A Little Girl in Old Detroit
E-text prepared by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier, Emmy, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/c/)
Copyright, 1902, By Dodd, Mead & Company.
First Edition Published September, 1902.
to Mr. and Mrs. Wallace R. Lesser
Time and space may divide and years bring changes, but remembrance is both dawn and evening and holds in its clasp the whole day.
A. M. D., Newark, N. J.
When La Motte Cadillac first sailed up the Strait of Detroit he kept his impressions for after travelers and historians, by transcribing them in his journal. It was not only the romantic side, but the usefulness of the position that appealed to him, commanding the trade from Canada to the Lakes, and a door by which we can go in and out to trade with all our allies. The magnificent scenery charmed the intrepid explorer. The living crystal waters of the lakes, the shores green with almost tropical profusion, the natural orchards bending their branches with fruit, albeit in a wild state, the bloom, the riotous, clinging vines trailing about, the great forests dense and dark with kingly trees where birds broke the silence with songs and chatter, and game of all kinds found a home; the rivers, sparkling with fish and thronged with swans and wild fowl, and blooms of a thousand kinds, made marvelous pictures. The Indian had roamed undisturbed, and built his temporary wigwam in some opening, and on moving away left the place again to solitude.
Beside its beauty was the prospect of its becom ing a mart of commerce. But these old discoverers had much enthusiasm, if great ignorance of individual liberty for anyone except the chief rulers. There was a vigorous system of repression by both the King of France and the Church which hampered real advance. The brave men who fought Indians, who struggled against adverse fortunes, who explored the Mississippi valley and planted the nucleus of towns, died one after another. More than half a century later the English, holding the substantial theory of colonization, that a wider liberty was the true soil in which advancement progressed, after the conquest of Canada, opened the lake country to newcomers and abolished the restrictions the Jesuits and the king had laid upon religion.
Amanda M. Douglas
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CONTENTS
A LITTLE GIRL IN OLD DETROIT.
CHAPTER I.
A HALF STORY.
CHAPTER II.
RAISING THE NEW FLAG.
CHAPTER III.
ON THE RIVER.
CHAPTER IV.
JEANNE'S HERO.
CHAPTER V.
AN UNKNOWN QUANTITY.
CHAPTER VI.
IN WHICH JEANNE BOWS HER HEAD.
CHAPTER VII.
LOVERS AND LOVERS.
CHAPTER VIII.
A TOUCH OF FRIENDSHIP.
CHAPTER IX.
CHRISTMAS AND A CONFESSION.
CHAPTER X.
BLOOMS OF THE MAY.
CHAPTER XI.
LOVE, LIKE THE ROSE, IS BRIERY.
CHAPTER XII.
PIERRE.
CHAPTER XIII.
AN UNWELCOME LOVER.
CHAPTER XIV.
A HIDDEN FOE.
CHAPTER XV.
A PRISONER.
CHAPTER XVI.
RESCUED.
CHAPTER XVII.
A PÆAN OF GLADNESS.
CHAPTER XVIII.
A HEARTACHE FOR SOME ONE.
CHAPTER XIX.
THE HEART OF LOVE.
CHAPTER XX.
THE LAST OF OLD DETROIT.
Transcriber's Notes