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VACATION TRAMPS IN
NEW ENGLAND HIGHLANDS By ALLEN CHAMBERLAIN WITH ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY COPYRIGHT, 1919 Couching Lion (Camel’s Hump) from the East THAT primitive and poetic pathway — the
trail — has
all the aroma of the wilderness. Ever
intimate -with the woods and streams, it watches the white cascades,
listens to
the echoes of far-of dill, delays by the lonely shore of snow-bound
lake,
wanders in the forest primeval, crosses in leisure the grassy, sun
filled
glades, skirts the time-stained crags, climbs into the heights, and
tarries to
look down into the valley. Clouds bound for unknown ports in the
trailless sky
adorn its realm with floating shadows. The trail, like a web of joy,
overspreads
all the wild gardens of the earth. ENOS A. MILLS: THE TRAIL
"The tendency nowadays to wander in
wildernesses
is delightful to see. Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized
people
are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home;
that
wilderness is a necessity; and that mountain parks and reservations are
useful,
not only as fountains of timber and irrigating rivers, but as fountains
of
life." So wrote John Muir. After his first experience of a tramp
across New
Hampshire's Presidential Peaks a friend wrote me, "We ought, as a duty,
to
go over this range, or something like it, as a pilgrimage, at least
once a
year, in order to remember how fine the earth and sky can be and are." If these pages can serve as a finger-board
to
indicate some of the "wildernesses" of New England that await the
foot-free rover, and the ease with which they may be reached and
enjoyed, their
object will have been attained. The author hereby expresses his
appreciation of the
courtesy of the Boston Evening Transcript and of Collier's Weekly in
permitting
the use of material which originally appeared in their columns. He "is
also indebted to the officers and members of the Appalachian Mountain
Club and
of the Green Mountain Club for authoritative information essential to
insuring
accuracy of statement.
II. A Hiker's Kit III. A Summer Sauntering IV. Over Vermont's Highest Spots V. Along the Sky-Line Trail VI. An Autumn Week-End VII. Midwinter on the Roof of VIII. Ketté-Adene IX. Stage Journeys Near Home |