To
AMADO
and
AMADO
The name that stood for such a friend is tall enough for two—
My oldest on the old frontier, my newest on the new.
Nor is it on my heart to pray my baby’s feet be spared
So rugged paths (companioned so) as once his father fared.
Contents
| Page | |
| The Enchanted Burro (New Mexico) | [1] |
| The Mummy-Miner (Peru) | [25] |
| A Boy of the Andes (Peru) | [43] |
| A Daughter of the Misti (Peru) | [65] |
| The Witch Deer (New Mexico) | [85] |
| Felipe’s Sugaring-Off (Peru) | [99] |
| Andrés, the Arriero (Bolivia) | [111] |
| Our Yellow Slave | [141] |
| The Peak of Gold (New Mexico) | [161] |
| Pablo’s Deer Hunt (New Mexico) | [179] |
| Candelária’s Curse (New Mexico) | [203] |
| The Habit of the Fraile (Peru) | [219] |
| The Great Magician | [241] |
| The Silver Omelet (Mexico) | [257] |
| A Duel in the Desert (California) | [275] |
| A ’Rastle with a Wildcat (New England) | [285] |
| A Tame Deer (California) | [299] |
| The Rebel Double Runner (New England) | [315] |
| The Balsa Boy of Lake Titi-Caca (Bolivia) | [333] |