女神电子书 > 浪漫言情电子书 > the conquest of new france >

第20部分

the conquest of new france-第20部分

小说: the conquest of new france 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




Saskatchewan。 The leader; no doubt St。 Luc de la Corne; had

returned from Montreal and now had with him nine men。 〃The

master;〃 says Hendry; 〃 invited me in to sup with him; and was

very kind。 He is dressed very Genteel。〃 He showed Hendry his

stock of furs; 〃a brave parcel;〃 the admiring rival thought。

Hendry admits the superiority of the French as traders。 They

〃talk Several Languages to perfection; they have the advantage of

us in every shape。〃 In the West; as in the East; France was

recognized as a formidable rival of England for the mastery of

North America。



When Hendry was making his peaceful visit to the French fort in

1755; the crisis of the struggle had just been reached。 In that

year the battle line from Acadia to the Ohio and the Mississippi

was already forming; and the fate of France's eager efforts to

hold the West was soon to be decided in the East。 If Britain

should conquer on the St。 Lawrence; she would conquer also on the

Saskatchewan and on the Mississippi。



Conquer she did; and thus it happened that it was Britain's sons

who took up the later burdens of the discoverer。 In the summer of

1789; just at the time when the great Revolution was beginning in

France; Alexander Mackenzie; a Scotch trader from Montreal;

starting from Lake Athabasca; north of the farthest point reached

by Hendry; was pressing still onward into an unknown region to

find a river which might lead to the sea。 This river he found; we

know it now as the Mackenzie。 For two weeks he and his Indians

and voyageurs paddled with the current down this mighty stream;

and on July 14; 1789; the day of the fall of the Bastille; he saw

whales sporting in Arctic waters。



The real goal which Mackenzie sought was that of La Verendrye; a

western and not a northern ocean。 Three years later; after months

of preparation; he attempted the great feat of crossing the Rocky

Mountains to the sea。 After nine months of rugged travel; across

mountain streams and gorges; in peril daily from hostile savages;

on July 22; 1793; he reached the shore of the Pacific Ocean; the

first white man to go by land over the width of the continent

from sea to sea。 It was thus a Scotchman who achieved that of

which La Verendrye had so long dreamed; and with no aid from the

state but with only the resources of a trading company。



Ten years later; when France sold to the United States her last

remaining territory of Louisiana; the American Government

equipped an expedition under Lewis and Clark to cross the Rocky

Mountains by way of the Missouri; the route from which the La

Verendrye brothers had been obliged to turn back。 The party began

the ascent of the Missouri on May 14; 1804; and arrived in the

Mandan country in the late autumn。 Here they spent the winter of

1804…05。 Not until November 15; 1805; had they completed the hard

journey across the Rocky Mountains and reached the mouth of the

Columbia River on the Pacific Ocean。 Little did La Verendrye; in

his eager search for the Western Sea; imagine the difficulties to

be encountered and the hardships to be endured by those who were

destined; in later days; to realize his dream。







CHAPTER VI。 The Valley Of The Ohio



Almost at the moment in 1749 when British ships were lying at

anchor in Halifax harbor and sending to shore hundreds of

boatloads of dazed and expectant settlers for the new colony;

there had set out from Montreal; in the interests of France; an

expedition with designs so far…reaching that we wonder still at

the stupendous issues involved in efforts which seem so petty。

The purpose of France was now to make good her claim to the whole

vast West。 It was a picturesque company which pushed its canoes

from the shore at Lachine on the 15th of June; six days before

the British squadron reached Halifax。 There was a procession of

twenty…three great birchbark canoes well filled; for in them were

more than two hundred men; at least ten in each canoe; together

with the necessary impedimenta for a long journey。 There were

twenty soldiers in uniform; a hundred and eighty Canadians

skilled in paddling and in carrying canoes and freight over the

portages; a band of Indians; and fourteen officers with Celoron

de Blainville at their head。



The acting Governor of Canada at this time was a dwarf in

physique; but a giant in intellect; the brilliant naval officer;

the Marquis de la Galissoniere; destined later to inflict upon

the English in the Mediterranean the naval defeat which caused

the execution of Admiral Byng as a coward。 This remarkable

manplanning; like his predecessor Frontenac; on a scale suited

to world politicssaw that the peace of 1748 settled nothing;

that in the balance now was the whole future of North America;

and that victory would be to the alert and the strong。 He chose


Celoron; the most capable of the hardy young Canadian noblesse

whom he had at hand; a man accustomed to the life of the forest;

and sent with him this large party to assert against the English

the right of France to the valley of the Ohio。 The English were

now to be shut out definitely from advancing westward and to be

confined to the strip of territory lying between the Atlantic

coast and the Alleghany Mountains; a little more than that strip

fifty miles wide talked about in Quebec as the maximum concession

of France; but still not very much according to the ideas of the

English; and even this not secure if France should ever grow

strong enough to crowd them out。



At no time do we find more vivid the contrast in type between the

two nations。 Before a concrete fact the British take action。 When

they gave up Louisbourg they built Halifax。 Their traders had

pressed into the Ohio country; not directed under any grandiose

idea of empire; but simply as individuals; to trade and reap for

themselves what profit they could。 When they were checked and

menaced by the French; they saw that something must be done。 How

they did it we shall see presently。 It was the weakness of the

English colonies that they could not unite to work out a great

plan。 If Virginia took steps to advance westward; Pennsylvania

was jealous lest lands which she desired should go to a rival

colony。 France; on the other hand; had complete unity of design。

Celoron spoke in the name of the King of France and he spoke in

terms uncompromising enough。 〃The Ohio;〃 said the King of France

through his agent; 〃belongs to me。〃 It is a French river。 The

lands bordering upon it are 〃my lands。〃 The English intruders are

foreign robbers and not one of them is to be left in the western

country: 〃I wilt not endure the English on my land。〃 The Indians;

dwelling in that region; are 〃my children。〃



Scattered over the vast region about the Great Lakes were a good

many French。 At the lower end of Lake Ontario stood Fort

Frontenac; a menace to the colony of New York; as the dwellers in

the British post of Oswego on the opposite shore of the lake well

knew。 We have already seen that the French held a fort at Niagara

guarding the route leading farther west to Lake Erie and to

regions beyond Lake Erie; by way of the Ohio or the upper lakes;

to the Mississippi。 Near the mouth of the Mississippi; New

Orleans was now becoming a considerable town with a governor

independent of the governor at Quebec。 Along the Mississippi at

strategic points stretching northward beyond the mouth of the

Missouri were a few French settlements; ragged enough and with a

shiftless population of fur traders and farmers; but adequate to

assert France's possession of that mighty highway。 The weak point

in France's position was in her connection of the Mississippi

with the St。 Lawrence by way of the Ohio。 This was the place of

danger; for here English rivalry was strongest; and it was to

cure this weakness that Celoron was now sent forth。



Celoron moved toilsomely over the portage which led past the

great cataract of Niagara and launched his canoes on Lake Erie。

》From its south shore; during seven days of heart…breaking labor;

the party dragged the canoes and supplies through dense forest

and over steep hills until they reached Chautauqua Lake; the

waters of which flow into the Allegheny River and by it to the

Ohio。 For many weary days they went with the current; stopping at

Indian villages; treating with the savages; who were sometimes

awed and sometimes menacing。 They warned the Indians to have no

dealings with the scheming English who would 〃infallibly prove to

be robbers;〃 and asserted as boldly as Celoron dared the lordship

of the King of France and his love for his forest children。

Celoron realized that he was on an historic mission。 At several

points on the Ohio; with great ceremony; he buried leaden plates;

as La Verendrye had done a few years earlier in the far West;

bearing an inscription declaring that; in the name of the King of

France; he took possession of the country。 On trees over these


返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的