
ROUGHING IT IN THE BUSH - By Susanna Moodie
To Agnes Strickland Author of the “Lives of the Queens of England" This simple tribute of affection is dedicated by her sister Susanna Moodie
Transcriber's Notes on this Etext Edition.
INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION - Published by Richard Bentley in 1854
CANADA
CHAPTER I — A VISIT TO GROSSE ISLE
CHAPTER II — QUEBEC
CHAPTER III — OUR JOURNEY UP THE COUNTRY
CHAPTER IV — TOM WILSON'S EMIGRATION
CHAPTER V — OUR FIRST SETTLEMENT, AND THE BORROWING SYSTEM
A determined young woman leaves the comforts of England, driven by a mix of ambition and the promise of a fresh start in the Canadian backwoods. The narrative opens with her reflections on why respectable families felt compelled to uproot—seeking better prospects, escaping social scorn, and yearning for independence. She paints the allure of fertile soil, gentle climate and tax‑free promise, while hinting at the inevitable gap between hopeful pamphlets and the land’s true character.
Soon she confronts the rugged reality of frontier life: dense forests, stubborn weather, and the painstaking labor of clearing fields and raising modest log cabins. Through candid observations and gentle humor, she describes the daily struggles of building a home, battling pests, and learning to survive on scant harvests. The account offers a vivid glimpse into the early days of settlement, capturing both the optimism that sparked the journey and the gritty perseverance required to turn that hope into a lived experience.
Language
en
Duration
~17 hours (1000K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by Andrew Sly HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2003-08-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1803–1885
Best known for Roughing It in the Bush, this English-born writer turned the hardships of early settler life in Canada into vivid, memorable literature. Her work is admired for its honesty, sharp observation, and flashes of humor even in difficult moments.
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