ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPA1GN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign library Brittle Books Project, 2014.COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION In Public Domain. Published prior to 1923. This digital copy was made from the printed version held by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was made in compliance with copyright law. Prepared for the Brittle Books Project, Main Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2014 V- THE WESTERN AVERNUS: TOIL AND TRAVEL IN FURTHER NORTH AMERICA: BY MORLEY ROBERTS WITH" SOME ILLUSTRATIONS BY A. D. MSCORMLCK ',3 • /1 mUNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY VolumeTHE WESTERN AVERNUS. \\*' *'THE WESTERN AVERNUS OR TOIL AND TRAVEL IN FURTHER NORTH AMERICA BY MORLEY ROBERTS New Edition Illustrated by A. D. McCORMICK and from Photographs Q30£0ftntnefe* ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE AND CO. 1896 All rights reserved*>\1 1\ N\) "V w Edinburgh : T. and A. Constable, Printers to Her MajestyTO MY FRIENDS GEORGE GISSING AND W. H. HUDSON 192875PREFACE On re-issuing this book, which was originally pub- lished in 1887, I may perhaps be excused for making some remarks as to its character and reception. In the first place, I would have it understood that what was true, let us say, of Winnipeg in 1884, needs now to be mentally revised by the reader. For things Transatlantic change marvellously even in a few short months, and since the completion of the Canadian Pacific Railroad, on which I myself worked when it was still unfinished, the cities within its influence have altered beyond recognition. But this is only true of inhabited places, for not. even a railroad can harm the infinite beauty of the mountains in British Columbia. Though this volume is usually spoken of as a book of travel, I myself prefer to regard it as autobiography, seeing that it contains few references to spots not now well within the range of the mere tourist. It is primarily the story of peculiar personal experience, which many have endured but few recorded; and if it have any value viiPreface it is that of the experience rather than that of any impression of any place. Since my return, having been led to wander in the Avernus of literature, where I was received by the Shades not without courtesy, certain, who occupy the position of censors, have, in season and out of season, suggested that my later work by no means reached the level of this. In some ways I cannot but agree with them, for it is the record of actual striving which in its essence has a positive value denied to the impersonal narrative or to a work of the imagination. I lived and did some necessary work in the world's rougher service. The rest is no more than a by-product; I do not plume myself on it, nor do I greatly regret the lack of keener appreciation. But I have been urged again and again to repeat the experiment of going berserk in some far-off and savage country; it has been suggested, openly and by implication, that misery, hardship, and starvation were needed before I brought forth the best fruits ; and many have endeavoured to persuade me to leave the difficult, if by no means giddy, height to which I have climbed with so much labour, for the purpose of affording them sport in the arena. I am reminded of Tertullian, who, in his treatise De Spectaculis, promised viiiPreface the elect a rarer joy than the earth affords when, looking from the golden bar of heaven, they watch their enemies frying in the pit. But now, as a man no longer altogether young, and with youthful endurance passed from me, I object to be butchered to make a critic's holiday. It is sufficient for me if this volume renews its youth for a season, and more than sufficient if its record warn the unwary who are solicitous of adventure, but ignorant of the calls that will be made upon them. It may discourage some, but those whom it renders fearful are not of the brotherhood of wanderers, nor truly of the race which should inherit the earth. MORLEY ROBERTS. b 5xCONTENTS CHAP. PAGE i. In Texas.........i ii. Bull-Punching........17 hi. Iowa and Minnesota......24 iv. In St. Paul....... . 34 v. To Manitoba and the Rockies .... 47 vi. The Kicking Horse Pass......57 vii. The Railroad Camps . ' 67 viii. The Columbia Crossing......86 ix. The Trail across the Selkirks 93 x. The Golden Range and the Shushwap Lakes . 113 xi. Round Kamloops.......125 xii. Through the Fraser Ca$on.....138 xiii. Down Stream to the Coast.....154 xiv. New Westminster . ......161 xv. Back Tracks to Eagle Pass . . . . .180 xvi. To Vancouver Island and Victoria . . . 203 xvii. Mount Tacoma Overhead.....209 xviii. Oregon Underfoot.......223 xix. Across the Coast Range.....235 xx. In San Francisco . . . . . . . 256LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Portrait of the Author, by A. D. McCormick . . Frontispiece Mexicans Gambling...... at page 12 Bull-Punching...... „ 20 On the Canadian Pacific..... 45 A Trestle Bridge on the C.P.R. 49 The Chancellor, Leanchoil .... 57 Mount Burgess, Emerald Lake ,, 62 The Kicking-Horse River..... >, 67 The Easiest Way Down..... 72 Mount Lefroy....... 86 A Glacier in the Selkirks .... >> 93 Wreck from a Snow-Slide .... 107 A British Columbian Lake .... 115 Mountains at Canmore..... 125 Ross Peak........ 138 The Three Sisters, Canmore .... „ 161 In the Snow........ „ 172 A Ferry on the Eagle River .... „ 196 Stowing Lumber....... ,, 218 Mount Hood, Oregon...... „ 223 A Mountain River...... »> 235 Mount Shasta, California..... „ 256 Shooting Hogs . ...... » 275THE WESTERN AVERNUS CHAPTER I in texas The wide prairie of North-west Texas, with Nature's sweet breath bearing faint odours of spring flowers, was around me ; a plain of few scant trees or smaller brush, with here and there a rounded hill that em- phasised the breadth of level land, and again the general surface broken, by quiet creeks and winter rain, into hollow canons beneath me, and beyond them once more the gentle roll of grassy prairie, and hills again. I looked around me and I was alone; and yet not wholly solitary, for about me strayed a band of sheep, grazing the sweet grasses that were so green when near, and showed a faint tinge of purple or delicate blue afar off. I was a Texas sheep-herder. A month before I had walked the crowded desolation of unnatural London. My life had been one of many changes. From the North of England to the wide brown plains of sunburnt Australia; from her again to the furrows of the ocean for many months of seaman's toil and danger; then England's greatest city and life, irksome and delightful by turns in her maze and prison ; then ill-health, with A IThe Western Avernus all its melancholy train, and sudden feverish resolution to shake from myself the chains I began to loathe. And it was thus I came to Texas, the land of revolution and rude romance, and pistol arbitration, whither my brother had long preceded me—a land of horses, cattle, and sheep, of cotton and corn, a land of refuge for many crimes, and for those tired and weary even as I was. So outward civilisation was gone, and it was with strange feelings of delight that I entered a new country to commence a new career, although I was aware that there would inevitably be much labour and perhaps much suffering for me. I came into a Texas town by no means greatly different from other American towns that I had seen and passed through in my swift flight south and west from the Atlantic seaboard, save that all around it was open unfenced prairie, with no fertile farms or houses to indicate that a town was near at hand. But I found, to my surprise, that Colorado City was cold on that spring morning of 1884, and I was unprepared for it, for I thought myself far enough south to demand as my right perpetual warmth and sunshine; and it was only when I learnt that I stood on a plateau two thousand feet above the sea-level that the cold did not seem unnatural. My impressions of the town and its people were favourable. There were many men walking round the streets dressed in wide-brimmed hats, leather leggings with fringe adornments, and long boots with large spurs rattling as they went. They were mostly tall and strong, and I noticed with interest the look of calm assurance about many of them, as if they had 2IN TEXAS said to themselves: ' I am a man, distinctly a man, nobody dares insult me ; if any one does, there will be a funeral—-and not mine.' Then the ordinary citizens of the place seemed ordinary citizens, in nowise remarkable, and, as far as I could see, neither they nor the others, who were, as I soon discovered, the much-talked-of cow-boys, wore knives or revolvers. In fact my impressions were exactly what they should not have been, according to Bret Harte. From him I had taken my notions of Western America, and I had constructed an ideal in the air, in which red-shirted miners, pistolling cow-boys, reckless stage- drivers, gentlemanly gamblers, and self-sacrificing women figured in a kind of kaleidoscopic harlequinade, ending up in a snow-storm or the smoke of a gun- powder massacre. And I was disappointed; but I must not be unjust to a favourite author of mine, for I owed it to my own imagination. My brother was living in this town, and it was with very little difficulty that I discovered him. We shook hands and sat down, running through our different experiences. I detailed my disgust of London and the life I had led there. He gave discouraging accounts of Texas, averring that the water was vile, that ' fever and ague' were common, that it was too hot in summer and too cold in winter. I learnt from him that almost everybody in town carried revolvers concealed under his coat-tails or inside his waistcoat, and that people were occasionally shot in spite of the peaceful look of the place. Nevertheless, there was little danger for a 3The Western Avernus man who was in the habit of minding his own business, who was not a drinker and quarrelsome, and did not frequent gambling-houses and saloons. I vowed I would go into none of them, and promptly broke it when I went down town with my brother to get clothes such as Texans wear, for he himself took me into one and introduced me to a gentlemanly gambler, who might have stepped bodily out of the story of' Poker Flat —a Georgian dark and slim, with long hair, dressed in black, amiable-looking, and a quiet desperado if need were. I changed my apparel under Cecil's advice and appeared in the streets in a very wide-brimmed grey felt hat and long boots reaching to my knees, and then, when I was ' civilised/ as he declared, we went to his boarding-house, and he introduced me to a circle of Texan working men. I made myself at home, and sat quietly listening to the talk about the war—a subject the Southerner is never weary of—of desperadoes, of cattle, and of sheep. Cecil and I held a council of two as to what was to be done. I wanted to work on a sheep or cattle ranche, as I had learnt the ways of these in Australia, and, although he had not ever followed that business himself, he agreed to go with me if we could obtain such work. A few days afterwards we left the city in the waggon of a sheep owner, hired to do the work of herders for 25 dols., or about £5, a month. So I once more dwelt under canvas, living a pastoral life, cooking rude meals in the open air on the open prairies, forty long miles to the northward of the town. And we went to work, building sheep 'corrals' or pens 4T EX AS of heaped, thorny mesquite brush, bringing in firewood, cutting it, putting up tents—for my part glad to be so far from men in that sweet fresh air, for I began to feel alive, volitional, not dead and most basely mechanical as at home in England. We were in camp on the border of the creek that ran by us with sluggish flow, as if it lacked the energy to go straight forward. In front of us, to the south, was a semicircle of bluffs, up which one had to climb to gain the open prairie, that stretched out green and grey as far as eye could reach. Beneath the bluffs was a level with thin mesquite trees, and on the banks of the creek a few cotton woods, and beyond it another level with thicker brush, and then a mass of broken, watercut land, formed into small fantastic canons that bit deep into the red earth, and clay, and gravel, that lay beneath. I led a busy life—up before sunrise, in after sundown. Then we sat round the camp-fire, smoking and talking. Our boss was an Englishman, one Jones, fair and pleasant; with him another fatter, ruddier Englishman, young, bumptious, and green withal, but no bad com- panion. Beside them a Mexican, long-haired, with glittering dark eyes under the shade of his big sombrero, small and active, taciturn for want of English. I could have warranted him a talker had we known his own sweet tongue. But my Spanish was limited to a few, oaths — Caramba !—with some others terrible to be translated, and Don Quixote in the original has yet to be mastered. Then another herder, myself, and Cecil. Decidedly, England was in the ascendant, and our 5The Western Avernus Spaniard looked on dumbly in contemplation, as his lithe fingers rolled cigarettes one after another in the yellow Mexican paper, dipping into his little linen bag for the dry tobacco. At daylight breakfast, after a wash in the creek. Bacon and bread and coffee, morning, noon, and night, with rare mutton and beans, red and white, cooked with grease and greasy. Then I went to the corrals and let out my sheep and their lambs, the oldest skipping merrily and the little new-born ones tottering weakly and baaing piteously, while the anxious mothers watched their offspring, turning round to lick them, looking at me suspiciously the while. With them I spent day after day on the prairie in almost utter solitude, save for the gentle animals I held in charge. These would scatter out and fleck the green prairie with white of wool, browsing on brush and sweet grass, while the lambs played round them, taking tentative doubtful bites at the grass, as if not yet assured that anything but milk was good for them, or stood sucking or lay asleep; sometimes waking suddenly with a loud baa of surprise to find themselves in such a strange wide world, and then rushing mother- wards for milk, butting with persistence the patient ewes, who moved along gently after other uncropped grasses. And at ten o'clock, when the sun grew fierce, they wolild take their noon-time's siesta, lying down under the scant shade of mesquites or the few rocks at the end of the bluffs that ran down to the creek. They slept and woke, got up one at a time, walking round, and then lay down again. And I picked a 6In Texas shady tree myself, taking all the shade, not through selfishness, but they yielded it to me for fear. I ate my little lunch, and drank water from the round tin flask encased in canvas that I bore over my shoulder, and smoked a peaceful pipe, and read a book I had brought out with me, or dreamed of things that had been, and of things not yet to be. And birds came round, perching on the woolly backs of sheep—birds of blue and birds of red, some with sweet songs. And from the shelter of low thick brush or tufts of heavier grass peeped a silvery-skinned snake with beady eyes, drawing back on seeing me. Or a little soft-furred cotton-tail rabbit whisked from one bush to another, throwing up his tuft of a tail and showing the white patch of under-fur that gives him his name, gleaming like cotton from the bursting pod, And that yonder ? It was a jack-rabbit, a hare, long-legged, quick-running; but then he went slowly, and sat up and looked at me as if he were a prairie dog of yonder town of quaint, brown, sleek-furred marmots, whose cry is like that of chattering angry birds. But Mr. Jack Rabbit swerved aside suddenly. The sheep would not frighten him, and I was as quiet as the windless tree I sat under. It was a snake, not silver, but brown and diamonded that scared him. But he saw me, and slipped under the rock, and lay there, making a strange noise, new to me but unmistakable. He was a rattlesnake. Then maybe I would go a little way from my herd and see an antelope on the distant prairie, and between me and the deer, a sly, slinking coyote, swift-footed and cunning, a howler at nights, making a whole chorus by himself; 7The Western Avernus by quick change of key persuading the awakened shep- herd that there was a band of them on the bluff in the moonlight looking down hungrily on the corralled and guarded sheep. Day by day this pastoral life went on, not all as sweet as an idyll, yet with some content. But my brother fell ill, and went back to town, and I was left to my own experience, which grew by contact with my Texan neighbours, with whom I got along pleasantly, as I was fast relapsing into primitive barbarism. I read little, and the noon I spent in contemplation, or observation of the denizens of the prairie, and at night the hour before sleep was spent in smoking and chatter, and grumbling at the sameness of the cookery. I herded through all April, but in the beginning of May I began to grow very weary of the work, and begged Jones to give me something else to do, no matter what, so that I was not compelled to act dog to his sheep any more. I was evidently unfit for a herder, for the task grew harder instead of easier. At last my 'boss' went into town and brought out another man, and released me. I went to corral-building, and wood- chopping, and to preparations for shearing, which would soon be; and as I then had Sunday free, I used to go fishing for cat-fish in the creek, and caught more often demoniacal mud turtles, which I unhooked with much fear of their snappish jaws. And one Sunday I slew a great rattlesnake nearly five feet long, as thick as my fore-arm. At the end of his tail, as he lay half coiled up, was a cloud—strange, undiscernible—the loud rattles in fierce, quick vibration. I went into a state of in- 8in texas stinctive animal fury, and killed him with a branch wrenched from a mesquite, regardless of the sharp thorns that made my hands bleed. Our days and nights now grew warmer with ad- vancing summer, which passed across the prairie and left it barer and brown, and doubtless made the dull sheep remember, if remember they can, past shearings of other years' fleeces and quick coolness. And shearing- time came on apace, for there were no more sudden 4 northers' that came from the frozen north, that knows no early spring, to make us shiver in our sleep and awake in early morning cursing the climate. So, when our preparations were complete, the wool- table set up in the corral, the wool-boxes for tying the soft fleeces ready, the posts and cross pieces erected for the canvas shelter to keep the glaring noon sun from the backs and bared necks of the stooping shearers, Jones went round and summoned the 'boys' to start to work. And our camp took a livelier aspect with its Texan youngsters. The English element was in the minority. Then the 'boss' went to town for more shearers, and came back with a band of Mexicans, who looked at the white men sulkily, thinking, no doubt, that there would not be so much money to be made, as they were not to have ' las boregas' to themselves. Among them was an Indian, a dark-skinned Chickasaw, who spoke a little English, and confided to me that he thought very little of the Mexicans. These were finer men, though, than my little wizened Indian—tall, some of them, with easy motion, dark eyes, dark hair, over which the inevitable sombrero of wide shade, with vast 9The Western Avernus complications of plaited adornments around it, making it look heavy and cumbersome. Next day shearing began. The sheep huddled to- gether in the corral bleating for their lambs, or ran to and fro for, those left outside. Under the rude festoons and curves of canvas, the wooden platform, with a few sheep in front, and on the board itself seven Mexicans, and the Chickasaw, and four Texan boys bending over the sheep. The sharp click-click of the moving, devouring shears of sharp steel, and the fair fleece, white and pure, falling back over the outer unclean wool yet unshorn. The last cut, and the loosed fleece- bdarer, uncloaked and naked, runs shaking itself into the crowding others, wondering 4 if it be 1/ and another is dragged unwillingly by the hind leg from its com- panions, while the parted fleece goes in a bundle of softness to the table, to be tied and tossed to the man who treads down the wool in the suspended woolsack, for we are primitive here and have no press. The clean new boards underneath us grow black, and every splinter has its lock of wool. There is wool everywhere, and the taste and smell of it; we are greasy with the grease of it, and hurt fingers smart with it, some little revenge for the pain the sheep have for careless cuts, that run red blood on the divided fleece. And night-time came, and the sheep stood in the corral hungry, wishing the vile yearly business [was over. And when we got up next morning there was not a Mexican to be seen. They had disappeared in the night, doubtless angry that there were white men to divide the profits with them. Jones 4 cavorted' round ioIn T ex as somewhat, abusing Mexicans generally, swore he would have no more to do with them, and went for more white men. I sheared among these in order to learn this noble pastoral art, as I wished to learn everything else, for no man knows when his knowledge may be useful and even necessary to him. So we had none of ' los Mexicanos,' with their fearful oaths, among us, and no Chickasaws or Choctaws. And for two days the shearing went well; then came a cold day, congealing the grease in the wool until it clogged the shears. One man, the boaster of the crowd, left, as he said, because the sheep were too hard to shear; as we said, because he was irritated that a boy sheared eighty while he got through no more than fifty. Then, as Jones was away, my fat ruddy young countryman had charge, and, being unaccustomed to authority and lacking tact, quarrelled with one, which led to all the rest leaving. So the patient sheep were not yet shorn. Jones came back to find things at a standstill, and being a good-tempered man, only swore a little at white men. But the shearing had to be done, and the vow about Mexicans had to be recanted. The wagon went into town, and in two days eleven more Mexicans came out, better men and better shearers than our first band. The captain— el capitan—was a broad-shouldered, lithe-waisted man, quick/keen, black, and comely ; with him a one-armed shearer, a great surprise to me, whose first movements on the board I watched with interest. He and the captain sheared in company, and between them made more money than any other two—made it shearing and gambling as well, for the maimed man was an adept at iiThe Western Avernus the cards, handling them with a rapidity and dexterity- many of his two-handed companions envied and suffered from. I still sheared with them, but not regularly, for sometimes I tied wool, and sometimes pressed it, and even occasionally herded again. I found them friendly, and at night they sang melancholy Mexican love-songs or gambled with the light of a solitary candle, crowding together in one small tent, while I sat amongst them, rolling up cigarettes, as they did, catching a few words of their talk; or I left them and sat by the fire with Jones and the other herders, and perhaps a stray cow- boy who came to sleep at our camp, or some of the young sons of our near neighbours; and in their conversation I got the relish of a new dish that tickled my civilised palate strangely. The flash of humour, the ready rough repartee that permitted no answer, tumbling one to the ground like a sudden tightening lasso dropped over head and shoulders, were like single-stick play after rapier and dagger, hard but harmless. And at last shearing was over, and my Mexican friends took their money, doubtless resolving to get drunk and gamble in town, and make up for the labour through which they had gone; and I began to think of going too, for I had heard from my brother in far northern Minnesota, and he asked me to come if it were possible. I was ready enough to go, for it did not seem to me that I was as well as I should be. Perhaps the alkali water was doing me no good, and I should feel better doubtless in the more bracing northern air, drinking the purer streams that ran from Minnesota's 12MEXICANS GAMBLING. [to face p. 12.IN TEXAS lakes and sweet-scented pine-woods. I would leave Texas behind me, and the open prairie and its sheep and bands of long-horned cattle, its chattering prairie dogs and howling coyotes, and prowling cougars, and try another country. But before I could get away there were many things to do, and some things to suffer—notably a storm one night, a surprise to me, for it seemed that the wind blew calmly on the high plateau, using its energy in ceaseless breezes, not in sudden destructive cyclonic convulsion. But one day the breeze failed. The clouds came up from all quarters, opening and shutting, closing in the blue, dark and thunderous with pallid leaden edges. We sat in our camp, not thinking greatly about the matter, for so many threatened storms had blown over. But presently Jones got up, and went across the creek to the house, remarking that he thought we should have rain. The young Englishman soon followed, leaving me with Alexander, a Californian herder, and Bill, a Missourian. Presently we heard thunder, and a few heavy drops of rain fell. We left the fire, and went into the big tent and sat down. Then there was a low roar of wind, and the rush of rain came with the wind and struck the tent, that bellied in and strained like a sail at sea. One moment of suspense, and, before we could move, the tent was flat on top of us, and the howl of the gale and the pattering of rain so tremendous that we could not hear ourselves shouting. One by one we crawled out, and in a moment were drenched to the skin. Our oilskins were under the tent; it was utterly impossible 13The Western Avernus to get them. The force of the wind was so great that I could not stand upright, and the rain, coming level on it, blinded me if I tried to look to windward. The lightning, too, was fearful, and the thunder seemed right over and round me. In the dark I got separated from my companions, and crawled on my hands and knees to a small mesquite and held on to it, while every blast bent it down right over me. . After a while I grew tired of staying there, and in a little lull I made a bolt for the end of the corral, which was a stone wall. Here I got some shelter, though I was afraid that the whole wall might blow over on me. As it was, some of the top stones were dislodged. So I stood up and leaned on it, with my face towards the wind and my broad-brimmed hat over my eyes to keep the sharp sting of the rain off. In front of me were the sheep, and leaning over the wall I could touch them ; yet such was the darkness that I could see nothing till the lightning came, and then they stood out before me a mass of white wool, with the lightning glistening on their eyeballs for a momentary space. Then darkness. In one flash I could see Alexander under one mesquite, and, twenty yards from him, Bill under another. I shouted to them, but the wind carried my voice away. Here I stayed for two hours. Then the wind began to lull and the lightning to grow more distant; so, plucking up courage, and waiting for lightning to give me my direction, I walked over to Alexander, and then all three got together again. I wanted them to come over to the house, for we could go round by the road without crossing the creek, which here ran in a horse- 14In Texas shoe. Alexander said he would come, for he did not want to be wet all night without any sleep, but we could not persuade Bill. No, he wasn't going to get lost on the prairie such a night as that; he knew where he was, and that was something. So we left him. It took us more than an hour to go less than a mile, for it was still blowing and raining hard, and the lightning was even yet vivid enough to blind us. Once we got off the road, but I managed to find it again, and about one o'clock we came to the house, where Jones and Harris laughed at the wretched figures we cut. How- ever, we got out blankets, and, throwing off our wet clothes, we soon forgot the storm. Next morning the creek was full to its banks, and rising yet. We found Bill at the camp, still wet through, though he had managed to find some dry matches and light a fire. Both tents were down. The provisions in the smaller one were all wet and much damage done. Still it was well nothing worse happened. I do not think I shall ever forget that night in Texas. Three days afterwards, when Jones began to haul his wool to town, I went in with him and Colonel Taylor, his next neighbour, who was hauling for him. It took a day and a half to get to Colorado, and during the first day I killed seven rattlesnakes and two others. On getting near to town we began to see signs of the damage done by the storm. We were on the banks of the Lone Wolf Creek, that runs into the Colorado River. The waters had run out on the prairie on both sides and swept the grass flat. Against every tree was a bunch of drifted bush and grasses, while here and 15The Western Avernus there I saw a poor little prairie owl or prairie dog, or a snake, strangled by the water or struck by blown branches. In town, houses had been washed away bodily, going down the creek, and others had been turned round on the wooden blocks beneath them. The whole place wore a dishevelled, disarranged look, as if some mischievous giant had been through it, making sport for himself. It was the severest gale ever known in North-west Texas. 16CHAPTER II BULL-PUNCHING I WAS in Colorado City again, with resources only forty-five dollars, or about nine pounds English, and had to go north to Minnesota, find my brother and support myself, until I got employment again, on that small sum. It was quite evident that I should be unable to pay my fare to St. Paul, Minnesota, and I had to decide now what was to be done. Problem : twelve or thirteen hundred miles to be overpassed with- out paying one's fare over the rails. This would have been an easy task to many, and some months later it would have scarcely caused me so much anxious thought, but I was then inexperienced and somewhat green in the matter of passes, which are often to be obtained by a plausible man of good address, and in the methods of 'beating the road/ or, more literally, cheating the company. My brother had told me that it was frequently possible to go long distances with men who had charge of cattle for the great meat-markets of St. Louis and Chicago, and had, with an eye to the future, introduced me to a rough-looking young fellow, who was an Englishman, but whose greatest pleasure consisted in being mistaken for a native Texan. He followed the B *7The Western Avernus profession of a * bull-puncher,' that is, he went in charge of the cattle destined for slaughter and canning in the distant North, and made money at it, being steady and trustworthy and no drinker. Jones and I had come to town on Saturday, and on Sunday morning I went to the stockyards to look about me, to watch them putting the cattle in the cars, and to see if I might find my friend. I found him too quickly, for no sooner did I come to the yard than I met him. He asked me if I wanted to go to Chicago, and offered to take me at once, as the train was ready to * pull out.' I was in a dilemma. My clothes and blankets were at the boarding-house, my money was in the bank. I told him this, and he settled it quickly. * Leave word for my brother Fred to bring along your things ; I will cash your order on the bank/ I went with him to the office, signed my name on the drover's pass after his, and in five minutes was running at twenty miles an hour over the wide prairie, leaving Colorado City behind in the sand dunes in the hollow by the river that gives it a name. We had seven cars of cattle to look after. The poor wretches had a weary journey before them, and their release would be a sudden death. It was a cruel change from the grassy plains with a limitless extent of sweet grass, to be shut in cars and jolted for more than a thousand miles with but short intervals of rest and release, for they remain in the cars twenty-four hours at a time. I found this bull-punching a very wearisome and dangerous business. It is too frequently the custom 18Bull-Punching with cattle-men to crowd the poor beasts, and put perhaps twenty-two where there is only comfortable room for eighteen or twenty. When a steer lies down he often gets rolled over, and is stretched out flat with- out power to move, as the others stand upon him. It is the duty of the ' bull-puncher' to see that this does not occur, or to make him get up. For this purpose he carries a pole, ten or twelve feet long, usually of hickory, and in the end of this a nail is driven, the head of which is filed off in order to get a sharp point of half or three-quarters of an inch long, which is used for ' jobbing' the unfortunate animal to rouse him to exert himself, and to make those who are standing on him crowd themselves together to give their comrade a chance. If this point does not effect the desired object, the 4 twisters ' are used. These are small tacks driven into the pole at and round the end, but not on the flat top, where the sharp point is. By means of these tacks the pole catches in the hair of the steer's tail, and it can be twisted to any desired extent. This method is effectual but very cruel, for I have seen the tail twisted until it was broken and limp; but, as a general rule, as soon as the twisting begins the steer gives a bellow and makes a gigantic effort to rise, which, if the other animals can be kept away, is mostly successful. If other means fail the train is run alongside the first cattle- yards, the car emptied, the steer then having no trouble in getting up, unless seriously injured. But I have found them with nearly all their ribs broken on the upper side, and occasionally they die in the car. If the man in charge is conscientious, he will be all over the 19The Western Avernus train whenever it stops, day or night, but very frequently he sleeps all night and pays no attention to them. The man I was with did most of the work at night, leaving me the day. If he needed help he called me, and I served him the same in the day. He was perfectly reckless in what he did, and would do what many will not attempt. He would foolishly risk his life by entering the cars if he found it impossible to make a bullock rouse himself, and as I stood outside holding the lantern for him I was sick with apprehension, seeing him hanging to the iron rails above the sharp long horns that might have run him through like a bayonet. Their eyes glittered in the light I held, and they bellowed with fear and anger. Had he fallen the chances were a thousand to one against his life; he would have been crushed to death between them or trodden out of the shape of humanity under their hoofs. Sometimes he succeeded, but sometimes all this danger was encountered in vain, and the steer he tried to save would be dead at last. It was dangerous work clambering round the cars and walking over them when the train was in motion. Dangerous enough at any time, but in the night, when I carried a long pole and a lantern with me, I often thought I should come to a sudden end beneath the wheels. I had to jump on the train, too, when in motion, or be left behind, and, at junctions such as Denison, was forced to walk among shunting cars and trains and loose engines, whose strong head-lights blinded me, hindering sight of some dark, stealthy, unlighted cars running silently on the next rails. 20BULL-PUNCHING. \to face p. 20.Bul l-P u n c h i n g We fed the cattle at Fort Worth, a bustling busy- town, the western capital of Texas, the scene of great railroad riots since then, and at Muskogee, a quiet dull place in the Indian Territory, reserved for Indians— Chickasaws, Choctaws, Cherokees, and others with less familiar names. I saw but few of these, and the men who loafed and idled round the stations through which we passed on the Missouri, Kansas, and Texas railroad were for the most part whites, armed with six-shooters, for it is not forbidden to carry them. It seemed strange to see little boys, eleven or twelve years old, strutting round with revolvers hung in their belts. Little des- peradoes in training, I thought. This country was sweet and green, and very pleasant, with great stretches of wood and then open pastures, and good streams and pools of bright water. We ran through the Territory, through part of Kansas and into Missouri, staying a few hours in Sedalia. I began now to weary of this endless journey, to weary of the prairie that would never cease, and to long for busy Chicago and well-farmed Illinois. It was time, indeed, for me to reach somewhere, for I had never taken off my clothes since leaving Colorado City, and I slept in snatches, rarely slumbering more than three hours at a time. We crossed the rapid Missouri at Franklin, and came to Hannibal, on the famous Mississippi. We stayed some hours outside the town to feed the cattle, and then'ran through a tunnel hewn out of solid rock on to the long slender bridge across the mighty river. I sat on the top of the cars, watching the immense flood 21The Western Avernus of waters that had come from Montana and had yet to go through m&ny a State to New Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico. Here and there were beautiful islands with plentiful trees, green and peaceful, separated from the busier banks on either hand The town was almost hidden behind thd hill under which we had come, and only its smoke, curling overhead, pointed out the the spot of many habitations; and some way down stream on the right was, aided by the thin haze and hill shadows, an old picturesque building that I fanci- fully converted into an ancient ruined castle. It gave the touch of golden romance and age that one so misses in that new land. We ran through Illinois and came to the great city of Chicago early on Sunday morning, and we gave up charge of the cattle, which would be almost instantly slaughtered. Then I had to make up my mind as to what I was to do. I went to the post-office and found no letters from my brother, although I had asked him to give me directions there how to find him. Perhaps he had written to Colorado City, and I had just missed his letter; perhaps he had left St. Paul, and had missed mine. I was in a dilemma. I knew not whether to go to Minnesota or not. I asked my friend, and he advised me to return to Texas, promising to obtain me work with cattle there, and 'at any rate,' said he,/you can come up with me again when you want to.' This determined me, and I returned to Colorado City once more. I spent an idle, careless, novel-reading time for some weeks, for I could find no one prepared to give me cattle to take North, as trade was slack and prices low. 22Bull-Punching I got a note from my brother at last, saying now he was near St. Paul still, and would wait for me. But I could not get away again, and perforce went to amusing myself, making acquaintances in town, mostly people my brother had known. I read and smoked, and went into the gambling saloons, though, fortunately, I have no taste for gambling. Then I met one of my Mexican friends, and he shook hands with me warmly, explaining in broken English that all the others were in the 'calabosa,' or jail, for being drunk and disorderly. And soon afterwards I met them going to work on the road in charge of a warder armed with a long six- shooter. They shouted to me and waved their hands, looking not unhappy, and doubtless thinking it was destiny, and not to be made matter of too much thought. I waved my hat to them and saw them no more. At last I determined to leave the town. I was sick of it, and not well besides, for the water affected me very injuriously. I began to make energetic inquiries, and at last found a man who took me with him. It was time for me to get away; my money was fairly exhausted, and I did not want to go to work in Texas any more. I left town on July 7th and arrived in Chicago on the 16th; and but one thing of all the journey remains in my mind, and that is the figure of Ray Kern, who had once been a cow-boy in Texas, but was leaving it on account of ill-health, for he was to be a companion to me afterwards in some of my other trials and journeys yet to come. When I bade farewell to my friends, Ray among them, I had but five dollars left, or £1 English. 23CHAPTER III IOWA AND MINNESOTA I WONDER if it be possible of any one who has never been away from his own country and his friends, who has always been in comfort and reasonable prosperity, to imagine my feelings when I suddenly found myself alone and almost penniless in Chicago? I think it impossible. My desolation was in a way unbounded, for every person I saw of the thousands in that great city, wherein I knew not a soul, save those I had left never to see again, made me feel even more and more lonely. I walked the crowded streets for hours, hardly knowing in what direction I was going nor in what direction I should go. My thoughts turned first towards my brother, who was, in the state of my finances, impossibly far away, and from him to my friends at home. To these I was now a shadow, for they were busy, and one from the many of a life-circle is but little. To me they were the only realities, and I was walking among shadows who were nothing, and could be nothing, to me, whose habits and thoughts and modes of life had become, after four years in London, intensely, even morbidly subjective. I had lived those years in a state of intellectual progress, which had culminated in a form of pessimism only permitting me 24Iowa and Minnesota to see beauty in art—in pictures of Turner, in music of Beethoven, in the poetry of the modern; and now I was thrown on the sharpest rocks of realism, and the awakening was strange and bitter. On the second day in the city I was even more melancholy, and it was an almost impossible task for me to seek work. But the necessity of so doing became more and more urgent as my resources became less and less, and I made some efforts to obtain employment on the schooners of Lake Michigan. For I had in the days of my more careless boyhood made a voyage at sea, and along with the memory of storm and calm, of channel and open ocean, retained some of the rough practical knowledge of a sailor's work. But I had lost the calm buoyant confidence and energy of those days, and with the decay of health had come a degree of diffidence which then made it difficult for me to push myself among a crowd of rude and ignorant men, even though I had enough plasticity of outward character to make me, to their careless glance, one of their own class. And the dulness of trade in Chicago that summer added to my troubles, and made me un- successful. That night I thought I should try to save money by sleeping somewhere without paying for a lodging. I had heard in London of boys and men sleeping in Covent Garden Market, and under the arches of the bridges. And now I was about to add this to my own experiences. I had been told that in the large cities of America it was very commonly the custom for the homeless.to sleep in 'box-cars,' which I believe 25The Western Avernus would be called 'goods trucks' in England, and I found at last, late in the evening, a spot where many were standing on the rails in a dark corner not far from Randolph Street. After some little search I discovered an open one, and after entering it and closing the sliding door, I lay down on the bare wooden floor, and with my head on my arms fell asleep. I must have slept about two hours when I was awakened by finding my habitation in motion. I was very little concerned as to where it was going, as I was in no place likely to be worse off than in Chicago, and I might very easily have been better. I left the matter in the hands of destiny, and turning over fell asleep again. But I was again awakened in a few minutes by the car stopping, apparently in some building from the difference of sound. The door was opened, and a man entering the car saw me and said,1 Hallo, partner, have you had a good sleep?' 'Pretty fair/ I said, 4but I guess it's over now.' And I got up to go. The intruder was a kind-hearted fellow, however, and as I went out he told me there were plenty of cars outside that would not be disturbed that night, and directed me where to find them. I thanked him, but soon found myself regarded suspiciously by a man who was the night watchman, who finally ordered me to get out of the yard, which I was obliged to do, as under the circumstances I had no alternative, although I confess to feeling very much inclined to resent his doing his duty. I went out into the streets once more. It was now after midnight, and I had little desire to walk about all night. So after all my trouble I had a 26Iowa and Minnesota night's lodging, for which I paid 25 cents, and was accommodated in a room villainous enough looking to be the scene of one of Poe's midnight murder tales. Next morning I was still despondent, and walked about aimlessly enough until I came to the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railroad station. I went in and sat down to rest and to think. My thinking discovered me no hope, but my prolonged stay there Was the cause of my again meeting with my travelling companion, Ray Kern. He came in looking miserable enough and pale ancf ill, but when he saw me he brightened up as I had done, and we, who were but of a day or two's acquaintance, grasped each other's hands as if we had been brothers. Poor Ray was in the same condition as myself, though he had a dollar or two more to balance his being worse in health than I was. We had a long talk of ways and means and aims, and his experience helped us out of Chicago. In all American cities there are employment offices, which, on payment of a fee, furnish work, if any is to be obtained, to suitable applicants. They frequently send labourers long distances on the cars for very trifling sums to work for the railroads, which furnish passes for the number they need. Ray and I went across the road to one of these offices, and found that men were wanted to go to a little town near Bancroft, in North-west Iowa, Kosciusko County, to work on the railroad. The fee required by the office was 2 dols., but all I had now was 1 dol. 50 cents, and I was rather hopeless of getting away, when Ray offered the manager 3 dollars 25 cents to send us both out. 27The Western Avernus After some chaffering this was agreed to, and we were furnished with office tickets, which would be changed at the station for passes. I was now without any money at all—not even a cent. But Ray, whose kindness to me I shall never forget, helped me through the day, and in the evening we started with about twenty others for our destination, 600 miles away. This system of sending labourers to distant points on free passes is naturally taken advantage of by persons who wish to go in the direction of the place where the help is needed or beyond it, and very frequently it happens that on reaching the end of the journey there is scarcely one left of those who started. And it was so in this instance. Of the twenty who left Chicago, Ray and I were the only ones who got out at Bancroft, for the others had quietly disappeared at various stations on the way. We had been about thirty-six hours on the journey, and during this time we had passed through a farming country, which was for the most part uninteresting, and, in the northern part of Iowa, to my eye positively ugly. It there consisted of level plains with no colour or trees to relieve their dead monotony, save an occasional grove of planted trees near a farm, placed to the north of the buildings to make some shelter from the howling 4 blizzards,' or winter storms, that rage for days on the bleak and open prairie. And the natural melan- choly of the scene was magnified for me by the hunger, which increased as we travelled, for we were both without money save a solitary half-dollar, which Ray was preserving for emergencies. 28Iowa and Minnesota When we at last reached our objective point we were not encouraged by what we saw. On a side track, a little way from town, stood three cars, one fitted up as an eating-room with rough tables and benches, and the others as sleeping-rooms with bunks in them. We put our blankets down and went in to get dinner, which consisted of huge chunks of tough, badly cooked beef with bread, and potatoes boiled in their skins. The plates were tin, the cups of the same material, the knives rusty and dirty and blunt. Our companions were of all nationalities, they ate like hogs, and their combined odour was distinctly simian. It was with difficulty Ray and I ate our dinners, hungry as we were, for one had to be energetic to obtain anything at all, and the noise and smell and close quarters made both of us, who were by no means in rude health, feel sick and miserable. After dinner, if I can call it such, we went out and walked in silence up the line. Presently I burst out, in unconscious imitation of the famous Edinburgh Reviewer,' This will never do.' Ray looked up and said shortly, ' Charlie, I agree with you/ We continued walking, and presently came to a little ' section house.' These are built at intervals along all the lines in America. In them live a ' section boss' and a small gang of men, who look after a certain section of the line, seeing that it is kept in repair. They raise the * ties' or sleepers if they settle down, renews them when they rot, see that the joints are perfect and the rails in line. Outside the house we 29The Western Avernus met the 4 section boss,' who asked us if we had cotfie up to work with the 4 gravel-train gang.' We said yes, we had come there with that intention, but didn't much like the look of things, and would prefer not doing it if anything else were possible. He seemed to be in no way surprised at that, and said if we cared to come to him we could go to work in the morning, promising us good accommodation and board, the wages being, however, only $1.25 a day—twenty-five cents less than that of the other job. The cost of board, however, was to be somewhat less. We engaged at once with him, and went back for our blankets, paying our last half- dollar for our miserable mid-day meal. Our 4boss' was named Breeze, and we found him and his wife very pleasant and intelligent and kind. The others in the gang were Swedes, who could not talk much English, and Ray and i had very little to do with them during the short time we stayed there. For Ray seemed too weak to work, and using the pick and shovel was so new to me that i made twice the labour of it that the others did ; and, moreover, my foot got so sore that i found some difficulty in working with any degree of complacency. After three days we determined to leave and go north to St. Paul, if it could be managed. But we had great difficulty in getting any money, as the men on sections are only paid once a month, when the travelling car of the R.R. Paymaster comes round. But we signed orders for Breeze to receive our money, and got seventy-five cents apiece, one dollar and a half in all, which constituted our sole resources. Mrs. Breeze made us up a parcel of food, and i gave her a little 30IowA AND MINNESOTA volume of Emerson's Essays, which I had brought from England with me. And thus we started north again. Of all the melancholy days' walks I ever had, that was the most doleful. Around us lay a miserable, flat, most dreary prairie; ahead of us stretched the long line of endless rails, fading in the distance to nothing, and overhead the July sun glared piteously on two dis- heartened tramps, who were most decidedly out of place, wishing themselves anywhere—anywhere out of that world. Had Ray been well and cheerful, I should have been more dispirited than I was, for in his state of health and mind I had to keep him up by cracking jokes and singing songs when I felt more like making lamentations or taking to sulky silence. But he was so weak that we had to rest, and if I had not kept him going we should have been there now. At noon we camped by a waterhole, or small swamp, and ate a little and had a smoke, and/ feeling hot and dust-grimed and wayworn, I stripped off and had a bathe, while Ray looked on in silence. By dint of hard and painful walking we reached a farm in the evening. We went up and asked for work. The superintendent was a Swede, a nice enough fellow. He gave us supper, and next morning set me shocking barley after a reaping and binding machine, while Ray went out hay-making. Our wages were to be a dollar a day and board. On the evening of the second day the owner of the farm, a Congressman named Cooke, came home, and, in American parlance, 'fairly made things hum.' In fact, we had to work too hard altogether, considering that we began at sunrise and worked till it was dark. Ray 31The Western Avernus by no means improved in health, and on that evening we agreed to leave the next day and make another stage to St Paul. I do not think Cooke minded our going much, as he thought we were unaccustomed to hard work. He came in to give us the three dollars each as I was rolling up my blankets, and noticing that I had a book he asked to see it. It was Sartor Resartus. Turning it over and over, he looked at it and then at me, and finally said, 'Doyou read it?' I answered by another question,(Do you suppose I carry it just for the sake of carrying it ?' 4 Well/ said he,' I am surprised at a man, who can read a book such as this seems to be, tramping in Iowa.' 'So am I, Mr. Cooke/ I replied, and, bidding him good-day, Ray and I marched off, a little better in spirits, as we now had seven dollars and a half between us. That night we crossed the northern boundary of Iowa and came into Minnesota at Elmore. We had supper at the hotel, and found out that there was a train going to St. Paul soon after midnight. After supper we went out, and finding an empty box-car we lay down to get some sleep. But the cold and mosquitoes combined made it almost impossible. On no other occasion have I ever found mosquitoes so active in such a low temperature. At midnight Ray got up, and went over to the con- ductor of the train and made a bargain with him to take us to Kasota (which was as far as he went with the train) for I dol. 50 cents each, which was much under the regular fare. This is very commonly done in the States by the conductors, who put the money in their own pockets. Next day we were in Kasota, a 32Iowa and Minnesota very pretty little place with lots of timber; indeed, Southern and Central Minnesota seem generally well wooded. We found there was a freight train leaving this town at one o'clock, and I went over to find the conductor. I asked him what he would take two of us to St. Paul for. He said,4 Two dollars each.' Now we had by this time only three dollars and three-quarters left, so I told him that wouldn't do, stating how our finances were, and offering him three and a half dollars. After refusing several times, finally he said, 4 Very well, you can come along, though I expect you will shake a fifty dollar bill at me when you get to St. Paul.' How devoutly I wished it had been in my power! We jumped into the caboose, and at eleven o'clock that night we arrived in St Paul. We had then 25 cents between us, which was very encouraging to think of. Five cents of this we gave to the brakeman of our train to show us a car to sleep in. We found one half filled with sawed lumber, crawled into it, spread our blankets, and lay down while our friend held the lantern. His last words were: 4 Mind you get out before four o'clock, or you will go down south again.' After about three hours' sleep we were wakened by the yardmen switching or shunting the car, and making up our bundles we dropped them out and followed them when the car next stopped. Near at hand we found a little platform about eight feet square, by a house right in the middle of the railroad yard. On this we spread our blankets, and only woke to find it broad daylight, seven o'clock, and men working all round us. We rolled up again, and in silence went up into the town. C 33CHAPTER IV in st. paul We placed our blankets and valises in a small restaurant and walked to the post-office. I asked four men the way to this building, and of these only the last could speak intelligible English, such are the numbers of Ger- mans and Scandinavians in some parts of the States. I found two post-cards from my brother; one of which stated he was working near the town, giving me an address, and the other, dated two weeks later, gave me to understand that he had been unable to remain in St. Paul owing to scarcity of work, and that he had left the city for New Orleans by the river steamboats. This was not very satisfactory for me, for I had cherished some little hope that he might have been either in a position to help me to work or to repay me some money which I lent him at Ennis Creek. Now I and my partner were truly on our 4 beam-ends/ and twenty cents alone stood between us and absolute bankruptcy. We walked from the post-office round the corner and sat down on a seat in the public park. As considera- tion, however, was in no way likely to appease our hunger, which was now beginning to be inconveniently perceptible, I left Ray and went to see what could be got for our cash remainder in the shape of breakfast. 34In St. Paul After tramping a while I bought a loaf for ten cents and butter for the rest, and we were now ' dead broke.' Ray was sitting in the same position as I had left him in, having no energy to move, poor fellow, and it was with difficulty I got him out of the seat to come and look for a quiet place in which to consume the luxuries with which I was laden. A neighbouring lumber-yard seemed suitable, and we found a convenient plank on which I put the paper of salty butter, while I divided the loaf with my knife. This was a nice meal for two hungry men, but we were glad enough to get it under the circumstances, and since then a loaf would at times have been a very godsend even without the butter. I was sorrier for Ray than for myself, for a cup of coffee or tea with his meal would have done him good, and it was as unattainable as champagne or oysters and chablis. When we had finished the bread I wrapped up the remains of the butter and hid it between two planks in a dark corner of the lumber pile, for I thought it possible that we might want it, though there seemed little likelihood of our having bread with it. As we still had tobacco, we lighted our pipes and walked slowly along the street, wondering where the next meal was to come from. Perhaps, if I were placed in the same situation again, I should not, in the light of far bitterer experience, regard it as so dismal, and my increased knowledge and savoir faire in things American would show me ways out where I then saw, as it were,' No thoroughfare' plainly written. Ray was really too ill to * rush round,' and he was 35The Western Avernus quite a deadweight on me, for he was hopeless. In ordinary circumstances his knowledge would have helped me, but all it did now was to recall pessimistic- ally the blackest side of his former experience. He thought it almost worse than useless to go to an em- ployment office without money, and so it seemed to me. But when I left him on the park-seat, and began to look around without the dear fellow's most dismal croaking to dishearten me, I plucked up courage, after making vain inquiries in various quarters, to try an Employment Agency whose chalked board outside gave evidence of labour needed in many different lines of business. There were fifty men wanted to work on the streets. This I considered was very probable, con- sidering the state they were in. There were more wanted for the waterworks. This, too, would be no work of supererogation. There were teamsters, dairy- men, and various others whose services were desired. I walked in and spoke to the manager, who, finding I professed not to be a teamster, though I could drive reasonably well, nor a milkman, for lack of practice, offered me the less lucrative and probably more toilsome job of labourer at the waterworks for the moderate fee of one dollar. Never had the great American dollar assumed such a gigantic size to me. Never had it seemed so far away. Liberty in her cap was fairly invisible, and the imagined scream of the bold eagle on the reverse was ■ faint and far/ 4 Well, mister,' said I,' I have not got a dollar/ < What have you got ?' was his answer, thinking, I suppose, that I might have 99 cents. I surprised him. 36In ST. Paul 41 've got a partner.' 4 Has he any money !' I might have answered in the language of Artemus Ward—4 nary cent/ but it did not occur to me. 4 He 's got as much as I have, and that's nix' (corrupt German for * nichts'). My friend looked at me, having no further remarks to make. I felt a crisis had come. 4 Suppose you send us both out and ask the boss to stop two dollars from our wages on your account. Won't this do ! You see we want work ; we've got to have it. That's a fact.' The manager walked to his big desk, wrote a note, sealed it, gave it to me, and said, ' Come here at two o'clock, and you can go out to the works with the provision wagon.' I thanked him very quietly and walked out. Ray was as I left him. I composed my countenance to sombre dolorousness, and sat down beside him, grunting out 'Got any tobacco?' No, the last was gone. He seemed so miserable that I thought it cruel to deceive him by my looks any longer, and laughed till I woke him fairly up, and he saw by the twinkle in my eyes that I had been in luck. 4 So you've got work?' 'Yes,' said I, 'and you too; we go out this afternoon to the waterworks.' How hard must be one's lot when the news that it is possible to earn a dollar and three-quarters a day, by ten hours of hard manual labour, acts like a very tonic and braces up the whole man ! Ray was for the rest of the day quite a new being, in spite of his hunger, 37The Western Avernus which half a small loaf in the morning had not gone far to appease. As for myself, I laughed and joked, and, thinking I should be quite happy if I had some tobacco, I managed to get into conversation with a man near us, borrowed a pipeful, and smoked in calm content. At two o'clock we found the wagon at the office, put our blankets in it, and set out on our walk, which was seven miles, to the works. After a while, finding the wagon move but slowly and the road plain before us, we walked on ahead, and when we had made about two-thirds of the way we came on three teamsters who were having dinner. They gave us a friendly hail, and, whether they fancied we looked hungry or not, kindly asked us to sit down with them and 'pile in/ which being interpreted signifies,' Pitch in and eat/ Under the circumstances such an invitation was by no means to be despised, and accordingly we consumed all there was, yea, even unto the last crust, taking an occasional drink at a very convenient spring, our companions chatting merrily the while and laughing at my semi- tragical, semi-comic account of our adventures since leaving Chicago. These were three good fellows. After another mile or two's walk we came in sight of the camp, which consisted of two huge tents on the flat and two more on the side of the hill. We could see a great trench or sewer cut in the ground with derricks swinging up large iron buckets of dirt, and men busily employed digging lower down, breaking the ground on the line laid out for excavation, while some were laying beams in the cut to prevent the sides from 38In St. Paul caving in. So down we went and presented our letter. The boss asked if we had had dinner, and as we said 4 No/—thinking it still possible to eat more—he told the cook to give us some, which we had little trouble in getting rid of. And then we went to work with a gang whose boss was called Weed, one of the nicest and most kindly men I ever worked under. However, what he first set me to do very nearly finished me. I had to take a big unwieldy maul, or mallet, and drive down boards into the mud and ooze at one side of the ditch, as they were then cutting through a kind of quicksand. The last week had not made me very much stronger, as may be imagined, and it was only sheer necessity which made me stick to it But I had to do something, and this was all that seemed to offer itself. Next day was even worse, for I had a big Irishman with me, and as we had to strike one after the other, he made it as hard as he could by working too fast. I had some difficulty in refraining from making a mistake and striking him. However, that evening I made a friend of Weed by offering to splice the rope into the big bucket. This had been done so execrably by another man that, when I turned out a neat and creditable job, he made things as pleasant as he could for me. We were working with as rough and as mixed a crowd as it has ever been my lot to come in contact with. There were Americans from most of the various States and Territories, there were some Englishmen, and a promiscuous crew of Canadian and European French, Germans, Swedes, Norwegians, Danes, Finns, 39The Western Avernus Polanders, Austrians, Italians, and one or two Mexicans. I didn't see a Turk, but I wouldn't like to say there was none. We slept in a big tent with about fifty men in it. There were upper and lower bunks, each holding two men. Ray and I secured a top one, and had for our left-hand companions two Swedes, while on our right was an Irishman and an American named Jack Dunn. I do not know what State he was from. This man was feared by every one in the tent. He was to all appearance exceedingly powerful, and, when in a bad temper, ferocious and ready to quarrel 4 at the drop of a hat,' as the American saying goes. At first he seemed to dislike me, and made some remarks about Englishmen in general which I declined in such company to make any cause for a disturbance. In a day or two, however, he distinguished me by honour- ing me with his friendship, and we would talk for hours while lying in our bunks, none of the rest caring to object, even if they wanted to sleep. He had not been two weeks out of jail when I saw him, and he gave me accounts of how he got in and how he got out. And both showed him to be a des- perate man, and most uncommonly courageous. It appeared he had been firing in a Mississippi steam- boat, and while he was in the stokehold one of the negroes came past him with a box and struck him on the elbow. 'I cussed the black-,' said Jack, 'and he answered me back. I never could stand sass from a nigger, and I picked up a lump of coal and threw it at him. He didn't give me any more talk. He died 40In St. Paul by the time we made the next landing, and you bet I just lighted out in the dark. They were after me, but it was more than a month before they took me. So I got eighteen months' hard labour for manslaughter. I thought of escaping, but couldn't see a chance, and had been there nine months when another chap escaped. I was just mad to think that one man had the grit in him to skip, while I lay in the thundering hole still, but when it came out how he tried, I didn't care for that way. You see his partner four days after told how it was. He had crawled down a drain. The warder got to hear of it and of course off he goes to the governor. The governor just said, " If he went that way, he's in there yet." For you see there was a grating or bars across the drain 120 feet down it. Down they goes to see it, and sure enough there was a mighty bad smell came out there. 'T would pretty nigh knock you down. The governor he gets us all out and tells us this: "Now, boys," sez he, " I want No. 20 out of there, and if I break down to him it will take days and days, for it's all solid stone and concrete over where he is ; and, besides, it will cost a pile o' money. Now, if there's anybody here with a sentence of less than two years, I '11 see that he shall get half of the full term remitted, if he '11 go down that pipe and fetch him out." 4 Well, we all just looked at each other ; some seemed as if they'd speak, some turned red and pale. I thought my heart was a-bursting, I heard it go thump, thump. At first I couldn't speak too, but I thought if another chap speaks afore me I'd just kill him as I did the nigger. I holds up my hand, and when the governor 41The Western Avernus looked at me I says in a kind of queer voice, as seemed to belong to somebody else, " I'll do it, sir." The other chaps looked at me. Mebbe they thought I was as good as dead too. Some looked glad, as if I'd kind o' took the 'sponsibility off 'em. And how did I feel ? I guess I felt all right in less than a minute. You see I was tired of the stone walls, and I seemed to see the river outside, and feel the wind coming right through the solid jail, so I kind of freshened up. ' Well, the boss he dismissed the other men, and him and me and two or three of the warders goes down to the pipe. I can't tell you just what size it was. It was just big enough for me to squeeze into. There was a coil of rope, about as thick as my thumb, and after taking off all my clothes but a flannel shirt and drawers and socks, I coils a yard or two round my shoulders, catches hold with my hand, and got in, with the rope tied round my heels so they could drag me and him out 4 They told me I wasn't in more than twenty minutes. Dunno. Seems to me I served nine months in there; the stink was just terrible, and the farther I got in the worse it was. And breathing! Jehosaphat! I panted like a tired dog, and I thought I would burst. Some- times I seemed to kind o' swell up, and I couldn't move. And then dark as it was, I seemed to see fire and sparks, and my eyes were hot, and I thought they was a-dropping out. One time I think I got insensible, but I suppose I kept on crawlin', for the warder that paid out the rope sez I never stopped till I got him. Oh yes, I got him, after crawlin' through all the narrow drains in America, drawin miles of rope that got so heavy and 42In St. Paul hard to drag that every inch seemed the last I could go. Christ, I wouldn't do it for the world again ! Before I knew it I touched something cold and clammy with my burning hands, and I shrunk up as if I'd touched a jelly-fish swimming in muddy water. I got a hitch over his heels, and they tightened up the rope; as I told 'em to do if I stopped and gave it a pull. And I don't remember anything more till I found myself outside in the air, with something lying near me covered with a tarpaulin. The doctor was bending over me, washing the blood off my face, for draggin' me out insensible I got scratched in the face on the pipe-joints, you see. I lay in the hospital two days, and every time I went to sleep I dreamt I was in therewith No. 20. Then they let me out, and I came here. Good-night, partner.' There was also in the same tent a man named Gunn, a very fine-looking young fellow, from Maine, who had been three years in British Columbia, where, according to his own account, he had earned a great deal of money by making ' ties' or sleepers for the Canadian Pacific Railroad. This he had spent in seeing his friends. And he was now trying to make a 'stake,' or a sum sufficient to take him back there. We had a great deal of conversation about that country, and I was infected with the desire of seeing it. It used to seem to me in England that it was almost the farthest place from anywhere in the world, and this had some effect in forming my plans, as I was too adventurous to remain satisfied in such a well-known, near-at-hand spot as Minnesota. 43The Western Avernus I stayed at the works twelve days, during which time I worked with the pick and shovel, rigged derricks, spliced ropes, and mixed mortar for the bricklayers, as the water was to run through a brick tunnel instead of iron pipes, where the quicksand was. On one occasion the man I was working with irritated me, and I went over to Weed and asked him to give me my 'time'—i.e. to make up what time I had worked there in order that I might get my money. He said,' Oh, nonsense; what's the matter with you ? I think you 're a little bad-tempered this morning. I don't want you to go away, so go back to work.' I went back and stayed four more days, but so anxious was I to get away from such detestable work and companions that I made all the overtime that I could. At last I worked one day ten hours in the ditch, went to supper at six, at seven came back, and with a little German for partner, pumped all night till six in the morning, then had breakfast, slept two and a half hours, worked from 9.30 till six in the evening, and after supper again went out pumping till midnight. At a quarter to twelve I lay down on a pile of loose bricks, as we were pumping turn and turn about, and fell asleep. At midnight two others came to relieve us, and it was with difficulty they woke me up. Next morning I got what money was coming to me and went into town. Ray would not come, so I shook hands with him, bidding him farewell. I now had a new partner, who was not so much to my mind as Ray, and of entirely different character. Pat M'Cormick was an American Irishman who had lived 44V *'*! ON THE CANADIAN PACIFIC. [tofitcep. 45.In St. Paul mostly in Michigan and Wisconsin, working in the pine-woods and 4 driving' on the rivers. This driving is taking the logs, which are sledded to the rivers from where they are cut, down into the lakes, and is a hazardous and laborious employment. The drivers are wet for weeks together, and mostly up to their middles in icy water; they stand on the logs going down rapids which would destroy a boat, they ease them over the shoals, and break 4jams' that occur when some logs get caught and those floating behind them are stopped by them. Pat was a great drinker, which unfortunately I did not find out till too late, and besides, utterly reckless, though good-tempered to an extreme when sober. We walked into town, creating some little amuse- ment in the more respectable streets by our appearance. I had still my big-brimmed Texas hat on me, which at the camp had earned me the title of 'Texas,' under which sobriquet I went for many months, as it was passed on from one acquaintance of mine to another. Our boots were long knee-boots, and of course un- cleaned, and our blankets looked as if we had just come off the tramp. We walked round a little, and presently came to an employment office. Outside was a large notice : CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILROAD In British Columbia and the Rocky Mountains iooo Labourers wanted at good wages. 100 Tie-makers wanted by the day, or by the piece. Steady work guaranteed for two years. 45The Western Avernus Perhaps, if I had not spoken with Gunn at the camp, I might have passed this by, but his eulogistic account of British Columbia had made me rather anxious to go there. Besides, the natural tendency of every one seems to be to go west in America. In Australia I had found it impossible to avoid getting farther and farther into the heart of the country, and it is possible that, if I had not made at last a deter- mined effort to get back to Melbourne, I should in time have come out at the Gulf of Carpentaria. Here I had to go west, under the direction of destiny, epitomised in Horace Greely's ' Go west, young man, and grow up with the country.' We went in, and found that the fee required was 8 J dols., or about 35 s., for which we were to be carried 1600 miles through Canada to the Rocky Mountains. As M'Cormick had insufficient money, I did for him what Ray Kern had done for me in Chicago—paid the extra amount, and, having bought provisions with the balance of our money, we went off to spend the day as best we could, for we were not to start till the following morning. That night we crossed the river, and finding a pile of hay in front of an unfinished house we crawled into it and slept very well there. Next morning we found ourselves on our way with about one hundred companions, some of whom were in various stages of intoxication, while others were in the deepest dumps consequent on such a state. 46CHAPTER V to manitoba and the rockies It was the morning of August 7th that I left St. Paul. With our last money, as I said, we had bought pro- visions, which consisted of a couple of loaves, some cheese, and a long sausage, with a few onions and two or three green peppers. After buying this I had twenty- five cents left. All the 7th was consumed in running north from St. Paul to the Canadian line, which from the Lake of the Woods to the Gulf of Georgia follows the forty- ninth parallel of latitude. After getting clear of the Minnesota forests we ran into the Red River Valley, which to the eye seems a perfectly level plain, green and grassy, but absolutely treeless. At nightfall we were at Glyndon, a few miles from the Dakota line and Fargo. At midnight we passed the Dominion line at St. Vincent and were in Manitoba, through the whole extent of which the same character of the country prevails as in Northern Minnesota. We reached Winnipeg that morning, and I devoted an hour to seeing what I could of the town, which seemed to me to be an entirely execrable, flourishing and detestable business town, flat and ugly and new. The climate is said to be two months black flies, two 47The Western Avernus months dust, and the remainder of the year mud and snow. The temperature in winter goes down some- times to sixty degrees below zero, which the inhabi- tants will often tell you is not disagreeable; 4 if you are well wrapped up, as the Polar bear said when he practised his skating,' I thought. My partner, M'Cormick, came to me a few minutes before the train started and asked if I had any money. 4 What for?' said I. Pat was ready with his answer. s If you have, it won't be any good after leaving here, and I want some whisky.' ' Well, Mac, if I give it you, you '11 get drunk.' ' Drunk! I never was drunk in my life. Come, Texas, you may as well. What's the good of money if you don't spend it ?' 4 If I do,' I answered, 4 you '11 repent it before long, you bet your life; and as to your never being drunk, why, you're drunk now.' And so he was, for some of the others had been passing the bottle round freely. But it wasn't any use trying to put him off, so, for the sake of peace and quietness, I let him have the last twenty-five cents I had, and he got a small flask of whisky. As I refused to drink any he drank most of it himself, with the result that he began quarrelling with one of a bridge-gang who boarded the train at Winnipeg. The altercation would have been amusing if Mac hadn't kept on appealing to me, trying to drag me into his troubles. He called the bridgeman a very opprobrious name, and for a moment there was great danger of a 48Eg fesis* A TRESTLE BRIDGE ON THE C. P. R [to face p. 49.To Manitoba and the Rockies 4 rough house' out* of-hand. Mac wanted him to get off the train when it stopped to have it out, but the other man, though not very peaceable by any means, was not so drunk as my partner, and had sense enough not to get left on the prairie for the sake of a fight. So they sat opposite each other wrangling for hours, while I expected their coming to blows every moment. Presently Mac came over to me. ' Texas, give me your six-shooter/ 41 haven't got one.' 'Oh yes, you have ; I know it's in your blankets. I want it.' 'Well, Mac,' I said, getting a little mad, 'in the blankets or not, you won't get it.' Mac went off, muttering that I was a pretty partner not to help him. Presently the bridgeman came over and sat down by my side. He began with drunken courtesy: 'Sir, I thank you for not giving *him your gun. Perhaps you saved my life.' Then getting ferocious : 'Not that I'm scared of him.' Then a short silence, and glaring fiercely at me: 'Nor of you either. I've seen cow-boys, bigger men than you, and with bigger hats too, but they didn't tire me. No, they didn't tire me any.' ' That's good, pard,' said I; ' don't get tired on my account. I'm a quiet man, and don't often kill any- body.' He looked at me for a while, muttering, and got up to go, saying, 'Oh no, he can't scare this chicken, bet your life.' D 49The Western Avernus A great many kept taking me for a regular cow-boy who had got out of his latitude, especially as Mac would always call me Texas. And to illustrate the absurd ideas so prevalent about the cow-boy, I may mention that when we were about to approach Moose Jaw, in the North-west Provinces, which are Prohibition Territories where whisky is forbidden, I went into the next car to ours for a drink of water. There was a little boy, about ten years old, there with his father and mother, and it is evident he had heard them speaking about it being forbidden to introduce spirits into Assiniboia and Alberta. So after he had taken a furtive and somewhat awe-stricken look at my hat, which, I am bound to say, was of extremely formidable brim, with the leather gear on it so much affected by Southern cow-boys, he turned to his father, saying, ' Pa, if the police knew a cow-boy had whisky, do you think they would search him V Of course the little fellow thought the hat a sure sign of a desperate character, whose belt was certainly full of six-shooters and bowie- knives, and whose mind ran on murder and scalping. At Moose Jaw, where we remained for some few minutes, there were a number of Cree Indians, bucks and squaws, some of whom came begging to us. These were the reddest, most bronzy Indians I ever saw. They used, I believe, to be constantly at war with the Blackfeet, who live nearer the Rockies. I paid but very little attention to the scenery as we passed through the North-west Provinces, though it is not so wearisome as the Manitoban dead-levels, on account of the prairie being somewhat rolling, with 50To Manitoba and the Rockies numerous lakes upon it, the haunt of flocks of wild- fowl. But the country is uninhabited. It seems to me that we passed over nearly 600 miles of plain without seeing a town or any habitation save a few small houses of the section gangs. Of the millions of buffaloes that used to be on these prairies there are no signs save bones to be seen. In the United States they have about 300 head in the Yellowstone Park, and it is said there are a few on the Llano Estacado, or Staked Plain, in Texas and New Mexico. Some exist, too, in Northern Montana and Southern British Columbia, in the most inaccessible ranges, for the process of hunting selection has destroyed all on the prairie and given rise to a mountain variety. I confess, for my own part, that I have never seen one wild in all my wanderings. At Gleichen we were told we could see the Rockies, and I was so eager to get beyond the vile monotony of the prairie that I had my head out of the window all the while for hours before we got there. And I and Mac were now rather in straits. Our food-supply gave out after two days, and this was the middle of the third. I had foolishly given a meal to a man who had nothing with him at all, and we were now suffering ourselves, staying our increasing appetites with tobacco. It does not, I imagine, predispose one to revel in heroic scenery for one's baser mechanism to go in pain and hollowness; but perhaps I had arrived at a stage of ascetic ecstasy, for I hardly thought of such needs the whole of that day, and was content in hunger until night blinded my vision and brought my soaring spirit back to its more material casing. 5iThe Western Avernus At Gleichen I could just discern the first faint line of the far Rocky Mountains, hung like a bodiless cloud in the air over the level plain. As we ran farther west it grew by slow gradations more and more distinct, until at last the sharp, fine, jagged outline stood out clear against the blue. Yet underneath that line was nothing, not even the ghost of the huge solidity of mountain walls. It was still thin, impalpable as faint motionless smoke, yet by the steadfastness of peak and pinnacle a recognised awful and threatening barrier. We came to Calgary, a flourishing and well-known town. Here numerous Blackfeet had their teepees, or wigwams. I shook hands with two of this tribe, the most noble of the Indians. Two tall old men they were, one with smooth, tight skin and glittering eyes, calm, steadfast, and majestic ; the other cut and carved by a million wrinkles, but strong and upright, with a kindly smile. Ye two of the Indians who pass away, I salute you ! Vos morituros saluto! Before Calgary we had crossed the Bow River, swift and blue, and heavenly and crystal, born of the moun- tains and fresh from snowfield and glacier. As we left the town we ran on the right bank, and being now among the first of the lower hills which buttress up the mountains from the plain, we went more slowly up grade, looking down into the stream far below. The sun was shining, the air clear and warm, the flowers blooming on every earthy spot, and the grass yet green. In a few hours we ran up to the real entrance of the Bow Pass. Tired of straining my neck out of window, I left the passenger-car and climbed upon one of the 52To Manitoba and the Rockies freight-cars in front, and, spite of choking smoke, cinder and ash, I kept my place till we ran into the heart of the mountains and night as well, for I wished to be alone with the hills. It was the first time in my life that I had seen mountains. I had been in Cumberland, it is true, and seen Skiddaw; I had climbed Cader Idris, and had lain there for hours, watching the vast stretch of sea and river and mountain; I had been on the Devon hills and on Derbyshire's peak. But these are not mountains of snow and fire perpetual. They are, it may be, haunted with ancient legend, but their newer garments of story and fable have clothed their primaeval naked- ness. We love them, but have no awe of them. They have no divinity. But the untouched virgin peaks of snow, the rocky pinnacles where eagles sun themselves in swift and icy air, the dim and scented pine-woods, the haunt of bears, the gorges of glaciers, and the birthplace of rivers, these are sacred. We are thousands of feet above the plain. Look back, and look your last on the vast and hazy prairie beneath you! In a moment you shall have passed the barrier and be among the hills, you shall be within the labyrinth and maze. Here is a vast gorge, now broad with sloping bastions of opposing fortresses on either hand, now narrow with steepest walls and impending rocks threatening the calm lakes that catch their shadows and receive their reflections. Even as you look do they not nod with possible thunderous ava- lanche, or is it the play only of shadow from opposite peak and pinnacle? How these are cut and scarped to 53The Western Avernus all conceivable fantasy of art and inconceivable majesty of nature, how they are castled and upheld with arch and bridge and flying buttress! This is the aisle of the Great Cathedral of the Gods ; this is the cave of /Eolus, the home of the hurricane; this is the lofty spot most beloved by the sunlight, for here come the first of the day beams, and here they linger last on rosy snow covering the rock whose massy base lies in the under shadow. I was in a land of phantasm, and the memory remains with me as a broken dream of wonder. As I write I catch from that past day shifting pictures, and, half seen, one dissolves into the next, to give way in turn in the kaleidoscope to some other symbol of the seen. For memories of such a pageant as a man sees only once in a lifetime are but as conventional signs and symbols for the painting of the unpaintable, of the foam and thunder of the stormy seas, of the golden sunset, of the fleece of floating cloud. So we ran on into the night and I slept, with eyes and imagination jaded, at the end of our journey on the western slope of the Great Divide of the Continent, where the waters flow towards the set of sun. It is almost as painful to me as I write to come back again to the more solid facts of my journey as it was to be hungry. The troubles we pass through vanish from our memories and the pleasures remain, as the gold is caught in the sluice-box while the earth and mud run out in turbid rush of water. Now I love to think only of the beauty I saw, and the pain drops away from me as I dream my toils over again. But the pain was real then. 54To Manitoba and the Rockies On the morning when we woke in the Rockies we found ourselves at the end of the track. We had come nearly as far as the rails were laid, and quite as far as the passenger-cars were allowed to run. Round me I saw the primaeval forest torn down, cut and hewed and hacked, pine and cedar and hemlock. Here and there lay piles of ties, and near them, closely stacked, thousands of rails. The brute power of man's organised civilisation had fought with Nature and had for the time vanquished her. Here lay the trophies of the battle. The morning was clear and glorious, the air chill and keen, and through it one could see with marvellous distinctness the farthest peaks and the slender pines cresting the shoulders of the hills 3000 feet above us. Before us stood the visible iron symbol of Power Triumphant—the American locomotive. She was ready to run a train of cars with stores of all kinds ten miles farther on, and now her whistle screamed. Echo after echo rang from the hills as the sound was thrown from one to the other, from side to side in the close valley, until it died like the horns of Elfland. We were to go with her, and all clambered in. Some sat on the top, some got in empty cars, with the side doors open. I was in one with about twenty others. I sat down by the door, opened my blankets and put them round me, for the cold grew more intense as we moved through the air, and watched the panorama. By this time I was absolutely starving, as it was now the third day since I had had a really satisfactory meal, and from Calgary to the Summit Mac and I had eaten nothing. So we were glad when our train stopped and 55The Western Avernus let us alight. We were received by a man who acted as a sort of agent for the company. He got us in group and read over the list of names furnished him by the conductor of the train, to which about a hundred answered. He then told us we were to go much farther down the pass, that we should have to walk about forty miles, and that we could get breakfast where we then were for twenty-five cents. It was about time to speak, and, as nobody else did, although I well knew there were dozens with no money in the crowd, I stepped up and wanted to know what those were to do who had no money, adding that I and my partner were 4 dead broke.' And after this open confession of mine the rest opened their mouths too, until at last it appeared that the moneyed members of the gang were in a very small minority. Our friend agreed that we couldn't be expected to go without food, and we had our meals on the understanding that the cost was to be deducted from our first pay. We had breakfast and set out on our forty miles tramp down the Kicking Horse Pass. 56THE CHANCELLOR, LEANCHOIL. [to face p. 57.CHAPTER VI THE KICKING HORSE PASS I HAVE said there were about a hundred of us, and soon we were all strung out in a long line, each man carrying blankets and a valise, and some of us both. I had had in earlier days much experience in travelling, and took care not to overburden myself, as so many of the others did, who were on their first tramp; for the ease with which it was made possible to leave the crowded cities of the East, combined with the hard times, had brought a miscellaneous throng of men to British Columbia, many of whom had never worked in the open air, but only in stores and shops, whilst there were many who had never worked at all. It was quite pitiful to see some little fellow, hardly more than a boy, who had hitherto had his lines cast in pleasant places, bearing the burden of two valises or portmanteaus, doubtless filled with good store of clothes made by his mother and sisters, while the sweat rolled off him as he tramped along bent nearly double. Perhaps next to him there would be some huge, raw-boned labourer whose belongings were tied up in a red handkerchief and suspended to a stick. I had a light pair of blankets and a small valise, which Mac carried for me, as he had nothing of his own. My blankets I made up into a loop 57The Western Avernus through which I put my head, letting the upper part rest on my left shoulder, the lower part fitting just above my hips on the right side. This is by far the most comfortable and easy way of carrying them, save in very hot weather. We tramped along, Mac and I, cheerfully enough, very nearly at the tail of the whole gang, as we were in no hurry, and were yet somewhat weak. Presently Mac picked up with another companion, leaving me free to look about me without answering his irresponsible chatter or applauding his adventures in Wisconsin, where it appears he had very nearly killed some one for nothing at all while he was drunk, as usual when not working. I am fain to confess that my memories of the next two days are so confused that, whether Tunnel Moun- tains came before the Kicking Horse Lake or whether it didn't, whether we crossed one, two, or three rivers before we got to Porcupine Creek, whether it was one mountain fire we saw, or two or more, I can hardly say with any certainty. All was so new and wonderful to me that one thing drove the other out of my head, and when I think it was so while I was walking slowly, I am lost in astonishment to see so many fluently describe mountain passes they have traversed in the train. I am afraid the guide-books must be a great aid to them. Tunnel Mountain was more like a gigantic cliff than a mountain. One could see the vast rock run up perpendicularly till it passed above the lower clouds. High from where I stood, perhaps 3000 feet above me, 58The Kicking Horse Pass was a thin white line, which I was told was a glacier 300 feet thick. A thousand feet above us, small and hard to be distinguished against the grey-brown rock, were men working with ropes round them at a vein of silver ore. How they had gained such a position I cannot think, and how they maintained it, working with chisel and mallet in the keen air and frost of that elevation, is a greater puzzle. They must have looked down and seen us crawling on the ground like ants. The roar of the river, though at places it almost deafened us, must have been like a bee's murmur, and when the crash of a big blast hurled the rocks into the stream the report would come to them as a distant smothered roar. The short tunnel ran through the outside of this cliff, and, just beyond, a roaring tributary of the Kicking Horse River made a bridge necessary. This was not finished then, but it had to be crossed, for there was no other way. It was sufficiently perilous. Along the cross-pieces of the bridge lay the stringers, pieces of timber 8 inches by 12 inches by 16 feet; these were set on their 8-inch side, two together on each side of the bridge, each couple at varying distances, sometimes close together and sometimes running so far apart one could scarcely straddle them. And these were not bolted down, but were loose and trembling. This was the path across! Had one fallen, nothing could save him, especially if heavily burdened, for there were but the large lower timbers to catch hold of, and underneath, fifty feet below, sharp rocks and a roaring stream of water. 59The Western Avernus At one place we came to a river or large creek running over a flat with a very swift current, but still not boisterously or with any huge rocks in it. As the road ran into it on one side and emerged on the other, we could see it was fordable. But still no one seemed to like the prospect of wading through a stream whose current might be strong enough to carry a man off his legs and the water of which was icy cold. One by one the stragglers came up, until nearly our full crowd was congregated on the river bank. We looked for some wagons to come by, but could see none. At last, after trying in vain to persuade some of the others to venture in, I took off my trousers, boots, and socks, and with these hung round my neck I waded into the water. It was bitterly cold, especially as it was now a warm day with pleasant air and sun, and the stream washed against me so that I had to lean up against the current. The others stood watching me, giving me an occasional word of encouragement or a yell of delight at my strange appearance. After a considerable struggle I emerged on the farther bank in a red glow. But my luck in another way was bad. Just as I got out a wagon came round the corner to meet me, and in it was a woman—about the only one we had seen since we had left the summit or the end of the track. She burst into laughter at the ridiculous cranelike figure I cut, standing with my garments and long boots hung about me. I turned and sat down in the grass and made myself decent as soon as possible. In the meantime, much to my disgust, some wagons came up and carried the other men across. I had all my trouble for nothing, and my 60The Kicking Horse Pass glorious example was lost on the crowd. After going another couple of hundred yards we came again to a wide stream, and this time I was myself carried over. And then we had a long tramp along the verge of a big mountain fire, which was crackling and smouldering from the banks of the river to the mountain tops. At nightfall, or rather just before it, we came to the Porcupine Creek, another furious tributary of the main river, and here we had supper at one of the railroad camps. Afterwards we set about lighting fires for our camping-ground, for we had but the shelter of the pines that night. We dragged brush and sticks together, and borrowing some axes from the camp we cut up some of the trees that had been thrown down by the wind in the winter or felled by the men who made ties. Four fires soon lighted up our forest, and blue and purple flames shot up, singeing the pines and sending up sparks into the blackness overhead, where their branches touched each other a hundred feet above. I think those fires of mountain wood upon the mountain always burn with far more beautiful colours than those on plains and lowlands, for here only, in the heart of the fire, can one see the fiery red, and over are blue and purple interlacings and shootings of purest colour stand- ing out against the dark background of balsam and hemlock, while the curling smoke runs from violet to grey and shadow. For an hour some of us flitted about in the darkness gathering in the firewood, and the rest lay down and smoked, or propped themselves quietly against the tree trunks, dreaming over the fire. It promised to be a 6lThe Western Aver n us chilly night. The crescent moon hung over a peak of snow, faint and new ; but the stars were jubilant and strong, like glittering sword-points in the deep trans- parent sky. Already behind the trees, where the shadows from the fires threw umbra and penumbra on the grass, were varying degrees of silvery frost, glittering brightly on the darkest umbral cone in the moonglow, and in the lighter shadow only chilling and stiffening the slender, infrequent grasses and the matted bundles of sharp pine needles. Close at hand, on the border of the pines, the creek ran over a bed of rounded boulders, here and there broken by a higher rock that threw a jet of foam in air. It ran rapidly and hurriedly by, with its shriller song all but overpowered in the deep strong bass of the distant river of roaring cataract. Beyond the creek, in its own shadow, for the moon's peak of silver snow showed above the barrier, was the sombre forest, at first a wall of solid blackness but breaking gradually with prolonged sight into lighter brush and black trunks below, with grey shadows and hollows over them, and above again lighter and lighter shades which ran to slender twigs against the blue, with here and there one star glittering through an oriel window of branches. I woke at midnight and found it sharp frost The fires had burnt to embers. Round about me in every direction lay my companions sleeping, save one or two unfortunates without blankets, who kept their backs against the trunks of the pines and their heads and arms upon their knees, crouching in a heap to retain what heat they could in them, as they looked into the fires 62MOUNT BURGESS, EMERALD LAKE. [to face p. 62.The Kicking Horse Pass and wished for day, I walked out of the shadows of the forest to the banks of the creek. The moon was sunk deep below the sloping shoulders of her peak, and her pale fires had died from the snow and ice. The stars glittered more radiantly in a darker blue, and pine-wood and mountain shadow melted into one upon the distant slopes. Looking down the valley was vague darkness, and when I walked a few yards from the rushing creek I could hear plainly the wavering roar of the river palpitating musically through the calm cold air. Save that, there was no sound ; everything was sleeping ; and when I turned away from the look of the red eyes of fire that gleamed through the brush from our camping- ground, I might fancy myself alone, with the voiceless spirit of the mountains brooding over me, one with the night. But the romance of the time fell from me as I felt the air more and more chilly, and I went to sleep again with my commonplace partner Mac, whose ideal was, I doubt not, a whisky bottle and nothing to do. Next day another twenty miles through the great gap torn in the forests for the right of way of the railroad. The trees were hewed down, sawed and hacked in pieces, and piled on either side, dragged by horses or cattle. Cedar, white and red, fragrant balsam, dark hemlock, the sheltering spruce—all the, pride of the forest—went down before axe and saw for man's triumph. Grey and red squirrels came peeping to see what was being done to their troubled homes, and the striped chipmunks ran and darted here and there quicker than birds. We left the broad track and took the road, 63The Western Avernus narrow and dark. Here one wagon could travel, but another could not pass it. It was a way hewn out of the primaeval forest; it was full of stumps and holes, with pools of water here and there, and sloughs of mud enough to engulf a horse. Ruts were a foot or two deep. When a wagon met me I would climb on a log or squeeze into the brush while it went plunging by, threatening to drop to pieces with every shock, creaking and complaining as for want of oil. Yet the loads were not heavy, and the horses, for the most part, good and well cared for. On this ' toat' or freight-road the wagons went east during one part of the day and west during the other. At noon on this second day we came to the 4 Island,' a kind of flat just above the river, and far below where the track ran. The work here was of a severe character, as they made a ' fill' or embankment eighty feet high, I should think, or possibly much more. We scrambled down the end of this and went to get dinner at the camp on the Island. Up to this time they had always given us our meals in the tents with knives and forks and plates, but here the cooks brought out a huge can of soup, some potatoes, great lumps of boijed beef, and a pile of plates and a bucket of knives and forks. A chorus of growls rose up on all sides. A cry was raised for our friend the agent, who came out to view the scene. Some of us pointed out that, if we were to pay for our meals, we expected to be treated in a reasonable manner, and not like hogs. Some of the 'boys' said it was a regular 'hand out,' and that we looked like a crowd of old ' bummers.' 64The Kicking Horse Pass 4 Bummers ' is American for beggars, and a ' hand out' is a portion of food handed out to a bummer or a tramp at the door when he is not asked inside. The agent looked as if he would like to say it was good enough for us, but the crowd was too big, and too ugly in temper, to play tricks with, and he temporised, calming us down ; and finally, finding that we were not to be appeased, said we need not pay for it, if we ate it or not. We were hungry, however, and, finding it impossible to get a spread, we had to make the best of it; and soon all of us were fighting for knives and plates and spoons and soup. We sat round in groups, growling and eating like a lot of bears. After dinner we started out again, passing a railroad camp every half-mile or so ; and now we began to leave at each place some of our number, whenever any of the contractors were in need of more men. Mac and I were told with some others to stay at Ross and M'Dermott's camps ; but When we got there, for some reason or another we did not like the look of the place, and concluded that we would take things into our own hands and go farther on. After leaving this camp we came to Robinson and Early's, and next to the large camp at Corey's, where they were making a tunnel through blue clay. This was called the Mud Tunnel. We passed on a little farther, and came to a sub- contractor's. At this point we met the agent, who had gone ahead of us on horseback. He reined up and said : ' Didn't I tell you fellows to stay at Ross and M'Dermott's ?' i Yes,' answered Mac. e 65The Western Avernus ' Well, why didn't you ?' 4 Oh, we didn't care about that place.' 4 What do you want then ? If you go on any farther I can't give you any more meals.' I myself did not care about going any farther, and said so. 4 Then you can work at Corey's if you like.' I turned to Mac and said,' Come, Mac, what's the good of fooling ; come with me.' i No back tracks, Texas. I '11 stay here.' It was settled finally that he should stay and work with the sub-contractor, and I went back to Corey's with the agent. When I got there it was dark, and supper was over. I had a little to eat, and slept that night in one of the dining-tents, under the table, while above me slept a New Brunswicker named Scott, who was to be my greatest friend hereafter both in British Columbia and California. He has often told me since that my last words that night were: ' I go to sleep to-night lulled to slumber by the music of the Kicking Horse.' 66THE KICKING HORSE RIVER. [to face p. 67.CHAPTER VII THE RAILROAD CAMPS OUR camp was right on the banks of the river, which ran in a sharp curve round the base of the hill through which the tunnel was being cut. The Kicking Horse was furious as usual there, rushing at the rocks which impeded its course and breaking about them in foam, or leaping with a swing and a dive over the lower and more rounded boulders. Beyond it, on the other bank, was a thick wall of pine and fir, and overhead the vast slope of mountain. Our side was decorated with a medley of various-shaped tents, round and square and oblong, so that it was difficult at night for a stranger to avoid tripping himself up with the pegs and ropes, or half strangling himself with the stays carried from the ridge-poles to the trees growing about all the encamp- ment. Besides the tents there were two large log-huts or shanties, built out of half-squared timbers with the bark only partly removed, and up a little slope, on the other side of the road which ran through the camp, stood a little log-house and kitchen for the accommo- dation of some of the ' bosses' and the head contractors. Beyond this the hill ran up gradually into a maze of fallen timber, with one little melancholy cleared space, where a simple and rude grave held the body of an 67The Western Avernus unknown and friendless man who had been killed some short time before i came. And still farther on was the summit of the low hill under which the tunnel was to be, and above again mountain piled on mountain. There must have been a hundred or more men employed at this work, which was of a hazardous and dangerous character. The hill was being attacked on both sides at once, and at the west end, down stream, the tunnel was advanced to some distance, but at the east end, though there, too, the hole had been run into the hill, the work was to do over again, owing to the tunnel having 4 caved' in, in spite of the huge timbers. The hill was composed of gravel on the top, then a thick stratum of extremely tenacious blue clay, and beneath that a bed of solid concrete which required blasting. My new friend Scott and i went to work at the east end with a large number of others. We had to remove the immense mass of clay and gravel which had come down when the ' cave' had occurred, and to cut back into the hill some distance until it appeared solid enough for the new tunnel to be commenced. As the cut into the hill was now very deep, we worked on three 'benches.' The lowest and farthest out from the crest of the hill attacked the clay at the bottom; the next, twenty or thirty feet above us, cut into the loose gravel, taking it in barrows to ^ach side; and the highest gang above that again wheeled away the sand at the top and cleared out the stumps as they came to them. The highest gang worked in comparative safety ; the next in some peril, as they had to look out for the rocks that might fall in their own bench and for those 68The Railroad Camps from the upper bench as well; but the lowest gang were in danger of their lives all the time, as from both benches above them came continually what rocks escaped the vigilance of those working over their heads. I worked here myself, and without any exaggeration I can say I never felt safe, for every minute or so would come the cry, 4 Look out below!' or 4 Stand from under!' and a heavy stone or rock would come thundering down the slope right among us. When I had been working three days, a rock about a foot through, weighing perhaps 80 lb., rolled over without any one crying out till very late. It came down and seemed to be about to drop right where I stood, so I made a prodigious jump on the instant, without having time to see where I was going, and struck my right knee under the cap on the end of a wheelbarrow handle just as the stone buried itself in the ground where I had been standing. The pain was so intense that I had to sit down for ten minutes or more, and when I got up I found I could scarcely walk, as the swelling was so great. It was with difficulty I got to the camp, and for five days I was unable to work. There was a doctor, paid I suppose by the company, who came along on horseback at intervals, and he gave me some liniment and told me to rest. During these days I used to eat and sleep and read what I could get, which was very little, so I was thrown back on my old friend Sartor Resartus. Sometimes another man who was too ill to work would come and talk with me, and at times I would go to the banks of the river and watch the stream as it ran past in such a fury and haste to 69The Western Avernus get to the Columbia. I was not now lodged in the tent, but in a curious kind of gipsy arrangement which had been built by another man before I came. It was made of hooped sticks set in the ground, and over these were spread pieces of old canvas and a big uncured bullock hide, which indeed served admirably to keep out the rain, but stank most abominably when it was hot. Here I used to lie, as it did not permit one to stand or indeed to do much more than crawl into it, and look out, having good vantage-ground to view both the river and the road. At night I would make a fire, and six or a dozen men would come round and spin yarns, dry their clothes, and rake out embers for their pipes. After a few days I felt well enough to make an attempt at work, but was really unfit for it, and so worked but a part of a day at a time till I felt all right. We were paid two dollars and a quarter for ten hours, and had to pay five dollars a week for board. They did not make us pay for the lodging, as may be imagined. On the Sunday after I felt quite well, I and a young Englishman, Tom, who shared my hide tent, went for a climb. We walked a mile up the river, and turned off the road up a creek which ran directly from between two lofty peaks, both of which were above the line of perpetual snow. We walked for a while on the side of the creek, stumbling among fallen timber and brush, until at last it was such a thicket on both sides that it became impossible to advance a step, and we took to the water, stumbling on the slippery stones, sometimes getting into holes up to our knees. It was a steep 70The Railroad Camps climb. After making our way up about a thousand feet we came to an impossible-looking place. The creek had cut deeply into a slatey bed, and the sides were so steep and slippery that our first attempts were unsuccessful. We tried to go round, but the tangle of brush was so dense that it would have taken an hour's work with the axe. Back we went to the foot of the little fall, and by scrambling like cats we got up, wondering how we were ever to get down. We still went on, finding it grow steeper and steeper, until at last it was almost like climbing up a cascade. I was in a profuse perspiration, and was kept damp by the spray. At last we came near to the top of the timber-line, where the creek branched into three. On our left hand, seen through the few trees, rose the loftiest peak, cut into pinnacles and deep gorges, and in these lay the glaciers, and on the rocky slopes was a thin covering of new snow that had been rain in the valley beneath us. Right from the highest peak to our feet ran a tre- mendous slope of crumbling fragments of the mountain, a 4 rock slide' 2000 feet high, while on each side was a fringe of lessening pines and scrub that failed *at last from the bare rock, which left no foothold. In front was another peak, and on the left another, both bare save for glaciers, and glittering in the sun. We turned and went back. My companion ran much faster than I, for I was afraid of hurting my knee, and found it more tender descending than ascending. So in a few moments I was left alone, as he would not wait. When I got to the difficult place I was puzzled. Had I been quite well I could have managed it, but to 71The Western Avernus make anything of a jump was impossible, and I could not get down without jumping. 1 should have been in a nice position if I had sprained my knee. I might have been eaten by bears before Tom would have thought of getting any one to look for me. So I sat down and considered. There was lying in the middle of the verge of the fall a pine, from which branch and bark had long been stripped. Its lower extremity was about sixty feet away beyond the rocky pool where the water fell. The whole trunk was slimy and slippery with green water moss, as the spray kept it always wet. At first I did not think it possible to go down it, but the more I looked at the way I had come up the more feasible the tree seemed, until at last I concluded I must try it, hit or miss. I waded into the water, straddled my tree, and backed over the edge of the fall. The spray flew up and nearly blinded me, and my slide was such a slippery one that it took all the grip in my legs to keep me from going down at breakneck speed. I put the brakes on with my hands too, and gradually crossed the boiling pool, until finally the trunk got too big for me to hold on to, and I slid the last ten or twenty feet with a rush that landed me on my back in the shallow water. I had cleaned off the weed on the tree, but I had to get a stick to scrape myself down with. The rest of the walk home was easy after that. Scott, whom I mentioned at the end of the last chapter, had meantime been discharged by one of the foremen, who considered he did 'riot do enough work. He went to work for Robinson and Early, who were near at hand. It was now nearly time for me to go. 72THE EASIEST WAY DOWN. [to face p. 72.The Railroad Camps On this my last day at Corey's I was working on the top bench with five or six others, who were some of the laziest men I ever saw. The foreman was not with us all the time, having to look after the men below, and when he turned his back, down would go a wheelbarrow and one would sit on it, while another would lie in the gravel. So, perhaps, only two or three would be doing anything. This day, however, as we were working right at the top of the slope, grubbing out stumps, it was impossible for all of them to hide at once. So they made up for this by doing as little as they could while pretending to do a great deal. I am not praising myself when I assert that I vi^as really doing more work at that time than any one of the others, yet I was the one picked out for censure by the same foreman who discharged Scott. I was angry at this, of course, and left work at 9.30, having worked a quarter of the day. This camp was not a very nice one to work at. For one thing, there were too many men, and it was so broken up with day and night shifts that one never knew where any one else was working, and scarcely where he himself would work next day. Then the accommodation was so bad* and the cooks so pressed that they found it impossible to give the men their 4 pie.' This piece of daily pastry is a source of wonderful content to many working men. Without it, let the other food be ever so good, he feels he is being de- frauded, and with it, though it be only of dried apple and sodden paste, he will put up with no potatoes and bad beef, or even none at times. However, just before I left, the camp was split in two and two sets of 73The Western Avernus cooks appointed, with the result that ours fairly gorged his men with pie. Instead of the usual solitary quarter, which one had to eye jealously or transfer at once to his own custody from the rusty tin plate, to keep some greedy man from getting two shares, whole pies were at the disposal of every one, and there was great gorging and contentment. On the whole, I was not sorry to leave; and that afternoon I walked to Robinson and Early's, where Scott was, and was told by Early I could come up at once and go to work in the morning. So I packed my blankets, and walked up that evening in the dark. This camp was divided into two parts by the ' grade' or embankment where the rails would be laid. On one side were the dinner and cook's tents, the store tent, where one could get clothes and tobacco, the bosses' tent, and a big composite log and canvas building with bunks in it. On the other side were four neat little log-huts. I walked along the ' dump' or grade till I came to a fire where four or five men were sitting, and went down and joined them. Scott was not there. I did not know any of these men, but, of course, in a country such as this was, that would be no obstacle to my joining in the conversation. I soon found out that I should have to sleep in the big tent with a crowd of Finns and Italians. They told me that the 4grub' was good, that the bosses were not bad, though they made their men work hard. The wages were the same as I had been getting at Corey's. I took my blankets and camped on a pile of balsam boughs in the lower bunks of the big tent. ' Bunk' is 74The Railroad Camps here but a euphemism for the ground, as bunk was divided from bunk by a six-inch log, with the bark and some of the smaller branches on, being nailed or tied against the uprights which supported the top tier. I made my bed in the dark and slept, covering my face over to keep the dust and dirt off that dropped through from the top bunk when the men in it gave a roll in their sleep. Next morning I went to work ' picking on a slope/ that is, smoothing off the sides of the hill above the grade, as one sees it done in England when going through a railroad cutting. Scott was working near the camp among the rocks, where blasting was going on. Surely the life I led for the next month was a strange one. I was working in the same glorious mountain scenery that had roused in me a fervour of artistic appreciation that had resulted in a curious state of forgetful ecstasy, blind and deaf to the actual around me. But now, while working, I became mechanical and base, the mountain opposite was painful, and I longed for a change of scene, an hour with the plain and prairie. Partly, no doubt, this change resulted from the strain put upon my imagination by the perpetual contemplation of the most magnificent scenery — a state of mind of which Ruskin speaks in the Modern Painters when writing of the psychological effects of the various aspects of Nature—and partly from the manual labour, in its physiological effect of robbing the brain of the blood that ran to the active and strained muscles of perpetual effort Perhaps it was also partly 75The Western Avernus owing to the mental analysis and introspection which irksome toil forced me to, when I chanced to work alone or in circumstances which compelled my com- panions to silence. Long suffering from bodily ail- ments in London had induced, as it were, a morbid melancholy of mind, which remained even when the troubles of indigestion and bile were partially removed by the keen mountain air, and the sense of unfitness for my surroundings threw me back, when alone, into the morbid introspective lines of thought that had been my pain and solace in the solitary times of indifferent companionship at home. I would repeat to myself as I worked snatches of our melancholy modern poetry that I knew so well. The indictment of life in the Lotus Eaters came before the Grand Jury of my passions and desires, and I found it a true bill. I smiled bitterly to myself to think of the gods, * where they smile in secret/ and as I laboured I sang softly: 4 Hateful is the dark blue sky, Vaulted o'er the dark blue sea ; Death is the end of life. Ah, why Should life all labour be ?' Yet, with the strange contradictions of man's nature, when I was with the others I was the merriest of all. There were some six or seven of us, English or American, who came together in one of the little log-huts, and we sang our songs and chatted and joked round the pine- wood fire that roared up the rude chimney, as if labour were but a dream, or, if real, a delight. There was Scott, little, with keen grey eyes, a reddish beard and moustache, light brown hair over a broad forehead that betokened untrained intellect, and a mouth which 76The Railroad Camps showed much possibility of emotion. He was not, in the ordinary sense of the term, educated, and was indeed ignorant in many ways, but he had that desire for knowledge which in so many goes further than compulsory culture towards the attainment of mental height. After him in my mind comes Davidson, a Canadian also, a bricklayer by trade, but by no means to be judged by the standard of an English artisan of that grade. He had read a great deal in a desultory way, and was a man of kindliness and keenness of thought, though without possibility of culture such as Scott possessed. Then comes Hank, a rude, rough block of a man, uneducated, powerful, with sensual lips and mouth and rough shock of hair. He played an execrable fiddle most execrably, but his love for it and tolerance and gentleness forced forgiveness from me, even when the tortured strings drove me outside. Another of our evening company was a pleasant Canadian, who also played on the violin, not so badly as Hank. He was somewhat melancholy, and I thought at times that some woman was at the bottom of his troubles. His name has slipped my memory, but I think it was Mitchell. There was also a German, Fritz, whom I shall speak of in the next chapter, as he was my companion in the journey towards the coast. We were a strange gathering at night-time, and not without elements of the picturesque, I fancy, in our strange interior of log-hut and its confused forms on blocks of wood before the fire, which burnt brightly and threw a glare on the darkness through the entrance, that did not boast a door, but only a rude portiere of 77The Western Aver n us sewed sacks. We sang at times strange melancholy- unknown ditties of love in the forests, songs of Michigan or Wisconsin, redolent of pine odour and sassafras, or German Liede, for we were more cosmopolitan than a crowd of Englishmen would be at home, and did not insist only on what we could understand. I myself often sang to them both English and German and Italian songs, and it seems strange to me now to think that those forests heard from me the strains of Mozart's 4 L'Addio/ sung doubtless out of time, as it was also out of place perhaps, and the vigorous tune of 4 La donna e mobile.' But even songs like these were appreciated, and often called for, with 4 Tom Bowling' or some other English sea-songs. Then we would tell each other stories or yarns, and I would repeat some of my travels in Australia for them, or explain how large London was, or tell those who had never seen the ocean stories of my own and my brother's voyages, or those of the great English sea-captains. Such evenings came to be a recognised institution, and if I felt melancholy or savage one or another of these men would come to the little tent I now had all to myself, and say they wanted me to settle for them some point in dispute. For now, by virtue of my education, which was apparent to them, they made me ' Arbiter elegantiarum/ umpire and referee as to pro- nunciation, and encyclopaedia, so that I was often hard put to it by a dozen different questions, which only a visit to a library could settle. I wrote for them a song which was very much admired as the culmination of genius. It was a song of the C. P. R., or Canadian 78The Railroad Camps Pacific Railroad, and all I remember is the chorus, which was— For some of us are bums, for whom work has no charms, And some of us are farmers, a-working for our farms, But all are jolly fellows, who come from near and far, To work up in the Rockies on the C. P. R. From which specimen the reader will not estimate my poetical powers so highly as the simple railroad men. Perhaps the most surprising incident to me during the month I worked at this camp was the unlooked-for appreciation of some lines which few ordinary educated people at home really like, through lack of finer insight It happened one Sunday afternoon that Scott, David- son, Hank, Mitchell, and I were in one of the 4 shacks,' or huts, and they were idly listening to me while I was inveighing against the injustice in life, its vanity and uselessness. Nobody but Scott was paying much attention, as I thought, and turning to him I repeated Rossetti's last sonnet in the House of Life, the * One Hope.' To my surprise Mitchell asked me to say it again, and then made me copy out the first quatrain: f When vain desire at last and vain regret Go hand in hand to death, and all is vain, What shall assuage the unforgotten pain, And teach the unforgetful to forget ?' Surely it was a strange enough thing for Rossetti to come to my memory in this beautiful desolation, but it was stranger still that his sorrow should find an echo in the heart of a poor labourer, to whom we so usually 79The Western Avernus deny the power of real suffering, or the spirit of apprecia- tion of subtle rhythms and obscurer imagery. Often after that I spoke to this man, feeling that to him had been given great power of suffering, or he could never have understood. I believe if the poets learn in suffering what they teach in song, that we also must suffer greatly before we can learn of them. Meanwhile, in the daytime there was the usual labour, such as drilling holes in the rock to blast it with powder, whose explosion sometimes threw the heavy stones a hundred yards into the torrent of the foaming river. We would dodge behind trees and get into all sheltered places till the shot was fired, then come out again and take away the debris, hammering the larger blocks to pieces and shovelling up the smaller into the carts. Then there were slopes to make smooth and round rocks and stones to be picked up from the borders of the Kicking Horse, to make a ' rip- rap' or stone wall at the bottom of the embankment, where the river would chafe it when swollen with melted snow. It was often laborious and wearisome, and I never looked at the scenery except, perhaps, when clouds gathered overhead, and rain-mist crawled along the ramparts of the hills, filling the valley, until a shower would come upon us suddenly and as suddenly depart; for then, when the mountain wind rolled up cloud and mist, the sun shone bright upon the hills above, dazzling our eyes with a sheet of new snow that had fallen on us below as rain. Or sometimes at evening, especially on Sunday, which in our camp was an idle day, I would walk up the grade to the turn of the river, and see, 80The Railroad Camps perhaps, the most exquisite picture that remains in my memory. At my feet ran the tumultuous current of the river, swinging quickly with a loud murmur to my left, covered with short crisp waves, with here and there a hurrying swirl and breaking foam that declared a hidden rock. It came towards me for three hundred yards, it may be, showing a swift declivity from the mass of argent foam as it turned the bend where stood a knoll of noble pines. Across the stream from where I sat were larch and pine on a spur shouldering rapidly from the river to the mass of the main mountain. Its side was cut away steeply by the wash of water, and showed bands of coloured clay, and here and there was a solitary tree marking its lofty line against the mass of the hill, emphasising by its sombre foliage the red and yellow ground against which it rose and from which it sprang. And in front was the mountain itself rising from a shadowy base, where the thick forest of green marked its foot against the foam of the rapid, to loftier height on height, whence the trees showed less and less, until they were at last but a faint fringe and sparse adornment of the line sharp against the sky, and higher still a peak of solitary snow, rosy in the sunlight that had left me in shadow for an hour. If I walked but half a mile up the road I came upon another beautiful sight, for there the valley pass was broader, and had a long, almost level space, beyond which was one of the queen peaks of the Rockies, whose presence dominated many miles of the valley. It was after one of these evenings spent alone with the mountains that I had a long talk with my com- f 81The Western Avernus panions as to what they proposed to do. Some intended staying on the railroad work until it was finished, and some thought of leaving it soon, and making their way into lower British Columbia over the intervening ranges of mountains. This had been my intention since leaving Corey's. It was quite impossible for me to stay at such irksome labour much longer, and I had tried to obtain what information I could as to the route, This was very sparse. There were vague reports as to the immense difficulties and dangers awaiting any one rash enough to attempt it, and had I been very timid I should have been scared into staying in the Rockies for the winter. This I hated to think of, as the snow- fall would be tremendous and the cold very severe at that elevation and latitude. There were four possible ways out. One was to go back through the North-west Provinces and Manitoba. This could not be thought of. For one thing, I hate going back at any time, and in America ' Forward' was always my motto. Another objection was that one would have in all probability to walk great part of a thousand miles to Winnipeg, as it was reported that the train men had very strict orders to let no one ' beat' his way on the trains, and of course I had insufficient money to pay my fare, even if I had desired to do it. There was another exit from the mountains which commended itself to my imagination if not to my prudence. That was to make a raft and go down the Columbia to Portland, Oregon, or rather to Kalama, W.T., first, and then up the Willammette to Portland. A German at Corey's had told me that this was feasible. He swore that the Columbia was 82The Railroad Camps ' smooth wie a looking-glass,' and that there was no danger at all. Others, however, told me of the great falls of the Columbia and the rapids, and asserted there were so many terrible gorges and canons and whirl- pools to be passed through that the river took a Dantean and Infernal colour in my mind. And, worst of all, it was utterly impossible to get a good map. So this was laid aside as impracticable. The next way was to go down to the Columbia and take the < trail' to Sand Point, on the Northern Pacific Railroad in Montana, a journey of 300 miles, which would take from fifteen to twenty days and require one to. pack a large quantity of food on his back to provide for all possible accidents and delays. The remaining route was to follow the railroad line. This would lead me to the Columbia, then over the Selkirk Range by Roger's Pass, and over the Columbia again. As far as I could gather we should then be in some kind of civilisation. But this, as will be seen, was far from the truth. The fact of the matter is that I could find no one who had been the journey, and the reports about it were so contradictory that in the Kicking Horse Pass it was impossible to find out how far it was across the Selkirk Range, whether it was 60 or 120 miles or even more. There was a halo of romance thrown over the whole place west of us, and when we passed in imagination the Columbia for the second time all beyond was as truly conjectural as El Dorado or Lyonesse. But this was the route I determined to take at the end of September, when I proposed leaving the camp. But my departure was hastened by the 83The Western Avernus following circumstance. I and some Finns and another Englishman had been set to work in a very wet and nasty place, from which we had to run the dirt in wheelbarrows over planks, and as the nature of the place necessitated our getting wet none of us liked it. About ten in the morning Robinson, one of the con- tractors, came down to take a look at us, and while standing on the bank spoke sharply to my English companion, who answered him back with no less sharp- ness. Next time he ran the barrow out it capsized. He laughed, which infuriated Robinson, who ordered him peremptorily to take his barrow out of the way. The young fellow said, * I don't have to, Mr. Robinson.' This made Robinson worse. He jumped down, grabbed hold of him, and, being a very powerful man, shook him to and fro as a terrier shakes a rat, at the same time threatening to strike him. This, however, he refrained from doing, and finally he ordered him to go to the camp and get his money. Of course this had nothing to do with me, but still I did not care to work for a man who had so little control over himself as the contractor showed, fearing that I might myself have a disturbance with him, which would end either in him or me being disabled; so when noon came I went and got my time made up, and sold the order, which would not be cashed for nearly a month, to Davidson, the bricklayer. I went then to Fritz, the German, and persuaded him to come with me. I should much have preferred Scott or any of the others, but none would leave the work for a while, though some of them had it in their minds to go farther west before the snow 84The Railroad Camps blockaded them in. So I rolled up my blankets and found a nice tin-pot with a handle, which we should call a 'billy' in Australia, and stole a cup and knife and fork. The cook made us up some food in a parcel, and with our blankets on our backs we set off down the road. As I passed the men sang out: ' Good-bye, Texas, take care of yourself/ I shook hands with my particular friends as I met them at intervals on the mile of work taken by Robinson and Early, and set off into the unknown country with 18 dols., or a little over £4. I saw my friend Scott the last of all as we turned the corner. But we were to meet again. 85CHAPTER VIII THE COLUMBIA CROSSING FRITZ and I passed through Corey's camp, as it lay in our westward journey, and I was greeted, of course, by some of my old companions, who asked me where I was bound for. When I told them we were going across the Selkirks, many of them really seemed to think I might as well jump into the Kicking Horse. One said, 'Well, old man, if you really mean going you must have lots of grit, but I '11 bet you a dollar you will soon turn back/ I assured him that I was not going to come back, and that I would die on the trail first. We shook hands and parted. From Corey's tunnel we had about fourteen miles to traverse before coming to the Columbia Valley and Golden City, which was at the mouth of the Kicking Horse Pass. Our way lay along the main and only road, first on the left and then on the right side of the river going down. Beautiful as the upper part of the pass is, I think that this last fourteen miles is in some ways even more delightful. We went for some miles by the side of the river, which foamed and thundered over huge rocks, and rushed through narrow openings to broaden out into foaming rapids. Then we began to ascend, as it had been impossible to take the roadMOUNT LEFROY. [to face p. 86.The Columbia Crossing on a level without encountering the engineering diffi- culties of tunnel and rock cut, which made the rail- road in this lower pass so costly. We went up and up the side of the hills, until at last we were probably a thousand feet above the river and the railroad track. Below us the stream was at times calm and blue and then instantly torn and fretted into foam. The road we were walking on was sufficiently wide for one wagon, and there was scarcely at any one place more than a foot or two to spare, and sometimes there was so little room that I had to scramble up the hill out of the way, or stand on the lower slope of crumbling stone, while a vehicle passed. Sometimes I saw that a horse- man had to turn back for a hundred yards or more before he could make his way beyond the wagon; and the declivities were of such a steep character that, had the brakes given way at many places, horses, driver and wagon would have rolled a thousand feet below. At last we began to go down, and came finally in sight of the valley of the Columbia. We could see the Kicking Horse quietly making its way across the long flat to the main river, and some miles away, under the heights of the Selkirk Range, we could catch a glimpse of the blue broad waters into which it ran. We turned from the road, taking a footpath which led us steeply dowrl to Golden City. It was now evening. Golden City is a beautiful and alluring name, but I scarcely think that its most ardent supporter would allow that it really deserved such an adjective* It con- sisted, when I saw it, of some log-huts and a few tents. 87The Western Avernus There were two or three stores, where goods of all kinds were sold ; there were also several places in which spirits could be obtained, I should imagine, if one could judge by the amount of noise issuing from some of the habitations. There was also a blacksmith's shop, and a blacksmith who was fairly busy. It was at this town we proposed to buy our provisions for the journey, and here we made more inquiries in order to find out how far it really was across the Selkirks. At the black- smith's we found the very man to make them of, as he was in the habit of going across the range sometimes, and was now getting ready for another trip. He tried to scare us into going with him, offering to take us for 10 dols. apiece, but finding that we meant going by ourselves he gave us what advice he could, and told us that the journey from Columbia to Columbia across the Big Bend was not more than seventy-five miles, and that we had yet to go eighteen miles to the north of where we were then before we came to the first crossing of the Columbia. We went into a store and bought our provisions. Here is the list:—- Flour, Bacon, Tea,. Hard biscuit, . 10 lb. • 6 „ • ii „ • 10 „ Boston biscuit, . Baking soda, Prunes, . Butter, ■ 5 lb- 2 OZ. . 2 lb. . I „ Of course we paid extraordinary prices, but I have lost my note of them. I think the bacon was twenty pence a pound, and, in such a place, of course it was not of very fine quality. For reasonably good tea we paid 3s. gd. a pound.The Columbia Crossing We walked three miles north, and camped a few yards above the road in a pine wood. Fritz, who was the more active member of the two, did the cooking, though I made and attended to the fire. I have often noticed when travelling how one's companion alters one's-self. In Iowa and Minnesota, when with Ray Kern, I did everything and was most active. Now, with Fritz, I was the lazy member of the firm. We, however, did hot do much cooking that night, beyond making tea, for we had cooked provisions with us from the camp. After supper I lay back against a pine, smoking dreamily and looking out across the valley at the great barrier of the Selkirks, which rose like g. wall beyond the river. In the advancing shadow of the evening the lower hills were dark, for the sun was setting behind them. In this darkness the black solidity seemed perpendicular, but above, the indentations of the valleys could be seen, and over these were the snow- capped summits piled one on another. As far as one could see on either hand this wall extended, and just half-way from sunwhite crest to shadowy base hung long white cloud-wreaths, motionless and sullen, just catching on their upper sides a faint glow from the sunlight that yet remained on the peaks. And as I lay the light faded, the hills took deep violet and purple hues, and they were deep and transparent as the darkest amethyst. I think that hour I spent watching the changes of light and shadow on those unchanging hills was the most peaceful of all my life. There seemed then in life nothing more of sorrow than gentle melancholy, nothing more of passion than lives in kindliest memory, 89The Western Avernus and no more pain at all. Then, if ever for one hour in my restless life, I was at rest. I slept that night the sleep of the righteous, on a spot where the turf seemed soft and dry, from which I re- moved the little sticks and branches of decaying wood that dropped from the trees above me. The scent of the pine-smoke of our dying fire mingled with the sweet native odours of the place, making a pleasant incense smell. In the morning I woke when the first grey dawn was on the opposite hills, and as I rolled over and put my head out of the blankets I saw a little red squirrel sitting with his brush over his head gnawing a crust of bread. It was, may be, his first taste of that civilisation whose last word to such is shooting and skinning, or a cage after blithe woodland freedom. Here and there a bird or two chattered overhead or in the lower brush, preparing for flight, and down the valley came sounds of other life awakening—the neigh of a pack-pony or the bray of a mule from the corrals of the Golden City. From the river light wreaths of mist arose and gathered with advancing day upon the hills, from whose crests the rapid sunbeams ran to their bases, discovering the huge gaps and gorges hidden from sight the evening before. For it was day now, and time for breakfast. Our simple meal over, and the embers of our relighted fire extinguished or but smouldering, we made up our burdens. It was decided that I should carry both sets of blankets, which would weigh about 16 lb., and the 10 lb. of flour, and Fritz took the remaining provisions. We were then almost equally burdened, each carrying about 26 lb., which was no small handicap, considering 90The Columbia Crossing the country we had to travel over. We both had plenty of matches, and I, for additional precaution, took a small medicine-bottle with me filled with lucifers and tightly corked. I had experienced in Australia the misery of camping out without a fire, and I had no desire to make perhaps a week or ten days' journey on raw bacon and flour if an accidental swim in a river oi a heavy fall of continuous rain should deprive us of the power of making one. Our way now ran north, still following the line of railroad work, to where it was to cross the Columbia, eighteen miles from the Golden City. The grading was here of an easy character, as it was a low embankment that could be made of the recent sands and clays of the valley alluvium ; consequently it was let out in great measure by contract to small parties of working men, or 4 station men,' as they are called, who were paid by the piece and not by the day. The only difficulty here was the number of little bridges that would have to be built, owing to the swamps and back-washes from the Columbia, for this part of the valley was absolutely flat. For part of the time we walked along the road, and then along the grade if it seemed easier and more direct. About half-way to the Columbia, however, we found ourselves in rather an awkward place. The grade ceased abruptly on the edge of a deep sheet of water that had previously run alongside of it, on our right hand, between us and the road for a mile or more. It was necessary either to get across or go back. We searched for some time before we found a place that seemed fordable, and that was rather doubtful. How- 91The Western Avernus ever, anything seemed preferable to going back, and I stripped myself nearly to a state of nature and waded in, holding clothes and blankets and flour above my head. At the deepest it was only brqast high, so I arrived without mishap at the other bank, and was presently joined by Fritz. Early in the afternoon we came to the Columbia Crossing, where there was a rather lively canvas town, consisting of numerous stores and saloons and gambling- houses. We passed through it and went down to the river, which was here of no great breadth, though strong and deep. We were ferried over for twenty-five cents apiece, and in a few minutes stood on the rude road in the thick forest. We were at the foot of the Selkirks. 92Qi vwt ,1V \)*A GLACIER IN THE SELKIRKS. \tofacep. 93.CHAPTER IX the trail across the selkirks We were still on the wagon road, if road it can be called, which was all stumps and rocks and hollows, svvampy and thick with mud. It ran steeply enough up the mountain, through pine, balsam, hemlock and birch, past a few railroad camps, for the first work on this side of the river had been commenced some time. As we walked we could hear below us the thunder of the blasting, and could catch now and then sight of a wreath of powder-smoke among the trees as it eddied upwards. We came out at last, after a hard climb, to a spot whence it was possible to get a view of the river and Death Rapids. We were almost above it, and as we looked down we could see the high walls of rock on either side and the dark blue water before it broke. This canon has some dangerous whirlpools in it, and I was told of many accidents which occurred to men at- tempting to raft it. Two young fellows on a raft were drawn into a whirlpool, both were sucked under, one never to reappear, while the other was thrown up before he became insensible, and, grasping a floating pine trunk, he was saved. Once the railroad men were going to raft some dump cars down the rapids; the raft broke away from them and ran the 93The Western Avernus gauntlet of the rocks, and was brought to shore eleven miles below. It was now getting towards nightfall, and it behoved us to seek out a camping-ground. About three miles from the river crossing we came to a sharp bend in the road and a little gorge or canon, down which leapt a creek that ran across the road and plunged into the valley. We saw a little clear space of velvet lawn ten yards from the road, and scrambling across a pool upon a fallen tree, we laid our packs down and built a fire. We were in absolute darkness in a few minutes, for lofty rocks were round us and thick growth of pine and brush above. The spray from the fall leapt almost to where we made our beds, and the damp air and seclu- sion gave good growth to the ferns about us. It was with some trouble that we made a fire, as we had no axe with us. We cooked some bacon, boiled some tea, and with biscuit made a comfortable meal. Fritz's last words to me that night were : 4 If you wake early call me ; I must steal an axe in the morning, for this is our last chance of getting one, as far as I can see.' I called him at early dawn : 4 Fritz, how about that axe?' And I turned over and went to sleep again. When I awoke once more Fritz was making tea. I asked if he had got the axe. He pointed to my side, where it lay in the grass. He said : ' I went down this creek till I came to the camp, but I couldn't see one, so I walked right through to where they were working and picked this one up. It is a good one, but wants grinding. Now we must look for a grindstone.' Of course I know the morality of this axe business 94The Trail across the Selkirks seems rather questionable, but I lay all the responsi- bility on Fritz. He suggested it, and he stole it It is true I had the benefit of it, but I couldn't help that. We rolled up the blankets and set off as soon as possible. This day we passed the last contractors and entered on the loneliest part of the road. At a surveyor's camp we ground the axe and made it a useful weapon —in fact, improved it so much that we considered now that we had at least a part title to it. This day was the last day of comfort for me. The inevitable hard- ships of the journey I thought little of; but, un- fortunately, my boots began to chafe me, and gradually I wore a raw place on both heels, so that I walked more than 130 miles, every moment in positive pain and anguish. I have at times in England considered a blister a thing intolerable, but when the blister gives way to a raw bleeding place about the size of a florin I think there is not much doubt that the former is prefer- able. In the evening we came to the Beaver Creek and crossed it, and following the road about a mile, after having had a talk with the hunter who had his camp at the crossing, we made ours under a thick balsam tree, cutting down another small one to make our bed of the branches. We were in tolerable loneli- ness. While Fritz made the supper, I, still being lazy partner, went to the banks of the creek and bathed my sore and aching feet in the cool running water, watching the sun set on the peaks by which the Beaver ran. We had a fine supper that night. We had bought fifty cents' worth from the cook of the last surveyor's camp we had passed, and for our money we got biscuits, 95The Western Avernus cakes, deermeat, bread, and some fruit pie. So we made merry, and smoked the pipe of peace and content- ment ; while I put away from me the thoughts of the misery I should endure in the morning when I put my boots on again. But the morning came, and the misery had to be endured, although I put it off as long as possible, walking round barefoot till we were nearly ready to start. This is a bad plan, however, and in future I washed my feet, dried them, warmed the boots at the fire, and put them on the first thing. In this way they get supple, and are not so harsh and hard when one has to make a move. We started again, and walked through the thick forest on a reasonably level road that did not entail much climbing, until we came at last to the road-maker's camp. Here we saw a party of hunters, with black and grizzly bears' skins hung up, and I began to think there were other dangers, perhaps, to be encountered than those we had reckoned on. Our chief fear had been lest we should run out of provisions, not lest we ourselves should make provisions for a hungry grizzly; and we were badly armed, having nothing but the axe and my bowie-knife. However, it could not be helped ; it was to be done. After walking a mile we came finally to the end of the road, such as it was, and entered on the trail. There were now three of us, for on this day at noon we came upon a man camped in a little bark ' lean-to' all by himself. He was suffering from an access of bile and blues, brought on by drinking heavily in Columbia City, and had dragged himself so far with 96The Trail across the Selkirks the greatest difficulty. When we came by he had been there two days, and as it was time to make dinner, we stayed with him and used his fire. We had a talk with him, and finding him to all appearance a good possible partner, we asked him to come with us. This he was glad enough to do, as it was not by any means a nice walk for a man by himself. His name was Bill. The trail upon which we were now walking was a narrow foot or bridle path cut years before through the forest. It had received very little attention since it was first made, and was blocked every now and again by trees that had fallen either by natural decay or by force of wind. At times it was full of large stones, requiring some circumspection in walking to avoid spraining one's ankle, or of masses of mud in which one sank a foot deep. The brush, heavy with rain and dew, dropped its moisture on us as we passed, and the prickly devils' clubs made things unpleasant for us as well. At noon, or a little later, we passed through some hundreds of yards of swamp, in which I had to walk quickly and carefully to avoid getting * bogged down/ and, in spite of all my care, when half across it I fell on my face and hands in the sticky mud, through my foot getting caught in a slender branch of willow trodden into it. I was a most melancholy-looking object, and Bill and Fritz exploded with laughter at my appearance, which was remarkable, no doubt, as on arriving on firm ground I had to scrape myself down with a knife and wash the mud out of my nose, ears, and eyes at the first creek. G 97The Western Ave rn us Towards evening we were overtaken by a bright, smart-looking young fellow, who was well dressed, carrying an overcoat and no blankets. He was walking rapidly, and would have passed us had it not been near camping-time. After going a mile or two more, we found a splendid place among a few trees in a fork of the creek, along the banks of which the trail ran, and right under a magnificent peak or crowd of peaks, which crowned an almost perpendicular wall of rock three or four thousand feet high. Under the trees we found a few sheets of bark, leaning against a horizontal supported by two sticks, which would serve us as a shelter from any rain or dew. It was now getting a little dusk. Fritz set to work making a fire, Bill and our new friend sat talking, and I went down to the creek with the flour and baking powder to make some bread. It was necessary to get a mixing and kneading place. I suppose a civilised cook would find some trouble in bread-making under such circumstances, but I was equal to the emergency, and mixed my dough in the hollowed top of a rock, and kneaded it on another flat stone. By this time the fire was roaring, and I soon found enough ashes to bake it in. In Australia, under similar circumstances, we used to cut a square piece of bark out of a tree and mix the bread on that. We cooked some bacon, making neat frying-pans of our tin plates, having cut sticks that were slightly bent at one end, which we split to insert the edges of the plates ; and we boiled the tea as usual. Fritz and I at Golden City had had an argument as to whether it was best to take tea or coffee. He wanted coffee and I tea. 98The Trail across the Selkirks He had not travelled so much as I had, and I knew from my life in the Australian bush that tea was the best drink in the world when one was roughing it, It was not long before Fritz acknowledged I was right, and he was as eager as I to light the fire and * boil the billy' whenever we stopped during the day. That night was the last of pleasant times, and it was the best. On the morrow my sufferings were to com- mence in earnest. But here everything was delightful —the well-situated camp, the shelter, the trees, water brawling on either side; on the left the enormous wall of mountain with old glaciers here and there, and drifts of ancient snow, and snow bridges, under which ran the decreasing waters of approaching winter; on the right three sister peaks of lofty snow, and beneath them and all around the quiet yet murmuring forest. So we sat about the roaring camp fire, on which we piled all available logs, smoking and chatting and joking until the blaze shone its brightest in the full darkness of night, and threw faint shadows and glows across the creeks into the forest on one side and the mountain on the other. Our new friend was a curious individual, who told us a number of stories calculated to make us respect his personal courage if they were true, and his powers of invention if they were false. For my part, I preserved my usual attitude in such cases—I believed as much as I could, rejecting the rest. In this way I obtain much more enjoyment from yarns than the cold, incredulous critic. My own opinion is that he was now in a hurry to get to a place where he was unknown. I fancied that the police on the railroad line might have 99The Western Avernus a fancy to interview him. If I am wrong, I beg his pardon, for he afforded me much entertainment by one story, the point of which consisted in his luck in stealing ten horses in succession, at each fresh capture leaving the horse he had wearied out as an exchange, without being captured until in the act of taking the tenth, when he was compelled to surrender to a loaded gun held by a man who turned out to be his brother-in-law! This story and another one about his throwing a British Columbia sheriff into the Fraser River, how he was captured, sentenced, imprisoned, and how he escaped, kept us well amused until it was time to turn in. In the morning, after breakfast, he left us, as he could walk much faster than we, owing to his being unencumbered with blankets and much food. So we bade him farewell. This day we came across a splendid patch of huckleberries and blueberries, and putting our blankets down, we all three ate solidly for about an hour. These huckleberries are, in my opinion, the nicest wild fruit I have ever tasted, and bears are of the same opinion, being extremely fond of them. My feet were now in a horrible condition, and the pain every step caused me was exquisite. I picked up a pair of boots that had been thrown away, and tried to wear them, but found them even worse than my own. It was impossible to walk barefoot in such a country, or I would have tried it It was simply a case for endurance, and I had to support myself with the know- ledge that it could not last for ever. This day we passed the summit or highest point in the pass, which was a meadow of natural grass, and rather swampy. IOOThe Trail across the Selkirks Just after passing it, and coming to the streams that ran west, we found a poor pack-pony lying in a swamp unable to get up. He had been left behind as useless, I suppose; but it seemed a cruelty to let him die of starvation, so we pulled him out and put him on his feet, hoping he would manage to pick up a living. It was no infrequent thing now for us to find these ponies dead alongside the trail; and if what we heard was true, one at least had been the means of saving the lives of some men who had attempted to cross the trail with insufficient provisions, for they had eaten part of it. As I stumbled painfully along the trail, now the last of the three who was wont to be first, I overtook an old blear-eyed individual carrying an enormous pack nearly as big as himself. He was short and thick, with boots up to his hips, and a cap down to his eyes. In his boot he carried a knife, and in his belt an old muzzle-loading revolver. His weather-beaten and hairy countenance was devoid of joy or sorrow, and it seemed to me that his mind was a trifle weak. He camped with us that night. It had been raining since the early morning, and we were sufficiently wet and miserable. If my feet had been sound, such a trifle as rain would never have disturbed me; but when one is in positive anguish, a little additional discomfort is sometimes the last straw. If it had been dry, it would have been of no consequence where we camped, provided only that there were wood and water, and there are few places where there is not enough of one and too much of the other in this IOIT HE W E S T E R N 1 'A V E R N U S mountain range; But as it was raining, it was positively necessary to find some shelter, and we walked for an hour after dark, stumbling and cursing, looking for a good tree. At last, just when we were about to give up and camp anywhere, rain or no rain, we came on a delightfully thick spruce * fir close to the trail. This tree is perhaps the best shelter-tree in the world. In appearance it is something like a lofty pagoda, and the thick needles arid downward slope of the 'branches throw off all rain, even if it be wet for weeks. We put our blankets underneath, cut off some of the lower branches of it, and were in a dry circular tent, with a big pole in the middle to be sure, but a 'plentiful'soft bed of generations of soft shed needles* Outside we soon had a roaring fire, throwing a red light into the murky air, and diffusing a pleasant warmth on all around, though the heavy rain quenchecf the: outer embers and caught the floating sparks before they could rise a yard from the blaze. I slept magnificently that night, ' forgetting my miseries, and remembering my sorrows no more.' Biit in the morning we had an unpleasant surprise. It seemed very bright when I opened my eyes, although I knew it must be still early by my sleepy sensations, and when I looked round I found it had t>een snowing heavily during the night, with the result that there were six inches of snow on the ground. The trail was covered by it, and it seemed as if we were in for a detention. However, it thawed rapidly, and most quickly on the bare trail, so that we were able to find our way with but little difficulty. IQ2The Trail \across the Selkirks We were, as I have said, now well on the western slope, but instead of there being less climbing, there was more. The path ran up one side of a mountain and plunged down again on the other, and this was the way with it: all that day.; The rain again com- menced to fall, and the snow dropped from the trees on my head and down my neck, so that I was wet through in half an hour, and yet perspiring, toiling up the steep slopes. And while going up my heels were torture to me, and when going down my boots, being now thoroughly wet, gave me blisters on the toes. The trail, too, was at times almost impassable for wind- fallen trees, as it is no light thing, when one is wet, weary, and heavily burdened, to climb over a dozen trees, three feet through, every hundred yards. And now, to add to our troubles, we came to a river which had to be crossed—the Illecilliwet. If we had come there a day or two before, it might have been possible to wade it; but now, swollen with two days' rain and melted snow, on the side nearest to us it was five or six feet deep, and the current running eight or ten miles an hour made it impossible to attempt it. The only thing to be done was to fell a lofty tree and to trust to its lodging in the shallow water on the other side, so that we could go over it as a bridge. We put our burdens down, and selecting a tree, felled it in about three-quarters of an hour. It fell with a tre- mendous splash into the river, and we raised a shout of joy, seeing that it reached well across. But, alas! our joy was shqrt-lived. Before we could get on to it, the rapid current took hold of it, and slowly first, and 103The Western Avernus then more quickly, it swung right down stream and lay along the bank on which we stood. There was nothing to do but to fell another. This time we selected a loftier red pine, and in another hour it crashed into the water, with its slender top lying on the dry stones of the farther side. I seized my blankets and the axe and ran out on the tree, and after me came Bill and Fritz. I scrambled through the branches half-way across, with them close behind me, and then slowly, but surely, the tree began to move and swing. I scrambled a yard or two more on the trunk, that was here in the water, and then made a jump into the stream on the upper side, the water coming over my long boots. It was icy cold, and it ran so strongly that it was impossible to go straight across, so I was forced to go down stream, with difficulty preserving my balance on the boulders of the river bed. As I got ashore, with Bill and Fritz a moment later, the stream took possession of our bridge and swung it alongside the first tree. We had got over, and that was all. We had left the old man behind, and I don't know how he got across, although I know he managed it, as I heard of him afterwards in Lower British Columbia. I met some time after this a man who, recognising him from my description, told me that he was known as 4 the man-eater,' through his having eaten part of his companion, who, having been caught in the snow with him on the eastern slope of the Selkirks, had died from starvation and exposure. We camped, soon after crossing this river, in a gloomy cedar forest. This is the worst shelter-tree in 104The Trail across the Selkirks existence, I believe. Its scanty foliage and infrequent boughs make it little better than nothing at all, and indeed sometimes worse, as one may select uncon- sciously a spot to camp in where the branches deliver a concentrated stream of water and allow the rain to come in as well. But we found here another little bark lean-to, and of course stayed there, as we were all tired out, although we had scarcely done ten miles the whole of the day. We soon had a good fire lighted, and began our cooking. Bill and I suggested pancakes, so I mixed up a lot of batter in the cups, and, having cut handles for our frying-pans, we began cooking. Now, my notion of a pancake was, and is, that it should be large and thick and puffy, but Bill thought they should be small, thin, and brown. Consequently, when I had my first one well under way, Bill said, 'What do you call that?9 This was very contemptu- ously. I was nettled. 'Why, a pancake. What do you call it?' 'Oh, I call it a pudding. You wait till I get my pan fixed, I'll show you what a pancake is/ When he had his first one nearly done, I said, * Bill, what's that you're cooking?' 'Why, a pancake. D—n it, can't you see ?' ' That's not a pancake, that's a miserable little hotcake. It's only a wafer. These are pancakes, Bill; see them, something to eat.' Bill nearly dropped his in the fire. 'Don't you think I know what a pancake is? I've made 'em all over America ; and you—why, you 're only an Englishman ; what do you know, anyhow?1 'That's your ignor- ance,' said I; ' I've cooked them in England, in Australia, in the States, and now I'm cooking them on 105The Western Avernus the Selkirk Trail. You 're only an American. Why don't you travel and learn something?' Bill got per- fectly furious, and if I had chaffed him any more, it would have ended in a fight over those miserable cakes. ' Well, well, Bill, call yours pancakes. They are pan- cakes, Bill; mine are only flapjacks.' Then there was peace in the camp, and the mollified Bill condescended to eat a flapjack and say it was good, while I took one of his, saying it was the best hotcake—no! pancake— I had ever eaten. So we smoked the pipe of peace and lay down, while the rain came through the cracks above us, and the melancholy wind howled among the dark and gloomy cedars. ; During the night the snow again fell, covering the ground to the depth of four or five inches, and making us as uncomfortable as three poor tramps could be. Still even so, I was able, in spite of the pain and incon- venience I suffered, to observe, in the bright sunshine that happily broke through and mastered the clouds, the beautiful effects of the snow on the near and far landscape. On the long arms of the cedars lay bright patches of snow, and bush and fallen trunks, and jagged stumps, whence the wind had smitten the top of branch and foliage, had their adornment. And in the distance, on the slopes and shoulders of the hills, the snow on the gre