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Plain Tales of the North

Chapter 3: Tale I: A Grave in Saskatchewan
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About This Book

A series of short narratives set in the remote North, offering vivid vignettes of travel, trade posts, hunting, and everyday survival. Episodes range from canoe journeys and dog-team work to encounters with Indigenous people, traders, missionaries, and newcomers, observing practical skills, local customs, and animal behavior. Recurring themes include isolation, the demands of extreme weather, resourcefulness, and occasional quiet humor, together forming a mosaic of life on the fringes rather than a single continuous plot.

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Title: Plain Tales of the North

Author: Thierry Mallet

Release date: March 24, 2018 [eBook #56828]

Language: English

Credits: E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images digitized by the Google Books Library Project (https://books.google.com) and generously made available by HathiTrust Digital Library (https://www.hathitrust.org/)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLAIN TALES OF THE NORTH ***

 

E-text prepared by Roger Frank
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images digitized by
the Google Books Library Project
(https://books.google.com)
and generously made available by
HathiTrust Digital Library
(https://www.hathitrust.org/)

 

Note: Images of the original pages are available through HathiTrust Digital Library. See https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.$b103945;view=1up;seq=7

 


 

 

 

PLAIN TALES OF THE NORTH

BY CAPTAIN THIERRY MALLET
G. P. Putnam’s Sons
New York & London
The Knickerbocker Press
1926

Copyright, 1925
by
Revillon Frères
Made in the United States of America

A DEDICATION
To the small group of men
outside the pale of civilization who
... isolated in the Far North ...
cling to the traditions which, for two
centuries, have been represented by
the flag of Revillon Frères.

THE TALES THAT ARE TOLD
I. A Grave in Saskatchewan
II. Traveling by Canoe
III. “Spot”
IV. In Civilization
V. A Pilot
VI. Native Mechanics
VII. War News in Husky Land
VIII. A Birch Bark Canoe
IX. A Silver Fox and a Scarf
X. Dead in the Storm
XI. A Strange Team
XII. A Moose Story
XIII. The Little Blue Lake
XIV. Forest Fires
XV. An Indian Wake
XVI. A Walrus Story
XVII. Mohican ... The Wolf
XVIII. Fighting Against Starvation
XIX. Wild Animals in the Water
XX. “Sunday”
XXI. Filming a White Bear on Land
XXII. Vermin and Ants
XXIII. A Greenhorn in a Rapid
XXIV. Large Fish
XXV. A Little Indian Girl
XXVI. Outlawed in the Barren Lands
XXVII. One Thousand Years
XXVIII. A Practical Joke
XXIX. Eskimo Arithmetic
XXX. “Caribou”
XXXI. In Siberia
XXXII. In the Hudson Straits
XXXIII. Whiskey Jack
XXXIV. Makejo
XXXV. Two Little Eskimo Boys
XXXVI. An Indian Warrior
XXXVII. Burro
XXXVIII. Travelling in North Alberta
XXXIX. Mother and Cubs
XL. An Old Trader
XLI. Wolverine
XLII. “Spot” ... Again
XLIII. Homesick
XLIV. Gotehe
XLV. Pets in the Wilderness
XLVI. An Eskimo Guide in the Barren Lands
XLVII. Man and Wife
XLVIII. “Forty Years Ago”
XLIX. Fisher and Porcupine
L. The Call of the Wild North of Fifty-three

The true romance of the far North has been captured in these short stories gathered and written by Captain Thierry Mallet, President of Revillon Frères, New York. For the past twenty years he has spent part of each year inspecting our trading-posts on the outskirts of civilization.

Through his long arduous journeys over the swift waters, as well as the vast areas of ice-clad country in the North, and through his constant companionship with the fearless men of these barren lands, Captain Mallet is particularly fitted to give us these unusual and striking tales.

Victor Revillon,
Jean M. Revillon.

PLAIN TALES OF THE NORTH

Tale I: A Grave in Saskatchewan

I know a lonely grave far north in Saskatchewan. It lies on a high bank, facing a small lake, under a cluster of old jack-pines. There is no cross on that grave, neither is there a name.

Four logs, nailed in a square and half-buried in the grey moss, mark the spot where fifteen years ago two old Indians, man and wife, dug a hole six by four and laid to rest a white woman, a mere girl, a bride of a few months.

Fifteen years have passed. But after all these years her memory still lingers with the few Indians who saw her come into the wilderness, wither under the fierce blast of the Arctic winter and die as the snow left the ground and spring came.

She was an American of gentle birth, refined and delicate. Her husband brought her there in a spirit of adventure. He was a strong man, rough and accustomed to the North. She loved him. She struggled bravely through the winter, but the fierce Arctic climate, the utter solitude, the coarse food—these she could not stand. At length, while the man was away for several days tending his traps, she laid herself on the rude cabin bunk and died, all alone.

There the Indians found her white and still, and buried her a few hundred yards from the shack, on the edge of the lake.

The man came back later—then left at once. He is a squaw man now—trapping and hunting in the neighborhood.

Each year his sleigh and his canoe pass along the lake, a stone’s throw from where she lies under the jack-pines. Not once has he stopped even to glance at the spot where she bravely lived with him and died alone.

You will find crosses, inscriptions, some kind of token of remembrance on all the Indian graves. Her grave alone, in the Far North, bears neither cross nor name—just four logs, nailed together in a square, half-buried in the grey moss.