CHAPTER X.
It was about ten
o’clock the same night when Mrs Barnett and Lieutenant Hobson knocked at
the postern gate of the fort. Great was the joy on seeing them, for they had
been given up for lost; but this joy was turned to mourning at the news of the
death of Norman. The brave fellow had been beloved by all, and his loss was sincerely
mourned. The intrepid and devoted Esquimaux received phlegmatically the earnest
expressions of gratitude of those they had saved, and could riot be persuaded
to come to the fort. What they had done seemed to them only natural, and these
were not the first persons they had rescued; so they quietly returned to their
wild life of adventure on the lake, where they hunted the otters and
water-birds day and night.
For the next three
nights the party rested. Hobson always intended to set out on June 2d; and on
that day, all having recovered from their fatigues and the storm having abated,
the order was given to start.
Sergeant Felton had done
all in his power to make his guests comfortable and to aid their enterprise;
some of the jaded dogs were replaced by fresh animals, and now the Lieutenant
found all his sledges drawn up in good order at the door of the enceinte, and
awaiting the travellers.
The adieux were soon
over. Each one thanked Sergeant Felton for his hospitality, and Mrs Paulina
Barnett was most profuse in her expressions of gratitude. A hearty shake of the
hand between the Sergeant and his brother-in-law, Long, completed the
leave-taking,
Each pair got into the
sledge assigned to them; but this time Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant shared
one vehicle, Madge and Sergeant Long following them.
According to the advice
of the Indian chief, Hobson determined to get to the coast by the shortest
route, and to take a north-easterly direction. After consulting, his map, which
merely gave a rough outline of the configuration of the country, it seemed best
to him to descend the valley of the Coppermine, a large river which flows into
Coronation Gulf.
The distance between
Fort Confidence and the mouth of this river is only a degree and a half-that is
to say, about eighty-five or ninety miles. The deep hollow formed by the gulf
is bounded on the north by Cape Krusenstein, and from it the coast juts out
towards the north-west, ending in Cape Bathurst, which is above the seventieth
parallel.
The Lieutenant,
therefore, now changed the route he had hitherto followed, directing his course
to the east, so as to reach the river in a few hours.
In the afternoon of the
next day, June 3d, the river was gained. It was now free from ice, and its
clear and rapid waters flowed through a vast valley, intersected by numerous
but easily fordable streams. The sledges advanced pretty rapidly, and as they
went along, Hobson gave his companion some account of the country through which
they were passing. A sincere friendship founded on mutual esteem, had sprung up
between these two. Mrs Paulina Barnett was an earnest student with a special
gift for discovery, and was therefore always glad to converse with travellers
and explorers. Hobson, who knew his beloved North America by heart, was able to
answer all her inquiries fully.
“About ninety
years ago,” he said, “the territory through which the Coppermine
flows was unknown, and we are indebted for its discovery to the agents of the
Hudson’s Bay Company. But as always happens in scientific matters, in
seeking one thing, another was found. Columbus was trying to find Asia, and
discovered America.”
“And what were the
agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company seeking? The famous North-West
Passage?”
“No, madam,”
replied the young Lieutenant. “A century ago the Company had no interest
in the opening of a new route, which would have been more valuable to its
rivals than to it. It is even said that in 1741 a certain Christopher
Middleton, sent to explore these latitudes, was publicly charged with receiving
a bribe of £500 from the Company to say that there was not, and could not be, a
sea passage between the oceans.”
“That was not much
to the credit of the celebrated Company,” said Mrs Barnett.
“I do not defend
it in the matter,” replied Hobson; “and its interference was
severely censured by Parliament in 1746, when a reward of £20,000 was offered
by the Government for the discovery of the passage in question. In that year
two intrepid explorers, William Moor and Francis Smith, penetrated as far as
Repulse Bay in the hope of discovering the much-longed-for passage. But they
were unsuccessful, and returned to England after an absence of a year and a
half.”
“But did not other
captains follow in their steps, resolved to conquer where they had
failed?” inquired Mrs Barnett.
“No, madam; and in
spite of the large reward offered by Parliament, no attempt was made to resume
explorations in English America until thirty years afterwards, when some agents
of the Company took up the unfinished task of Captains Moor and Smith.”
“The Company had
then relinquished the narrow-minded egotistical position it had taken
up?”
“No, madam, not
yet. Samuel Hearne, the agent, only went to reconnoitre the position of a
copper-mine which native miners had reported. On November 6, 1769, this agent
left Fort Prince of Wales, on the river Churchill, near the western shores of
Hudson’s Bay. He pressed boldly on to the north-west; but the excessive
cold and the exhaustion of his provisions compelled him to return without
accomplishing anything. Fortunately he was not easily discouraged, and on
February 23d of the next year he set out again, this time taking some Indians
with him. Great hardships were endured in this second journey. The fish and
game on which Hearne had relied often failed him; and he had once nothing to
eat for seven days but wild fruit, bits of old leather, and burnt bones. He was
again compelled to return to the fort a disappointed man. But he did not even
yet despair, and started a third time, December 7th, 1770; and after a struggle
of nineteen months, he discovered the Coppermine river, July 13th, 1772, the
course of which he followed to its mouth. According to his own account, he saw
the open sea, and in any case he was the first to penetrate to the northern
coast of America.”
“But the
North-West Passage-that is to say, the direct communication by sea between the
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans—was not then discovered?”
“Oh no,
madam,” replied the Lieutenant; “and what countless adventurous
sailors have since gone to seek it! Phipps in 1773, James Cook and Clerke in
1776 to 1779, Kotzebue in 1815 to 1818, Ross, Parry, Franklin, and others have
attempted this difficult task; but it was reserved to M’Clure in our own
day to pass from one ocean to the other across the Polar Sea.”
“Well, Lieutenant,
that was a geographical discovery of which we English may well be proud. But do
tell me if the Hudson’s Bay Company did not adopt more generous views,
and send out some other explorer after the return of Hearne.”
“It did, madam;
and it was thanks to it that Captain Franklin was able to accomplish his voyage
of 1819 to 1822 between the river discovered by Hearne and Cape Turnagain. This
expedition endured great fatigue and hardships; provisions often completely
failed, and two Canadians were assassinated and eaten by their comrades. But in
spite of all his sufferings, Captain Franklin explored no less than five
thousand five hundred and fifty miles of the hitherto unknown coast of North
America!”
“He was indeed a
man of energy,” added Mrs Barnett; “and he gave proof of his great
qualities in starting on a fresh Polar expedition after all he had gone
through.”
“Yes,”
replied the Lieutenant; “and he met a terrible death in the land his own
intrepidity had discovered. It has now been proved, however, that all his
companions did not perish with him. Many are doubtless still wandering about on
the vast ice-fields. I cannot think of their awful condition without a shudder.
One day,” be added earnestly, and with strange emotion—” one
day I will search the unknown lands where the dreadful catastrophe took place,
and— “
“And,”
exclaimed Mrs Barnett, pressing his hand, “I will accompany you. Yes,
this idea has occurred to me more than once, as it has to you; and my heart
beats high when I think that fellow countrymen of my own-Englishmen-are
awaiting succour.”
“Which will come
too late for most of them, madam,” said the Lieutenant; “but rest
assured some will even yet be saved.”
“God grant it,
Lieutenant!” replied Mrs Barnett; “and it appears to me that the agents
of the Company, living as they do close to the coast, are better fitted than
any one else to fulfil this duty of humanity.”
“I agree with you,
madam; they are, as they have often proved, inured to the rigours of the Arctic
climate. Was it not they who aided Captain Back in his voyage in 1834, when he
discovered King William’s Land, where Franklin met his fate? Was it not
two of us, Dease and Simpson, who were sent by the Governor of Hudson’s
Bay to explore the shores of the Polar Sea in 1838, and whose courageous
efforts first discovered Victoria Land? It is my opinion that the future
reserves for the Hudson’s Bay Company the final conquest of the Arctic
regions. Gradually its factories are advancing further and further north,
following the retreat of the fur-yielding animals; and one day a fort will be
erected on the Pole itself, that mathematical point where meet all the
meridians of the globe.”
During this and the
succeeding journeys Jaspar Hobson related his own adventures since he entered
the service of the Company his struggles with the agents of rival associations,
and his efforts to explore the unknown districts of the north or west; and Mrs
Barnett, on her side, told of her travels in the tropics. She spoke of all she
had done, and of all she hoped still to accomplish; so that the long hours,
lightened by pleasant conversation, passed rapidly away.
Meanwhile the dogs
advanced at full gallop towards the north. The Coppermine valley widened
sensibly as they neared the Arctic Ocean. The hills on either side sank lower
and lower, and only scattered clumps of resinous trees broke the monotony of
the landscape. A few blocks of ice, drifted down by the river, still resisted
the action of the sun; but each day their number decreased, and a canoe, or
even a good-sized boat, might easily have descended the stream, the course of
which was unimpeded by any natural barrier or aggregation of rocks. The bed of
the Coppermine was both deep and wide; its waters were very clear, and being
fed by the melted snow, flowed on at a considerable pace, never, however,
forming dangerous rapids. Its course, at first very sinuous, became gradually
less and less winding, and at last stretched along in a straight line for
several miles. Its banks, composed of fine firm sand, and clothed in part with
short dry herbage, were wide and level, so that the long train of sledges sped
rapidly over them.
The expedition travelled
day and night-if we can speak of the night, when the sun, describing an almost
horizontal circle, scarcely disappeared at all. The true night only lasted two
hours, and the dawn succeeded the twilight almost immediately. The weather was
fine; the sky clear, although somewhat misty on the horizon; and everything
combined to favour the travellers.
For two days they kept
along the river-banks without meeting with any difficulties. They saw but few
fur-bearing animals; but there were plenty of birds, which might have been
counted by thousands. The absence of otters, sables, beavers, ermines, foxes,
&c., did not trouble the Lieutenant much, for he supposed that they had
been driven further north by over-zealous tracking; and indeed the marks of
encampments, extinguished fires, &c., told of the more or less recent
passage of native hunters. Hobson knew that he would have to penetrate a good
deal further north, and that part only of his journey would be accomplished
when he got to the mouth of the Coppermine river. He was therefore most eager
to reach the limit of Hearne’s exploration, and pressed on as rapidly as
possible.
Every one shared the
Lieutenant’s impatience, and resolutely resisted fatigue in order to
reach the Arctic Ocean with the least possible delay. They were drawn onwards
by an indefinable attraction; the glory of the unknown dazzled their sight.
Probably real hardships would commence when they did arrive at the much-desired
coast. But no matter, they longed to battle with difficulties, and to press
straight onwards to their aim. The district they were now traversing could have
no direct interest for them; the real exploration would only commence on the
shores of the Arctic Ocean. Each one, then, would gladly hail the arrival in
the elevated western districts for which they were bound, cut across though
they were by the seventieth parallel of north latitude.
On the 5th June, four
days after leaving Fort Confidence the river widened considerably. The western
banks, curving slightly, ran almost due north; whilst the eastern rounded off
into the coastline, stretching away as far as the eye could reach.
Lieutenant Hobson
paused, and waving his hand to his companions, pointed to the boundless ocean.
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