Robert Louis Stevenson, in one of his essays on the art of writing, says in substance that one of the methods of telling a story is to choose a background and then build in harmony with the landscape selected.
In The Gold Rock of the Chippewa the writer has followed this method. The story opens in 1775, a dozen years after the Great Lakes region had been ceded by France to England. But it does not attempt to tell of the great war in which Wolfe and Montcalm gave their lives for their countries. It might be called “The Robinson Crusoe of Lake Superior,” as the events of the whole story take place among the rocky wooded hills, on the cold streams, the clear lakes, the wild islands, and on the deep blue waters of “Gitche Gumee,” the largest and most beautiful of the great inland seas of North America.
D. Lange.
St. Paul, Minnesota,
August, 1925. [[7]]
CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||
| I. | [The Council] | 11 |
| II. | [Ganawa Speaks] | 17 |
| III. | [Gitche Gumee] | 23 |
| IV. | [Vague News] | 34 |
| V. | [The White Boy Learns] | 45 |
| VI. | [A Spooky Camp] | 54 |
| VII. | [A Wolf] | 61 |
| VIII. | [Tawny] | 68 |
| IX. | [The Proving of Tawny] | 74 |
| X. | [The Riddle] | 81 |
| XI. | [Mystery and Danger] | 89 |
| XII. | [Beginning the Search] | 97 |
| XIII. | [At the Big Pool] | 105 |
| XIV. | [A Puzzle] | 113 |
| XV. | [The Smoke-House] | 121 |
| XVI. | [A Double Surprise] | 129 |
| XVII. | [Into the Unknown] | 137 |
| XVIII. | [Real Trouble] | 144 |
| XIX. | [On Wild Lakes] | 151 |
| XX. | [Farthest North] | 159 |
| XXI. | [Wild Fruit] [[8]] | 166 |
| XXII. | [On a New Tack] | 173 |
| XXIII. | [The Beaver Hunt] | 179 |
| XXIV. | [Much Work and a Clue] | 186 |
| XXV. | [A Mystery] | 193 |
| XXVI. | [Stalking a Moose] | 202 |
| XXVII. | [The Storm Camp] | 211 |
| XXVIII. | [Fighting a Wolf] | 218 |
| XXIX. | [A Discovery] | 228 |
| XXX. | [Ganawa Is Frightened] | 238 |
| XXXI. | [Sailing The Pirate] | 247 |
| XXXII. | [Caribou Island] | 254 |
| XXXIII. | [The Last Search] | 260 |
| XXXIV. | [A Bold Venture] | 268 |
[[9]]