Rick Ralton's reconciliationSociety for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1894 - 384 ˹éÒ |
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asked boat Bow River brother Calgary chap clergyman Cloth boards cried Croft's Castle Crown 8vo dark dear depôt Derry doctor door Dunfanaghy exclaimed eyes face fancied feet fellow felt Fort William George Munro girl Graham hand heard heart hills Horn Head horse Jewitt knew Lake laughed letter Letterkenny looked M'Cauley Maggie Martin Jervis miles mind Miss Ralton Montreal Moriarty morning mother mountains Muckish Mulcahy Mulgan never night old dog Owen Sound passed Piper poor Rick poor Rita railway replied Rick Reuben Trevor Rick found Rick Ralton Rick's Rita's river road Roberts Rockies round scene seemed Selkirks shouted Shuswap lakes side silence soon steamer stood sure talk tell thing thought Three page Illustrations told Tory Island train tramp turned walked wonder words Yale young Ralton
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˹éÒ 335 - I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies, and of all the truth, which thou hast shewed unto thy servant; for with my staff I passed over this Jordan, and now I am become two bands.
˹éÒ 294 - Oh, the little more, and how much it is! And the little less, and what worlds away!
˹éÒ 225 - his own bitterness ; and a stranger doth not intermeddle with his joy.
˹éÒ 283 - Macdonald towers a mile and a quarter above the railway in almost vertical height. Its base is but a stone's-throw distant, and it is so sheer, so bare and stupendous, and yet so near, that one is overawed by a sense of immensity and mighty grandeur. This is the climax of mountain scenery. In passing before the face of this gigantic precipice, the line clings to the base of Hermit Mt., and, as the station at Rogers' Pass is neared, its clustered spires appear, facing those of Mt.
˹éÒ 103 - As far as the eye could reach, nothing was to be seen but reeds which rose five or six feet above the waters in which they bathed their roots.
˹éÒ 84 - Go west, young man, and grow up with the country" but Horace Greeley was not born until two years after this trip.
˹éÒ 279 - Beavermouth, the most northly station on the transcontinental route, the line soon turns abruptly to the left and enters the Selkirks through the Gate of the Beaver River - a passage so narrow that a felled tree serves as a footbridge over it - just where the river makes its final and mad plunge down to the level of the Columbia.