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1793 WD 6 mo. 26 4 enemies, do good for evil, to bless then that curse, unclear. I am
humbled, under a sense of making so slow a progress, when so much is put in our power, We are like to have our patience tried, no opening yet appears when we shall be like to be released, to turn homeward, and I find no better way than to endeavour to be still, and feel after the foundation, we are sometimes amused with the extraordinary accounts of carrying on the fur trade to the N.west, we are told that many hundred bushels of homony Cornunclear yearly tounclear, where it is forwarded to the grand portage, and there given out, one bushel to a man, who uses none of it on his northern rout of about 1800 or 2000 Miles from the grand portage, it is to be his main support in case of Sickness, accidents & for one whole year, but whilst in health they substitute a kind of moss which accumulates on the Rocks by reason of thick fogs, & on Huckleberries, wild rice fish & this trade is also carried on by white Canadians, who appear as hardy, & as Savage as the Indians, and by their own account this company has arrived to great opulence. 27 5 A Shawnee Indian came to see us, & says he don't expect the Treaty will be over before frost, (cold comfort) the centinals cry out after the gates are shut, which is at 9 O clock all is well every quarter of an hour, and I wish it was so, the? we should have reasonable ground to hope for success in the Business we are come about, Capt. Drake came to see us this evening he has followed the Seas for 30 years, and has had the command of a Vessel on the Lakes for 4 years, he appears healthy and drinks nothing but water, he says he was in the Guinea trade several years, and whilst in that employ he became so callist? to tender feelings, as to see no evil in it, but the cruelties exercised towards these