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MCGRATH P. T. (Sir), 1903,
The second St. Pierre. In New England Magazine May vol. 28 new series (3) pp.
285-298 illus.. The
Second St. Pierre By
P. McGrath 
THE
destruction by earthquake in May, 1902, of St. Pierre, Martinique, suddenly reminded
the world of the existence of that unfortunate city, but there happily has been
little to call its attention to a second French colonial town, that of St. Pierre,
Miquelon. Yet this latter should be a place of no small interest to us, because
it serves as a sort of halfway house for the New England fishing fleet on the
Grand Banks, and it is the pivotal point of the famous "French Shore Question." It
is strange that as St. Pierre, Martinique, was the first landfall which Cervera's
fleet made in its now famous dash across the Atlantic, the original design was
to make St. Pierre, Miquelon, its objective, and have it threaten the North Atlantic
seaboard, drawing the United States fleet from the Caribbean. In that case the
whole theatre of war might have been exchanged and the grim naval tragedy of Santiago
enacted with the southern coast of Newfoundland as a background. Ten
miles off that seaboard lies the little French colony of St. Pierre-et-Miquelon,
popularly known as "St. Pierre." This miniature province consists of
the islets of Miquelon, Langlade and St. Pierre, named in order of size. Their
total area is eighty-one square miles, and the resident population 6,500, nine-tenths
of these being located on St. Pierre, which, though the smallest of the group,
has its only harbor, and hence has become the capital. It is seven miles long
by three wide, and the harbor is formed by a low reef, called Dog Island, which
lies half a mile distant, the channel between afforded a sheltered anchorage.
A bar fourteen feet below water closes this against any but fishing craft; warships,
steamers and large sailing vessels must anchor in the roadstead outside. 
The
archipelago shows but a pin's head on the map, yet its loss would be a sadder
blow to the prestige of France than any since the conquering German entered Paris.
She cherishes these barren rocks as the sole remaining fragments of the vast empire
she ruled in America in bygone days, and in this remnant is centred the blighted
patriotic aspirations of a people who once enjoyed sovereignty from the St. Lawrence
to the Mississippi, and who "staked out" a continent which others wrested
from them. But France has also a practical reason for her attitude. The descendants
of the monarch who gave up Canada with the comment that it was but "a few
arpents of snow," retain their hold on these islets to-day with desperation
born of declining power. The cause is not far to seek; St. Pierre is the headquarters
of the great French coast fishery on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. That industry
is a nursery of seamen for the French navy, and with St. Pierre wrested from the
grasp of France, her subjects would be without a base of operations, the fishery
overseas would be abandoned and the naval training school would vanish. In
the eventful days when Spain was planning a naval demonstration against the United
States, a Spanish agent of capacity and understanding paid a long visit to St.
Pierre. A reputable authority vouches for this, and many circumstances occurred
at the same time which lend it confirmation. This agent arranged, through a merchant
there, to have. large stocks of coal brought from Cape Breton, only one hundred
and fifty miles awav, and stored in vessels anchored in the roadstead. Cervera's
fleet was to have taken a northern course and the French cable repair ship Admiral
Caubet, then on duty on the Grand Banks, was to have steamed off some hundreds
of miles to sea, and there pick up and cut a cable, establishing communication
with both France and St. Pierre. Then when Cervera hove in sight, she would signal
or convey to him all such information as would be of value. He would next proceed
to St. Pierre and coal, and three days later would be off Boston, preparing to
devastate the North Atlantic seaboard, and with nothing to oppose him but the
lightly armored scouts of Admiral Watson's patrol, the battleships and cruisers
being needlessly blockading Cuba. The plan had this in its favor: France
was well disposed towards Spain. St. Pierre was France's only foothold in North
America, and the islet was an ideal base for such a project. A French cable runs
direct from Brest to St. Pierre, with no alien connection, insuring absolute secrecy
for official communications, while the western extension, from St. Pierre to Cape
Breton and thence to the American continent, would enable the movements of the
U. S. warships to be learned. There is no British consul permitted in St. Pierre,
and the American agent was to have been spirited away mysteriously. Very little
shipping, except fishing vessels, frequent the adjacent waters, and the long and
indented coast line of Newfoundland, only a few miles off, contains scores of
harbors, all remote from the telegraph and many unpeopled, where warships could
remain for days without their presence being detected. The British and French
cruisers were at that time on patrol duty on the west coast of Newfoundland, hundreds
of miles away, and with moderate luck the plan might have been carried out successfully,
bearing- in mind the amazing- series of fortunate accidents through which Cervera
escaped detection by the American fleet for so long a time after he reached the
much-traversed waters of the Caribbean. But
the St. Pierre project was dropped, though why is a closely guarded secret. Perhaps
it was because the Grand Banks, over which Cervera would have to come, are so
thickly spread with fishing vessels that it would be impossible for the ships
to escape detection. Any fishing craft could approach Cape Race and signal the
fact to the station there, whence the news would be flashed to the United States
thirty-six hours before it could otherwise reach and forewarn the U. S. naval
authorities, thus enabling them to forearm against the danger. But, be the reason
what it may, another alternative was ultimately adopted, and St. Pierre lost its
only chance, in all probability, of ever becoming conspicuous to the world's eye. 
Still,
for the tourist who strikes from the beaten track, it possesses an interest few
places in America can equal. It has all the charm of novelty, it is absolutely
unique, it exists for itself alone. Too few discover what a field for the enjoyment
of a sojourn it affords. Jt is a bit of old France which confronts the visitor,
set down in this lonely, sea-girt isle. The town is located on the narrow strip
of land between the sea and the gently sloping-hill whose crest forms the backbone
of the islet, it fronts on the roadstead, extends along for about two miles, and
then straggles backward and half way up the incline. Its houses are
two-storied gable-roofed wooden buildings, of the type we know as French, and
in their quaintncss seem almost as if they had been transplanted from Brittany
and had taken root on this lonely rock. This impression is heightened by the unfamiliar
language, garb and manners of the people. One hears the rapid chatter and sees
the mercurial movements of the true Frenchman, the lavish gesture, the deliberate
courtesy, the countless trivial differences which mark a race distinct from our
own. The ox-cart goes creaking" by. The gorgeous gendarmes ogle the maidens.
The fishermen in huge sabots, bright blouses and flat caps, pass to their work.
The women in gay-colored attire, with snowy headdress, look as if they had just
crossed from the motherland. The black-eyed children, the surtouted seminarians,
the cassocked priests, the clang of the angelus bell,—all combine to set
one back a full century at least,—until one is awakened from the dream by
the glare of the electric light, to discover that in this one, and only, particular
the canker of modernity has eaten into the heart of the picture. Otherwise, everything
is ancient, and provincial, and picturesque. One misses the usual accessories
of the elaborate civilization of to-day,—the trains, the street cars, the
telephone, the daily paper, the high-class hotel, the "sky-scraper,"
the crowds and bustle of city life, the strenuous struggle for existence that
marks the larger community; and one settles down here in an old-fashioned four-post
bed in a modest little pension, and enjoys a refreshing sleep, unbroken
by the babel of noises of a metropolitan caravanserie, rising to enjoy
an appetizing repast served in true French style, but with the novel combination
of a white enamel cloth and real silver cutlery. For
the eye there is much to please and for the camera much to record. The curious
little dog-teams used by the poorer classes always amuse the beholder; horses
are very rare on the island, and dogs or oxen do then-work. The town crier, who
by beat of drum calls the citizens to the main square, where auctions are held,
ventures initiated and official announcements proclaimed, is another object of
interest. The same functionary makes his rounds every night at ten o'clock, and
as his signal is heard the cafcs must extinguish their lights and suspend
business, nominally at least. 
St.
Pierre boasts four stone buildings—for housing the official phalanx —and
a stone quay. All were built by disciplinaires, convicts sent out from
France for this purpose. But the practice has been abandoned of late years,
and the disciplinaires are seen no more. Every other building is of wooden
frame, those in the main street being faced with brick or stucco, while the remainder
are clapboarded. All the wood has to be imported, even the firewood, which is
brought across from the Newfoundland shore in schooner loads and sold at a handsome
rate. Even the wood ashes are saved by the thrifty Newfoundlanders and sent across
in barrels, being- in demand among- the Pierrois housewives for use in the making
of soap. The islands are untimbered, and the absence of forest growth or greenery
is one of the drawbacks. St.
Pierre lives and thrives by the great cod fisheries of the Grand Banks. For over
three centuries it has occupied a position in French history such as St. John's
has held in English eyes respecting- this important industry. When the English
chose St. John's for their fishing base, the French occupied St. Pierre. It was
formally annexed by them in 1660, and fortified in 1700. Two years later the British
overran it and held it for sixty years, when France obtained it again as a shelter
port for her fishermen. In 1778, during- the American war of independence,
England recaptured it once more; but after five years the Treaty of Versailles
returned it to France. England again assumed its mastery in 1793, and held it
until 1815. Then, by the Treaty of Paris, it was ceded to France a third time,
and she has ruled it ever since. When the Acadians were expelled from Grand Pre
many of them emigrated to St. Pierre, then in the hands of France. In these days
war was really "hell," and when the French secured St. Pierre, they
deported every Britisher they found there, and England retaliated when her turn
arrived. Thus the unfortunate Acadians were sent packing- a second time, and now
they made their way to the Magdalen Islands, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, where
they settled in peace and where their descendants survive to this day. 
The
history of St. Pierre the past century has been uneventful. It gradually grew
in population and importance, despite destructive fires in 1865, 1867 and 1879.
The prevailing use of wood in its buildings made the disasters complete, but still
the place was rebuilt each time, on the same old-fashioned lines. It is the rendezvous
for all the French codfishers; the Americans, Canadians and Newfoundlanders also
visit it, and it does a large trade in summer. Of late years, however, this has
been declining, and St. Pierre admittedly has seen its best days. But for the
fisheries it would not exist; if they fail its downfall cannot be long delayed.
Should France cease to own St. Pierre to-morrow, in ten years the group would
be practically deserted, for the outfitting and smuggling by which it is maintained
would then be stopped, and it is too barren to support anything in itself. The
earth 10 make the little gardens and flower plots is brought from Newfoundland;
the graves in the cemetery on the hillside are often blasted from out of the solid
rock. Yet the French love for nature asserts itself, and the gardens are contrived
with infinite labor and patience and fostered by unceasing attention. And flowers
are to be seen, too, on the graves above, though usually metal wreaths and crosses,
fashioned into floral designs, do dutv for the natural ones. Outfitting
and smuggling are convertible terms, so far as St. Pierre is concerned. "What
is St. Pierre?" asked a teacher of a boy in one of our schools recently. "A
smuggler's den," the youngster promptly replied. For that is its reputation.
More significant still is the saving of a Gloucester fishing skipper who, when
asked if he had a good fare, replied, "I've done very well, but I'll run
into St. Pierre and fill up with stuff," meaning opium, fine perfumery and
costly wines, which he would smuggle home to Massachusetts in his vessel. During
the summer months while the codfishery is in progress, St. Pierre is a busy, bustling
place, its population swollen by the 8,000 fishermen who come across from Brittany
every season, to engage in this pursuit ; and its trade is augmented by the needs
of this host of sun-tanned voyageurs. The Pierrois armateurs (fish
merchants) maintain large fleets of codding schooners, and although every Pierrois
who is fit for the work goes off to the banks in one of these the supply of men
in the islands is wholly inadequate to crew them, and about 4,000 extra hands
have to be brought over from Bordeaux every spring and returned every fall. These
are carried across in large sailing ships or steamers, several hundred men in
each, and a scene of indescribable activity is witnessed as they land with their
chests of clothing and personal effects, while the ships' holds disgorge immense
stores of fishing impedimenta and supplies. Last year a steamer carrying 1,200
of these Bordonnais broke her shaft in mid-ocean and drifted about for a fortnight.
She was scantily provisioned, and the captain put all hands on short rations;
they were on the verge of mutiny when an English steamer sighted her and towed
her into the Azores. The armateurs interested tried to hire two Newfoundland
seal-ships to go after the men, but failed, and the French Government had to send
two warships to undertake this task, for the mob had virtually terrorized St.
Michael's. This mishap was a bad blow to St. Pierre. It tied up nearly one hundred
vessels from a month's fishing", and they never made that up. 
The
Pierrois fishing- fleet comprises 350 schooners crewed by some 5,500 men. The
season lasts from May to October, and the importance of the industry to France
has already been indicated. When the autumn gales drive the fleet off the Banks,
the Bor-donnais and their catch are transferred to the waiting transports and
sent home, while the schooners are laid up in the inner harbor of St. Pierre anchored
head and stern, and bound in a solid mass with chains and tackle to resist the
fury of the fierce mid-winter blizzards which rage about the unprotected little
archipelago. Beside these there are the ships fitted out from the "Metropolitan"
ports—St. Malo, Granville, Dieppe and Cancale —which sail across to
the Banks from France direct and run in to St. Pierre only to land their fish
or procure bait and supplies. There are about 120 of these ships, square rigged
vessels, built in France, and invalided into this industry as they grow too old
for other pursuits. They carry about 4,000 men, all told. The Pierrois vessels
are bought in Newfoundland or Nova Scotia, usually after they have seen many years
of service. The French government is notoriously indifferent as to the seaworthiness
of these vessels, and the result is that the loss of Frenchmen and ships every
year is abnormally heavy. In one gale in September, 1900, twenty-two of
their ships, with nearly 250 men, went down on the Banks. All
through the fishing season this tide of shipping sweeps in and out of St. Pierre.
Americans, Canadians and Newfoundlanders, united by the bond of a common speech,
combine for good or ill. If it is to help a shipmate perform a daring deed, or
mayhap to take charge of a cafe, the flag- is subordinated to the kinship
of tongue. The Yankee will shout the refrain of the British national anthem, and
the "Bluenose" will join in "The Star-Spangled Banner,"
and the Newfoundland bait-smuggler will unite with both. If one is struck all
are ranged beside him, and their common contempt for "Froggie" is scarcely
concealed. When they sally forth after the closing of the wine-shops woe betide
the hapless Pierrois who comes their way, especially if a gendarme. He
is their pet aversion, and there is always bad blood between them. Sometimes
reserves are at hand and the fishermen must flee to their boats; on other occasions
the roysterers withstand the few who appear and a turbulent affray ensues. St.
Pierre is also the Mecca of the defaulter. To it as a sanctuary fly absconders
from Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and New England. The extradition laws are nominally
in force, but the authorities rarely take the initiative unless compelled. Two
years ago two Newfoundland bailiffs went there to secure an offender. The Pierrois
hate the "Terranovans'' bitterly, and it only required a judiciously circulated
report, by some friends of the fugitive, that the officers were really spies of
the Newfoundland government in quest of evidence as to fishery matters, to have
a mob of infuriated Frenchmen awaiting them at the Quai. The demonstration was
so threatening that the commander of the gendarmes advised the two objects
of it not to land; and they saw the wisdom of his counsel, preferring- to return
empty-handed rather than with a skin full of bruises. While
the trade of St. Pierre is necessarily large, its legitimate commerce bears no
proportion to the total volume of its annual turn-over. Canada's commerce equals
$60 per head; 
Newfoundland's,
$40; St. Pierre's, $280. Smuggling accounts for the difference. The import duties
at St. Pierre are very low, the customs regulations very lax, the official chiefs
very complaisant. The "Yankee" lavs in stocks of champagne, perfumes
and opium; the Nova Scotian fills his bulkheads with whiskey and gin, the Quebecker
procures brandy and light wines; the Newfoundlander's tastes include liquors,
tobacco and ships' stores. The extent of this smuggling traffic was almost incredible
until the past three or four years. Half the intoxicants consumed in the "prohibition"
state of Maine were landed on its coast from St. Pierre; whole cargoes
of corn-spirit were conveyed up the St. Lawrence and distributed among the Quebec
villages. Cape P>rcton paid scarcely a dollar to the Canadian excise, and yet
it never lacked for whiskey; and the south coast of Newfoundland was one vast
depot of contraband goods. But a lucky accident enabled (lie Newfoundland government
to break up a rcg'u-lar smuggling "svndicatc," whose principals were
found to include even some members of the colonial Legislature. The crusade caused
a cessation of operations on the neighboring coast line, and the American and
Canadian authorities cooperating, the extent of the traffic was very appreciably
reduced. An American agent once accompanied a shipment of alcohol
from Chicago to St. Pierre in bond, and its return to the Maine coast as whiskey,—it
having been "doctored" at St. Pierre;—and his arrest of those
involved was successful in curtailing the business. Canada is the worst sufferer
yet, for the racial kinship between the Pierrois and the Quebeckers makes it difficult
to secure the evidence necessary to wholesale conviction and the stamping out
of the traffic. Life
is easy in St. Pierre, and the people make the most of it. The town boasts
thirty-three cafés of different grades, from the high-class ones,
where the aristocrats assemble, to the plain cabarets which the fishermen
affect. She enjoys the distinction of having the greatest variety of liquors on
sale of any place in the world. The costliest vintages can be procured there,
and the vilest concoctions that ever were tasted are on sale in the poorest saloons.
Sometimes the foreigners forgather with the French, and the meeting almost invariably
ends in a disturbance. On one occasion an unusually fierce outbreak occurred,
and six foreigners—two Americans, a Nova Scotian and three Newfoundlanders—were
set upon by twenty infuriated Frenchmen. My informant, who was one of the Newfoundlanders,
knocked down the chandelier with a blow of a chair he wielded, and the six made
their escape through a rear window as the gendarmes were thundering at
the front door. These, on entering, had much ado to separate the Pierrois, who
were clawing and biting one another on the floor, each supposing the other to
be the hated aliens, and then all had to turn in and act as fire fighters, for
the oil from the lamps had blazed up and caught the woodwork, and serious conflagration
was threatened. It was many a day before the aliens involved in that fracas could
show themselves ashore again. The
French fisherman has an immense capacity for liquor, but he is not quarrelsome
as a rule. He is usually provoked by the more pugnacious aliens, and when many
of these are in port the little force of fifty gendarmes, which forms the
only military or police organization, is worked overtime in the endeavor to keep
the peace between the warring- factions. During the winter disorder is at
a minimum and felonious offences are at all times rare, although a few years ago
a murder was committed there, for which the assailant in due course paid the penalty
by death under the guillotine The
animated panorama of St. Pierre and its ship-thronged roadstead is best enjoyed
from the hilltop behind the town. It is somewhat of a climb to the summit, which
is crested with a big wooden cross, visible many miles at sea; but the view well
repays one. Half way down is the cemetery. Beyond it the outskirts of the
town. Then, spread along the foreshore, the little city itself, gray and straggling,
its peaked roofs and gabled windows looking so odd. Farther off is the harbor,
with its fishing smacks; the roadstead widens out, with its larger vessels flaunting
the tricolor. Dog Island lies like a smudge across the picture, and away
beyond is the blue sea, save where the outline of the Newfoundland coast marks
the mother horizon. All tells of peace and contentment, nothing more so than the
little cemetery in full sight of the town, and the upraised cross, which symbolizes
the common haven of us all. The cemetery is what one might expect in a fishing
town. Few costly monuments; many plain little wooden crosses bearing the legend
that tells the life story of the sleeper beneath. Trees, shrubs, even grass plots,
there are none. All is desolate and forlorn, save here and there a little mound
of flowers, the object of much loving care. Each section is railed off, that wandering
animals may not encroach, and all through the summer workmen are busy digging
graves for the coming winter, as in these latitudes the frost hardens the soil
like flint. Rows of crosses in one corner record the memory of the unknown dead,
picked up at sea and buried here. In this section are to be seen the names of
many foreigners, while many more of alien race are interred whose name and nation
remain a mystery. The disasters which contribute to fill this area are usually
those occurring about the islands, for a Frenchman has a superstitious horror
of being long with a corpse. Hence, when he finds a dead body on the Banks, he
strips it of its boots and clothes, if they are worth the trouble, and then tosses
it overboard again, to find a resting place in the oozy depths until the last
trump shall sound, The
picture of St. Pierre in its details is as interesting as in its ensemble. On
entering the town one notes the healthy, comfortable and contented appearance
of the people, the quaint-ness of the houses, the cleanliness of the streets (although
there are no sidewalks) and the nattiness of the garb of all who pass bv. The
Quai, or government pier, is the pivot of the whole ; the
public buildings front on it, and the policy of the town is directed from this
centre. The prices of fish are decided here, bargains and sales are made, vessels
are chartered or reported, and crews are hired or discharged. The curing of fish
is not permitted within the city limits, and to witness these somewhat unsavory
operations one must ramble along the beaches which encircle the island. These
are of pebbles and round basalt stones, and are partly natural and partly artificial.
The cod are landed from the vessel and conveyed to the beaches, where thev are
immersed in crates sunk in the surf, and stirred with long- poles until they are
thoroughly washed. Then they are spread on the stones to dry. The process is repeated
daily, the fish being- exposed to the full, strong sunlight, with a current of
air circulating beneath. For the nights, and when rain or fog threatens, the fish
have to be gathered up and stacked in circular fagots under tarpaulins, for the
best-cured cod are absolutely devoid of moisture and hard as leather. Three-fourths
of the cod consumed in France goes from St. Pierre and the industry is stimulated
by an elaborate system of bounties covering every phase of the business, and every
man-merchant or fisher—interested in it, the bounties being equal to two-thirds
of the value of the catch. The Newfoundland government has partly offset this
by forbidding its people to sell bait to the French, and although some daring
smugglers evade the law and run cargoes across the twelve-mile channel, the Pierrois
fishing has been seriously crippled by the Bait Act, and the rival administrations
pursue a policy of deadly hostility which serves to keep alive that long-standing
international complication, the French Shore Question. But that's another story! The
curing of the cod is done by the women, the old men and the beach boys. The latter
are lads of 16 to 18, recruited in France by the government and sent out to act
as helpers to the fishermen and to learn the trade, so that after three years
they may be drafted into the navy. They receive $30 for the season, besides food,
clothing, shelter and transport. They are all registered and numbered, and are
subject to the ministry of marine at St. Pierre and to the commanders of the warships
on the station. The first year they usually spend on the beaches, going to the
Banks the next and third seasons, and if hardship is any training for naval service,
they are certainly well qualified, for it would be difficult to imagine any more
despairful life than that which they undergo during tins apprenticeship. Indeed,
for the men as well as the boys, this fishing industry is a terrible one, and
revelations two years ago bythe surgeon of a hospital ship sent out with the fleet
are slowly bringing about an improvement of the conditions. On
the Banks there is no observance of the Sabbath by the French. but in St. Pierre
it is the day of days. The social life of the town is brisk, and the people are
noted for enjoyment. The governor is a Parisian appointee, and the chiefs of the
colonial administration also come out from France. The armateurs and large
traders educate their boys and girls in la patrie, and the elite
of the city is therefore a la mode. Balls are frequent, and often are held
on Sunday night. The elections for the Municipal Council are held on that day
also. The recognized event, however, is the high mass at the Cathedral at eleven.
This is attended by everybody, and the church is invariably crowded to the doors.
The women in elegant attire, fill the front of the edifice; the older men accompany
them, but the younger ones gather by the doors till the service begins, when they
pour in with a rush, each one paying a son for the privilege of a chair.
The church is ornately decorated and the service is impressive, the singing being
by well trained voices. The collection is taken up by two good-looking young women,
preceded by the beadle, an imposing personage over six feet high, dignified by
a long, black beard, a gorgeous military uniform and a gilded staff of office.
After church the young people pair off and enjoy a promenade until dinner time.
This is at one o'clock, and is a course dinner, the cooking and serving being
excellent, and the wine in full accord. The visitor, if invited out, will find
the meal a long one, but the younger folks can speak English fairly well, so that
it is preferable to the inevitable silence of the pension, unless one can
accommodate one's school-day French to the (flexible Pierrois dialect. After dinner
all stroll out on the wide road that stretches across the island like a ribbon,
and at the farthest end of which lies a little fish-curing hamlet, where the beach-boys
are housed. From here is obtained a splendid view of Miquelon and Langlade, the
two other stars in tins ocean constellation. Miquelon is the farthest off and
the-largest. The coves in its rock-ribbed face shelter a few hundred hardy boat
fishermen, who ply their quest for cod in skiffs around its rugged coast. Langlade
has a thin covering of soil, and a small contingent of farmers eke out an existence
by tilling this sterile area. The two islets were formerly separated by a navigable
channel, but it gradually silted up, and now one may walk dry-shod between the
two at low tide. Many shipwrecks contributed to obstruct this passage, for in
times of storm mariners would mistake it for the channel farther south which separates
St. Pierre from Langlade, and running head on, their vessels would bury themselves
in the sand, the crews being frequently lost. The Dunes, as the shoals are called,
have an evil reputation with the superstitious Frenchmen, who will not
approach the place when storms are raging now, for they say the spirits of the
shipwrecked mariners of long ago can still be seen and heard when the elemental
conflict rages, and the furious waves tear the sands from the rotting fabrics
which in olden times were stout ships, and which are now exposed so that the wandering
Kodaker may record a picture which tells of the vanity of all human purpose. Church
and State have their celebrations annually in St. Pierre. That of the Church is
the Corpus Christi festival, when there is a religious procession through the
streets, with the prelate carrying the Consecrated Host and imparting benediction
from altars erected at each side of the square. The procession is a picturesque
one, with its files of girls in white dresses and veils, boys in the uniform of
French soldiers, acolytes in surplices and soutanes, collegians in black
surtouts, and the priests in the gorgeous vestments of the Roman Catholic
ritual; while bearded sailors line the route, and bear aloft crosses and lanterns
and religious emblems. The festival is attended by practically the whole
population of the three islands, and the devotional exercises are -participated
in with fervor. The
State celebrates on July 14 the fete day of the Republic. The warships
are in port and fire salutes, and the fishing vessels display their bunting lavishly.
There are boat races in the harbor and firing competitions by the bluejackets
near Point-aux-Canons. The guns mounted there are purely ornamental, being quite
obsolete; and to fire one would mean destruction to the weapon and probably to
the gunner also. On this day the Pierrois manifest much the same kind of enthusiasm
as animates the American on "the glorious Fourth." The Pierrois are
kindly and hospitable, welcome strangers with cordiality, and strive to make the
visit pleasant. The place is the very embodiment of peace, and rest, and content;
a lonely, forgotten eyrie which the stress and strife and turmoil of the great
world never disturbs. The one drawback to the full enjoyment of a visit is the
prevalence of fog, which during the greater portion of the year envelops the Grand
Banks and the south shore of Newfoundland. This gray, wet, clinging veil of mist
enshrouds St. Pierre all too frequently, and makes its varied surroundings only
a series of dull smudges. As we sail awav from its picturesque harbor the curling
fog-wreaths steal in from the sea and envelop the island in their ghostly vapor,
and thus we leave it to what the future has in store for this new-century paradox—a
French community, self-contained and independent, set down on a lonely rock in
the North Atlantic and with English speaking provinces surrounding it.
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