The Story of Geronimo

PUBLISHERS Grosset & Dunlap NEW YORK
SIGNATURE BOOKS GERONIMO
© JIM KJELGAARD 1958
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 58-9837 The Story of Geronimo
For Eleanor Gefroh who has been the dearest of friends to me and mine

Geronimo crawled up the hill so carefully that no stalk of grass moved, and no bush quivered. A pair of crested quail, feeding on insects in the grass, merely glanced up when he passed and went on feeding. Geronimo reached the top of the hill and crouched down in the grass.
Beyond were more hills, the near ones low, rocky, and given more to shrubs and grass than to trees. Geronimo's eyes strayed across the Arizona landscape to the east. There lay No-doyohn Canyon, where Geronimo had been born in 1829, just twelve years earlier. There his father had died when Geronimo was five years old. In the far distance beyond the canyon, tall, pine-clad mountains rose.
Geronimo looked down the slope on a wickiup. This Apache house was built of poles thrust into the ground, with deer skin walls and a smoke hole in the center of the roof. It was the home of Delgadito, a mighty chief among the Mimbreno Apaches, the tribe to which Geronimo belonged. Delgadito was so mighty that only the great chief, Mangus Coloradus himself, outranked him.
Delgadito owned many horses. Most of them grazed by day in pastures far from the village. But his black war stallion, his nimble-footed gray hunting horse, and the mare that his wife rode were only absent from their picket ropes when a rider was using them.
Now the gray hunting horse was gone, which meant that Delgadito was out after deer. But the mare and the stallion were still there. Geronimo had come to steal the war horse. This, however, was not the time to do it.

Jim Kjelgaard
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2012-12-15

Темы

Geronimo, 1829-1909 -- Juvenile literature; Apache Indians -- Kings and rulers -- Biography -- Juvenile literature

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