FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   402   403   404   405   406   407   408   409   410   411   412   413   >>  
e 21st of November. CONCLUSION OF MR. BACK'S NARRATIVE. ... CONCLUSION. I have little now to add to the melancholy detail into which I felt it proper to enter, but I cannot omit to state that the unremitting care and attentions of our kind friends Mr. McVicar and Mr. McAuley, united with our improved diet to promote to the restoration of our health, so that by the end of February the swellings of our limbs which had returned upon us entirely subsided, and we were able to walk to any part of the island. Our appetites gradually moderated and we nearly regained our ordinary state of body before the spring. Hepburn alone suffered from a severe attack of rheumatism which confined him to his bed for some weeks. The usual symptoms of spring having appeared, on the 25th of May we prepared to embark for Fort Chipewyan. Fortunately on the following morning a canoe arrived from that place with the whole of the stores which we required for the payment of Akaitcho and the hunters. It was extremely gratifying to us to be thus enabled, previous to our departure, to make arrangements respecting the requital of our late Indian companions, and the more so as we had recently discovered that Akaitcho and the whole of his tribe, in consequence of the death of the leader's mother and the wife of our old guide Keskarrah, had broken and destroyed every useful article belonging to them and were in the greatest distress. It was an additional pleasure to find our stock of ammunition more than sufficient to pay them what was due, and that we could make a considerable present of this most essential article to every individual that had been attached to the Expedition. We quitted Moose-Deer Island at five P.M. on the 26th, accompanied by Mr. McVicar and Mr. McAuley and nearly all the voyagers at the establishment, having resided there about five months, not a day of which had passed without our having cause of gratitude for the kind and unvaried attentions of Mr. McVicar and Mr. McAuley. These gentlemen accompanied us as far as Fort Chipewyan where we arrived on the 2nd of June, here we met Mr. Wentzel and the four men who had been sent with him from the mouth of the Copper-Mine River, and I think it due to that gentleman to give his own explanation of the unfortunate circumstances which prevented him from fulfilling my instructions respecting the provisions to have been left for us at Fort Enterprise. (See below.) In a subsequent con
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   402   403   404   405   406   407   408   409   410   411   412   413   >>  



Top keywords:

McVicar

 

McAuley

 
arrived
 

Chipewyan

 

CONCLUSION

 
accompanied
 

spring

 

Akaitcho

 
article
 

attentions


respecting

 

Keskarrah

 

attached

 

Expedition

 
quitted
 

greatest

 

broken

 

additional

 

pleasure

 

belonging


distress

 

sufficient

 

essential

 

individual

 

ammunition

 

considerable

 

present

 

destroyed

 

gentleman

 
explanation

Copper

 

unfortunate

 

circumstances

 
subsequent
 
Enterprise
 
fulfilling
 

prevented

 

instructions

 
provisions
 

Wentzel


mother

 
months
 
resided
 
establishment
 

voyagers

 

passed

 
gentlemen
 

gratitude

 

unvaried

 

Island