[Illustration: ADRIFT. Page 162.]
ADRIFT IN THE ICE-FIELDS.
BY
CAPT. CHARLES W. HALL, AUTHOR OF "THE GREAT BONANZA," ETC.
_ILLUSTRATED._
BOSTON: LEE AND SHEPARD, PUBLISHERS. NEW YORK: CHARLES T. DILLINGHAM. 1877.
COPYRIGHT: BY LEE AND SHEPHARD. 1877.
PREFACE.
To open to the youth of America a knowledge of some of the winter sports of our neighbors of the maritime provinces, with their attendant pleasures, perils, successes, and reverses, the following tale has been written.
It does not claim to teach any great moral lesson, or even to be a guide to the young sportsman; but the habits of all birds and animals treated of here have been carefully studied, and, with the mode of their capture, have been truthfully described.
It attempts to chronicle the adventures and misadventures of a party of English gentlemen, during the early spring, while shooting sea-fowl on the sea-ice by day, together with the stories with which they whiled away the long evenings, each of which is intended to illustrate some peculiar dialect or curious feature of the social life of our colonial neighbors.
Later in the season the breaking up of the ice carries four hunters into involuntary wandering, amid the vast ice-pack which in winter fills the great Gulf of St. Lawrence. Their perils, the shifts to which they are driven to procure shelter, food, fire, medicine, and other necessaries, together with their devious drift and final rescue by a sealer, are used to give interest to what is believed to be a reliable description of the ice-fields of the Gulf, the habits of the seal, and life on board of a sealing steamer.
It would seem that the world had been ransacked to provide stories of adventure for the boys of America; but within the region between the Straits of Canso and the shores of Hudson's Bay there still lie hundreds of leagues of land never trodden by the white man's foot; and the folk-lore and idiosyncrasies of the population of the Lower Provinces are almost as unknown to us, their near neighbors.
The descendants of emigrants from Bretagne, Picardy, Normandy, and Poitou, still retaining much of their ancient patois, costume, habits, and superstitions; the hardy Gael, still ignorant of any but the language of Ossian and his burr-tongued Lowland neighbors; the people of each of Ireland's many counties, clinging still to feud, fun, and their ancient Erse tongue, together with representatives from every English shire, and the remnants of Indian tribes and Esquimaux hordes,--offer an opportunity for study of the differences of race, full of picturesque interest, and scarcely to be met with elsewhere.
The century which has with us almost realized the apostolic announcement, "Old things are passed away; behold, all things have become new," with them has witnessed little more than the birth, existence, and death of so many generations, and the old feuds and prejudices of race and religion, little softened by the lapse of time, still remain with their appropriate developments, in the social life of the scattered peoples of these northern shores.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Adrift in the Ice-Fields by Charles W. Hall
- 2: The breeding grounds of the seal
- 3: Boats for decoy shooting and stealthy approach
- 4: Hughie was an invaluable comrade on such a quest
- 5: Lund managed to accommodate six sportsmen
- 6: And you youngsters had better get to bed
- 7: The younger Davies and Creamer
- 8: Greeley says What Greeley said was never known
- 9: Scaled slowly up against the storm to the hindmost decoy
- 10: And Ben and Creamer made their appearance
- 11: Counting one hundred paces beyond Creamer
- 12: The next second Hughie stood alone
- 13: If Hughie here had had his way
- 14: If they dhrink all the whiskey
- 15: While Katty was easily persuaded by Mrs
- 16: But where's the masther at all
- 17: Katty saw ahead of her the hapless Lanty
- 18: 'sind young Costigan down for the pig
- 19: 'the boy's frikened at somethin'
- 20: And only that it's daylight now
- 21: But Matthew drank about a pint of the consecrated water
- 22: As he proceeded to search for the buried decoys
- 23: No tlee there at all big enough
- 24: About sixty yards from La Salle
- 25: I bought it myself of La Salle for one hundred and fifty
- 26: He will never repay your kindness
- 27: Plodding citizens of a republic
- 28: Wich 'e wraps 'isself hup hin hevery mornin'
- 29: Worrell never stopped until he reached Grahame's
- 30: He saw Davies and Creamer running hastily to their box
- 31: And heard the calls of Ben and Creamer
- 32: Kennedy seemed about to go after the wounded bird
- 33: And La Salle and Kennedy got one each
- 34: Notwithstanding their tanning
- 35: And Captain Coffin and another man
- 36: The apparition of the 'packet light
- 37: Where La Salle and his companion
- 38: An' did na keep the guse fra' me
- 39: An' mony a beating I got for wark negleckit
- 40: While Kennedy groaned in anguish of spirit
- 41: Kennedy will have time to eat supper
- 42: Cleared the end of the sprit from its becket
- 43: Besides innumerable kinks in the cables
- 44: And Creamer acceding more reluctantly
- 45: ' There's a flock of Brent geese
- 46: As passengers don't count along of able bodied seamen
- 47: They circled in head on over the decoys
- 48: La Salle skated up to the Indian stand
- 49: A few of the decoys were of pine wood
- 50: La Salle had fallen in with him at the Seven Islands
- 51: La Salle examined the load of the day
- 52: During a presidential struggle
- 53: Illustration Springing into his sleigh
- 54: And the floating decoys to be put in order
- 55: And after my cousin Johnny McGrath has his bit of a spree
- 56: An' took a stronger hold on my hip
- 57: And made the impressions indelible
- 58: While Creamer acted as the motive power
- 59: The bottle dropped on the berg
- 60: Fitted his sculling oar into its muffled aperture
- 61: Sluggish floes and fantastic pinnacles
- 62: And leaving Lund to haul them to the shelter of his woods
- 63: Spose shootum big gun call them hin
- 64: Called out Lund across the rapidly increasing space
- 65: And walking around the edge of the floe
- 66: To which La Salle added some coffee
- 67: Can't we get ashore and off of this horrid floe
- 68: He was again awakened by Regnar
- 69: Regnar seemed little surprised
- 70: While La Salle made a cup of his carefully treasured coffee
- 71: Regnie reported forty wooden decoys
- 72: Only glate burn up every day or two
- 73: La Salle examined the condition of his patient
- 74: Some three drachms of saltpeter in solution
- 75: I will rub your throat with goose grease
- 76: La Salle awoke to find Regnie still awake
- 77: You never see Ingin knife in store
- 78: The ice being closely frozen together
- 79: Two year ago I camp on Tignish Lun
- 80: Regnar threw his gun to his shoulder
- 81: Regnar dragged his prize to the little enclosure
- 82: La Salle drew from his vest pocket a stump of lead pencil
- 83: A glance of mingled expression shot from the eyes of Orloff
- 84: The coots and ducks have come northward
- 85: Regnar touched La Salle's shoulder
- 86: Regnar whistled sharp and shrill
- 87: And answered in his Esquimaux English
- 88: He split the boulder of soapstone into halves
- 89: Then wait until Coquan mend moccasons
- 90: An' Quedetchque come no more for many years
- 91: Pairs of the small Greenland seal Phoca Vitulina
- 92: Their coarse bristles quivering with rage
- 93: Regnar started forward in pursuit
- 94: In a moment or so Regnar arose
- 95: All agreed with La Salle in this decision
- 96: And also six inches of weather board on each side
- 97: Regnar cut out no less than three pairs of moccason boots
- 98: We are not likely to find any sealers to the eastward
- 99: Regnar was the first to recover his coolness
- 100: It proved to be as Regnar had said
- 101: And taking the boat hook and his weapons
- 102: And saw Regnar standing above him
- 103: Made a close search of the clothing worn by the deceased
- 104: Regnar led the way to the base of the berg
- 105: Regnar cleared away the ice chips
- 106: Addressing a huge shouldered Esquimaux
- 107: In about half an hour they emerged into a large glade
- 108: Not far from where Krasippe had received his wound
- 109: Hubel was summoned back to Denmark
- 110: But before the year of my stay had elapsed
- 111: My name is Regnar Orloff Hubel
- 112: Regnar commenced cutting a deep
- 113: And to them I am still Regnar Orloff
- 114: But Regnar was equal to the emergency
- 115: Regnar ran his eye over the contents
- 116: They only back to run down that floe
- 117: I'll have her aboord in tin minutes
- 118: Shouting that his brother had fallen between the floes
- 119: An' de capten said we mus' do somethin' else
- 120: He tould de capten to rig one of de pumps
- 121: On being introduced to La Salle
- 122: At the same time Blake and Regnar seized him by the arms
- 123: His real name is Regnar Orloff Hubel
- 124: And then I taunted him with a fatal quarrel long ago
- 125: La Salle rang the bell sharply
- 126: We met amid a gathering of savage and half civilized men
- 127: To introduce to you Regnar Hubel
