. Days in the open. Do you know the blackened timber—do you know that racing streamWith the raw, right-angled log-jam at the end;And the bar of sun-warmed shinglewhere a man may bask anddreamTo the click of shod canoe-polesround the bend?It is there that we are going withour rods and reels and a silent smoky Indian that weknow—To a couch of new-pulled hemlock,with the starlight on our the Red Gods call us out andwe must go!—RuDYARD Kipling, The Feetof the Young CONTENTS I. The Boy and the BrookII. The Two Boys . III. The Town-Meeting at Blue Pool IV. In the North Wood


. Days in the open. Do you know the blackened timber—do you know that racing streamWith the raw, right-angled log-jam at the end;And the bar of sun-warmed shinglewhere a man may bask anddreamTo the click of shod canoe-polesround the bend?It is there that we are going withour rods and reels and a silent smoky Indian that weknow—To a couch of new-pulled hemlock,with the starlight on our the Red Gods call us out andwe must go!—RuDYARD Kipling, The Feetof the Young CONTENTS I. The Boy and the BrookII. The Two Boys . III. The Town-Meeting at Blue Pool IV. In the North Woods .V. Over the Simplon Pass VI. On Sea and Shore VII. Among the Northern Pines VIII. .In the Land of Nod IX. On Both Coasts . X. On Moosehead Lake Rock 13 25 354965758799III 125 8 CONTENTS XI. Among the Cut-Throats of Lake Chelan ..... 139 XII. Camping on the Nepigon . -151 XIII. In a House-Boat on the Kootenay 167 XIV. Skegemog Point .... 183 XV. In the Algoma Woods—and Be-fore ..... 199XVI. In the Valley of the Dwyfor . 213XVII. Boy Life in the Open . 225 XVIII. The Bully of the Upper Oswe- gatchie 239 XIX. Olla Podrida . . 255


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Keywords: ., bookauthorrh, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectfishing