Page:Furcountryorseve00vernrich.djvu/227

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A NEIGHBOURLY VISIT. 12g before midday, Sergeant Long, on his return from an excursion along the coast, ended his report to the Lieutenant by saying, that if his eyes had not deceived him, a tribe of nomads were encamped about four miles from the fort, near a little cape jutting out from the coast.

  • ' What do you suppose these nomads are? " inquired Hobson.
  • Either men or morses," replied the Sergeant. " There 's no

medium ! " The brave Sergeant would have been considerably .surprised if any one had told him that some naturalists admit the existence of the " medium," the idea of which he scouted; and certain savants have with some humour classed the Esquimaux as an " intermediate species " between man and the sea-cow. Lieutenant Hobson, Mrs Barnett, Madge, and a few others at once went to ascertain the truth of the report. Well wrapt up, and on their guard against a sudden chill, their feet cased in furred boots, and guns and hatchets in their hands, they issued from the postern,

d made their way over the frozen snow along the coast, strewn with masses of ice. The moon, already in the last quarter, shed a few faint rays through the mists which shrouded the ice-fields. After marching for about an hour, the Lieutenant began to think that the Sergeant had been mistaken, and that what he had seen were morses, who had returned to their native element through the holes in the ice which they always keep open. But Long, pointing to a grey wreath of smoke curling out of a conical protuberance on the ice-field some hundred steps off, con- tented himself with observing quietly —

    • The morses are smoking, then ! "

As he spoke some living creatures came out of the hut dragging themselves along the snow. They were Esquimaux, but whether male or female none but a native could have said, for their costumes were all exactly alike. Indeed, without in the least sharing the opinion of the naturalist quoted above, any one might have taken the rough shaggy figures for seals or some other amphibious animals. There were six of them — four full-grown, and two children. Although very short, they were broad-chested and muscular. They iiad the flat noses, long eye-lashes, large mouths, thick lips, long black coarse hair, and beardless chins of their race. Their costume consisted of a round 1