Gaut Gurley

D.P. Thompson
Gaut Gurley

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Title: Gaut Gurley
Author: D. P. Thompson
Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7087] [Yes, we are more than
one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on March 9,
2003]
Edition: 10

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GAUT GURLEY;
OR,
THE TRAPPERS OF UMBAGOG.
A TALE OF BORDER LIFE.
BY
D. P. THOMPSON,

CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
.
Town and Country contrasted, in relation to Vice and Crime.--A
Display Party to avoid Bankruptcy.--Gaut Gurley, and other leading
Characters, introduced as Actors in this scene of City Life.
CHAPTER II
.
Retrospect of the life of the Country Merchant, in making Money, to
become a "Solid Man of Boston."--Humble Beginnings.--Tempted into
Smuggling from Canada in Embargo times, and makes a Fortune, by
the aid of the desperate and daring Services of Gaut Gurley.--A Sketch
of the Wild Scenes of Smuggling over the British line into Vermont
and New Hampshire.--Removal to the City.
CHAPTER III
.

Gambling (an allegory) invented by the Fiends, and is proclaimed the
Premium Vice by Lucifer.--A Gambling Scene between Gaut Gurley
and the merchant, Mark Elwood.--The Failure of the latter.--The
Refusal of his brother, Arthur Elwood, to help him.--The Surprise and
Distress of his Family.
CHAPTER IV
.
The Downward Path of the Habitual Gambler.--His Family sharing in
the Degradation, and becoming the suffering Victims of his Vices.--The
Sudden Resolve to be a Man again, and remove to an unsettled Country,
to begin Life anew in the Woods.
CHAPTER V
.
The moral and intellectual Influences of Forest Life.--Scenery of
Umbagog.--Description of Elwood's new Home in the Woods.--The
Burning of his first Slash.--His House catches Fire, and he and his Wife
engage in extinguishing it, praying for the return of their Son, Claud
Elwood, to help them in their terrible strait.
CHAPTER VI
.
Claud Elwood and his Forest Musings.--Dangerous Assault, and
slaying of a Moose.--Rescue of Gaut's Daughter from the enraged
animal.--Strange Developments.--Incipient Love
Scene.--Trout-catching.--Return of Claud and Phillips (the Old Hunter
here first introduced), to aid in saving the Elwood Cottage from the
fire.--The Thunder-shower comes to complete the conquest of the
fire.--The destruction of the King Pine by a Thunderbolt.
CHAPTER VII
.
Journey up the Magalloway, to bring home the slaughtered
Moose.--Love and its entanglements; its Sunshine now, its Storms in
the distance.

CHAPTER VIII
.
Jaunt of Claud and Phillips over the Rapids to the next Great Lake, for
Deer-hunting and Trout-catching.--Rescue of Fluella, the Indian Chief's
Daughter, from Drowning in the Rapids.--Her remarkable Character for
Intellect and Beauty.
CHAPTER IX
.
The Logging Bee.--The introduction of a New Character in Comical
Codman, the Trapper.--The Woodmen's Banquet.--The forming of the
Trapping and Hunting Company, to start on an Expedition to the Upper
Lakes.
CHAPTER X
.
Developments of the dark and designing character of Gaut
Gurley.---Tomah, the college-learned Indian.
CHAPTER XI
.
Mrs. Elwood's Bodings, on account of the connection of her Husband
and Son with Gaut and his Daughter.--Her Interview with
Fluella.--Claud's Interview with Fluella and her Father, the Chief.--The
Chief's History of his Tribe.
CHAPTER XII
.
Adventures of the Trappers the first day of their Expedition up the
Lakes.--Bear-hunt, Trout-catching, etc.--Introduction of Carvil, an
amateur Hunter from the Green Mountains.
CHAPTER XIII
.
The Trappers' Central Camp on the Maguntic Lake.--Three Stories of

most remarkable Adventures in the Woods, told at the Camp-fire by
three Hunters and Trappers.
CHAPTER XIV
.
The Voyage to Oquossah, the farthest large Lake.--The stationing of
the Trappers at different points on the Lake.--The appointment of Gaut
as Keeper of the Central Camp, on the Lake below.--The Results of
their Fall's Operations, and Preparations to return Home.
CHAPTER XV
.
The Trappers overtaken by
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