the North Woods, by Harriet T. 
Comstock 
 
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Title: Joyce of the North Woods 
Author: Harriet T. Comstock 
Illustrator: John Cassel 
Release Date: September 9, 2006 [EBook #19225] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOYCE OF 
THE NORTH WOODS *** 
 
Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
[Illustration: "YOU'VE GOT THE WINNING CARDS, MY GIRL ... 
IT'S ALL IN THE PLAYING NOW"]
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JOYCE OF THE NORTH WOODS 
BY 
HARRIET T. COMSTOCK 
AUTHOR OF JANET OF THE DUNES, TOWER AND THRONE, 
THE QUEEN'S HOSTAGE, ETC. 
ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN CASSEL 
GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS :: NEW YORK 
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ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF 
TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES INCLUDING THE 
SCANDINAVIAN 
COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY 
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TO 
EVELINA HEMINWAY SMITH 
"SISTER--FRIEND" 
Accept the dedication of this book of mine as a very slight recognition 
of your encouragement in my work; your faith in me. 
To you I first read the story; from you I received my first approval; I 
believe its chances will be brighter in the book-world if your name and 
good-will go with it. 
HARRIET T. COMSTOCK
Flatbush--Brooklyn, N. Y. February, 1910 
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TABLE OF CONTENTS 
CHAPTER I 
3 
CHAPTER II 
24 
CHAPTER III 
46 
CHAPTER IV 
65 
CHAPTER V 
78 
CHAPTER VI 
98 
CHAPTER VII 
111 
CHAPTER VIII 
134
CHAPTER IX 
154 
CHAPTER X 
177 
CHAPTER XI 
198 
CHAPTER XII 
212 
CHAPTER XIII 
231 
CHAPTER XIV 
251 
CHAPTER XV 
273 
CHAPTER XVI 
301 
CHAPTER XVII 
312 
CHAPTER XVIII
334 
CHAPTER XIX 
350 
CHAPTER XX 
369 
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PREFATORY NOTE 
"Love is the golden bead in the bottom of the crucible." And the 
crucible was St. Angé. 
* * * * * 
Fifty years before this story began, St. Angé was a lumber camp; the 
first gash in that part of the great Solitude to the north, which lay across 
Beacon Hill, three miles from Hillcrest. 
When the splendid lumber had been felled within a prescribed limit, 
Industry took another leap, left St. Angé scarred and blighted, with a 
fringe of forest north and south, and struck camps farther back and 
nearer Canada. 
Then Nature began to heal the stricken heart of the Solitude. A second 
growth of lovely tree and bush sprang to the call, and the only 
reminders of the camp were the absences of the men during the logging 
season, and the roaring and rushing of the river through Long Meadow 
every spring, with its burden of logs from the distant camps. 
In the beginning St. Angé had had her aspirations. A futile highway had 
been constructed, for no other purpose apparently, than to connect the 
north and south forests. A little church had been built--there had never 
been any regular service held in it--and a small school-house which
promptly degenerated into the Black Cat Tavern, General Store, and 
Post Office. A few modest houses met the highway face to face; a few 
more turned their backs upon it and were content with an outlook 
across Long Meadow and toward Beacon Hill, beyond which lay the 
village of Hillcrest which grew in importance as St. Angé degenerated. 
There were scattered houses among the clumps of maple and pine 
growths, and there was a forlorn railroad station before which a rickety, 
single track branch ended. Sometime during the day a train came in, 
and after an uncertain period it departed; it was the only link with the 
outer world that St. Angé had except what came by way of Hillcrest. 
Toward Hillcrest, as the years went on, there grew in St. Angé a feeling 
of envy and distrust. Its prosperity and decency were a reflection, its 
very emphatic regard for law and order a menace and burden. St. 
Angéans sent their aspiring youths to the Hillcrest school--it was never 
an alarming constituency--it was cheaper to do that than to support a 
school of their own. There were emergencies when the Hillcrest doctor 
and minister were in demand, so it behooved St. Angé to keep up a 
partial show of friendliness, but bitterly did it resent the interference of 
Hillcrest justice during that season immediately following the enforced 
sobriety and isolation of the lumber camp. 
Were men not to have some compensation for the hardships of the 
backwoods? 
And just at that point in the argument Beacon Hill received its name 
and significance. From its top a watcher could view the road leading to 
Hillcrest, and by a well-directed signal give warning    
    
		
	
	
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