Sally of Missouri - Rose E. Young

Sally of Missouri

E-text prepared by Martin Pettit and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
New York: McClure, Phillips & Co.: Mcmiii
Copyright, 1903, by McCLURE, PHILLIPS & CO.
Published, October, 1903
Dedicated to Florence Wickliffe



Steering, of New York Old Bernique, of French St. Louis Piney, of the Woods Crittenton Madeira, of Canaan Sally, of Missouri There are also some kind-hearted people: Farmers, Housewives, Store-keepers, Miners, etc.

Hoo-ee-ow-ohme!
It was half a sob, half a laugh, and, half sobbing, half laughing, the young man stopped his horse on the crest of the Tigmore Hills, in the Ozark Uplift, raised in his stirrups, and looked the country through and through, as though he must see into its very heart. In the brilliant mid-afternoon light the Southwest unrolled below him and around him in a ragged bigness and an unconquered loneliness. As far as eye could reach tumbled the knobs, the flats, the waste weedy places, the gullies, the rock-pitted sweeps of table-land and the timbered hills of the Uplift. The buffalo grass trembled across the lowlands in long, shaking billows that had all the effect of scared flight. From the base of the Tigmores a line of river bottom stretched westward, and beyond the bottom curved a pale, quiet river. In the distance wraiths of blue smoke falteringly bespoke the presence of people and cabins; on a cleared hill an object that might be horse or dog or man was silhouetted, small and vague; and in the farthest west the hoister of a deserted zinc mine cut up against the sky a little lonely way. The near and dominant things were constantly those tremulous, fleeing billows of grass, the straight strong trees, the sullen rocks, the silent, shivering water.

Rose E. Young
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Год издания

2007-11-07

Темы

Missouri -- Fiction; Prospecting -- Fiction

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