Chapter 1: LITTLE HOUSE IN THE BIG WOODS

O N C E upon a time, sixty years ago, a little girl lived in the Big Woods of Wissin, in a little gray house made of logs. The great, dark trees of the Big Woods stood all around the house, and beyond them were other trees and beyond them were more trees. As far as a man could go to the north in a day, or a week, or a whole month, there was nothing but woods. There were no houses. There were no roads. There were no people. There were only trees and the wild animals who had their homes among them.

Wolves lived in the Big Woods, and bears, and huge wild cats. Muskrats and mink and otter lived by the streams. Foxes had dens in the hills and deer roamed everywhere.

To the east of the little log house, and to the West, there were miles upon miles of trees, and only a few little log houses scattered far apart in the edge of the Big Woods.

So far as the little girl could see, there was only the otle house where she lived with her Father and Mother, her sister Mary and baby sister Carrie. A wagon track ran before the house, turning and twisting out of sight in the woods where the wild animals lived, but the little girl did not know where it went, nor what might be at the end of it.

The little girl was named Laura and she called her father, Pa, and her mother, Ma. In those days and in that place, children did not say Father and Mother, nor Mamma and Papa, as they do now.

At night, when Laura lay awake irundle bed she listened and could not hear anything at all but the sound of the trees whispering together.

Sometimes, far away in the night, a wolf howled. Then he came nearer, and howled again.

It was a scary sound. Laura khat wolves would eat little girls. But she was safe ihe solid log walls. Her fathers gun hung over the door and good old Jack, the brindle bulldog, lay on guard before it. Her father would say, Go to sleep, Laura. Jack wohe wolves in. So Laura snuggled uhe covers of the trundle bed, close beside Mary, ao sleep. One night her father picked her tip out of bed and carried her to the window so that she might see the wolves. There were two of them sitting in front of the house. They looked like shaggy dogs. They poiheir the big, bright moon, and howled.

Jack paced up and down before the drowling. The hair stood up along his bad he showed his sharp, fierce teeth to the wolves. They howled, but they could not get in.

The house was a fortable house. Upstairs there was a large attic, pleasant to play ihe rain drummed on the roof. Downstairs was the small bedroom, and the big room. The bed-; room had a window that closed with a wooden shutter. The big room had two windows with glass in the panes, and it had two doors, a front, door and a back door.

All around the house was a crooked rail feo keep the bears and the deer away.

In the yard in front of the house were two beautiful big oak trees. Every m as soon as she was awake Laura ran to look out of the window, and one m she saw in each of the big trees a dead deer hanging from a branch.

Pa had shot the deer the day before and Laura had been asleep when he brought them home at night and hung them high irees so the wolves could not get the meat.

That day Pa and Ma and Laura and Mary had fresh venison for dinner. It was so good that Laura wished they could eat it all. But most of the meat must be salted and smoked and packed away to be eaten in the winter.

For winter was ing. The days were shorter, an

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