Adèle Dubois - A Story of the Lovely Miramichi Valley in New Brunswick by Mrs. William T. Savage
page 45 of 229 (19%)
page 45 of 229 (19%)
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into a noble manhood, and it was no wonder that his mother's heart
swelled with pride and joy when she looked upon him. Straight, muscular, and vigorous in form, his features and expression were precisely her own, enlarged and intensified. Open and generous in disposition, his character had a certain quality of firmness, quite in contrast with that of his uncle Edward, and this she had carefully sought to strengthen. In the pursuit of his studies, he had thus far been earnest and successful. During the last half year, however, he had chafed under the confinements of student life, and having now become quite restive in the harness, he had asked his father for a few months of freedom from books. He wished to explore a wilderness, to go on a foreign voyage, to wander away, away, anywhere beyond the sight of college walls. "John", said Mrs. Lansdowne, "I have been conversing with your father on the subject, and he has consented to an expedition for you". "O! glorious! mother where am I to go? to the Barcan desert, or to the Arctic Ocean?" "You are to make a journey to the Miramichi River?" "Miramichi!" said John, after a brief pause, "I thought I had a slight acquaintance with geography, but where in the wide world is Miramichi?" "It is in the province of New Brunswick. You will have seventy-five miles of almost unbroken wilderness to pass through". |
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