Canadian Crusoes: A Tale of the Rice Lake PlainsGood Press, 2019. 12. 5. - 269ÆäÀÌÁö 'Canadian Crusoes: A Tale of the Rice Lake Plains' is a novel by Catharine Parr Traill. It is considered to be the first Canadian novel for children. The work is set in what is today central southern Ontario, just south of Rice Lake, where three children become lost and must fend for themselves. Drawing from its namesake, Daniel Defoe's novel 'Robinson Crusoe', the novel sets out to show that these children, two English Canadian and one French Canadian, are able to work together to survive in the new world of Canada. |
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... valley, surrounded by lofty wood-crowned hills, the heights of which were clothed chiefly with groves of oak and pine, though the sides of the hills and the alluvial bottoms gave a variety of noble timber trees of various kinds, as the ...
... valley, surrounded by lofty wood-crowned hills, the heights of which were clothed chiefly with groves of oak and pine, though the sides of the hills and the alluvial bottoms gave a variety of noble timber trees of various kinds, as the ...
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... valley. Years passed on; the farm, carefully cultivated, began to yield its increase, and food and warm clothing were not wanted in the homesteads. Catharine had become, in course of time, the happy mother of four healthy children; her ...
... valley. Years passed on; the farm, carefully cultivated, began to yield its increase, and food and warm clothing were not wanted in the homesteads. Catharine had become, in course of time, the happy mother of four healthy children; her ...
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Fear not ye are of more value than many sparrows | |
CHAPTER III | |
Oh come and hear what cruel wrongs Befel the Dark Ladye COLERIDGE | |
CHAPTER IX | |
CHAPTER XI | |
CHAPTER XII | |
APPENDIX APPENDIX A Preface Page vii | |
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APPENDIX Bald Eagle bank bark Beaver beneath berries bilberries birch birds boughs boys bright brother bushes Canadian Canadian Crusoes canoe Catharine Catharine¡¯s cedar chief Cold Springs companions cousin cranberries creek dark dear deep deer delight dried Duncan Maxwell Eagle eyes father fear feet fire fish flowers forest fruit George Copway Grape Island ground hand head heard heart Hector and Louis hills hunting Indian girl island knew knife laughed leaves light lodge look lost lumberer mocassins Mohawk morning Mosang Mount Ararat night Ojebwa old Jacob paddle partridge path pine Plains poor ravine Rice Lake river seemed shanty shelter shore side sister skins soft soon Spirit spot squaw squirrel stone stream Table of Contents things thought trees tribe valley venison Victor Hirtzler wanderers watched Whip-poor-will wigwam wild Wolfe wood young