow, and the trees ceased, and the ponies' flanks began to heave
-steadily. The morning was as bright as it was cold, however, and
-Mount Farnham, shaped like a chimney-pot, glittered right over us on
-the left. I remarked to Mr. Starboard what a nasty mountain it
-looked for climbing purposes, whereupon he astonished me by saying he
-had been up it.
-
-'You went up to see if it could be done?' I said, thinking I had
-struck a keen climber in the European sense of the word.
-
-'No,' said Mr. Starboard simply; 'you would not catch me going up a
-place like that for the climb. I went there because I thought there
-was silver and lead there.'
-
-The ponies were now beginning to show their respective stamina, two
-of them going right ahead, and the one that carried my friend {230}
-getting slower and slower. We had got by this time into a sort of
-rocky amphitheatre where the snow lay thicker, and just as I passed
-under a little cascade congealed into fantastic icicles as it spouted
-from a cleft, I heard a noise in my rear, and turned to see my friend
-and his pony doing Catherine wheels in the snow together. Luckily
-they fell--and rolled--softly and rose uninjured; but very soon after
-that the ponies had to be left. We turned them loose on a platform
-of rock which was, Mr. Starboard said, just short of ten thousand
-feet up. Only a few hundred more remained to be done, which we
-accomplished on foot through knee-deep snow, gaining the summit just
-in time.
-
-For the first time I got a view of the Rockies. We looked down a
-long, narrow, purple valley that ran at right angles to the Columbia
-River, over the first hills beyond Wilmer, into a sea of mountains.
-I had heard that phrase--a sea of mountains--applied to the Rockies
-before, but I had not realised its fitness before.
-
-[Illustration: A SENTINEL OF THE ROCKIES.]
-
-There it was, a sea of white caps frozen eternally in the very moment
-when they had stormed the sky.
-
-For just five minutes we gazed, and then a mist settled down on them,
-and, where we were, {231} immediately a bitter wind began to blow and
-caused us to make for the ponies hurriedly. As we rode down the
-frozen trail we startled some ptarmigan, which rose and fluttered
-above the snow like big white butterflies.
-
-
-
-
-{232}
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-AN EIGHTY-MILE WALK THROUGH THE COLUMBIA VALLEY
-
-We got back to Wilmer the following morning, and the problem then
-was--how to reach Golden again. The boat was due up the river some
-time in the day, but sandbanks do not encourage punctuality. I had
-my suspicions of that boat, and in any case, even if it arrived that
-day, it would certainly not start back again till the morning
-following. I did not want to wait for it at Wilmer, and decided
-instead that I would start walking down the valley at once and pick
-the boat up at Spellamacheen, forty miles downstream, some time next
-day. My friend was as suspicious of the walk as I was of the boat;
-and since he had heard that some men were likely to turn up that day
-in a motor from Golden who might give him a lift back in case the
-boat failed, he decided to wait for them.
-
-So we parted, and rather late in the day--at {233} noon, to be
-exact--I set out on my walk. Forty miles is not much of a walk. It
-can be done in ten hours very easily--in eight if you make up your
-mind to it. I decided I would take nine hours over it and waste no
-time. I did not stop for lunch in Athelmer--where one crosses the
-Columbia--but merely bought some chocolate and a pound of apples, and
-hurried on.
-
-About a mile out of Athelmer I ate the apples, because they were a
-nuisance to carry, and wished I could as easily get rid of my heavy
-overcoat, which had its pockets stuffed with toilet and sleeping
-accessories just like a suit-case. I also wished that I had on boots
-that I had ever tried walking in. Still I did six or seven miles in
-the first hour and a half, and then I realised that two things
-destructive to fast walking were about to happen. One was
-footsoreness and the other was rain. Both came upon me a few minutes
-later, and both increased steadily hour after hour. The valley which
-had looked so beautiful in all the reds of autumn, as we drove
-through it in the sunlight, was now filled with a clammy mist; and
-the road which had seemed a fine road for the horses in fine weather
-now struck me as offensively sticky, and my pace declined {234} to
-something under three miles an hour. I consoled myself for a little
-with the thought that I was getting an experience of autumn in the
-Columbia Valley. Afterwards I decided that I would gladly do without
-it. I could have imagined it just as well. The road was like glue
-and my coat had increased in weight several pounds. To balance this
-as far as possible, I sat on a wet spruce tree that had fallen by the
-side of the road and ate my packet of chocolate; after which I moved
-on at a very sober pace. I began to doubt if I should get to
-Spellamacheen that night; and the doubt soon increased to a certainty
-that I should not. Then I remembered that on the drive out we had
-passed a place called Dolans, only twenty-eight miles from Wilmer. I
-did some mental arithmetic which seemed to prove that even Dolans was
-a terrible distance off, and I tried a little running, but it was not
-of a kind to win a Marathon race. Running through glue when you are
-footsore is trying work. Nevertheless by six o'clock I calculated I
-was only about three miles from Dolans, which rejoiced me, until the
-horrid thought cropped up--if I got in after the supper hour, should
-I get any supper?
-
-It was by no means certain in that valley.
-
-{235}
-
-Providence a few minutes later sent a buggy, driven by a small,
-glum-looking man up behind me, and the glum-looking man said 'Care to
-drive?' I said 'Yes,' and found he was bound for Dolans like myself.
-We got there about seven o'clock. The rancher and his wife were in;
-also another wayfarer like ourselves, who had arrived a few minutes
-before us. He was an elderly man, with a great shock of iron-grey
-hair, who was driving into Golden in a farm-cart from some place
-several days distant. He had the strangest pair in his cart--a
-little brown mare of about fourteen hands, and a great lanky horse
-the height of a giraffe.
-
-We were all given a good meal, and ate it in silence, and sat in
-silence to digest it. Canadians in these valleys are often that way;
-it is due not to unsociability but to disuse of their tongues.
-Possibly to ruminate is the better way, but silence can be
-oppressive, and if you start a conversation and the other people only
-reflect upon your words, they may be weighing them as if they were
-gold, but you are not sure enough of this to be elated. I was rather
-glad to be shown to my bed, which was in a barn (but the blankets
-were clean, Mr. Dolans said), pretty early. {236} Mr. Dolans sat on
-the bed for a bit, and advised me to buy the ranch. I promised to
-think the matter over, and went to sleep instead in a nice atmosphere
-of hay, and got up for six o'clock breakfast. The other two had
-already driven off; but the rain had ceased, and though the road was
-a mud slide, I started for Spellamacheen in high hopes of catching
-the boat in spite of being footsore.
-
-I need not have worried myself, for when I got there at 12.30, I
-learnt that the boat had just passed on its way up to Wilmer, and was
-not likely to be down again for two or three days.
-
-Spellamacheen consists of a rest-house ranch in full view of a
-semicircle of snowclad mountains, but I was a little disheartened in
-spite of the view. I particularly wanted to catch the midnight train
-from Golden to Vancouver, and now I realised that to do this I should
-have to walk the rest of the way--another forty miles. From two
-o'clock to twelve is ten hours. If I did four miles an hour, I
-should catch the train to a nicety.
-
-When I am resting on a walk I am always singularly optimistic. I was
-stiff after lunch--partly from the unusual exercise, partly from
-sleeping in wet clothes, and my feet {237} were sorer than ever, but
-I set out for Golden, confident that I should catch that train. A
-young man with a bundle on his back, who had got into Spellamacheen
-just ahead of me, offered to hike with me. He also was for Golden,
-but thought twenty miles more that day would satisfy him.
-
-He was a pleasant and conversational young man, and told me that he
-was from New Brunswick, but had for the last eight months been at
-work digging the ditches for the Columbia Valley Irrigation Company.
-He had had enough of it, he said; in fact too much. Compared with
-New Brunswick, British Columbia was no catch at all, and he meant to
-go back home. Frenchmen are not fonder of their 'patrie' than are
-the Canadian-born. He brimmed over, did that young man, with praises
-of New Brunswick--brimmed over very intelligently, telling me about
-the Reversible Falls of St. John and the conditions of farming in the
-province with a clearness which few Englishmen of his class could
-emulate. He said that he would only get one and a half dollars a day
-instead of two and a half, but then one and a half would go much
-further there than two and a half in British Columbia. You could
-live better on it, and life was easier {238} there. British Columbia
-was too rough: he allowed there was no pioneer about him. He had got
-tired of the Columbia Valley months before, and had started to come
-out of it in July, but had only got as far as Athelmer. There he had
-gone to a hotel for the night, and had got drinking, and somehow
-before he knew it all the money he had saved during his months of
-digging had been drunk. So he had gone back to the ditches. But he
-meant to get out of the valley this time. I gathered that even this
-time it had been a near shave, for having again got as far as the
-hotel, he had found a lot of fellows drinking what he called
-'Schlampagne.' He supposed there must have been a hundred bottles of
-schlampagne drunk last night, and whisky afterwards, but he himself
-had been very careful and had taken gin instead. You never knew, he
-said, what the whisky would be made of, but if you drank from a
-bottle of gin marked English, it was all right. He felt a bit funny
-inside to-day, but seemed quite cheerful about it because he had won
-away from the hotel, and was pretty sure now to get back to New
-Brunswick, after which he would not go pioneering again. He doubted,
-however, if we were likely to get to Golden that day. There was
-{239} a place called M'Kie's we could put up at eighteen miles on, or
-if we felt like it, another called Petersen's--eight miles further.
-I said I wanted to catch the midnight train from Golden, and was
-going to walk on by night: at which he said he would do the same. He
-repeated that he was funny inside and footsore, but he thought he
-could do it. We would get to M'Kie's for supper, or rather get M'Kie
-to make us up a supper, which we would eat upon the road, and we
-should thus get into Golden in good time. He was sure we were going
-at least four miles an hour.
-
-I was sure we were scarcely doing three, and by the time we did get
-to M'Kie's, just before dark, we were both so sure that a rest would
-do us good that we thought we would eat our supper there after all.
-
-M'Kie's was a shack just off the road, with a huge puma-skin nailed
-to the verandah. Inside was a very old woman, who said that we could
-get our tea all right, but M'Kie wasn't in yet, and we'd better wait
-for him. So we sat down in the road, and I paddled in an icy creek
-that went foaming by the house door. Then the old woman asked us in
-and chatted to us while she cooked the meal. M'Kie turning up, we
-fell to, and {240} M'Kie entertained us with trapping stories. It
-seemed he was half-trapper, half-rancher, and the big skin we had
-seen outside he had got only a few days before. The mountain lion
-had come down right into the sheepfold, and his two dogs had treed
-it, and a single bullet had brought it down. It was the biggest skin
-that he had ever seen, and measured ten feet six from tip to tail.
-It certainly was a large skin, but a puma's tail counts for a good
-deal. M'Kie had also shot a bear in the sheepfold the week before,
-and he talked so much about cinnamons and grizzlies, which seemed
-very plentiful round there, that the New Brunswicker insisted on our
-having his opinion as to whether they ever attacked unarmed men
-walking by night. M'Kie thought not. So we started on again,
-somewhat reassured, along what promised to be an uncommonly dark road.
-
-The sky was all clouded over, and it was now 8.30, and there was no
-chance whatever of my catching the midnight train, since twenty miles
-still remained to be accomplished, and our limp condition made even
-three miles an hour hard. But we walked on, mostly because I now
-wanted to get the morning train at eleven o'clock, and I felt that if
-we {241} went back to M'Kie's and stopped the night, I should be so
-stiff that I could not walk at all next day. The New Brunswicker
-sportingly said that he would go on for as long as he could anyhow,
-though he wasn't bent on any particular train; and for some four
-mortal hours we splashed along through mud and water in what was the
-next thing to pitch darkness. To add to the discomfort, a high,
-cold, and very wet wind began to blow, and there was every prospect
-of rain soon descending in torrents. It was at this point, I think,
-that our thoughts began to turn to Petersen's. The New Brunswicker
-remarked that if we had passed Petersen's there was nowhere to stop
-at between where we were and Golden; but if we had not passed
-Petersen's, we might rest there a few minutes and perhaps get some
-milk to drink. Soon after this we felt sure that we had passed
-Petersen's in the dark; and though neither of us admitted it, I think
-our respective hearts sank. We decided to rest a little, which we
-did, and we rested again a few minutes later without deciding to do
-it. As we got up from a brief smoke on a fallen log the rain began
-to pelt down, and we saw a light just off the road.
-
-I own I should have wanted to stop at {242} Petersen's anyhow, even
-if the New Brunswicker had not confessed that he could not go any
-further: but I don't know that I should have had his perseverance in
-knocking Petersen's up. There certainly was a light there. But I
-was convinced that everybody inside was deep in sleep. The New
-Brunswicker thought somebody might be up, and after knocking vainly
-for ten minutes at the front door of the house he went round to the
-back, while I sat on the doorstep, wondering what fifteen miles in
-that black rain would be like.
-
-A couple of minutes later, the New Brunswicker appeared triumphant.
-The Petersens, he said, were up--in their kitchen--and thither we
-limped, much relieved. They were the kindest people--Swedes, both of
-them, and kept a milk cow, and gave us milk and buttermilk. They
-said they were sorry they hadn't a bed to offer us, but we could have
-the kitchen. Fastidious travellers might have thought the kitchen
-untidy and stuffy, and even the New Brunswicker before he went to
-sleep on the floor on his blankets, with some old clothes that we
-found hanging on the walls over our legs--even he got a broom (after
-the Petersens had gone to bed) and swept a clean space {243} for us
-to lie on. But at least it was warm, and a haven of luxury compared
-with the road.
-
-Personally, I know that I was very sorry to have to get up off that
-floor at 4 A.M., when that industrious old lady, Mrs. Petersen, came
-in again to relight the stove and to prepare breakfast. She was
-followed presently by her husband and son and a hired man, while from
-the barn there issued forth not only that shock-headed old man with
-the queer rig whom I had seen at Dolans, but no less than five other
-men who had been working in different parts of the valley, and were
-hiking out before the winter should come. These had all spent their
-night in the barn, which seems to be a privileged resting-place for
-travellers in this part of the country.
-
-Mrs. Petersen had to get breakfast for some dozen people, and an odd
-company we were, all unkempt and unshaven, and most of us looking,
-truthfully enough, as if we had slept for some months in our clothes.
-We all did a wash before breakfast, however. Two of the men at table
-were socialists, and we had a desultory conversation on that subject
-while we were not occupied in eating Mrs. Petersen's bacon and eggs.
-Nobody seemed much to dispute the socialist position, but {244} this
-might have been because nobody was greatly interested in it. I
-remember that the socialists thought that capital ought to be done
-away with, but Mr. Petersen, who no doubt had a small amount himself
-and kept a hired man, thought it was a useful thing, and should be
-retained. Everybody went off directly the meal was finished, except
-ourselves, who lingered because the New Brunswicker had boldly
-requested the shock-headed old man to drive us in to Golden in his
-farm-cart, and we went to help harness the little mare and the big
-giraffe.
-
-It was still raining heavily when we started, and it rained just as
-heavily all the way into Golden. I never was so damped in my life,
-and this was due not merely to the rain, but because the farm-cart
-was so full of the old man's things (he seemed to be moving his house
-in it) that the only place available in it for me was a sack of hay.
-The cart had stood out all night in the rain, and the sack of hay was
-wet through, which made it like a sponge, so that the more I dried
-off the top of it the more moisture I seemed to absorb from the under
-part. The little mare and the big horse made about two and a half
-miles an hour, and if I could have walked, {245} I should have done
-so, for now again the eleven o'clock train seemed in danger of
-getting off from Golden without me. Indeed it was half-past eleven
-before we got to Golden, and, resigned to despair, I accompanied the
-New Brunswicker into an inn, where I thought I should have to wait
-again for the midnight train. We ordered beer in the bar, and as I
-was explaining to the proprietor what a nuisance it was to have
-missed the train, he put down his glass and said, 'Wait a minute,'
-and went to the telephone. He came back to inform me that the train
-had just been signalled, being very late. He thought I should just
-have time to catch it if I rushed.
-
-
-
-
-{246}
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-FROM GOLDEN TO THE COAST
-
-I managed to get that train, and also a half bottle of rye whisky on
-the way to it, and sank into a seat in the smoking compartment, where
-I sat all soaked and miserable, supping my rye whisky at intervals
-and half dozing until two grizzly-bear hunters got in a few stations
-down the line. They were very wonderfully arrayed in moccasins and
-Arctic socks and turned-up overalls and sweaters and cartridge belts;
-and though they were modest enough in their bearing, and did not talk
-about their exploits until they were asked questions, the whole
-compartment was soon eagerly chatting of nothing but grizzly bears.
-The two hunters, who were amateurs of the sport, had been up in the
-mountains alone, a three days' portage from the railroad, and had got
-three grizzlies, and would have got more, they said, but that heavy
-falls of snow had forced them to decamp. They spoke like good
-shots--which does not {247} mean that they said they were good
-shots--and they seemed very keen on their sport, which they claimed
-to be the most dangerous and exacting in the world; nor would they
-listen to my meek suggestion that the Bengal tiger would compare
-favourably with the grizzly.
-
-'It's a cat,' one of them said sniffily; 'you shoot it off elephants.'
-
-I said that I knew Anglo-Indians who went after tigers on foot, and I
-also argued that even in the case of shooting from elephants the
-combination of a charging tiger and a restive elephant offered
-opportunity of showing one's nerve to be in order such as is not to
-be despised, especially if the howdah happens to have been inexpertly
-fixed and slides at the critical moment. They allowed that there
-might be something in this, but persisted that in any case
-tiger-hunting was done at ease, with natives to do all the portering,
-whereas grizzly-bear hunters like themselves had to carry everything
-with them, and camp in the snow, and shoot on mountain-sides, down
-which a grizzly bear would charge at a man quicker than a racehorse.
-They gave graphic descriptions of charges of grizzly bears, with
-their back legs flying ahead of their front ones. The {248} last
-bear they had bagged had dropped, they said, within twenty paces of
-them, after being rolled over three times.
-
-I fancy they spoke reasonably enough, and that the pursuit of the
-grizzly--certainly if done without a guide--is as good a test of a
-man's nerve as any other. As to the merits of the grizzly considered
-as a brute likely to do for you if you do not previously do for it,
-and compared with such others as the tiger, the buffalo, the
-rhinoceros, the elephant, or the lion, there is no arriving at any
-final conclusion. African hunters never seem agreed about the
-comparative merits of the last three; while one Indian sportsman
-supports the buffalo, another will support the tiger. Not having any
-experience of the grizzly bear myself, I can only say that, judging
-from what I have heard, he must be accounted big enough game for
-anybody. There is no doubt that most of the old trappers have a
-wholesome respect for him, and the longer they are after him, the
-greater, as a rule, their respect grows. His pace, when charging, is
-said to be something terrific, and, downhill, it always charges as
-soon as hit, its back legs flying out before it at a nightmare speed.
-Add that it seems less easy to drop finally than any other animal,
-that your fingers {249} may be frozen to the trigger in the intervals
-of shooting, and that a single blow from one of its front paws is
-strong enough to claw the face out of an ox, and it will be seen that
-it is no contemptible foe. On the other hand, experts seem agreed
-that it rarely if ever charges uphill, and if shot from above is
-therefore comparatively harmless. If a man could always pick his
-position for shooting, this would reduce the value of the grizzly
-bear as a sporting animal; but obviously the hunter cannot always
-choose. Any one who has been on a snowslide will realise that. From
-the point of view of an unarmed person, the grizzly bear would seem
-to be rather less dangerous than he is sometimes made out to be. You
-will often hear that grizzly bears will attack a man at sight. The
-truth seems to be that--as is the case with any other bears--attacks
-are only to be feared either from female grizzlies with cubs, or from
-a grizzly of either sex, if the intruder is so placed as to appear to
-the grizzly's eyes to be cutting off its retreat to its lair. Of
-course no unarmed man would elect to put himself in either of these
-positions, and equally naturally he might unwittingly do so--in which
-case it would be better not to be that man, though I believe there is
-an {250} authentic story of a lumberman who, returning alone from his
-work, was suddenly attacked by two grizzlies, and managed to kill
-both of them with his axe, though the second mauled him badly.
-Authentic or not, and one grizzly or two, it is pretty certain that
-few people would care to try a similar encounter.
-
-Afterwards the conversation shifted to timber-wolves and the Yukon.
-One of the passengers scoffed at the notion of a dog being able to
-kill a timber-wolf, as happens in one of Mr. Jack London's novels. A
-northern timber-wolf, according to this critic, is at least twice the
-size of the European wolf, with a disproportionately large and
-powerful jaw--a single snap from which would polish off any dog. Two
-or three of the biggest dogs known could hardly even hold a
-timber-wolf much less kill it. I dare say there was more in this
-criticism than in one I heard later, anent Mr. Maurice Hewlett. A
-very solemn fruit-rancher was ploughing wearily through one of Mr.
-Hewlett's earlier romances, and he looked up presently to say it was
-funny the sort of yarns these writing chaps seemed to believe in.
-There was a girl in the book who milked a wild deer. He had seen
-plenty of deer in his time, but none of them had seemed to fancy
-coming close enough to {251} be milked. If a chap wanted to write
-about the country he ought to know it right through like Mr. Service.
-Had we read Service's poems? Several of the men in the compartment
-evidently had read them; and, indeed, Mr. Service's poems concerning
-the Yukon seemed to have reached the heights of popularity. I think
-it is due in part to the fascination which the north exercises on all
-sorts and conditions of Canadians, not only because it stands for
-romance and mystery, but because a sort of idea is gaining ground
-that these inhospitable and well-nigh polar regions only await a
-sufficiently hardy type of colonist to have as great a boom almost as
-some of the more southern districts. The idea exists not only among
-business-like estate-agents, who see themselves in fancy selling
-Arctic blocks to this expected race, but among quite disinterested
-and patriotic people, who talk of it, as Mr. Service himself does, as
-a strong man's land. A few peculiarly strong men may survive there;
-and it is excusable for a poet to regard them as super-men--Canada's
-noblest type. As a matter of fact it is at least as romantic to
-weave halos about the heads of the crowd that seeks the Yukon country
-as it is to make one's heroine milk a wild deer. A certain praise
-{252} is always due to pioneers, and the struggle with nature at its
-cruellest and most wild is not a bad test of an individual's
-character; but for respectable ranchers and fruit-growers (who have
-never been to the Yukon themselves, but have struggled with nature
-quite as valiantly elsewhere) to talk enthusiastically about the
-great lone land as the country for breeding men is absurd. Canadians
-may be able to colonise further north than they have done at present,
-and their descendants will, no doubt, be a fine and hardy race. But
-there is a point in the north just as there is a point in the south
-beyond which no white man's country lies. If any strong men are
-going to perpetuate their families beyond that northern point, they
-are going to be strong Esquimaux--not strong Canadians. Esquimaux
-already do quite a lot of grappling with nature in lone lands, but
-they are not the heroes of Mr. Service's poems. I don't wish to
-labour the point, but this northern strong man business seems to me
-entirely overdone. There is always going to be romance attached to
-the uninhabitable country, and adventurous young men will get there;
-but the theory that these are the people of whom Canada has
-peculiarly to be proud will not do. Adam Gordon's bush-riders {253}
-had a certain merit; so had Mr. Kipling's gentlemen-rankers; so have
-Mr. Service's prospectors; but none of them ever forwarded
-civilisation very greatly. The fact is, there are true and admirable
-pioneers, men like Hudson and Thompson, of whom Canada has had
-plenty; and there are pioneers of doubtful value like those in Mr.
-Service's poems. These latter are picturesque enough in verse,
-especially in Mr. Service's verse, which catches the fascination of
-the north at times admirably, but the others are the men worth
-boasting about.
-
-The rain persisted while we sat talking of all these matters, and the
-mountains were hung about with a clammy vapour which spoilt the view
-from the train. I should like to have stopped at Glacier, which is
-the usual centre for the better-known Selkirks, of which many of the
-giants have been climbed only within the last six or seven years, but
-I had not time, and they all swam by in the mist, which changed into
-dusk as we reached Revelstoke. There a number of lumberjacks filled
-up the carriage, and were very cheery and conversational all night.
-Having slept only two hours the night before, I should not have
-minded being able to get a sleeper, but they were all taken; and
-{254} indeed there were not even seats enough to go all round, though
-it was a first-class carriage. In any case the lumberjacks in my
-part of the carriage would have prevented sleep. Sometimes they
-would sit down for a few minutes and tell stories, then they would
-dart off to have a look at a carriage-load of Doukhobors who were on
-in front and seemed rather better than a show to judge by the
-lumbermen's guffaws when they came back from these trips. Canadian
-trains may not always be restful, but they are generally
-entertaining. The distances traversed are so great that people
-cannot afford to sit in them in hunched silence. They have to
-unbend, and some of them unbend thoroughly. That is why, though the
-ordinary traveller has to pass through great tracts of land in the
-train, he is not losing local colour to quite the extent one loses it
-in an European train. Some one in the carriage is sure to know
-something about the district one is passing through and to be ready
-to talk about it. The smoking compartment becomes an animated
-club-room in which conversation becomes general on any subject.
-There is no better place for a discussion of political problems, and
-I fancy a great many Canadians reserve their consideration of these
-for {255} the time they have to spend in the train. Certainly they
-grow very keen in the train, and I have heard the warmest arguments
-and the most libellous denunciations of leading Canadian statesmen
-hurled freely about among men who had never set eyes on one another
-before. And there are plenty of other arguments with which to pass
-the time. As we got to Sicamous Junction, for example, we took on
-board two fruit-growers, one of whom was a 'wet' grower and the other
-a 'dry.' A wet fruit-grower is a man who does not irrigate his
-fruit-land, and a dry fruit-grower is one who, having settled in the
-dry belt, has to irrigate. As fierce a debate was started between
-these two as ever you heard between exponents of wet and dry
-fly-fishing.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE SELKIRKS. THE RETURN FROM THE HUNT.]
-
-As far as fruit-raising is concerned, the 'dry' men appear to have
-the advantage. Their contention is that they can turn off the water
-so as to leave their trees dry for the winter when frost at wet roots
-is so fatal; while they can turn the water on whenever it is wanted
-for swelling the fruit. In addition, the dry belt country gets a
-longer season of sunshine, which is more favourable for the growth of
-the earlier and finer dessert apples. It seems curious that none of
-our finest-flavoured apples, {256} such as Cox's Orange Pippin or
-Ribston Pippin, seem to come to perfection in Canada; and I found
-British Columbian fruit-growers very anxious that English people
-should appreciate this fact, and also get to know which are the
-British Columbian apples most worth asking for in England, as though
-some of the older orchards are still growing comparatively worthless
-apples, the new ones are being planted only with a few best kinds,
-which are as wine to water. One of these best kinds, by the way, is
-called Wine-sap; two of the other selectest varieties being Jonathan
-and Winter Banana. The latter is said to have a strong banana
-flavour. It is worth the English public's while, if it is going in
-largely for British Columbian apples, to encourage only the growing
-of the best, and that is to be done by demanding only the best from
-our own greengrocers by name. It is just as simple to plant a good
-apple tree as it is to plant a bad one, and there is no reason why
-the world in general should not eat only the best apples. So long as
-people are contented to look only at the colour of the fruit, which
-is no criterion whatever, and to pay their greengrocers' price for an
-unnamed sort, the best apples will not be for sale, and one will go
-on being provided with {257} highly-coloured samples that taste like
-inferior turnips.
-
-The weather picked up in the morning, and I was able to see some of
-the beauties of the great Fraser River, though I somehow missed the
-Chinamen washing for gold, Indians spearing salmon, bright red, split
-salmon drying on frames, Chinese cabins and Indian villages with
-their beflagged graveyards, which are said to be visible from the car
-windows. Perhaps I was talking too much.
-
-
-
-
-{258}
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-A LITTLE ABOUT VANCOUVER CITY
-
-A diminutive Japanese who picked up my fairly heavy trunk, slung it
-over his shoulder and walked down the platform with it as though it
-were nothing but a shawl, was the first person I met in Vancouver,
-reminding me that that land-locked sea below was the Pacific, which
-white men do not own but only share with the brown and yellow
-Orientals. I wonder--will the day come when the latter want an ocean
-all to themselves? And are there, in view of this contingency, plans
-of this intricate coast among the Japanese naval archives? They knew
-the other side pretty well before the war began with Russia, and they
-are not a people to leave things to chance. The yellow men have
-known the Pacific coast from San Francisco to Vancouver as long as
-the white men, and put in a great deal of work there and eaten much
-humble pie, and also realised by the constant {259} rise in their
-wages--ten times anything their own country offers--that the white
-man is strangely lost without them. They had no flair for colonising
-half a century ago, when the rush was made for the Pacific coast, but
-they have it now.
-
-Vancouver is very beautifully situated. The ground sloping to the
-shut sea, girt with those huge, straight trees that give a sense of
-luxuriance to this northern Pacific coast which no tropic country can
-excel, is a perfect situation for a big city. Vancouver is a big
-city. It is so big that many people are afraid for its immediate
-future. They say that it is already far bigger than it has any right
-to be, and that by the dubiously beneficent aid of innumerable real
-estate men, it is increasing at a pace that is bound to end in
-disaster. The slump had been expected in 1909, it was expected last
-year, it is expected this year. Some year it will come; and if I
-were a patriotic and hard-working inhabitant of Vancouver, I should
-then head a deputation which had for its purpose the dumping in the
-sea of a large number of the real estate agents who swarm hungrily in
-the place. There is a big street entirely filled with their offices,
-and the mark of them is {260} everywhere. Mr. A. G. Bradley, in that
-encyclopaedic work _Canada in the Twentieth Century_, jeers at the
-English for their distrust of the real estate man, who, he thinks,
-serves a useful and necessary purpose. Better go to the real estate
-man, says Mr. Bradley, if you want to buy land, than to the bar
-loafer. There is a great deal in that. In individual cases they are
-excellent men. But, collected together in vast numbers, as in
-Vancouver, they can do mischief in a way the bar loafer never can,
-and that is by so magnifying the importance of the buying and selling
-of land, that people take to it in exchange for work, and falsely
-imagine that enormous prosperity is coming to a place which is in
-reality doing nothing but changing its land at fancy and speculative
-prices, expecting the prosperity somehow and some day to follow of
-itself.
-
-I suppose Seattle, with less justification, is in very much the same
-case. Both, besides being ports with great expectations, happen to
-be the last place, so to speak, in their respective countries; and
-there is something magnetic in the attraction of a last place.
-Thither drifts that very considerable population which, by getting on
-geographically, almost persuades itself that it is getting on
-materially. Having {261} attained the limit, it stays there and does
-as little as it can. Such people give a city a false air of
-greatness, and are, in fact, a surplus population with nothing to do
-but bid up land against one another.
-
-Of course there are plenty of genuine citizens in Vancouver, with all
-the enterprise and intelligence that help to make cities great.
-Practically, too, the greatness of Vancouver is in the end assured.
-It is already a magnificent port, having a big trade with the East,
-but nothing to what it will have. The Panama Canal will make it the
-centre, by sea, of the world. Again, it is the terminus of the
-Canadian Pacific Railway, and is destined, every one says, to become
-the terminus of the Grand Trunk, and any other railroad that wants to
-outlet on the Pacific. Wheat has begun to come through it from the
-prairie that used to go west to Montreal. The new reciprocity treaty
-will divert some of this freight to the south, no doubt, but that
-remains to be seen. In any case, besides being a port, Vancouver
-will remain the business capital of a province endlessly rich in
-minerals and timber, and increasingly rich in fruit- and farm-land.
-Some day, therefore, Vancouver will extend to those remote spots
-{262} where already town lots are being disposed of. Some day.
-Only, a big city should not live upon its future; and the sale of
-such lots miles off in the backwoods to people who, having bought
-them, cannot pay for them or cannot put up houses on them, or cannot
-afford to live in those houses even if they put them up, because
-there is nothing for them to do there and their money has run
-out--this sort of sale, while it enriches the real estate man, does
-not enrich anybody else. Moreover, it creates a restless spirit
-among those genuine farmers out in the country who would honestly be
-farming their land, if real estate agents would leave them alone, and
-not persuade them that it is just as profitable a game to hang about
-waiting for opportunities to sell their farms in plots. Of course
-they, like most other people who get as far as Vancouver, are not
-mere innocents. Sellers and buyers are probably equally aware of the
-risks they run; but where a tide of speculation sets in, the
-shrewdest people seem ready to take the most absurd risks. And the
-slump has taken so long in coming, and the possibilities of Vancouver
-seem so immense, that speculation in land has become a perfect
-fascination.
-
-{263}
-
-'What will it be worth next year?'
-
-That is the formula you constantly see at the end of an advertisement
-of some town lot--five miles, perhaps, from anywhere. The correct
-answer varies. If the slump does not come off next year, the lot may
-be worth double what is being asked for it now. If the slump does
-come off it will be worth a twentieth, perhaps, of what was given for
-it. Slump or no slump, this method of building up a city is
-unsatisfactory. Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg--these have become great
-as the centres of comparatively populous provinces, in which wealth
-has been gradually and carefully created by agricultural and
-industrial enterprises established on a firm basis. The jobs have
-been waiting for the men. In Vancouver alone, of all big Canadian
-cities, the men are waiting for the jobs, or, what is worse, waiting
-in the belief that money comes anyhow, and that jobs are not the
-prerequisite of money-making. I do not wish to give the impression
-that Vancouver is full of unemployed people, still less of
-unemployable ones; merely that many of the people there employed are
-not engaged in the undertakings that ensure the continuity of a
-city's prosperity.
-
-{264}
-
-Certainly any picture of Vancouver that made it out gloomy would be a
-mistake. Nothing could be livelier than its streets and its people;
-and if the slump does not come, and the Jeremiahs are wrong,
-Vancouver citizens will be justified of any amount of exultation.
-Already they have most of the things that make citizens pleased and
-proud--a beautiful site, fine streets, the most splendid of public
-parks, water-ways innumerable in front, and, behind, a country good
-to look at and rich in potentialities. Vancouver's industries, even
-if they do not justify the size of the place, are important and
-prosperous; and its propinquity to the salmon fisheries and vast
-timber tracts of British Columbia is something which alone would make
-a great town. In tone it is new world compared with Victoria, but
-old world compared with Seattle. There are many English people
-there. Living is high. No coin under five cents is, of course, in
-use, and when you start the day by paying that sum for a newspaper
-marked one cent, you find it difficult to beat down prices during the
-rest of the day. Apropos of newspapers, I was told of a very
-successful strike among the paper-boys of Vancouver some little time
-ago. Many people must have heard {265} of it, but it is worth
-retelling. The strike was headed by a youthful organiser, popularly
-known as Reddy, from the colour of his hair. Reddy was alleged to be
-thirteen years of age at the time, but Pitt was not so much older
-when he became Prime Minister of Great Britain. Holding the firm
-conviction that he and his fellow-workers were entitled to at least
-two cents out of the five for every paper sold (I am not sure of my
-figures), Reddy proclaimed a strike, and conducted it so successfully
-that the newspaper proprietors of Vancouver were compelled to wait
-upon him humbly, and yield in every particular to his demands. Among
-historic strikes this seems worthy of a place.
-
-
-
-
-{266}
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-THE HAPPY FARMERS OF THE ISLAND
-
-There are no lotus-lands attached to the Dominion, and will not be,
-unless we make over to it at some date the West Indies. But because
-Vancouver Island has a climate excelling that of any other part of
-Canada, and a beauty of scenery not surpassed anywhere; because also
-the men who have settled there have reckoned these possessions dearer
-than other things, such as the fat soil of the prairie and the chance
-of growing quickly rich, Canadians of the mainland are given at times
-to lay a charge of lotus-eating against them. I think the charge is
-an unfair one. Life may be less strenuous on the island, and there
-are men there, no doubt, who take their work there over easily.
-Against this has to be set the fact that the work that does go on in
-Vancouver Island goes on all the year round, that the colonists are
-men with an eye to the far future as well as to the immediate {267}
-one (they have, that is to say, an English ideal of permanent
-residence instead of the notion of getting what they can from the
-place and decamping), and that in their hands, if the island is not
-being developed as fast as it might be, it is at least safe from
-spoliation and waste. Some day, when the mainland Canadians have
-time to consider the amenities of a country life as well as the
-necessities, they will find themselves going to the island for hints.
-
-As one crosses from Vancouver, the beauty of the straits prepares one
-a little for the beauty of the island which, so far as I saw it, has
-no bare or ugly places. Its coast-line has the contour of the
-Scandinavian fiords, but its charm is greater, owing to the luxuriant
-growth of the tall and splendid trees. Right to the edge of these
-rock-bound sea-water lakes the forest grows--Douglas firs, surely the
-finest of all straight-growing trees, cedar and maple, jack-pine and
-arbutus, and at their feet, flowers and mosses and saxifrages.
-Arriving at Victoria, I went straight through to Duncans, and,
-looking from the train, was reminded by the greenness of the land,
-freshened by the delicate rain that was falling, of the mountainous
-parts of Ceylon--which impression was strengthened by the fact of the
-{268} smoking-compartment being crowded with Orientals of all sorts,
-mostly Chinese, but Japanese too and some Indians, all seeming very
-much at their ease among the white men. It was a harmonious sight;
-but what, I wondered, would an Anglo-Indian say if he found himself
-condemned to sit with his cheroot among this riff-raff of natives?
-and what chance of any agreement on questions affecting our Indian
-Empire between the officials of India and these Westerners who admit
-the Oriental to an equality with themselves?
-
-I was bound on a visit to friends who had a farm on Quamichan Lake,
-and found a buggy waiting for me at Duncans station, driven by an
-elderly man who had all the Canadian optimism, in spite of the fact
-that he had, in 1882, sold for a song the whole of Edmonton, then in
-his possession. Another of the missed millionaires of Canada. He
-brought me in the dark to my friends' farm, and when I looked out of
-my window next morning, I almost believed myself to be back in
-England. A little lake lay two fields below--a fresh-water lake
-still and reedy, with woods or orchards sloping to its edge, and in
-the distance a ring of hills. It might be Grasmere transported to
-some warmer county such as Devonshire; {269} but Devonshire never
-grew such stately trees, nor has England anywhere mountains wooded
-like these to their peaks. A heat-mist lay on the water, and the
-apples in the orchard seemed the reddest I had ever seen. Only the
-grass was not English grass, though it was greener than most of the
-grass of the new world. All round the lake were farms, belonging
-largely to Englishmen, dairy-farming or fruit-farming, making use of
-science and co-operation, but not sacrificing beauty to utility.
-Perhaps they could not spoil the island if they tried. The trees are
-so dominant and stately that every piece of cleared land seems to
-look at once like a part of an old English park.
-
-It should have been called New England, this beautiful country which
-has so many English people in it, which carries on so much of the
-English tradition and sentiment, and which has even the English
-pheasant. I saw thousands of pheasants during the days I spent
-there. They were put down on the island not so very many years ago,
-and they have increased enormously. The deer were already there, and
-you may see them in the orchards, unless they are very high-fenced,
-at almost any time in the early morning. And there are {270} grouse
-and partridges in plenty too, and beasts that England no longer
-possesses--the coon and the puma, and the bear and the wolverine. To
-see the salmon leaping all across Cowichan Bay, on a bright October
-morning, is a sight for sore eyes, if they happen to be an angler's.
-To drive along the roads is to realise instantly that they are the
-best roads in the Dominion. Duncans is particularly English, even
-for Vancouver Island. I think it is vanity and a certain cause of
-vexation to expect in the new world a conformity to the ways of the
-old, which necessary differences of living--the indispensable growth
-of new habits, some of them better than the old--render in time
-impossible. Those who expect such a conformity are usually the first
-to forget that the old country changes too, and that it is we, as
-often as those across the sea, who have forgotten the ancient order
-and taken on the new, generally without thought, and often without
-reason. Though it is absurd to expect to find Canada a replica in
-ideas and habits of the old world, it is nevertheless pleasant to
-come upon a community there which, without holding itself too much
-apart from its neighbours or standing out against what is
-progressive, does represent some peculiarly {271} English qualities
-at their best. That is, perhaps, why the island makes a particular
-appeal to the man newly out from home. I certainly do not think its
-inhabitants are to be charged with stiffness and unadaptability. Men
-who have taken on the new life, and work in a spirit of optimism not
-less than that shown elsewhere, are rather to be admired than
-otherwise if they have retained, and even insist on, what is good in
-the old. And a love of sport and beauty and sociability, and even of
-leisure, is a good thing, especially when it is found among men who
-do their own work as these men do, and more especially when found
-among women who work as the women of the island do. The work is the
-best of all, but all work and no play turns many people--and not a
-few Canadians--not merely into dull folk, but into narrow-minded and
-backward ones, who will some day have all the unpleasantness of being
-rudely awakened to the fact.
-
-No doubt there are some ne'er-do-weels on the island, but the great
-majority of those I met seemed to me to be capable men, likely to do
-well by what is the most beautiful, and will some day be, perhaps,
-the most valuable part of the Empire.
-
-
-
-
-{272}
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
- A CHAT WITH THE PRIME MINISTER OF BRITISH
- COLUMBIA AND A BIG FIRE AT VICTORIA
-
-As everybody knows who has been in Canada, there are two hotel
-systems in vogue there. By the one system you pay for your room and
-board separately, and this is called the European plan. By the other
-you take your meals and lodging at a fixed price, and that is called
-the American plan.
-
-In much the same way one might say there are two systems of life in
-Canada, and indeed elsewhere. By the one you distinguish between
-your work and your play, and treat each as a separate item. By the
-other you mix the two up, and are apt to consider yourself a
-strenuous person. I don't know that it is fair to describe these
-respectively as the American and the European system of life; but I
-am pretty certain that whether you apply the systems to life or to a
-hotel, the results produced by them are not on the whole very
-different. {273} Applying them to life, the main distinction seems
-to be that the exponents of the strenuous or American method--those
-who get their fun out of their work and their holidays out of their
-forced travel, or their compulsory rest by doctor's orders--are
-frequently led to confuse the appearance of work with the reality,
-and to be disentitled to wear that air of superiority which, in the
-presence of confessed believers of leisure, they too frequently
-assume. For, when all is said and done, leisure is as necessary to
-man as work, and everybody takes it, whatever he may think.
-
-Vancouver laughs at Victoria for its dead-aliveness and want of
-hustle. Victoria smiles at Vancouver for its restlessness and
-superfluity of energy.
-
-Now you see the point of my aphorism. I do not propose to hold the
-balance between these distinguished cities. Both have their peculiar
-merits; and if Vancouver is likely in years to come to leave Victoria
-far behind in the race for industrial supremacy, Victoria is none the
-less likely to remain ahead of Vancouver in culture and the arts. At
-present I should judge that Victoria is distinctly the steadier city
-of the two. Speculation in land is the exception rather than the
-rule; prices go {274} up steadily, and the land is bought by
-intending residents. At which point I will abandon comparisons,
-which are the more absurd because the destinies of the two towns are
-so widely different. Vancouver is a great port on the mainland of
-Canada, connecting it with Asia, the western States, South America,
-and whatever countries will henceforth export merchandise via the
-Panama Canal. Victoria is the political capital of British Columbia,
-with all the prestige that attaches to such a position and the finest
-climate in the Dominion. Not that it is only that. Some of its
-inhabitants consider that its prospects are immeasurably superior to
-those of Seattle, 'since the riches of Vancouver Island' (I quote
-from a local pamphlet), 'in their entirety incomparably more valuable
-than the gold-mines of Alaska, are directly tributary to the British
-Columbia capital.'
-
-There is a great deal in this, though one has to remember that those
-riches will take many years to develop. The drawback to the
-immediate development of Vancouver Island is that it is covered with
-enormous timber. Reciprocity with the States is likely to give a
-fillip to the lumber industry, and the clearing of the land will then
-go on far quicker than {275} hitherto. True, lumbermen do not
-actually clear the land; they leave the stumps behind them, and all
-the poorer trees. But they undoubtedly open the land up. Moreover,
-the revival of Esquimalt as a naval base will revive the prestige of
-Victoria, and create more work, besides inducing railwaymen to press
-on into the island.
-
-I stopped there on my way back, partly to see the town itself, partly
-because I wished to see Mr. Richard M'Bride. The town disappointed
-me just a little. It commands a magnificent view of the mountains on
-the mainland, and the country all round is beautiful. But the villas
-and gardens, which one hears so much praised, struck me as a little
-commonplace. Perhaps it is that I like a town to be a town and a
-garden to be a garden; whereas Victoria is a sort of garden city,
-grateful no doubt to those eyes that are accustomed to the
-utilitarian towns of the West, but altogether lacking in
-architectural fineness. The Parliament Buildings are good, and would
-be very good if those responsible for their maintenance would remove
-the inscription 'Canada' from across the front of them. In its
-coloured lettering it looks like the icing-sugar mottoes you see
-inscribed on birthday cakes.
-
-{276}
-
-But let a more enthusiastic pen than mine (again I fall back on that
-local pamphlet) describe Victoria as it appears to Victorians.
-
-'If there are sights more beautiful than the Olympian Mountains from
-Beacon Hill, or the windings of the Gorge as the waters come in from
-the sea between waving battlements of plumy firs, then eyes have not
-seen them. If there is a sweeter song than the skylark's matin
-melodies high up from Cadboro Bay, then ears have not heard it. If
-there be more bewildering loveliness than clusters about the shaded
-and flower-gemmed gardens of Victorian homes looking seaward, then
-poets have not written it in imperishable numbers, nor minstrels
-celebrated it in well-remembered song. If there be a city of dreams,
-even the fabled Atlantis of antiquity, or vision of Babylonian towers
-set in hanging gardens, and redolent of strange odours of musk and
-myrrh, or fairy casements opening out to perilous seas forlorn, then
-never one approached in splendour this jewel of all time, ringed by
-the azure seas and sentinelled by everlasting hills.... A bird's
-song drops like the sudden peal of a bell. Outside are broad
-boulevards, grey with powdery macadam, stretching towards the
-bustling city; highways of progress and {277} modernity, now scrolled
-by the flight of a whizzing automobile, now echoing with the staccato
-sound of hurrying hoof-beats. Inside are flowers and brooding
-hedges, the sheen of close-cropped grasses and sun-lacquered
-tree-trunks--rest, peace, and sweet seclusion.'
-
-After this it comes almost as a relief to know from the same pamphlet
-that 'the climate of Victoria is best expressed in figures.' There
-is a great deal to be said for figures.
-
-There is a very good, small, natural-history museum in a wing
-attached to the Parliament Buildings, but it is absurdly small. The
-collection of Indian curios is remarkably inadequate, and merely
-tempts the visitor to ask when Canadians are going to devote some of
-the money they are undoubtedly making to a genuine study and
-collection of the remains of their predecessors in the land. Indians
-are not dying out as fast as some people suppose; but their crafts
-are, and so are their creeds and all that appertains to them. It
-would be easy even now to create a magnificent Indian museum, but it
-will become less and less easy as the years go by. Relics of Indian
-times are constantly being picked up by men travelling in
-out-of-the-way parts, or unearthed during railroad and other {278}
-excavations, and if it were known that the authorities would be glad
-to receive them and would perhaps pay the cost of their carriage to
-some centre, there is no doubt that many valuable finds would be
-forwarded to them. The making of museums, just like the building of
-ships, is a branch of empire work which should not be neglected; and
-Victorians are eminently the people to recognise this.
-
-It was in his rooms in Parliament Buildings that Mr. M'Bride
-conversed with me on the subject of British Columbia. You hear
-people say in Canada, that if ever that astutest of party leaders,
-Sir Wilfrid Laurier, goes out of office with his Liberals, Mr.
-M'Bride will shortly after become Prime Minister of the Dominion--as
-Conservative leader, be it understood. He is not a great orator, and
-he has no scheme even for a party millennium. That, however, in
-Canada is a strength rather than a weakness. Politicians are not
-expected in Canada to bring about the millennium: indeed, so far as I
-could make out, the average Canadian is of opinion that when the
-millennium comes, it will be noticeable for an absence of
-politicians. They have not our reverence for these great men. But
-on the other hand, they require from them evidence of qualities which
-{279} may or may not be present in our ministers. One is a readiness
-to seize opportunity as it comes. Another is, to have a practical
-understanding of the ways of finance. Yet a third is, to be in touch
-with men and things--the sort of quality we mean, however vaguely,
-when we raise the cry of a Cabinet of Business Men. All these
-qualities Mr. M'Bride possesses, together with that readiness to seem
-agreeable which is almost a necessity to a public man.
-
-Mr. M'Bride confined his conversation with me to British Columbia--a
-big enough subject for a short interview. I wished to know if the
-survey of the province was being carried out as quickly as possible.
-In a vast country like British Columbia, it seems one of the most
-important things. The right to acquire land must be made simple and
-certain. Mr. M'Bride declared that surveying was going on as fast as
-men and money could do it, and referred me to the surveyor-general
-for details. I wish I could go further into the subject, but there
-is no space for it here. Then we got on to education, and Mr.
-M'Bride asked me to assure the working men of England that the
-education facilities of British Columbia were as fine as any to be
-got anywhere. {280} Perhaps this is so, though I heard some
-criticism of the public schools from another eminent Victorian. It
-is easier, perhaps, to be enthusiastic than to be unanimous about any
-given system of education. To take but one small point, the
-co-education of boys and girls is a thing upon which people are not
-agreed even in British Columbia.
-
-I was on the steamboat, ready to start for Vancouver, when the great
-fire of 1910 broke out in the town. With a considerable wind blowing
-it seemed to me not improbable that the whole of Victoria would be
-burnt down that night, and I had sufficient of the journalistic
-instinct to leave my things to go on by the boat and to go back
-myself to watch the blaze. Luckily the wind dropped and the fire was
-kept to one quarter, and I rather regretted my haste when I found
-myself stranded in Victoria at three o'clock in the morning. Still,
-it was worth while to have been there, if only to observe the working
-of the Canadian mind in a crisis of this sort. In England you would
-have heard ejaculations of horror and much sympathy expressed with
-those who were bound to suffer by the fire. The Victorian crowd took
-it quite differently. 'This'll create more work,' said one {281} man
-fervidly. 'Just what the town needed,' said another enthusiast.
-'We'll be able to have a better-looking street there after this.
-Those shops weren't good enough.' I even heard some of the men who
-had rushed out of their burning offices talking keenly and proudly of
-the sort of buildings they'd have to start putting up next day--much
-better buildings. Presumably they were insured, but even so men in
-the old country would have been a little shocked and perturbed, and
-regretful of the old rooms they were accustomed to. I fell asleep,
-when I had found a hotel, almost oppressed by the optimism of Canada.
-
-
-
-
-{282}
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-BACK THROUGH OTTAWA
-
-It was just before sunrise that I first saw Ottawa. I was on my way
-back from Vancouver, and had spent four successive days in the train,
-getting out only for minutes at a time to stamp about platforms where
-the train waited long enough to permit of such exercise.
-
-Such days, varied only by meals for which one is always looking, but
-never hungry, tend to become monotonous, even though one spends them
-mostly in the observation car. The fact is, observation pure and
-simple is one of the most difficult things possible to a member of
-the human tribe--as hard as doing compulsory jig-saws; and reading
-humorous American magazines, one after the other, is an alternative
-that also requires the strong mind. If I must travel long distances
-by train, I want to be the engine-driver.
-
-The country, I thought, looked less attractive {283} as I repassed it
-now than it looked before, and I put this down to the freeze-up,
-which had come unusually early, people kept saying, and gave to the
-land a black and ruffled look, like a sick bird's. Later it would be
-beautiful again in snow, and the life and work of the season of snow
-would begin. Meanwhile, people in the little northerly stations we
-passed had the appearance of having stopped work. You saw them
-standing about--always with their backs to buildings to get out of
-the shrivelling wind. I suppose in most of these places there is a
-between-time in which nobody can work.
-
-Nothing much was doing in Ottawa when I got out there, but that of
-course was due to the earliness of the hour. It was so early that
-when I reached a hotel they told me breakfast was not to be had for
-some time yet, and so, since I was too wide-awake to go to sleep
-again, I thought I would spend the hour looking at the Dominion
-Parliament Buildings. Perhaps it was the too early hour, perhaps it
-was the coldness of the wind blowing round that bluff above the river
-on which the famous buildings stand--but I could feel none of that
-satisfaction, when I looked at them, which great architecture gives.
-The {284} situation is fine, but not the buildings. Anthony Trollope
-has written of them:--'As regards purity of art and manliness of
-conception, the work is entitled to the very highest praise.... I
-know no modern Gothic purer of its kind or less sullied with
-fictitious ornamentation'--but I think he must have breakfasted
-handsomely first. Some one else, but I forget who, and it does not
-matter, has described the buildings as 'a noble pile,' which seems to
-hit the mark, if, as I fancy, that mid-Victorian expression suggests
-something on so large a scale, which has obviously cost such a lot of
-money, that vague admiration is the least of the emotions which
-should be produced by a sight of it. 'A noble pile,' then, let them
-remain, especially since, seen from some distance, with the beautiful
-river below and a spacious country stretched before them, they
-possess a certain imposing appearance. Closer up, one is less
-impressed. There is a long-backed unmeaning set to the buildings, as
-though the architects had found concentration a vexation, and had
-decided to extend instead. Still, they might have elaborated
-painfully, and they did not--except for those little turrets on the
-side-buildings, surmounted by railings which one associates chiefly
-with {285} the London area. Area railings are meant, I suppose, to
-prevent errand-boys from falling into the areas, but there can be few
-errands to the roof of the Parliament Buildings. In passing, I did
-not like those hundreds of silly little windows that peep all round:
-one, as it were, for every official to peep from.
-
-Reflection should serve to temper criticism, however. The year 1867,
-in which the Dominion Parliament required its Houses, was not one of
-brilliant achievement in the architectural world; and when it is
-remembered that Canada itself was also a new country, the wonder is
-that nothing worse was built. Only a few years before, we in England
-had been transfixed with admiration of the Crystal Palace; Royal
-Academicians were above criticism, and 'almost too great to live';
-bright in the sun gleamed the Albert Memorial. We ruled the waves,
-but not the arts; and 'our daughter of the snows' took over our large
-ideas and our little taste in building.
-
-Whether she took over our political ideas is another matter, upon
-which I pondered as I contemplated those Parliament Buildings. There
-stood the House in which Sir John Macdonald evolved that
-east-and-west policy which seemed such an empire-cementing thing;
-{286} where Sir Wilfrid Laurier teaches the world how to lead a
-party; where not as yet had been ratified that Reciprocity Agreement
-with America which has been agitating our statesmen so much this
-year, though, even as I gazed, it must have been in course of
-construction. Would an Imperial Parliament sit there some day, I
-wondered, and direct the affairs of the British Empire from what
-would be, not so long hence, a far more central and important spot
-than Westminster? I could not quite imagine it. I could not even
-like the idea, as some Imperialists at any price can. Home Rule for
-England is one of the policies I shall always stand for, I believe;
-even when Canadians have that grasp of Imperial affairs which we in
-England impute to them--by comparison, we generally mean, with our
-own English political opponents--that grasp which, as a matter of
-fact, is much less common among them at present than it is among us,
-whether we be Liberals or Conservatives.
-
-I wish our party political system allowed of our minimising the zeal
-and intelligence of the side opposed to us without magnifying those
-qualities in a third party which, in strict reality, it scarcely
-possesses. I wish, for example, that Tariff Reformers could deride
-{287} the Imperialistic attitude of Free Traders (and vice versa)
-without declaring that Canadians could in this matter teach us all
-lessons. For the truth is that Canadians could not give lessons to
-either in this matter. They have an Imperial sentiment all right,
-but they do not worry over it as we do. Take that question of
-Preference which has been making us all so hot for several years now.
-It never troubled Canadians at all. They thought that there was a
-good deal in it from a business point of view, and they were prepared
-to try it--and did so. But they never for a moment fancied or
-perturbed themselves with thinking that, either with or without it,
-the Empire would totter to its fall. Our fervours left them entirely
-cool; and in that business-like state of coolness, after duly
-granting us Preference, they have, equally duly in their opinion, set
-out to establish reciprocity with the States. The only thing likely
-to make them hot in this matter is the suggestion that they have been
-lacking in Imperial spirit. Of course they had been lacking in that
-early, romantic, self-immolating and fantastically quaint, Imperial
-spirit which we attributed to them--just to make our own Little
-Englanders try and feel ashamed; but, equally again, they {288} never
-had it, and would not dream of claiming it even if they could be made
-to understand what our devotees meant by it. To forgo trade in order
-to uphold the flag would not appeal to a Canadian--mainly for the
-reason that the idea would strike him as grotesque.
-
-In the matter of this Reciprocity Agreement, then, I think it is we
-who are wrong if we make it a reproach to the Canadians. It may or
-may not be a sound economic proceeding, but it is entered upon
-without prejudice to Imperial sentiment. Only if we first assume
-that all Canadians have been burning for years past with the same
-zeal for an Imperial Zollverein that has animated our own Tariff
-Reformers, can we now credit them with cooling off and backsliding.
-But such an assumption would be a very great mistake. All
-assumptions that Canadians view our political problems from our point
-of view are great mistakes. They no more do so than we view theirs
-from their point of view. We do not. Nothing struck me more
-forcibly than the fact that what causes us political turmoil in Great
-Britain is viewed with complete coolness in Canada, and that what
-Canadians are keen after remains unknown to us. While I was there, I
-kept seeing letters {289} in English papers (reproduced
-sometimes--but very briefly--in Canadian papers) saying that Canada
-was whole-hearted for Tariff Reform, or that Canadian Free Traders
-were sweeping the country; whereas the fact was and is, that these
-two terms (whatever might in reality be the state of Canadian
-parties) never conveyed in the least in Canada what we mean by them,
-and therefore conveyed no truth that could be understood of both
-peoples equally.
-
-Does this inter-Imperial lack of comprehension threaten the future of
-the Empire? It might seem so at first. Lack of understanding
-between fellow-citizens cannot be a good thing in itself. But it has
-this merit, that it makes real interference on either side a rare
-thing. If we understood--or believed we understood--what was for the
-future welfare of Canada, it is doubtful if we could refrain from
-pointing it out, even if we could refrain from insisting upon it. If
-the Canadians thought themselves capable of directing us in the right
-way--say in the management of India--they would feel urged to give
-their opinion, and Anglo-Indian officials, having this last straw
-added to their backs, would strike _en masse_. As it is, we let each
-other's real problems {290} alone, and are satisfied with our own
-solutions of them. Imperial Conferences are necessary because in
-some matters the Empire must work together, having the same
-interests. Cables and Dreadnoughts are cases in point. That Great
-Britain still bears the main expenditure in all such matters is
-proof, if proof be needed, that what American papers somewhat
-unkindly call 'British Island Politics' are, still, more Imperial
-than the politics of any other part of the Empire. We pay and we ask
-for little in return, and the Empire will go on, even now that Canada
-has become a nation. Only some mistake could, I think, part us--a
-mistake as big as that which parted us from the United States--and we
-are not likely to make it; nor is Canada likely to wish for it,
-however great she may picture and make her own destiny. But that she
-will want to rule entirely in her own house is certain. Canadians
-themselves--the voters I mean--are not likely for a long time to wish
-for much more than they have in the way of national liberty. I do
-not think they would much worry as to whether their ambassador at
-Washington, for example, was appointed from Ottawa or from London.
-The results in either case would be likely to be very similar, {291}
-and in any case, as I have said, Canadians are not obsessed at
-present with politics. But it has to be remembered that besides
-Canadian voters, there are Canadian politicians, and since it is in
-the nature of politicians to be at least as ambitious as other
-people, it is natural that Canadian politicians should want in their
-own hands all the important posts that are to be had. Just at
-present Canadians take such a disrespectful view of politicians in
-general--which is unfair no doubt to their own political
-representatives, but natural perhaps in a new country which has not
-too much time to reflect upon the real benefactions politicians may
-confer, and rather fancies, from isolated examples, that 'graft' is
-what they are usually after--that they are not likely to demand of
-their own accord more power to the hand of their own statesmen. But
-the accord of voters depends in due course upon the persuasive powers
-of candidates, and I foresee the candidates persuading pretty hard in
-the near future: all of which will make work for Imperial Conferences
-of the near future, but not, it is to be hoped, impossible work.
-
-I find that having represented myself as reflecting upon Canadian
-politics outside the {292} Dominion Parliament Buildings, I have
-altogether omitted Canadian politics in favour of Imperial
-considerations. Beyond showing, or rather trying to show, that
-Canadian politics--the things that really interest Canadians--are not
-in the least what we are accustomed to think them, I have got no
-further at all. Still, that--if I have shown it--is something, for
-it may suggest to some gentle reader that an Empire is not a simple,
-extended Great Britain, in which every one thinks precisely the same
-things to be of the same immediate importance; of which all the
-emotions and reflections may be realised in full by a perusal, let us
-say, of the Standard of Empire.
-
-And so I remove myself from that bluff above the river at Ottawa to
-my hotel, and thence to divers parts of that charming town, which
-looked then--for Parliament was not sitting--something like Oxford
-out of term; and thence to the train carrying me back to Montreal and
-Quebec.
-
-Afterwards came the return across the Atlantic to a country smaller
-than Canada--(less than a week of steaming, my friends), in company
-with Canadians who were returning to see what the old place was like
-after many years. I think they would not be {293} ill-pleased with
-it, small as it is by comparison. I hope they found behind it some
-of the qualities which, as it seems to me, are to be found also in
-THE FAIR DOMINION, making it to my eyes yet more fair.
-
-
-
-
-{294}
-
-INDEX
-
-
-ABBOTT, MOUNT, 215.
-
-Alaska, 274.
-
-Alberta, 13, 138, 141, 142, 143, 164, 165, 217.
-
-Alps, the, 177, 180, 199.
-
-Angell, Norman, 68.
-
-Annunzio, Gabriel d', 178.
-
-Anticosti, 16.
-
-Archangel, 13.
-
-Athelmer, 233, 238.
-
-
-
-BAIE ST. PAUL, 40.
-
-Banff, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 183.
-
-Beacon Hill, 276.
-
-Beaupre, 47, 48, 49, 50.
-
-Beaupre, Ste. Anne de, 48, 51, 53.
-
-Bears, Grizzly, 246-50.
-
-Belle Isle, 16.
-
-Birmingham, 156.
-
-Blondin, 90.
-
-Bourassa, Mr., 30, 31, 33, 85, 86.
-
-Bourne, Archbishop, 17.
-
-Bow River, 141, 144, 179.
-
-Bradley, A. G., 31.
-
-British Columbia, 188, 216, 237, 238, 256, 274, 279.
-
-Bruce, Randolph, 221, 222, 225.
-
-Brussels, 88.
-
-
-
-CADBORO' BAY, 276.
-
-Calgary, 141, 143, 144, 145, 163, 164, 170, 195.
-
-Canadian Pacific Railway, 18, 141, 142, 152, 162, 182, 261.
-
-Cartier, 40.
-
-Ceylon, 267.
-
-Champlain, 35, 42.
-
-Chicago, 159.
-
-Chicoutimi, 39, 43.
-
-Chuzzlewit, Martin, 128.
-
-Colonial Intelligence for Educated Women, Committee of, 195.
-
-Columbia River, 218, 219, 222, 224, 230, 233.
-
-Columbia Valley, 215, 216, 225, 234, 238.
-
-Cooper, Fenimore, 92.
-
-Covent Garden, 117.
-
-
-
-DICKENS, CHARLES, 29, 90.
-
-Dufferin Terrace, 26, 27, 28.
-
-Duncans, 267, 268, 270.
-
-
-
-EDEN CITY, 129.
-
-Edmonton, 268.
-
-Eliott, Professor, 163.
-
-Emerald Lake, 206.
-
-_Empress of Britain_, S.S., 1.
-
-Eucharistic Congress, the, 17, 77, 78, 79.
-
-
-
-FARNHAM, MOUNT, 229.
-
-Fort William, 114.
-
-Fraser River, 257.
-
-Free Trade, 29, 149, 287.
-
-French River, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 99, 101, 102.
-
-
-
-GLACIER HOUSE, 215.
-
-Glasgow, 73.
-
-Golden, 215, 216, 217, 218, 224, 232, 236, 237, 238, 239, 241, 244.
-
-Gordon, Adam, 252.
-
-Grand Trunk Railway, 261.
-
-Grasmere, 268.
-
-
-
-HAMMERSMITH, 94.
-
-Hampstead Heath, 117.
-
-Heights of Abraham, 34.
-
-Hennepin, Father Louis, 89.
-
-Hesse, Landgraf of, 226.
-
-Hewlett, Maurice, 250.
-
-Higgsville, 128.
-
-Himalayas, the, 177, 227.
-
-Home Rule, 31.
-
-Hoogly, the, 44.
-
-Howells, W. D., 90.
-
-Hudson Bay Company, 115.
-
-
-
-IMPERIALISM, 33, 36, 287, 290.
-
-Illecillewaet Glacier, the Great, 215.
-
-Iron Top Mountain, 224.
-
-Irrigation Company, Columbia Valley, 237.
-
-Irrigation Works, Columbia Valley, 221.
-
-
-
-KAMLOOPS, 216, 229.
-
-Keats, John, 200.
-
-Kildonan, 123, 124.
-
-Kinchinjunga, 177.
-
-Kipling, Rudyard, 105, 106, 253.
-
-
-
-LACHINE RAPIDS, 77.
-
-Laggan, 200.
-
-Laurentian Mountains, 27.
-
-Laurier, Sir Wilfrid, 278, 286.
-
-Liverpool, 1.
-
-
-
-LONDON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, 152.
-
-London, 73, 86, 117, 118, 119, 285.
-
-Loti, Pierre, 110, 111.
-
-Louise, Lake, 198, 199, 200, 206.
-
-Lourdes, 47.
-
-
-
-MACDONALD, SIR JOHN, 285.
-
-Manchester, 156.
-
-Manitoba, 114, 144.
-
-Marseilles, 77.
-
-Maskinonge, 93, 96, 99, 100.
-
-M'Bride, Richard, 275, 278, 279.
-
-Meredith, George, 130.
-
-Montmorency Falls, 38, 39, 49, 50.
-
-Montreal, 17, 34, 45, 56, 64, 66, 67, 68, 69, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76,
-77, 79, 80, 81, 84, 292.
-
-Moosejaw, 126, 156.
-
-Moraine Lake, 201, 204.
-
-Murray Bay, 40.
-
-Muskoka Lakes, 92.
-
-
-
-NAPOLEON, 120.
-
-National Park, 179, 181.
-
-New Brunswick, 32, 237, 238, 242.
-
-New York, 39, 51, 154, 159.
-
-Niagara Falls, 38, 89, 90.
-
-Nightingale, 163, 165, 166.
-
-North Pole, 136.
-
-Nottingham, 28.
-
-Nova Scotia, 32.
-
-
-
-OJIBWAY, AN, 96, 97, 99, 100.
-
-Okanagan, 216, 219.
-
-Olympian Mountains, 276.
-
-Ontario, 8, 13, 32, 33, 45, 85, 109, 111, 112, 113, 141, 151.
-
-Orleans, Ile d', 40.
-
-Ottawa, 84, 282, 283, 292.
-
-Oxford, 77, 292.
-
-
-
-PANAMA CANAL, 261, 274.
-
-Paris, 77, 117, 158.
-
-Parkman, Francis, 41, 42.
-
-Parnell, Charles Stewart, 31.
-
-Peterborough, 8, 81.
-
-Pickerel, 95, 98.
-
-Pitt, William, 265.
-
-Police, North-West Mounted, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136.
-
-Port Arthur, 114.
-
-
-
-QUAMICHAN LAKE, 268.
-
-Quebec, 18, 20, 22, 26, 28, 31, 32, 34, 37, 38, 39, 45, 49, 50, 53,
-56, 60, 61, 64, 111, 112, 292.
-
-
-
-REVELSTOKE, 253.
-
-Red River, 123, 144.
-
-'Reddy,' 265.
-
-Regina, 82, 126, 131, 132, 136, 156, 218.
-
-Remittance Men, 161.
-
-Rockefeller, 23.
-
-Rockies, the, 170, 171, 177, 181, 198, 209, 215, 216, 230.
-
-Rome, 34, 79.
-
-Roosevelt, Theodore, 45.
-
-Russia, 135.
-
-
-
-SAGUENAY, 37, 39, 41, 43, 44, 46.
-
-San Francisco, 258.
-
-St. Irenee, 40.
-
-St. John, Reversible Falls of, 237.
-
-St. Laurent, 67, 68.
-
-St. Lawrence, 16, 26, 34, 39, 40, 44, 57.
-
-St. Malo, 41.
-
-Saskatchewan, 144.
-
-Seattle, 260, 264, 274.
-
-Selkirk, Lord, 123.
-
-Selkirks, the, 215, 216, 224, 225, 253.
-
-Siegfried, Andre, 18, 147.
-
-Sir Donald, Mount, 215.
-
-Spain, 156.
-
-Spillamacheen, 232, 234, 237.
-
-Strathmore, 163, 164.
-
-Sudbury, 102, 107.
-
-Superior, Lake, 114.
-
-
-
-TADOUSAC, 40, 41, 42, 44.
-
-Tariff Reform, 149, 286, 288.
-
-Thames, 94.
-
-Thebes, 127, 128, 129.
-
-Toronto, 29, 65, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 91, 92, 93.
-
-Town Planning Bill, 140.
-
-Trachoma, 3.
-
-Trinite, Cap, 43, 44.
-
-Trollope, Anthony, 284.
-
-
-
-ULSTER, 33.
-
-
-
-VALLEY OF THE TEN PEAKS, 201, 202, 204.
-
-Vancouver, 196, 236, 258, 259, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 267, 273,
-274, 282.
-
-Vancouver Island, 266-71, 274.
-
-Vannutelli, Cardinal, 78.
-
-Victoria, 196, 267, 273, 275, 277, 280.
-
-
-
-WALKER, BRUCE, 119, 120.
-
-Webb, Captain, 90.
-
-Wilmer, 216, 220, 221, 224, 232, 236.
-
-Windermere, Lake, 222, 223.
-
-Winnipeg, 8, 84, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 123, 124, 127, 128, 130,
-144.
-
-Wolfe, General, 34, 35, 39.
-
-Wood, Major, 34.
-
-World's Fair, the, 82, 83, 87, 88.
-
-
-
-YOHO VALLEY, 206, 207, 209, 210.
-
-Young Women's Christian Association, 196.
-
-Yukon, 188, 250, 251, 252.
-
-
-
-
- Printed by T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty
- at the Edinburgh University Press
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Dominion, by R. E. Vernede
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