in the Backwoods, by Catherine 
Parr Traill 
 
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Title: Lost in the Backwoods 
Author: Catherine Parr Traill
Release Date: November, 2004 [EBook #6813] [Yes, we are more than 
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LOST IN THE BACKWOODS. 
A TALE OF THE CANADIAN FOREST. 
 
BY MRS. TRAILL 
 
Preface 
The interesting tale contained in this volume of romantic adventure in 
the forests of Canada, was much appreciated and enjoyed by a large 
circle of young readers when first published, under the title of "The 
Canadian Crusoes." After being many years out of print, it will now, 
we hope and believe, with a new and more descriptive title, prove 
equally attractive to our young friends of the present time.
EDINBURGH, 1882. 
CHAPTER I. 
"The morning had shot her bright streamers on high, O'er Canada, 
opening all pale to the sky, Still dazzling and white was the robe that 
she wore, Except where the ocean wave lashed on the shore" 
Jacobite Song 
There lies, between the Rice Lake and the Ontario, a deep and fertile 
valley, surrounded by lofty wood-crowned hills, clothed chiefly with 
groves of oak and pine, the sides of the hills and the alluvial bottoms 
display a variety of noble timber trees of various kinds, as the useful 
and beautiful maple, beech, and hemlock. This beautiful and highly 
picturesque valley is watered by many clear streams, whence it derives 
its appropriate appellation of "Cold Springs." 
At the period my little history commences, this now highly cultivated 
spot was an unbroken wilderness,--all but two clearings, where dwelt 
the only occupiers of the soil,--which previously owned no other 
possessors than the wandering hunting tribes of wild Indians, to whom 
the right of the hunting grounds north of Rice Lake appertained, 
according to their forest laws. 
I speak of the time when the neat and flourishing town of Cobourg, 
now an important port on Lake Ontario, was but a village in 
embryo,--if it contained even a log-house or a block-house, it was all 
that it did,--and the wild and picturesque ground upon which the fast 
increasing village of Port Hope is situated had not yielded one forest 
tree to the axe of the settler. No gallant vessel spread her sails to waft 
the abundant produce of grain and Canadian stores along the waters of 
that noble sheet of water; no steamer had then furrowed its bosom with 
her iron paddles, bearing the stream of emigration towards the wilds of 
our northern and western forests, there to render a lonely trackless 
desert a fruitful garden. What will not time and the industry of man, 
assisted by the blessing of a merciful God, effect? To him be the glory 
and honour; for we are taught that "unless the Lord build the house,
their labour is but lost that build it: without the Lord keep the city, the 
watchman waketh but in vain." 
But to my tale. And first it will be necessary to introduce to the 
acquaintance of my young readers the founders of our little settlement 
at Cold Springs. 
Duncan Maxwell was a young Highland soldier, a youth of eighteen, at 
the famous battle of Quebec, where, though only a private, he received 
the praise of his colonel for his brave conduct. At the close of the battle 
Duncan was wounded; and as the hospital was full at the time, he was 
billeted in the house of a poor French Canadian widow in the Quebec 
suburb. Here, though a foreigner and an    
    
		
	
	
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