. Here and there in New England and Canada . o the Second Connecticut Lake, whose watersflow down from near the frontier, and enter the Connecticut River. 74 CHAPTER XVI. THE RANGELEY LAKES. Farmington.—Rangeley.—Indian Rock.—Cupsuptic.—Lake Moost;- LUCMAGUNTIC.—BaLD MOUNTAIN.—MoLLYCHUNKAMUNK LaKE.—LaKE Welokennebacook.—Lake Umkagog. Then I gently shake the tackleTill the barbed and fatal hackleIn its tempered jaws shall shackleThat old trout, so wary grown. AWAY up in the north-western corner of Maine, deep amid the forests, andsurrounded by untrodden mountains, are the famous fishing andhunt


. Here and there in New England and Canada . o the Second Connecticut Lake, whose watersflow down from near the frontier, and enter the Connecticut River. 74 CHAPTER XVI. THE RANGELEY LAKES. Farmington.—Rangeley.—Indian Rock.—Cupsuptic.—Lake Moost;- LUCMAGUNTIC.—BaLD MOUNTAIN.—MoLLYCHUNKAMUNK LaKE.—LaKE Welokennebacook.—Lake Umkagog. Then I gently shake the tackleTill the barbed and fatal hackleIn its tempered jaws shall shackleThat old trout, so wary grown. AWAY up in the north-western corner of Maine, deep amid the forests, andsurrounded by untrodden mountains, are the famous fishing andhunting grounds of the Rangele\- Lakes, for a generation past the favoriteresort of the better class of New-England sportsmen. This charmed regionis entered by taking the Boston & Maine Railroad to Portland, whence wemay go by the MaineCentral Railroad toFarmington and Phillips,and stage to Greenvale, on Rangelej Lake; or / ^. by the Grand Trunk / \ Railway to Bryant Pond, and stage to \ f —?- * > dover and South Arm.


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