قراءة كتاب Jack the Young Trapper: An Eastern Boy's Fur Hunting in the Rocky Mountains
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Jack the Young Trapper: An Eastern Boy's Fur Hunting in the Rocky Mountains
By the same Author
Jack the Young Cowboy
Jack the Young Trapper
Jack the Young Canoeman
Jack the Young Explorer
Jack in the Rockies
Jack Among the Indians
Jack the Young Ranchman
Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk Tales
Blackfoot Lodge Tales
The Story of the Indian
The Indians of To-day
The Punishment of the Stingy
American Duck Shooting
American Game Bird Shooting
Trails of the Pathfinders
JACK
THE YOUNG TRAPPER
An Eastern Boy's Fur Hunting
in the Rocky Mountains
BY
GEORGE BIRD GRINNELL
Author of "Jack the Young Ranchman," "Jack Among the Indians," "Jack in the Rockies," "Jack the Young Canoeman," "Pawnee Hero Stories," "Blackfoot Lodge Tales," "The Story of the Indian," "The Indian of To-day," etc.
ILLUSTRATED BY WALTER KING STONE
NEW YORK
FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
PUBLISHERS
Copyright, 1907, by
Frederick A. Stokes Company
Twelfth Printing, January 22, 1936
Printed in the United States of America
FOREWORD
A century ago the western half of the American Continent was unknown. Vast herds of buffalo and antelope swarmed over its rolling plains; elk and deer fed along its rivers; wild sheep and white goats clambered over its rocky heights; bears prowled through its forests; beavers built their dams and houses along every stream. Occasionally a group of Indians passed over the plains or threaded the defiles of the mountain ranges.
A few years later the white man began to penetrate this wilderness. Beaver were growing scarcer, and men were forced to go further for them. So the trapper entered these unknown fastnesses and began his work. He followed up stream after stream, sought out remote valleys, crossed deserts. With rifle in one hand and trap in the other, he endured every hardship and exposed himself to every danger. He swam rivers, climbed mountains, fought Indians, and risked life in his struggle for fur.
They were men of firm courage and stern resolution, those trappers of the early days. About their life and their work there is a romance and a charm that appeal powerfully to the imagination. Jack Danvers was fortunate in that the man who taught him some of the secrets of that now forgotten life was one who had borne a part in the work of subduing the wild west, and in laying the foundations upon which its present civilization is built.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | A Council of War | 1 |
II. | A Pleasant Spring Ride | 9 |
III. | An Expedition for Fur | 18 |
IV. | Making Ready for the Trip | 27 |
V. | The Start for North Park | 37 |
VI. | To Laramie and North Park | 48 |
VII. | A Talk about Beaver | 60 |
VIII. | The Water Fowls' Summer Home | 73 |
IX. | A Troublesome Grizzly | 83 |
X. | A Big Beaver Meadow | 95 |
XI. | Indian Beaver Lore | 113 |
XII. | Prospecting for Fur | 126 |
XIII. | A Lion's Leap | 140 |
XIV. | Setting for Beaver | 155 |
XV. | They Skin Beaver |