[Gutenberg 48845] • A Girl of the North: A Story of London and Canada

[Gutenberg 48845] • A Girl of the North: A Story of London and Canada
Authors
Jones, Susan Morrow
Publisher
Blurb
Tags
canada -- fiction , london (england) -- fiction , young women -- fiction , canadians -- england -- fiction , man-woman relationships -- fiction
ISBN
9781714376940
Date
2020-02-12T00:00:00+00:00
Size
0.19 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 55 times

The world called it failure: he called it success, and the thought evolved itself into happiness for a time. George Archer was a man of unusual talent and power. He had translated the most recent book by a celebrated Danish naturalist, besides which he had acquired some fame as a naturalist on his own account; and the small world of men, who trouble about such things, mentioned his name with a certain amount of respect as that of one to whom mysteries are revealed. He was rich. He had travelled all over the world. At last, wishing to go to Canada, the idea of writing a book on the different varieties of Canadian fish came to him with the charm of inspiration, of freedom, and of novelty. He was singularly unpractical, and given to great enthusiasms. The glamour of Canada fell upon him; he was fascinated by the long cold winter, with its tempests and swinging winds, its drifting snow, and the endless battle with the princes and powers of the air: by the spring, too, with its force when all the brooks ran and overflowed with the melting of the snow in the hot sun, and the glorious long, light, glowing days, when everything broke into life with suddenness. After this came a gorgeous summer, with hot vibrating days, which brought magnificent flowers into blossom; and then autumn with its Indian summer and stillness-a sort of grey stillness, as if the dear dead came back for a space. The wind died then, and there was only a movement of the air laden with sweetness as it passed over blueberry barrens and lonely stretches of black, still lakes, which possessed the charm of the unknown, the fascination of the forest crowded with moose and bears. George Archer loved the country with its colouring of triumph-trees, sky, and water, all shared in the same glory.