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George Frederick Ruxton - Life in the Far West

Here you can read online George Frederick Ruxton - Life in the Far West full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 1985, publisher: University of Oklahoma Press, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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In this classic of western Americana, George Frederick Ruxton, who died in St. Louis in 1848 at the youthful age of twenty-seven, brilliantly brings to life the whole heroic age of the Mountain Men. The author, from his intimate acquaintance with the trappers and traders of the American Far West, vividly recounts the story of two of the most adventurous of these hardy pioneers - Killbuck and La Bont?, whose daring, bravery, and hair-breadth escapes from their numerous Indian and Spaniard enemies were legend among their fellow-frontiersmen.With Ruxton, we follow Killbuck and La Bont? and their mountain companions - Old Bill Williams, Black Harris, William Sublette, Joseph Walker, and others - across the prairies and forests, west from picturesque old Bents Fort, into the dangerous Arapaho country near the headwaters of the Platte. We share with them the culinary delights of their campfires - buffalo boudins and beaver tails - and hear from their own lips, in the incomparable mountaineer dialect, hair-raising stories of frontier life and humorous tales of trading camp and frontier post.Life in the Far West, then, is adventure extraordinary - the true chronicle of the rugged Mountain Men whose unflinching courage and total disregard for personal safety or comfort opened the Far West to the flood of settlers who were to follow. The breath-taking water colors and sketches, which depict with great detail many of the familiar scenes of the early West, were done by one of Ruxtons contemporaries and fellow-explorers, Alfred Jacob Miller.

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title Life in the Far West American Exploration and Travel 14 - photo 1

title:Life in the Far West American Exploration and Travel ; [14]
author:Ruxton, George Frederick Augustus.
publisher:University of Oklahoma Press
isbn10 | asin:0806115343
print isbn13:9780806115344
ebook isbn13:9780585289380
language:English
subjectWest (U.S.)--Description and travel, Frontier and pioneer life--West (U.S.) , Hunting--West (U.S.)
publication date:1979
lcc:F592.R983eb
ddc:917.8
subject:West (U.S.)--Description and travel, Frontier and pioneer life--West (U.S.) , Hunting--West (U.S.)
Page i
Life in the Far West
THE AMERICAN EXPLORATION AND TRAVEL SERIES
Page ii
Trappers Alfred Jacob Miller A prominent feature in the character of the - photo 2
Trappers (Alfred Jacob Miller)
"A prominent feature in the character of the hunters of the
far west is their quick determination and resolve in
cases of extreme difficulty and peril
"
Courtesy Walters Art Gallery
Page iii
Life in the Far West
By
George Frederick Ruxton
Edited by Leroy R. Hafen
With a foreword by
Mae Reed Porter
Page iv ISBN 0-8061-1534-3 Life in the Far West is Volume 14 in The - photo 3
Page iv
ISBN: 0-8061-1534-3
Life in the Far West is Volume 14 in The American Exploration and Travel Series.
Copyright 1951 by the University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Publishing Division of the University. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the U.S.A.
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Page v
Foreword
In The Literature of the early Far West, no work excels in color, charm, or authenticity George Frederick Ruxton's Life in the Far West, which has long been recognized by students of the fur trade as a classic of its kind. Despite this recognition, and despite the wide influence Life in the Far West has had on the innumerable histories and novels about this colorful era, the book itself has not often been available to the interested modern reader. For this reason I welcome the opportunity to say a few words in this new edition of Life in the Far West, which has been admirably edited and annotated by LeRoy R. Hafen, and to record a few of the many pleasures that Ruxton's works have given both myself and my husband, Clyde Porter.
The final opening of the hitherto unpaved gaps in the Pan-American Highway between El Paso and Mexico City brought realization of a long-held desire of ours to set eyes on the localities that in 1846 were visited by young George Ruxton, and in June, 1950, with his two books as guides, we traversed the more than two thousand miles between Veracruz and the bone-dry deserts of present-day New Mexico and Arizona that Ruxton had traveled on horseback, over a century ago, to arrive in the Far West of the trappers and traders about which he was to write.
The new highway obligingly follows quite closely Ruxton's own route, so we were able without inconvenience to add to our knowledge of formerly accessible places, acquired in two earlier jaunts to the southern extremities of his travels, impressions of the towns below ChihuahuaMapimi, Frsnillo, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes, Lagos, and others which cannot have
Page vi
changed greatly since Ruxton wrote of them, cut off as they were by all but impassable roads for anything but the most primitive means of travel.
The deeper we penetrated into these regions the greater our wonderment mounted, until it seemed a veritable miracle that a person on horseback could have traversed such barren and rugged country and lived to write of it. These natural obstacles overcome, it must have taken genuine bravery to pass alone, save for a cowardly servant or two, through the dread Apache and Comanche country of northern Mexico.
To today's gregarious society, the solitary life led by Ruxton in his wanderings seems beyond endurance. One marvels that a man reared in refinement and luxury could sacrifice all the comforts of home and turn so frequently from the civilized world as did Ruxton in his brief twenty-seven years. One wonders, too, that he found time and opportunity for literary efforts; it is indeed remarkable that, with his schooling coming to a close as it did in his thirteenth year, he was able to write with such style and apparent ease a book now recognized as perhaps unique in quality.
In one hundred years civilization's tide has all but obliterated the footprints on the moccasin trails of the West, but Ruxton through the printed page has breathed the breath of life into some of the strangest yet most fascinating of God's mortals, the Mountain Men. It took a young man out of England, a born adventurer and explorer, to write a "Who's Who," a "What's What," and a vocabulary for that breed.
Picture 4
MAE REED PORTER
KANSAS CITY
Page vii
Contents
Foreword
v
Introduction
ix
Chapter I
3
Chapter II
35
Chapter III
50
Chapter IV
75
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