The Long Portage

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Long Portage by Harold Bindloss, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Harold Bindloss ISBN: 9781465531766
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Harold Bindloss
ISBN: 9781465531766
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
THE GLADWYNE EXPEDITION Vernon Lisle was fishing with a determination that did not spring altogether from love of the sport. The water of the British Columbian river in which he stood knee-deep was icy cold; his rubber boots were badly ripped and leaky, and he was wet with the drizzle that drove down the lonely valley. It was difficult to reach the slack behind a boulder some distance outshore, and the arm he strained at every cast ached from hours of assiduous labor; but there was another ache in his left side which was the result of insufficient food, and though the fish were shy he persevered. A few hundred yards away the stream came roaring down a long declivity in a mad white rapid and then shot across the glassy green surface of the pool below in a raised-up wedge of foam. Wet boulders and outcropping fangs of rock hemmed in the water, and among them lay stranded logs and stream-packed masses of whitened branches. Farther back, ragged cypresses and cedars, half obscured by the drifting haze of spray, climbed the sides of the gorge, and beyond rose the dim, rounded summits of treeless hills. There were streaks of snow on some of them, for winter threatened to close in unusually early. With a lowering sky overhead and the daylight beginning to fade, it was a desolate picture; one into which the lonely figure of the man in tattered deerskin jacket and shapeless hat somehow fitted. His attire matched the gray-white coloring of rock and boulder; his spare form and agile movements, together with the intentness of his bronzed face and the steadiness of his eyes, hinted at the quickness of observation, the stubborn endurance, and the tireless activity, by which alone life can be maintained in the savage North. He had the alertness of the wild creatures of the waste; and it was needed. All round him stretched a forbidding wilderness, part of the great desolation which runs north from the warmer and more hospitable thick-forest belt of British Columbia. Indeed, this wilderness, broken by the more level spaces between the Rockies and Lake Winnipeg, runs right across Canada from Labrador to the Pacific on the northern edge of the heavy-timber line. It contains little human life—a few Hudson Bay fur-traders and the half-breed trappers who deal with them—and it is frozen for eight months in the year. There are only two practicable means of traversing it—with dog sledges on the snow, or by canoe on the lakes and rivers in the brief summer
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
THE GLADWYNE EXPEDITION Vernon Lisle was fishing with a determination that did not spring altogether from love of the sport. The water of the British Columbian river in which he stood knee-deep was icy cold; his rubber boots were badly ripped and leaky, and he was wet with the drizzle that drove down the lonely valley. It was difficult to reach the slack behind a boulder some distance outshore, and the arm he strained at every cast ached from hours of assiduous labor; but there was another ache in his left side which was the result of insufficient food, and though the fish were shy he persevered. A few hundred yards away the stream came roaring down a long declivity in a mad white rapid and then shot across the glassy green surface of the pool below in a raised-up wedge of foam. Wet boulders and outcropping fangs of rock hemmed in the water, and among them lay stranded logs and stream-packed masses of whitened branches. Farther back, ragged cypresses and cedars, half obscured by the drifting haze of spray, climbed the sides of the gorge, and beyond rose the dim, rounded summits of treeless hills. There were streaks of snow on some of them, for winter threatened to close in unusually early. With a lowering sky overhead and the daylight beginning to fade, it was a desolate picture; one into which the lonely figure of the man in tattered deerskin jacket and shapeless hat somehow fitted. His attire matched the gray-white coloring of rock and boulder; his spare form and agile movements, together with the intentness of his bronzed face and the steadiness of his eyes, hinted at the quickness of observation, the stubborn endurance, and the tireless activity, by which alone life can be maintained in the savage North. He had the alertness of the wild creatures of the waste; and it was needed. All round him stretched a forbidding wilderness, part of the great desolation which runs north from the warmer and more hospitable thick-forest belt of British Columbia. Indeed, this wilderness, broken by the more level spaces between the Rockies and Lake Winnipeg, runs right across Canada from Labrador to the Pacific on the northern edge of the heavy-timber line. It contains little human life—a few Hudson Bay fur-traders and the half-breed trappers who deal with them—and it is frozen for eight months in the year. There are only two practicable means of traversing it—with dog sledges on the snow, or by canoe on the lakes and rivers in the brief summer

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Behind The Veil in Persia and Turkish Arabia: an Account of an Englishwoman's Eight Years' Residence Amongst The Women of The East by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book The Mirror of Alchemy by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Madame Sans-Gêne: Roman tiré de la Pièce de Mm. Victorien Sardou et Émile Moreau, La Maréchale, et Le Roi de Rome (Complete) by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book An Attic Philosopher in Paris (Complete) by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book L'Enfer by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Australia, its History and Present Condition Containing an Account both of the Bush and of the Colonies with their Respective Inhabitants by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Mind and Motion and Monism by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Hand Shadows to Be Thrown upon the Wall by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book The House of Whispers by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book What Jesus Taught by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Baraboo, Dells, and Devil's Lake Region by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Field Mice as Farm and Orchard Pests: Farmers' Bulletin 670 by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Arcana Coelestia by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Wir Fanden Einen Pfad Neue Gedichte by Harold Bindloss
Cover of the book Colonel Crockett's Co-operative Christmas by Harold Bindloss
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy