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as far as the snipes are concerned, for I greatly err if the swamp of Chateau Richer, about sixteen miles below Quebec, on the northern shore, do not produce in the season more of these delicious migratories than are to be found from one end of the upper prov'nce to the other; but whether on the banks of the noble St. Lawrence, or on the shores of Lake Huron, the sportsman cannot but admire the wonders which a Divine Providence has been pleased to collect together. An extremely interesting, as well as beautiful work, got up in the first style of excellence, by Mr. Willis, of literary celebrity, will give the reader a very good idea of Canadian scenery-the illustrations are admirable, and for fidelity, as well as in the execution, are not to be surpassed.

The farmer of moderate means, who finds it difficult to make "both ends meet "in this country, and who can scrape together some three or four hundred pounds, cannot lay out his little capital to greater advantage than by emigrating to Canada, to settle down on the land apportioned to him in one of the numerous townships of the upper or lower province. His "location" once cleared, he becomes an independent man; and if he happen to have perpetrated a little bit of poaching on his landlord's manor at home, and fond withal of his rod and gun, he can supply his table all the year round with fish, flesh, and fowl. Venison, ducks of sou is, wild turkeys, partridges (such as they are), wood-cocks, and snipes, are as plenty as blackberries; while salmon, trout, pike, and Maskinongè, and every kind of fresh-water fish, are to be found in profusion.

The same remark holds good as regards the half-pay officer, or one retired from the service; for the amount realized by the sale of the latter's commission would far exceed the sum required to clear his "grant,' prepare it for cultivation, and erect a comfortable dwelling, There are but few military men of the present day, who are not sportsman; and I know not a more attractive spot for an old officer, after having served his country, to pass the remainder of his days in, than a Canadian township. If, in the course of human events, circumstances and that fickle jade "Fortune "per.nit, to Canada will I migrate, there to pitch my tent, and eke out the fag-end of a chequered existence. Some quarter of a century or more has passed since I had the good fortune to be quartered at Quebec; but the sport I enjoyed in its neighbourhood, the society by which that sport was varied, and above all, the glorious works of Nature in her grandest garb, took so strong a hold of my imagination, that I look back to this happy period as if it were but of recent date; and events which passed under my observation at the time, are brought back as vividly to the recollection as if they had occurred but yesterday,

Whenever I could be spared from my duties in the garrison, or obtain leave for a few days, I never missed running down to Chateau Richer, or Green Island. In these excursions I was frequently accompanied by one or two of my brother sportsmen, but it did sometimes occur that I had the fun all to myself. It came to pass on a certain day in September, 1819, that, not having been successful in enlisting a "Compagnon d'armes, on a crusade against the Green Island snipes, I paid a visit to our old friend Pierre Larosse a" alone by myself, as a government boat had been placed at my disposal.

I reached the worthy Canadian's comfortable farm house before dark, and having dreamt of snipes and wild ducks, guns and powder-flasks,

was up betimes in the morning ready to deal death and destruction amongst the feathered visitors to this celebrated spot, and to realize, as I hoped, the anticipations my host had given rise to by his cheering report of the numerous becassines arrived in his marais. Many of my fellow knights of the trigger have, doubtless, discovered in the early part of their shooting career that they invariably shoot better alone than in company. An excitable and enthusiastic youngster, in his eagerness to bring down his bird, pulls his trigger before his aim is properly ascertained, and without the deliberation requisite to insure success. At the period I write of, I confess to not being sufficiently cool when in the swamp with one or more guns; indeed, to this day I could name one or two old hands afflicted with this feeling-although, single-handed (as we say of our dogs), they are scarcely to be equaled, in swamp, stubble, or cover. Our nei ves are not all of the same quality constitutions and temperaments differ, and every act of our life is swayed by them. In shooting this is particularly to be remarked, and those of my mercurial readers who are the slaves of impulse would act wisely were they to do a bit of arithmetic ere they fire at random, by counting up to the number 5, or ascertaining how many 2 and 2 make, while adjusting their aim. Under any circumstances, however, I should say that the man who is anxious to make up "a bag," had better adopt the " "solitary system," for the chances are that the head will be cool and the hand steady, inasmuch as no gentleman ever indulges in an "extra glass" overnight without a companion. It will nevertheless occasionally happen, when two or three jolly fellows are on a shooting excursion, that more wine and more whiskey toddy are imbibed while discussing the day's adventures, or making arrangements for the morrow's work, than prudence admits of. As far as I am concerned at least, I could never get through a pint of wine or one jorum of toddy at a sitting, when doomed to solitude, although some of my convivial friends can testify that when fairly in for a drinking bout I can take my "broth" as kindly as any of them. A pint of Hodgson's pale ale, and one glass of "hot with," having been the extent of my allowance on the evening of my arrival at Pierre Larosse's, I never felt in better order for the day's operations than on the following morning.

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My worthy host having volunteered to accompany me to the marais, we set forth, after an early breakfast, with the never-failing "addendum" of a "goutte" of "eau-de-vie," by way of a retainer,' as the lawyers say, and a few minutes' walk soon disclosed to me the gratifying fact of there being plenty of work cut out for my dog and myself in the swamp. Now whether it was owing to a well-conducted stomach (for no man can shoot straight while labouring under an indigestion), the cool head, well-braced nerves, or good luck, this deponent sayeth not; but certain it is that, for a youngster at the sport, I never shot better in my life. At noon a luncheon was brought down to the "hutte "on the Lagoon, where, the year before, Mr. Wood, of the artillery, and Mr. Grant, had, by mistake, shot the worthy farmer's decoy ducks (vide "The Sportsman in Canada," vol. I, chap. 5); and having discussed our meal with great "gusto," I lost no time in following up my good fortune, and before dusk I had killed some five or six and thirty couple of snipe. Just before leaving off, I was lucky enough to knock over a couple right and left, both of which were difficult shots. "Sapristi!"

exclaimed Pierre Larosse, "Vous êtes bien adroit, Monsieur;" and he added in French-at least his Canadian "patois," which on the other side of the Atlantic passes muster for it, and which jargon I will take the liberty of translating for the benefit of my readers-"You almost equal François Dumesnil, who was the most celebrated snipe shot in the Canadas, or even the far west."

"And who was François Dumesnil ?" I inquired.

"He was the son of an old friend of my grandfather's," replied Larosse: "his father was a small farmer in the parish of St. Nicolas, on the south bank of the river, about half way between this island and Quebec. His mother was an Indian, and one of the most beautiful of her tribe; her family were Hurons, and François' father having been sent up the country to superintend the transport of a raft of timber down the Ottawa, saw, and became enamoured of, the young Indian maid, whose affections he gained, and whom, after no slight remonstrance and objections on the part of his parents, he subsequently married. The fruit of this union was my snipe-shooting hero-the renowned François, who, having at an early age accompanied his tawny mother on a visit to her family on the other side of Lake Huron, became familiarized with, and attached to, the wild life of the tribes with whom he associated. He accompanied the chiefs on their hunting parties, and to this circumstance must be attributed the extraordinary skill he attained in the use of the rifle and fowling-piece. Before he was sixteen he could split the skull of a goose or duck with a rifle ball at a distance of a hundred yards, and he could drive a dollar into the bark of a tree with equal certainty. When I first knew François he was much older than myself; but though comparatively a youth, I could appreciate his skill as a chasseur, and many is the day that I have accompanied him when shooting in this island, and in the swamps of Chateau Richer, a spot you know, Monsieur, as well as I do. We are now near home, but if Monsieur pleases, after dinner I will tell you a tale recounted to me by François one evening, in the very room where Monsieur (meaning myself) will eat his repast."

Having got rid of the Green Island mud by sousing my anatomy in one of Madame Larosse's washing-tubs, and exchanged my damp and soiled habiliments for dry and clean clothing, I came down to the farmer's salon, where a blazing wood fire, and a table laid for dinner, gave promise of warmth and good cheer for the evening. After a satisfactory day's sport, I know of nothing which gladdens the heart of man more than a change from wet garments to clean linen and warm hose, a cheerful fire, and wherewithal to appease thirst and hunger.

On the evening in question I had the full measure of these sublunary enjoyments. My servant, who had accompanied me from the garrison, was an old and experienced campaigner, and always had an eye to his master's (and bis own) comforts. A couple of boiled shads (a very nice fish by the way), a savoury mess of mutton, potatoes, and onions (not a bad imitation of an Irish stew), and a couple of spipe, composed the bill of fare; and a few glasses of old Madeira, and a bottle of pale ale, were equally satisfactory; and feeling warm and comfortable, though lacking a companion to share the enjoyment, I bethought me of Pierre Larosse, and his friend the celebrated shot. My communicative host was not long in obeying the expected summons, and having brewed him a huge

rummer of unimpeachable punch, he thus resumed the thread of his

narrative :

"I have said, Monsieur, that my grandfather was on terms of friendship with the family of François, the intimacy was continued down to François and myself. In the summer and autumnal months, his father and himself would frequently avail themselves of a chance passage in a Gaspé boat, and visit us. François and myself were in consequence frequently brought together, and as a similarity in tastes and habits is the never-failing forerunner of a good understanding between equals, we became, in spite of the disparity in our ages, sworn friends. One evening, after a hard day's shooting over the very ground you have traversed this morning, Monsieur, we were talking of the different chasses in which we had been engaged, and from shooting in the marshes, the conversation turned upon his hunting expeditions in the upper province, and in the territory beyond the English frontier, and during the recital allusion was made more than once to the intimacy that had for so many years existed in our families. All at once François said to me

"Pierre, did your father ever recount to you the extraordinary history of the handsome Jack Tar,' as he was called (for nobody ever knew his real name), and the young squaw of Indian Lorette ?'*

"Never,' I replied.

"That is odd too,' rejoined my friend; and what is stranger still, you have never heard it from my own lips. It is a fearful tale, and one I shall never think of but with horror, as the concluding scene of this frightful tragedy was, by the merest accident, enacted before my eyes.'

"I will, as far as I am able, Monsieur, give you François Dumesnil's painful narrative in his own words, which I will, with your permission,

term

THE SNIPE-SHOOTER'S ADVENTURE.

In the year 17-, and during your grandfather's lifetime, Pierre, a brig bound from a port in Scotland to Quebec was wrecked on the dangerous and inhospitable coast of the island of Anticosti, situated nearly at the mouth of our river. It was late in the season, and the privations and hardships endured by the survivors of the calamity were dreadful. Of the survivors there were but four, and of these two subsequently died of exhaustion and suffering at the farm-house of my father, at St. Nicolas.

The hapless crew of this ill-fated vessel were seventeen in number originally, but had perished one by one, by cold, hunger, and the attacks of bears and wolves, leaving but four to tell the disastrous tale. A boat belonging to Gaspé, returning from the bay of Fundy, fortunately for these dying men, happened to be driven by stress of weather to the very spot where the brig had been wrecked. The little craft, from drawing less water, was enabled to anchor so near the shore as to be sheltered from the effects of the storm; and the crew, witnessing the pitiable condition of the unfortunate sufferers on the beach, rescued and carried them safely to Gaspé. The strangers were hospitably received, and when they were sufficiently recovered to undertake the journey to Quebec, they were furnished with clothes and money on their departure. They travelled but slowly--sometimes on foot, and occasionally being

* A village so named, about seven miles from Quebec, and inhabited by different tribes of Indians who visit the capital of the lower province.

offered seats in a charette (a kind of timber waggon), from one village to another. They were nearly a fortnight before they reached St. Nicolas, where they arrived in a most miserable plight-weakened by their previous sufferings, their strength prostrated, and worn out by fatigue. Their heart-rending tale excited the compassion of the inhabitants, and as my father was ever foremost in acts of charity, he offered the men asylum beneath his roof. Two of these wretched beings were common seafaring men, and they both died; one of the remaining pair had been the mate of the vessel, but the other was a young man of a decidedly superior stamp, in person, in manner, appearance, address, and speech. He was superlatively handsome, and his deportment was that of a highly born gentleman, who had mixed in good society. The mate of the brig, when que ioned as to the rank and calling of his companion in misfortune, could afford no information on the subject; he said that various conjectures had been hazarded as to the station in life of his captain's passenger, that no clue had been given as to his whereabouts in the mother country, and that no one knew anything as to his former mode of life or pursuits: he had been shipped at Greenock under the name of Jackson, but that every one on board was under the impression that it was an assumed one; and this was all the information that could be obtained.

On my first introduction to this mysterious individual, I became fascinated by his polished and casy manners, although there was an evident hesitation and restraint when questioned as to his motive for visiting Canada. He admitted that he was not the bearer of any letters of introduction to the families in either province, but that his motive for undertaking so long a voyage arose from a desire to gratify his curiosity. With this somewhat vague and unsatisfactory explanation our family were fain compelled to be satisfied.

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The mate and our other uncommunicative guest left us in a few days for Quebec, where the former soon obtained employment on board a homeward-bound ship; the latter was to all appearance idle, and a wanderer, without any ostensible occupation, and without acquaintances. On one or two occasions I met the young man on the banks of the river Charles, and in some meadows under Beauport, where, like myself, he had come in quest of snipes. Our greeting was always friendly, and I might say cordial, for I liked him in spite of his caution and reserve. The last time I ever saw him in the neighbourhood of Quebec was in the spring of the year following his arrival amongst us. We met in some stubble and fallow-fields behind the village of Beauport, where a very tolerable sprinkling of snipe is sure to be found, as the floods drive the birds from the marshes. Jackson, or the handsome Jack Tar,' as he was nicknamed, gave me to understand that he had taken up his quarters at Indian Lorette, a village romantically situated about six or seven miles from Quebec-that he liked the country, and should make friends with some Indians living in the village, in the hope of accompanying them on their hunting expeditions on their return from Lower Canada. We shot together during the afternoon, and after an exchange of drams we parted, and as it proved, for the last time.

My father's dealings with the merchants for timber, staves, and shingles, led me frequently into the city of Quebec, and taking some interest in the welfare of this young man, I made inquiries as to his

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