So
the childish quarrel has gone on for two centuries. England and France
alike conspired to crush the man while he lived; and when he died they
quarrelled over the glory of his discoveries. The point is not whether
Radisson actually wet his oars in the different indentations of Hudson
and James bays. The point is that he found where it lay from the Great
Lakes, and discovered the watershed sloping north from the Great Lakes
to Hudson Bay. This was new ground, and entitled Radisson to the fame
of a discoverer.
From the Indians of the bay, Radisson heard of another lake leagues to
the north, whose upper end was always frozen. This was probably some
vague story of the lakes in the region that was to become known two
centuries later as Mackenzie River. The spring of 1663 found the
explorers back in the Lake of the Woods region accompanied by seven
hundred Indians of the Upper Country. The company filled three hundred
and sixty canoes. Indian girls dived into the lake to push the canoes
off, and stood chanting a song of good-speed till the boats had glided
out of sight through the long, narrow, rocky gaps of the Lake of the
Woods. At Lake Superior the company paused to lay up a supply of
smoked sturgeon. At the Sault four hundred Crees turned back. The
rest of the Indians hoisted blankets on fishing-poles, and, with a west
wind, scudded across Lake Huron to Lake Nipissing. From Lake Nipissing
they rode safely down the Ottawa to Montreal.
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