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the conquest of new france-第14部分

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round the entrance to the Gulf of St。 Lawrence for years before;

in 1535; the French sailor; Jacques Cartier; advanced up the

river as far as the foot of the torrential rapids where now

stands the city of Montreal。 Cartier was seeking a route to the

Far East。 He half believed that this impressive waterway drained

the plains of China and that around the next bend he might find

the busy life of an oriental city。 The time came when it was

known that a great sea lay between America and Asia and the

mystery of the pathway to this sea long fascinated the pioneers

of the St。 Lawrence。 Canada was a colony; a trading…post; a

mission; the favorite field of Jesuit activity; but it was also

the land which offered by way of the St。 Lawrence a route leading

illimitably westward to the Far East。



One other route rivaled the St。 Lawrence in promise; and that was

the Mississippi。 The two rivers are essentially different in

their approaches and in type。 The mouth of the St。 Lawrence opens

directly towards Europe and of all American rivers lies nearest

to the seafaring peoples of Europe。 Since it flows chiefly in a

rocky bed; its course changes little; its waters are clear; and

they become icy cold as they approach the sea and mingle with the

tide which flows into the great Gulf of St。 Lawrence from the

Arctic regions。 The Mississippi; on the other hand; is a turbid;

warm stream; flowing through soft lands。 Its shifting channel is

divided at its mouth by deltas created from the vast quantity of

soil which the river carries in its current。 On the low…lying;

forest…clad; northern shore of the Gulf of Mexico it was not easy

to find the mouth of the Mississippi by approaching it from the

sea。 The voyage there from France was long and difficult; and;

moreover; Spain claimed the lands bordering on the Gulf of Mexico

and declared herself ready to drive out all intruders。



Nature; it is clear; dictated that; if France was to build up her

power in the interior of the New World; it was the valley of the

St。 Lawrence which she should first occupy。 Time has shown the

riches of the lands drained by the St。 Lawrence。 On no other

river system in the world is there now such a multitude of great

cities。 The modern traveler who advances by this route to the

sources of the river beyond the Great Lakes surveys wonders ever

more impressive。 Before his view appear in succession Quebec;

Montreal; Toronto; Buffalo; Cleveland; Detroit; Chicago; Duluth;

and many other cities and towns; with millions in population and

an aggregate of wealth so vast as to stagger the imagination。

Step by step had the French advanced from Quebec to the interior。

Champlain was on Lake Huron in 1615; and there the Jesuits soon

had a flourishing mission to the Huron Indians。 They had only to

follow the shore of Lake Huron to come to the St。 Mary's River

bearing towards the sea the chilly waters of Lake Superior。 On

this river; a much frequented fishing ground of the natives; they

founded the mission of Sainte Marie du Saut。 Farther to the

south; on the narrow opening connecting Lake Huron and Lake

Michigan; grew up the post known as Michilimackinac。 It was then

inevitable that explorers and missionaries should press on into

both Lake Superior and Lake Michigan。 By the time that Frontenac

came first to Canada in 1672 the French had a post called St。

Esprit on the south shore of Lake Superior near its western end

and they had also passed westward from Lake Michigan and founded

posts on both the Illinois and the Wisconsin Rivers which flow

into the Mississippi。



France had placed on record her claim to the whole of the Great

West。 On a June morning in 1671 there had been a striking scene

at Sainte Marie du Saut。 The French had summoned a great throng

of Indians to the spot。 There; with impressive ceremony;

Saint…Lusson; an officer from Canada; had set up a cedar post on

which was a plate engraved with the royal arms; and proclaimed

Louis XIV lord of all the Indian tribes and of all the lands;

rivers; and lakes; discovered and to be discovered in the region

stretching from the Atlantic to that other mysterious sea beyond

the spreading lands of the West。 Henceforth at their peril would

the natives disobey the French King; or other states encroach

upon these his lands。 A Jesuit priest followed Saint…Lusson with

a description to the savages of their new lord; the King of

France。 He was master of all the other rulers of the world。 At

his word the earth trembled。 He could set earth and sea on fire

by the blaze of his cannon。 The priest knew the temper of his


savage audience and told of the King's warriors covered with the

blood of his enemies; of the rivers of blood which flowed from

their wounds; of the King's countless prisoners; of his riches

and his power; so great that all the world obeyed him。 The

savages

gave delighted shouts at the strange ceremony; but of its real

meaning they knew nothing。 What they understood was that the

French seemed to be good friends who brought them muskets;

hatchets; cloth; and especially the loved but destructive

firewater which the savage palate ever craved。



The mystery of the Great Lakes once solved; there still remained

that of the Western Sea。 The St。 Lawrence flowed eastward。

Another river must therefore be found flowing westward。 The

French were eager listeners when the savages talked of a mighty

river in the west flowing to the sea。 They meant; as we now

suppose; the Mississippi。 There are vague stories of Frenchmen on

the Mississippi at an earlier date; but; however this may be; it

is certain that in the summer of 1673 Louis Joliet; the son of a

wagon…maker of Quebec; and Jacques Marquette; a Jesuit priest;

reached and descended the great river from the mouth of the

Wisconsin to a point far past the mouth of the Ohio。



France thus planted herself on the Mississippi; though there her

occupation was less complete and thorough than it was on the St。

Lawrence。 Distance was an obstacle; it was a far cry from Quebec

by land; and from France the voyage by sea through the Gulf of

Mexico was hardly less difficult。 The explorer La Salle tried

both routes。 In 1681…1682 he set out from Montreal; reached the

Mississippi overland; and descended to its mouth。 Two years later

he sailed from France with four ships bound for the mouth of the

river; there to establish a colony; but before achieving his aim

he was murdered in a treacherous attack led by his own

countrymen。



It was Pierre Le Moyne; Sieur d'Iberville; who first made good

France's claim to the Mississippi。 He reached the river by sea in

1699 and ascended to a point some eighty miles beyond the present

city of New Orleans。 Farther east; on Biloxi Bay; he built Fort

Maurepas and planted his first colony。 Spain disliked this

intrusion; but Spain soon to be herself ruled; as France then

was; by a Bourbon kingdid not prove irreconcilable and slowly

France built up a colony in the south。 It was in 1718 that

Iberville's brother; Jean Baptiste Le Moyne; Sieur de Bienville;

founded New Orleans; destined to become in time one of the great

cities of North America。 Its beginnings were not propitious。 The

historian Charlevoix describes it as being in 1721 a low…lying;

malarious place; infested by snakes and alligators; and

consisting of a hundred wretched hovels。



In spite of this dreary outlook; it was still true that France;

planted at the mouth of the Mississippi; controlled the greatest

waterway in the world。 Soon she had scattered settlements

stretching northward to the Ohio and the Missouri; the one river

reaching eastward almost to the waters of the St。 Lawrence

system; the other flowing out of the western plains from its

source in the Rocky Mountains。 The old mystery; however;

remained; for the Mississippi flowed into the Gulf of Mexico;

into Atlantic waters already well known。 The route to the Western

Sea was still to be found。



It was easy enough for France to record a sweeping claim to the

West; but to make good this claim she needed a chain of posts;

which should also be forts; linking the Mississippi with the St。

Lawrence and strong enough to impress the Indians whose country

she had invaded。 At first she had reached the interior by way of

the Ottawa River and Lake Huron; and in that northern country her

position was secure enough through her posts on the upper lakes。

The route farther south by Lake Ontario and Lake Erie was more

difficult。 The Iroquois menaced Niagara and long refused to let

France have a footing there to protect her pathway to Lake Erie

and the Ohio Valley。 It was not until 1720; a period

comparatively late; that the French managed to have a fort at the

mouth of the Niagara。 On the Detroit River; the next strategic

point on the way westward; they were established earlier。 Just

after Frontenac died in 1698; La Mothe Cadillac urged that there

should be built 

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