as Erie, for a signal defeat of our flotilla during
the late contest with the Americans. Pushing
her bold waters through this somewhat inferior lake,
the St. Lawrence pursues her course seaward with impetuosity,
until arrested near La Chine by rock-studded shallows,
which produce those strong currents and eddies, the
dangers of which are so beautifully expressed in the
Canadian Boat Song,—a composition that has
rendered the “rapids” almost as familiar
to the imagination of the European as the falls of
Niagara themselves. Beyond La Chine the St. Lawrence
gradually unfolds herself into greater majesty and
expanse, and rolling past the busy commercial town
of Montreal, is once more increased in volume by the
insignificant lake of St. Peter’s, nearly opposite
to the settlement of Three Rivers, midway between
Montreal and Quebec. From thence she pursues her
course unfed, except by a few inferior streams, and
gradually widens as she rolls past the capital of
the Canadas, whose tall and precipitous battlements,
bristled with cannon, and frowning defiance from the
clouds in which they appear half imbedded, might be
taken by the imaginative enthusiast for the strong
tower of the Spirit of those stupendous scenes.
From this point the St. Lawrence increases in expanse,
until, at length, after traversing a country where
the traces of civilisation become gradually less and
less visible, she finally merges in the gulf, from
the centre of which the shores on either hand are
often invisible to the naked eye; and in this manner
is it imperceptibly lost in that misty ocean, so dangerous
to mariners from its deceptive and almost perpetual
fogs.
In following the links of this extensive chain of
lakes and rivers, it must be borne in recollection,
that, proceeding seaward from Michilimackinac and
its contiguous district, all that tract of country
which lies to the right constitutes what is now known
as the United States of America, and all on the left
the two provinces of Upper and Lower Canada, tributary
to the English government, subject to the English
laws, and garrisoned by English troops. The several
forts and harbours established along the left bank
of the St. Lawrence, and throughout that portion of
our possessions which is known as Lower Canada, are
necessarily, from the improved condition and more
numerous population of that province, on a larger scale
and of better appointment; but in Upper Canada, where
the traces of civilisation are less evident throughout,
and become gradually more faint as we advance westward,
the fortresses and harbours bear the same proportion
In strength and extent to the scantiness of the population
they are erected to protect. Even at the present
day, along that line of remote country we have selected
for the theatre of our labours, the garrisons are
both few in number and weak in strength, and evidence
of cultivation is seldom to be found at any distance
in the interior; so that all beyond a certain extent
of clearing, continued along the banks of the lakes
and rivers, is thick, impervious, rayless forest,
the limits of which have never yet been explored,
perhaps, by the natives themselves.