About This Book
A series of letters addressed to his mother records the writer's Atlantic voyage and early experiences seeking a new life in Canada. He recounts shipboard details—meals, sea sickness, fellow passengers, weather and fog—and vivid impressions of coasts, straits, and settlements along the St. Lawrence. Practical commentary on emigrant hardships and agent pitfalls mixes with humorous anecdote and domestic intimacy; the letters offer observations about accommodation, travel arrangements, and the contrast between wild, uncultivated shores and cultivated farmhouses further upriver. Interspersed advice aims to prepare prospective emigrants for the unexpected challenges of passage and settlement.
About the Author
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