The Earl in
Montreal—Alarming news—Engages a body
of Swiss—The De Meurons—Embark for the
North-West—Kawtawabetay's story—Hears
of Seven Oaks—Lake Superior—Lord
Selkirk—A doughty Douglas—Seizes Fort
William—Canoes upset and Nor'-Westers
drowned—"A Banditti"—The Earl's
blunder—A winter march—Fort Douglas
recaptured—His Lordship soothes the
settlers—An Indian Treaty—"The Silver
Chief "—The Earl's note-book.
The sad story of
the beleaguered and excited colonists
reached the ears of Lord Selkirk
through his agents. The trouble
threatening his settlers determined
the energetic founder to visit Canada
for himself, and, if possible, the
infant colony. Accordingly, late in
the year 1815, in company with his
family —consisting of the Countess,
his son, and two daughters—he reached
Montreal. The news of the first
dispersion of the colonists, their
flight to Norway House, and the
further threatenings of the Bois
Brules, arrived about the time of
their coming to Now York. Lord Selkirk
hastened on to Montreal, but it was
too late in the season, being about
the end of October, to penetrate to
the interior.
He must winter in
Montreal. He was here in the very
midst of the enemy. With energy,
characteristic of the man, he brought
the matter of protection of his colony
urgently before the Government of
Lower Canada. In a British colony
surely the rights of property of a
British subject would be protected,
and surely the safety of hundreds of
loyal people could not be trifled
with. As we shall see in a later
chapter, the high-minded nobleman
counted without his host; he had but
to live a few years in the New World
of that day to find how skilfully the
forms of law can be adapted to carry
out illegal objects and shield
law-breakers.
As early as February of that year
(1815), dreading the threatenings even
then made by the North-West Company,
he had represented to Lord Bathurst,
the British Secretary of State, the
urgent necessity of an armed force,
not necessarily very numerous, being
sent to the Red River settlement to
maintain order in the colony. Now,
after the outrageous proceedings of
the summer of 1815 and the arrival of
the dreary intelligence from Red
River, Lord Selkirk again brings the
matter before the authorities, this
time before Sir Gordon Drummond,
Governor of Lower Canada, and encloses
a full account of the facts as to the
expulsion of the settlers from their
homes, and of the many acts of
violence perpetrated at Red River.
Nothing being gained in this way, his
Lordship determined to undertake an
expedition himself, as soon as it
could be organized, and carry
assistance to his persecuted people,
who, he knew, had been gathered
together by Colin Robertson, and to
whom he had sent as Governor, Mr.
Semple, in whom he reposed great
confidence. We have seen that during
the winter of 1815-16, peace and a
certain degree of confidence prevailed
among the settlers, more than half of
whom were spending their first winter
in the country. Fort Douglas was
regarded as strong enough to resist a
considerable attack, and the presence
of Governor Semple, a military
officer, was thought a guarantee for
the protection of the people. During
the winter, however, Lord Selkirk
learned enough to assure him that the
danger was not over—that, indeed, a
more determined attack than ever would
be made as soon as the next season
should open. He had been sworn in as a
Justice of the Peace in Upper Canada
and for the Indian territories ; he
had obtained for his personal
protection from the Governor the
promise of a sergeant and six men of
the British army stationed in Canada,
but this was not sufficient.
He undertook a plan of placing upon
his own land in the colony a number of
persons as settlers who could be
called upon in case of emergency, as
had been the intention in the case of
the Highland colonists, to whom
muskets had been furnished. The close
of the Napoleonic wars had left a
large number of the soldiers engaged
in these wars out of employment, the
British Government having been
compelled to reduce the size of the
army. During the Napoleonic wars a
number of soldiers of adventure from
Switzerland and Italy, captured by
Britain in Spain, entered her service
and were useful troops. Two of these
regiments, one named "De Meuron," and
the other "Watteville," had been sent
to Canada to assist in the war against
the United States. This war being now
over also, orders came to Sir Gordon
Drummond to disband the two regiments
in May, 1815. The former of the
regiments was at the time stationed at
Montreal, the latter at Kingston.
From these bodies of men Lord Selkirk
undertook to provide his colony with
settlers willing to defend it. The
enemies of Lord Selkirk have been very
free in their expression of opinion as
to the worthlessness of these soldiers
and their unfitness as settlers. It is
worthy of notice, however, that the
Nor'-Westers did not scruple to use
Messrs. Missani and Brumby, as well as
Reinhard and Huerter of the same
corps, to carry out their own
purposes. The following order, given
by Sir John Coape Sherbrooke,
effectually disposes of such a
calumny:—
"Quebec, July 26th, 1816.
"In parting with the regiments 'De
Meuron' and 'Watte-ville,' both of
which corps his Excellency has had the
good fortune of having under his
command in other parts of the world,
Sir John Sherbrooke desires
Lieutenant-Colonel De Meuron and
Lieutenant-Colonel May, and the
officers and men of these corps will
accept his congratulations on having,
by their conduct in the Canadas,
maintained the reputation which they
have deservedly acquired by their
former services. His Excellency can
have no hesitation in saying that his
Majesty's service in these provinces
has derived important advantages
during the late war from the
steadiness, discipline, and efficiency
of those corps.
"J. Harvey, Lieutenant-Colonel,
D.A.G."
Testimony to the same effect is given
by the officer in command of the
garrison of Malta, on their leaving
that island to come to Canada.
These men afforded the material for
Lord Selkirk's purpose, viz. to till
the soil and protect the colony. Like
a wise man, however, he made character
the ground of engagement in the case
of all whom he took. To those who came
to terms with him he agreed to give a
sufficient portion of land,
agricultural implements, and as wages
for working the boats on the voyage
eight dollars a month. It was further
agreed that should any choose to leave
Red River on reaching it, they should
be taken back by his Lordship free of
expense.
Early in June, 1816, four officers and
about eighty men of the "De Meurons"
left Montreal in Lord Selkirk's employ
and proceeded westward to Kingston.
Here twenty more of the "Watteville"
regiment joined their company. Thence
the expedition, made up by the
addition of one hundred and thirty
canoe-men, pushed on to York
(Toronto), and from York northward to
Lake Simcoe and Georgian Bay. Across
this Bay and Lake Huron they passed
rapidly on to Sault Ste. Marie, Lord
Selkirk leaving the expedition before
reaching that place to go to
Drummond's Isle, which was the last
British garrison in Upper Canada, and
at which point he was to receive the
sergeant and six men granted for his
personal protection by the Governor of
Canada. At Drum-mond's Island a
council was held with Kawtawabetay, an
Ojibeway chief, by the Indian
Department, Lieut.-Colonel Maule, of
the 104th Regiment, presiding.
Kawtawabetay there informed the
council that in the spring of 1815 two
North-West traders, McKenzie and
Morrison, told him that they would
give him and his people all the goods
or merchandise and rum that they had
at Fort William, Leach Lake, and Sand
Lake, if he, the said Kawtawabetay,
and his people would make and declare
war against the settlers in Red River.
On being asked by the chief whether
this was at the request of the "great
chiefs" at Montreal or Quebec,
McKenzie and Morrison said it was
solely from the North-West Company's
agents, who wished the settlement
destroyed, as it was an annoyance to
them. The chief further stated that
the last spring (1816), whilst at Fond
Du Lac Superior, a Nor'-Wester agent
(Grant) offered him two kegs of rum
and two carrots of tobacco if he would
send some of his young men in search
of certain persons employed in taking
despatches to the Red River, pillage
these bearers of despatches of the
letters and papers, and kill them
should they make any resistance. The
chief stated he had refused to have
anything to do with those offers. On
being asked in the council by Lord
Selkirk, who was present, as to the
feelings of the Indians towards the
settlers at Red River, he said that at
the commencement of the Red River
settlement some of the Indians did not
like it, but at present they are all
glad of its being settled.
Lord Selkirk soon hastened on and
overtook his expedition at Sault Ste.
Marie, now consisting of two hundred
and fifty men all told, and these
being maintained at his private
expense. They immediately proceeded
westward, intending to go to the
extreme point of Lake Superior, near
where the town of Duluth now stands,
and where the name Fond du Lac is
still retained. The expedition would
then have gone north-westward through
what is now Minnesota to Red Lake,
from which point a descent could have
been made by boat, through Red Lake
River and Red River to the very
settlement itself. This route would
have avoided the Nor'-Westers
altogether.
Westward bound, the party had little
more than left Sault Ste. Marie,
during the last week of July, when
they were met on Lake Superior by two
canoes, in one of which was Miles
Macdonell, former Governor of Red
River, who brought the sad
intelligence of the second destruction
of the colony and of the murder of
Governor Semple and his attendants.
His Lordship was thrown into the
deepest despair. The thought of his
Governor killed, wholesale murder
committed, the poor settlers led by
him from the Highland homes, where
life at least was safe, to endure such
fear and privation, was indeed a sore
trial. To any one less moved by the
spirit of philanthropy, it must have
been a serious disappointment, but to
one feeling so thorough a sympathy for
the suffering and who was himself the
very soul of honour, it was a crushing
blow.
He resolved to change his course and
to go to Fort William, the
headquarters of the Nor'-Wosters. He
now determined to act in his office as
magistrate, and sought to induce two
gentlemen of Sault Ste. Marie, Messrs.
Ermatinger and Askin, both
magistrates, to accompany him in that
capacity. They were unable to go.
Compelled to proceed alone, he writes
from Sault Ste. Marie, on July 29th,
to Sir John Sherbrooke, and after
speaking of his failure to induce the
two gentlemen mentioned by him to go,
says, "I am therefore reduced to the
alternative of acting alone, or of
allowing an audacious crime to pass
unpunished. In these circumstances I
cannot doubt that it is my duty to
act, though I am not without
apprehension that the law may be
openly resisted by a set of people who
have been accustomed to consider force
as the only true criterion of right."
One would have said, on looking at the
matter dispassionately, that the
Governor-General, with a military
force so far west as Drummond Isle in
Georgian Bay, would have taken
immediate steps to bring to justice
the offenders.
Governor Sherbrooke seems to have felt
himself powerless, for he says in a
despatch to Lord Bathurst, "I beg
leave to call your Lordship's serious
attention to the forcible and, I fear,
too Just description given by the Earl
of Selkirk of the state of the Red
River territory. I leave to your
Lordship to judge whether a banditti
such as he describes will yield to the
influence, or be intimidated by the
menaces of distant authority." It may
be well afterwards to contrast this
statement of the Governor's with
subsequent despatches. It must not be
forgotten that while "the banditti"
was pursuing its course of violence in
the far-off territory, and, as has
been stated, thoroughly under the
direction and encouragement of the
North-West Company partners, the
leading members of this Company, who
held, many of them, high places in
society and in the Government in
Montreal, were posing as the lovers of
peace and order, and were lamenting
over the excesses of the Indians and
Bois Brules. By this course they were
enabled to thwart any really effective
measures towards restoring peace at
the far-away "seat of war."
The action of the North-West Company
may be judged from the following
extracts from a letter of the Hon.
John Richardson, one of the partners,
and likewise a member of the executive
council of Lower Canada, addressed to
Governor Sherbrooke. He says on August
17th, 1816: "It is with much concern
that I have to mention that blood has
been shed at the Red River to an
extent greatly to be deplored ; but it
is consolatory to those interested in
the North-West Company to find that
none of their traders or people were
concerned, or at the time within a
hundred miles of the scene of
contest." What a commentary on such a
statement are the stories of Pambrun
and Huerter, given in a previous
chapter ! What a cold-blooded
statement after all the plottings and
schemes of the whole winter before the
attack! What a heartless falsehood as
regards the Indians, who, under so
great temptations, refused to be
partners in so bloody an enterprise!
The resolution of Lord Selkirk to go
to Fort William in the capacity of a
magistrate was one involving, as he
well knew, many perils. He was not,
however, the man to shrink from a
daring enterprise having once
undertaken it.
To Fort William, then, with the
prospect of meeting several hundreds
of the desperate men of the North-West
Company, Lord Selkirk made his way. So
confident was he in the rectitude of
his purpose and in the justice of his
cause, that he pushed forward, and
without the slightest hesitation
encamped upon the Kaministiquia, on
the south side of the river, in sight
of Fort William. The expedition
arrived on August 12th. A demand was
at once made on the officers of the
North-West Company for the release of
a number of persons who had been
captured at Red River after the
destruction of the colony and been
brought to Fort William, The
Nor'-Westers denied having arrested
these persons, and to give colour to
this assertion immediately sent them
over to Lord Selkirk's encampment.
On the 13th and following days of the
month of August, the depositions of a
number of persons wore taken before
his Lordship as a Justice of the
peace. The depositions related to the
guilt of the several Nor'-Wester
partners, their destroying the
settlement, entering and removing
property from Fort Douglas, and the
like; and wore made by Pambrun,
Lavigne, Nolin, Blondoau, Brisbois,
and others. It was made so clear to
Lord Selkirk that the partners were
guilty of inciting the attacks on the
colony and of approving the outrages
committed, that he determined to
arrest a number of the leaders. This
was done by regular process—by
warrants served on Mr. McGillivray,
Kenneth McKenzie, Simon Fraser, and
others, but these prisoners were
allowed to remain in Fort William.
In one case, that of a partner named
John McDonald, resistance having been
offered, the constables called for the
aid of a party of the De Meurons, who
had crossed over from the encampment
with them in their boats. The leaving
of the prisoners with their liberty in
Fort William, however, gave the
opportunity for conspiracy; and it was
represented to Lord Selkirk that Fort
William would be used for the purposes
of resistance, and that the prisoners
arrested would be released. The facts
leading to this belief were that a
canoe, laden with arms, had left the
fort at night; that eight barrels of
gunpowder had been secreted in a
thicket, and that these had been taken
from the magazine; while some forty
stand of arms, fresh-loaded, had been
found in a barn among some hay. These
indications proved that an attempt was
about to be made to resist the
execution of the law, and accordingly
the prisoners were placed in one
building and closely guarded, while
Lord Selkirk's encampment was removed
across the river and pitched in front
of the fort to prevent any surprise.
A further examination of the prisoners
took place, and their criminality
being so evident, they were sent to
York, Upper Canada, Three canoes, well
manned and containing the prisoners,
left the fort on August 18th, under
the charge of Lieutenant Fauche, one
of the De Meuron officers. The journey
down the lakes was marred by a most
unfortunate accident. One of the
canoes was upset some fifteen miles
from Sault Ste. Marie. This was caused
by the sudden rise in the wind. The
affair was purely accidental, and
there were drowned one of the
prisoners, named McKenzie, a sergeant
and a man of the De Meurons, and six
Indians. The prisoners were taken to
Montreal and admitted to bail. The
course taken by Lord Selkirk at Fort
William has been severely criticized,
and became, indeed, the subject of
subsequent legal proceedings. One of
the Nor'-Wester apologists stated to
Governor Sherbrooke "that the mode of
proceeding under Lord Selkirk's orders
resembled nothing British, and
exceeded even the military despotism
of the French in Holland."
No doubt it would have been better had
Lord Selkirk obtained other
magistrates to take part in the
proceedings at Fort William, but we
have seen he did try this and failed.
Had it been possible to have had the
arrests effected without the
appearance of force made by the De
Meurons, it would have been more
agreeable to our ideas of ordinary
legal proceedings; but it must be
remembered he was dealing with those
called by a high authority "a
banditti." Could Fort William have
been left in the hands of its
possessors, it would have been better;
but then there was clear evidence that
the Nor'-Westers intended violence. To
have left Fort William in their
possession would have been suicidal.
It would probably have been better
that Lord Selkirk should not have
stopped the canoes going into the
interior with North-West merchandise,
but to have allowed them to proceed
was only to have assisted his
enemies—the enemies, moreover, of law
and order. Thousands of pounds' worth
of his property stolen from Fort
Douglas by the agents of the
North-West Company, and the fullest
evidence in the depositions made
before him that this was in pursuance
of a plan devised by the Company and
deliberately carried out! Several
hundreds of lawless voyageurs and
unscrupulous partners ready to use
violence in the wild region of Lake
Superior, where, during fifty years
preceding, they had committed numerous
acts of bloodshed, and had never been
called to account! The worrying
reflection that homeless settlers and
helpless women and children were
crying, in some region then unknown to
him, for his assistance, after their
wanton dispersion by their enemies
from their homes on the banks of Red
River! All these things were
sufficient to nerve to action one of
far less generous impulses than Lord
Selkirk.
Is it at all surprising that his
Lordship did not act with all the
calmness and scrupulous care of a
judge on the bench, who, under
favourable circumstances, feels
himself strong in his consciousness of
safety, supported by the myriad
officers of the law, and surrounded by
the insignia of Justice ? The
justification of his course, even if
it be interpreted adversely, is, that
in a state of violence, to preserve
the person is a preliminary to the
settlement of other questions of
personal right. One thing at least is
to Lord Selkirk's credit, that, as
soon as possible, he handed over the
law-breakers to be dealt with by the
Canadian Courts, where, however,
unfortunately, another divinity
presided than the blind goddess of
Justice.
Let us now see where we are in our
story. Lord Selkirk is at Fort
William. The Nor'-Wester partners have
been sent to the East. It is near the
end of August, and the state of
affairs at Fort William does not allow
the founder to pass on to his colony
for the winter. He is surrounded by
his De Meuron settlers. During the
months of autumn the expedition is
engaged in laying in supplies for the
approaching winter, and opening up
roads toward the Red River country.
The season was spent in the usual
manner of the Lake Superior country,
shut out from the rest of the world.
The winter over, Lord Selkirk started
on May 1st, 1817, for Red River,
accompanied by his body-guard. The De
Meurons had preceded him in the month
of March, and, reaching the interior,
restored order.
The colonizer arrived at his colony in
the last week of June, and saw, for
the first time, the land of his dreams
for the preceding fifteen years. In
order to restore peace, he endeavoured
to carry out the terms of the
proclamation issued by the Government
of Canada, that all property taken
during the troubles should be restored
to its original owners. This
restitution was made to a certain
extent, though much that had been
taken from Fort Douglas was never
recovered. The settlers were brought
back from their refuge at Norway
House, and the settlement was again
organized. The colonists long after
related, with great satisfaction, how
Lord Selkirk cheered them by his
presence. After their return to their
despoiled homesteads a gathering of
the settlers took place, and a full
consideration of all their affairs was
had in their patron's presence.
This gathering was at the spot where
the church and burying-ground of St.
John's are now found. "Here." said his
Lordship, pointing to lot number four,
on which they stood, "here you shall
build your church; and that lot," said
he, pointing to lot number three
across the little stream called
Parsonage Creek, "is for the school."
The people then reminded his Lordship
that he had promised them a minister,
who should follow them to their
adopted country. This he at once
acknowledged, saying, "Selkirk never
forfeited his word;" while he promised
to give the matter attention as soon
as practicable. In addition, Lord
Selkirk gave a document stating that,
"in consideration of the hardships
which the settlers had suffered, in
consequence of the lawless conduct of
the North-West Company, his intention
was to grant gratuitously the
twenty-four lots which had been
occupied to those of the settlers who
had made improvements on their lands
before they were driven away from them
in the previous year."
Before the dispersion of this public
gathering of the people, the founder
gave the name, at the request of the
colonists, to their settlement. The
name given by him to this first parish
in Rupert's Land was that of Kildonan,
from their old home in the valley of
Helmsdale, in Sutherlandshire,
Scotland. In more fully organizing the
colony, his Lordship ordered a
complete survey to be made of the
land, and steps to be taken towards
laying out roads, building bridges,
erecting mills, &c.
It will be remembered, as already
stated, that at the inception of the
colony scheme, in 1811, the
Nor'-Westers had threatened the
hostility of the Indians. It may be
mentioned as a strange fact that, to
this day, it is a trick of the Bois
Brules, taking their cue from the
Nor'-Westers, when making any demand,
to threaten the Government with the
wrath of the Indians, over whom they
profess to exercise a control. We have
already seen that the Nor'-Westers'
boast as to their influence over the
Indians was empty. In the publications
of the Nor'-Westers of 1816-20 a
speech is sometimes set forth of an
Indian chief, "Grandes Oreilles,"
breathing forth threatenings against
the infant settlement. It is worthy of
notice that even this resource is
swept away by the author of the
speech, a Nor'-Wester trader,
confessing that he had manufactured
the speech and "Grandes Oreilles" had
never spoken it.
Within throe weeks of his arrival at
Red River Lord Selkirk carried out his
promise of making a treaty with the
Indians. All the Indians were most
willing to do this, as on many
occasions during the troubles they
had, by giving early information as to
the movements of the Nor'-Westers, and
by other means, shown their sympathy
and feeling toward the settlers. The
object of the treaty was simply to do
what has since been done all over the
north-west territories—to extinguish
the Indian title. The treaty is signed
alike by Ojibe-way, Cree, and
Assiniboine chiefs, the last mentioned
being a tribe generally considered to
belong to the Sioux stock. Lord
Selkirk afterwards made a treaty, on
leaving the Red River, with the other
Sioux nations inhabiting his
territory. The chiefs were met at Red
River by his Lordship, and those whose
names are attached to the treaty are,
giving their French names in some
cases as shorter than the Indian, Le
Sonent, Robe Noire, Peguis, L'Homme
Noir, and Grandes Oreilles. His
Lordship seems to have had a most
conciliatory and attractive manner. It
is worth while closing this chapter by
giving extracts from the speeches of
these Indian chiefs, taken down at the
grand council at which Lord Selkirk
smoked the pipe of peace with the
assembled warriors.
Peguis, the Saulteaux chief, always
the fast friend of the colonists,
said, "When the English settlers first
came here we received them with joy.
It was not our fault if even the
stumps of the brushwood were too rough
for their feet; but misfortunes have
since overtaken them. Evil-disposed
men came here, calling themselves
great chiefs, sent from our Great
Father across the big lake, but we
believe they were only traders,
pretending to be great chiefs on
purpose to deceive us. They misled the
young men who are near us (a small
party of Bois Brules encamped in the
neighbourhood), and employed them to
shed the blood of your children and to
drive away the settlers from this
river. We do not acknowledge these men
as an independent tribe. They have
sprung up here and there like
mushrooms and we know them not.
"At the first arrival of the settlers
we were frequently solicited by the
North-West Company to frighten them
away ; but we were pleased to see that
our Great Father had sent some of his
white children to live among us, and
we refused to do or say anything
against them. The traders even
demanded our calumets, and desired to
commit our sentiments to paper, that
they might send to our Great Father ;
but we refused to acknowledge the
speeches which they wished to put into
our mouths. We are informed that they
have told a tale that it was the
Indians who drove away and murdered
the children of our Great Father, but
it is a falsehood.
"As soon as I saw the mischief that
happened I went to Lake Winnipeg with
a few friends to wait for news from
the English, but I could meet none. We
have reasons to be friends of the
colony. When there were only traders
here we could not get a blanket, or a
piece of cloth, without furs to give
in exchange. Our country is now almost
destitute of furs, so that we were
often in want; from the people of the
colony we get blankets and cloth for
the meat we procure them. The country
abounds with meat, which we can
obtain, but to obtain furs is
difficult."
Next, L'Homme Noir, a chief of the
Asiniboines, who had come from a long
distance, addressing Lord Selkirk,
particularly declares, "we were often
harassed with solicitations to assist
the Bois Brules in what they have done
against your children, but wo always
refused. We are sure you must have had
much trouble to come here. We have
often been told you were our enemy ;
but we have to-day the happiness to
hear from your own mouth the words of
a true friend. We receive the present
you give us with great pleasure and
thankfulness."
After this, Robe Noire, an Ojibeway
chief, spoke in like terms; when the
veritable Grandes Oreilles, to whose
spurious war speech we have already
referred, said as follows :—
"I am happy to see here our own
father. Clouds have overwhelmed me. I
was a long time in doubt and
difficulty, but now I begin to see
clearly.
"We have reason to be happy this day.
We know the dangers you must have
encountered to come so far. The truth
you have spoken pleases us. We thank
you for the present you give us. There
seems an end to our distress, and it
is you who have relieved us.
"When our young men are drunk they are
mad; they know not what they say or
what they do; but this must not be
attended to; they mean no harm."
Long after, Selkirk was remembered and
beloved by these Indian tribes, who
spoke of him as the "Silver Chief."
So much for the founder's work in his
colony in 1817. His affairs urgently
required attention elsewhere. In the
language of a writer of the period,
"having thus restored order, infused
confidence in the people, and given a
certain aid to their activity, Lord
Selkirk took his final leave of the
colony." With a guide and a few
attendants he journeyed southward,
passing through the country of the
warlike Sioux, with whom he made
peace.
The writer had at one time in his
possession a note-book with, in Lord
Selkirk's writing, an itinerary of his
journey from Red River Colony, in
which familiar names, such as Riviere
Sale, Riviere Aux Gratias, Pembina,
and the like, appear with their
distances in leagues. Among other
memoranda is one, "lost on the
Prairie," and the distance in leagues
estimated as lost by the misadventure.
Every traveller over the Manitoba
prairie will take a feeling interest
in that entry.
Passing through the Mississippi
country, he seems to have proceeded
eastward to Washington; he next
appears in Albany, and hastens back to
Upper Canada, without even visiting
his family in Montreal, though he had
been absent from them for upwards of a
year. In Upper Canada his presence was
urgently needed to meet the artful
machinations of his enemies.