Voyages of Samuel De Champlain — Volume 03 by Samuel de Champlain
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page 50 of 222 (22%)
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in my explorations, to pass through their country, in order to encourage
those who had stayed back, with an assurance of the good treatment they would receive, and of the large amount of good merchandise at the Fall, and also of the desire I had to assist them in their war. For carrying out this purpose I requested three canoes and three savages to guide us, but after much difficulty obtained only two and one savage, and this by means of some presents made them. ENDNOTES: 30. The _island_ refers to New Foundland. Cap de Raye, still known as Cape Ray, was on the southwestern angle of New Foundland. 31. Now called Point aux Vaches. It was sometimes called All-Devils' Point. _Vide_ note 136, Vol. I. p. 235. 32. _Outardes_. Sometimes written _houtardes_, and _Oltardes_. The name outarde or bustard, the _otis_ of ornithologists, a land bird of Europe, was applied to a species of goose in Canada at a very early period. The outarde is mentioned by Cartier in 1535, and the name may have been originally applied by the fishermen and fur-traders at a much earlier period, doubtless on account of some fancied resemblance which they saw to the lesser bustard or outarde, which was about the size of the English pheasant. _Vide Pennant's British Zooelogy_, Vol. I. p. 379. Cartier, Champlain, Lescarbot, Baron La Hontan, Potherie, and Charlvoix mention the outarde in catalogues of water-fowl in which _oye_, the goose, is likewise mentioned. They very clearly distinguish it from the class which they commonly considered _oyes_, or geese. Cartier, for |
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