The Drama of the Forests: Romance and Adventure

It was in childhood that the primitive spirit first came whispering to me. It was then that I had my first day-dreams of the Northland—of its forests, its rivers and lakes, its hunters and trappers and traders, its fur-runners and mounted police, its voyageurs and packeteers, its missionaries and Indians and prospectors, its animals, its birds and its fishes, its trees and its flowers, and its seasons.
Even in childhood I was for ever wondering … what is daily going on in the Great Northern Forest?… not just this week, this month, or this season, but what is actually occurring day by day, throughout the cycle of an entire year? It was that thought that fascinated me, and when I grew into boyhood, I began delving into books of northern travel, but I did not find the answer there. With the years this ever-present wonder grew, until it so possessed me that at last it spirited me away from the city, while I was still in my teens, and led me along a path of ever-changing and ever-increasing pleasure, showing me the world, not as men had mauled and marred it, but as the Master of Life had made it, in all its original beauty and splendour. Nor was this all. It led me to observe and ponder over the daily pages of the most profound and yet the most fascinating book that man has ever tried to read; and though, it seemed to me, my feeble attempts to decipher its text were always futile, it has, nevertheless, not only taught me to love Nature with an ever-increasing passion, but it has inspired in me an infinite homage toward the Almighty; for, as Emerson says: In the woods we return to reason and faith. Then I feel that nothing can befall me in life—no disgrace, no calamity (leaving me my eyes)—which Nature cannot repair. Standing on the bare ground—my head bathed by the blithe air and uplifted into infinite space—all mean egoism vanishes.… I am the lover of uncontained and immortal beauty.
So, to make my life-dream come true, to contemplate in all its thrilling action and undying splendour the drama of the forests, I travelled twenty-three times through various parts of the vast northern woods, between Maine and Alaska, and covered thousands upon thousands of miles by canoe, pack-train, snowshoes, bateau , dog-train, buck-board, timber-raft, prairie-schooner, lumber-wagon, and alligator. No one trip ever satisfied me, or afforded me the knowledge or the experience I sought, for traversing a single section of the forest was not unlike making one's way along a single street of a metropolis and then trying to persuade oneself that one knew all about the city's life. So back again I went at all seasons of the year to encamp in that great timber-land that sweeps from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Thus it has taken me thirty-three years to gather the information this volume contains, and my only hope in writing it is that perhaps others may have had the same day-dream, and that in this book they may find a reliable and satisfactory answer to all their wonderings. But making my dream come true—what delight it gave me! What sport and travel it afforded me! What toil and sweat it caused me! What food and rest it brought me! What charming places it led me through! What interesting people it ranged beside me! What romance it unfolded before me! and into what thrilling adventures it plunged me!

Arthur Heming
Содержание

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THE DRAMA OF THE FORESTS


CONTENTS


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


THE DRAMA OF THE FORESTS


AT FORT CONSOLATION


A MIGHTY HUNTER


THEIR SUMMER LIFE


FAMILY HUNTING GROUNDS


MEETING OO-KOO-HOO


THE BEST FUR DISTRICTS


WANTED, A SON-IN-LAW


LEAVING FORT CONSOLATION


OO-KOO-HOO'S WOODCRAFT


THE BEAR'S DEDUCTION


BEASTS WITH HUMAN SOULS


THE HONESTY OF INDIANS


TRACKING UP RAPIDS


TRAVELLING AT NIGHT


POLING UP RAPIDS


OO-KOO-HOO VISITS BEAVERS


WOODCRAFT OF TRAILING


INDIANS IN THE WORLD WAR


APPROACHING GAME


SUNDAY IN CAMP


NEARING TRIP'S END


INDIAN POLITENESS


TRAPPING EQUIPMENT


SETTING FOX TRAP


DOG TRAILING FOX


OTHER WAYS OF TRAPPING


FASHIONABLE FOOLS


THE LAST RESORT


HUNTER CAUGHT IN SNARE


THE FOX AT HOME


THE RABBIT AND THE HUNTER


HUNTING THE LYNX


MARTEN TRAPPING


MINK ON THE FUR TRAIL


MEGUIR AND THE WOLVERINE


PREPARING FOR WINTER


THE TRUTH ABOUT BEARS


THE WAYS OF THE BEAVER


HUNTING THE BEAVER


BEAVER DAMS AND CANALS


BEAVER FIGHTS WOLVERINE


USEFULNESS OP BEAVER


OO-KOO-HOO SHOOTS A BEAR


A DEADFALL FOR BEAR


MARASTY AND THE BEAR


HOW BEARS ARE HUNTED


NEYKIA AND HER LOVER


OO-KOO-HOO AND THE WOLF


THE WAYS OF A WOLF


THE WOLVES AND GREENHORNS


THE WOLF THAT KILLED A MAN


COMING OF THE FUR-RUNNERS


THE NEW YEAR'S DANCE


THE BEAUTIFUL ATHABASCA


BACK TO FORT CONSOLATION


THE WINTER MAIL ARRIVES


THE DOG BRIGADE


TRAVELLING WITH DOG-TRAINS


CAMPING IN THE SNOW


NORTHERN MAIL SERVICE


POLICE AND GUNMEN


RECORD TRAVELLING


BEAR HOLDS UP MAIL


GOD AND THE WILD MEN


THE BEST FOOT-GEAR


APPROACHING MOOSE


THE OUTLAW AND NEW YORKER


LAW AND ORDER ENFORCED


THE WAYS OF THE MOOSE


THE OWL TRACKS MOOSE


"THE OWL" MAKES A KILL


SKINNING ANIMALS


OLD-TIME HUNTING


THE BEAR IN HIS WASH


THE WOLVERINE AND GILL NET


"THE PERFECT WOMAN"


INDIANS AND CIVILIZATION


WOLVES RUNNING CABIBOU


TRAILING IN THE SNOW


THE MAN WHO HIBERNATED


THE SPRING HUNT


HUNTING THE OTTER


LITTLE PINE'S LOVE SONG


THE LOVE DANCE


THE WAYS OF THE FEMALE


HUNTING WILD FOWL


OO-KOO-HOO'S COURTING


NATURE'S SANCTUARIES


GOING TO THE POST


CONTEST OF WITS


MISSIONARIES AND INDIANS


NEYKIA'S WEDDING


THE WEDDING SPEECHES


MUSTERING THE FUR BRIGADE


DEPARTURE OF THE FUR BRIGADE


CAMP OF THE FUR BRIGADE


THE LONGEST BRIGADE ROUTES


BILLY BRASS TELLS ANOTHER STORY


THE TRUTH ABOUT WOODSMEN


A RACE FOR THE PORTAGE


FIGHTING WITH DEATH


ATHABASCA AND SON-IN-LAW


THE END

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2006-06-03

Темы

Indians of North America -- Canada; Ojibwa Indians; Northwest, Canadian -- Description and travel; Hunting -- Canada

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