The Lady of Fort St. John 
 
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Hartwell Catherwood 
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Title: The Lady of Fort St. John 
Author: Mary Hartwell Catherwood 
 
Release Date: June 19, 2006 [eBook #18631] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LADY 
OF FORT ST. JOHN*** 
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94b 
 
THE LADY OF FORT ST. JOHN 
by 
MARY HARTWELL CATHERWOOD 
Author of "The Romance of Dollard" 
 
[Illustration] 
 
Boston and New York Houghton, Mifflin and Company The Riverside 
Press, Cambridge 1891 Copyright, 1891, By Mary Hartwell 
Catherwood. All rights reserved. The Riverside Press, Cambridge, 
Mass., U. S. A. Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. Houghton & Co. 
 
This book I dedicate 
TO 
TWO ACADIANS OF THE PRESENT DAY; 
NATIVES OF NOVA SCOTIA WHO REPRESENT THE 
LEARNING AND GENTLE ATTAINMENTS OF THE NEW 
ORDER: 
DR. JOHN-GEORGE BOURINOT, C. M. G., ETC. CLERK OF THE 
CANADIAN HOUSE OF COMMONS, OF OTTAWA; AND
DR. GEORGE STEWART, OF QUEBEC. 
 
PREFACE. 
How can we care for shadows and types, when we may go back 
through history and live again with people who actually lived? 
Sitting on the height which is now topped by a Martello tower, at St. 
John in the maritime province of New Brunswick, I saw--not the 
opposite city, not the lovely bay; but this tragedy of Marie de la Tour, 
the tragedy "which recalls" (says the Abbé Casgrain in his "Pèlerinage 
au pays d'Evangéline") "the romances of Walter Scott, and forces one 
to own that reality is stranger than fiction." 
In "Papers relating to the rival chiefs, D'Aulnay and La Tour," of the 
Massachusetts Historical Collection, vol. vii., may be found these 
prefatory remarks:-- 
"There is a romance of History as well as a History of Romance. To the 
former class belong many incidents in the early periods of New 
England and its adjacent colonies. The following papers ... refer to two 
persons, D'Aulnay and La Tour, ... individuals of respectable intellect 
and education, of noble families and large fortune. While the first was a 
zealous and efficient supporter of the Roman Church, the second was 
less so, from his frequent connection with others of a different faith. 
The scene of their ... prominent actions, their exhibition of various 
passions and talents, their conquests and defeats, their career and end, 
as exerting an influence on their associates as well as themselves, on 
other communities as well as their own--was laid in Nova Scotia. This 
phrase then comprised a territory vastly more extensive than it does 
now as a British Province. It embraced not only its present boundaries, 
which were long termed Acadia, but also about two thirds of the State 
of Maine." 
It startles the modern reader, in examining documents of the French 
archives relating to the colonies, to come upon a letter from Louis XIII.
to his beloved D'Aulnay de Charnisay, thanking that governor of 
Acadia for his good service at Fort St. John. Thus was that great race 
who first trod down the wilderness on this continent continually and 
cruelly hampered by the man who sat on the throne in France. 
 
CONTENTS. 
CHAPTER PAGE 
Prelude. At the Head of the Bay of Fundy 1 
I. An Acadian Fortress 13 
II. Le Rossignol 21 
III. Father Isaac Jogues 40 
IV. The Widow Antonia 55 
V. Jonas Bronck's Hand 64 
VI. The Mending 73 
VII. A Frontier Graveyard 82 
VIII. Van Corlaer 96 
IX. The Turret 107 
X. An Acadian Poet 121 
XI. Marguerite 133 
XII. D'Aulnay 143 
XIII. The Second Day 155 
XIV. The Struggle between Powers 173
XV. A Soldier 191 
XVI. The Camp 211 
XVII. An Acadian Passover 227 
XVIII. The Song of Edelwald 252 
Postlude. A Tide-Creek 273 
 
LADY OF FORT ST. JOHN. 
 
PRELUDE. 
AT THE HEAD OF THE BAY OF FUNDY. 
The Atlantic rushed across a mile or two of misty beach, boring into all 
its channels in the neck of Acadia. Twilight and fog blurred the 
landscape, but the eye could trace a long swell of earth rising gradually 
from the bay, through marshes, to a summit with a small stockade on 
its southern slope. Sentinels pacing within the stockade felt the weird 
influence of that bald land. The guarded spot seemed an island in a sea 
of vapor    
    
		
	
	
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