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Natures Invitation - August 14, 1873

Forest and Stream

Release Date: 01/02/2022

The Greatest Fish Story Ever Told! show art The Greatest Fish Story Ever Told!

Forest and Stream

The events that happened in Kekoskee, Wisconsin are so extraordinary and improbable that I always hesitate about telling the story. The evidence is legal, convincing and overwhelming.  In total it makes up the grandest fish story in the history of a lifetime. It is really a story about bullheads, and of course it is a beautiful story, for the bullhead is naturally a romantic fish.  Every man in Mayville and Kekoskee knows this story, and without any hint or coaching will tell it to you exactly as his neighbor does.  Everyone in town knows the horse too.  You see, there was...

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A Greenhorn and Big John in the Wilds of Michigan -  January 18, 1877 show art A Greenhorn and Big John in the Wilds of Michigan - January 18, 1877

Forest and Stream

If the sketch which follows, depicting a general outline of incidents which entered into the experience of a "Greenhorn," on his first deer hunt in the wilds of Michigan, shall have the effect of driving the work-encumbered denizens of the city into some reasonable consideration for his own wellbeing, by taking for himself such recreation as will yield him the greatest possible benefit, the object of it will have been accomplished. After a fellow has spent say thirty years of his life with his nose at the grindstone, it is not astonishing that it comes to strike him at last as being somewhat...

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Trout Fishing - January 1, 1874 show art Trout Fishing - January 1, 1874

Forest and Stream

Forest and Stream - By the Poets Hand. TROUT FISHING, a poem by Eunice B. Lamberton.

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The Back Lakes of Canada - January 1, 1874 show art The Back Lakes of Canada - January 1, 1874

Forest and Stream

A deer hunting adventure, covering 50 miles in a canoe.

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Natures Invitation - August 14, 1873 show art Natures Invitation - August 14, 1873

Forest and Stream

NATURES INVITATION On the fair face of Nature let us muse, and dream by lapsing stream and drooping wood; Tread the dark forests whose primeval ranks, since the creation dawn have cast their shade; Ponder by flowing stream and ocean tides, and note the varied forms of life they hold, Mark the wild game so clear to hunter's heart, the swarming fowl that skim the salty deeps, The birds that haunt the woodlands and the plains, The fish that swim the seas, the lakes, the streams, And tempt the thoughtful angler to their marge; Glance at the life that fills our native woods, and game of Asian...

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Metaphysics of Deer Hunting - October 2, 1873 show art Metaphysics of Deer Hunting - October 2, 1873

Forest and Stream

METAPHYSICS OF DEER HUNTING When the financial panic was at its height last week, we visited a wealthy friend whose up-town mansion is palatial, his income from safe and judicious investments always ample and assured, and his bank account invariably showing a balance to his credit of many thousands. A gentleman who dabbles little in speculative risks; and whom cares of State and fluctuations of the market of late do not perplex ; one of those rare exceptions among men, content with sufficient and not ambitious for more. Surely, his was a case not, within the range of human probability, to be...

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Caribou Hunting in Nova Scotia - September 25, 1873 show art Caribou Hunting in Nova Scotia - September 25, 1873

Forest and Stream

A far reachinging journey through forests and across barrens in pursuit of the elusive Caribou.

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Reminiscence of Lake Superior - February 26, 1874 show art Reminiscence of Lake Superior - February 26, 1874

Forest and Stream

REMINISCENCE OF LAKE SUPERIOR BY THOMAS SEDGWICK STEELE It was with a hearty laugh that Dr. W. bounded into my room one bright morning in the latter part of September, without waiting to knock or in any way announce his arrival. In almost the same breath he called out, “Why! you’re a pretty fellow to be housed here all day long, fussing over those feathers and wires ! Why are you not on the river trolling, or in the woods after partridges? Come, put up those tools and lets off for a day’s tramp. Peter has put up enough luncheon for two, so pick up your gun and come on.” The fact was,...

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NATURES INVITATION

On the fair face of Nature let us muse, and dream by lapsing stream and drooping wood;

Tread the dark forests whose primeval ranks, since the creation dawn have cast their shade;

Ponder by flowing stream and ocean tides, and note the varied forms of life they hold,

Mark the wild game so clear to hunter's heart, the swarming fowl that skim the salty deeps,

The birds that haunt the woodlands and the plains, The fish that swim the seas, the lakes, the streams,

And tempt the thoughtful angler to their marge;

Glance at the life that fills our native woods, and game of Asian plains, and Afric wilds.

When soft May breezes fan the early woods, and with her magic wand the blue-eye'd Spring

Quickens the swelling blossoms and the buds,

Then forth the russet partridge leads her brood, while on the fallen tree-trunk drums her mate ;

The quail her young in tangled thicket hides, the dun deer with their fawns the forests range,

The wild geese platoons hasten far in air, the wild ducks from their Southern lagoons pass,

And soaring high their Northward journeyings take, The dusky coot along the coast-line sweeps,

The piping snipe and plover that frequent,

The sandy bars and beaches, wing their flight, And all the grassy prairies of the West,

Team with the speckled younglings of the grouse, And all the budding forests and the streams

Are gay with beauty, joyous with young life.

Then swell the first bird melodies; the wren chirrups and perches on the garden rail,

The blue-bird twitters on the lilac hedge, or flits on azure wings from tree to tree;

The golden robin on the apple-bough, hovers, where last year's withered nest had been,

The darting swallows circle o'er the roof, the woodpeckers on trunk of gnarled trees

Tap their quick drum-beats with their horny beaks, the crow caws hoarsely from the blasted pine,

High in mid-air the sailing hawk is poised, while from the grove the purple pigeon-flocks,

Burst with loud flapping in the grain-sown fields.

Fair is the scene in Autumn, when the frosts from palettes rich, with prodigal, gorgeous brush

Color the nodding groves with brown and gold.

Then silvery-skied, and purple-hazed the dome of heaven's deep vault, and fair the earth below.

Far up, where sunny uplands scope their sides, shaggy with woods, prone to the brimming stream,

Where bowering beech trees shake their laden boughs, and oaks their varnished acorns high uplift,

Where the broad butter-nut its gummy fruit in russet husks slow-ripens day by day,

And where in crowded ranks the chestnut groves waves out their broad-leaved pennons to the air,

And from their prickly burs shake treasures down, there the quick clusterings of the squirrels sound.

The gentle valley with its belt of hills crowned to their tops with grand, primeval woods,

Glows with all forms and hues that nature loves.

Deep in its hollow stretch meadows brightly green, kept verdurous by the full o’erflowing stream ;

Yet the deep swamps and thickets that engird, the river-reaches, are resplendent all,

Their umbrage tinctur'd with imperial dyes.

The maples tall with blood-red foliage burn, the hickories clap their palms of burnish'd gold,

The poplar thrusts its yellow spire in air, the russet oaks and purpled dogwoods blend,

Their colors with the alder's sable green and scarlet sumacks; all contrasted rich

With sombre evergreens, and willows pale.

And when the winds autumnal, wailing strip the frosted foliage, like a host they stand,

With trailing banners and with drooping plumes.

Such be the scenes in wondrous forest-land

Such be the scenes by sea and lake and stream

That we would picture; wild romantic scenes,

Dear to the hunter's and the angler's soul.

-Isaac McLelllan