Michael McGrath, Postmaster | Page 3

Ralph Connor
postmaster, the representative among
them of Her Majesty's Government, but they were proud of him as
standing for all that was heroic in the Empire's history; for a man who
had touched shoulders with those who had fought their way under
India's fierce suns and through India's swamps and jungles, from
Calcutta to Lucknow and back, was no common citizen, but a man who
trailed glory in his wake. More than this, Ould Michael was a friend to
all, and they loved him for his simple, generous heart. Too generous, as
it turned out, for every month it was his custom to summon his friends
to Paddy Dougan's bar and spend the greater part of the monthly
remittance that came in his letter from home. That monthly letter
should be placed in the category of household gods with the flag, the
garden and the postoffice. Its arrival was always an occasion for
celebration--not for the remittance it contained, but for the wealth of
love and tender memory it brought to Ould Michael in this far-off land.
Late in the afternoon, just before the arrival of the mail-stage, there
rode up the bench towards the postoffice a man remarkable even in that
company of remarkable men. He was tall--a good deal over six
feet--spare, bony, with huge hands and feet and evidently possessed of
immense strength. His face and head were covered with a mass of
shaggy hair--brick-red mixed with grey--and out of this mass of
grizzled hair gleamed two small grey eyes, very bright and very keen.
"Howly mither av Moses!" shouted Ould Michael rushing towards him;
"'tis McFarquhar. My friend, Mr. McFarquhar," said Ould Michael,
presenting me in his most ceremonious style and standing at attention.
McFarquhar took my hand in his paw and gave me a grasp so cordial
that, were it not for the shame of it, I would have roared out in agony.
"I am proud to make the acquaintance of you," he said, with a strong
highland accent. "You will be a stranger in these parts?"
I told him as much of my history and affairs as I thought necessary and

drew from him as much information about himself and his life as I
could, which was not much. He had come to the country a lad of twenty
to take service under the Hudson Bay Company. Fifteen years ago had
left the Company and had settled in the valley of Grizzly Creek, which
empties into the Fraser a little below the Grand Bend. I found out too,
but not from himself, that he had married an Indian woman and that,
with her and his two boys, he lived the half-savage life of a hunter and
rancher. He was famous as a hunter of the grizzly bears that once
frequented his valley and, indeed, he bore the name of "Grizzly
McFarquhar" among the old-timers.
He was Ould Michael's dearest friend. Many a long hunt had they taken
together, and over and over again did they owe their lives to each other.
But the hour had now come for the performance of Ould Michael's
monthly duty. The opening of the mail was a solemn proceeding. The
bag was carried in from the stage by Ould Michael, followed by the
entire crowd in a kind of triumphal procession, and reverently
deposited upon the counter. The key was taken down from its hook
above the window, inserted into the lock, turned with a flourish and
then hung up in its place. From his pocket Ould Michael then took a
clasp-knife with a wicked-looking, curved blade, which he laid beside
the bag. He then placed a pair of spectacles on his nose and, in an
impressive manner and amidst dead silence, opened the bag, poured out
its contents upon the counter, turned it inside out and carefully shook it.
No one in the crowd moved. With due deliberation Ould Michael, with
the wicked-looking clasp knife, proceeded to cut the strings binding the
various bundles of letters and papers. The papers were then deposited
beneath the counter upon the floor, and the letters spread out upon the
counter. The last act of the ceremony was the selecting by Ould
Michael of his own letter from the pile, after which, with a waive of the
hand, he declared, "Gentlemen, the mail is open," when they flung
themselves upon it with an eagerness that told of the heart-hunger for
news from a far-country that is like cool water to the thirsty soul.
The half-hour that followed the distribution of the mail offered a scene
strange and touching. The men who had received letters stood away
from the crowd and read them with varying expressions of delight or

grief, or in silence that spoke more deeply than could any words. For
that half-hour the lonely
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