The Pine-tree coast . ucky enough \ get ashore. 5 See Shakspeares King Lear, Act II. Scene ii. 6 It was printed at Cambridge, England, by the University printer, in 1638. The date isgone from the title-page, but is found at the beginning of the New Testament, where the newtitle-page is scrawled all over with the names of different owners. T Bonnybeag is a great landmark for fishermen. The land rises all the way from thecoast, making the ridge of which it forms part stand quite high, though Bonnybeag itself isonly a hill when you get to it. The summit commands all the ocean between Cape Elizabe


The Pine-tree coast . ucky enough \ get ashore. 5 See Shakspeares King Lear, Act II. Scene ii. 6 It was printed at Cambridge, England, by the University printer, in 1638. The date isgone from the title-page, but is found at the beginning of the New Testament, where the newtitle-page is scrawled all over with the names of different owners. T Bonnybeag is a great landmark for fishermen. The land rises all the way from thecoast, making the ridge of which it forms part stand quite high, though Bonnybeag itself isonly a hill when you get to it. The summit commands all the ocean between Cape Elizabethand the Nubble. It is a shelly gneiss covered with a scrubby growth. n the summit thereis a cave, called the Devils Den. in which five or six persons find standing-room. Bonny-beag is, I think, the Three Turks Heads mentioned by Winthrop. Great Works River issuesfrom Bonnybeag Pond. 8 Two authors. Mr. J. T. Trowbridge and Professor J. B. McMaster, have chosen thislocality for their summer OLD CEDAKS, CAPE PORPOISK. CHAPTER VII. THE STORY OF CAPE PORPOISE. The master, the swabber, the boatswain and I,The gunner and the mate. — Tempest. YELLOW, black, and purple striped dinners swarm about these rocks. Itis best to use a rod here, on account of the entangling rock-weed. Forbait you have only to break off the barnacles adhering to the rocks. Large codare often taken in the cove by simply casting the line out into deep water, with-out attaching a sinker. I once saw five beauties, the largest weighing sevenpounds, hauled in from Bill Tynhams Rock in a few minutes. But the haddockis the best of all fish for a chowder, because its flesh is so white, firm, and who has sung its praises like our own world-renowned Mrs. Partington ? Oh, chowder ! monarch of the stews — With onion tinctured — I am fain,By aid of my enraptured muse, To sound thy virtues in a strain ;The nations glory, greatest dish By art conceived and born of fish ! Just back of the grove, und


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