<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THREE. The Marine Excursions of the Knights of Pythias </h2>
<p>Half-past six on a July morning! The Mariposa Belle is at the wharf,
decked in flags, with steam up ready to start.</p>
<p>Excursion day!</p>
<p>Half past six on a July morning, and Lake Wissanotti lying in the sun as
calm as glass. The opal colours of the morning light are shot from the
surface of the water.</p>
<p>Out on the lake the last thin threads of the mist are clearing away like
flecks of cotton wool.</p>
<p>The long call of the loon echoes over the lake. The air is cool and fresh.
There is in it all the new life of the land of the silent pine and the
moving waters. Lake Wissanotti in the morning sunlight! Don't talk to me
of the Italian lakes, or the Tyrol or the Swiss Alps. Take them away. Move
them somewhere else. I don't want them.</p>
<p>Excursion Day, at half past six of a summer morning! With the boat all
decked in flags and all the people in Mariposa on the wharf, and the band
in peaked caps with big cornets tied to their bodies ready to play at any
minute! I say! Don't tell me about the Carnival of Venice and the Delhi
Durbar. Don't! I wouldn't look at them. I'd shut my eyes! For light and
colour give me every time an excursion out of Mariposa down the lake to
the Indian's Island out of sight in the morning mist. Talk of your Papal
Zouaves and your Buckingham Palace Guard! I want to see the Mariposa band
in uniform and the Mariposa Knights of Pythias with their aprons and their
insignia and their picnic baskets and their five-cent cigars!</p>
<p>Half past six in the morning, and all the crowd on the wharf and the boat
due to leave in half an hour. Notice it!—in half an hour. Already
she's whistled twice (at six, and at six fifteen), and at any minute now,
Christie Johnson will step into the pilot house and pull the string for
the warning whistle that the boat will leave in half an hour. So keep
ready. Don't think of running back to Smith's Hotel for the sandwiches.
Don't be fool enough to try to go up to the Greek Store, next to Netley's,
and buy fruit. You'll be left behind for sure if you do. Never mind the
sandwiches and the fruit! Anyway, here comes Mr. Smith himself with a huge
basket of provender that would feed a factory. There must be sandwiches in
that. I think I can hear them clinking. And behind Mr. Smith is the German
waiter from the caff with another basket—indubitably lager beer; and
behind him, the bar-tender of the hotel, carrying nothing, as far as one
can see. But of course if you know Mariposa you will understand that why
he looks so nonchalant and empty-handed is because he has two bottles of
rye whiskey under his linen duster. You know, I think, the peculiar walk
of a man with two bottles of whiskey in the inside pockets of a linen
coat. In Mariposa, you see, to bring beer to an excursion is quite in
keeping with public opinion. But, whiskey,—well, one has to be a
little careful.</p>
<p>Do I say that Mr. Smith is here? Why, everybody's here. There's Hussell
the editor of the Newspacket, wearing a blue ribbon on his coat, for the
Mariposa Knights of Pythias are, by their constitution, dedicated to
temperance; and there's Henry Mullins, the manager of the Exchange Bank,
also a Knight of Pythias, with a small flask of Pogram's Special in his
hip pocket as a sort of amendment to the constitution. And there's Dean
Drone, the Chaplain of the Order, with a fishing-rod (you never saw such
green bass as lie among the rocks at Indian's Island), and with a trolling
line in case of maskinonge, and a landing net in case of pickerel, and
with his eldest daughter, Lilian Drone, in case of young men. There never
was such a fisherman as the Rev. Rupert Drone.</p>
<p>Perhaps I ought to explain that when I speak of the excursion as being of
the Knights of Pythias, the thing must not be understood in any narrow
sense. In Mariposa practically everybody belongs to the Knights of Pythias
just as they do to everything else. That's the great thing about the town
and that's what makes it so different from the city. Everybody is in
everything.</p>
<p>You should see them on the seventeenth of March, for example, when
everybody wears a green ribbon and they're all laughing and glad,—you
know what the Celtic nature is,—and talking about Home Rule.</p>
<p>On St. Andrew's Day every man in town wears a thistle and shakes hands
with everybody else, and you see the fine old Scotch honesty beaming out
of their eyes.</p>
<p>And on St. George's Day!—well, there's no heartiness like the good
old English spirit, after all; why shouldn't a man feel glad that he's an
Englishman?</p>
<p>Then on the Fourth of July there are stars and stripes flying over half
the stores in town, and suddenly all the men are seen to smoke cigars, and
to know all about Roosevelt and Bryan and the Philippine Islands. Then you
learn for the first time that Jeff Thorpe's people came from Massachusetts
and that his uncle fought at Bunker Hill (it must have been Bunker Hill,—anyway
Jefferson will swear it was in Dakota all right enough); and you find that
George Duff has a married sister in Rochester and that her husband is all
right; in fact, George was down there as recently as eight years ago. Oh,
it's the most American town imaginable is Mariposa,—on the fourth of
July.</p>
<p>But wait, just wait, if you feel anxious about the solidity of the British
connection, till the twelfth of the month, when everybody is wearing an
orange streamer in his coat and the Orangemen (every man in town) walk in
the big procession. Allegiance! Well, perhaps you remember the address
they gave to the Prince of Wales on the platform of the Mariposa station
as he went through on his tour to the west. I think that pretty well
settled that question. So you will easily understand that of course
everybody belongs to the Knights of Pythias and the Masons and Oddfellows,
just as they all belong to the Snow Shoe Club and the Girls' Friendly
Society.</p>
<p>And meanwhile the whistle of the steamer has blown again for a quarter to
seven:—loud and long this time, for any one not here now is late for
certain; unless he should happen to come down in the last fifteen minutes.</p>
<p>What a crowd upon the wharf and how they pile on to the steamer! It's a
wonder that the boat can hold them all. But that's just the marvellous
thing about the Mariposa Belle.</p>
<p>I don't know,—I have never known,—where the steamers like the
Mariposa Belle come from. Whether they are built by Harland and Wolff of
Belfast, or whether, on the other hand, they are not built by Harland and
Wolff of Belfast, is more than one would like to say offhand.</p>
<p>The Mariposa Belle always seems to me to have some of those strange
properties that distinguish Mariposa itself. I mean, her size seems to
vary so. If you see her there in the winter, frozen in the ice beside the
wharf with a snowdrift against the windows of the pilot house, she looks a
pathetic little thing the size of a butternut. But in the summer time,
especially after you've been in Mariposa for a month or two, and have
paddled alongside of her in a canoe, she gets larger and taller, and with
a great sweep of black sides, till you see no difference between the
Mariposa Belle and the Lusitania. Each one is a big steamer and that's all
you can say.</p>
<p>Nor do her measurements help you much. She draws about eighteen inches
forward, and more than that,—at least half an inch more, astern, and
when she's loaded down with an excursion crowd she draws a good two inches
more. And above the water,—why, look at all the decks on her!
There's the deck you walk on to, from the wharf, all shut in, with windows
along it, and the after cabin with the long table, and above that the deck
with all the chairs piled upon it, and the deck in front where the band
stand round in a circle, and the pilot house is higher than that, and
above the pilot house is the board with the gold name and the flag pole
and the steel ropes and the flags; and fixed in somewhere on the different
levels is the lunch counter where they sell the sandwiches, and the engine
room, and down below the deck level, beneath the water line, is the place
where the crew sleep. What with steps and stairs and passages and piles of
cordwood for the engine,—oh no, I guess Harland and Wolff didn't
build her. They couldn't have.</p>
<p>Yet even with a huge boat like the Mariposa Belle, it would be impossible
for her to carry all of the crowd that you see in the boat and on the
wharf. In reality, the crowd is made up of two classes,—all of the
people in Mariposa who are going on the excursion and all those who are
not. Some come for the one reason and some for the other.</p>
<p>The two tellers of the Exchange Bank are both there standing side by side.
But one of them,—the one with the cameo pin and the long face like a
horse,—is going, and the other,—with the other cameo pin and
the face like another horse,—is not. In the same way, Hussell of the
Newspacket is going, but his brother, beside him, isn't. Lilian Drone is
going, but her sister can't; and so on all through the crowd.</p>
<p>And to think that things should look like that on the morning of a
steamboat accident.</p>
<p>How strange life is!</p>
<p>To think of all these people so eager and anxious to catch the steamer,
and some of them running to catch it, and so fearful that they might miss
it,—the morning of a steamboat accident. And the captain blowing his
whistle, and warning them so severely that he would leave them behind,—leave
them out of the accident! And everybody crowding so eagerly to be in the
accident.</p>
<p>Perhaps life is like that all through.</p>
<p>Strangest of all to think, in a case like this, of the people who were
left behind, or in some way or other prevented from going, and always
afterwards told of how they had escaped being on board the Mariposa Belle
that day!</p>
<p>Some of the instances were certainly extraordinary. Nivens, the lawyer,
escaped from being there merely by the fact that he was away in the city.</p>
<p>Towers, the tailor, only escaped owing to the fact that, not intending to
go on the excursion he had stayed in bed till eight o'clock and so had not
gone. He narrated afterwards that waking up that morning at half-past
five, he had thought of the excursion and for some unaccountable reason
had felt glad that he was not going.</p>
<p>The case of Yodel, the auctioneer, was even more inscrutable. He had been
to the Oddfellows' excursion on the train the week before and to the
Conservative picnic the week before that, and had decided not to go on
this trip. In fact, he had not the least intention of going. He narrated
afterwards how the night before someone had stopped him on the corner of
Nippewa and Tecumseh Streets (he indicated the very spot) and asked: "Are
you going to take in the excursion to-morrow?" and he had said, just as
simply as he was talking when narrating it: "No." And ten minutes after
that, at the corner of Dalhousie and Brock Streets (he offered to lead a
party of verification to the precise place) somebody else had stopped him
and asked: "Well, are you going on the steamer trip to-morrow?" Again he
had answered: "No," apparently almost in the same tone as before.</p>
<p>He said afterwards that when he heard the rumour of the accident it seemed
like the finger of Providence, and fell on his knees in thankfulness.</p>
<p>There was the similar case of Morison (I mean the one in Glover's hardware
store that married one of the Thompsons). He said afterwards that he had
read so much in the papers about accidents lately,—mining accidents,
and aeroplanes and gasoline,—that he had grown nervous. The night
before his wife had asked him at supper: "Are you going on the excursion?"
He had answered: "No, I don't think I feel like it," and had added:
"Perhaps your mother might like to go." And the next evening just at dusk,
when the news ran through the town, he said the first thought that flashed
through his head was: "Mrs. Thompson's on that boat."</p>
<p>He told this right as I say it—without the least doubt or confusion.
He never for a moment imagined she was on the Lusitania or the Olympic or
any other boat. He knew she was on this one. He said you could have
knocked him down where he stood. But no one had. Not even when he got
halfway down,—on his knees, and it would have been easier still to
knock him down or kick him. People do miss a lot of chances.</p>
<p>Still, as I say, neither Yodel nor Morison nor anyone thought about there
being an accident until just after sundown when they—</p>
<p>Well, have you ever heard the long booming whistle of a steamboat two
miles out on the lake in the dusk, and while you listen and count and
wonder, seen the crimson rockets going up against the sky and then heard
the fire bell ringing right there beside you in the town, and seen the
people running to the town wharf?</p>
<p>That's what the people of Mariposa saw and felt that summer evening as
they watched the Mackinaw life-boat go plunging out into the lake with
seven sweeps to a side and the foam clear to the gunwale with the lifting
stroke of fourteen men!</p>
<p>But, dear me, I am afraid that this is no way to tell a story. I suppose
the true art would have been to have said nothing about the accident till
it happened. But when you write about Mariposa, or hear of it, if you know
the place, it's all so vivid and real that a thing like the contrast
between the excursion crowd in the morning and the scene at night leaps
into your mind and you must think of it.</p>
<p>But never mind about the accident,—let us turn back again to the
morning.</p>
<p>The boat was due to leave at seven. There was no doubt about the hour,—not
only seven, but seven sharp. The notice in the Newspacket said: "The boat
will leave sharp at seven;" and the advertising posters on the telegraph
poles on Missinaba Street that began "Ho, for Indian's Island!" ended up
with the words: "Boat leaves at seven sharp." There was a big notice on
the wharf that said: "Boat leaves sharp on time."</p>
<p>So at seven, right on the hour, the whistle blew loud and long, and then
at seven fifteen three short peremptory blasts, and at seven thirty one
quick angry call,—just one,—and very soon after that they cast
off the last of the ropes and the Mariposa Belle sailed off in her cloud
of flags, and the band of the Knights of Pythias, timing it to a nicety,
broke into the "Maple Leaf for Ever!"</p>
<p>I suppose that all excursions when they start are much the same. Anyway,
on the Mariposa Belle everybody went running up and down all over the boat
with deck chairs and camp stools and baskets, and found places, splendid
places to sit, and then got scared that there might be better ones and
chased off again. People hunted for places out of the sun and when they
got them swore that they weren't going to freeze to please anybody; and
the people in the sun said that they hadn't paid fifty cents to be
roasted. Others said that they hadn't paid fifty cents to get covered with
cinders, and there were still others who hadn't paid fifty cents to get
shaken to death with the propeller.</p>
<p>Still, it was all right presently. The people seemed to get sorted out
into the places on the boat where they belonged. The women, the older
ones, all gravitated into the cabin on the lower deck and by getting round
the table with needlework, and with all the windows shut, they soon had
it, as they said themselves, just like being at home.</p>
<p>All the young boys and the toughs and the men in the band got down on the
lower deck forward, where the boat was dirtiest and where the anchor was
and the coils of rope.</p>
<p>And upstairs on the after deck there were Lilian Drone and Miss Lawson,
the high school teacher, with a book of German poetry,—Gothey I
think it was,—and the bank teller and the younger men.</p>
<p>In the centre, standing beside the rail, were Dean Drone and Dr.
Gallagher, looking through binocular glasses at the shore.</p>
<p>Up in front on the little deck forward of the pilot house was a group of
the older men, Mullins and Duff and Mr. Smith in a deck chair, and beside
him Mr. Golgotha Gingham, the undertaker of Mariposa, on a stool. It was
part of Mr. Gingham's principles to take in an outing of this sort, a
business matter, more or less,—for you never know what may happen at
these water parties. At any rate, he was there in a neat suit of black,
not, of course, his heavier or professional suit, but a soft clinging
effect as of burnt paper that combined gaiety and decorum to a nicety.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mr. Gingham, waving his black glove in a general way towards
the shore, "I know the lake well, very well. I've been pretty much all
over it in my time."</p>
<p>"Canoeing?" asked somebody.</p>
<p>"No," said Mr. Gingham, "not in a canoe." There seemed a peculiar and
quiet meaning in his tone.</p>
<p>"Sailing, I suppose," said somebody else.</p>
<p>"No," said Mr. Gingham. "I don't understand it."</p>
<p>"I never knowed that you went on to the water at all, Gol," said Mr.
Smith, breaking in.</p>
<p>"Ah, not now," explained Mr. Gingham; "it was years ago, the first summer
I came to Mariposa. I was on the water practically all day. Nothing like
it to give a man an appetite and keep him in shape."</p>
<p>"Was you camping?" asked Mr. Smith.</p>
<p>"We camped at night," assented the undertaker, "but we put in practically
the whole day on the water. You see we were after a party that had come up
here from the city on his vacation and gone out in a sailing canoe. We
were dragging. We were up every morning at sunrise, lit a fire on the
beach and cooked breakfast, and then we'd light our pipes and be off with
the net for a whole day. It's a great life," concluded Mr. Gingham
wistfully.</p>
<p>"Did you get him?" asked two or three together.</p>
<p>There was a pause before Mr. Gingham answered.</p>
<p>"We did," he said,—"down in the reeds past Horseshoe Point. But it
was no use. He turned blue on me right away."</p>
<p>After which Mr. Gingham fell into such a deep reverie that the boat had
steamed another half mile down the lake before anybody broke the silence
again.</p>
<p>Talk of this sort,—and after all what more suitable for a day on the
water?—beguiled the way.</p>
<p>Down the lake, mile by mile over the calm water, steamed the Mariposa
Belle. They passed Poplar Point where the high sand-banks are with all the
swallows' nests in them, and Dean Drone and Dr. Gallagher looked at them
alternately through the binocular glasses, and it was wonderful how
plainly one could see the swallows and the banks and the shrubs,—just
as plainly as with the naked eye.</p>
<p>And a little further down they passed the Shingle Beach, and Dr.
Gallagher, who knew Canadian history, said to Dean Drone that it was
strange to think that Champlain had landed there with his French explorers
three hundred years ago; and Dean Drone, who didn't know Canadian history,
said it was stranger still to think that the hand of the Almighty had
piled up the hills and rocks long before that; and Dr. Gallagher said it
was wonderful how the French had found their way through such a pathless
wilderness; and Dean Drone said that it was wonderful also to think that
the Almighty had placed even the smallest shrub in its appointed place.
Dr. Gallagher said it filled him with admiration. Dean Drone said it
filled him with awe. Dr. Gallagher said he'd been full of it ever since he
was a boy; and Dean Drone said so had he.</p>
<p>Then a little further, as the Mariposa Belle steamed on down the lake,
they passed the Old Indian Portage where the great grey rocks are; and Dr.
Gallagher drew Dean Drone's attention to the place where the narrow canoe
track wound up from the shore to the woods, and Dean Drone said he could
see it perfectly well without the glasses.</p>
<p>Dr. Gallagher said that it was just here that a party of five hundred
French had made their way with all their baggage and accoutrements across
the rocks of the divide and down to the Great Bay. And Dean Drone said
that it reminded him of Xenophon leading his ten thousand Greeks over the
hill passes of Armenia down to the sea. Dr. Gallagher said the he had
often wished he could have seen and spoken to Champlain, and Dean Drone
said how much he regretted to have never known Xenophon.</p>
<p>And then after that they fell to talking of relics and traces of the past,
and Dr. Gallagher said that if Dean Drone would come round to his house
some night he would show him some Indian arrow heads that he had dug up in
his garden. And Dean Drone said that if Dr. Gallagher would come round to
the rectory any afternoon he would show him a map of Xerxes' invasion of
Greece. Only he must come some time between the Infant Class and the
Mothers' Auxiliary.</p>
<p>So presently they both knew that they were blocked out of one another's
houses for some time to come, and Dr. Gallagher walked forward and told
Mr. Smith, who had never studied Greek, about Champlain crossing the rock
divide.</p>
<p>Mr. Smith turned his head and looked at the divide for half a second and
then said he had crossed a worse one up north back of the Wahnipitae and
that the flies were Hades,—and then went on playing freezeout poker
with the two juniors in Duff's bank.</p>
<p>So Dr. Gallagher realized that that's always the way when you try to tell
people things, and that as far as gratitude and appreciation goes one
might as well never read books or travel anywhere or do anything.</p>
<p>In fact, it was at this very moment that he made up his mind to give the
arrows to the Mariposa Mechanics' Institute,—they afterwards became,
as you know, the Gallagher Collection. But, for the time being, the doctor
was sick of them and wandered off round the boat and watched Henry Mullins
showing George Duff how to make a John Collins without lemons, and finally
went and sat down among the Mariposa band and wished that he hadn't come.</p>
<p>So the boat steamed on and the sun rose higher and higher, and the
freshness of the morning changed into the full glare of noon, and they
went on to where the lake began to narrow in at its foot, just where the
Indian's Island is, all grass and trees and with a log wharf running into
the water: Below it the Lower Ossawippi runs out of the lake, and quite
near are the rapids, and you can see down among the trees the red brick of
the power house and hear the roar of the leaping water.</p>
<p>The Indian's Island itself is all covered with trees and tangled vines,
and the water about it is so still that it's all reflected double and
looks the same either way up. Then when the steamer's whistle blows as it
comes into the wharf, you hear it echo among the trees of the island, and
reverberate back from the shores of the lake.</p>
<p>The scene is all so quiet and still and unbroken, that Miss Cleghorn,—the
sallow girl in the telephone exchange, that I spoke of—said she'd
like to be buried there. But all the people were so busy getting their
baskets and gathering up their things that no one had time to attend to
it.</p>
<p>I mustn't even try to describe the landing and the boat crunching against
the wooden wharf and all the people running to the same side of the deck
and Christie Johnson calling out to the crowd to keep to the starboard and
nobody being able to find it. Everyone who has been on a Mariposa
excursion knows all about that.</p>
<p>Nor can I describe the day itself and the picnic under the trees. 'There
were speeches afterwards, and Judge Pepperleigh gave such offence by
bringing in Conservative politics that a man called Patriotus Canadiensis
wrote and asked for some of the invaluable space of the Mariposa
Times-Herald and exposed it.</p>
<p>I should say that there were races too, on the grass on the open side of
the island, graded mostly according to ages, races for boys under thirteen
and girls over nineteen and all that sort of thing. Sports are generally
conducted on that plan in Mariposa. It is realized that a woman of sixty
has an unfair advantage over a mere child.</p>
<p>Dean Drone managed the races and decided the ages and gave out the prizes;
the Wesleyan minister helped, and he and the young student, who was
relieving in the Presbyterian Church, held the string at the winning
point.</p>
<p>They had to get mostly clergymen for the races because all the men had
wandered off, somehow, to where they were drinking lager beer out of two
kegs stuck on pine logs among the trees.</p>
<p>But if you've ever been on a Mariposa excursion you know all about these
details anyway.</p>
<p>So the day wore on and presently the sun came through the trees on a slant
and the steamer whistle blew with a great puff of white steam and all the
people came straggling down to the wharf and pretty soon the Mariposa
Belle had floated out on to the lake again and headed for the town, twenty
miles away.</p>
<p>I suppose you have often noticed the contrast there is between an
excursion on its way out in the morning and what it looks like on the way
home.</p>
<p>In the morning everybody is so restless and animated and moves to and fro
all over the boat and asks questions. But coming home, as the afternoon
gets later and the sun sinks beyond the hills, all the people seem to get
so still and quiet and drowsy.</p>
<p>So it was with the people on the Mariposa Belle. They sat there on the
benches and the deck chairs in little clusters, and listened to the
regular beat of the propeller and almost dozed off asleep as they sat.
Then when the sun set and the dusk drew on, it grew almost dark on the
deck and so still that you could hardly tell there was anyone on board.</p>
<p>And if you had looked at the steamer from the shore or from one of the
islands, you'd have seen the row of lights from the cabin windows shining
on the water and the red glare of the burning hemlock from the funnel, and
you'd have heard the soft thud of the propeller miles away over the lake.</p>
<p>Now and then, too, you could have heard them singing on the steamer,—the
voices of the girls and the men blended into unison by the distance,
rising and falling in long-drawn melody: "O—Can-a-da—O—Can-a-da."</p>
<p>You may talk as you will about the intoning choirs of your European
cathedrals, but the sound of "O—Can-a-da," borne across the waters
of a silent lake at evening is good enough for those of us who know
Mariposa.</p>
<p>I think that it was just as they were singing like this: "O—Can-a-da,"
that word went round that the boat was sinking.</p>
<p>If you have ever been in any sudden emergency on the water, you will
understand the strange psychology of it,—the way in which what is
happening seems to become known all in a moment without a word being said.
The news is transmitted from one to the other by some mysterious process.</p>
<p>At any rate, on the Mariposa Belle first one and then the other heard that
the steamer was sinking. As far as I could ever learn the first of it was
that George Duff, the bank manager, came very quietly to Dr. Gallagher and
asked him if he thought that the boat was sinking. The doctor said no,
that he had thought so earlier in the day but that he didn't now think
that she was.</p>
<p>After that Duff, according to his own account, had said to Macartney, the
lawyer, that the boat was sinking, and Macartney said that he doubted it
very much.</p>
<p>Then somebody came to Judge Pepperleigh and woke him up and said that
there was six inches of water in the steamer and that she was sinking. And
Pepperleigh said it was perfect scandal and passed the news on to his wife
and she said that they had no business to allow it and that if the steamer
sank that was the last excursion she'd go on.</p>
<p>So the news went all round the boat and everywhere the people gathered in
groups and talked about it in the angry and excited way that people have
when a steamer is sinking on one of the lakes like Lake Wissanotti.</p>
<p>Dean Drone, of course, and some others were quieter about it, and said
that one must make allowances and that naturally there were two sides to
everything. But most of them wouldn't listen to reason at all. I think,
perhaps, that some of them were frightened. You see the last time but one
that the steamer had sunk, there had been a man drowned and it made them
nervous.</p>
<p>What? Hadn't I explained about the depth of Lake Wissanotti? I had taken
it for granted that you knew; and in any case parts of it are deep enough,
though I don't suppose in this stretch of it from the big reed beds up to
within a mile of the town wharf, you could find six feet of water in it if
you tried. Oh, pshaw! I was not talking about a steamer sinking in the
ocean and carrying down its screaming crowds of people into the hideous
depths of green water. Oh, dear me no! That kind of thing never happens on
Lake Wissanotti.</p>
<p>But what does happen is that the Mariposa Belle sinks every now and then,
and sticks there on the bottom till they get things straightened up.</p>
<p>On the lakes round Mariposa, if a person arrives late anywhere and
explains that the steamer sank, everybody understands the situation.</p>
<p>You see when Harland and Wolff built the Mariposa Belle, they left some
cracks in between the timbers that you fill up with cotton waste every
Sunday. If this is not attended to, the boat sinks. In fact, it is part of
the law of the province that all the steamers like the Mariposa Belle must
be properly corked,—I think that is the word,—every season.
There are inspectors who visit all the hotels in the province to see that
it is done.</p>
<p>So you can imagine now that I've explained it a little straighter, the
indignation of the people when they knew that the boat had come uncorked
and that they might be stuck out there on a shoal or a mud-bank half the
night.</p>
<p>I don't say either that there wasn't any danger; anyway, it doesn't feel
very safe when you realize that the boat is settling down with every
hundred yards that she goes, and you look over the side and see only the
black water in the gathering night.</p>
<p>Safe! I'm not sure now that I come to think of it that it isn't worse than
sinking in the Atlantic. After all, in the Atlantic there is wireless
telegraphy, and a lot of trained sailors and stewards. But out on Lake
Wissanotti,—far out, so that you can only just see the lights of the
town away off to the south,—when the propeller comes to a stop,—and
you can hear the hiss of steam as they start to rake out the engine fires
to prevent an explosion,—and when you turn from the red glare that
comes from the furnace doors as they open them, to the black dark that is
gathering over the lake,—and there's a night wind beginning to run
among the rushes,—and you see the men going forward to the roof of
the pilot house to send up the rockets to rouse the town, safe? Safe
yourself, if you like; as for me, let me once get back into Mariposa
again, under the night shadow of the maple trees, and this shall be the
last, last time I'll go on Lake Wissanotti.</p>
<p>Safe! Oh yes! Isn't it strange how safe other people's adventures seem
after they happen? But you'd have been scared, too, if you'd been there
just before the steamer sank, and seen them bringing up all the women on
to the top deck.</p>
<p>I don't see how some of the people took it so calmly; how Mr. Smith, for
instance, could have gone on smoking and telling how he'd had a steamer
"sink on him" on Lake Nipissing and a still bigger one, a side-wheeler,
sink on him in Lake Abbitibbi.</p>
<p>Then, quite suddenly, with a quiver, down she went. You could feel the
boat sink, sink,—down, down,—would it never get to the bottom?
The water came flush up to the lower deck, and then,—thank heaven,—the
sinking stopped and there was the Mariposa Belle safe and tight on a reed
bank.</p>
<p>Really, it made one positively laugh! It seemed so queer and, anyway, if a
man has a sort of natural courage, danger makes him laugh. Danger! pshaw!
fiddlesticks! everybody scouted the idea. Why, it is just the little
things like this that give zest to a day on the water.</p>
<p>Within half a minute they were all running round looking for sandwiches
and cracking jokes and talking of making coffee over the remains of the
engine fires.</p>
<p>I don't need to tell at length how it all happened after that.</p>
<p>I suppose the people on the Mariposa Belle would have had to settle down
there all night or till help came from the town, but some of the men who
had gone forward and were peering out into the dark said that it couldn't
be more than a mile across the water to Miller's Point. You could almost
see it over there to the left,—some of them, I think, said "off on
the port bow," because you know when you get mixed up in these marine
disasters, you soon catch the atmosphere of the thing.</p>
<p>So pretty soon they had the davits swung out over the side and were
lowering the old lifeboat from the top deck into the water.</p>
<p>There were men leaning out over the rail of the Mariposa Belle with
lanterns that threw the light as they let her down, and the glare fell on
the water and the reeds. But when they got the boat lowered, it looked
such a frail, clumsy thing as one saw it from the rail above, that the cry
was raised: "Women and children first!" For what was the sense, if it
should turn out that the boat wouldn't even hold women and children, of
trying to jam a lot of heavy men into it?</p>
<p>So they put in mostly women and children and the boat pushed out into the
darkness so freighted down it would hardly float.</p>
<p>In the bow of it was the Presbyterian student who was relieving the
minister, and he called out that they were in the hands of Providence. But
he was crouched and ready to spring out of them at the first moment.</p>
<p>So the boat went and was lost in the darkness except for the lantern in
the bow that you could see bobbing on the water. Then presently it came
back and they sent another load, till pretty soon the decks began to thin
out and everybody got impatient to be gone.</p>
<p>It was about the time that the third boat-load put off that Mr. Smith took
a bet with Mullins for twenty-five dollars, that he'd be home in Mariposa
before the people in the boats had walked round the shore.</p>
<p>No one knew just what he meant, but pretty soon they saw Mr. Smith
disappear down below into the lowest part of the steamer with a mallet in
one hand and a big bundle of marline in the other.</p>
<p>They might have wondered more about it, but it was just at this time that
they heard the shouts from the rescue boat—the big Mackinaw lifeboat—that
had put out from the town with fourteen men at the sweeps when they saw
the first rockets go up.</p>
<p>I suppose there is always something inspiring about a rescue at sea, or on
the water.</p>
<p>After all, the bravery of the lifeboat man is the true bravery,—expended
to save life, not to destroy it.</p>
<p>Certainly they told for months after of how the rescue boat came out to
the Mariposa Belle.</p>
<p>I suppose that when they put her in the water the lifeboat touched it for
the first time since the old Macdonald Government placed her on Lake
Wissanotti.</p>
<p>Anyway, the water poured in at every seam. But not for a moment,—even
with two miles of water between them and the steamer,—did the rowers
pause for that.</p>
<p>By the time they were half-way there the water was almost up to the
thwarts, but they drove her on. Panting and exhausted (for mind you, if
you haven't been in a fool boat like that for years, rowing takes it out
of you), the rowers stuck to their task. They threw the ballast over and
chucked into the water the heavy cork jackets and lifebelts that
encumbered their movements. There was no thought of turning back. They
were nearer to the steamer than the shore.</p>
<p>"Hang to it, boys," called the crowd from the steamer's deck, and hang
they did.</p>
<p>They were almost exhausted when they got them; men leaning from the
steamer threw them ropes and one by one every man was hauled aboard just
as the lifeboat sank under their feet.</p>
<p>Saved! by Heaven, saved, by one of the smartest pieces of rescue work ever
seen on the lake.</p>
<p>There's no use describing it; you need to see rescue work of this kind by
lifeboats to understand it.</p>
<p>Nor were the lifeboat crew the only ones that distinguished themselves.</p>
<p>Boat after boat and canoe after canoe had put out from Mariposa to the
help of the steamer. They got them all.</p>
<p>Pupkin, the other bank teller, with a face like a horse, who hadn't gone
on the excursion,—as soon as he knew that the boat was signalling
for help and that Miss Lawson was sending up rockets,—rushed for a
row boat, grabbed an oar (two would have hampered him), and paddled madly
out into the lake. He struck right out into the dark with the crazy skiff
almost sinking beneath his feet. But they got him. They rescued him. They
watched him, almost dead with exhaustion, make his way to the steamer,
where he was hauled up with ropes. Saved! Saved!!</p>
<p>They might have gone on that way half the night, picking up the rescuers,
only, at the very moment when the tenth load of people left for the shore,—just
as suddenly and saucily as you please, up came the Mariposa Belle from the
mud bottom and floated.</p>
<p>FLOATED?</p>
<p>Why, of course she did. If you take a hundred and fifty people off a
steamer that has sunk, and if you get a man as shrewd as Mr. Smith to plug
the timber seams with mallet and marline, and if you turn ten bandsmen of
the Mariposa band on to your hand pump on the bow of the lower decks—float?
why, what else can she do?</p>
<p>Then, if you stuff in hemlock into the embers of the fire that you were
raking out, till it hums and crackles under the boiler, it won't be long
before you hear the propeller thud thudding at the stern again, and before
the long roar of the steam whistle echoes over to the town.</p>
<p>And so the Mariposa Belle, with all steam up again and with the long train
of sparks careering from the funnel, is heading for the town.</p>
<p>But no Christie Johnson at the wheel in the pilot house this time.</p>
<p>"Smith! Get Smith!" is the cry.</p>
<p>Can he take her in? Well, now! Ask a man who has had steamers sink on him
in half the lakes from Temiscaming to the Bay, if he can take her in? Ask
a man who has run a York boat down the rapids of the Moose when the ice is
moving, if he can grip the steering wheel of the Mariposa Belle? So there
she steams safe and sound to the town wharf!</p>
<p>Look at the lights and the crowd! If only the federal census taker could
count us now! Hear them calling and shouting back and forward from the
deck to the shore! Listen! There is the rattle of the shore ropes as they
get them ready, and there's the Mariposa band,—actually forming in a
circle on the upper deck just as she docks, and the leader with his baton,—one—two—ready
now,—</p>
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