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<h2> CHAPTER VI. CHAMPLAIN'S WRITINGS AND CHARACTER </h2>
<p>There are some things that speak for themselves. In attempting to
understand Champlain's character, we are first met by the fact that he
pursued unflinchingly his appointed task. For thirty-two years he
persevered, amid every kind of hardship, danger, and discouragement, in
the effort to build up New France. He had personal ambitions as an
explorer, which were kept in strict subordination to his duty to the king.
He possessed concentration of aim without fanaticism. His signal
unselfishness was adorned by a patience which equalled that of
Marlborough. Inspired by large ideals, he did not scorn imperfect means.</p>
<p>Thus there are certain large aspects of Champlain's character that stand
forth in the high light of deed, and do not depend for their effect either
upon his own words or those of others. But when once we have paid tribute
to the fine, positive qualities which are implied by his accomplishment,
we must hasten to recognize the extraordinary value of his writings as an
index to his mind and soul. His narrative is not an epic of disaster. It
is a plain and even statement of great dangers calmly met and treated as a
matter of course. Largely it is a record of achievement. At points where
it is a record of failure Champlain accepts the inevitable gracefully and
conforms his emotions to the will of God. The Voyages reveal a strong man
'well four-squared to the blows of fortune.' They also illustrate the
virtue of muscular Christianity.</p>
<p>At a time which, like ours, is becoming sated with cleverness, it is a
delight to read the unvarnished story of Champlain. In saying that the
adjective is ever the enemy of the noun, Voltaire could not have levelled
the shaft at him, for few writers have been more sparing in their use of
adjectives or other glowing words. His love of the sea and of the forest
was profound, but he is never emotional in his expressions. Yet with all
his soberness and steadiness he possessed imagination. In its strength and
depth his enthusiasm for colonization proves this, even if we omit his
picture of the fancied Ludovica. But as a man of action rather than of
letters he instinctively omits verbiage. In some respects we suffer from
Champlain's directness of mind for on much that he saw he could have
lingered with profit. But very special inducements are needed to draw him
from his plain tale into a digression. Such inducements occur at times
when he is writing of the Indians, for he recognized that Europe was eager
to hear in full detail of their traits and customs. Thus set passages of
description, inserted with a sparing hand, seemed to him a proper element
of the text, but anything like conscious embellishment of the narrative he
avoids—probably more through mere naturalness than conscious
self-repression.</p>
<p>From Marco Polo to Scott's Journal the literature of geographical
discovery abounds with classics, and standards of comparison suggest
themselves in abundance to the critic of Champlain's Voyages. Most
naturally, of course, one turns to the records of American exploration in
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries—to Ramusio, Oviedo, Peter
Martyr, Hakluyt, and Purchas. No age can show a more wonderful galaxy of
pioneers than that which extends from Columbus to La Salle, and among the
great explorers of this era Champlain takes his place by virtue alike of
his deeds and writings. In fact, he belongs to the small and distinguished
class of those who have recorded their own discoveries in a suitable and
authentic narrative, for in few cases have geographical results of equal
moment been described by the discoverer himself.</p>
<p>Among the many writings which are available for comparison and contrast
one turns, singularly yet inevitably, to Lescarbot. The singularity of a
comparison between Champlain and Lescarbot is that Lescarbot was not a
geographer. At the same time, he is the only writer of importance whose
trail crosses that of Champlain, and some light is thrown on Champlain's
personality by a juxtaposition of texts. That is to say, both were in
Acadia at the same time, sat together at Poutrincourt's table, gazed on
the same forests and clearings, met the same Indians, and had a like
opportunity of considering the colonial problems which were thrust upon
the French in the reign of Henry IV.</p>
<p>It would be hard to find narratives more dissimilar,—and the
contrast is not wholly to the advantage of Champlain. Or rather, there are
times when his Doric simplicity of style seems jejune beside the flowing
periods and picturesque details of Lescarbot. No better illustration of
this difference in style, arising from fundamental difference in
temperament, can be found than the description which each gives of the
Ordre de Bon Temps. To Champlain belongs the credit of inventing this
pleasant means of promoting health and banishing ennui, but all he tells
of it is this: 'By the rules of the Order a chain was put, with some
little ceremony, on the neck of one of our company, commissioning him for
the day to go a-hunting. The next day it was conferred upon another, and
thus in succession. All exerted themselves to the utmost to see who would
do the best and bring home the finest game. We found this a very good
arrangement, as did also the savages who were with us.'</p>
<p>Such is the limit of the information which we receive from Champlain
regarding the Ordre de Bon Temps, his own invention and the life of the
company. It is reserved for Lescarbot to give us the picture which no one
can forget—the Atoctegic, or ruler of the feast, leading the
procession to dinner 'napkin on shoulder, wand of office in hand, and
around his neck the collar of the Order, which was worth more than four
crowns; after him all the members of the Order, carrying each a dish.'
Around stand the savages, twenty or thirty of them, 'men, women, girls,
and children,' all waiting for scraps of food. At the table with the
French themselves sits the Sagamos Membertou and the other Indian chiefs,
gladdening the company by their presence. And the food!—'ducks,
bustards, grey and white geese, partridges, larks, and other birds;
moreover moose, caribou, beaver, otter, bear, rabbits, wild-cats, racoons,
and other animals,' the whole culminating in the tenderness of moose meat
and the delicacy of beaver's tail. Such are the items which Champlain
omits and Lescarbot includes. So it is throughout their respective
narratives—Champlain ever gaining force through compactness, and
Lescarbot constantly illuminating with his gaiety or shrewdness matters
which but for him would never have reached us.</p>
<p>This difference of temperament and outlook, which is so plainly reflected
on the printed page, also had its effect upon the personal relations of
the two men. It was not that Lescarbot scandalized Champlain by his
religious views, for though liberal-minded, Lescarbot was not a heretic,
and Champlain knew how to live harmoniously even with Huguenots. The cause
of the coolness which came to exist between them must be sought rather in
fundamental contrasts of character. To Champlain, Lescarbot doubtless
seemed a mere hanger-on or protege of Poutrincourt, with undue levity of
disposition and a needless flow of conversation. To Lescarbot, Champlain
may well have seemed deficient in literary attainments, and so preoccupied
with the concerns of geography as to be an uncongenial companion. To
whatever cause conjecture may trace it, they did not become friends,
although such lack of sympathy as existed shows itself only in an
occasional pin-prick, traceable particularly in the later editions of
their writings. For us it is the more needful to lay stress upon the
merits of Lescarbot, because he tends to be eclipsed by the greater
reputation of Champlain, and also because his style is sometimes so
diffuse as to create prejudice. But at his best he is admirable, and
without him we should know much less than we do about that Acadian
experience which holds such a striking place in the career of Champlain.</p>
<p>The popular estimate of French character dwells overmuch upon the levity
or gaiety which undoubtedly marks the Gallic race. France could not have
accomplished her great work for the world without stability of purpose and
seriousness of mood. Nowhere in French biography are these qualities more
plainly illustrated than by the acts of Champlain. The doggedness with
which he clung to his patriotic and unselfish task is the most conspicuous
fact in his life. Coupled therewith is his fortitude, both physical and
moral. In times of crisis the conscript sets his teeth and dies without a
murmur. But Champlain enlisted as a volunteer for a campaign which was to
go on unceasingly till his last day. How incessant were its dangers can be
made out in full detail from the text of the Voyages. We may omit the
perils of the North Atlantic, though what they were can be seen from
Champlain's description of his outward voyage in the spring of 1611. The
remaining dangers will suffice. Scurvy, which often claimed a death-roll
of from forty to eighty per cent in a single winter; famine such as that
which followed the failure of ships from home to arrive at the opening of
navigation; the storms which drove the frail shallop on the rocks and
shoals of Norumbega; the risk of mutiny; the chances of war, whether
against the Indians or the English; the rapids of the wilderness as they
threatened the overloaded canoe on its swift descent; the possible
treachery of Indian guides—such is a partial catalogue of the
death-snares which surrounded the pathway of an explorer like Champlain.
Every one of these dangers is brought before us by his own narrative in a
manner which does credit to his modesty no less than to his fortitude.
Without embellishment or self-glorification, he recites in a few lines
hairbreadth escapes which a writer of less steadfast soul would have
amplified into a thrilling tale of heroism. None the less, to the
discriminating reader Champlain's Voyages are an Odyssey.</p>
<p>Bound up with habitual fortitude is the motive from which it springs. In
Champlain's case patriotism and piety were the groundwork of a conspicuous
and long-tested courage. The patriotism which exacted such sacrifices was
not one which sought to define itself even in the form of a justifiable
digression from the recital of events. But we may be sure that Champlain
at the time he left Port Royal had made up his mind that the Spaniards,
the English, and the Dutch were not to parcel out the seaboard of North
America to the exclusion of the French. As for the religious basis of his
fortitude, we do not need Le Jeune's story of his death-bed or the record
of his friendship with men of religion. His narrative abounds throughout
with simple and natural expressions of piety, not the less impressive
because they are free from trace of the theological intolerance which
envenomed French life in his age. And not only did Champlain's trust in
the Lord fortify his soul against fear, but religion imposed upon him a
degree of self-restraint which was not common among explorers of the
seventeenth century. It is far from fanciful to see in this one of the
chief causes of his hold upon the Indians. To them he was more than a
useful ally in war time. They respected his sense of honour, and long
after his death remembered the temperance which marked his conduct when he
lived in their villages.</p>
<p>As a writer, Champlain enjoyed the advantage of possessing a fresh,
unhackneyed subject. The only exception to this statement is furnished by
his early book on the West Indies and Mexico, where he was going over
ground already trodden by the Spaniards. His other writings relate to a
sphere of exploration and settlement which he made his own, and of which
he well merited to be the chronicler.</p>
<p>Running through the Voyages is the double interest of discovery and
colonization, constantly blending and reacting upon each other, but still
remaining matters of separate concern. It is obvious that in the mind of
the narrator discovery is always the more engaging theme. Champlain is
indeed the historian of St Croix, Port Royal, and Quebec, but only
incidentally or from chance. By temper he was the explorer, that is, the
man of action, willing to record the broad results, but without the
instinct which led Lescarbot to set down the minutiae of life in a small,
rough settlement. There is one side of Champlain's activity as a colonizer
which we must lament that he has not described—namely, his efforts
to interest the nobles and prelates of the French court in the upbuilding
of Canada. A diary of his life at Paris and Fontainebleau would be among
the choicest documents of the early colonial era. But Champlain was too
blunt and loyal to set down the story of his relations with the great, and
for this portion of his life we must rely upon letters, reports, and
memoranda, which are so formal as to lack the atmosphere of that painful
but valiant experience.</p>
<p>Excluding the brief notices of life at St Croix, Port Royal, and Quebec,
Champlain's Voyages present a story of discovery by sea and discovery by
land. In other words, the four years of Acadian adventure relate to
discoveries made along the seaboard, while the remaining narratives,
including the Des Sauvages of 1604, relate to the basin of the St
Lawrence. Mariner though he was by early training, Champlain achieved his
chief success as an explorer by land, in the region of the Great Lakes.
Bad fortune prevented him from pursuing his course past Martha's Vineyard
to the mouth of the Hudson and Chesapeake Bay. It was no small achievement
to accomplish what he did on the coast of Norumbega, but his most
distinctive discoveries were those which he made in the wilderness,
leading up to his fine experience of 1615-16 among the Hurons.</p>
<p>To single out Champlain's chief literary triumph, it was he who introduced
the Algonquin, the Huron, and the Iroquois to the delighted attention of
France. Ever since the days of Cartier the French had known that savages
inhabited the banks of the St Lawrence, but Champlain is the pioneer in
that great body of literature on the North American Indian, which
thenceforth continued without interruption in France to the Rene and Atala
of Chateaubriand. Above all other subjects, the Indians are Champlain's
chief theme.</p>
<p>To some extent the account of Indian life which is given in the Voyages
suffers by comparison with the Relations of the Jesuits. The Fathers, by
reason of their long residence among the Indians, undoubtedly came to
possess a more intimate knowledge of their character and customs than it
was possible for Champlain to acquire during the time he spent among them.
On the other hand, the Jesuits were so preoccupied with the progress of
the mission that they tended to view the life of the savages too
exclusively from one angle. Furthermore, the volume of their description
is so great as to overwhelm all readers who are not specially interested
in the mission or the details of Indian custom. Champlain wrote with
sufficient knowledge to bring out salient traits in high relief, while his
descriptive passages are sufficiently terse to come within the range of
those who are not specialists. When we remember the perpetual interest
which, for more than three hundred years, Europe has felt in the North
American Indian, the Voyages of Champlain are seen in their true
perspective. For he, with fresh eyes, saw the red man in his wigwam, at
his council, and on the war-path; watched his stoic courage under torture
and his inhuman cruelty in the hour of vengeance. Tales of the wilderness,
the canoe, the portage, and the ambush have never ceased to fascinate the
imagination of Europe. Champlain's narrative may be plain and unadorned,
but, with such a groundwork, the imagination of every reader could supply
details at will.</p>
<p>In all essential respects Champlain seems to have been a good observer and
an accurate chronicler. It is true that his writings are not free from
error involving facts of distance, altitude, and chronology. But such
slips as have crept into his text do not constitute a serious blemish or
tend to impugn the good faith of his statements on matters where there is
no other source of information. Everything considered, his substantial
accuracy is much more striking than his partial inaccuracy. In fact, no
one of his high character and disinterested zeal could write with any
other purpose than to describe truly what he had seen and done. The seal
of probity is set upon Champlain's writings no less than upon the record
of his dealings with his employers and the king. Unselfish as to money or
fame, he sought to create New France.</p>
<p>In national progress much depends on the auspices under which the nation
was founded and the tradition which it represents. Thus England, and all
the English world, has an imperishable tradition in the deeds and
character of Alfred the Great; thus Canada has had from the outset of the
present stage in her development a great possession in the equal
self-sacrifice of Montcalm and Wolfe. On the other hand, the nation is
doomed to suffer which bases its traditions of greatness upon such acts as
the seizure of Silesia by Frederick or Bismarck's manipulation of the Ems
telegram.</p>
<p>For Canada Champlain is not alone a heroic explorer of the seventeenth
century, but the founder of Quebec; and it is a rich part of our heritage
that he founded New France in the spirit of unselfishness, of loyalty, and
of faith.</p>
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<h2> BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE </h2>
<p>Original Text</p>
<p>The best edition of Champlain's own works, in the original text, is that
of Laverdiere—'OEuvres de Champlain, pabliees sous le Patronage de
l'Universite Laval. Par l'Abbe C.-H. Laverdiere, M.A. Seconde Edition. 6
tomes, 4to. Quebec: Imprime au Seminaire par Geo. E. Desbarats, 1870.'</p>
<p>The list of Champlain's writings includes:</p>
<p>1. The 'Bref Discours,' describing his trip to the West<br/>
Indies.<br/></p>
<p>2. The 'Des Sauvages,' describing his first voyage to<br/>
the St Lawrence.<br/></p>
<p>3. The 'Voyages' of 1613, covering the years 1604-13<br/>
inclusive.<br/></p>
<p>4. The 'Voyages' of 1619, covering the years 1615-18<br/>
inclusive.<br/></p>
<p>5. The 'Voyages' of 1632, which represent a re-editing<br/>
of the early voyages from 1603 forward, and continue<br/>
the narrative from 1618 to 1629.<br/></p>
<p>6. A general treatise on the duties of the mariner.</p>
<p>English Translations</p>
<p>1. The 'Bref Discours,' in a translation by Alice Wilmere,<br/>
was published by the Hakluyt Society in 1859.<br/></p>
<p>2. The Des Sauvages (1604) was translated in 'Purchas<br/>
His Pilgrimes' (1625).<br/></p>
<p>3. The 'Voyages' of 1604-18 inclusive were translated by<br/>
C. P. Otis for the Prince Society of Boston, in three<br/>
volumes, 1878-82, with the Rev. E. F. Slafter as<br/>
editor. This is a fine work, but not easily accessible<br/>
in its original form. Fortunately, Professor Otis's<br/>
translation has been reprinted, with an introduction<br/>
and notes by Professor W. L. Grant, in the 'Original<br/>
Narratives of Early American History' (Scribners,<br/>
1907). The passages quoted in the present volume are<br/>
taken from Otis's translation, with occasional changes.<br/></p>
<p>4. The 'Voyages' of 1604-16 inclusive have also been well<br/>
translated by Annie Nettleton Bourne, with an<br/>
introduction and notes by Professor E. G. Bourne<br/>
(A. S. Barnes and Co., 1906). This translation follows<br/>
the edition of 1632, and also gives the translation<br/>
of 'Des Souvages' which appears in Purchas.<br/></p>
<p>General Literature</p>
<p>The career of Champlain is treated in many historical works, of which the
following are a few: Parkman, 'Pioneers of France in the New World';
Dionne, 'Samuel de Champlain' (in the Makers of Canada' series); Biggar,
'Early Trading Companies of New France'; Slafter, 'Champlain' (in Winsor's
'Narrative and Critical History of America,' vol. iv, part i, chap. iii);
Salone, 'La Colonisation de la Nouvelle France'; Sulte, 'Histoire des
Canadiens-Francais'; Ferland, 'Cours d'Histoire du Canada'; Garneau,
'Histoire du Canada,' fifth edition edited by the author's grandson,
Hector Garneau.</p>
<p>Portrait</p>
<p>Unfortunately, there is no authentic portrait of Champlain. That ascribed
to Moncornet is undoubtedly spurious, as has been proved by V. H. Paltsits
in 'Acadiensis,' vol. iv, pp. 306-11.</p>
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