Woman's Way Through Unknown Labrador eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about Woman's Way Through Unknown Labrador.

Woman's Way Through Unknown Labrador eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about Woman's Way Through Unknown Labrador.

The big map of Labrador looked back from the wall of the little study in Congers.  We stood before it a long time discussing plans and possibilities.  Then an eager, happy face was turned to me as he told how he would write the story and how he would have grown when he came home again.

On June 20th he sailed from New York with his little party.

In January following came that short message, “Mr. Hubbard died October 18th in the interior of Labrador.”

In March were received the letters containing that final record of his life, which took from the hearts of those who loved him best the intolerable bitterness, because it told that he had not only dreamed his dream—­he had attained his Vision.

It was a short, full life journey, and a joyous, undaunted heart that traversed it.  Almost the most beautiful of its attributes was the joyousness.

He was “glad of Life because it gave him a chance to love and to work and to play.”

He never failed to “look up at the stars.”

He thought “every day of Christ.”

Sometimes towards evening in dreary November, when the clouds hang heavy and low, covering all the sky, and the hills are solemn and sombre, and the wind is cold, and the lake black and sullen, a break in the dark veil lets through a splash of glorious sunshine.  It is so very beautiful as it falls into the gloom that your breath draws in quick and you watch it with a thrill.  Then you see that it moves towards you.  All at once you are in the midst of it, it is falling round you and seems to have paused as if it meant to stay with you and go no farther.

While you revel in this wonderful light that has stopped to enfold you, suddenly it is not falling round you any more, and you see it moving steadily on again, out over the marsh with its bordering evergreens, touching with beauty every place it falls upon, forward up the valley, unwavering, without pause, till you are holding your breath as it begins to climb the hills away yonder.

It is gone.

The smoke blue clouds hang lower and heavier, the hills stand more grimly solemn and sombre, the wind is cold, the lake darker and more sullen, and the beauty has gone out of the marsh.

Then—­then it is night.

But you do not forget the Light.

You know it still shines—­somewhere.

CHAPTER II

SLIPPING AWAY INTO THE WILDERNESS

It was on the 15th of July, 1903, that Leonidas Hubbard, Jr., my husband, with two companions, set out from Northwest River Post, near the head of Lake Melville, for a canoe trip into the interior of Labrador, which be hoped would not only afford him an interesting wilderness experience but also an opportunity to explore and map one, and perhaps both, of these rivers, the Northwest River draining Lake Michikamau to Lake Melville, and the George River draining the northern slope of the plateau to Ungava Bay.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Woman's Way Through Unknown Labrador from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.