The Valley of Vision : a Book of Romance an Some Half Told Tales by Henry Van Dyke
page 108 of 207 (52%)
page 108 of 207 (52%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
SKETCHES OF QUEBEC If you love a certain country, for its natural beauty, or for the friends you have made there, or for the happy days you have passed within its borders, you are troubled and distressed when that country comes under criticism, suspicion, and reproach. It is just as it would be if a woman who had been very kind to you and had done you a great deal of good were accused of some unworthiness. You would refuse to believe it. You would insist on understanding before you pronounced judgment. Memories would ask to be heard. That is what I feel in regard to French Canada, the province of Quebec, where I have had so many joyful times, and found so many true comrades among the _voyageurs_, the _habitants_, and the _coureurs de bois._ People are saying now that Quebec is not loyal, not brave, not patriotic in this war for freedom and humanity. Even if the accusation were true, of course it would not spoil the big woods, the rushing rivers, the sparkling lakes, the friendly mountains of French Canada. But all the same, it hurts me to hear such a charge against my friends of the forest. |
|