277
pages
English
Documents
2010
Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe Tout savoir sur nos offres
277
pages
English
Ebook
2010
Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe Tout savoir sur nos offres
The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Man of Two
Countries, by Alice Harriman
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no
cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it,
give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg
License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: A Man of Two Countries
Author: Alice Harriman
Illustrator: C. M. Dowling
Release Date: February 14, 2009 [EBook #28070]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
A MAN OF TWO COUNTRIES ***
Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Carla Foust and the
Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.netDistributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
(This
file was produced from images generously made
available
by The Internet Archive)
Transcriber's note
Minor punctuation errors have been changed without
notice. Printer errors have been changed, and they
are indicated with a mouse-hover and listed at the end
of this book. All other inconsistencies are as in the
original.
A MAN o f TWO
COUNTRIES
BY
ALICE HARRIMAN
Author of Songs o' the Sound, Chaperoning Adriennethrough the Yellowstone, Songs o'
the Olympics, etc.
Chapter Headings by
C. M. DOWLING
1910
THE ALICE HARRIMAN COMPANY
NEW YORK & SEATTLE
Copyright 1910, by
The Alice Harriman Company
All rights reserved
PRINTED BY
The Premier Press
NEW YORK
U. S. A.
TO THE READER
Prior to the days of the cowboy and the range, the
settler and irrigation, the State and the Province, an
ebb and flow of Indians, traders, trappers, wolfers,buffalo-hunters, whiskey smugglers, missionaries,
prospectors, United States soldiery and newly
organized North West Mounted Police crossed and
recrossed the international boundary between the
American Northwest and what was then known as the
"Whoop Up Country." This heterogeneous flotsam and
jetsam held some of the material from which Montana
evolved its later statehood.
To one who came to know and to love the region after
the surging tide had exterminated the buffalo and
worse than exterminated the Indian,—to one who
appreciates the limitless possibilities of the splendid
Commonwealth of Montana on the one side and the
great Province of Alberta on the other of that invisible
line which now draws together instead of separating
men of a common tongue, this period seems
tremendously interesting. The "local color" has,
perhaps, not been squeezed from too many tubes.
Types stand out; never individuals.
As types, therefore, the characters of this book weave
their story as the shuttle of time, filled with the woof of
hidden purpose and open deed, runs through the warp
of their friendships and enmities.
And with the less attractive strands the shifting
harness of place and circumstance enmeshes a
thread of Love's gold.
Book I. The River
Book II. The PrairieBook III. The State
TABLE OF CONTENTS
BOOK I
I. Twisting the Lion's Tail 15
II. The Girl on the Fontenelle 30
BOOK II
I. Under the Union Jack 47
II. Hate 58
III. The Hot Blood of Youth 72
IV. The Return to Fort Benton 88
BOOK III
I. Visitors from Helena 107
II. Charlie Blair's Sister 125
III. A Man of Two Countries 141
IV. The State Republican Convention 155
V. Despair 165
VI. Il Trovatore 180
VII. Debauching a Legislature 196
VIII. Danvers' Discouragement 211
IX. A Frontier Knock 219
X. Wheels Within Wheels 226
XI. The Chinese Legend 241XII. Recognition 251
XIII. The Lobbyist 257
XIV. The Keystone 268
XV. An Unpremeditated Speech 281
XVI. The Election 291
BOOK I
THE RIVER
"I beheld the westward marches
Of the ... nations,
Restless, struggling, toiling, striving."
—Longfellow
Philip Danvers, heading a small party of horsemen,
galloped around the corner of a warehouse and pulled
up on the levee at Bismarck as the mate of the Far
West bellowed, "Let 'er go!"
"Hold on!" he shouted, leaping from his mount.
"Why in blazes!" The mate's impatience flared luridly
as he ordered the gang-plank replaced. His heat
ignited the smouldering resentment of the passengers,
and they, too, exploded.
"We're loaded to the guards now!" yelled one."Yeh can't come aboard!" threatened another.
"Haven't yeh got a full passenger list a'ready,
Captain?" demanded a blustering, heavy-set man with
beetling eyebrows, as he pushed himself angrily
through the crowding men to the deck-rail.
"Can't help it if I have, Burroughs," retorted the
autocrat of the river-boat. "These troopers are recruits
for the North West Mounted Police——"
"The hell yeh say!"
Philip Danvers noted the unfriendly eye, and realized
that this burly fellow dominated even the captain.
"Their passage was engaged three months ago," went
on the officer.
"It's nothing to me," affirmed Burroughs, reddening in
his effort to regain his surface amenity.
The young trooper, superintending the loading of the
horses, resented the manifest unfriendliness toward
the English recruits. A dreary rain added discomfort,
and the passengers growled at the slow progress
hitherto made against the spring floods of the
turbulent Missouri and this prolonged delay at
Bismarck.
As he went up the gang-plank and walked along the
deck, bits of conversation came to him.
"He looks like an officer," said one, with a jerk of his
thumb in his direction."An officer! Where? D'yeh mean the dark-haired one?"
The voice was that of Burroughs again, and as
Danvers met his insolent eye an instant antagonism
flashed between the roughly dressed frontiersman and
the lean-flanked, broad-shouldered English youth.
"Hello! 'F there ain't Toe String Joe!" continued
Burroughs, recognizing the last to come on board, as
the line was cast off and the steamer backed into the
stream. "What you doin' here, Joe?"
"I met up with these here Britishers when they came in
on the train from the East, an' I'm goin' t' enlist,"
admitted the shambling Joe, his breath confirming his
appearance. "Where you been?"
"Back to the States to get my outfit. I'm goin' ter start
in fer myself up to Fort Macleod. So you've decided to
be a damned Britisher, eh?" Burroughs reverted to
Joe's statement. "Yeh'll have to take the oath of
allegiance fer three years of enlistment. Did yeh know
that?" He closed one eye, as if speculating how this
might further his own interests. "You'll make a fine
police, Joe, you will!" he jeered in conclusion.
"You goin' to Fort Macleod?" questioned Joe. "You'll
git no trade in Canada!"
"Don't yeh ever think it!" returned Burroughs, with a
look that Danvers sub-consciously noted.
Beyond the crowd he saw a child, held by a man with
a scarred face. His involuntary look of amazement
changed the pensiveness of her delicate face toanimation, and she returned his smile. This
unexpected exchange of friendship restored his self-
respect and his anger evaporated. He recalled the
childhood spent in English lanes with his only sister.
He beckoned enticingly, and soon she came near, shy
and lovely.
"What's your name, little girl?"
"Winifred."
"That's a pretty name," said the young trooper. "Are
you going to Fort Benton with your papa?"
"No. Papa's dead—and—mamma. That's my brother,"
indicating the man who had held her. "He came to get
me. His name is Charlie."
"Dear little girl!" thought Philip Danvers, as the child
ran to brotherly arms.
"Howdy!" Charlie gave unconventional greeting as he
took a bench near by.
"I've been getting acquainted with your sister,"
explained the Englishman.
"Glad of it. Winnie's afraid of most o' the men, an'
there aren't more'n three white women up the river.
I've had to bring her back with me, and I don't know
much about children. But there's one good old lady at
Benton," the frontiersman proceeded, cheerfully.
"She'll look after her. You see, I'm away most of the
time. I'm a freighter between the head of navigation
and the Whoop Up Country—Fort Macleod."