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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The cruise of the Canoe Club, by W. L.
-Alden
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The cruise of the Canoe Club
-
-Author: W. L. Alden
-
-Release Date: June 15, 2022 [eBook #68322]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Richard Hulse, hekula03 and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRUISE OF THE CANOE
-CLUB ***
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- “DON’T THINK FOR A MOMENT OF GETTING ANY OTHER CANOE.” [P. 12. ]
-
-
-
-
- THE CRUISE OF THE CANOE CLUB
-
-
- BY W. L. ALDEN
- AUTHOR OF
- “THE MORAL PIRATES” “THE CRUISE OF THE ‘GHOST’” ETC.
-
-
- Illustrated
-
-
- NEW YORK
- HARPER & BROTHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE
- 1883
-
-
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, by
-
- HARPER & BROTHERS,
-
- In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
-
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- “DON’T THINK FOR A MOMENT OF GETTING ANY OTHER
- CANOE” _Frontispiece_
-
- “SHE’S HALF FULL OF WATER” 30
-
- A STAMPEDE IN CAMP 38
-
- NOT SO EASY AS IT LOOKS 50
-
- “HE CAUGHT HOLD OF THE ROOT OF A TREE AND KEPT HIS
- CANOE STATIONARY” 70
-
- RUNNING THE RAPID 78
-
- GETTING BREAKFAST UNDER DIFFICULTIES 94
-
- HUNTING FOR A WILD-CAT IN CHAMBLY CASTLE 110
-
- SAILING DOWN THE RICHELIEU RIVER 116
-
- “THEY FOUND A BEAR FEASTING UPON THE REMAINS OF THEIR
- BREAKFAST” 138
-
- AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE 146
-
- “HOW IN THE WORLD DID YOU GET UP THERE?” 160
-
-
-
-
-THE CRUISE
-
-OF
-
-THE CANOE CLUB.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-It is a very easy thing for four boys to make up their minds to get
-four canoes and to go on a canoe cruise, but it is not always so
-easy to carry out such a project--as Charley Smith, Tom Schuyler,
-Harry Wilson, and Joe Sharpe discovered.
-
-Canoes cost money; and though some canoes cost more than others,
-it is impossible to buy a new wooden canoe of an approved model
-for less than seventy-five dollars. Four canoes, at seventy-five
-dollars each, would cost altogether three hundred dollars. As the
-entire amount of pocket-money in the possession of the boys was
-only seven dollars and thirteen cents, it was clear that they were
-not precisely in a position to buy canoes.
-
-There was Harry’s uncle, who had already furnished his nephew
-and his young comrades first with a row-boat, and then with a
-sail-boat. Even a benevolent uncle deserves some mercy, and the
-boys agreed that it would never do to ask Uncle John to spend three
-hundred dollars in canoes for them. “The most we can ask of him,”
-said Charley Smith, “is to let us sell the _Ghost_ and use the
-money to help pay for canoes.”
-
-Now, the _Ghost_, in which the boys had made a cruise along the
-south shore of Long Island, was a very nice sail-boat, but it was
-improbable that any one would be found who would be willing to
-give more than two hundred dollars for her. There would still be
-a hundred dollars wanting, and the prospect of finding that sum
-seemed very small.
-
-“If we could only have stayed on that water-logged brig and
-brought her into port we should have made lots of money,” said Tom.
-“The captain of the schooner that towed us home went back with a
-steamer and brought the brig in yesterday. Suppose we go and look
-at her once more?”
-
-While cruising in the _Ghost_ the boys had found an abandoned brig,
-which they had tried to sail into New York harbor, but they had
-been compelled to give up the task, and to hand her over to the
-captain of a schooner which towed the partly disabled _Ghost_ into
-port. They all thought they would like to see the brig again, so
-they went down to Burling Slip, where she was lying, and went on
-board her.
-
-The captain of the schooner met the boys on the dock. He was in
-excellent spirits, for the brig was loaded with valuable South
-American timber, and he was sure of receiving as much as ten
-thousand dollars from her owners. He knew very well that, while the
-boys had no legal right to any of the money, they had worked hard
-in trying to save the brig, and had been the means of putting her
-in his way. He happened to be an honest, generous man, and he felt
-very rich; so he insisted on making each of the boys a present.
-
-The present was sealed up in an envelope, which he gave to Charley
-Smith, telling him not to look at its contents until after
-dinner--the boys having mentioned that they were all to take dinner
-together at Uncle John’s house. Charley put the envelope rather
-carelessly in his pocket; but when it was opened it was found to
-contain four new one-hundred-dollar bills.
-
-It need hardly be said that the boys were delighted. They showed
-the money to Uncle John, who told them that they had fairly earned
-it, and need feel no hesitation about accepting it. They had now
-money enough to buy canoes, and to pay the expenses of a canoe
-cruise. Mr. Schuyler, Mr. Sharpe, and Charley’s guardian were
-consulted, and at Uncle John’s request gave their consent to the
-canoeing scheme. The first great difficulty in the way was thus
-entirely removed.
-
-“I don’t know much about canoes,” remarked Uncle John, when the
-boys asked his advice as to what kind of canoes they should get,
-“but I know the commodore of a canoe club. You had better go
-and see him, and follow his advice. I’ll give you a letter of
-introduction to him.”
-
-No time was lost in finding the commodore, and Charley Smith
-explained to him that four young canoeists would like to know what
-was the very best kind of canoe for them to get.
-
-The Commodore, who, in spite of his magnificent title, wasn’t in
-the least alarming, laughed, and said, “That is a question that
-I’ve made up my mind never to try to answer. But I’ll give you the
-names of four canoeists, each of whom uses a different variety of
-canoe. You go and see them, listen to what they say, believe it
-all, and then come back and see me, and we’ll come to a decision.”
-He then wrote four notes of introduction, gave them to the boys,
-and sent them away.
-
-The first canoeist to whom the boys were referred received them
-with great kindness, and told them that it was fortunate they
-had come to him. “The canoe that you want,” said he, “is the
-‘Rice Lake’ canoe, and if you had gone to somebody else, and
-he had persuaded you to buy ‘Rob Roy’ canoes or ‘Shadows,’ you
-would have made a great mistake. The ‘Rice Lake’ canoe is nearly
-flat-bottomed, and so stiff that there is no danger that you will
-capsize her. She paddles easily, and sails faster than any other
-canoe. She is roomy, and you can carry about twice as much in her
-as you can carry in a ‘Rob Roy.’ She has no keel, so that you can
-run rapids easily in her, and she is built in a peculiar way that
-makes it impossible for her to leak. Don’t think for a moment of
-getting any other canoe, for if you do you will never cease to
-regret it.”
-
-He was such a pleasant, frank gentleman, and was so evidently
-earnest in what he said, that the boys at once decided to get ‘Rice
-Lake’ canoes. They did not think it worth while to make any farther
-inquiries; but, as they had three other notes of introduction
-with them, Tom Schuyler said that it would hardly do to throw them
-away. So they went to see the next canoeist, though without the
-least expectation that he would say anything that would alter their
-decision.
-
-Canoeist No. 2 was as polite and enthusiastic as canoeist No. 1.
-“So you boys want to get canoes, do you?” said he. “Well, there
-is only one canoe for you to get, and that is the ‘Shadow.’ She
-paddles easily, and sails faster than any other canoe. She’s not
-a flat-bottomed skiff, like the ‘Rice Laker,’ that will spill you
-whenever a squall strikes her, but she has good bearings, and you
-can’t capsize her unless you try hard. Then, she is decked all
-over, and you can sleep in her at night, and keep dry even in a
-thunder-storm; her water-tight compartments have hatches in them,
-so that you can stow blankets and things in them that you want to
-keep dry; and she has a keel, so that when you run rapids, and
-she strikes on a rock, she will strike on her keel instead of her
-planks. It isn’t worth while for you to look at any other canoe,
-for there is no canoe except the ‘Shadow’ that is worth having.”
-
-“You don’t think much of the ‘Rice Lake’ canoe, then?” asked Harry.
-
-“Why, she isn’t a civilized canoe at all,” replied the canoeist.
-“She is nothing but a heavy, wooden copy of the Indian birch. She
-hasn’t any deck, she hasn’t any water-tight compartments, and she
-hasn’t any keel. Whatever else you do, don’t get a ‘Rice Laker.’”
-
-The boys thanked the advocate of the “Shadow,” and when they
-found themselves in the street again they wondered which of the
-two canoeists could be right, for each directly contradicted the
-other, and each seemed to be perfectly sincere. They reconsidered
-their decision to buy “Rice Lake” canoes, and looked forward with
-interest to their meeting with canoeist No. 3.
-
-That gentleman was just as pleasant as the other two, but he did
-not agree with a single thing that they had said. “There are
-several different models of canoes,” he remarked, “but that
-is simply because there are ignorant people in the world. Mr.
-Macgregor, the father of canoeing, always uses a ‘Rob Roy’ canoe,
-and no man who has once been in a good ‘Rob Roy’ will ever get
-into any other canoe. The ‘Rob Roy’ paddles like a feather, and
-will outsail any other canoe. She weighs twenty pounds less than
-those great, lumbering canal-boats, the ‘Shadow’ and the ‘Rice
-Laker,’ and it don’t break your back to paddle her or to carry
-her round a dam. She is decked over, but her deck isn’t all cut
-up with hatches. There’s plenty of room to sleep in her, and her
-water-tight compartments are what they pretend to be--not a couple
-of leaky boxes stuffed full of blankets.”
-
-“We have been advised,” began Charley, “to get ‘Shadows’ or ‘Rice’--”
-
-“Don’t you do it,” interrupted the canoeist. “It’s lucky for you
-that you came to see me. It is a perfect shame for people to try to
-induce you to waste your money on worthless canoes. Mind you get
-‘Rob Roys,’ and nothing else. Other canoes don’t deserve the name.
-They are schooners, or scows, or canal-boats, but the ‘Rob Roy’ is
-a genuine canoe.”
-
-“Now for the last canoeist on the list!” exclaimed Harry as the
-boys left the office of canoeist No. 3. “I wonder what sort of a
-canoe he uses?”
-
-“I’m glad there is only one more of them for us to see,” said Joe.
-“The Commodore told us to believe all they said, and I’m trying my
-best to do it, but it’s the hardest job I ever tried.”
-
-The fourth canoeist was, on the whole, the most courteous and
-amiable of the four. He begged his young friends to pay no
-attention to those who recommended wooden canoes, no matter what
-model they might be. “Canvas,” said he, “is the only thing that a
-canoe should be built of. It is light and strong, and if you knock
-a hole in it you can mend it in five minutes. If you want to spend
-a great deal of money and own a yacht that is too small to sail in
-with comfort and too clumsy to be paddled, buy a wooden canoe;
-but if you really want to cruise, you will, of course, get canvas
-canoes.”
-
-“We have been advised to get ‘Rice Lakers,’ ‘Shadows,’ and ‘Rob
-Roys,’” said Tom, “and we did not know until now that there was
-such a thing as a canvas canoe.”
-
-“It is very sad,” replied the canoeist, “that people should take
-pleasure in giving such advice. They must know better. However, the
-subject is a painful one, and we won’t discuss it. Take my advice,
-my dear boys, and get canvas canoes. All the really good canoeists
-in the country would say the same thing to you.”
-
-“We must try,” said Joe, as the boys walked back to the Commodore’s
-office, “to believe that the ‘Rice Laker,’ the ‘Shadow,’ the ‘Rob
-Roy,’ and the canvas canoe is the best one ever built. It seems to
-me something like believing that four and one are just the same.
-Perhaps you fellows can do it, but I’m not strong enough to believe
-as much as that all at one time.”
-
-The Commodore smiled when the boys entered his office for the
-second time and said, “Well, of course you’ve found out what is the
-best canoe, and know just what you want to buy?”
-
-“We’ve seen four men,” replied Harry, “and each one says that the
-canoe that he recommends is the only good one, and that all the
-others are good for nothing.”
-
-“I might have sent you to four other men, and they would have told
-you of four other canoes, each of which is the best in existence.
-But perhaps you have already heard enough to make up your minds.”
-
-“We’re farther from making up our minds than ever,” said Harry. “I
-do wish you would tell us what kind of canoe is really the best.”
-
-“The truth is,” said the Commodore, “that there isn’t much to
-choose among the different models of canoes, and you’ll find that
-every canoeist is honestly certain that he has the best one. Now,
-I won’t undertake to select canoes for you, though I will suggest
-that a light ‘Rob Roy’ would probably be a good choice for the
-smallest of you boys. Why don’t you try all four of the canoes that
-have just been recommended to you? Then, if you cruise together,
-you can perhaps find out if any one of them is really better than
-the others. I will give you the names of three or four builders,
-all of whom build good, strong boats.”
-
-This advice pleased the boys, and they resolved to accept it. That
-evening they all met at Harry’s home and decided what canoes they
-would get. Harry determined to get a “Shadow,” Tom a “Rice Laker,”
-Charley a canvas canoe, and Joe a “Rob Roy;” and the next morning
-orders for the four canoes were mailed to the builders whom the
-Commodore had recommended.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-It was some time before the canoes were ready, and in the mean time
-the young canoeists met with a new difficulty. The canoe-builders
-wrote to them wishing to know how they would have the canoes
-rigged. It had never occurred to the boys that there was more than
-one rig used on canoes, and of course they did not know how to
-answer the builders’ question. So they went to the Commodore and
-told him their difficulty.
-
-“I might do,” said he, “just as I did when I told you to go and ask
-four different canoeists which is the best canoe; but I won’t put
-you to that trouble. I rather like the Lord Ross lateen rig better
-than any other, but, as you are going to try different kinds of
-canoes, it would be a good idea for you to try different rigs.
-For example, have your ‘Rob Roy’ rigged with lateen-sails; rig the
-‘Shadow’ with a balance-lug, the ‘Rice Laker’ with a ‘sharpie’
-leg-of-mutton, and the canvas canoe with the standing lug. Each one
-of these rigs has its advocates, who will prove to you that it is
-better than any other, and you can’t do better than try them all.
-Only be sure to tell the builders that every canoe must have two
-masts, and neither of the two sails must be too big to be safely
-handled.”
-
-“How does it happen that every canoeist is so perfectly certain that
-he has the best canoe and the best rig in existence?” asked Tom.
-
-“That is one of the great merits of canoeing,” replied the
-Commodore. “It makes every man contented, and develops in him
-decision of character. I’ve known a canoeist to have a canoe so
-leaky that he spent half his time bailing her out, and rigged
-in such a way that she would neither sail nor do anything in a
-breeze except capsize; and yet he was never tired of boasting of
-the immense superiority of his canoe. There’s a great deal of
-suffering in canoeing,” continued the Commodore, musingly, “but its
-effects on the moral character are priceless. My dear boys, you
-have no idea how happy and contented you will be when you are wet
-through, cramped and blistered, and have to go into camp in a heavy
-rain, and without any supper except dry crackers.”
-
-While the boys were waiting for their canoes they read all the
-books on canoeing that they could find, and searched through a
-dozen volumes of the London _Field_, which they found in Uncle
-John’s library, for articles and letters on canoeing. They thus
-learned a good deal, and when their canoes arrived they were
-able to discuss their respective merits with a good degree of
-intelligence.
-
-The “Rob Roy” and the “Shadow” were built with white cedar planks
-and Spanish cedar decks. They shone with varnish, and their
-nickel-plated metal-work was as bright as silver. They were
-decidedly the prettiest of the four canoes, and it would have
-been very difficult to decide which was the prettier of the two.
-The “Rice Laker” was built without timbers or a keel, and was
-formed of two thicknesses of planking riveted together, the grain
-of the inner planking crossing that of the outer planking at right
-angles. She looked strong and serviceable, and before Tom had
-been in possession of her half an hour he was insisting that she
-was much the handiest canoe of the squadron, simply because she
-had no deck. The outside planks were of butternut; but they were
-pierced with so many rivets that they did not present so elegant
-an appearance as did the planks of the “Shadow” and the “Rob Roy.”
-The canvas canoe consisted of a wooden skeleton-frame, covered and
-decked with painted canvas. She was very much the same in model as
-the “Shadow;” and though she seemed ugly in comparison with her
-varnished sisters, Charley claimed that he would get more comfort
-out of his canoe than the other boys would out of theirs, for the
-reason that scratches that would spoil the beauty of the varnished
-wood could not seriously injure the painted canvas. Thus each boy
-was quite contented, and asserted that he would not change canoes
-with anybody. They were equally well contented with the way in
-which their canoes were rigged, and they no longer wondered at the
-confident way in which the canoeists to whom the Commodore had
-introduced them spoke of the merits of their respective boats.
-
-Of course the subject of names for the canoes had been settled
-long before the canoes arrived. Joe had named his “Rob Roy” the
-_Dawn_; Harry’s canoe was the _Sunshine_; Tom’s the _Twilight_; and
-Charley’s the _Midnight_. The last name did not seem particularly
-appropriate to a canoe, but it was in keeping with the other names,
-and, as the canoe was painted black, it might have been supposed to
-have some reference to her color.
-
-The boys had intended to join the American Canoe Association, but
-Uncle John suggested that they would do well to make a cruise,
-and to become real canoeists, before asking for admission to the
-association. They then decided to form a canoe club of their own,
-which they did; and Harry was elected the first Commodore of the
-Columbian Canoe Club, the flag of which was a pointed burgee of
-blue silk, with a white paddle worked upon it. Each canoe carried
-its private signal in addition to the club flag, and bore its name
-in gilt letters on a blue ground on each bow.
-
-Where to cruise was a question which was decided and reconsidered
-half a dozen times. From the books which they had read the boys
-had learned that there is, if anything, more fun in cruising on a
-narrow stream than in sailing on broad rivers; that running rapids
-is a delightful sport, and that streams should always be descended
-instead of ascended in a canoe. They, therefore, wanted to discover
-a narrow stream with safe and easy rapids, and also to cruise on
-some lake or wide river where they could test the canoes under
-sail and under paddle in rough water. They learned more of the
-geography of the Eastern States and of Canada, in searching the map
-for a good cruising route, than they had ever learned at school;
-and they finally selected a route which seemed to combine all
-varieties of canoeing.
-
-The cruise was to begin at the southern end of Lake Memphremagog,
-in Vermont. On this lake, which is thirty miles long, the young
-canoeists expected to spend several days, and to learn to handle
-the canoes under sail. From the northern end of the lake, which is
-in Canada, they intended to descend its outlet, the Magog River,
-which is a narrow stream, emptying into the St. Francis River at
-Sherbrooke. From Sherbrooke the St. Francis was to be descended to
-the St. Lawrence, down which the canoes were to sail to Quebec.
-They wrote to the postmaster at Sherbrooke asking him if the Magog
-and the St. Francis were navigable by canoes, and when he replied
-that there were only one or two rapids in the Magog, which they
-could easily run, they were more than ever satisfied with their
-route.
-
-The previous cruises that the boys had made had taught them what
-stores and provisions were absolutely necessary and what could be
-spared. Each canoe was provided with a water-proof bag to hold a
-blanket and dry clothes, and with a pair of small cushions stuffed
-with elastic felt, a material lighter than cork, and incapable of
-retaining moisture. These cushions were to be used as mattresses at
-night, and the rubber blankets were to be placed over the canoes
-and used as shelter tents. Although the mattresses would have made
-excellent life-preservers, Uncle John presented each canoeist with
-a rubber life-belt, which could be buckled around the waist in a
-few seconds in case of danger of a capsize. Harry provided his
-canoe with a canvas canoe-tent, made from drawings published in the
-London _Field_, but the others decided not to go to the expense
-of making similar tents until Harry’s should have been thoroughly
-tested.
-
-When all was ready the blankets and stores were packed in the
-_Sunshine_, the cockpit of which was provided with hatches, which
-could be locked up, thus making the canoe serve the purpose of
-a trunk. The four canoes were then sent by rail to Newport, at
-the southern end of Lake Memphremagog, and a week later the boys
-followed them, carrying their paddles by hand, for the reason that,
-if they had been sent with the canoes and had been lost or stolen,
-it would have been impossible to start on the cruise until new
-paddles had been procured.
-
-Newport was reached, after an all-night journey, at about two
-o’clock in the morning. The canoeists went straight to the
-freight-house to inspect the canoes. They were all there, resting
-on the heads of a long row of barrels, and were apparently all
-right. The varnish of the _Dawn_ and the _Sunshine_ was scratched
-in a few places, and the canvas canoe had a very small hole punched
-through her deck, as if she had been too intimate with a nail in
-the course of her journey. The boys were, however, well satisfied
-with the appearance of the boats, and so walked up to the hotel to
-get dinner and a supply of sandwiches, bread, and eggs for their
-supper.
-
-Dinner was all ready, for, under the name of breakfast, it was
-waiting for the passengers of the train, which made a stop of half
-an hour at Newport. A band was playing on the deck of a steamer
-which was just about to start down the lake, and the boys displayed
-appetites, as they sat near the open window looking out on the
-beautiful landscape, which rather astonished the waiter.
-
-A good, quiet place for launching the canoes was found, which was
-both shady and out of sight of the hotel. It was easy enough to
-carry the three empty canoes down to the shore; but the _Sunshine_,
-with her heavy cargo, proved too great a load, and about half-way
-between the freight-house and the shore she had to be laid on the
-ground and partly emptied. Here Joe, who tried to carry the spars
-and paddles of four canoes on his shoulder, found that there is
-nothing more exasperating than a load of sticks of different sizes.
-No matter how firmly he tried to hold them together, they would
-spread apart at every imaginable angle. Before he had gone three
-rods he looked like some new kind of porcupine with gigantic quills
-sticking out all over him. Then he began to drop things, and,
-stooping to pick them up, managed to trip himself and fall with a
-tremendous clatter. He picked himself up and made sixteen journeys
-between the spot where he fell and the shore of the lake, carrying
-only one spar at a time, and grasping that with both hands. His
-companions sat down on the grass and laughed to see the deliberate
-way in which he made his successive journeys, but Joe, with a
-perfectly serious face, said that he was going to get the better of
-those spars, no matter how much trouble it might cost him, and that
-he was not going to allow them to get together and play tricks on
-him again.
-
-[Illustration: “SHE’S HALF FULL OF WATER.”]
-
-It was tiresome stooping over, packing the canoes, but finally they
-were all in order, and the Commodore gave the order to launch them.
-The lake was perfectly calm, and the little fleet started under
-paddle for a long, sandy point that jutted out into the lake some
-three miles from Newport. The _Sunshine_ and the _Dawn_ paddled
-side by side, and the two other canoes followed close behind them.
-
-“Boys, isn’t this perfectly elegant?” exclaimed Harry, laying down
-his paddle when the fleet was about a mile from the shore and
-bathing his hot head with water from the lake. “Did you ever see
-anything so lovely as this blue water?”
-
-“Yes,” said Charley; “the water’s all right outside of the canoes,
-but I’d rather have a little less inside of mine.”
-
-“What do you mean,” asked Harry. “Is she leaking?”
-
-“She’s half full of water, that’s all,” replied Charley, beginning
-to bail vigorously with his hat.
-
-“Halloo!” cried Joe, suddenly. “Here’s the water up to the top of
-my cushions.”
-
-“We’d better paddle on and get ashore as soon as possible,” said
-Harry. “My boat is leaking a little too.”
-
-Charley bailed steadily for ten minutes, and somewhat reduced
-the amount of water in his canoe. The moment he began paddling,
-however, the leak increased. He paddled with his utmost strength,
-knowing that if he did not soon reach land he would be swamped;
-but the water-logged canoe was very heavy, and he could not drive
-her rapidly through the water. His companions kept near him, and
-advised him to drop his paddle and to bail, but he knew that the
-water was coming in faster than he could bail it out, and so he
-wasted no time in the effort. It soon became evident that his canoe
-would never keep afloat to reach the sand-spit for which he had
-been steering, so he turned aside and paddled for a little clump
-of rushes, where he knew the water must be shallow. Suddenly he
-stopped paddling, and almost at the same moment his canoe sunk
-under him, and he sprung up to swim clear of her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-Luckily the water was only four feet deep, as Charley found when he
-tried to touch bottom; so he stopped swimming, and, with the water
-nearly up to his shoulders, stood still and began to think what to
-do next.
-
-The canoes--including the sunken _Midnight_--were a good mile
-from the shore, and although the sandy shoal on which Charley was
-standing was firm and hard it was of small extent, and the water
-all around it was too deep to be waded.
-
-“You’ll have to get into one of our canoes,” said Harry.
-
-“How am I going to do it without capsizing her?” replied Charley.
-
-“I don’t believe it can be done,” said Harry, as he looked first
-at the _Sunshine_ and then at the _Twilight_; “but then you’ve got
-to do it somehow. You can’t swim a whole mile, can you?”
-
-“Of course I can’t, but then it wouldn’t do me any good to spill
-one of you fellows by trying to climb out of the water into a canoe
-that’s as full now as she ought to be. Besides, I’m not going to
-desert the _Midnight_.”
-
-“I thought the _Midnight_ had deserted you,” said Joe. “If my canoe
-should go to the bottom of the lake without giving me any warning,
-I shouldn’t think it a bit rude to leave her there.”
-
-“Don’t talk nonsense!” exclaimed Charley; “but come here and help
-me get my canoe afloat again. We can do it, I think, if we go to
-work the right way.”
-
-Charley found no difficulty in getting hold of the painter of his
-canoe with the help of his paddle. Giving the end of the painter to
-Joe, he took the _Dawn’s_ painter, and by ducking down under the
-water succeeded after two or three attempts in reeving it through
-the stern-post of the sunken canoe, and giving one end to Harry
-and the other to Tom. Then, taking the bow painter from Joe, he
-grasped it firmly with both hands, and at a given signal all the
-boys, except Joe, made a desperate effort to bring the wreck to the
-surface.
-
-They could not do it. They managed to raise her off the bottom, but
-Harry and Tom in their canoes could not lift to any advantage, and
-so were forced to let her settle down again.
-
-“I’ve got to unload her,” said Charley, gloomily. “I think we can
-get her up if there is nothing in her except water. Anyhow we’ve
-got to try.”
-
-It was tiresome work to get the water-soaked stores and canned
-provisions out of the canoe, and Charley had to duck his head
-under the water at least a dozen times before the heaviest part
-of the _Midnight’s_ cargo could be brought up and passed into the
-other canoes. His comrades wanted to jump overboard and help him,
-but he convinced them that they would have great difficulty in
-climbing back into their canoes, and that in all probability they
-would capsize themselves in so doing. “He’s right!” cried Joe.
-“Commodore, please make an order that hereafter only one canoe
-shall be wrecked at a time. We must keep some dry stores in the
-fleet.”
-
-When the _Midnight_ was partly unloaded a new and successful effort
-was made to raise her. As soon as she reached the surface Charley
-rolled her over, bottom upward, and in this position the small
-amount of air imprisoned under her kept her afloat.
-
-The cause of the leak was quickly discovered. There was a hole
-through her canvas bottom nearly an inch in diameter, made by some
-blow she had received while on the way to the lake. The wonder
-was, not that she sunk when she did, but that she had floated long
-enough to be paddled a mile. It is probable that the ballast-bag,
-which was close by the hole, had partly stopped the leak at first,
-but had afterward been slightly moved, thus permitting the water to
-rush freely in.
-
-The surface of painted canvas dries very quickly in the hot sun,
-and it was not long before the bottom of the _Midnight_ was dry
-enough to be temporarily patched. Harry lighted his spirit-lamp
-and melted a little of the lump of rosin and tallow which had been
-provided for mending leaks. This was spread over a patch of new
-canvas: the patch was then placed over the hole, and more of the
-melted rosin and tallow smeared over it. In about fifteen minutes
-the patch was dry enough to be serviceable, and Charley righted the
-canoe, hailed her out, and by throwing himself across the cockpit,
-and then carefully turning himself so as to get his legs into it,
-found himself once more afloat and ready to paddle.
-
-The canoe still leaked, but the leak could be kept under without
-difficulty by occasional bailing, and in the course of half an hour
-the sand-spit for which the fleet had started was reached. It was
-part of a large island with steep, rocky shores and a beautiful
-little sandy beach. It was just the place for a camp; and though
-the boys had expected to camp some miles farther north, the sinking
-of Charley’s canoe had so delayed them that it was already nearly
-six o’clock, and they therefore decided to paddle no farther that
-day.
-
-[Illustration: A STAMPEDE IN CAMP.]
-
-The canoes were hauled out on the beach, and unloaded and shored
-up with their rudders, backboards, and a few pieces of drift-wood
-so as to stand on an even keel. Then came the work of rigging
-shelters over them for the night. Harry’s canoe-tent was supported
-by four small upright sticks resting on the deck and fitting
-into cross-pieces sewed into the roof of the tent. The sides and
-ends buttoned down to the gunwale and deck of the canoe, and
-two curtains, one on each side, which could be rolled up like
-carriage-curtains in fair weather and buttoned down in rainy
-weather, served both as the doors and windows of the tent. The
-shelters rigged by the other boys were much less complete. The two
-masts of each canoe were stepped, the paddle was lashed between
-them, and a rubber blanket was hung over the paddle, with its edges
-reaching nearly to the ground. The blankets and the bags which
-served as pillows were then arranged, and the canoes were ready for
-the night.
-
-It was a warm and clear night, and a breeze which came up from
-the south at sunset blew the mosquitoes away. Harry found his
-tent, with the curtains rolled up, cool and pleasant; but his
-fellow-canoeists found themselves fairly suffocating under their
-rubber blankets, and were compelled to throw them aside.
-
-Toward morning, when the day was just beginning to dawn, the
-canoeists were suddenly awakened by a rush of many heavy, trampling
-feet which shook the ground. It was enough to startle any one,
-and the boys sprung up in such a hurry that Harry struck his head
-against the roof of his tent, knocked it down, upset the canoe,
-and could not at first decide whether he was taking part in a
-railway collision or whether an earthquake of the very best quality
-had happened. The cause of the disturbance was a herd of horses
-trotting down to the water’s edge to drink. There were at least
-twenty of them, and had the canoes happened to be in their path
-they might have stumbled over them in the faint morning light;
-in which case the boys would have had the experience of being
-shipwrecked on dry land.
-
-A gentle southerly breeze wrinkled the water while breakfast was
-cooking, and the Commodore ordered that the masts and sails should
-be got ready for use. It was impossible to make an early start,
-for Charley’s blankets had to be dried in the sun, and the hole
-in his canoe had to be repaired with a new patch in a thorough
-and workmanlike way. It was, therefore, ten o’clock before the
-canoes were ready to be launched; and in the mean time the wind
-had increased so much that the boys decided to use only their
-main-sails.
-
-The moment the sails drew the canoes shot off at a pace which
-filled the young canoeists with delight. The canoes were in good
-trim for sailing, as they were not overloaded; and while they were
-skirting the west shore of the island the water was quite smooth.
-Each canoe carried a bag partly filled with sand for ballast, and
-every one except Joe had lashed his ballast-bag to the keelson.
-This was a precaution which Joe had forgotten to take, and before
-long he had good reason to regret his error.
-
-As soon as the northern end of the island was passed the canoes
-came to a part of the lake where there was quite a heavy sea. The
-_Dawn_ and the _Twilight_ were steered by the paddle, which passed
-through a row-lock provided for the purpose; and Joe and Tom found
-little difficulty in keeping their canoes directly before the wind.
-The two other canoes were steered with rudders, and occasionally,
-when their bows dipped, their rudders were thrown nearly out of the
-water, in consequence of which they steered wildly. All the canoes
-showed a tendency to roll a good deal, and now and then a little
-water would wash over the deck. It was fine sport running down the
-lake with such a breeze, and the boys enjoyed it immensely.
-
-The wind continued to rise, and the lake became covered with
-white-caps. “Commodore,” said Charley Smith, “I don’t mean to show
-any disrespect to my commanding officer, but it seems to me this is
-getting a little risky.”
-
-“How is it risky?” asked Harry. “You’re a sailor and know twice as
-much about boats as I do, if I am Commodore.”
-
-“It’s risky in two or three ways. For instance, if the wind blows
-like this much longer a following sea will swamp some one of us.”
-
-“Oh! we’re going fast enough to keep out of the way of the sea,”
-cried Joe.
-
-“Just notice how your canoe comes almost to a dead stop every time
-she sinks between two seas, and you won’t feel quite so sure that
-you’re running faster than the sea is.”
-
-The boys saw that Charley was right. The canoes were so light that
-they lost their headway between the seas, and it was evident that
-they were in danger of being overtaken by a following sea.
-
-“Tell us two or three more dangers, just to cheer us up, won’t you?”
-asked Joe, who was in high spirits with the excitement of the sail.
-
-“There’s the danger of rolling our booms under, and there is a
-great deal of danger that Harry’s canoe and mine will broach-to
-when our rudders are out of water.”
-
-“What will happen if they do broach-to?”
-
-“They’ll capsize, that’s all,” replied Charley.
-
-“What had we better do?” asked Harry. “There’s no use in capsizing
-ourselves in the middle of the lake.”
-
-“My advice is that we haul on the port tack, and run over to the
-west shore. The moment we get this wind and sea on the quarter we
-shall be all right--though, to be sure, we’ve got more sail up than
-we ought to have.”
-
-The canoes were quite near together, with the exception of the
-_Twilight_, which was outsailing the others; but even she was still
-near enough to be hailed. Harry hailed her, and ordered the fleet
-to steer for a cove on the west shore. As soon as the wind was
-brought on the port quarter the canoes increased their speed; and
-although the _Twilight_ made more leeway than the others, she drew
-ahead of them very fast. The wind was now precisely what the canoes
-wanted to bring out their sailing qualities. The _Sunshine_ soon
-showed that she was the most weatherly, as the _Twilight_ was the
-least weatherly, of the fleet. The _Midnight_ kept up very fairly
-with the _Sunshine_; and the _Dawn_, with her small lateen-sail,
-skimmed over the water so fast that it was evident that if she
-could have carried the big balance-lug of the _Sunshine_ she would
-easily have beaten her.
-
-The canoes were no longer in danger of being swamped; but the wind
-continuing to rise, the boys found that they were carrying more
-sail than was safe. They did not want to take in their sails and
-paddle, and though all of the sails except the _Dawn’s_ lateen
-could be reefed, nobody wanted to be the first to propose to reef;
-and Harry, in his excitement, forgot all about reefing. The wind,
-which had been blowing very steadily, now began to blow in gusts,
-and the boys had to lean far out to windward to keep their canoes
-right side up.
-
-“We can’t keep on this way much longer without coming to grief,”
-Charley cried at the top of his lungs, so that Harry, who was some
-distance to windward, could hear him.
-
-“What do you say?” replied Harry.
-
-“We’ve got too much sail on,” yelled Charley.
-
-“Of course we’ll sail on. This is perfectly gorgeous!” was Harry’s
-answer.
-
-“He don’t hear,” said Charley. “I say, Joe, you’d better take
-in your main-sail, and set the dandy in its place. You’ll spill
-yourself presently.”
-
-“The dandy’s stowed down below, where I can’t get at it. I guess I
-can hold her up till we get across.”
-
-Tom was by this time far out of hailing distance, and was
-apparently getting on very well. Charley did not doubt that he
-could manage his own canoe well enough, but he was very uneasy
-about Harry and Joe, who did not seem to realize that they were
-carrying sail altogether too recklessly. The fleet was nearly two
-miles from the shore, and a capsize in the heavy sea that was
-running would have been no joke.
-
-Charley turned part way around in his canoe to see if his life-belt
-was in handy reach. As he did so he saw that the water a quarter
-of a mile to windward was black with a fierce squall that was
-approaching. He instantly brought his canoe up to the wind, so that
-the squall would strike him on the port bow, and called out to
-Harry and Joe to follow his example. Harry did not hear him, and
-Joe, instead of promptly following Charley’s advice, stopped to
-wonder what he was trying to do. The squall explained the matter
-almost immediately. It struck the _Sunshine_ and the _Dawn_, and
-instantly capsized them, and then rushed on to overtake Tom, and
-to convince him that Lake Memphremagog is not a good place for
-inexperienced canoeists who want to carry sail recklessly in
-squally weather.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-From the books they had read Harry and Joe had learned exactly what
-to do in case of capsizing under sail, and had often discussed the
-matter. “When I capsize,” Harry would say, “I shall pull the masts
-out of her, and she’ll then right of her own accord. Then I shall
-unship the rudder, put my hands on the stern-post, and raise myself
-up so that I can straddle the deck, and gradually work my way along
-until I can get into the cockpit. After that I shall bail her out,
-step the masts, and sail on again.” Nothing could be easier than to
-describe this plan while sitting in a comfortable room on shore,
-but to carry it out in a rough sea was a different affair.
-
-Harry was not at all frightened when he found himself in the water,
-and he instantly swum clear of the canoe, to avoid becoming
-entangled in her rigging. He then proceeded to unship the masts
-and the rudder, and when this was done tried to climb in over the
-stern. He found that it was quite impossible. No sooner would he
-get astride of the stern than the canoe would roll and throw him
-into the water again. After half a dozen attempts he gave it up,
-and swimming to the side of the canoe managed to throw himself
-across the cockpit. This was the way in which Charley Smith had
-climbed into his canoe the day before, and to Harry’s great
-surprise--for no such method of climbing into a canoe had been
-mentioned in any of the books he had read--it proved successful.
-
-Of course the deck of the canoe was now level with the water, which
-washed in and out of her with every sea that struck her. Harry
-seized the empty tin can which he used as a bailer, and which
-was made fast to one of the timbers of the canoe with a line, to
-prevent it from floating away, but he could not make any headway
-in bailing her out. The water washed into her just as fast as he
-could throw it out again, and he began to think that he should have
-to paddle the canoe ashore full of water. This would have been hard
-work, for with so much water in her she was tremendously heavy
-and unwieldy; but, after getting her head up to the wind with his
-paddle, he found that less water washed into her, and after long
-and steady work he succeeded in bailing most of it out.
-
-Meanwhile Charley, whose help Harry had declined, because he felt
-so sure that he could get out of his difficulty by following the
-plan that he had learned from books on canoeing, was trying to help
-Joe. At first Joe thought it was a good joke to be capsized. His
-Lord Ross lateen-sail, with its boom and yard, had floated clear of
-the canoe of its own accord, and, as the only spar left standing
-was a mast about two feet high, she ought to have righted. But Joe
-had forgotten to lash his sand-bag to the keelson, and the result
-was that whenever he touched the canoe she would roll completely
-over and come up on the other side. Joe could neither climb in
-over the stern nor throw himself across the deck, and every attempt
-he made resulted in securing for him a fresh ducking. Charley tried
-to help him by holding on to the capsized canoe, but he could not
-keep it right side up; and as Joe soon began to show signs of
-becoming exhausted Charley was about to insist that he should hang
-on to the stern of the _Midnight_, and allow himself to be towed
-ashore, when Tom in the _Twilight_ arrived on the scene.
-
-[Illustration: NOT SO EASY AS IT LOOKS.]
-
-Tom had seen the _Dawn_ and the _Sunshine_ capsize, and was far
-enough to leeward to have time to take in his sail before the
-squall reached him. It therefore did him no harm, and he paddled
-up against the wind to help his friends. It took him some time
-to reach the _Dawn_, for it blew so hard that when one blade of
-the paddle was in the water he could hardly force the other blade
-against the wind. Before the cruise was over he learned that by
-turning one blade at right angles to the other--for the two blades
-of a paddle are joined together by a ferrule in the middle--he
-could paddle against a head-wind with much less labor.
-
-The _Twilight_, being an undecked “Rice Lake” canoe, could easily
-carry two persons, and, with the help of Charley and Tom, Joe
-climbed into her. Charley then picked up the floating sail of
-the _Dawn_, made her painter fast to his own stern, and started
-under paddle for the shore. It was not a light task to tow the
-water-logged canoe, but both the sea and the wind helped him, and
-he landed by the time that the other boys had got the camp-fire
-started and the coffee nearly ready.
-
-“Well,” said Harry, “I’ve learned how to get into a canoe to-day.
-If I’d stuck to the rule and tried to get in over the stern I
-should be out in the lake yet.”
-
-“I’m going to write to the London _Field_ and get it to print my
-new rule about capsizing,” said Joe.
-
-“What’s that?” asked Charley. “To turn somersaults in the water?
-That was what you were doing all the time until Tom came up.”
-
-“That was for exercise, and had nothing to do with my rule, which
-is, ‘Always have a fellow in a “Rice Lake” canoe to pick you up.’”
-
-“All your trouble came from forgetting to lash your ballast-bag,”
-remarked Harry. “I hope it will teach you a lesson.”
-
-“That’s a proper remark for a Commodore who wants to enforce
-discipline,” cried Charley; “but I insist that the trouble came
-from carrying too much sail.”
-
-“The sail would have been all right if it hadn’t been for the
-wind,” replied Harry.
-
-“And the wind wouldn’t have done us any harm if we hadn’t been on
-the lake,” added Joe.
-
-“Boys, attention!” cried Harry. “Captain Charles Smith is hereby
-appointed sailing-master of this fleet, and will be obeyed and
-respected accordingly, or, at any rate, as much as he can make us
-obey and respect him. Anyhow, it will be his duty to tell us how
-much sail to carry, and how to manage the canoes under sail.”
-
-“This is the second day of the cruise,” remarked Joe an hour later,
-as he crept into his blankets, “and I have been wet but once. There
-is something wrong about it, for on our other cruises I was always
-wet through once every day. However, I’ll hope for the best.”
-
-In the middle of the night Joe had reason to feel more satisfied.
-It began to rain. As his rubber blanket was wet, and in that state
-seemed hotter than ever, Joe could not sleep under the shelter of
-it, and, as on the previous night, went to sleep with nothing over
-him but his woollen blanket. His head was underneath the deck, and
-as the rain began to fall very gently, it did not awaken him until
-his blanket was thoroughly wet.
-
-He roused himself and sat up. He was startled to see a figure
-wrapped in a rubber blanket sitting on his deck. “Who’s there?” he
-asked, suddenly. “Sing out, or I’ll shoot!”
-
-“You can’t shoot with a jack-knife or a tin bailer, so I’m not much
-afraid of you,” was the reply.
-
-“Oh, it’s you, Tom, is it?” said Joe, much relieved. “What in the
-world are you doing there?”
-
-“My canoe’s half full of water, so I came out into the rain to get
-dry.”
-
-“Couldn’t you keep the rain out of the canoe with the rubber
-blanket?”
-
-“The canoe is fourteen feet long, and hasn’t any deck, and the
-blanket is six feet long. I had the blanket hung over the paddle,
-but of course the rain came in at the ends of the canoe.”
-
-“Well, I’m pretty wet, for I didn’t cover my canoe at all. What’ll
-we do?”
-
-“Sit here till it lets up, I suppose,” replied Tom. “It must stop
-raining some time.”
-
-“I’ve got a better plan than that. Is your rubber blanket dry
-inside? Mine isn’t.”
-
-“Yes, it’s dry enough.”
-
-“Let’s put it on the ground to lie on, and use my rubber blanket
-for a tent. We can put it over a ridge-pole about two feet from the
-ground, and stake the edges down.”
-
-“What will we do for blankets? It’s too cold to sleep without them.”
-
-“We can each borrow one from Harry and Charley. They’ve got two
-apiece, and can spare one of them.”
-
-Joe’s plan was evidently the only one to be adopted; and so the
-two boys pitched their little rubber tent, borrowed two blankets,
-and crept under shelter. They were decidedly wet, but they lay
-close together and managed to keep warm. In the morning they woke
-up rested and comfortable, to find a bright sun shining and their
-clothes dried by the heat of their bodies. Neither had taken the
-slightest cold, although they had run what was undoubtedly a
-serious risk, in spite of the fact that one does not easily take
-cold when camping out.
-
-As they were enjoying their breakfast the canoeists naturally
-talked over the events of the previous day and night. Harry had
-been kept perfectly dry by his canoe-tent--one side of which he
-had left open, so as to have plenty of fresh air; and Charley had
-also been well protected from the rain by his rubber blanket, hung
-in the usual way over the paddle, although he had been far too warm
-to be comfortable.
-
-“I’m tired of suffocating under that rubber blanket of mine, and
-I’ve invented a new way of covering the canoe at night, which will
-leave me a little air to breathe. I’ll explain it to you when we
-camp to-night, Joe.”
-
-“I’m glad to hear it, for I’ve made up my mind that I’d rather
-be rained on than take a Turkish bath all night long under that
-suffocating blanket.”
-
-“Will your new plan work on my canoe?” asked Tom.
-
-“No; nothing will keep that ‘Rice Lake’ bathtub of yours dry in a
-rain, unless you deck her over.”
-
-“That’s what I’m going to do when we get to Magog. I’ll buy some
-canvas and deck over the ends of my canoe. Sleeping in her in the
-rain as she is now is like sleeping in a cistern with the water
-running into it.”
-
-“Now that we’ve had a chance to try our sails, which rig do you
-like best, Sailing-master?” asked Harry.
-
-“That lateen-rig that Joe has,” replied Charley. “He can set
-his sail and take it in while the rest of us are trying to find
-our halyards. Did you see how the whole concern--spars and
-sail--floated free of the canoe of their own accord the moment she
-capsized?”
-
-“That’s so; but then my big balance-lug holds more wind than Joe’s
-sail.”
-
-“It held too much yesterday. It’s a first-rate rig for racing, but
-it isn’t anything like as handy as the lateen for cruising; neither
-is my standing-lug. I tried to get it down in a hurry yesterday,
-and the halyards jammed, and I couldn’t get it down for two or
-three minutes.”
-
-“I can get my leg-of mutton in easy enough,” remarked Tom, “but I
-can’t get the mast out of the step unless the water’s perfectly
-smooth, and I don’t believe I could then without going ashore.”
-
-“Now, Commodore,” said Charley, “if you’ll give the order to start,
-I’ll give the order to carry all sail. The breeze is light and the
-water is smooth, and we ought to run down to the end of the lake by
-noon.”
-
-The little fleet made a beautiful appearance as it cruised down
-the lake under full sail. The breeze was westerly, which fact
-enabled the canoes to carry their after-sails--technically known as
-“dandies”--to much advantage. When running directly before the wind
-the “dandy” is sometimes a dangerous sail, as it is apt to make the
-canoe broach-to; but with a wind from any other direction than dead
-aft it is a very useful sail.
-
-The canoes sailed faster than they had sailed the day before,
-because there was no rough sea to check their headway. They reached
-Magog at noon, went to the hotel for a good dinner, bought some
-canvas with which to deck Tom’s canoe, and then looked at the
-dam which crosses the Magog River a few rods from the lake, and
-wondered how they were ever to get through the rapids below it.
-
-There was a place where the canoes could be lowered one by one over
-the breast of the dam and launched in a little eddy immediately
-below. The rapids, which extended from below the dam for nearly
-a quarter of a mile, were, however, very uninviting to a timid
-canoeist. The water did not seem to be more than three or four feet
-deep, but it was very swift, and full of rocks. “You boys can’t
-never run them rapids in them boats,” said a man who came to look
-at the canoes. “You’ll have to get a cart and haul round ’em.”
-
-The boys did not like to be daunted by their first rapid, and,
-as there did not seem to be much risk of drowning, they decided
-to take the chances of getting the canoes through it safely.
-Harry gave the order to lash everything fast in the canoes that
-could be washed overboard, and he prepared to lead the way in the
-_Sunshine_.
-
-It was magnificent sport shooting down the rapid like an arrow.
-The canoes drove through two or three waves which washed the
-decks, though the canoe-aprons of the _Dawn_, _Sunshine_, and
-_Midnight_ kept the water from getting into the cockpits. Harry’s
-and Charley’s canoes each struck once on the same rock while in
-the rapid, but in each case only the keel struck the rock, and
-the current dragged the canoes safely over it. When the fleet was
-reunited in the smooth water below the rapid the boys expressed
-their enthusiasm by all talking at once at the top of their lungs.
-Every one was delighted with the way his canoe had acted, and with
-the skill with which he had avoided this or that rock, or had
-discovered the best channel just at the right moment. In their
-excitement they let the canoes float gently down the stream, until
-they suddenly discovered another rapid at the beginning of a sharp
-bend in the river just ahead of them.
-
-It was nothing like as fierce in appearance as the first rapid,
-and as Harry led the way the others followed close after him, one
-behind the other, fancying that they could run the rapid without
-the least trouble. Half-way down Harry’s canoe struck on a rock,
-swung broadside to the current, and hung there. Tom was so close
-behind him that he could not alter his course, and so ran straight
-into the _Sunshine_ with a terrible crash. The _Dawn_ and the
-_Twilight_ instantly followed, and as the four canoes thus piled
-together keeled over and spilled their occupants into the river, it
-began to look as if the rapid had determined to make the irreverent
-young canoeists respect it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-When the boys were compelled to jump overboard they could see that
-the water was only about two feet deep; but they did not know
-whether they could stand up against the fierce current. They found
-that they could, although they had to move slowly to avoid being
-swept off their feet. Harry’s canoe was easily pushed off the rock
-on which it had run, and the moment it was out of the way the other
-canoes were free. Each canoeist seized the stern of his own canoe,
-and let it drag him down the rest of the rapid, which fortunately
-was a short one. While performing this feat the knees of the
-canoeists were scraped over the rocks, and they received several
-unpleasant bruises; but they thought it was impossible to get into
-their canoes in swift water, and so had no choice except to float
-down hanging on to the sterns of the canoes.
-
-Reaching the smooth water, they swum and pushed the canoes before
-them toward the shore. Here they found a great bank of sawdust that
-had floated down the river from the mill at Magog, and it was so
-soft and elastic that they determined to sleep on it that night,
-instead of sleeping in their canoes, since the sky was perfectly
-clear and there was no danger of rain.
-
-The canoes were hauled out on the bank, so that the stores could be
-readily taken out of them. The canvas canoe did not seem to be in
-the least injured either by the rock on which she had struck or by
-the collision with the other canoes. Harry’s canoe had sustained a
-little damage where one of the planks had been ground against the
-rock on which she had hung so long, but it was not enough to cause
-her to leak, and the injuries of the other canoes were confined to
-their varnish.
-
-“All the trouble,” remarked Harry, “came from following too close
-after one another. To-morrow, if we find any more rapids, we will
-keep the canoes far enough apart, so that if one canoe runs aground
-the others can turn out for her.”
-
-“We could have got into the canoes easy enough if we had only
-thought so,” said Tom. “If I’d stood up on the rock and held
-the canoe along-side of it, I could have stepped in without any
-difficulty.”
-
-“Why didn’t you do it, then?” asked Harry.
-
-“Because I didn’t happen to think of it, and because all the rest
-of you had started to float down after your canoes.”
-
-“I noticed one thing about a rapid which if I was Commodore it
-would be my duty to impress on your faithful but ignorant minds,”
-said Joe. “When you see a big ripple on the water the rock that
-makes it isn’t under the ripple, but is about four or five feet
-higher up stream.”
-
-“That’s so!” exclaimed Harry. “I ought to have remembered that, for
-Macgregor speaks about it in one of his books.”
-
-“Whereabouts did your canoe strike, Commodore?” inquired Charley.
-
-“Oh, about midships.”
-
-“And of course she swung round broadside to the current.”
-
-“Didn’t she, though! If I’d jumped out of her on the side I
-intended to when she first struck she would have swung against my
-legs; but I remembered that you must always jump out of a canoe in
-a rapid on the side above her.”
-
-“What do you mean by the side above her?” asked Tom.
-
-“I mean that you must not jump out below her.”
-
-“That’s as clear as anything could be,” said Joe. “Still, I’d like
-to know what you mean by ‘below her.’”
-
-“There’s an upper end and a lower end to every rapid, isn’t there?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, the side of the canoe toward the upper end of a rapid is
-what I call ‘above her.’ If you jump out on that side she can’t
-float against your legs and smash them.”
-
-“Now, if you’ve got through with that question,” continued Charley,
-“I want to say that if the Commodore had put his stores and his
-ballast-bag in the stern of his canoe, so as to make her draw a
-good deal more water aft than she did forward, she would have
-struck aft of midships, and wouldn’t have swung around.”
-
-“You’re right. That’s just what Macgregor recommends, but I
-forgot it. Boys, I hereby order every canoe to be loaded with all
-her ballast and cargo in the after compartment before we start
-to-morrow.”
-
-“And I want to remind you fellows of one more thing,” said Charley.
-“When the current is sweeping you toward a concave shore--that is,
-where the river makes a bend--don’t try to keep your canoe clear of
-the shore by hard paddling. Just backwater on the side of the canoe
-that is toward the middle of the river.”
-
-“That’s Macgregor again!” cried Harry; “but I’d forgotten it.
-To-morrow we’ll run our rapids in real scientific style.”
-
-“Provided there are any more rapids,” suggested Tom.
-
-“What did that Sherbrooke postmaster say about the Magog rapids?”
-inquired Joe.
-
-“Said there weren’t any, except one or two which we could easily
-run,” replied Harry.
-
-“Then we’ve probably got through with the rapids,” said Charley.
-“I’m rather sorry, for it’s good fun running them.”
-
-Supper was now over, and the canoeists, spreading their rubber
-blankets on the sawdust, prepared to “turn in.” They were in
-a wild and beautiful spot. The great “Rock Forest,” as it is
-called, through which the Magog runs, is of vast extent, and is
-inhabited by bears and smaller wild animals. The boys from their
-camping-ground could see nothing but the river, the dense woods on
-either bank, and the bright moonlit sky above them. The rapid was
-roaring as if it was angry at having failed to wreck the canoes,
-and the only other sound was the crackling of branches in the
-forest, and the occasional sighing of the gentle breeze. The boys
-were tired, and, lulled by the sound of the rapids, soon dropped
-asleep.
-
-The recent rains had dampened the sawdust to the depth of about two
-inches, but below this depth it was dry and inflammable. A small
-fire had been made with which to cook supper, and the dampness of
-the sawdust had made the boys so confident that the fire would not
-spread, that they had not taken the trouble to put it out before
-going to sleep.
-
-Now, it happened that the damp sawdust on which the fire had been
-kindled gradually became dry, and finally took fire. It burnt very
-slowly on the surface, but the dry sawdust immediately below burnt
-like tinder. About two hours after Harry had closed his eyes he
-was awakened from a dream that he had upset a burning spirit-lamp
-over his legs. To his horror he saw that the whole bank of sawdust
-was on fire. Smoke was everywhere creeping up through the damp top
-layer, and at a little distance from the canoes the smouldering
-fire had burst into roaring flames.
-
-Harry instantly called his comrades, and starting up they rushed to
-the canoes, threw their blankets and stores into them, and prepared
-to launch them. They had not a moment to spare. The flames were
-close to them, and were spreading every moment, and as they shoved
-the canoes toward the water their feet repeatedly sunk down through
-the ashes below the surface, the flames springing up as they
-hurriedly drew their feet back. It did not take many minutes to
-get the canoes into the water and to embark, but as the canoeists
-pushed out into the river the part of the bank where they had been
-sleeping burst into flames.
-
-A light breeze had sprung up which was just enough to fan the fire
-and to carry it into an immense pile of dry drift-wood that lay on
-the shore below the sawdust bank. The boys waited in the quiet
-eddy near the bank and watched the progress of the fire. It licked
-up the drift-wood in a very few moments, and then, roaring with
-exultation over the work it had done, it swept into the forest. In
-half an hour’s time a forest fire was burning which threatened to
-make a terrible destruction of timber, and the heat had grown so
-intense that the canoeists were compelled to drop down the stream
-to avoid it.
-
-Canoeing at night is always a ticklish business, but on a swift
-river, full of rapids, as is the Magog, it is exceedingly
-dangerous. The fire lighted the way for the fleet for a short
-distance, but before a landing-place was reached a turn on the
-river shut out the light, and at the same time the noise of a rapid
-close at hand was heard.
-
-[Illustration: “HE CAUGHT HOLD OF THE ROOT OF A TREE AND KEPT HIS
-CANOE STATIONARY.”]
-
-The boys had no desire to entangle themselves in unknown rapids
-in the dark, and paddled at once for the shore opposite to that
-where the fire was raging. They found when they reached it that it
-was a perpendicular bank on which it was impossible to land. They
-floated down a short distance, hoping to find a landing spot,
-but none could be found. Then they attempted to cross the stream
-to the other shore, hoping that the fire would not spread in that
-direction. To their dismay they found that they were already almost
-within the clutch of the rapid. The current had become strong and
-swift, and it was evident before they had got half-way across the
-river that nothing but the hardest paddling could keep them from
-being drawn into the rapid. It was an occasion when everybody had
-to look out for himself and depend on his own paddles for safety.
-The young canoeists struck out manfully. Harry was the first to
-reach the shore, where he caught hold of the root of a tree and
-kept his canoe stationary. Tom followed closely behind him, and
-Harry told him to catch hold of the _Sunshine_ until he could make
-the _Twilight’s_ painter fast to the root. Joe arrived a little
-later, for his canoe had run on a rock, and for a few minutes he
-was in great danger of a capsize.
-
-The three canoeists succeeded in tying up to the bank, where they
-expected every moment to be joined by Charley. The minutes passed
-on, but Charley did not appear. His comrades shouted for him, but
-there was no answer. Indeed, the rapid made such a noise, now that
-they were close upon it, that they could not have heard Charley’s
-voice had he been a few yards from them.
-
-The fear that an accident had happened to Charley made the other
-boys very uneasy. Joe cast his canoe loose and paddled out into
-the river and nearly across it, looking for some signs of the
-_Midnight_ and her owner, but he came back unsuccessful, after
-having narrowly escaped being carried down the rapid. There could
-no longer be any doubt that the current had swept the _Midnight_
-away, and that Charley had been compelled to make the hazardous and
-almost hopeless attempt of running the rapid in the dark.
-
-As soon as Joe returned Harry said that he would paddle out into
-the middle of the river where Charley was last seen, and would let
-his canoe drift down the rapid, but Tom and Joe insisted that he
-should do no such thing. Said Joe, “Either Charley is drowned or
-he isn’t. If he isn’t drowned he is somewhere at the foot of the
-rapid, where we’ll find him as soon as it gets light. If he is
-drowned it won’t do him any good for another of us to get drowned.”
-
-“Joe is right,” said Tom. “We must stay here till daylight.”
-
-“And meanwhile Charley may be drowned!” exclaimed Harry.
-
-“I don’t believe he is,” replied Tom. “He’s the best canoeist of
-any of us, and he is too good a sailor to get frightened. Then, he
-is very cautious, and I’ll bet that the first thing he did when he
-found himself in the rapid was to buckle his life-belt round him.”
-
-“If he did that it wouldn’t hurt him if he were capsized.”
-
-“Not if the rapid is like those we’ve run, and the chances are
-that it is. I feel sure that Charley has got through it all right,
-and without losing his canoe. We’ll find him waiting for us in the
-morning.”
-
-What Tom said seemed so reasonable that Harry gave up his wild
-idea of running the rapid, and agreed to wait until daylight. It
-was already nearly one o’clock, and at that time of year the day
-began to dawn by half-past three. There was no opportunity for the
-boys to sleep, but they occasionally nodded as they sat in their
-canoes. About two o’clock Harry poked Tom with his paddle, and in
-a low voice called his attention to the crackling of the twigs in
-the woods a short distance from the bank. Something was evidently
-making its way through the forest and coming nearer every minute to
-the canoes. The boys grasped their pistols and anxiously waited.
-They remembered that there were bears in the woods, and they fully
-believed that one was on its way down to the water. “Don’t fire,”
-whispered Harry, “till I give the word;” but while he was speaking
-a dark form parted the underbrush on the bank above them and came
-out into full view.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-The early morning visitor was not a bear. He was a very welcome
-visitor, for as soon as he made himself visible he was seen to be
-the missing canoeist. Charley was very wet and cold, but he was
-soon furnished with dry clothes and a blanket, and warmed with a
-cup of hot coffee made with the help of Harry’s spirit-lamp; and as
-he lay on the bank and waited for daylight he told the story of his
-midnight run down the rapid.
-
-When the boys were crossing the river above the rapid Charley’s
-canoe was close behind Joe’s. The latter ran on a rock, and in
-order to avoid her Charley was compelled to pass below the rock.
-In so doing he found himself in great danger of running on another
-rock, and in his effort to avoid this he drifted still farther
-down the river. Before he was aware of his danger he was caught by
-the current at the head of the rapid. He had just time to turn his
-canoe so as to head her down stream and to buckle his life-belt
-around him. In another second he was rushing down the rapid at a
-rate that, in view of the darkness, was really frightful.
-
-It was useless to attempt to guide the canoe. Charley could see
-so little in advance of him that he could not choose his channel
-nor avoid any rock that might lie in his path. He, therefore, sat
-still, trusting that the current would carry him into the deepest
-channel and keep him clear of the rocks. The rapid seemed to be a
-very long one, but the _Midnight_ ran it without taking in a drop
-of water or striking a single rock.
-
-As soon as quiet water was reached Charley paddled to the shore,
-intending to make his canoe fast and to sleep quietly in her until
-morning. He was in high spirits at having successfully run a rapid
-in the dark, and he paddled so carelessly that just as he was
-within a yard of the shore the canoe ran upon a sunken log, spilled
-her captain into the water, and then floated off in the darkness
-and disappeared.
-
-Charley had no difficulty in getting ashore, but he was wet to the
-skin, and his dry clothes and all his property, except his paddle,
-had gone on a cruise without him. There was nothing for him to do
-but to make his way back along the bank to the other boys. This
-proved to be a tiresome task. The woods were very thick, and full
-of underbrush and fallen trunks. Charley was terribly scratched,
-and his clothes badly torn, as he slowly forced his way through the
-bushes and among the trees. He was beginning to think that he would
-never reach the boys, when he fortunately heard their voices as
-they whispered together.
-
-When morning dawned the canoeists, feeling extremely cramped
-and stiff, cast their canoes loose, and started down the river,
-intending, if possible, to find Charley’s canoe, and then go
-ashore for breakfast and a good long sleep. The rapid had been
-run so easily by Charley in the night that they rightly imagined
-they would find no difficulty in running it by daylight. Tom took
-Charley in the _Twilight_, and the fleet, with Harry leading the
-way, passed through the rapid without accident. The boys could not
-but wonder how Charley had escaped the rocks in the darkness, for
-the rapid, which was much the roughest and swiftest they had yet
-seen, seemed to be full of rocks.
-
-Not very far below the rapid the missing canoe was discovered
-aground in an eddy. She was uninjured; and as there was a sandy
-beach and plenty of shade near at hand the boys went ashore, made
-their breakfast, and, lying down on their rubber blankets, slept
-until the afternoon.
-
-[Illustration: RUNNING THE RAPID.]
-
-It was time for dinner when the tired canoeists awoke, and by the
-time they had finished their meal and were once more afloat it
-was nearly three o’clock. They ran three more rapids without any
-trouble. Their canoes frequently struck on sunken rocks; but as
-they were loaded so as to draw more water aft than they did
-forward, they usually struck aft of midships, and did not swing
-around broadside to the current. When a canoe struck in this way
-her captain unjointed his paddle, and, taking a blade in each hand,
-generally succeeded in lifting her clear of the rock by pushing
-with both blades against the bottom of the river. In the next rapid
-Joe’s canoe ran so high on a rock that was in the full force of
-the current that he could not get her afloat without getting out
-of her. He succeeded in getting into her again, however, without
-difficulty, by bringing her along-side of the rock on which he was
-standing, although he had to step in very quickly, as the current
-swept her away the moment he ceased to hold her.
-
-In running these rapids the canoes were kept at a safe distance
-apart, so that when one ran aground the one following her had time
-to steer clear of her. At Charley’s suggestion the painter of each
-canoe was rove through the stern-post instead of the stem-post. By
-keeping the end of the painter in his hand the canoeist whose canoe
-ran aground could jump out and feel sure that the canoe could not
-run away from him, and that he could not turn her broadside to the
-stream by hauling on the painter, as would have been the case had
-the painter been rove through the stem-post.
-
-“I want to see that Sherbrooke postmaster!” exclaimed Joe, after
-running what was the seventh rapid, counting from the dam at Magog.
-“He said there were only one or two little rapids in this river.
-Why, there isn’t anything but rapids in it!”
-
-“There’s something else just ahead of us worse than rapids,” said
-Charley. “Look at that smoke.”
-
-Just a little distance below the fleet the river was completely
-hidden by a dense cloud of smoke that rested on the water and rose
-like a heavy fog-bank above the tops of the highest trees. It was
-caused by a fire in the woods--probably the very fire which the
-boys had started on the previous night. How far down the river the
-smoke extended, and whether any one could breathe while in it, were
-questions of great importance to the canoeists.
-
-The fleet stopped just before reaching the smoke, and the boys
-backed water gently with their paddles while they discussed what
-they had better do. It was of no use to go ashore with the hope
-of finding how far the smoke extended, for it would have been as
-difficult to breathe on shore as on the water.
-
-“There’s one good thing about it,” said Charley: “the smoke blows
-right across the river, so the chances are that it does not extend
-very far down stream.”
-
-“We can’t hear the noise of any rapid,” said Harry, “and that’s
-another good thing. There can’t be a rapid of any consequence
-within the next quarter of a mile.”
-
-“Then I’ll tell you what I’ll do, with the Commodore’s permission,”
-continued Charley. “There is no use in staying here all day,
-for that smoke may last for any length of time. I’ll tie a wet
-handkerchief around my mouth and nose, and take the chances of
-paddling through the smoke. It isn’t as thick close to the water
-as it looks to be, and I haven’t the least doubt that I can run
-through it all right.”
-
-“But suppose you get choked with smoke, or get into a dangerous
-rapid?” suggested Tom.
-
-“There isn’t any rapid near us, or we would hear it, and I don’t
-think the smoke will hurt me while I breathe through a wet
-handkerchief. At any rate, I’d rather try it than sit here and wait
-for the smoke to disappear.”
-
-It was decided, after farther discussion, that Charley should
-attempt to paddle through the smoke, if he really wished to do so;
-and that he should blow a whistle if he got through all right,
-and thought that the other boys could safely follow his example.
-Paddling a little way up stream, so as to have room to get up his
-fastest rate of speed before reaching the smoke, Charley started
-on his hazardous trip. He disappeared in the smoke with his canoe
-rushing along at a tremendous rate, and in a few seconds his
-comrades heard him calling to them to come on without fear.
-
-They followed Charley’s example in covering their mouths and noses
-with wet handkerchiefs, and in paddling at the top of their speed.
-They were agreeably surprised to find that the belt of smoke was
-only a few yards wide, and that almost before they had begun to
-find any difficulty in breathing they emerged into pure air and
-sunlight.
-
-“It was a risky business for you, Charley,” said Harry, “for the
-smoke might have covered the river for the next quarter of a mile.”
-
-“But then it didn’t, you see,” replied Charley. “How cheap we
-should have felt if we had waited till morning for the smoke to
-blow away, and then found that we could have run through it as
-easily as we have done!”
-
-“Still, I say it was risky.”
-
-“Well, admitting that it was, what then? We can’t go canoeing
-unless we are ready to take risks occasionally. If nobody is ever
-to take a risk, there ought not to be any canoes, or ships, or
-railroads.”
-
-“That Sherbrooke postmaster isn’t afraid to take risks,” observed
-Joe. “If he keeps on telling canoeists that there are no rapids in
-this river, some of these days he’ll have an accident with a large
-canoeist and a heavy paddle. We’ve run seven rapids already, and
-have another one ahead of us. If we ever get to Sherbrooke, I think
-it will be our duty to consider whether that postmaster ought to be
-allowed to live any longer.”
-
-Just before sunset the fleet reached Magog Lake, a placid sheet of
-water about four miles long, with three or four houses scattered
-along its eastern shore. At one of these houses eggs, milk, butter,
-bread, a chicken, and a raspberry pie were bought, and the boys
-went into camp near the lower end of the lake. After a magnificent
-supper they went to bed rather proud of their achievements during
-the last day and night.
-
-The next day the canoeists started in the cool of the morning, and
-as soon as they left the lake found themselves at the head of their
-eighth rapid. All that day they paddled down the river, running
-rapids every little while, jumping overboard when their canoes
-ran aground and refused to float, and occasionally slipping on the
-smooth rocky bottom of the stream and sitting down violently in the
-water. Once they came to a dam, over which the canoes had to be
-lowered, and on the brink of which Joe slipped and slid with awful
-swiftness into the pool below, from which he escaped with no other
-injury than torn trousers and wet clothes.
-
-“That postmaster said there were no dams in the Magog, didn’t he?”
-asked Joe as he prepared to get into his canoe. “Well, I hope he
-hasn’t any family.”
-
-“Why, what about his family?” demanded Tom.
-
-“Nothing; only I’m going to try to get him to come down the Magog
-in a canoe, so he can see what a nice run it is. I suppose his body
-will be found some time, unless the bears get at him.”
-
-“That’s all rubbish, Joe,” said Charley. “We wouldn’t have had half
-the fun we’ve had if there hadn’t been any rapids in the river.
-We’re none the worse for getting a little wet.”
-
-“We might have had less fun, but then I’d have had more trousers if
-it hadn’t been for that dam. I like fun as well as anybody, but I
-can’t land at Sherbrooke with these trousers.”
-
-“I see Sherbrooke now!” exclaimed Harry; “so you’d better change
-your clothes while you have a chance.”
-
-Sherbrooke was coming rapidly into sight as the fleet paddled down
-the stream, and in the course of half an hour the boys landed in
-the village, near a dam which converted the swift Magog into a lazy
-little pond. While his comrades drew the canoes out of the water
-and made them ready to be carted to the St. Francis, Harry went to
-engage a cart. He soon returned with a big wagon large enough to
-take two canoes at once; and it was not long before the fleet was
-resting in the shade on the bank of the St. Francis, and surrounded
-by a crowd of inquisitive men, boys, and girls.
-
-It was difficult to convince the men that the canoes had actually
-come from Lake Memphremagog by the river, and the boys were made
-very proud of their success in running rapids which, the men
-declared, could only be run in skiffs during a freshet. Without
-an exception all the men agreed that there were rapids in the St.
-Francis which were really impassable, and that it would be foolish
-for the boys to think of descending that river. After making
-careful inquiries, and convincing themselves that the men were in
-earnest, the canoeists retired some distance from the crowd and
-held a council.
-
-“The question is,” said Harry, “shall we try the St. Francis after
-what we have heard? The youngest officer present will give his
-opinion first. What do you say, Joe?”
-
-“I think I’ve had rapids and dams enough,” replied Joe; “and I’d
-rather try some river where we can sail. I vote against the St.
-Francis.”
-
-“What do you say, Tom?”
-
-“I’ll do anything the rest of you like; but I think we’d better
-give the St. Francis up.”
-
-“Now, Charley, how do you vote?”
-
-“For going down the St. Francis. I don’t believe these men know
-much about the river, or anything about canoes. Let’s stick to our
-original plan.”
-
-“There are two votes against the St. Francis, and one for it,” said
-Harry. “I don’t want to make a tie, so I’ll vote with the majority.
-Boys, we won’t go down the St. Francis, but we’ll go to the hotel,
-stay there over Sunday, and decide where we will cruise next.”
-
-“All right,” said Joe, going to his canoe, and taking a paddle
-blade in his hand.
-
-“What in the world are you going to take that paddle to the hotel
-for?” asked Harry.
-
-“I’m going to see the postmaster who said there were no rapids in
-the Magog or the St. Francis; that’s all,” replied Joe. “I’ve a
-painful duty to perform, and I’m going to perform it.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-A council was held at the hotel, and a dozen different water-routes
-were discussed. As the boys still wanted to carry out their
-original design of making a voyage to Quebec, they decided to take
-the canoes by rail to Rouse’s Point, and from thence to descend
-the Richelieu River to the St. Lawrence. The railway journey would
-take nearly a whole day, but they thought it would be a rather
-pleasant change from the close confinement of canoeing. For it must
-be admitted that, delightful as they had found canoeing to be, the
-task of sitting for hours in the cockpit of a canoe with scarcely
-a possibility of materially changing one’s position was tiresome,
-and the boys, after a night’s sleep at the Sherbrooke hotel, felt
-decidedly stiff.
-
-As it would have taken three days to send the canoes to Rouse’s
-Point by freight, the canoeists were compelled to take them on
-the same train with themselves. They went to the express office
-on Monday morning and tried to make a bargain with the express
-company. The agent astonished them by the enormous price which he
-demanded, and Harry, who acted as spokesman for the expedition,
-told him that it was outrageous to ask such a price for carrying
-four light canoes.
-
-The man turned to a book in which were contained the express
-company’s rates of charges, and showed Harry that there was a fixed
-rate for row-boats and shells.
-
-“But,” said Harry, “a canoe is not a row-boat nor a shell. What
-justice is there in charging as much for a fourteen-foot canoe as
-for a forty-foot shell?”
-
-“Well,” said the agent, “I dunno as it would be fair. But, then,
-these canoes of yours are pretty near as big as row-boats.”
-
-“A canoe loaded as ours are don’t weigh over one hundred and ten
-pounds. How much does a row-boat weigh?”
-
-“Well, about two or three hundred pounds.”
-
-“Then, is it fair to charge as much for a canoe as for a row-boat,
-that weighs three times as much?”
-
-The agent found it difficult to answer this argument, and after
-thinking the matter over he agreed to take the canoes at half the
-rate ordinarily charged for row-boats. The boys were pleased with
-their victory over him, but they still felt that to be compelled to
-pay four times as much for the canoes as they paid for their own
-railroad-tickets was an imposition.
-
-At ten o’clock the train rolled into the Sherbrooke station. To the
-great disappointment of the boys, no express-car was attached to
-it, the only place for express packages being a small compartment
-twelve feet long at one end of the smoking-car. It was obvious
-that canoes fourteen feet long could not go into a space only
-twelve feet long, and it seemed as if it would be necessary to wait
-twelve hours for the night-train, to which a large express-car was
-always attached. But the conductor of the train was a man who could
-sympathize with boys, and who had ideas of his own. He uncoupled
-the engine, which was immediately in front of the smoking-car, and
-then had the canoes taken in through the door of the smoking-car
-and placed on the backs of the seats. Very little room was left for
-passengers who wanted to smoke; but as there were only four or five
-of these they made no complaint. The canoes, with blankets under
-them, to protect the backs of the seats, rode safely, and when,
-late in the afternoon, Rouse’s Point, was reached, they were taken
-out of the car without a scratch.
-
-There was just time enough before sunset to paddle a short distance
-below the fort, where a camping-ground was found that would have
-been very pleasant had there been fewer mosquitoes. They were the
-first Canadian mosquitoes that had made the acquaintance of the
-young canoeists, and they seemed to be delighted. They sung and
-buzzed in quiet excitement, and fairly drove the boys from their
-supper to the shelter of the canoes.
-
-Harry had a long piece of mosquito-netting, which he threw over the
-top of his canoe-tent, and which fell over the openings on each
-side of the tent, thus protecting the occupant of the canoe from
-mosquitoes without depriving him of air. None of the other boys
-had taken the trouble to bring mosquito-netting with them, except
-Charley, who had a sort of mosquito-netting bag, which he drew over
-his head, and which prevented the mosquitoes from getting at his
-face and neck.
-
-As for Joe and Tom, the mosquitoes fell upon them with great
-enthusiasm, and soon reduced them to a most miserable condition.
-Tom was compelled to cover his head with his India-rubber blanket,
-and was nearly suffocated. Joe managed to tie a handkerchief over
-his face in such a way as to allow himself air enough to breathe,
-and at the same time to keep off the mosquitoes. Instead of
-covering the rest of his body with his blanket, he deliberately
-exposed a bare arm and part of a bare leg, in hopes that he could
-thus satisfy the mosquitoes and induce them to be merciful. At
-the end of half an hour both Tom and Joe felt that they could
-endure the attacks of the insatiable insects no longer. They got
-up, and, stirring the embers of the fire, soon started a cheerful
-blaze. There were plenty of hemlock-trees close at hand, and the
-hemlock-boughs when thrown on the fire gave out a great deal of
-smoke. The two unfortunate boys sat in the lee of the fire and
-nearly choked themselves with smoke; but they could endure the
-smoke better than the mosquitoes, and so they were left alone by
-the latter. In the course of the next hour a breeze sprung up,
-which blew the mosquitoes away, and the sleepy and nearly stifled
-boys were permitted to go to bed and to sleep.
-
-[Illustration: GETTING BREAKFAST UNDER DIFFICULTIES.]
-
-The wind died down before morning, and the mosquitoes returned.
-As soon as it was light the canoeists made haste to get breakfast
-and to paddle out into the stream. The mosquitoes let them depart
-without attempting to follow them; and the boys, anchoring the
-canoes by making the ballast-bags fast to the painters, enjoyed an
-unmolested bath. As they were careful to anchor where the water was
-not quite four feet deep they had no difficulty in climbing into
-the canoes after the bath. Joe’s mishap on Lake Memphremagog had
-taught them that getting into a canoe in deep water was easier in
-theory than in practice.
-
-Later in the morning the usual southerly breeze, which is found
-almost every morning on the Richelieu, gave the canoeists the
-opportunity of making sail--an opportunity that was all the more
-welcome since the cruise down the Magog had been exclusively a
-paddling cruise. The breeze was just fresh enough to make it
-prudent for the canoes to carry their main-sails only, and to give
-the canoeists plenty of employment in watching the gusts that came
-through the openings in the woods that lined the western shore.
-
-About twelve miles below Rouse’s Point the fleet reached “Ile aux
-Noix,” a beautiful island, in the middle of the stream, with a
-somewhat dilapidated fort at its northern end. The boys landed and
-examined the fort, and the ruined barracks which stood near it.
-The ditch surrounding the fort was half filled with the wooden
-palisades which had rotted and fallen into it, and large trees
-had sprung up on the grassy slope of the outer wall. The interior
-was, however, in good repair, and in one of the granite casemates
-lived an Irishman and his wife, who were the entire garrison. In
-former years the “Ile aux Noix” fort was one of the most important
-defences of the Canadian frontier, and even in its present forlorn
-condition it could be defended much longer than could the big
-American fort at Rouse’s Point. The boys greatly enjoyed their
-visit to the island, and after lunch set sail, determined to make
-the most of the fair wind and to reach St. John before night.
-
-The breeze held, and in less than three hours the steeples and
-the railway bridge of St. John came in view. The canoeists landed
-at the upper end of the town; and Harry and Charley, leaving
-the canoes in charge of the other boys, went in search of the
-Custom-house officer whose duty it was to inspect all vessels
-passing from the United States into Canada by way of the Richelieu
-River. Having found the officer, who was a very pleasant man,
-and who gave the fleet permission to proceed on its way without
-searching the canoes for smuggled goods, Harry and Charley walked
-on to examine the rapids, which begin just below the railway
-bridge. From St. John to Chambly, a distance of twelve miles,
-the river makes a rapid descent, and is entirely unnavigable for
-anything except canoes. A canal around the rapids enables canal
-boats and small vessels to reach the river at Chambly, where it
-again becomes navigable; but the boys did not like the idea of
-paddling through the canal, and greatly preferred to run the rapids.
-
-The first rapid was a short but rough one. Still, it was no worse
-than the first of the Magog rapids, and Harry and Charley made
-up their minds that it could be safely run. The men of whom they
-made inquiries as to the rapids farther down said that they were
-impassable, and that the canoes had better pass directly into the
-canal, without attempting to run even the first rapid. Harry was
-inclined to think that this advice was good, but Charley pointed
-out that it would be possible to drag the canoes up the bank of the
-river and launch them in the canal at any point between St. John
-and Chambly, and that it would be time enough to abandon the river
-when it should really prove to be impassable.
-
-Returning to the canoes, the Commodore gave the order to prepare to
-run the rapids. In a short time the fleet, with the _Sunshine_ in
-advance, passed under the bridge; and narrowly escaping shipwreck
-on the remains of the wooden piles that once supported a bridge
-that had been destroyed by fire, entered the rapid. There was quite
-a crowd gathered to watch the canoes as they passed, but those
-people who wanted the excitement of seeing the canoes wrecked were
-disappointed. Not a drop of water found its way into the cockpit
-of a single canoe; and though there was an ugly rock near the end
-of the rapid, against which each canoeist fully expected to be
-driven as he approached it, the run was made without the slightest
-accident.
-
-Drifting down with the current a mile or two below the town, the
-boys landed and encamped for the night. While waiting at St. John,
-Joe and Tom had provided themselves with mosquito-netting, but they
-had little use for it, for only a few mosquitoes made the discovery
-that four healthy and attractive boys were within reach. The night
-was cool and quiet, and the canoeists, tired with their long day’s
-work, slept until late in the morning.
-
-Everything was prepared the next day for running the rapids which
-the men at St. John had declared to be impassable. The spars and
-all the stores were lashed fast; the sand-bags were placed in the
-after-compartments; the painters were rove through the stern-posts,
-and the life-belts were placed where they could be buckled on at an
-instant’s notice. After making all these preparations it was rather
-disappointing to find no rapids whatever between St. John and
-Chambly, or rather the Chambly railway bridge.
-
-“It just proves what I said yesterday,” remarked Charley, turning
-round in his canoe to speak to his comrades, who were a boat’s
-length behind him. “People who live on the banks of a river never
-know anything about it. Now, I don’t believe there is a rapid in
-the whole Richelieu River, except at St. John. Halloo! keep back,
-boys--”
-
-While he was speaking Charley and his canoe disappeared as suddenly
-as if the earth, or rather the water, had opened and swallowed
-them. The other boys in great alarm backed water, and then paddling
-ashore as fast as possible, sprung out of their canoes and ran
-along the shore, to discover what had become of Charley. They found
-him at the foot of a water-fall of about four feet in height over
-which he had been carried. The fall was formed by a long ledge of
-rock running completely across the river; and had the boys been
-more careful, and had the wind been blowing in any other direction
-than directly down the river, they would have heard the sound of
-the falling water in time to be warned of the danger into which
-Charley had carelessly run.
-
-His canoe had sustained little damage, for it had luckily fallen
-where the water was deep enough to keep it from striking the rocky
-bottom. Charley had been thrown out as the canoe went over the
-fall, but had merely bruised himself a little. He towed his canoe
-ashore, and in answer to a mischievous question from Joe admitted
-that perhaps the men who had said that the Chambly rapids were
-impassable were right.
-
-Below the fall and as far as the eye could reach stretched a fierce
-and shallow rapid. The water boiled over and among the rocks with
-which it was strewn, and there could not be any doubt that the
-rapid was one which could not be successfully run, unless, perhaps,
-by some one perfectly familiar with the channel. It was agreed that
-the canoes must be carried up to the canal, and after two hours of
-hard work the fleet was launched a short distance above one of the
-canal locks.
-
-The lock-man did not seem disposed to let the canoes pass through
-the lock, but finally accepted fifty cents, and, grumbling to
-himself in his Canadian French, proceeded to lock the canoes
-through. He paid no attention to the request that he would open the
-sluices gradually, but opened them all at once and to their fullest
-extent. The result was that the water in the lock fell with great
-rapidity; the canoes were swung against one another and against
-the side of the lock, and Charley’s canoe, catching against a bolt
-in one of the upper gates, was capsized and sunk to the bottom,
-leaving her captain clinging to the stern of the _Sunshine_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-There is no place more unfit for a sudden and unexpected bath than
-the lock of a canal. The sides and the gates are perpendicular and
-smooth, and present nothing to which a person in the water can
-cling. Charley had no difficulty in supporting himself by throwing
-one arm over the stern of Harry’s canoe, but had he been alone in
-the lock he would have been in a very unpleasant position.
-
-As soon as the gates were opened the boys paddled out of the lock,
-and went ashore to devise a plan for raising the sunken canoe. Of
-course it was necessary that some one should dive and bring up the
-painter, so that the canoe could be dragged out of the lock; but,
-as canal-boats were constantly passing, it was a full hour before
-any attempt at diving could be made. There were half a dozen small
-French boys playing near the lock, and Charley, who was by no means
-anxious to do any unnecessary diving, hired them to get the canoe
-ashore, which they managed to do easily. It was then found that
-nearly everything except the spars had floated out of her, and the
-rest of the morning was spent in searching for the missing articles
-in the muddy bottom of the canal. Most of them were recovered, but
-Charley’s spare clothes, which were in an India-rubber bag, could
-not be found.
-
-This was the second time that the unfortunate _Midnight_ had
-foundered, and Charley was thoroughly convinced of the necessity of
-providing some means of keeping her afloat in case of capsizing. It
-was impossible for him to put water-tight compartments in her, such
-as the _Sunshine_ and the _Dawn_ possessed, but he resolved to buy
-a dozen beef-bladders at the next town, and after blowing them up
-to pack them in the bow and stern of his canoe. Tom, whose “Rice
-Lake” canoe was also without water-tight compartments, agreed
-to adopt Charley’s plan, and thus avoid running the risk of an
-accident that might result in the loss of the canoe and cargo.
-
-When the fleet finally got under way again there was a nice breeze
-from the south, which sent the canoes along at the rate of four
-or five miles an hour. Chambly, the northern end of the canal,
-was reached before four o’clock, the boys having lunched on
-bread-and-water while in the canoes in order not to lose time by
-going ashore. They passed safely through the three great locks at
-Chambly; and entering the little lake formed by the expansion of
-the river, and known as Chambly Basin, they skirted its northern
-shore until they reached the ruins of Chambly Castle.
-
-More than one hundred and fifty years ago the Frenchmen built
-the great square fort, with round towers at each angle, which is
-now called Chambly Castle. At that time the only direct way of
-communication between the settlements on the St. Lawrence and
-those in the valleys of the Hudson and the Mohawk was up the
-Richelieu River, Lake Champlain, and Lake George. It was this route
-that Burgoyne followed when he began the campaign that ended so
-disastrously for him at Saratoga, and it was at Chambly Castle that
-he formally took command of his army. The castle was placed just
-at the foot of the rapids, on a broad, level space, where Indians
-used to assemble in large numbers to trade with the French. Its
-high stone walls, while they could easily have been knocked to
-pieces by cannon, were a complete protection against the arrows and
-rifles of the savages, and could have withstood a long siege by any
-English force not provided with artillery. In the old days when the
-castle was garrisoned by gay young French officers, and parties
-of beautiful ladies came up from Montreal to attend the officers’
-balls, and the gray old walls echoed to music, and brilliant lights
-flashed through the windows, the Indians encamped outside the gates
-must have thought it the most magnificent and brilliant place in
-the whole world. Now there is nothing left of it but the four
-walls and the crumbling towers. The iron bolts on which the great
-castle gate once swung are still embedded in the stone, but nothing
-else remains inside the castle except grassy mounds and the wild
-vines that climb wherever they can find an angle or a stone to
-cling to.
-
-The canoeists made their camp where the Indians had so often camped
-before them, and after supper they rambled through the castle and
-climbed to the top of one of the towers. They had never heard of
-its existence, and were as surprised as they were delighted to find
-so romantic a ruin.
-
-“I haven’t the least doubt that the place is full of ghosts,” said
-Charley as the boys were getting into the canoes for the night.
-
-“Do you really believe in ghosts?” asked Tom, in his matter-of-fact
-way.
-
-“Why,” replied Charley, “when you think of what must have happened
-inside of that old castle and outside of it when the Indians
-tortured their prisoners, there can’t help but be ghosts here.”
-
-“I don’t care, provided there are no mosquitoes,” said Joe. “Ghosts
-don’t bite, and don’t sing in a fellow’s ears.”
-
-Any one who has camped near a rapid knows how strangely the running
-water sounds in the stillness of the night. Joe, who, although
-there were no mosquitoes to trouble him, could not fall asleep, was
-sure that he heard men’s voices talking in a low tone, and two or
-three times raised himself up in his canoe to see if there were any
-persons in sight. He became convinced after a while that the sounds
-which disturbed him were made by the water, but, nevertheless,
-they had made him rather nervous. Though he had professed not to
-be afraid of ghosts, he did not like to think about them, but he
-could not keep them out of his mind. Once, when he looked out of
-his canoe toward the castle, he was startled to find it brilliantly
-lighted up. The light was streaming from the casemates, loop-holes,
-and windows, and it was some moments before he comprehended that it
-was nothing more ghostly than moonlight.
-
-Toward midnight Joe fell asleep, but he slept uneasily. He woke up
-suddenly to find a dark object with two fiery eyes seated on the
-deck of his canoe and apparently watching him. He sprung up, with
-a cry of terror, which awakened his comrades. The strange object
-rushed away from the canoe, and, stopping near the gate of the
-castle, seemed to be waiting to see what the boys would do.
-
-By this time Joe had recovered his senses, and knew that his
-strange visitor was a wild animal. The boys took their pistols.
-Tom, who was the best shot, fired at the animal. He did not hit it,
-but as Tom advanced slowly toward it the creature went into the
-castle.
-
-“It’s a wild-cat,” cried Charley. “I saw it as it crossed that
-patch of moonlight. Come on, boys, and we’ll have a hunt.”
-
-With their pistols ready for instant service, the canoeists rushed
-into the castle. The wild-cat was seated on a pile of stones in
-what was once the court-yard, and did not show any signs of fear.
-Three or four pistol-shots, however, induced it to spring down
-from its perch and run across the court-yard. The boys followed it
-eagerly, plunging into a thick growth of tall weeds, and shouting
-at the top of their lungs. Suddenly the animal vanished; and though
-Tom fancied that he saw it crouching in the shadow of the wall and
-fired at it, as he supposed, he soon found that he was firing at a
-piece of old stovepipe that had probably been brought to the place
-by a picnic party.
-
-Giving up the hunt with reluctance, the canoeists returned to their
-canoes; at least, three of them did, but Joe was not with them.
-They called to him, but received no answer, and becoming anxious
-about him, went back to the castle and shouted his name loudly, but
-without success.
-
-“It’s very strange,” exclaimed Charley. “He was close behind me
-when we chased the wild-cat into those weeds.”
-
-“Has anybody seen him since?” asked Harry.
-
-[Illustration: HUNTING FOR A WILD-CAT IN CHAMBLY CASTLE.]
-
-Nobody had seen him.
-
-“Then,” said Harry, “the wild-cat has carried him off, or killed
-him.”
-
-“Nonsense!” exclaimed Charley; “a wild-cat isn’t a tiger, and
-couldn’t carry off a small baby. Joe must be trying to play a trick
-on us.”
-
-“Let’s go back and pay no attention to him,” suggested Tom. “I
-don’t like such tricks.”
-
-“There’s no trick about it,” said Harry. “Joe isn’t that kind of
-fellow. Something has happened to him, and we’ve got to look for
-him till we find him.”
-
-“Harry’s right,” said Charley. “Go and get the lantern out of my
-canoe, won’t you, Tom? I’ve got matches in my pocket.”
-
-When the lantern was lit a careful search was made all over the
-court-yard. Harry was greatly frightened, for he was afraid that
-Joe might have been accidentally shot while the boys were shooting
-at the wild-cat, and he remembered that in his excitement he had
-fired his pistol in a very reckless way. It was horrible to think
-that he might have shot poor Joe; worse, even, than thinking that
-the wild-cat might have seized him.
-
-The court-yard had been thoroughly searched without finding the
-least trace of Joe, and the boys were becoming more and more
-alarmed, when Charley, whose ears were particularly sharp, cried,
-“Hush! I hear something.” They all listened intently, and heard a
-voice faintly calling “Help!” They knew at once that it was Joe’s
-voice, but they could not imagine where he was. They shouted in
-reply to him, and Charley, seizing the lantern, carefully pushed
-aside the tall weeds and presently found himself at the mouth of a
-well.
-
-“Are you there, Joe?” he cried, lying down on the ground, with his
-head over the mouth of the well.
-
-“I believe I am,” replied Joe. “I’m ready to come out, though, if
-you fellows will help me.”
-
-The boys gave a great shout of triumph.
-
-“Are you hurt?” asked Charley, eagerly.
-
-“I don’t think I am; but I think somebody will be if I have to stay
-here much longer.”
-
-It was evident that Joe was not seriously hurt, although he had
-fallen into the well while rushing recklessly after the wild-cat.
-Tom and Harry ran to the canoes and returned with all four of the
-canoe-painters. Tying one of them to the lantern, Charley lowered
-it down, and was able to get a glimpse of Joe. The well was about
-twenty feet deep, and perfectly dry, and Joe was standing, with his
-hands in his pockets, leaning against the side of the well, and
-apparently entirely unhurt, in spite of his fall.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-
-It was an easy matter to help Joe out of the old well. He had
-fallen into it while running after the wild-cat, but a heap of
-decayed leaves at the bottom broke the fall and saved him from any
-serious injury. Nevertheless, he must have been a little stunned at
-first, for he made no outcry for some time, and it was his first
-call for help that was heard by Charley.
-
-The boys returned to their canoes, and, as it was not yet
-midnight, prepared to resume the sleep from which they had been so
-unceremoniously awakened. They had little fear that the wild-cat
-would pay them another visit, for it had undoubtedly been badly
-frightened. Still, it was not pleasant to think that there was a
-wild beast within a few rods of them, and the thought kept the
-canoeists awake for a long time.
-
-The wild-cat did not pay them a second visit, and when they awoke
-the next morning they were half inclined to think that their
-night’s adventure had been only a dream. There, however, were the
-marks made by its claws on the varnished deck of Joe’s canoe, and
-Joe’s clothing was torn and stained by his fall. With the daylight
-they became very courageous, and decided that they had never been
-in the least afraid of the animal. The so-called wild-cat of
-Canada, which is really a lynx, is, however, a fierce and vicious
-animal, and is sometimes more than a match for an unarmed man.
-
-There was a strong west wind blowing when the fleet started, and
-Chambly Basin was covered with white-caps. As the canoes were
-sailing in the trough of the sea they took in considerable water
-while skirting the east shore of the Basin, but once in the narrow
-river they found the water perfectly smooth. This day the fleet
-made better progress than on any previous day. Nothing could be
-more delightful than the scenery, and the quaint little French
-towns along the river, every one of which was named after some
-saint, were very interesting. The boys landed at one of them and
-got their dinner at a little tavern where no one spoke English,
-and where Charley, who had studied French at Annapolis, won the
-admiration of his comrades by the success with which he ordered the
-dinner.
-
-[Illustration: SAILING DOWN THE RICHELIEU RIVER.]
-
-With the exception of the hour spent at dinner, the canoeists
-sailed, from six o’clock in the morning until seven at night, at
-the rate of nearly six miles an hour. The clocks of Sorel, the town
-at the mouth of the Richelieu, were striking six as the canoes
-glided into the broad St. Lawrence and steered for a group of
-islands distant about a mile from the south shore. It was while
-crossing the St. Lawrence that they first made the acquaintance of
-screw-steamers, and learned how dangerous they are to the careless
-canoeist. A big steamship, on her way to Montreal, came up the
-river so noiselessly that the boys did not notice her until
-they heard her hoarse whistle warning them to keep out of her way.
-A paddle-wheel steamer can be heard while she is a long way off,
-but screw-steamers glide along so stealthily that the English
-canoeists, who constantly meet them on the Mersey, the Clyde, and
-the lower Thames, have nicknamed them “sudden death.”
-
-Cramped and tired were the canoeists when they reached the nearest
-island and went ashore to prepare a camp, but they were proud of
-having sailed sixty miles in one day. As they sat around the fire
-after supper Harry said, “Boys, we’ve had experience enough by this
-time to test our different rigs. Let’s talk about them a little.”
-
-“All right,” said Joe. “I want it understood, however, that my
-lateen is by all odds the best rig in the fleet.”
-
-“Charley,” remarked Tom, “you said the other day that you liked
-Joe’s rig better than any other. Do you think so still?”
-
-“Of course I do,” answered Charley. “Joe’s sails set flatter than
-any lug-sail; he can set them and take them in quicker than we can
-handle ours, and as they are triangular he has the most of his
-canvas at the foot of the sail instead of at the head. But they’re
-going to spill him before the cruise is over, or I’m mistaken.”
-
-“In what way?” asked Joe.
-
-“You are going to get yourself into a scrape some day by trying to
-take in your sail when you are running before a stiff breeze. If
-you try to get the sail down without coming up into the wind it
-will get overboard, and either you will lose it or it will capsize
-you; you tried it yesterday when a squall came up, and you very
-nearly came to grief.”
-
-“But you can say the same about any other rig,” exclaimed Joe.
-
-“Of course you can’t very well get any sail down while the wind is
-in it; but Tom can take in his sharpie-sail without much danger
-even when he’s running directly before the wind, and Harry and I
-can let go our halyards and get our lugs down after a fashion, if
-it is necessary. Still, your lateen is the best cruising rig I’ve
-ever seen, though for racing Harry’s big, square-headed balance-lug
-is better.”
-
-“You may say what you will,” said Tom, “but give me my
-sharpie-sails. They set as flat as a board, and I can handle them
-easily enough to suit me.”
-
-“The trouble with your rig,” said Charley, “is that you have a mast
-nearly fifteen feet high. Now, when Joe takes in his main-sail he
-has only two feet of mast left standing.”
-
-“How do you like your own rig?” asked Harry.
-
-“Oh, it is good enough. I’m not sure that it isn’t better than
-either yours or Tom’s; but it certainly isn’t as handy as Joe’s
-lateen.”
-
-“Now that you’ve settled that I’ve the best rig,” said Joe, “you’d
-better admit that I’ve the best canoe, and then turn in for the
-night. After the work we’ve done to-day, and the fun we had last
-night, I’m sleepy.”
-
-“Do you call sitting still in a canoe hard work?” inquired Tom.
-
-“Is falling down a well your idea of fun?” asked Harry.
-
-“It’s too soon,” said Charley, “to decide who has the best canoe.
-We’ll find that out by the time the cruise is over.”
-
-The island where the boys camped during their first night on the
-St. Lawrence was situated at the head of Lake St. Peter. This lake
-is simply an expansion of the St. Lawrence, and though it is thirty
-miles long and about ten miles wide at its widest part, it is so
-shallow that steamboats can only pass through it by following an
-artificial channel dredged out by the government at a vast expense.
-Its shores are lined with a thick growth of reeds, which extend
-in many places fully a mile into the lake, and are absolutely
-impassable, except where streams flowing into the lake have kept
-channels open through the reeds.
-
-On leaving the island in the morning the canoeists paddled down the
-lake, for there was not a breath of wind. The sun was intensely
-hot, and the heat reflected from the surface of the water and the
-varnished decks of the canoes assisted in making the boys feel as
-if they were roasting before a fire. Toward noon the heat became
-really intolerable, and the Commodore gave the order to paddle over
-to the north shore in search of shade.
-
-It was disappointing to find instead of a shady shore an
-impenetrable barrier of reeds. After resting a little while in the
-canoes, the boys started to skirt the reeds, in hope of finding an
-opening; and the sun, apparently taking pity on them, went under a
-cloud, so that they paddled a mile or two in comparative comfort.
-
-The friendly cloud was followed before long by a mass of thick
-black clouds coming up from the south. Soon the thunder was heard
-in the distance, and it dawned upon the tired boys that they were
-about to have a thunder-storm, without any opportunity of obtaining
-shelter.
-
-They paddled steadily on, looking in vain for a path through the
-reeds, and making up their minds to a good wetting. They found,
-however, that the rain did not come alone. With it came a fierce
-gust of wind, which quickly raised white-caps on the lake. Instead
-of dying out as soon as the rain fell the wind blew harder and
-harder, and in the course of half an hour there was a heavy sea
-running.
-
-The wind and sea coming from the south, while the canoes were
-steering east, placed the boys in a very dangerous position. The
-seas struck the canoes on the side and broke over them, and in
-spite of the aprons, which to some extent protected the cockpits
-of all except the _Twilight_, the water found its way below. It
-was soon no longer possible to continue in the trough of the sea,
-and the canoes were compelled to turn their bows to the wind and
-sea--the boys paddling just sufficiently to keep themselves from
-drifting back into the reeds.
-
-The _Sunshine_ and the _Midnight_ behaved admirably, taking very
-little water over their decks. The _Twilight_ “slapped” heavily,
-and threw showers of spray over herself, while the _Dawn_ showed a
-tendency to dive bodily into the seas, and several times the whole
-of her forward of the cockpit was under the water.
-
-“What had we better do?” asked Harry, who, although Commodore, had
-the good-sense always to consult Charley in matters of seamanship.
-
-“It’s going to blow hard, and we can’t sit here and paddle against
-it all day without getting exhausted.”
-
-“But how are we going to help ourselves?” continued Harry.
-
-“Your canoe and mine,” replied Charley, “can live out the gale well
-enough under sail. If we set our main-sails close-reefed, and keep
-the canoes close to the wind, we shall be all right. It’s the two
-other canoes that I’m troubled about.”
-
-“My canoe suits me well enough,” said Joe, “so long as she keeps
-on the top of the water, but she seems to have made up her mind to
-dive under it.”
-
-“Mine would be all right if I could stop paddling long enough to
-bail her out, but I can’t,” remarked Tom. “She’s nearly half full
-of water now.”
-
-“We can’t leave the other fellows,” said Harry, “so what’s the use
-of our talking about getting sail on our canoes?”
-
-“It’s just possible that Tom’s canoe would live under sail,”
-resumed Charley; “but it’s certain that Joe’s won’t. What do you
-think about those reeds, Tom--can you get your canoe into them?”
-
-“Of course I can, and that’s what we’d better all do,” exclaimed
-Tom. “The reeds will break the force of the seas, and we can stay
-among them till the wind goes down.”
-
-“Suppose you try it,” suggested Charley, “and let us see how far
-you can get into the reeds? I think they’re going to help us out of
-a very bad scrape.”
-
-Tom did not dare to turn his canoe around, so he backed water and
-went at the reeds stern-first. They parted readily, and his canoe
-penetrated without much difficulty some half-dozen yards into the
-reeds where the water was almost quiet. Unfortunately, he shipped
-one heavy sea just as he entered the reeds, which filled his canoe
-so full that another such sea would certainly have sunk her, had
-she not been provided with the bladders bought at Chambly.
-
-Joe followed Tom’s example, but the _Dawn_ perversely stuck in the
-reeds just as she was entering them, and sea after sea broke over
-her before Joe could drive her far enough into the reeds to be
-protected by them.
-
-Joe and Tom were now perfectly safe, though miserably wet; but, as
-the rain had ceased, there was nothing to prevent them from getting
-dry clothes out of their water-proof bags, and putting them on as
-soon as they could bail the water out of their canoes. Harry and
-Charley, seeing their comrades in safety, made haste to get up sail
-and to stand out into the lake--partly because they did not want to
-run the risk of being swamped when entering the reeds, and partly
-because they wanted the excitement of sailing in a gale of wind.
-
-When the masts were stepped, the sails hoisted, and the sheets
-trimmed, the two canoes, sailing close to the wind, began to creep
-away from the reeds. They behaved wonderfully well. The boys had
-to watch them closely, and to lean out to windward from time to
-time to hold them right side up. The rudders were occasionally
-thrown out of the water, but the boys took the precaution to steer
-with their paddles. The excitement of sailing was so great, that
-Charley and Harry forgot all about the time, and sailed on for
-hours. Suddenly they discovered that it was three o’clock, that
-they had had no lunch, and that the two canoeists who had sought
-refuge in the reeds had absolutely nothing to eat with them. Filled
-with pity, they resolved to return to them without a moment’s
-delay. It was then that it occurred to them that in order to sail
-back they must turn their canoes around, bringing them while so
-doing in the trough of the sea. Could they possibly do this without
-being swamped? The question was a serious one, for they were fully
-four miles from the shore, and the wind and sea were as high as ever.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-
-Charley and Harry took in their sails, keeping the canoes head to
-sea with an occasional stroke of the paddle. When all was made
-snug, and the moment for turning the canoes had arrived, they
-realized that they were about to attempt the most hazardous feat of
-the whole cruise.
-
-“Can we do it?” asked Harry, doubtfully.
-
-“We’ve got to do it,” replied Charley.
-
-“Why can’t we unship our rudders and back water till we get to the
-reeds?”
-
-“It might be possible, but the chances are that we would be
-swamped. The seas would overtake us, and we couldn’t keep out of
-the way of them. No, we’ve got to turn around and sail back in the
-regular way.”
-
-“You know best, of course,” said Harry; “but what’s the use of
-taking in our sails before we turn around? We’ll have trouble in
-setting them again with the wind astern.”
-
-“We can turn the canoes quicker without sails than we could
-with the sails set, and every second that we can gain is worth
-something. Besides, if we are capsized it will be an advantage to
-have the sails furled. But we’re wasting time. Let your canoe get
-right astern of mine, so that mine will keep a little of the sea
-off of you; then watch for two or three big seas and turn your
-canoe when they have passed.”
-
-Harry followed his friend’s instructions, and succeeded in turning
-his canoe without accident. Then Charley, getting into the lee of
-the _Sunshine_, did his best to imitate Harry’s successful feat. He
-managed to turn the canoe, but while in the act a heavy sea rolled
-into the cockpit and filled the _Midnight_ absolutely full. The
-beef-bladders, however, kept the canoe afloat, but she lay like a
-log on the water, and every successive wave swept over her.
-
-Charley did not lose his presence of mind. He shouted to Harry to
-run up his sail and keep his canoe out of the way of the seas, and
-then he busied himself shaking out the reef of his main-sail, so
-that he could set the whole sail. The moment the canoe felt the
-strain of her canvas she began to rush through the water in spite
-of her great weight, and no more seas came aboard her. Steering
-with one hand, Charley bailed with his hat with such energy that he
-soon freed the canoe of water. Meanwhile he rapidly overtook Harry,
-and reached the reeds, while the _Sunshine_ was a quarter of a mile
-behind him.
-
-Tom and Joe were found sitting in their canoes and suffering the
-pangs of hunger. Charley put on dry clothes, while Harry prepared
-a lunch of dried beef and crackers, after which the canoeists
-resigned themselves as cheerfully as they could to spending the
-rest of the afternoon and the night in the reeds. It was not a
-pleasant place, but the wind kept the mosquitoes away, and the boys
-managed to fall asleep soon after sunset. The wind died out during
-the night, and the boys found, the next morning, that only a few
-rods below the place where they had spent the night there was an
-open channel by which they could easily have reached the shore.
-This was rather aggravating, and it increased the disgust with
-which they remembered Lake St. Peter and its reed-lined shores.
-
-The voyage down the St. Lawrence seemed monotonous after the
-excitement of running the Magog rapids, and the various adventures
-of the sail down the Richelieu. The St. Lawrence has very little
-shade along its banks, for, owing to the direction in which it
-runs, the sun shines on the water all day long. The weather was
-exceedingly hot while the boys were on the river, and on the third
-day after leaving Lake St. Peter they suffered so greatly that they
-were afraid to stay on the water lest they should be sunstruck.
-Going ashore on the low sandy bank, they were unable to find a
-single tree or even a hillock large enough to afford any shade.
-They thought of drawing the canoes ashore and sitting in the shade
-of them, but there was not a breath of air stirring, and the very
-ground was so hot that it almost scorched their feet. Half a mile
-away on a meadow they saw a tree, but it was far too hot to think
-of walking that distance. They decided at last to get into their
-canoes and to paddle a few rods farther to a place where a small
-stream joined the river, and where they hoped to find the water
-somewhat cooler for bathing.
-
-On reaching the mouth of the little stream the bows of the canoes
-were run ashore, so that they would not float away, and the boys,
-hastily undressing, sprung into the water. They had a delightful
-bath, and it was not until they began to feel chilly that they
-thought of coming out and dressing. Tom was the first to go
-ashore, and as he was wading out of the water he suddenly felt
-himself sinking in the sand. Harry and Joe attempted to land a
-few yards from the place where Tom was trying to drag his feet
-out of the clinging sand, and they too found themselves in the
-same difficulty. Harry at once perceived what was the matter,
-and, making frantic efforts to get to the shore, cried out to his
-comrades that they were caught in a quicksand.
-
-The struggles made by the three boys were all in vain. When they
-tried to lift one foot out of the sand the other foot would sink
-still deeper. It was impossible for them to throw themselves at
-full length on the quicksand, for there were nearly two feet of
-water over it, and they were not close enough together to give one
-another any assistance. By the time Charley fully understood the
-peril they were in, Tom had sunk above his knees in the sand, and
-Joe and Harry, finding that they could not extricate themselves,
-were waiting, with white faces and trembling lips, for Charley to
-come to their help.
-
-Charley knew perfectly well that if he ventured too near the other
-boys he would himself be caught in the quicksand, and there would
-be no hope that any of them could escape. Keeping his presence of
-mind, he swum to the stern of one of the canoes, set it afloat, and
-pushed it toward Tom so that the latter could get hold of its bow.
-He then brought two other canoes to the help of Joe and Harry, and
-when each of the three unfortunate canoeists was thus furnished
-with something to cling to he climbed into his own canoe.
-
-“What are we to do now?” asked Harry.
-
-“Just hold on to your canoes till I can tow them out into the
-stream. You can’t sink while you hang on to them.”
-
-“Won’t the canoes sink with us?” asked Tom.
-
-“Not a bit of it. You wouldn’t sink yourselves if you could lie
-down flat on the quicksand. I was caught in a quicksand once, and
-that’s the way I saved myself.”
-
-“I hope it’s all right,” exclaimed Joe; “but it seems to me
-that you’ll have to get a derrick to hoist me out. But I’m not
-complaining. I can hang on to my canoe all day, only I don’t want
-to be drowned and buried both at the same time.”
-
-Charley, meanwhile, was busily making his canoe fast to Tom’s
-canoe with his painter. When this was done he paddled away from
-the shore with all his might, while Tom tried to lift himself
-out of the quicksand by throwing the weight of his body on the
-canoe. Slowly Tom and his canoe yielded to the vigorous strokes
-of Charley’s paddle and were towed out into deep water. By the
-same means Joe and Harry were rescued, and then the entire
-fleet--Charley paddling, and the others swimming and pushing their
-canoes--floated a short distance down stream, and finally landed
-where the sand was firm and hard.
-
-“What should we have done if you’d got into the quicksand, as we
-did?” said Harry to Charley, as they were dressing.
-
-“By this time we should all have disappeared,” replied Charley.
-
-“I shall never go ashore again while we’re on this river without
-making sure that I’m not walking into a quicksand,” continued
-Harry. “It was awful to find myself sinking deeper and deeper, and
-to know that I couldn’t help myself.”
-
-“Very likely there isn’t another quicksand the whole length of
-the St. Lawrence,” said Charley. “However, it’s well enough to be
-careful where we land. I’ve noticed that where a little stream
-joins a big one the bottom is likely to be soft; but after all a
-regular dangerous quicksand isn’t often met. I never saw but one
-before.”
-
-“Tell us about it,” suggested Joe.
-
-“No; we’ve talked enough about quicksands, and the subject isn’t a
-cheerful one. Do you see that pile of boards? Let’s make a board
-shanty, and go to sleep in it after we’ve had some lunch. It will
-be too hot to paddle before the end of the afternoon.”
-
-A shanty was easily made by leaning a dozen planks against the
-top of the pile of boards, and after a comfortable lunch the boys
-took a long nap. When they awoke they were disgusted to find that
-their canoes were high and dry two rods from the edge of the water.
-They had reached a part of the river where the tide was felt, and
-without knowing it they had gone ashore at high tide. They had to
-carry the canoes, with all their contents, down to the water, and
-as the receding tide had left a muddy and slippery surface to walk
-over the task was not a pleasant one. They congratulated themselves
-that they had not gone ashore at low tide, in which case the rising
-of the water during the night would have carried away the canoes.
-
-Sailing down the river with a gentle breeze, and with the help of
-the ebbing tide, the canoeists came to the mouth of a small river
-which entered the St. Lawrence from the north. They knew by means
-of the map that the small river was the Jacques Cartier. It was a
-swift, shallow, and noisy stream, flowing between high, precipitous
-banks, and spanned by a lofty and picturesque bridge. Taking in
-their sails, the boys entered the Jacques Cartier, picking their
-way carefully among the rocks, and making headway very slowly
-against the rapid current. They stopped under the bridge, just
-above which there was an impassable rapid, and went ashore for lunch.
-
-Near by there was a saw-mill, and from one of the workmen who came
-to look at the canoes the boys heard wonderful reports of the
-fish to be caught in the stream. It was full of salmon--so the man
-said--and about nine miles from its mouth there was a pool where
-the trout actually clamored to be caught. The enthusiasm of the
-canoeists was kindled; and they resolved to make a camp on the bank
-of the stream, and to spend a few days in fishing.
-
-After having thus excited his young hearers the workman cruelly
-told them that the right to fish for salmon was owned by a man
-living in Montreal, and that any one catching a salmon without
-permission would be heavily fined. The trout, however, belonged to
-nobody, and the boys, though greatly disappointed about the salmon,
-would not give up their plan of trout-fishing. They hired two carts
-from a farmer living a short distance from the river, and, placing
-their canoes on the carts, walked beside them over a wretchedly
-rough road until they reached a place deep in the woods, where a
-little stream, icy cold, joined the Jacques Cartier. Just before
-entering the latter the little stream formed a quiet pool, in
-which the trout could be seen jumping. The point of land between
-the trout-stream and the river was covered with a carpet of soft
-grass, and on this the canoes were placed and made ready to be
-slept in.
-
-The workman at the mouth of the Jacques Cartier had not exaggerated
-the number of trout in the pool. It was alive with fish. The boys
-were charmed with the beauty of their camping-ground and the luxury
-of their table. It was rather tiresome to walk two miles every
-day to the nearest farm-house for milk, but with the milk rice
-griddle cakes were made, and upon these and fresh-killed trout the
-canoeists feasted for three delightful days.
-
-[Illustration: “THEY FOUND A BEAR FEASTING UPON THE REMAINS OF
-THEIR BREAKFAST.”]
-
-They had one real adventure while on the Jacques Cartier. One day,
-when they returned to their camp from an exploration of the upper
-part of the trout-stream, they found a bear feasting upon the
-remains of their breakfast and their bottle of maple-sirup, which
-he had upset and broken. The animal was full-grown, and looked
-like a very ugly customer, but no sooner did he see the boys than
-he started on a rapid run for the woods. By the time the boys
-had found their pistols and were ready to follow him the bear had
-disappeared, and though they hunted for him all the rest of the day
-they could not find him. Had the bear taken it into his head to
-hunt the boys he would probably have been much more successful, for
-their pistol-bullets would have had little effect upon him, except
-to sharpen his appetite for tender and wholesome boys’-meat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-
-It sometimes blows very hard on the St. Lawrence. It blew
-especially hard the morning the young canoeists returned to the
-banks of the great river from their excursion up the Jacques
-Cartier. As far as they could see the St. Lawrence was covered with
-white-caps. The wind blew directly up the river, and a heavy sea
-was breaking on the little island which lay opposite the mouth of
-the Jacques Cartier. Paddling against such a wind and sea would
-have been nearly impossible, and the boys resolved to wait until
-the wind should go down.
-
-The day was a long one, for there was nothing to do but to watch
-the men at work in the saw-mill, and to look out on the river to
-see if the wind and sea had gone down. It continued to blow hard
-all day and all night, and when Harry awoke his comrades at five
-o’clock the next morning it was blowing as hard as ever.
-
-Nobody wanted to spend another day at the saw-mill. Although the
-wind was blowing up the river the tide was ebbing, and would help
-the canoes to make some little progress, in spite of the wind and
-sea. So after a hurried breakfast the fleet got under way at six
-o’clock and gallantly breasted the waves.
-
-The boys found that paddling against so strong a head-wind was
-harder than they had imagined that it could be. It was almost
-impossible to force the upper blade of the paddle through the air
-when trying to make a stroke, and it was only by turning the two
-paddle-blades at right angles to one another, so that the upper
-blade would present its edge to the wind, that this could be done.
-The seas were so large that the two canoes which were leading would
-often be entirely invisible to the other canoes, though they were
-but a few yards apart. The _Twilight_, as was her habit when driven
-against head-seas, threw spray all over herself, and the _Dawn_
-exhibited her old vice of trying to dive through the seas. The
-other canoes were dry enough, but they presented more resistance to
-the wind, and hence were harder to paddle.
-
-Little was said during the first half-hour, for everybody was
-working too hard at the paddle to have any breath to spare for
-talking; but finally Harry, who was in the advance with Charley,
-slackened his stroke, and, hailing Joe and Tom, asked them how they
-were getting along.
-
-“Wet as usual,” replied Joe. “The water is pretty near up to my
-waist in the canoe, and two waves out of three wash right over her.
-But I don’t care; I’ll paddle as long as anybody else will.”
-
-“My canoe will float, unless the bladders burst,” said Tom, “but
-I’ll have to stop and bail out before long, or she’ll be so heavy
-that I can’t stir her.”
-
-“Never mind,” cried Joe. “Look at the splendid time we’re making.
-We’ve come nearly a quarter of a mile, and that means that we’re
-paddling at the rate of half a mile an hour. At this rate we’ll
-get somewhere in the course of the summer.”
-
-“There isn’t any use in tiring ourselves out for nothing,”
-exclaimed Harry. “Boys! we’ll make that sand-spit right ahead of
-us, and wait there till the wind goes down.”
-
-“All right,” said Joe. “Only it’s a pity to go ashore when the tide
-is helping us along so beautifully. That is, the Commodore said it
-would help us, and of course he is right.”
-
-“No reflections on the Commodore will be allowed,” cried Harry.
-“Bail out your canoes, you two fellows, and Charley and I will wait
-for you.”
-
-Joe was very anxious to go ashore and rest, for he was nearly tired
-out; but he was not willing to let Harry know that he was tired.
-The two boys had been disputing while on the Jacques Cartier as
-to their respective strength, and Harry had boasted that he could
-endure twice as much fatigue as Joe. This was true enough, for
-Harry was older and much more muscular, but Joe was determined to
-paddle as long as he could swing his arms rather than to admit
-that he was the weaker.
-
-The sandy spit where Harry proposed to rest was half a mile farther
-on, but before it was reached poor Joe managed to sprain the
-muscles of his left wrist. He was compelled to stop paddling except
-just hard enough to keep the _Dawn’s_ head to the sea, and to call
-out to the Commodore that he must be allowed to go ashore at once.
-
-Now, the north shore of the river, near which the canoes were
-paddling, was a rocky precipice, rising perpendicularly directly
-from the water, and at least two hundred feet high. To land on such
-a shore was, of course, impossible, and the sandy spit toward which
-the fleet was paddling was the only possible landing-place within
-sight, unless the canoes were to turn round and run back to the
-Jacques Cartier.
-
-In this state of things Harry, after consulting with Charley and
-Tom, resolved to tow the _Dawn_. Her painter was made fast to the
-stern-post of the _Sunshine_, and Harry, bracing his feet and
-setting his teeth tight together, began the task of forcing two
-heavy canoes through the rough water. He found that he could make
-progress slowly, but Joe could not steer the _Dawn_ except by
-paddling, and as he was able to do very little of that she kept
-yawing about in a most unpleasant way, which greatly added to
-Harry’s labor.
-
-Suddenly, Joe had a happy thought: he set his “dandy” and hauled
-the sheet taut, so that the boom was parallel with the keel. The
-effect of this was that whenever the canoe’s head fell off the sail
-filled and brought her up again. Joe was relieved of the task of
-steering, and Harry was able to tow the _Dawn_ much more easily
-than before.
-
-The other canoeists followed Joe’s example, and, setting their
-“dandies,” greatly lessened their labor. The canoes kept their
-heads to the wind of their own accord, and everybody wondered why
-so obvious a method of fighting a head-wind had not sooner been
-thought of.
-
-It was eight o’clock when the sandy spit was reached. The tide had
-been ebbing for some hours, and the sand was warm and dry, except
-near the edge of the water. The canoes were hauled some distance
-over the sand to a spot where there was a clump of bushes, and
-where it was reasonable to suppose that they would be perfectly
-safe even at high tide. A second breakfast was then cooked and
-eaten, after which the boys set out to explore their camping-ground.
-
-It was simply a low sand-bank, about a hundred feet wide at widest
-part, and running out two or three hundred feet into the river.
-As has been said, the north bank of the river was a perpendicular
-precipice, but now that the tide was out there was a path at the
-foot of the precipice by means of which any one could walk from the
-sand-spit to a ravine a quarter of a mile away, and thus reach the
-meadows lying back of the precipice. This path was covered with
-water at high tide; but, as it was sure to be passable for three or
-four hours, Harry and Tom set out to procure provisions for the day.
-
-[Illustration: AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE.]
-
-The fleet was wind-bound all that day, for neither the wind nor the
-sea showed the slightest intention of going down. Harry and Tom
-returned after an hour’s absence, with bread, butter, eggs, milk,
-and strawberries, and with the cheerful information that, in the
-opinion of a gloomy farmer, the wind would continue to blow for at
-least two days more.
-
-After resting and sleeping on the soft sand the boys began to find
-the time hang heavily on their hands. They overhauled their sails
-and rigging, putting them in complete order. Charley mended a pair
-of trousers belonging to Joe in a really artistic way; and Joe,
-with his left arm in a sling, played “mumble-te-peg” with Harry.
-Tom collected fire-wood, and, when he had got together more than
-enough to cook two or three meals, occupied himself by trying to
-roll a heavy log into a position near the canoes, where it could be
-used as a seat or a table.
-
-The sand was strewn with logs, big and little, and Harry proposed
-that as many logs as possible should be got together, so that an
-enormous camp-fire could be started. It was a happy idea, for it
-gave the boys employment for the greater part of the day. It became
-a matter of pride with them to bring the biggest and heaviest of
-the logs up to the fireplace. Some of them could only be stirred
-with levers, and moved with the help of rollers cut from smaller
-logs. Whenever a particularly big log was successfully moved the
-boys were encouraged to attack a still bigger one. Thus they
-finally collected an amount of fire-wood sufficient to make a blaze
-bright enough to be seen a dozen miles at night.
-
-When they were tired of rolling logs Tom went fishing, but caught
-nothing; while Charley cooked the dinner and watched the rising
-tide--half afraid that the water would reach the fire and put it
-out before he could get dinner ready. The tide rose so high that it
-came within two or three yards of the fire, and almost as near to
-the canoes, but it spared the dinner. When the tide was nearly full
-only a small part of the sand-spit was out of water, and the path
-along the foot of the precipice was completely covered, so that
-the waves broke directly against the rocks.
-
-“It’s lucky for us that the tide doesn’t cover the whole of this
-place,” remarked Charley as he placed the dinner on a large log
-which served as a table, and beat a tattoo on the frying-pan as a
-signal to Tom to give up fishing and come to dinner. “I should hate
-to have to take to the canoes again in this wind.”
-
-“It’s lucky that the tide will ebb again,” said Harry, “for we’re
-cut off from the shore as the tide is now, unless we could climb up
-the rocks, and I don’t believe we could.”
-
-“It’s all right,” said Tom, putting his fishing-tackle in his
-canoe, “provided the tide doesn’t come up in the night and float
-the canoes off.”
-
-“Oh, that can’t happen!” exclaimed Harry. “The tide’s turned
-already, and doesn’t reach the canoes.”
-
-“I’m going to sleep on the sand,” remarked Joe. “It’s softer than
-the bottom of my canoe, and there isn’t any sign of rain.”
-
-“You don’t catch me sleeping anywhere except in my canoe,” said
-Harry. “There isn’t any bed more comfortable than the _Sunshine_.”
-
-“Can you turn over in her at night?” asked Joe.
-
-“Well, yes; that is, if I do it very slow and easy.”
-
-“The bottom-board is a nice soft piece of wood, isn’t it?”
-continued Joe.
-
-“It’s pine-wood,” replied Harry, shortly. “Besides, I sleep on
-cushions.”
-
-“And you like to lie stretched out perfectly straight, don’t you?”
-
-“I like it well enough--much better than I like to see a young
-officer trying to chaff his Commodore,” returned Harry, trying to
-look very stern.
-
-“Oh, I’m not trying to chaff anybody!” exclaimed Joe. “I was only
-wondering if your canoe was as comfortable as a coffin would be,
-and I believe it is--every bit as comfortable.”
-
-When the time came for “turning in” Joe spread his water-proof
-blanket on the sand close by the side of his canoe. He had dragged
-her several yards away from the rest of the fleet, so as to be able
-to make his bed on the highest and driest part of the sand, and to
-shelter himself from the wind by lying in the lee of his boat. The
-other boys preferred to sleep in their canoes, which were placed
-side by side and close together. The blazing logs made the camp
-almost as light as if the sun were shining, and the boys lay awake
-a long while talking together, and hoping that the wind would die
-out before morning.
-
-Joe, whose sprained wrist pained him a little, was the last to fall
-asleep. While he had expressed no fears about the tide (for he did
-not wish to be thought nervous), he was a little uneasy about it.
-He had noticed that when the tide rose during the day it would have
-completely covered the sand-spit had it risen only a few inches
-higher. Long after his comrades had fallen asleep it occurred to
-Joe that it would have been a wise precaution to make the canoes
-fast to the bushes, so that they could not be carried away; but
-he did not venture to wake the boys merely in order to give them
-advice which they probably would not accept. So he kept silent, and
-toward ten o’clock fell asleep.
-
-In the course of the night he began to dream. He thought that he
-was a member of an expedition trying to reach the North Pole in
-canoes, and that he was sleeping on the ice. He felt that his feet
-and back were slowly freezing, and that a polar-bear was nudging
-him in the ribs occasionally, to see if he was alive and ready to
-be eaten. This was such an uncomfortable situation that Joe woke
-up, and for a few moments could not understand where he was.
-
-The wind had gone down, the stars had come out, and the tide had
-come up. Joe was lying in a shallow pool of water, and his canoe,
-which was almost afloat, was gently rubbing against him. He sprung
-up and called to his companions. There was no answer. The fire was
-out, but by the starlight Joe could see that the whole sand-spit
-was covered with water, and that neither the other boys nor their
-canoes were in sight. The tide was still rising, and Joe’s canoe
-was beginning to float away, when he seized her, threw his blankets
-into her, and, stepping aboard, sat down, and was gently floated
-away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-
-Joe was alone on the St. Lawrence in the middle of the night, and
-with a sprained wrist, which nearly disabled him so far as paddling
-was concerned. Worse than this, his comrades had disappeared,
-and there could not be the slightest doubt that their canoes had
-floated away with them while they were sound asleep. What chance
-had he of finding them? How could he get ashore, with his sprained
-wrist; and what probability was there that the three boys thus
-carried away in their sleep would escape from their dangerous
-situation without any serious accident?
-
-As these questions presented themselves to Joe his first impulse
-was to admit that he was completely disheartened and to burst into
-tears. He was, however, far too manly to yield to it, and he
-immediately began to think what was the best thing that he could do
-in the circumstances.
-
-The water was perfectly smooth, so that there was really no danger
-that the runaway canoes would capsize, unless their owners should
-start up in a fright and not fully understand that their canoes
-were no longer on solid land. Neither was there much chance that
-they would be run down by steamboats, for the steamboat channel
-was near the south shore of the river, a long distance from the
-sand-spit. Joe remembered how fast the tide had risen the day
-before, and he calculated that the missing canoes must have been
-afloat about half an hour before the water reached the place
-where he was sleeping. They would naturally drift in the same
-direction in which the _Dawn_ was drifting; and all that it would
-be necessary for Joe to do in order to overtake them would be to
-increase the speed at which his canoe was moving.
-
-There was a scarcely perceptible breeze blowing from the south.
-Joe got up his main-mast and set his sail. Light as the breeze
-was, the canoe felt it, and began to move through the water. Joe
-steered by the stars, and kept the _Dawn_ as nearly as possible on
-the course which he supposed the other canoes had taken. He had no
-lantern with him, and could see but a little distance ahead in the
-dark, but he shouted every few moments, partly in order to attract
-the attention of the missing canoeists, and partly in order to warn
-any other boat that might be in the neighborhood not to run him
-down.
-
-After sailing in this way for at least an hour, and hearing no
-sound whatever but his own voice and the creaking of the canoe’s
-spars, Joe was startled at perceiving a black object just ahead of
-him. He avoided it with a vigorous movement of his paddle, and as
-he drifted close to it with the wind shaken out of his sail he saw
-to his great delight that it was a canoe.
-
-It was the _Sunshine_, with her canoe-tent rigged over her, and her
-commander sound asleep. Taking hold of her gunwale, Joe drew the
-two canoes together and put his hand gently on Harry’s forehead.
-Harry instantly awoke, and hearing Joe begging him as he valued his
-life to lie perfectly still, took the latter’s advice, and asked,
-with some alarm, what was the matter. When he learned that he was
-adrift on the river he sat up, took down his tent, and getting out
-his paddle joined in the search for Tom and Charley.
-
-“They must be close by,” said Harry, “for all three canoes must
-have floated away at the same time. Tom and Charley sleep sounder
-than I do, and if I didn’t wake up it’s pretty certain that they
-didn’t.”
-
-Presently Charley’s canoe was overtaken. Charley had been awakened
-by the sound of Harry’s paddle and the loud tone in which Harry
-and Joe were talking. He was sitting up when the _Dawn_ and the
-_Sunshine_ overtook him; and having comprehended the situation in
-which he found himself on awaking, he was making ready to paddle
-ashore.
-
-There was now only one canoe missing--the _Twilight_. Harry, Joe,
-and Charley took turns in shouting at the top of their lungs for
-Tom, but they could obtain no answer except the echo from the
-cliffs of the north shore. They paddled up the river until they
-were certain that they had gone farther than Tom could possibly
-have drifted, and then turned and paddled down stream, shouting at
-intervals, and growing more and more alarmed at finding no trace of
-the lost canoe.
-
-“She can’t have sunk, that’s one comfort,” exclaimed Harry, “for
-the bladders that Tom put in her at Chambly would keep her afloat,
-even if he did manage to capsize her in the dark.”
-
-“He took the bladders out yesterday morning and left them on the
-sand just in the lee of his canoe,” said Charley. “Don’t you
-remember that he sponged her out after we landed, and that he said
-that he wouldn’t put his things back into her until we were ready
-to start?”
-
-“I remember it now,” replied Harry. “And I remember that I did the
-same thing. There’s nothing in my canoe now except my water-proof
-bag and my blankets. But they’re not of much consequence compared
-with Tom. Boys, do you really think he’s drowned?”
-
-“Of course he isn’t,” cried Joe. “We’ll find him in a few minutes.
-He must be somewhere near by, and he’s sleeping so sound that he
-don’t hear us. You know how hard it is to wake him up.”
-
-“Tom is a first-rate swimmer, and if he has spilt himself out of
-his canoe and she has sunk, he has swum ashore,” said Charley.
-“My opinion is that we had better stay just where we are until
-daylight, and then look for him along the shore. He’s worth a dozen
-drowned fellows, wherever he is.”
-
-Charley’s advice was taken, and the boys waited for daylight
-as patiently as they could. Daylight--or rather dawn--came in
-the course of an hour, but not a glimpse of the missing canoe
-did it afford. The tide had already changed, and the top of the
-treacherous sand-spit was once more above water, and not very far
-distant from the canoes. As soon as it was certain that nothing
-could be seen of Tom on the water his alarmed comrades paddled
-toward the north shore, hoping that they might find him, and
-possibly his canoe, somewhere at the foot of the rocks.
-
-They were again unsuccessful. While Joe sailed up and down along
-the shore, the two other boys paddled close to the rocks, and
-searched every foot of space where it would have been possible for
-a canoe to land, or a canoeist to keep a footing above the water.
-They had searched the shore for a full mile above the sand-spit
-and had paddled back nearly half the way, when they were suddenly
-hailed, and looking up, saw Tom standing on a ledge of rock ten
-feet above the water.
-
-“Are you fellows going to leave me here all day?” demanded Tom. “I
-began to think you were all drowned, and that I’d have to starve to
-death up here.”
-
-[Illustration: “HOW IN THE WORLD DID YOU GET UP THERE?”]
-
-“How in the world did you get up there?” “Where were you when we
-came by here half an hour ago?” “Where’s your canoe?” “Are you all
-right?” These and a dozen other questions were hurled at Tom by his
-excited and overjoyed friends.
-
-“I was asleep until a few minutes ago,” replied Tom. “I got up here
-when the tide was high, and I had hard work to do it, too.”
-
-“What’s become of your canoe? Is she lost?” asked Harry.
-
-“She’s somewhere at the bottom of the river. I tried to turn over
-in her in the night, thinking she was on the sand-spit, but she
-turned over with me, and sunk before I could make out what had
-happened.”
-
-“And then you swum ashore?”
-
-“Yes. I saw the north-star, and knew that if I could swim long
-enough I could find the shore. When I struck these rocks I was
-disappointed, for I couldn’t find a place where I could land until
-I got my hands on this ledge and drew myself up.”
-
-“Unless Tom wants to stay where he is we’d better invent some way
-of taking him with us,” remarked Joe.
-
-“He’ll have to get into my canoe,” said Harry.
-
-“How deep is the water where you are?” asked Tom.
-
-“It’s anywhere from six feet to sixty. I can’t touch bottom with
-the paddle, so it’s certain to be more than seven feet deep.”
-
-“Then, if you’ll please to give me room, I’ll jump, and somebody
-can pick me up.”
-
-Tom jumped into the water, and had little trouble in climbing into
-Harry’s canoe--the water being perfectly quiet. The fleet then
-paddled back to the sand-spit, where they landed and breakfasted,
-while Tom dried his clothes by the fire.
-
-Every member of the expedition except Joe had lost something, and
-poor Tom had lost his canoe and everything except the clothes
-which he was wearing. As long as the water continued to be smooth
-Tom could be carried in either Harry’s or Charley’s canoe, but in
-case the wind and sea should rise it would be very difficult, if
-not impossible, to keep the canoe right side up with two persons
-in her. Quebec was still at least twenty-five miles distant, and
-it would take nearly a whole day of very hard work to paddle a
-heavy canoe, with two boys in her, only one of whom was furnished
-with a paddle, twenty-five miles, even in the most favorable
-circumstances. Moreover, Joe’s sprained wrist made it impossible
-for him to paddle, and the wind was so light that sailing to Quebec
-was out of the question.
-
-It was therefore decided that Harry should take Joe in the
-_Sunshine_ back to the Jacques Cartier, and leaving him to walk to
-the nearest railway-station, should return to the sand-spit and
-join Tom and Charley in paddling down to Quebec, Tom taking Joe’s
-canoe. Although the boys had originally intended to end their
-cruise at Quebec, they had become so fond of canoeing that they
-would gladly have gone on to the Saguenay River and, if possible,
-to Lake St. John; but now that Tom was without a canoe no one
-thought of prolonging the cruise.
-
-Quebec was reached by the fleet several hours after Joe had
-arrived there by the train. He was at the landing-place to meet
-his comrades, and had already made a bargain with a canal-boatman
-to carry the canoes all the way to New York for five dollars each.
-As the _Sunshine_ was fitted with hatches which fastened with a
-lock, and as it would be necessary for the Custom-house officer
-at Rouse’s Point to search her, Harry wrote to the Custom-house
-at that place, giving directions how to open the lock. It was a
-padlock without a key, one of the so-called letter-locks which can
-be opened by placing the letters in such a position that they spell
-some particular word. Harry had provided the canoe with this lock
-expressly in order to avoid trouble at Custom-houses, and in this
-instance the plan proved completely successful, for the officer at
-Rouse’s Point was able to unlock the canoe and to lock it up again
-without a key.
-
-The boys spent a night and a day at Quebec, and, after seeing their
-canoes safely started, they took the train for New York. As they
-talked over their cruise on the way home they agreed that canoeing
-was far more delightful than any other way of cruising, and that
-they would go on a canoe cruise every summer.
-
-“As soon as I can afford it I shall get a new canoe,” said Tom.
-
-“Will you get a ‘Rice Laker?’” asked Harry.
-
-“Of course I will. My canoe was much the best boat in the fleet,
-and I shall get another exactly like her.”
-
-“There’s no doubt that you are a genuine canoeist, Tom,” said
-Charley. “You’ve had lots of trouble with your canoe because she
-had no deck, and at last she sunk and nearly drowned you, because
-she had no water-tight compartments; but for all that you really
-think that she was the best canoe ever built. Is everybody else
-convinced that his own canoe is the best in the world?”
-
-“I am,” cried Joe.
-
-“And I am,” cried Harry.
-
-“So am I,” added Charley; “and as this proves that we are all
-thorough canoeists, we will join the American Canoe Association at
-once, and cruise under its flag next summer.”
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
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