By Trench and Trail in Song and Story

audiobook

By Trench and Trail in Song and Story

by Angus Mackay

EN·~1 hours·33 chapters

Chapters

33 total

E-text prepared by Linda Cantoni, Bryan Ness, Emmy, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)

0:25

By Trench and Trail IN Song and Story

0:17

INTRODUCTION.

2:58

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:18

DESTINY

0:18

THE SONS OF OUR MOTHERS

1:38

CHRISTMAS IN QUEBEC.

6:09

"THE CLEVELAND MESSAGE."

2:13

THE CLEVELAND MESSAGE or HOW CANADA AND THE U. S. MAY BECOME ONE.

3:55

THE SULTAN AT THE KAISER'S KOURT

9:54

Description

A lively anthology of verse and song, this volume captures the rough‑hewn spirit of early‑20th‑century lumber camps and front‑line trenches alike. The author’s plain‑spoken, dialect‑rich lyrics were sung around campfires from British Columbia to Maine, and even echoed over the battlefields of France and the deserts of the Middle East. Readers will hear bawdy limericks, sturdy “come‑all‑ye” chants, and solemn war ballads that once rallied workers and soldiers alike. The introduction explains how popular demand from fellow timbermen inspired the collection, promising a genuine taste of the frontier’s musical folklore.

Illustrated with sketches by a wartime lieutenant, the book weaves together images of pine forests, Christmas in Quebec, and military scenes, grounding the verses in vivid, period‑appropriate scenery. While the tone can be cheeky, it also carries a heartfelt tribute to the sacrifices of everyday heroes—lumberjacks, soldiers, and their families. The blend of humor, patriotism, and rustic charm offers listeners a window into a bygone era where song was both work‑song and rallying cry.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (104K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2011-09-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Angus Mackay

Angus Mackay

1864–1923

A Scottish-Canadian poet and storyteller who wrote under the pen name Oscar Dhu, he is best remembered for turning local history and frontier life into vivid verse and narrative. His work helped preserve the voice of Gaelic-speaking communities in Quebec and the wider Canadian experience of the early 1900s.

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