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قراءة كتاب Lost in the Wilds A Canadian Story

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Lost in the Wilds
A Canadian Story

Lost in the Wilds A Canadian Story

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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LOST IN THE WILDS

Cover
It was an awful moment.
It was an awful moment.

LOST IN THE WILDS

A CANADIAN STORY

BY ELEANOR STREDDER

LONDON, EDINBURGH,
DUBLIN, & NEW YORK
THOMAS NELSON
AND SONS
1893

CONTENTS.

  1. In Acland's Hut

  2. Hunting the Buffalo

  3. The First Snowstorm

  4. Maxica, the Cree Indian

  5. In the Birch-bark Hut

  6. Searching for a Supper

  7. Following the Blackfeet

  8. The Shop in the Wilderness

  9. New Friends

  10. The Dog-sled

  11. The Hunters' Camp

  12. Maxica's Warning

  13. Just in Time

  14. Wedding Guests

  15. To the Rescue

  16. In Confusion

LOST IN THE WILDS.

CHAPTER I.

IN ACLAND'S HUT.

The October sun was setting over a wild, wide waste of waving grass, growing dry and yellow in the autumn winds. The scarlet hips gleamed between the whitening blades wherever the pale pink roses of summer had shed their fragrant leaves.

But now the brief Indian summer was drawing to its close, and winter was coming down upon that vast Canadian plain with rapid strides. The wailing cry of the wild geese rang through the gathering stillness.

The driver of a rough Red River cart slapped the boy by his side upon the shoulder, and bade him look aloft at the swiftly-moving cloud of chattering beaks and waving wings.

For a moment or two the twilight sky was darkened, and the air was filled with the restless beat of countless pinions. The flight of the wild geese to the warmer south told the same story, of approaching snow, to the bluff carter. He muttered something about finding the cows which his young companion did not understand. The boy's eyes had travelled from the winged files of retreating geese to the vast expanse of sky and plain. The west was all aglow with myriad tints of gold and saffron and green, reflected back from many a gleaming lakelet and curving river, which shone like jewels on the broad breast of the grassy ocean. Where the dim sky-line faded into darkness the Touchwood Hills cast a blackness of shadow on the numerous thickets which fringed their sheltering slopes. Onward stole the darkness, while the prairie fires shot up in wavy lines, like giant fireworks.

Between the fire-flash and the dying sun the boy's quick eye was aware of the long winding course of the great trail to the north. It was a comfort to perceive it in the midst of such utter loneliness; for if men had come and gone, they had left no other record behind them. He seemed to feel the stillness of an unbroken solitude, and to hear the silence that was brooding over lake and thicket, hill and waste alike.

He turned to his companion. "Forgill," he asked, in a low venturing tone, "can you find your way in the dark?"

He was answered by a low, short laugh, too expressive of contempt to suffer him to repeat his question.

One broad flash of crimson light yet lingered along the western sky, and the evening star gleamed out upon the shadowy earth, which the night was hugging to itself closer and closer every moment.

Still the cart rumbled on. It was wending now by the

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