CHAPTER XIX.
On the 2nd December; the
intensity of the cold decreased. The phenomena of the lunar halo and Aurora
Borealis were symptoms which a meteorologist would have been at no loss to
interpret. They implied the existence of a certain quantity of watery vapour in
the atmosphere, and the barometer fell slightly, whilst the thermometer rose to
15° above zero.
Although this
temperature would have seemed very cold to the inhabitants of a temperate zone,
it was easily endured by the colonists. The absence of wind made a great
difference, and Hobson having noticed that the upper layers of snow were
becoming softer, ordered his men to clear it away from the outer approaches of
the enceinte. Mac-Nab and his subordinates set to work zealously, and completed
their task in a few days. The traps were now uncovered and re-set. A good many
footprints showed that there were plenty of furred animals about the cape, and
as they could not get any other food, it was probable that the bait in the
snares would soon attract them. In accordance with the advice of Marbre the
hunter, a reindeer trap was constructed iii the Esquimaux style. A trench was
dug twelve feet deep, and of a uniform width of ten feet. A see-saw plank,
which would rebound when lowered, was laid across it. A bait of herbs was
placed at one end of the plank, and any animal venturing to take them, was
inevitably flung to the bottom of the pit, and the plank immediately returning
to its former position, would allow of the trapping of another animal in the
same manner. Once in, there was no getting out. The only difficulty Marbre had
to contend with in making his trap, was the extreme hardness of the ground to
be dug out, but both he and the Lieutenant were not a little surprised at
finding beneath some five feet of earth and sand a bed of snow, as hard as a
rock, which appeared to be very thick.
After closely examining
the geological structure of the ground, Hobson observed:
“This part of the
coast must have been subjected to intense cold for a considerable length of
time a great many years ago. Probably the ice rests on a bed of granite, and
the earth and sand upon it have accumulated gradually.”
“Well, sir, our
trap won’t be any the worse for that, the reindeer will find a slippery
wall, which it will be impossible for them to climb.”
Marbre was right, as the
event proved.
On the 5th September, he
and Sabine were on their way to the trench, when they heard loud growls. They
stood still and listened.
“It’s no
reindeer making that noise, “said Marbre, “I know well enough what
creature has fallen into our pit.”
“A bear?”
replied Sabine.
“Yes,” said
Marbre, whose eyes glistened with delight.
“Well,”
remarked Sabine, “we won’t grumble at that, bears’ steaks are
as good as reindeers’, and we get the fur in! Come along.”
The two hunters were
armed. They quickly slipped balls into their guns, which were already loaded
with lead, and hurried to the trap. The see-saw plank had swung back into its
place, but the bait had disappeared, having probably been dragged down, into
the trench. The growls became louder and fiercer, and looking down the hunters
saw that it was indeed a bear they had taken. A huge mass was huddled together
in one corner of the pit, looking in the gloom like a pile of white fur with
two glittering eyes. The sides of the trench had been ploughed up by the
creature’s sharp claws, and had they been made of earth instead of ice,
it would certainly have managed to scramble out, but it could get no hold on
the slippery surface, and it had only managed to enlarge its prison, not to
escape from it.
Under the circumstances
the capture was easy. Two balls carefully aimed put an end to the bear’s
life, and the next thing to do was to get it out of the pit. The two hunters
returned to the fort for reinforcements, and ten of the soldiers, provided with
ropes, returned with them. It was not without considerable difficulty that the
body was hauled up. It was a huge creature, six feet long, weighing six hundred
pounds, and must have possessed immense strength. It belonged to the sub-order
of white bears, and had the flattened head, long neck, short and slightly
curved claws, narrow muzzle, and smooth white fur characteristic of the
species. The edible portions of this valuable animal were confided to Mrs
Joliffe, and b her carefully prepared for the table.
The next week the traps
were in full activity. Some twenty martens were taken, in all the beauty of
their winter clothing, but only two or three foxes. These cunning creatures
divined the snare laid for them, and scratching up the ground near the trap,
they often managed to run off with the bait without being caught. This made Sabine
beside himself with rage for,” he said, “such a subterfuge was
unworthy of a respectable fox.”
About the 10th December,
the wind having veered round to the south-west, the snow again began to fall,
but not in thick flakes, or in large quantities. The wind being high, however,
the cold was severely felt, and it was necessary to settle in-doors again, and
resume domestic occupations. Hobson distributed lime lozenges and lime juice to
every one as a precaution against the scorbutic affections, which damp cold
produces. No symptoms of scurvy had fortunately as yet appeared amongst the
occupants of the fort, thanks to the sanitary precautions taken.
The winter solstice was
now approaching, when the darkness of the Polar night would be most profound,
as the sun would be at the lowest maximum point below the horizon of the
northern hemisphere. At midnight the southern edges of the long white plains
were touched with a faint glimmer of twilight, that was all, and it would be
impossible to imagine anything more melancholy than the gloomy stillness and
darkness of the vast expanse.
Hobson felt more secure
from the attacks of wild beasts, now that the approaches to the enceinte had
been cleared of snow, which was a fortunate circumstance, as ominous growlings
were heard, the nature of which no one could mistake.
There was no fear of
visits from Indian hunters or Canadians at this time of year, but an incident
occurred proving that these districts were not altogether depopulated even in
the winter, and which was quite an episode in the long dreary dark months. Some
human beings still lingered on the coast hunting morses and camping under the
snow. They belonged to the race of Esquimaux, °` or eaters of raw flesh,”
which is scattered over the continent of North America, from Baffin’s Bay
to Behring Strait, seldom, however, advancing farther south than the Great
Slave Lake.
On the morning of the
14th December, or rather nine hours before midday, Sergeant Long, on his return
from an excursion along the coast, ended his report to the Lieutenant by
saying, that if his eyes had not deceived him, a tribe of nomads were encamped
about four miles from the fort, near a little cape jutting out from the coast.
“What do you
suppose these nomads are?” inquired Hobson.
“Either men or morses,”
replied the Sergeant. “There’s no medium!”
The brave Sergeant would
have been considerably surprised if any one had told him that some naturalists
admit the existence of the “ medium,” the idea of which he scouted;
and certain savants have with some humour classed the Esquimaux as an “
intermediate species “ between roan and the sea-cow.
Lieutenant Hobson, Mrs
Barnett, Madge, and a few others at once went to ascertain the truth of the
report. Well wrapt up, and on their guard against a sudden chill, their feet
cased in furred boots, and guns and hatchets in their hands, they issued from
the postern, and made their way over the frozen snow along the coast, strewn
with masses of ice.
The moon, already in the
last quarter, shed a few faint rays through the mists which shrouded the
ice-fields. After marching for about an hour, the Lieutenant began to think
that the Sergeant had been mistaken, and that what he had seen were morses, who
had returned to their native element through the holes in the ice which they
always keep open.
But Long, pointing to a
grey wreath of smoke curling out of a conical protuberance on the ice-field
some hundred steps off, contented himself with observing quietly—
“The morses are
smoking, then !”
As he spoke some living
creatures came out of the but dragging themselves along the snow. They were
Esquimaux, but whether male or female none but a native could have said, for
their costumes were all exactly alike.
Indeed, without in the
least sharing the opinion of the naturalist quoted above, any one might have
taken the rough shaggy figures for seals or some other amphibious animals.
There were six of them-four full-grown, and two children. Although very short,
they were broad-chested and muscular. They had the flat noses, long eye-lashes,
large mouths, thick lips, long black coarse hair, and beardless chins of their
race. Their costume consisted of a round coat made of the skin of the walrus, a
hood, boots, trousers, and mittens of the same material. They gazed at the
Europeans in silence.
“Does any one
understand Esquimaux?” inquired the Lieutenant.
No one was acquainted
with that idiom, and every one started when a voice immediately exclaimed in
English, “Welcome! welcome !”
It was an Esquimaux,
and, as they learned later, a woman, who, approaching Mrs Barnett, held out her
hand.
The lady, much
surprised, replied in a few words, which the native girl readily understood,
and the whole family was invited to follow the Europeans to the fort.
The Esquimaux looked
searchingly at the strangers, and after a few moments’ hesitation they
accompanied the Lieutenant, keeping close together, however:
Arrived at the enceinte,
the native woman, seeing the house, of the existence of which she had had no
idea, exclaimed—
“House!
snow-house!”
She asked if it were
made of snow, which was a natural question enough, for the house was all but
hidden beneath the white mass which covered the ground. She was made to
understand that it was built of wood; she then turned and said a few words to
her companions, who made signs of acquiescence, and they all passed through the
postern, and were taken to the large room in the chief building.
They removed their
hoods, and it became possible to distinguish sexes. There were two men, about
forty or fifty years old, with yellowish-red complexions, sharp teeth, and
projecting cheek-bones, which gave them something of the appearance of
carnivorous animals; two women, still young whose matted hair was adorned with
the teeth and claws of Polar bears; and two children, about five or six years
old, poor little creatures with intelligent faces, who looked about them with
wide wondering eyes.
“I believe the
Esquimaux are always hungry,” said Hobson, “so I don’t
suppose our guests would object to a slice of venison.”
In obedience to the
Lieutenant’s order, Joliffe brought some reindeer-venison, which the poor
creatures devoured with greedy avidity; but the young woman who had answered in
English behaved with greater refinement, and watched Mrs Barnett and the women
of the fort without once removing her eyes from them. Presently noticing the
baby in Mrs Mac-Nabs arms; she rose and ran up to it, speaking to it in a soft
voice, and caressing it tenderly.
Indeed if not exactly
superior, the young girl was certainly more civilised than her companions,
which was especially noticeable when, being attacked by a slight fit of
coughing, she put her hand before her mouth in the manner enjoined by the first
rules of civilised society.
This significant gesture
did not escape any one, and Mrs Barnett, who chatted for some time with the
Esquimaux woman, learned from her in a few short sentences that she had been
for a year in the service of the Danish governor of Upper Navik, whose wife was
English, and that she had left Greenland to follow her family to the hunting
grounds. The two men were her brothers; the other woman was her sister-in-law,
married to one of the men, and mother of the two children. They were all
returning from Melbourne Island, on the eastern coast of English America, and
were making for Point Barrow, on the western coast of Russian America, the home
of their tribe, and- were considerably astonished to find a factory established
on Cape Bathurst. Indeed the two men shook their heads when they spoke of it.
Did they disapprove of the construction of a fort at this particular point of
the coast? Did they think the situation ill-chosen? In spite of all his
endeavours, Hobson could get no satisfactory reply to these questions, or
rather he could not understand the answers he received.
The name of the young
girl was Kalumah, and she seemed to have taken a great fancy to Mrs Barnett.
But sociable as she was, she appeared to feel no regret at having left the
governor of Upper Navik, and to be sincerely attached to her relations.
After refreshing
themselves with the reindeer-venison, and drinking half-a-pint of rum, in which
the children had their share, the Esquimaux took leave of their hosts; but
before saying goodbye, the young girl invited Mrs Barnett to visit their
snow-hut, and the lady promised to do so the next day, weather permitting.
The next day was fine,
and accompanied by Madge, Lieutenant Hobson, and a few soldiers, well armed in
case any bears should be prowling about, Mrs Barnett set out for “ Cape
Esquimaux,” as they had named the spot where the little colony had
encamped.
Kalumah hastened forward
to meet her friend of yesterday, and pointed to the but with an, air of pride.
It was a large cone of snow, with an opening in the summit, through which the
smoke from the fire inside made its way. These snow-houses, called igloos
in the language of the Esquimaux, are constructed with great rapidity, and are
admirably suited to the climate. In them their owners can endure a temperature
40° below zero, without fires, and without suffering much. In the summer the
Esquimaux encamp in tents made of seal and reindeer skins, which are called tupics.
It was no easy matter to
get into this hut. The only opening was a hole close to the ground, and it was
necessary to creep through a kind of passage three or four feet long, which is
about the thickness of the walls of these snow-houses. But a traveller by
profession, a laureate of the Royal Society, could not hesitate, and
Mrs Paulina Barnett did not hesitate! Followed by Madge, she bravely entered the
narrow tunnel in imitation of her guide. Lieutenant Hobson and his men
dispensed with paying their respects inside.
And Mrs Barnett soon
discovered that the chief difficulty was not getting into the but, but
remaining in it when there. The room was heated by a fire, on which the bones
of morses were burning; and the air was full of the smell of the fetid oil of a
lamp, of greasy garments, and the flesh of the amphibious animals which form
the chief article of an Esquimaux’s diet. It was suffocating and sickening!
Madge could not stand it, and hurried out at once, but Mrs Barnett, rather than
hurt the feelings of the young native, showed superhuman courage, and extended
her visit over five long minutes!-five centuries! The two children and their
mother were at home, but the men had gone to hunt morses four or five miles
from their camp.
Once out of the hut, Mrs
Barnett drew a long sigh of relief, and the colour returned to her blanched
cheeks.
“Well,
madam,” inquired the Lieutenant, “what do you think of Esquimaux
houses?”
“The ventilation
leaves something to be desired !” she replied simply.
The interesting native
family remained encamped near Cape Esquimaux for eight days. The men passed
twelve hours out of every twenty-four hunting morses. With a patience which
none but sportsmen could understand, they would watch for the amphibious
animals near the holes through which they come up to the surface of the
ice-field to breathe. When the morse appears, a rope with a running noose is
flung round its body a little below the head, and it is dragged on to the
ice-field, often with considerable difficulty, and killed with hatchets. It is
really more like fishing than bunting. It is considered a great treat to drink
the warm blood of the walrus, and the Esquimaux often indulge in it to excess.
Kalumah came to the fort
every day in spite of the severity of the weather. She was never tired of going
through the different rooms, and watching Mrs Joliffe at her cooking or sewing.
She asked the English name of everything, and talked for hours together with
Mrs Barnett, if the term “talking” can be applied to an exchange of
words after long deliberation on both sides. When Mrs Barnett read aloud,
Kalumah listened with great attention, although she probably understood nothing
of what she heard.
The young native girl
had a sweet voice, and sometimes sang some strange melancholy rhythmical songs
with a peculiar metre, and, if we may so express it, a frosty ring about them,
peculiarly characteristic of their origin.
Mrs Barnett had the
patience to translate one of these Greenland sagas, which was sung to a sad
air, interspersed with long pauses, and filled with strange intervals, which
produced an indescribable effect. We give an English rendering of Mrs
Barnett’s translation, which may give a faint idea of this strange
hyperborean poetry.
GREENLAND
SONG
Dark Is the sky,
The sun sinks wearily;
My trembling heart, with sorrow filled,
Aches drearily !
My sweet child at my songs is smiling still,
While at his tender heart the icicles lie chill.
Child of my dreams I
Thy love doth cheer me;
The cruel biting frost I brave
But to be near thee!
Ah me, Ah me, could these hot tears of mine
But melt the icicles around that heart of thine!
Could we once more
Meet heart to heart,
Thy little hands close clasped in mine,
No more to part.
Then on thy chill heart rays from heaven above
Should fall, and softly melt it with the warmth of love!
On the 20th December the
Esquimaux family came to take leave of the occupants of the fort. Kalumah was
sorry to part with Mrs Barnett, who would gladly have retained her in her
service, but the young native could not be persuaded to leave her own people;
she promised, however, to return to Fort Hope in the summer.
Her farewell was
touching. She presented Mrs Barnett with a copper ring, and received in
exchange a necklace of black beads, which she immediately put on. Hobson gave
the poor people a good stock of provisions, which they packed in their sledge;
and after a few words of grateful acknowledgment from Kalumah, the whole party
set out towards the west, quickly disappearing in the thick fogs on the shore.
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