Bompas, Charlotte Selina, 1830-1917 / 2008-07-29 00:00:00
EBOOK, OWINDIA ***
Avinash Kothare, Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team. This file was produced from images
generously made available by the Canadian Institute for Historical
Microreproductions.
OWINDIA:
_A TRUE TALE OF THE MACKENZIE RIVER INDIANS_,
NORTH-WEST AMERICA.
THE STORY OF OWINDIA.
A pretty open spot on the bank of the Great Mackenzie River was the
place where Owindia first saw light. One of the universal pine
forests formed the back ground, while low shrubs and willows, with a
pleasant, green carpet of mossy grass, were the immediate
surroundings of the camp.
The banks of the Mackenzie often rise to a height of sixty feet
above the river. This was the case in the spot where Michel the
Hunter had pitched his tent, or "lodge" as it is called. A number of
other Indians were camped near, led thither by the fish which is so
abundant in our Northern rivers, and which proves a seldom failing
resource when the moose or reindeer go off their usual track. The
woods also skirting the river furnish large supplies of rabbits,
which even the Indian children are taught to snare. Beavers too are
most numerous in this district, and are excellent food, while their
furs are an important article of trade with the Hudson Bay Company;
bringing to the poor Indian his much prized luxury of tea or tobacco,
a warm blanket or ammunition.
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