The Free Rangers: A Story of the Early Days Along the Mississippi

AUTHOR OF THE YOUNG TRAILERS, THE FOREST RUNNERS, ETC.
APPLETON-CENTURY-CROFTS, INC.
NEW YORK
COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission of the publishers.
Copyright, 1936, by Sallie B. Altsheler Printed in the United States of America
THE FREE RANGERS, WHILE AN INDEPENDENT STORY IN ITSELF, CONTINUES THE FORTUNES OF THE TWO BOYS AND THEIR COMRADES WHO WERE THE CENTRAL CHARACTERS IN THE YOUNG TRAILERS, THE FOREST RUNNERS, THE KEEPERS OF THE TRAIL AND THE EYES of THE WOODS.
The wilderness rolled away to north and to south, and also it rolled away to east and to west, an unbroken sweep of dark, glossy green. Straight up stood the mighty trunks, but the leaves rippled and sang low when a gentle south wind breathed upon them. It was the forest as God made it, the magnificent valley of North America, upon whose edges the white man had just begun to nibble.
A young man, stepping lightly, came into a little glade. He was white, but he brought with him no alien air. He was in full harmony with the primeval woods, a part of them, one in whose ears the soft song of the leaves was a familiar and loved tune. He was lean, but tall, and he walked with a wonderful swinging gait that betokened a frame wrought to the strength of steel by exercise, wind, weather, and life always in the open. Though his face was browned by sun and storm his hair was yellow and his eyes blue. He was dressed wholly in deerskin and he carried over his shoulder the long slender rifle of the border. At his belt swung hatchet and knife.
There was a touch to the young man that separated him from the ordinary woods rover. He held himself erect with a certain pride of manner. The stock of his rifle, an unusually fine piece, was carved in an ornate and beautiful way. The deerskin of his attire had been tanned with uncommon care, and his moccasins were sewn thickly with little beads of yellow and blue and red and green. Every piece of clothing was scrupulously clean, and his arms were polished and bright.

Joseph A. Altsheler
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Английский

Год издания

2005-02-14

Темы

Mississippi River -- Juvenile fiction; Frontier and pioneer life -- Juvenile fiction

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