Far Away and Long Ago: A History of My Early Life
Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading
Team.
Author of Idle Days In Patagonia, The Purple Land, A Crystal Age, Adventures Among Birds, Etc.
Preamble—The house where I was born—The singular ombu tree—A tree without a name—The plain—The ghost of a murdered slave—Our playmate, the old sheep-dog—A first riding-lesson—The cattle: an evening scene—My mother—Captain Scott—The hermit and his awful penance
We quit our old home—A winter day journey—Aspect of the country—Our new home—A prisoner in the barn—The plantation—A paradise of rats— An evening scene—The people of the house—A beggar on horseback—Mr. Trigg our schoolmaster—His double nature—Impersonates an old woman— Reading Dickens—Mr. Trigg degenerates—Once more a homeless wanderer on the great plain
The old dog Caesar—His powerful personality—Last days and end—The old dog's burial—The fact of death is brought home to me—A child's mental anguish—My mother comforts me—Limitations of the child's mind—Fear of death—Witnessing the slaughter of cattle—A man in the moat—Margarita, the nursery-maid—Her beauty and lovableness—Her death—I refuse to see her dead
Living with trees—Winter violets—The house is made habitable—Red willow—Scizzor-tail and carrion-hawk—Lombardy poplars—Black acacia —Other trees—The fosse or moat—Rats—A trial of strength with an armadillo—Opossums living with a snake—Alfalfa field and butterflies—Cane brake—Weeds and fennel—Peach trees in blossom— Paroquets—Singing of a field finch—Concert-singing in birds—Old John—Cow-birds' singing—Arrival of summer migrants
Appearance of a green level land—Cardoon and giant thistles—Villages of the vizcacha , a large burrowing rodent—Groves and plantations seen like islands on the wide level plains—Trees planted by the early colonists—Decline of the colonists from an agricultural to a pastoral people—Houses as part of the landscape—Flesh diet of the gauchos— Summer change in the aspect of the plain—The water-like mirage—The giant thistle and a thistle year —Fear of fires—An incident at a fire—The pampero , or south-west wind, and the fall of the thistles —Thistle-down and thistle-seed as food for animals—A great pampero storm—Big hailstones—Damage caused by hail—Zango, an old horse, killed—Zango and his master
W. H. Hudson
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FAR AWAY AND LONG AGO
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I EARLIEST MEMORIES
CHAPTER II MY NEW HOME
CHAPTER III DEATH OF AN OLD DOG
CHAPTER IV THE PLANTATION
CHAPTER V ASPECTS OF THE PLAIN
CHAPTER VI SOME BIRD ADVENTURES
CHAPTER VII MY FIRST VISIT TO BUENOS AYRES
CHAPTER VIII THE TYRANT'S FALL AND WHAT FOLLOWED
CHAPTER IX OUR NEIGHBOURS AT THE POPLARS
CHAPTER X OUR NEAREST ENGLISH NEIGHBOUR
CHAPTER XI A BREEDER OF PIEBALDS
CHAPTER XII THE HEAD OF A DECAYED HOUSE
CHAPTER XIII A PATRIARCH OF THE PAMPAS
CHAPTER XIV THE DOVECOTE
CHAPTER XV SERPENT AND CHILD
CHAPTER XVI A SERPENT MYSTERY
CHAPTER XVII A BOY'S ANIMISM
CHAPTER XVIII THE NEW SCHOOLMASTER
CHAPTER XIX BROTHERS
CHAPTER XX BIRDING IN THE MARSHES
CHAPTER XXI WILD-FOWLING ADVENTURES
CHAPTER XXII BOYHOOD'S END
CHAPTER XXIII A DARKENED LIFE
CHAPTER XXIV LOSS AND GAIN
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
CHAPTER XXIII
CHAPTER XXIV