Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Two Wilderness Voyagers: A True Tale of Indian Life
The crows had gathered at their rookeries among the tall pines of a bluff which over topped an Ojibwa village. Snow had melted Off the bark roofs of the wigwams and in their front - if they may be said to have had a front lay a far stretch Of blue-green ice shimmering under the April sun. TO and fro above this ice field the solemn harbingers Of Spring ?apped their black wings. They scanned its barren space in vain search for open water and the ?oat of winter killed fish. The occasional remon strant Aal-aal-asl! Of one Of these winging spec ters sounded a lean and melancholy note Of hunger. Now and then, too, within their range Of Vision, a wolf, bare Of rib and thin to the semblance Of a shadow, loped, a ?itting wraith, across an arm Of the lake. Save for the scream Of a scolding jay, the chirrup Of a surviving bunting, or the chatter Of a red squirrel, the Spaces of the skeleton woods had been as the aisles Of the dead.
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