[The Journey to the Polar Sea by John Franklin]@TWC D-Link book
The Journey to the Polar Sea

CHAPTER 6
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At sunset we encamped on the banks of the main branch.
At three A.M.June 28th we embarked in a thick fog occasioned by a fall of the temperature of the air ten degrees below that of the water.

Having crossed Knee Lake which is nine miles in length and a portage at its western extremity we entered Primeau Lake with a strong and favourable wind, by the aid of which we ran nineteen miles through it and encamped at the river's mouth.

It is shaped like the barb of an arrow with the point towards the north and its greatest breadth is about four miles.
During the night a torrent of rain washed us from our beds accompanied with the loudest thunder I ever heard.

This weather continued during the 29th and often compelled us to land and turn the canoes up to prevent them from filling.

We passed one portage and the confluence of a river said to afford by other rivers beyond a height of land a shorter but more difficult route to the Athabasca Lake than that which is generally pursued.
On the 28th we crossed the last portage and at ten A.M.entered the Isle a la Crosse Lake.


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