<h3> CHAPTER V </h3>
<h4>
CROSSING THE MOUNTAINS
</h4>
<p>Like many lowland dwellers, the Overlanders had thought of a pass as a
door opening through a rock wall. What they found was a forested slope
flanked on both sides by mighty precipices down which poured cataracts
with the sound of the voice of many waters. Huge hemlocks lay
criss-crossed on the slope. Above could be seen the green edge of a
glacier, and still higher the eternal snows of the far peaks. The tang
of ice was in the air; but in the valleys was all the gorgeous bloom of
midsummer—the gaudy painter's brush, the shy harebell, the tasselled
windflower, and a few belated mountain roses. Long-stemmed, slender
cornflowers and bluebells held up their faces to the sun, blue as the
sky above them. Everywhere was an odour as of incense, the fragrance
of the great hemlocks, of grasses frost-touched at night and sunburnt
by day, of the unpolluted earth-mould of a thousand years.</p>
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<p>Where was the trail? None was visible! The captain led the way,
following blazes chipped in the bark of the trees, zigzagging up the
slope from right to left, from left to right, hanging to the horse's
mane to lift weight from the saddle, with a rest for breathing at each
turn as they climbed; and, when the ridge of the foothill was
surmounted, a world of peacock-blue lakes lay below, fringed by
forests. The cataracts looked like wind-blown ribbons of silver.
Instead of dipping down, the trail led to the rolling flank of another
great foothill, and yet another, round sharp saddlebacks connecting the
mountains. Here, ox-carts were dangerous and had to be abandoned. It
was with difficulty that the oxen could be driven along the narrow
ledges.</p>
<p>Jasper House, Whitefish Lake, the ruins of Henry House, they saw from
the height of the pass. One foaming stream they forded eight times in
three hours, driven from side to side by precipice and windfall; and in
places they could advance only by ascending the stream bed. This was
risky work on a fractious pony, and some of the riders preferred wading
to riding. At noon on the 22nd of August the riders crossed a small
stream and set up their tents on the border of a sedgy lake. Then
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somebody noticed that the lake emptied west, not east; and a wild
halloo split the welkin. They had crossed the Divide. They were on
the headwaters of the Fraser, where a man could stand astride the
stream; and the Fraser led to the Cariboo gold-diggings. They still
had four hundred miles to travel. Their boots were in shreds and their
clothes in tatters; but what were four hundred miles to men who had
tramped almost three thousand?</p>
<p>But their progress had been so slow that the provisions were running
short. The first snow of the mountains falls in September, and it was
already near the end of August. There was not a moment to lose in
resting. What had been a lure of hope now became a goad of
desperation. So it is with all life's highest emprises. We plunge in
led by hope. We plunge on spurred by fate. When the reward is won,
only God and our own souls know that, even if we would, we could not
have done otherwise than go on.</p>
<p>Those travellers who had insisted on bringing oxen had now to kill them
for meat. Chipmunks were shot for food. So were many worn-out horses.
Hides were used to resole boots and make mitts. Not far from Moose
Lake the last bag of pemmican was eaten.
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Perhaps it was a good
thing at this time that the band of Overlanders began to spread out and
scatter along the trail; for hungry men in large groups are a tragic
danger to themselves. Those of the advance-party were now some ten
days ahead of their companions in the rear. Mrs MacNaughton, whose
husband was with the rear party, of which we shall hear more anon,
relates the story of a young fellow so ravenous that he fried the
deer-thong he had bought for a tump-line back at one of the company's
forts. Fortunately, somewhere west of Moose Lake, the travellers came
on a band of Shuswap Indians who traded for matches and powder enough
salmon and cranberry cakes to stave off actual famine.</p>
<p>Trees with chipped bark pointed the way down the Fraser. For three
days the party followed the little stream that had come out of the lake
hardly wider than the span of a man's stride. With each mile its
waters swelled and grew wilder. On the third day windfall and
precipice drove the riders back from the river bed into the heavy
hemlock forest, where festoons of Spanish moss overhead almost shut out
the light of the sun and all sense of direction. And when they came
back to the bank of the stream they saw a
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wild cataract cutting
its way through a dark canyon. There was no mistake. This was the
Fraser, and it was living up to its reputation.</p>
<p>And yet the Overlanders were sorely puzzled. There were no more blazes
on the trees to point the way; and, if this was the Fraser, it seemed
to flow almost due north. Where was Cariboo? Mr M'Micking, who was
acting as captain, tried to find out from the Indians. They made him a
drawing showing that if he crossed another watershed he would come on a
white man's wide pack-road. That must lead to Cariboo; but the snow
lay already a foot deep on this road; and unless the Overlanders
hastened they would be snowbound for the winter. On the other hand, if
the white men continued to follow the wild river canyon north, it would
bring them to Fort George on the main Fraser in ten days. There was no
time to waste on chance travelling. The Overlanders knew that
somewhere south from Moose Lake must lie the headwaters of the
Thompson, which would bring them to Kamloops. Was that what the
Indians meant by their drawings of a white man's road? If that were
true, between Moose Lake and the Thompson must lie the land of their
desire,
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Cariboo; but to cross another unknown divide in winter
seemed risky. To follow the bend of the Fraser north might be the long
way round, but it was sure.</p>
<p>It was decided to let the party separate. Let those with provisions
still remaining try to push overland to Cariboo. If they failed to
find it, they could build cabins and winter on their pack animals.
Twenty men joined this group. The rest decided to stick to the river.
Behind were straggling a score more of the travellers, who were left to
follow as they could. Mrs Shubert with her children joined the band
going overland to find the Thompson.</p>
<p>The Indians traded canoes for horses and showed the Overlanders how to
put rafts together to run the Fraser. Axes had been worn almost to the
haft. Cutting the huge trees and splitting them into suitable timbers
was slow work. It was September before the rafts were ready to be
launched. There were four. Each had a heavy railing round it like
that of a ferry, with some flat stones on which fires could be lighted
to cook meals without pausing to land. When we recall the experiences
of Mackenzie and Fraser on this river, it seems almost incredible that
these landsmen made
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the descent on rafts with their few remaining
ponies and oxen tied to the railings; yet so they did. If we imagine
rafts, with horses and oxen tied to the railings, trying to run the
whirlpool below Niagara, we shall have some conception of what this
meant.</p>
<p>The canoes sheered out of the way and the rafts were unmoored. The
Scarborough raft, with men from Whitby and Scarborough, near Toronto,
swirled out to midstream on the afternoon of the 1st of September.
'Poor, poor white men,' sighed the Indians; 'no more see white men';
but the men in the canoes rapped the gunnels with their paddles and
uttered rousing cheers. Then the <i>Ottawa</i> and the <i>Niagara</i> and the
<i>Huntingdon</i> rafts slipped out on the current. All went well for four
days. Sweeps made of trees with the branch ends turned down and long,
slim poles kept the rafts in mid-current. Meals were cooked as the
unwieldy craft glided along the river-bank. Two or three men kept
guard at night, so that the rafts were delayed for only a few hours
during the darkest part of the night. The sun shone hot at midday and
there were hard frosts at night; but the rest in this sort of travel
was wonderfully refreshing after four months of toil across prairie and
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mountain. But on the afternoon of the 5th of September the rafts
began to bounce and swirl. The banks raced to the rear, and before the
crews realized it, a noise as of breaking seas filled the air, and the
<i>Scarborough</i> was riding her first rapid. Luckily, the water was deep
and the rocks well submerged. The <i>Scarborough</i> ran the rapid without
mishap and the other rafts followed. On the next day, however, the
waters 'collected' and began running in leaps and throwing back spume.
Some one shouted 'Breakers! head ashore!' and the galloping rafts
bumped on the bank of the river. The banks here were steep for
portaging; and the Scarborough boys, brought up on the lake-front, east
of Toronto, decided, come what might, to run the rapids. They let go
the mooring-rope and went churning into a whirlpool of yeasty spray.
All hands bent their strength to the poles. The raft dipped out of
sight, but was presently seen riding safely and calmly below the rapids.</p>
<p>Those watching the <i>Scarborough</i> from the bank breathed freely again
and plucked up heart; but the worst was yet ahead. The oily calm below
the first rapid dropped into another maelstrom of angry waters. Into
this the <i>Scarborough</i> was drawn by the terrible undertow. For a
moment the watchers on the bank could see nothing but the horns of the
bellowing, frightened oxen tied to the railing. Then the raft was
mounting the waves again. The seaworthiness of a raft is, of course,
well known. It may dip under water, or even split, but it seldom
upsets and never swamps or sinks. Before the other rafts ran the
rapids, two of them were first lightened of their loads. The men
preferred to pack their provisions over the precipices rather than take
the risk of losing them in the rapid. Nor was the packing child's
play. There was a narrow portage-trail along the ledges of the rocks,
and where the slabs of granite had split off Indians had laid rickety
poles across. Over these frail bridges the packers, with great
difficulty, carried the loads of the two rafts. Fortunately most of
them had long since discarded boots for moccasins.</p>
<p>All the rafts came through safely. The canoes were not so fortunate.
When the <i>Scarborough</i> reached a sand-bar at the foot of the rapids,
the men were surprised to find three of their Toronto friends, who had
gone ahead in a canoe, now stranded high and dry. The canoe had sidled
to the waves, swamped, and sunk with everything the Toronto men
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owned, including their coats, tents, and boots. For two days they had
been awaiting the coming of the rafts. They were almost dead from
exposure and hunger.</p>
<p>Nine canoes in all were wrecked at this spot. One split on the reef.
Another was caught in the backwater. Others sank in the whirlpool
below the rapids. Others went under at the first leap into the
cataract. Two of the canoes had foolishly been lashed abreast. They
sidled, shipped a billow, and sank. All the men clung to the gunnels;
but one who was a powerful swimmer struck out for the shore. The
canoes stranded on the shore below and the clinging men saved
themselves. When they looked for their friend who had struck out for
the shore, he was no longer to be seen. These men were all from
Goderich, brought up on the banks of Lake Huron.</p>
<p>A similar fate befell a crew of four men from Toronto. Two of them
undertook to portage provisions along the bank of the canyon, while the
other two, named Carpenter and Alexander, tried to run the canoe down
the rapids. The episode has some interest for students of psychology.
Carpenter walked down the bank of the canyon a short distance to
reconnoitre the different channels of the
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rapids. He was seen to
take out his notebook and write an entry. He then put the note-book in
the inner pocket of his coat, took off the coat, and slung it in a tree
on the bank. When he came back to the canoe, he seemed preoccupied.
The canoe ripped on a rock in midstream, flattened, and sank.
Carpenter went down insensible as though his head had struck and he had
been stunned. Alexander was washed ashore. He found himself on the
side of the bank opposite the rest of the party. Going below to calmer
waters, he swam across. Carpenter's coat hung on the trees. In the
pocket was the note-book, in which Alexander read the astounding words:
'Arrived at Grand Canyon. Ran the canyon and was drowned.' Carpenter
left a wife and child in Toronto, for whom, evidently, he had written
the message. But if he was of sound mind, desiring to live, and so
certain of death that he was able to write his own fate in the past
tense, why did he attempt the rapids? His friends had no explanation
of the curious incident.</p>
<p>There is another gruesome story of a sand-bar in the very middle of
this raging canyon. It will be remembered that some of the Overlanders
had straggled far to the rear. Some
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time before spring a party of
them attempted to run this canyon. They were never again seen alive.
Some treasure-seekers who came over the trail in spring stranded on
this sand-bar. They found the bodies of the missing men. All but one
had been torn and partly devoured. It need not be told here that no
wild beast could have stemmed the rapids from either side. Unless
wolves or cougars had accidentally been washed to the sand-bar, and
washed away again, the wild solitude must have witnessed a horror too
terrible to be told; for the body of the man who had apparently died
last was fully clothed and unmolested. As absolutely nothing more is
known of what happened than has been set down here, it seems well that
there is no record of the names of these castaways.</p>
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