A Tour to the River Saguenay, in Lower Canada

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CHAPTER I .

A TOUR

 

TO THE

 

RIVER SAGUENAY,

 

IN

 

LOWER CANADA.

 

BY

CHARLES LANMAN,

AUTHOR OF “A SUMMER IN THE WILDERNESS.”

 

PHILADELPHIA:

CAREY AND HART.

1848.


Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1847, by

CAREY AND HART,

in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court for the Eastern District of

Pennsylvania.

 

PHILADELPHIA:

T. K. AND P. G. COLLINS, PRINTERS.


TO

SOLOMON T. NICOLL, ESQ.,

OF NEW YORK CITY.

My Dear Sir,

To you, in testimony of my friendship, I inscribe this little volume.

On a pleasant morning in May last, I awoke from a piscatorial dream, haunted by the idea that I must spend a portion of the approaching summer in the indulgence of my passion for angling. Relinquishing my editorial labors for a time, I performed a pilgrimage which has resulted in the production of this volume, and I hope it may entertain those of my friends and the public who have heretofore received my literary efforts with favor. The work will be found to contain a record of adventures in the valleys of the Hudson, St. Lawrence and St. Johns, and along some of the rivers of New England.

Truly, your friend,

CHARLES LANMAN.

New York, Autumn of 1847.


CONTENTS.

CHAPTER I.

The Catskill Mountains—South Peak Mountain—A thunder storm—Midnight on the mountains—Sunrise—Plauterkill Clove—Peter Hummel—Trout fishing—Stony Clove—The Kauterskill Fall—The Mountain House—The Mountain Lake

CHAPTER II.

A spring day—The sky—The mountains—The streams—The woods—The open fields—Domestic animals—Poetry—The poultry yard

CHAPTER III.

The Corn Planting Bee

CHAPTER IV.

Lake Horicon—Sketches of its scenery—Information for anglers—Sabbath Day Point—War memories—The insect city—Death of a deer—Rogers’ Slide—Diamond Island—The snake charmer—Snake stories—Night on Horicon

CHAPTER V.

The Scaroon country—Scaroon Lake—Pike fishing by torchlight—Trout fishing—Lyndsay’s Tavern—Paradox Lake

CHAPTER VI.

The Adirondac Mountains—Trout fishing in the Boreas River—A night in the woods—Moose Lake—Lake Delia—The Newcomb Farm—Mount Tahawus—The Indian Pass—Lakes Sanford and Henderson—The McIntyre iron works

CHAPTER VII.

John Cheney, the Adirondac hunter—Some of his exploits

CHAPTER VIII.

Burlington—Lake Champlain—Distinguished men

CHAPTER IX.

Stage coach—The Winooski—The Green Mountains—The ruined dwelling—The White Mountains—The Flume—A deep pool—The Old Man of the Mountains—The Basin—Franconia Notch—View of the mountains—Mount Washington—The Notch Valley

CHAPTER X.

Montreal

CHAPTER XI.

Quebec

CHAPTER XII.

A sail down the St. Lawrence—Sword-fish chasing a whale

CHAPTER XIII.

The Saguenay River—Storm picture—The Hudson’s Bay Company—Eminent merchant—The Mountaineer Indians—Tadousac—Ruin of a Jesuit establishment

CHAPTER XIV.

The salmon—Several adventures

CHAPTER XV.

Seal hunting on the St. Lawrence—The white porpoise

CHAPTER XVI.

The Esquimaux Indians of Labrador

CHAPTER XVII.

The Habitans of Canada

CHAPTER XVIII.

The Grand Portage into New Brunswick—Lake Timiscouta—The Madawaska River

CHAPTER XIX.

The Acadians

CHAPTER XX.

Sail down the Madawaska—The Falls of the St. John

CHAPTER XXI.

The Hermit of Aroostook

CHAPTER XXII.

The River St. John

CHAPTER XXIII.

The Penobscot River

CHAPTER XXIV.

Moosehead Lake and the Kennebeck River

CHAPTER XXV.

A fishing party on the Thames—Watch Hill—Night adventures

CHAPTER XXVI.

A week in a fishing smack—Fishermen—A beautiful morning at sea—A day at Nantucket—Wreck of a ship—Night on the Sound—Safe arrival


A TOUR

TO THE

RIVER SAGUENAY.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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