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			  Chapter Eighteen. 
			 
			 
		   				 				 
				 
The walk continued—Frozen toes—An encampment in the snow.
After  quitting York Fort, the three friends followed the track leading to the  spot where the winter’s firewood was cut. Snow was still falling  thickly, and it was with some difficulty that the accountant kept in the  right direction. The night was excessively dark, while the dense fir  forest, through which the narrow road ran, rendered the gloom, if  possible, more intense.
When they had proceeded about a mile, their leader suddenly came to a stand.
“We must quit the track now,” said he; “so get on your snow-shoes as fast as you can.”
Hitherto  they had carried their snow-shoes under their arms, as the beaten track  along which they travelled rendered them unnecessary; but now, having  to leave the path and pursue the remainder of their journey through deep  snow, they availed themselves of those useful machines by means of  which the inhabitants of this part of North America are enabled to  journey over many miles of trackless wilderness, with nearly as much  ease as a sportsman can traverse the moors in autumn, and that over snow  so deep that one hour’s walk through it without such aids would  completely exhaust the stoutest trapper, and advance him only a mile or  so on his journey. In other words, to walk without snow-shoes would be  utterly impossible, while to walk with them is easy and agreeable. They  are not used, after the manner of skates, with a sliding, but a stepping  action, and their sole use is to support the wearer on the top of snow,  into which without them he would sink up to the waist. When we say that  they support the wearer on the top of the snow, of course we do not  mean that they literally do not break the surface at all. But the depth  to which they sink is comparatively trifling, and varies according to  the state of the snow and the season of the year. In the woods they sink  frequently about six inches, sometimes more, sometimes less; while on  frozen rivers, where the snow is packed solid by the action of the wind,  they sink only two or three inches, and sometimes so little as to  render it preferable to walk without them altogether. Snow-shoes are  made of a light, strong framework of wood, varying from three to six  feet long by eighteen and twenty inches broad, tapering to a point  before and behind, and turning up in front. Different tribes of Indians  modify the form a little, but in all essential points they are the same.  The framework is filled up with a netting of deer-skin threads, which  unites lightness with great strength, and permits any snow that may  chance to fall upon the netting to pass through it like a sieve.
On the present occasion, the snow, having recently fallen, was soft, and the walking, consequently, what is called heavy.
“Come  on,” shouted the accountant, as he came to a stand for the third time  within half an hour, to await the coming up of poor Hamilton, who, being  rather awkward in snow-shoe walking even in daylight, found it nearly  impossible in the dark.
“Wait a little, please,” replied a faint  voice in the distance; “I’ve got among a quantity of willows, and find  it very difficult to get on. I’ve been down twice al—”
The sudden  cessation of the voice, and a loud crash as of breaking branches,  proved too clearly that our friend had accomplished his third fall.
“There  he goes again,” exclaimed Harry Somerville, who came up at the moment.  “I’ve helped him up once already. We’ll never get to North River at this  rate. What is to be done?”
“Let’s see what has become of him  this time, however,” said the accountant, as he began to retrace his  steps. “If I mistake not, he made rather a heavy plunge that time,  judging from the sound.”
At that moment the clouds overhead  broke, and a moonbeam shot down into the forest, throwing a pale light  over the cold scene. A few steps brought Harry and the accountant to the  spot whence the sound had proceeded, and a loud, startling laugh rang  through the night air, as the latter suddenly beheld poor Hamilton  struggling, with his arms, head, and shoulders stuck into the snow, his  snow-shoes twisted and sticking with the heels up and awry, in a sort of  rampant confusion, and his gun buried to the locks beside him.  Regaining one’s perpendicular after a fall in deep snow, when the feet  are encumbered by a pair of long snow-shoes, is by no means an easy  thing to accomplish, in consequence of the impossibility of getting hold  of anything solid on which to rest the hands. The depth is so great  that the outstretched arms cannot find bottom, and every successive  struggle only sinks the unhappy victim deeper down. Should no assistance  be near, he will soon beat the snow to a solidity that will enable him  to rise, but not in a very enviable or comfortable condition.
“Give me a hand, Harry,” gasped Hamilton, as he managed to twist his head upwards for a moment.
“Here  you are,” cried Harry, holding out his hand and endeavouring to  suppress his desire to laugh; “up with you,” and in another moment the  poor youth was upon his legs, with every fold and crevice about his  person stuffed to repletion with snow.
“Come, cheer up,” cried  the accountant, giving the youth a slap on the back; “there’s nothing  like experience—the proverb says that it even teaches fools, so you need  not despair.”
Hamilton smiled as he endeavoured to shake off some of his white coating.
“We’ll be all right immediately,” added Harry; “I see that the country ahead is more open, so the walking will be easier.”
“Oh,  I wish that I had not come!” said Hamilton, sorrowfully, “because I am  only detaining you. But perhaps I shall do better as we get on. At any  rate I cannot go back now, as I could never find the way.”
“Go  back! of course not,” said the accountant; “in a short time we shall get  into the old woodcutters’ track of last year, and although it’s not  beaten at all, yet it is pretty level and open, so that we shall get on  famously.”
“Go on then,” sighed Hamilton.
“Drive ahead,”  laughed Harry; and without further delay they resumed their march, which  was soon rendered more cheerful as the clouds rolled away, the snow  ceased to fall, and the bright, full moon poured its rays down upon  their path.
For a long time they proceeded in silence, the  muffled sound of the snow, as it sank beneath their regular footsteps,  being the only interruption to the universal stillness around. There is  something very solemnising in a scene such as we are now describing—the  calm tranquillity of the arctic night, the pure whiteness of the snowy  carpet, which rendered the dark firs inky black by contrast; the clear,  cold, starry sky, that glimmered behind the dark clouds, whose heavy  masses, now rolling across the moon, partially obscured the landscape,  and anon, passing slowly away, let a flood of light down upon the  forest, which, penetrating between the thick branches, scattered the  surface of the snow as it were with flakes of silver. Sleep has often  been applied as a simile to nature in repose, but in this case death  seemed more appropriate. So silent, so cold, so still was the scene,  that it filled the mind with an indefinable feeling of dread, as if  there was some mysterious danger near. Once or twice during their walk  the three travellers paused to rest, but they spoke little, and in  subdued voices, as if they feared to break the silence of the night.
“It  is strange,” said Harry, in a low tone, as he walked beside Hamilton,  “that such a scene as this always makes me think more than usual of  home.”
“And yet it is natural,” replied the other, “because it  reminds us more forcibly than any other that we are in a foreign land—in  the lonely wilderness—far away from home.”
Both Harry and  Hamilton had been trained in families where the Almighty was feared and  loved, and where their minds had been early led to reflect upon the  Creator when regarding the works of His hand: their thoughts, therefore,  naturally reverted to another home, compared with which this world is  indeed a cold, lonely wilderness; but on such subjects they feared to  converse, partly from a dread of the ridicule of reckless companions,  partly from ignorance of each other’s feelings on religious matters, and  although their minds were busy their tongues were silent.
The  ground over which the greater part of their path lay was a swamp, which,  being now frozen, was a beautiful white plain, so that their advance  was more rapid, until they approached the belt of woodland that skirts  North River. Here they again encountered the heavy snow, which had been  such a source of difficulty to Hamilton at setting out. He had profited  by his former experience, however, and by the exercise of an excessive  degree of caution managed to scramble through the woods tolerably well,  emerging at last, along with his companions, on the bleak margin of what  appeared to be the frozen sea.
North River, at this place, is  several miles broad, and the opposite shore is so low that the snow  causes it to appear but a slight undulation of the frozen bed of the  river. Indeed, it would not be distinguishable at all, were it not for  the willow bushes and dwarf pines, whose tops, rising above the white  garb of winter, indicate that terra firma lies below.
“What a  cold, desolate-looking place!” said Hamilton, as the party stood still  to recover breath before taking their way over the plain to the spot  where the accountant’s traps were set. “It looks much more like the  frozen sea than a river.”
“It can scarcely be called a river at  this place,” remarked the accountant, “seeing that the water hereabouts  is brackish, and the tides ebb and flow a good way up. In fact, this is  the extreme mouth of North River; and if you turn your eyes a little to  the right, towards yonder ice-hummock in the plain, you behold the  frozen sea itself.”
“Where are your traps set?” inquired Harry.
“Down in the hollow, behind yon point covered with brushwood.”
“Oh, we shall soon get to them, then; come along,” cried Harry.
Harry  was mistaken, however. He had not yet learned by experience the extreme  difficulty of judging of distance in the uncertain light of night—a  difficulty that was increased by his ignorance of the locality, and by  the gleams of moonshine that shot through the driving clouds, and threw  confused, fantastic shadows over the plain. The point which he had at  first supposed was covered with low bushes, and about a hundred yards  off, proved to be clad in reality with large bushes and small trees, and  lay at a distance of two miles.
“I think you have been mistaken in supposing the point so near, Harry,” said Hamilton, as he trudged on beside his friend.
“A fact evident to the naked eye,” replied Harry. “How do your feet stand it, eh? Beginning to lose bark yet?”
Hamilton  did not feel quite sure. “I think,” said he, softly, “that there is a  blister under the big toe of my left foot. It feels very painful.”
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