I. [The Object of the Expedition]
II. [Off at Last]
III. [On the Edge of the Wilderness]
IV. [The Plunge into the Wild]
V. [Still in the Awful Valley]
VI. [Searching for a Trail]
VII. [On a Real River at Last]
VIII. ["Michikamau or Bust!"]
IX. [And There was Michikamau!]
X. [Prisoners of the Wind]
XI. [We Give It Up]
XII. [The Beginning of the Retreat]
XIII. [Hubbard's Grit]
XIV. [Back Through the Ranges]
XV. [George's Dream]
XVI. [At the Last Camp]
XVII. [The Parting]
XVIII. [Wandering Alone]
XIX. [The Kindness of the Breeds]
XX. [How Hubbard Went to Sleep]
XXI. [From Out the Wild]
XXII. [A Strange Funeral Procession]
XXIII. [Over the Ice]
XXIV. [Hubbard's Message]

Acknowledgment is due Mr. Frank Barkley Copley, a personal and literary friend of Mr. Hubbard, for assistance rendered in the preparation of this volume.
D. W.
New York, January, 1905.

THE LURE OF THE LABRADOR WILD

I. THE OBJECT OF THE EXPEDITION

"How would you like to go to Labrador, Wallace?" It was a snowy night in late November, 1901, that my friend, Leonidas Hubbard, Jr., asked me this question. All day he and I had been tramping through the snow among the Shawangunk Mountains in southern New York, and when the shades of evening fell we had built a lean-to of boughs to shelter us from the storm. Now that we had eaten our supper of bread and bacon, washed down with tea, we lay before our roaring campfire, luxuriating in its glow and warmth.

Hubbard's question was put to me so abruptly that it rather startled me.

"Labrador!" I exclaimed. "Now where in the world is Labrador?"

Of course I knew it was somewhere in the north-eastern part of the continent; but so many years had passed since I laid away my old school geography that its exact situation had escaped my memory, and the only other knowledge I had retained of the country was a confused sense of its being a sort of Arctic wilderness. Hubbard proceeded to enlighten me, by tracing with his pencil, on the fly-leaf of his notebook, an outline map of the peninsula.

"Very interesting," I commented. "But why do you wish to go there?"