Roughing It in the Bush
d sir! Sure
eaks, ne'er for
mine, I'd try
e gods had n
his domicile, which opened into the general apartment, but through a square hole cut in one of the planks, just wide enough to admit a man's head through the aperture. Here we made Tom a comfortable bed on the floor, and did the best we could to n
f me," he would say; "she cri
st as eccentric as himself, had carved out of boxwood. When he slipped this nose over his own (which was no beautiful classical specimen
ose!" cried all the boys in the street. A party of Irish emigrants passed at the moment. The men, with the courtesy natural to their nation, forbore to laugh in the gentleman's face
hat I really entertained fears for his life. The hot fit had just left him, and he l
ch gave light and air to Tom's berth. This man was disgustingly ugly. He had lost one eye in a quarrel. It had been gouged out in the barbarous conflict, and the side of his face presented a succession of horrible scars inflicted by the
customed insolence, began ab
ht but themselves; but the Yankees had whipped them, and would whip th
while he drew his white nightcap over his ghastly and livid brow, Tom thrust his face through the aperture, and uttered a diabolical cry; then sank down upon his u
nd pointing to the vacant aperture. "Did you hear it? did you see
ated that Old Satan had lost his senses. The man was bewildered; he stared at the vacant aperture, then at us in t
aid, "a dreadful sound
tch girl, who now perceived the joke; "he was
d I. "You had better speak to the doctor about them. Such f
bling his fist very undecidedly at the hole. Again the ghastly head was protruded-the dreadful eyes rolled wildly in their hollow sockets, and a yell more appalling than the former rang through the room. The man sprang from his chair, which he overt
k-look, it comes again!
upon his victim, gave a knowing wink,
oorway with one leap, he fled across the field at full speed. The stream intercept
that I had strength to follow up my advantage, I would lead Old Satan
ited that wretched cabin, we never
ance from --, formed our principal fare. He positively refused to touch the sad bread, as my Yankee neighbours very appropriately
of the baby's biscuit, and try and make us some decent bread. The stuff your
ast; and I never baked in one of
ld, but soon returned. I looked into his jug-it was empty. "No luck," said he; "those stingy wretches had just baked
but I much doubted if he
said he, sitting down on the stool
old one?" sai
se; they
am I to pu
s wondering as I came across the field why they called the yeast milk-emptyings, and that put the way to make it
the colloquy between him and Mrs. Joe; h
stranger, what
the way you told me h
ool. People have to raise bread before they can bake it. Pray who
at whose hous
ty in the hollow don't know how to make bread. A clever wife that! Are you her husband?" (Tom shakes his he
s nothing to you. Will you oblige me by telling me how to make the
ou. So you expect me to answer your questions, and give back no
vility. Is the old woman who lives in the lit
may try. I guess she'll give you an answe
d you do the
at of her daughter-in-law, although it was cunning and inquisitive, and as sharp as a needle. She was busy shelling cobs of Indian corn into a barrel
milk-emptyings. Now, I always prefer bran-emptyings. They make the best bread.
the bran, by all mean
water, at blood-heat, as will mix it into a stiff batter. I then put the jug into a pan of warm water, and set it on the hearth near the fire, and keep it at the same heat until it rises, which it generally wil
obliged to you. We have no bran;
You Englishers, who come out with s
me a smal
te close, and fixing her sharp eyes on h
cally): "Oh
ow do you get
cally): "I do
others do that for you, if you don't take care
his gravity): "On Eve's s
do they keep you for nothing,
e old woman goes to the binn, and measures o
: "A York
here any difference between a York shill
re not a place in England called York?" (Lo
me in that way, or Yankee either. There is threepen
): "But the recipe; do you a
luded in the pr
ay, rejoicing in my sleeve that I had
hed pot never boils; and there certainly was no lack of watchers in this case. Tom sat for hours regarding it with his large heavy eyes, the maid inspected it from time to time, and scarce ten minutes were suffered to elapse withou
orning; it must get up by that time. I will wait till then. I
t eccentric capers. We were all convulsed with laughter. In the midst of one of these droll movements, Tom suddenly hopped like a kangaroo (which feat he performed by raising himself upon tip-toes, then fli
ad the satisfaction of finding that it had risen high above the
ot understand the method of baking in these ovens; or that my bread should have remained in the kettle for half an hour, until it had risen the second time, before I applied the fire to it, in order that the bread should be light. It not only required experience to know when it was in a fit state for baking, but the ov
rom his domicile, in his shirt sleeves. "Do open
g the lid of the oven with the t
vinegar," says he. "The
the breakfast table. "I hoped to have given you a treat, b
into the loaf, and drew it forth covered with raw dough.
of many droll, but not unkindly, witicisms. For myself, I could have borne the severest infliction from the
s hindered me for some minutes from reading a word which they contained. Sixteen years have slowly passed away-it appears half a century-but never, never can home letters give me the intense joy those letters did. After seven years' exile, the hope of return grows feeble, the means are still less in our power, and our fri
of setting off on his return home the next day. We tried to persuade him to stay until the following spring, and make a
d I hope by that time you will know how to make better bread." And thus ended Tom Wilson's emigration to Canada. He brought out three hundre
ACKWO
isles! ra
orld's pride
cross the
love-lorn
s gone and p
wild to ear
ect that Ar
here, to ple
y tower, an
each rude co
endent of y
mit your cla
fetter bin
f man's ab
that make
e free a cour
determined
t all are bo
youth, the
mourn o'er
eir wants an
uperior to
y break-the s
ates a n
in my ru
y towers I
r clime and co
ndence gree
forests, da
st labour's
lot I gl
e a purer,
wealthy ups
sweet by la
aven has ble
rowns the wo
axe, the f
maze to fer
readth of wel
ed by his ow
nce clear, h
, when he sl