. The sea coast resorts of eastern Maine, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Cape Breton . bor. The roar of combat was plainly heard through the Sabbath stillness ofthe Forest City, and Longfellow refers to it thus in his poem, My Lost-Youth : I remember the sea-fight far away,How it thundered oer the tide !And the dead captains, as they layIn their graves, oerlooking the tranquil bay,Where they together died. Through scenes, the theatre of such events, the steamer makes its;way, during the long twilight of summer, and now as the coast lightsbeam through the gathering gloom
. The sea coast resorts of eastern Maine, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Cape Breton . bor. The roar of combat was plainly heard through the Sabbath stillness ofthe Forest City, and Longfellow refers to it thus in his poem, My Lost-Youth : I remember the sea-fight far away,How it thundered oer the tide !And the dead captains, as they layIn their graves, oerlooking the tranquil bay,Where they together died. Through scenes, the theatre of such events, the steamer makes its;way, during the long twilight of summer, and now as the coast lightsbeam through the gathering gloom one by one her voyagers seek theseclusion that the stateroom grants, where, surrounded by the invigor-ating air, blown from the wide salt sea, amid odors such as no landsmanknows, they sink to rest, wooed by a quiet broken, yet not disturbed, bythe dull, far away throb of the engines and the wash of the waves. There-are no noisy landings, with their accompanying discharge of freight, todisturb refreshing slumber, which may continue until the landing at next morning. «?%&>??. PASSAMAQUODDY AND ABOUT THERE EASTPORT AND ITS SURROUNDINGS HOW TO REACH GRAND MANAN, CAMPOBELLO, LUBEC, ETC. A SUMMER CAMP. T TNRUFFLED Passamaquoddy Bay lies sheltered from the sea by a^ mighty chain of islands, all British territory, for this is the easternextremity of the United States. Its shores and islands bear numerous summer resorts, which possessenough of individuality to warrant a separate and detailed favorable times of tide, when it serves, to use a nautical phrase,the route of the International steamers into Passamaquoddy is throughThe Narrows, formed by Lubec, a white, wooded town upon the leftand the long island of Campobello to the right. The entrance to thischannel is past the light at Quoddy Head, which marks the easternlimit of the United States of America. At other seasons of the tide one must circumnavigate Campobello,and approach the American town o
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