The Arctic Prairies : a Canoe-Journey of 2,000 Miles in Search of the Caribou; / Being the Account of a Voyage to the Region North of Aylemer Lake

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CHAPTER I DEPARTURE FOR THE NORTH

CHAPTER II DOWN THE NOISY RIVER WITH THE VOYAGEURS

CHAPTER III HUMAN NATURE ON THE RIVER

CHAPTER IV DOWN THE SILENT RIVER WITH THE MOUNTED POLICE

CHAPTER V A CONFERENCE WITH THE CHIEFS

CHAPTER VI OUT WITH SOUSI BEAULIEU

CHAPTER VII THE BUFFALO HUNT

CHAPTER VIII THOMAS ANDERSON

CHAPTER IX MOSQUITOES

CHAPTER X A BAD CASE

CHAPTER XI THE SECOND BUFFALO HUNT

CHAPTER XII BEZKYA AND THE PILLS

CHAPTER XIII FORT SMITH AND THE SOCIAL QUEEN

CHAPTER XIV RABBITS AND LYNXES IN THE NORTH-WEST

CHAPTER XV EBB AND FLOW OF ANIMAL LIFE

CHAPTER XVI THE PELICAN TRIP

CHAPTER XVII THE THIRD BUFFALO HUNT

CHAPTER XVIII DOWN TO FUNDAMENTALS

CHAPTER XIX WHITE MAN AND RED. MEAT, BUT NOTHING MORE

CHAPTER XX ON THE NYARLING

CHAPTER XXI FORT RESOLUTION AND ITS FOLK

CHAPTER XXII THE CHIPEWYANS, THEIR SPEECH AND WRITING

CHAPTER XXIII THE DOGS OF FORT RESOLUTION

CHAPTER XXIV THE VOYAGE ACROSS THE LAKE

CHAPTER XXV CROSSING THE LAKE ITS NATURAL HISTORY

CHAPTER XXVI THE LYNX AT BAY

CHAPTER XXVII THE LAST OF THAT INDIAN CREW

CHAPTER XXVIII GEOLOGICAL FORCES AT WORK

CHAPTER XXIX PIKE'S PORTAGE Part of my plan was to leave a

CHAPTER XXX CARIBOU-LAND AT LAST

CHAPTER XXXI GOOD-BYE TO THE WOODS

CHAPTER XXXII THE TREELESS PLAINS

CHAPTER XXXIII THE UNKNOWN

CHAPTER XXXIV AYLMER LAKE

CHAPTER XXXV THE MUSK-OX

CHAPTER XXXVI THE ARCTIC PRAIRIES AND MY FARTHEST NORTH

CHAPTER XXXVII FACING HOMEWARD

CHAPTER XXXVIII THE FIRST WOODS

CHAPTER XXXIX FAREWELL TO THE CARIBOU

CHAPTER XL OLD FORT RELIANCE TO FORT RESOLUTION

CHAPTER XLI GOING UP THE LOWER SLAVE

CHAPTER XLII FORT SMITH AND THE TUG

CHAPTER XLIII

CHAPTER XLIV THE RIVER

CHAPTER XLV THE RIVER SHOWS ITS TEETH

CHAPTER XLVI BRIGHT AGAIN

CHAPTER XLVII WHEN NATURE SMILED

CHAPTER XLVIII THE END

Title: The Arctic Prairies

Author: Ernest Thompson Seton

Edition: 10

Language: English

Produced by Bruce Miller; Courtesy of Kevin McCarthy Director of Perrot Memorial Library.

The Arctic Prairies

A Canoe-Journey

OF 2,000 MILES IN SEARCH OF THE CARIBOU

BEING THE ACCOUNT OF A VOYAGE TO THE REGION NORTH OF AYLMER LAKE

By Ernest Thompson Seton

Author of "Wild Animals I Have Known", "Life Histories", Etc.

DEDICATED

TO

THE RIGHT HONOURABLE SIR WILFRID LAURIER, G. C. M. G. PREMIER OF CANADA

PREFACE

What young man of our race would not gladly give a year of his life to roll backward the scroll of time for five decades and live that year in the romantic bygone-days of the Wild West; to see the great Missouri while the Buffalo pastured on its banks, while big game teemed in sight and the red man roamed and hunted, unchecked by fence or hint of white man's rule; or, when that rule was represented only by scattered trading-posts, hundreds of miles apart, and at best the traders could exchange the news by horse or canoe and months of lonely travel?

I for one, would have rejoiced in tenfold payment for the privilege of this backward look in our age, and had reached the middle life before I realised that, at a much less heavy cost, the miracle was possible today.

For the uncivilised Indian still roams the far reaches of absolutely unchanged, unbroken forest and prairie leagues, and has knowledge of white men only in bartering furs at the scattered trading-posts, where locomotive and telegraph are unknown; still the wild Buffalo elude the hunters, fight the Wolves, wallow, wander, and breed; and still there is hoofed game by the million to be found where the Saxon is as seldom seen as on the Missouri in the times of Lewis and Clarke. Only we must seek it all, not in the West, but in the far North-west; and for "Missouri and Mississippi" read "Peace and Mackenzie Rivers," those noble streams that northward roll their mile-wide turbid floods a thousand leagues to the silent Arctic Sea.

This was the thought which spurred me to a six months' journey by canoe. And I found what I went in search of, but found, also, abundant and better rewards that were not in mind, even as Saul, the son of Kish, went seeking asses and found for himself a crown and a great kingdom.

Four years have gone by since I lived through these experiences. Such a lapse of time may have made my news grow stale, but it has also given the opportunity for the working up of specimens and scientific records. The results, for the most part, will be found in the Appendices, and three of these, as indicated—namely, the sections on Plants, Mammals, and Birds—are the joint work of my assistant, Mr. Edward A. Preble, and myself.

My thanks are due here to the Right Honourable Lord Strathcona, G. C. M. G., Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, for giving me access to the records of the Company whenever I needed them for historical purposes; to the Honourable Frank Oliver, Minister of the Interior, Canada, for the necessary papers and permits to facilitate scientific collection, and also to Clarence C. Chipman, Esq., of Winnipeg, the Hudson's Bay Company's Commissioner, for practical help in preparing my outfit, and for letters of introduction to the many officers of the Company, whose kind help was so often a Godsend.

ERNEST THOMPSON SETON.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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