all full of beastly 
mosquitoes in the summer--it beats me! I wish Yerkes would hurry up." 
He leant back sleepily against the door of the car and closed his eyes. 
"It's because they haven't got a name--and they're so endless!--and the 
place is so big!--and the people so few!--and the chances are so 
many--and so queer!" said Elizabeth Merton laughing.
"What sort of chances?" 
"Chances of the future." 
"Hasn't got any chances!" said Philip Gaddesden, keeping his hands in 
his pockets. 
"Hasn't it? Owl!" Lady Merton neatly pinched the arm nearest to her. 
"As I've explained to you many times before, this is the Hinterland of 
Ontario--and it's only been surveyed, except just along the railway, a 
few years ago--and it's as rich as rich--" 
"I say, I wish you wouldn't reel out the guide-book like that!" grumbled 
the somnolent person beside her. "As if I didn't know all about the 
Cobalt mines, and that kind of stuff." 
"Did you make any money out of them, Phil?" 
"No--but the other fellows did. That's my luck." 
"Never mind, there'll be heaps more directly--hundreds." She stretched 
out her hand vaguely towards an enchanting distance--hill beyond hill, 
wood beyond wood; everywhere the glimmer of water in the hollows; 
everywhere the sparkle of fresh leaf, the shining of the birch trunks 
among the firs, the greys and purples of limestone rock; everywhere, 
too, the disfiguring stain of fire, fire new or old, written, now on the 
mouldering stumps of trees felled thirty years ago when the railway 
was making, now on the young stems of yesterday. 
"I want to see it all in a moment of time," Elizabeth continued, still 
above herself. "An air-ship, you know, Philip--and we should see it all 
in a day, from here to James Bay. A thousand miles of it--stretched 
below us--just waiting for man! And we'd drop down into an 
undiscovered lake, and give it a name--one of our names--and leave a 
letter under a stone. And then in a hundred years, when the settlers 
come, they'd find it, and your name--or mine--would live forever." 
"I forbid you to take any liberties with my name, Elizabeth! I've
something better to do with it than waste it on a lake in--what do you 
call it?--the 'Hinterland of Ontario.'" The young man mocked his 
sister's tone. 
Elizabeth laughed and was silent. 
The train sped on, at its steady pace of some thirty miles an hour. The 
spring day was alternately sunny and cloudy; the temperature was 
warm, and the leaves were rushing out. Elizabeth Merton felt the spring 
in her veins, an indefinable joyousness and expectancy; but she was 
conscious also of another intoxication--a heat of romantic perception 
kindled in her by this vast new country through which she was passing. 
She was a person of much travel, and many experiences; and had it 
been prophesied to her a year before this date that she could feel as she 
was now feeling, she would not have believed it. She was then in Rome, 
steeped in, ravished by the past--assisted by what is, in its way, the 
most agreeable society in Europe. Here she was absorbed in a rushing 
present; held by the vision of a colossal future; and society had dropped 
out of her ken. Quebec, Montreal and Ottawa had indeed made 
themselves pleasant to her; she had enjoyed them all. But it was in the 
wilderness that the spell had come upon her; in these vast spaces, some 
day to be the home of a new race; in these lakes, the playground of the 
Canada of the future; in these fur stations and scattered log cabins; 
above all in the great railway linking east and west, that she and her 
brother had come out to see. 
For they had a peculiar relation to it. Their father had been one of its 
earliest and largest shareholders, might indeed be reckoned among its 
founders. He had been one, also, of a small group of very rich men who 
had stood by the line in one of the many crises of its early history, 
when there was often not enough money in the coffers of the company 
to pay the weekly wages of the navvies working on the great iron road. 
He was dead now, and his property in the line had been divided among 
his children. But his name and services were not forgotten at Montreal, 
and when his son and widowed daughter let it be known that they 
desired to cross from Quebec to Vancouver, and inquired what the cost 
of a private car might be for the journey, the authorities at Montreal
insisted on placing one of the official cars at their disposal. So that they 
were now travelling as the guests of the C.P.R.; and the good will of 
one of    
    
		
	
	
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