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H. G. Wells' New Novel

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THE MACMILLAN COMPANY,

Publishers

NEW YORK

lease mention THE BOOKMAN in writing to advertisers.

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THE

BOOKMAN

AN EXCURSION INTO CANADIAN
HISTORY

BY MAJOR CHARLES W. GORDON
(Ralph Connor)

No subject in my school curriculum was made so repulsive to me as Canadian history. Those responsible for this outrage I hope have by this time reaped their reward in full and complete punishment. The crime committed by the historians of our country is all the more unpardonable because of the splendor of the material which lay to their hands.

The early history of Canada is fairly shot through with iridescence attaching to names that gleam down through the years-names of sailors and soldiers daring and gallant, of explorers and colonizers indefatigable, of fierce zealots. What splendid hours the Canadian youth might have spent in the study of the early history of their own country, we can imagine after our experience with Parkman. Among those great and shining names three stand out like stars in a dark sky-Cabot, Cartier and Champlain.

In a recent rereading of Canadian history I had the good fortune in my wanderings to fall in with the Professor. As I was full of my reading,

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the matter of Canadian history came naturally enough into our conversation. The memory of the outrage perpetrated upon my youthful mind burning hot within me, I exclaimed:

"Why, in the name of all that is sane and reasonable, was not Canadian history made to us youngsters what it should have been made? Canadian history is really fine stuff when, for instance, a man like Parkman gets hold of it."

"Parkman!" The Professor's left eyebrow went up. This trick of the eyebrow I afterwards discovered to mean mild criticism.

"Yes, Parkman", I declared. "Awfully interesting."

"Interesting? Yes. But I believe we were speaking of history."

"Of course", he continued, "to us today, in the light of recent events, the really interesting thing in Canadian history is the extraordinary persistence of the historic motif. The present trouble in Quebec, for instance, was inevitable."

"And why, in the name of all the greater deities?" I gasped. "The

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