Old Timers
by
Violet Reid Reavie, 1961
Port Bruce, Ontario, as it was in 1896
- This poem of Port Bruce, I’ll try hard to tell
- My Dad, John Reid, rented the old hotel.[]
- It was sixty-five long years ago,
- Some passed quickly, some very slow.
- The old generation have long been at rest,
- Very few of the ones in mine are left.
- It was a big fishing village then
- And many of the legends, I’d like to pen.
-
- The hotel would ring with laughter and cheer
- All the young people would gather here.
- It had a ballroom full forty feet long.
- They could dance, play games, sing the old folk
song.
- The kitchen was big, with wood stove, table and
chairs
- There was Mother and Dad and six hungry heirs.
- My sister Louise kept it cleaned and bright
- The floors of pine were scrubbed till white.
-
- I never was allowed inside the bar-room
- But I well remember the old spittoon.
- Sometimes the room was blue with smoke,
- When the men would gather to exchange a joke.
- Some would chew tobacco and sit
- And see how far each one could spit.
- In the dining room linen so spotless white
- Made the tables look so cheerful and bright.
- Both Mother and Sister Louise knew how to bake
- And the meals they served were tempting to take.
- Such meats and cakes from an old wood stove
- Brought the week-end Aylmerites in a drove.
-
- Sundry visitors from a U.S. yacht club in uniforms
white[]
- To the natives of Port Bruce, were a wonderful
sight.
- They filled the village with laughter and fun,
- From the time they arrived till the set of the sun.
- Their monkey, I held on a chain to catch spiders
and flies,
- While visitors ate fish dinners and lemon pies.
- When everything else was so trim and neat
- Dolf
Dennis would
wander around in bare feet.
-
- I liked to go out in the boats, Uncle Tom or Enterprise []
- And watch the men lift fish in every size.
- Sometimes I would get drowsy and fall asleep
- But George
Young an eye on me would always keep[]
- Often the boat would would roll like a log,
- I would come home seasick as a dog.
-
- We had a crow and he was a black sneak.
- He would steal anything bright he could hold in his
beak.
- He had a few words not in the Golden Rule,
- He could laugh, “Ha, Ha,” and say “You old fool.”
-
- Then there was the tale of Dead Man’s Woods[]
- All I could picture was white sheets and hoods.
- I tried to be brave and break the bad habit
- But I would always slither by like a scared rabbit.
- I don’t know the story of the woods to this day
- And I never have heard what the old folks say.
-
- On the lake’s beach I loved to stray
- And pick up pebbles so bright and gay
- And watch the waves roll over my bare feet.
- All this to me was a wonderful treat.
-
- Dave
and Ellen Shephard’s Maggie, my best friend[]
- With dolls we played “Mothers to pretend.”
- How well I remember the cook stove’s high oven
- And the pound cakes made in it. How we did love
‘em.
- When I was about seven and loved good things to eat
- I asked Mother Ellen how she made the wonderful
treat
-
- Nellie
Young had the
first bicycle at that time[]
- A beautiful red and cost many a dime.
- When I saw her coming my eyes opened wide,
- As the shimmering beauty, past me would glide.
- The girls of her age learned to ride on the
ball-room floor
- One on each side to prevent going out the door.
- If by chance they should fall, I’d giggle with
glee,
- And many a mad glance was cast at me.
- Louise
asked how she looked, (What a shock)
- Sarah
Smale replied,
“Like dirt on a rock.”
- If the others wanted to laugh they hid it inside,
- But I shrieked and got nearly shaken out of my
hide.
- I was just a small kid and chock full of fun.
- I didn’t mind being called a little son of a gun.
-
- The tall old grain elevator I remember
well[]
- But in my time it contained no grain to sell.
- It was a home for rats and bats and cats
- And for us small kids without caps or hats.
- We would climb to the top and slide down the shutes
- One after the other lickety skoot.
- The board had been polished by sliding wheat,
- So no chance of a sliver in your seat.
- Didn’t know if you’d land head, bottom or feet.
- We were all mixed up in a great big heap.
-
-
- Capt.
Thompson and two
nieces lived on the hill,
- Jennie
and Lizzie Gibson
are saints to me still.[]
- The place was a castle made of gray stone and glass
- With large friendly doors inviting people who pass.
- A grand spiral stairway led to a lookout on top,
- Where the old Captain with his telescope would
stop.
- To view the lake vessels that went to and fro.
- They bring to him memories of long, long ago.
- The old lake Captain liked to visit and chat
- While his little white dog was teasing the cat.
- Twice a day he would call at the old hotel
- And his only swear word was. “Damn Hell, Damn
Hell.”
-
- Down the hill again, I’d run,
- Stop and see Mina and Levi Young[]
- They had kids three,
- Edna,
Bruce and wee Marjorie.[]
- If you’d meet Levi going to or from,
- All you could hear was “H’m, H’m, H’m.”
-
- On down the road called Pigtail’s Run
- I must say hello to Sarah Young,[]
- She always had something nice to say,
- Like, “Violet, what will you have to-day.”
- A pat on the head, I’d give the dog,
- And say. “I guess another saw-log,”
- I never had much money to spend
- But I could share the candy with a friend.
-
- The boys left me alone and let me go free.
- I’d dare any to beat me climbing a tree.
- Out on a limb I’d go like scat
- And over and over I’d skin the cat.[]
- I could turn handsprings or stand on my head.
- If I tried it now I’d sure drop dead.
-
- There is Abe McQuiggan’s Laura and Daisy[]
- We always thought Abe a wee bit lazy.
- But he sure knew how to bow the fiddle.
- He’d play “Turkey in the Straw”, or high diddle
-diddle.
-
- I want to go back to the beach and sand,
- In my bare feet ‘twas a hot place to stand.
- They had traps to bury the insides of the fish
- And it was not a very inviting dish.
- When they would empty into a big sink.
- Lordy oh Lordy, how it would stink.
-
- Sometimes the men would shoot the rats,
- One escaped and ran up Indian Pete’s pants.[]
- I didn’t know about Indians, but what I had, read,
- But he squeezed the crazed rat until it was dead.
- He danced and whooped and ran up and down
- I laughed and laughed at the excited clown.
-
- In my memory I can recall sturgeon full six feet
tall.[]
- Gave the men plenty of work from spring to fall.
- Big holes in the nets, the sturgeons would tear
- It took many skilled hands to make the repairs.
- Then on the reels put them out to dry,
- All ready again for the sturgeon to try.
-
- See Mr. Puddin’ Murdy with his palm fan[]
- He was very short and a very fat man.
- He was graceful and light as a cork on his feet,
- And a great surprise to people he’d meet.
- But he would almost keep me in a trance,
- When he taught me how to waltz and do a tap dance.
- He would go around the room, weave in and out
- Till Mr. Puddin’ Murdy was all tired out
- But I liked to go there, I loved the old man,
- With his very red face and old palm fan.
- He wore a straw hat the whole year round,
- With a string fast to his coat to keep it off the
ground.
- He hated the startling sounds of loud pop guns.
- He called the boys, my brothers, the rum sellers
sons.
-
(At the same time he was selling booze.)
-
- My sister Pearl was so sedate,[]
- Wouldn’t go barefooted or wade in the lake.
- She wouldn’t walk fences or climb a tree.
- She left all that for a tomboy like me.
- She never got dirty or tore her dresses.
- I had dark hair, she had blond tresses.
- She wouldn’t catch turtles or a lively frog.
- Or walk out on rocks or a slippery log.
- She hated the sight of a rat or a bat.
- Or cared too much for a dog or a cat.
- The pet coons we had worried her some more
- When she saw them coming she would slam the door
- Mother kept us dressed like a pair of twins
- And I can’t even feel bad at my terrible sins.
- The both of us were taught the Golden Rule
- But I’d rather play hooky than go to school.
-
- The men had to cut ice in the winter to keep.
- It must be at least eighteen inches deep
- ‘Twas packed in sawdust with lots of care
- To keep out the sunshine and the warm air
- With water they would clean off the ice they
brought.
- To pack around the many fish they caught.
- Then put on the boat for Port Stanley next day,
- To be shipped to the U.S.A.
-
- On one side of the fish house, row on row,
- Were kegs and cases of sturgeon roe,
- The public hadn’t acquired the expensive taste
- That now is featured in caviar paste.
- The sturgeon are gone and so is the roe
- And the exciting days of long ago.
- And the rough, kindly, friendly fisher folk
- Who chewed tobacco and spit at my feet as a joke.
-
- Next to Mannie Smale and his family of ten.
- Must have taken bushels of food and many a yen.
- There was Jim, Edwin, Frank, Sarah and Nora,
- Irwin,
John, Cecil, Effie and Cora.[]
- When they’d gather round the organ for an old folk
song.
- It’s one of the memories I’d like to prolong.
- No doubt they had lots of family scraps then.
- (John
has passed away since I wrote this poem)
-
- Old Elvira and Jack Nichol were friends of mine too.[]
- She kept boarders, could bake and make good stew.
- She was small, just a tiny wee mite,
- But could fly around like the tail of a kite.
- If anyone over her clean floor would steal,
- She would glare at them and say, “Dirt to the
heels,”
- She hated spiders and detested lies,
- And with the dish cloth would swat the flies,
- (At the same time would say - work or die, darn it)
-
- When Elvira helped Mother she stayed for
dinner
- And as sure as fate I would act like a sinner
- One time she licked a drop off the catsup bottle
- The giggles inside me I couldn’t throttle.
- Mother was shocked. From the table I was led,
- Got a good spanking and was put to bed.
-
- One of the very Old Timers was Venie Young[]
- Never knew him to hunt with a rod or a gun.
- But he could spin yarns of long ago.
- That always thrilled me from head to toe.
- He kept catfishes in boxes along the creek.
- Very often someone a fish would sneak.
- I think he was a native of the Old Sod.
- His favourite expression was, “Um God,”
- He and his wife lived retired on Pigtail Run.
- To all us children he was lots of fun.
-
- Nellie
Young’s brother Percy loved the water and his dog,[]
- He could paddle a punt or an old floating log.
- Sometimes on a picnic with us kids he would go,
- With baskets of lunch and some tricks for a show.
- We’d cross the creek and up the steep hill.
- Never tried to step on a thing we might kill.
- We would play many games of give and take
- And often look down on the beautiful lake.
- Then back home across the creek he would row.
- ‘Twas another happy memory of long, long ago.
-
- I had three brothers Amos, Wilmot and Bill,[]
- Who helped me to clammer round many a hill.
- Wilmot
and Amos, one
day sat down on a log,
- Smoked their first cigars and were sick as a dog.
- Brother Wilmot took good care of me,
- Liked to see his sister dance with laughter and
glee
- To the berry patch often with him I would go.
- He would help me over a fence, walk logs very slow.
- We would pick the fruit without stem or leaf.
- This gave our busy mother some relief.
- With our pails of berries, heaped, black or red[]
- I was tired out, exhausted, almost dead.
-
- Bill
taught me to stand on my head, walk on my hands,
- Then flip over backwards and on my feet stand.
- To twist myself up and roll in a ball.
- It’s a wonder there’s anything left of me at all.
-
- The old bathing suits, then, are hard to describe,
- But you, with much modesty, your beauty would hide.
- They had bloomers, a short dress with a sailor
collar,
- Trimmed with braid. Must have cost a whole dollar.
- Some wore black stockings to cover their legs.
- They now would be spattered with rotten eggs.
-
- Bob
Fishleigh lived
over on Lime Kiln Hill.[]
- How it got its name I don’t know, still.
- Mabel
and I went to school together. She was my chum.
- Her brother Tom was a wee bit dumb.
- Fred
and Maria Rolfs’
children three,
- Elgin, Clarence
and sister Aimee.[]
- They would walk around on the tip of their toes.
- Maria
had a wart on the side of her nose.
- Elgie
was sweet on my sister Louise,
- And tried very hard her hand to squeeze.
- With a broom she would chase us out of the door,
- Being teased by him made her very sore.
- He liked her cooking and thought it delicious,
- He always helped wipe the Sunday dishes.
- This all happened over sixty years ago,
- When old Port Bruce was all glitter and show.
-
- The old church didn’t have a steeple[]
- Just a place of worship for the fisher people.
- No stained glass windows or high wall,
- To us now ‘twould look more like a hall.
- On each side it had brackets that held oil lamps,
- Didn’t have a carpet with pattern stamped.
-
- The women thought a chandelier would give more
light
- To us kids, then, it was a wonderful sight.
- One member said when people would sing,
- Didn’t see why money they’d had to bring,
- To pay for such an outrageous, frivolous thing.
-
- Each Sunday to Sunday school, Pearl and I went,
- Whether we liked it not, we were always sent,
- Our shoes were kept shining and bright.
- My feet squeezed into ones much too tight.
- Our dresses were pretty with Eaton Jacket[]
- But the shoes made such a terrible racket.
- I would wiggle, twist and turn about,
- Always glad when we got out.
- The grownups considered it a terrible thing,
- When I carried the shoes home by the string.
- We always enjoyed our supper Sunday night.
- The meal mother served was such a delight.
-
- To Mother
Wonnacott, the one I loved best of all,
- Every Saturday I would go from Spring to Fall.
- She would always make dishes of good things to eat.
- And would find for me a very special treat.
- She had two sons named Loran and Mert.[]
- Mert
was small. They called him Little Squirt.
- I like the white hairy dog they called Nipper.
- If anyone touched me he would bite through her
slipper.
- Her boarders were Fred Rolland, Jack Whittam, Deac Lee.[]
- Deac
had the habit of saying, “Holy Gee.”
- Mom
Wonnacott made
cream cake, fried fish golden brown,
- And she’d tell me of when Doc. brought wee Loran to town.
- She asked Mert if they’d keep him. He said with
a frown,
- “Naw- Throw him in the creek and let him drown.”
- She was loved by more than the Wonnacott clan,
- And was known years later as dear old Nin-nan.
-
- The Stephens brothers Billy, Hugh and Joe[]
- Wore high top boots with copper toe.
- They had a farm on the side of the hill,
- And a yoke of oxen the land to till
- Mrs.
Poquet their
sister, lived with them too.
- She could wash, mend, bake and make a good stew.
- The brothers wore pants covered with patches.
- Didn’t look like much but kept out the scratches.
-
- We will now stroll down the Wonnacott Road,
- Where hopped many a warty old toad,
- To the cottage of Maggie Elliot and husband Ed.[]
- They loved to feast on sturgeon fish head
- He would smack his lips as up he stood
- And say, “Mon days Moggie, ain’t this good.”
-
- Cleve
Mowers, his
mother and father, Bill,[]
- Lived across the creek not far from the hill.
- They used to drink and get rip roaring tight
- And end up in a family free-for-all fight.
- They were both big people and of strength didn’t
lack.
- Sometimes they’d tear the clothes off each others
back
- She would go away and leave him then come back to
tackle,
- The old demon again for another big battle.
-
- Jim
Burwell was one
of Port Bruce’s fisherman,[]
- About him I have very little to pen,
- One thing to remember, he had a few bad teeth.
- With a chew of tobacco, he could split a maple
leaf.
-
- The old school stood at the foot of the hill,[]
- Where many a kid got a thrill and a chill.
- The old box stove, the pointer of hickory wood,
- Made the big boys laugh and the small ones be good.
- I had a long way to walk with my dinner pail.
- And my first teacher was Sarah Smale.[]
- How well I remember the old desks and ink wells.
- The chestnuts we would sneak in and shell
- The map of Elgin County hung on the wall.
- On the bench a water-pail, one dipper for all.
-
- In the winter we would sleigh-ride down the hill.
- Lots of good fun and many a spill.
- With Aunt Delia Davis, up on the hill
- Lived nieces, Addie and Amy. I love them still[]
- The quaint home had flower gardens with flagstone
walk,
- A garden seat where old friends could sit and talk,
- Inside the home were antiques galore
- And there must have been a dozen cats or more.
-
- Aunt
Delia gave me a
marble trinket, precious as gold,
- It must be at least a hundred and thirty years old.
- I still have the old treasure of marble art,
- Another souvenir, with which, I hope never to part.
-
- Colin
Hutchinson lived
with them and worked the land,[]
- And drove a high stepping horse with a skillful
hand.
- The black open top buggy was always clean and
bright,
- To ride with Colin was my supreme delight.
- He carried a whip but never used it on Dan.
- He always wore gloves and the gloves were bright
tan.
- Colin
enjoyed a few drinks from the bottle once in a while,
- But he would always meet you with a bow and a
smile.
-
- Then one day tragedy smote the town.
- Will
Anderson and Ted Burroughs both were drowned.[]
- When a heavy storm swept over the lake,
- They were blown off the scow, their lives to take.
- With Ted’s Bertha and Jessie I went to school,
- When tragedy walked in their lives to rule.
- His boy Cecil was Ted’s only son.
- Cecil
gave his life in World War One[]
-
- One great day Uncle Tom’s Cabin came to town,[]
- Cruel Simon Legree and his terrible frown.
- He ruled the slaves with his lash whip in hand.
- They were afraid to sit down and afraid to stand.
- Poor old Uncle Tom would do no wrong.
- He had finger nails full one inch long.
- His back was bent and he carried a cane.
- He had snow white hair, he was crippled and lame,
- Eliza was distracted when she had to part with her
child,
- The pitiless seperation drove her almost wild,
- She took a chance, over the ice flowe, to run away.
- They turned the bloodhounds loose to catch her that
day.
- The hounds always looked hungry as the dickens.
- They got out one night and ate all Dave Shephard’s chickens[]
- Little Eva, her pale face and beautiful blonde
curls
- Didn’t look much like the Port’s little girls.
- Uncle Tom loved her and would tell her fairy tales
- About the magic carpet and the dancing elves dales.
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