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<h2> CHAPTER III. </h2>
<h3> 1604, 1605. </h3>
<p>ACADIA OCCUPIED.</p>
<p>De Monts, with one of his vessels, sailed from Havre de Grace on the
seventh of April, 1604. Pontgrave, with stores for the colony, was to
follow in a few days.</p>
<p>Scarcely were they at sea, when ministers and priests fell first to
discussion, then to quarrelling, then to blows. "I have seen our cure and
the minister," says Champlain, "fall to with their fists on questions of
faith. I cannot say which had the more pluck, or which hit the harder; but
I know that the minister sometimes complained to the Sieur de Monts that
he had been beaten. This was their way of settling points of controversy.
I leave you to judge if it was a pleasant thing to see."</p>
<p>Sagard, the Franciscan friar, relates with horror, that, after their
destination was reached, a priest and a minister happening to die at the
same time, the crew buried them both in one grave, to see if they would
lie peaceably together.</p>
<p>De Monts, who had been to the St. Lawrence with Chauvin, and learned to
dread its rigorous winters, steered for a more southern, and, as he
flattered himself, a milder region. The first land seen was Cap la Heve,
on the southern coast of Nova Scotia. Four days later, they entered a
small bay, where, to their surprise, they saw a vessel lying at anchor.
here was a piece of good luck. The stranger was a fur-trader, pursuing her
traffic in defiance, or more probably in ignorance, of De Monts's
monopoly. The latter, as empowered by his patent, made prize of ship and
cargo, consoling the commander, one Rossignol, by giving his name to the
scene of his misfortune. It is now called Liverpool Harbor.</p>
<p>In an adjacent harbor, called by them Port Mouton, because a sheep here
leaped overboard, they waited nearly a month for Pontgrave's store-ship.
At length, to their great relief, she appeared, laden with the spoils of
four Basque fur-traders, captured at Cansean. The supplies delivered,
Pontgrave sailed for Tadoussac to trade with the Indians, while De Monts,
followed by his prize, proceeded on his voyage.</p>
<p>He doubled Cape Sable, and entered St. Mary's Bay, where he lay two weeks,
sending boats' crews to explore the adjacent coasts. A party one day went
on shore to stroll through the forest, and among them was Nicolas Aubry, a
priest from Paris, who, tiring of the scholastic haunts of the Rue de la
Sorbonne and the Rue d'Enfer, had persisted, despite the remonstrance of
his friends, in joining the expedition. Thirsty with a long walk, under
the sun of June, through the tangled and rock-encumbered woods, he stopped
to drink at a brook, laying his sword beside him on the grass. On
rejoining his companions, he found that he had forgotten it; and turning
back in search of it, more skilled in the devious windings of the Quartier
Latin than in the intricacies of the Acadian forest, he soon lost his way.
His comrades, alarmed, waited for a time, and then ranged the woods,
shouting his name to the echoing solitudes. Trumpets were sounded, and
cannon fired from the ships, but the priest did not appear. All now looked
askance on a certain Huguenot, with whom Aubry had often quarrelled on
questions of faith, and who was now accused of having killed him. In vain
he denied the charge. Aubry was given up for dead, and the ship sailed
from St. Mary's Bay; while the wretched priest roamed to and fro, famished
and despairing, or, couched on the rocky soil, in the troubled sleep of
exhaustion, dreamed, perhaps, as the wind swept moaning through the pines,
that he heard once more the organ roll through the columned arches of
Sainte Genevieve.</p>
<p>The voyagers proceeded to explore the Bay of Fundy, which De Monts called
La Baye Francoise. Their first notable discovery was that of Annapolis
Harbor. A small inlet invited them. They entered, when suddenly the narrow
strait dilated into a broad and tranquil basin, compassed by sunny hills,
wrapped in woodland verdure, and alive with waterfalls. Poutrincourt was
delighted with the scene. The fancy seized him of removing thither from
France with his family and, to this end, he asked a grant of the place
from De Monts, who by his patent had nearly half the continent in his
gift. The grant was made, and Poutrincourt called his new domain Port
Royal.</p>
<p>Thence they sailed round the head of the Bay of Fundy, coasted its
northern shore, visited and named the river St. John, and anchored at last
in Passamaquoddy Bay.</p>
<p>The untiring Champlain, exploring, surveying, sounding, had made charts of
all the principal roads and harbors; and now, pursuing his research, he
entered a river which he calls La Riviere des Etechemins, from the name of
the tribe of whom the present Passamaquoddy Indians are descendants. Near
its mouth he found an islet, fenced round with rocks and shoals, and
called it St. Croix, a name now borne by the river itself. With singular
infelicity this spot was chosen as the site of the new colony. It
commanded the river, and was well fitted for defence: these were its only
merits; yet cannon were landed on it, a battery was planted on a detached
rock at one end, and a fort begun on a rising ground at the other.</p>
<p>At St. Mary's Bay the voyagers thought they had found traces of iron and
silver; and Champdore, the pilot, was now sent back to pursue the search.
As he and his men lay at anchor, fishing, not far from land, one of them
heard a strange sound, like a weak human voice; and, looking towards the
shore, they saw a small black object in motion, apparently a hat waved on
the end of a stick. Rowing in haste to the spot, they found the priest
Aubry. For sixteen days he had wandered in the woods, sustaining life on
berries and wild fruits; and when, haggard and emaciated, a shadow of his
former self, Champdore carried him back to St. Croix, he was greeted as a
man risen from the grave.</p>
<p>In 1783 the river St. Croix, by treaty, was made the boundary between
Maine and New Brunswick. But which was the true St. Croix? In 1798, the
point was settled. De Monts's island was found; and, painfully searching
among the sand, the sedge, and the matted whortleberry bushes, the
commissioners could trace the foundations of buildings long crumbled into
dust; for the wilderness had resumed its sway, and silence and solitude
brooded once more over this ancient resting-place of civilization.</p>
<p>But while the commissioner bends over a moss-grown stone, it is for us to
trace back the dim vista of the centuries to the life, the zeal, the
energy, of which this stone is the poor memorial. The rock-fenced islet
was covered with cedars, and when the tide was out the shoals around were
dark with the swash of sea-weed, where, in their leisure moments, the
Frenchmen, we are told, amused themselves with detaching the limpets from
the stones, as a savory addition to their fare. But there was little
leisure at St. Croix. Soldiers, sailors, and artisans betook themselves to
their task. Before the winter closed in, the northern end of the island
was covered with buildings, surrounding a square, where a solitary tree
had been left standing. On the right was a spacious house, well built, and
surmounted by one of those enormous roofs characteristic of the time. This
was the lodging of De Monts. Behind it, and near the water, was a long,
covered gallery, for labor or amusement in foul weather. Champlain and the
Sieur d'Orville, aided by the servants of the latter, built a house for
themselves nearly opposite that of De Monts; and the remainder of the
square was occupied by storehouses, a magazine, workshops, lodgings for
gentlemen and artisans, and a barrack for the Swiss soldiers, the whole
enclosed with a palisade. Adjacent there was an attempt at a garden, under
the auspices of Champlain; but nothing would grow in the sandy soil. There
was a cemetery, too, and a small rustic chapel on a projecting point of
rock. Such was the "Habitation de l'Isle Saincte-Croix," as set forth by
Champlain in quaint plans and drawings, in that musty little quarto of
1613, sold by Jean Berjon, at the sign of the Flying Horse, Rue St. Jean
de Beauvais.</p>
<p>Their labors over, Poutrincourt set sail for France, proposing to return
and take possession of his domain of Port Royal. Seventy-nine men remained
at St. Croix. Here was De Monts, feudal lord of half a continent in virtue
of two potent syllables, "Henri," scrawled on parchment by the rugged hand
of the Bearnais. Here were gentlemen of birth and breeding, Champlain,
D'Orville, Beaumont, Sourin, La Motte, Boulay, and Fougeray; here also
were the pugnacious cure and his fellow priests, with the Hugnenot
ministers, objects of their unceasing ire. The rest were laborers,
artisans, and soldiers, all in the pay of the company, and some of them
forced into its service.</p>
<p>Poutrincourt's receding sails vanished between the water and the sky. The
exiles were left to their solitude. From the Spanish settlements northward
to the pole, there was no domestic hearth, no lodgement of civilized men,
save one weak band of Frenchmen, clinging, as it were for life, to the
fringe of the vast and savage continent. The gray and sullen autumn sank
upon the waste, and the bleak wind howled down the St. Croix, and swept
the forest bare. Then the whirling snow powdered the vast sweep of
desolate woodland, and shrouded in white the gloomy green of pine-clad
mountains. Ice in sheets, or broken masses, swept by their island with the
ebbing and flowing tide, often debarring all access to the main, and
cutting off their supplies of wood and water. A belt of cedars, indeed,
hedged the island; but De Monts had ordered them to be spared, that the
north wind might spend something of its force with whistling through their
shaggy boughs. Cider and wine froze in the casks, and were served out by
the pound. As they crowded round their half-fed fires, shivering in the
icy currents that pierced their rude tenements, many sank into a desperate
apathy.</p>
<p>Soon the scurvy broke out, and raged with a fearful malignity. Of the
seventy-nine, thirty-five died before spring, and many more were brought
to the verge of death. In vain they sought that marvellous tree which had
relieved the followers of Cartier. Their little cemetery was peopled with
nearly half their number, and the rest, bloated and disfigured with the
relentless malady, thought more of escaping from their woes than of
building up a Transatlantic empire. Yet among them there was one, at
least, who, amid languor and defection, held to his purpose with
indomitable tenacity; and where Champlain was present, there was no room
for despair.</p>
<p>Spring came at last, and, with the breaking up of the ice, the melting of
the snow, and the clamors of the returning wild-fowl, the spirits and the
health of the woe-begone company began to revive. But to misery succeeded
anxiety and suspense. Where was the succor from France? Were they
abandoned to their fate like the wretched exiles of La Roche? In a happy
hour, they saw an approaching sail. Pontgrave, with forty men, cast anchor
before their island on the sixteenth of June; and they hailed him as the
condemned hails the messenger of his pardon.</p>
<p>Weary of St. Croix, De Monts resolved to seek out a more auspicious site,
on which to rear the capital of his wilderness dominion. During the
preceding September, Champlain had ranged the westward coast in a pinnace,
visited and named the island of Mount Desert, and entered the mouth of the
river Penobscot, called by him the Pemetigoet, or Pentegoet, and
previously known to fur-traders and fishermen as the Norembega, a name
which it shared with all the adjacent region. <SPAN href="#linknote-27"
name="linknoteref-27" id="linknoteref-27">27</SPAN> Now, embarking a second
time, in a bark of fifteen tons, with De Monts, several gentlemen, twenty
sailors, and an Indian with his squaw, he set forth on the eighteenth of
June on a second voyage of discovery. They coasted the strangely indented
shores of Maine, with its reefs and surf-washed islands, rocky headlands,
and deep embosomed bays, passed Mount Desert and the Penobscot, explored
the mouths of the Kennebec, crossed Casco Bay, and descried the distant
peaks of the White Mountains. The ninth of July brought them to Saco Bay.
They were now within the limits of a group of tribes who were called by
the French the Armouchiquois, and who included those whom the English
afterwards called the Massachusetts. They differed in habits as well as in
language from the Etechemins and Miemacs of Acadia, for they were tillers
of the soil, and around their wigwams were fields of maize, beans,
pumpkins, squashes, tobacco, and the so-called Jerusalem artichoke. Near
Pront's Neck, more than eighty of them ran down to the shore to meet the
strangers, dancing and yelping to show their joy. They had a fort of
palisades on a rising ground by the Saco, for they were at deadly war with
their neighbors towards the east.</p>
<p>On the twelfth, the French resumed their voyage, and, like some
adventurous party of pleasure, held their course by the beaches of York
and Wells, Portsmouth Harbor, the Isles of Shoals, Rye Beach, and Hampton
Beach, till, on the fifteenth, they descried the dim outline of Cape Ann.
Champlain called it Cap aux Isles, from the three adjacent islands, and in
a subsequent voyage he gave the name of Beauport to the neighboring harbor
of Gloucester. Thence steering southward and westward, they entered
Massachusetts Bay, gave the name of Riviere du Guast to a river flowing
into it, probably the Charles; passed the islands of Boston Harbor, which
Champlain describes as covered with trees, and were met on the way by
great numbers of canoes filled with astonished Indians. On Sunday, the
seventeenth, they passed Point Allerton and Nantasket Beach, coasted the
shores of Cohasset, Scituate, and Marshfield, and anchored for the night
near Brant Point. On the morning of the eighteenth, a head wind forced
them to take shelter in Port St. Louis, for so they called the harbor of
Plymouth, where the Pilgrims made their memorable landing fifteen years
later. Indian wigwams and garden patches lined the shore. A troop of the
inhabitants came down to the beach and danced; while others, who had been
fishing, approached in their canoes, came on board the vessel, and showed
Champlain their fish-hooks, consisting of a barbed bone lashed at an acute
angle to a slip of wood.</p>
<p>From Plymouth the party circled round the bay, doubled Cape Cod, called by
Champlain Cap Blanc, from its glistening white sands, and steered
southward to Nausett Harbor, which, by reason of its shoals and sand-bars,
they named Port Mallebarre. Here their prosperity deserted them. A party
of sailors went behind the sand-banks to find fresh water at a spring,
when an Indian snatched a kettle from one of them, and its owner,
pursuing, fell, pierced with arrows by the robber's comrades. The French
in the vessel opened fire. Champlain's arquebuse burst, and was near
killing him, while the Indians, swift as deer, quickly gained the woods.
Several of the tribe chanced to be on board the vessel, but flung
themselves with such alacrity into the water that only one was caught.
They bound him hand and foot, but soon after humanely set him at liberty.</p>
<p>Champlain, who we are told "delighted marvellously in these enterprises,"
had busied himself throughout the voyage with taking observations, making
charts, and studying the wonders of land and sea. The "horse-foot crab"
seems to have awakened his special curiosity, and he describes it with
amusing exactness. Of the human tenants of the New England coast he has
also left the first precise and trustworthy account. They were clearly
more numerous than when the Puritans landed at Plymouth, since in the
interval a pestilence made great havoc among them. But Champlain's most
conspicuous merit lies in the light that he threw into the dark places of
American geography, and the order that he brought out of the chaos of
American cartography; for it was a result of this and the rest of his
voyages that precision and clearness began at last to supplant the
vagueness, confusion, and contradiction of the earlier map-makers.</p>
<p>At Nausett Harbor provisions began to fail, and steering for St. Croix the
voyagers reached that ill-starred island on the third of August. De Monts
had found no spot to his liking. He now bethought him of that inland
harbor of Port Royal which he had granted to Poutrincourt, and thither he
resolved to remove. Stores, utensils, even portions of the buildings, were
placed on board the vessels, carried across the Bay of Fundy, and landed
at the chosen spot. It was on the north side of the basin opposite Goat
Island, and a little below the mouth of the river Annapolis, called by the
French the Equille, and, afterwards, the Dauphin. The axe-men began their
task; the dense forest was cleared away, and the buildings of the infant
colony soon rose in its place.</p>
<p>But while De Monts and his company were struggling against despair at St.
Croix, the enemies of his monopoly were busy at Paris; and, by a ship from
France, he was warned that prompt measures were needed to thwart their
machinations. Therefore he set sail, leaving Pontgrave to command at Port
Royal: while Champlain, Champdore, and others, undaunted by the past,
volunteered for a second winter in the wilderness.</p>
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