The canadian magazine of politics, science, art and literature, November 1910-April 1911 . keel furrows itswaters. The western shore runs farout forming one side of a wide the Kings Kangerscame, on Christmas Day, three miles up the harbour onthe eastern side a steep hill runsdown in a wooded slope to the watersedge, and at the foot of this, at theplace now called Nibletts Landing,they went on shore. But only one oftheir ships had arrived; the missingone, with their lumber, had beenblown off shore in one of the fierce in good time came the other trans-port; but the lumber


The canadian magazine of politics, science, art and literature, November 1910-April 1911 . keel furrows itswaters. The western shore runs farout forming one side of a wide the Kings Kangerscame, on Christmas Day, three miles up the harbour onthe eastern side a steep hill runsdown in a wooded slope to the watersedge, and at the foot of this, at theplace now called Nibletts Landing,they went on shore. But only one oftheir ships had arrived; the missingone, with their lumber, had beenblown off shore in one of the fierce in good time came the other trans-port; but the lumber that was fcohave built their shelt-er had beenswept overboard in the gale! A pro-blem now arose, one to them almostunsolvable; to make in this wilder-ness some protection from the wea-ther, whose quality they had alreadytested. So they began work. They werenot pioneem by blood, but of thesame type and class, many of them,as those poor gentlemen downwhose sleeves Captain John Smithpoured cans of water in Virginia. Nothardy New Englanders these, movingon into deeper forest unafraid, but. AT ?THK WILLOWS


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectcanadia, bookyear1893