The Young Seigneur / Or, Nation-Making
orward and greeted hi
nd of whom they h
urpose. "It is a pity the rest of the country does not know my people more closely," Haviland wrote in his invitation:-"I
"My election is coming." And he talked cheerfully and bu
g it with their native ponies and hay-carts and their stuff-coated, deliberate persons, is beginning to break apart as the steamer swings heavily away. The pedestrians are already stringing o
a loud vo
OUCK I
se fo
e" one forcibl
ead!" reitera
rue!" insist
ad and in
nd is in
ell me tha
edings, affect to resign themselves to the bad news of Malbr
MA-A-A-
uting, racing and singing along all the roads, the country-folk rattle away to
e B: Tha
rouck?" Chry
at fought him in Flanders. I fancy the soldiers of Montcalm shouting it at
h swept across the wide stretches of river-view that lay open in bird-like perspective from the crest o
a pair of baby girls who, holding each others' hands, were cr
orward. "How much, are you going to give me for this? Do you think we drive people for nothing, eh?" The children
is a term of endea
rms up around his neck and, kissing him, said, "I will
ifle your seigneur," he cried in the h
re is something of earthliness i
ittle child
but heav
t is, so p
f faith a
this first of the relations between