"AT EVENING TIME IT SHALL BE LIGHT"
This little love story of the prairies is dedicated to all who believe that the defence of the helpless is heroism; that the protection of the home is splendid achievement; and, that the storm, and stress, and patient endurance of the day will bring us at last to the peace of the purple twilight.
CONTENTS
| Chapter | Page | |
| PROEM | [ix] | |
| I | Springvale by the Neosho | [13] |
| II | Jean Pahusca | [25] |
| III | The Hermit's Cave | [32] |
| IV | In the Prairie Twilight | [43] |
| V | A Good Indian | [56] |
| VI | When the Heart Beats Young | [73] |
| VII | The Foreshadowing of Peril | [85] |
| VIII | The Cost of Safety | [99] |
| IX | The Search for the Missing | [114] |
| X | O'Mie's Choice | [132] |
| XI | Golden Days | [150] |
| XII | A Man's Estate | [166] |
| XIII | The Topeka Rally | [184] |
| XIV | Deepening Gloom | [200] |
| XV | Rockport and "Rockport" | [217] |
| XVI | Beginning Again | [242] |
| XVII | In the Valley of the Arickaree | [261] |
| XVIII | The Sunlight on Old Glory | [277] |
| XIX | A Man's Business | [292] |
| XX | The Cleft in the Rock | [317] |
| XXI | The Call to Service | [334] |
| XXII | The Nineteenth Kansas Cavalry | [354] |
| XXIII | In Jean's Land | [370] |
| XXIV | The Cry of Womanhood | [390] |
| XXV | Judson Summoned | [403] |
| XXVI | O'Mie's Inheritance | [420] |
| XXVII | Sunset by the Sweetwater | [442] |
| XXVIII | The Heritage | [464] |
ILLUSTRATIONS
| Page | |
| "Come, Phil," she cried, "come, crown me Queen of May here in April!" | [Frontispiece] |
| "Baronet, I think we are marching straight into Hell's jaws" | [158] |
| Every movement of ours had been watched by Indian scouts | [244] |
| Like the passing of a hurricane, horses, mules, men, all dashed toward the place | [288] |
| They came slowly toward us, the two captive women for whom we waited | [394] |
PROEM
"Nature never did betray the heart that loved her"
I can hear it always—the Call of the Prairie. The passing of sixty Winters has left me a vigorous man, although my hair is as white as the January snowdrift in the draws, and the strenuous events of some of the years have put a tax on my strength. I shall always limp a little in my right foot—that was left out on the plains one freezing night with nothing under it but the earth, and nothing over it but the sky. Still, considering that although the sixty years were spent mainly in that pioneer time when every day in Kansas was its busy day, I am not even beginning to feel old. Neither am I sentimental and inclined to poetry. Life has given me mostly her prose selections for my study.
But this love of the Prairie is a part of my being. All the comedy and tragedy of these sixty years have had them for a setting, and I can no more put them out of my life than the Scotchman can forget the heather, or the Swiss emigrant in the flat green lowland can forget the icy passes of the glacier-polished Alps. Geography is an element of every man's life. The prairies are in the red corpuscles of my blood. Up and down their rippling billows my memory runs. For always I see them,—green and blossom-starred in the Springtime; or drenched with the driving summer deluge that made each draw a brimming torrent; or golden, purple, and silver-rimmed in the glorious Autumn. I have seen them gray in the twilight, still and tenderly verdant at noonday, and cold and frost-wreathed under the white star-beams. I have seen them yield up their rich yellow sheaves of grain, and I have looked upon their dreary wastes marked with the dull black of cold human blood. Plain practical man of affairs that I am, I come back to the blessed prairies for my inspiration as the tartan warmed up the heart of Argyle.