We are in a West Coast village or township, cut off from all communication with the outer world, without Steamers, Railways, even Roads. We grow our own corn, produce our own beef, our mutton, our butter, our cheese, and our wool. We do our own carding, our spinning, and our weaving. We marry and are taken in marriage by, and among, our own kith and kin. In short, we are almost entirely independent of the more civilized and more favoured South. The few articles we do not produce-tobacco and tea-our local merchant, the only one in a district about forty square miles in extent, carries on his back, once a month or so, from the Capital of the Highlands. We occasionally indulge in a little whisky at Christmas and the New Year, at our weddings and our balls. We make it, too, and we make it well.
Voyages from Montreal Through the Continent of North America : Journey to the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific in 1789 and 1793
Alexander Mackenzie
bookVoyages from Montreal Through the Continent of North America (Vol. 1&2) : Journey to the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific in 1789 and 1793
Alexander Mackenzie
bookVoyages from Montreal Through the Continent of North America : Journey to the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific in 1789 and 1793
Alexander Mackenzie
bookVoyages from Montreal Through the Continent of North America : Journey to the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific in 1789 and 1793
Alexander Mackenzie
bookVoyages from Montreal Through the Continent of North America (Vol. 1&2) : Journey to the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific in 1789 and 1793
Alexander Mackenzie
bookHistorical Tales and Legends of the Highlands
Alexander Mackenzie
bookThe Prophecies of the Brahan Seer
Alexander Mackenzie
bookReise durch Nordwestamerika : Vom Osten Kanadas zum nördlichen Eismeer und die Pazifikküste
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