The Prairie Flower: A Tale of the Indian Border

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Prairie Flower: A Tale of the Indian Border by Gustave Aimard, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Gustave Aimard ISBN: 9781465602732
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Gustave Aimard
ISBN: 9781465602732
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
America is the land of prodigies! Everything there assumes gigantic proportions, which startle the imagination and confound the reason. Mountains, rivers, lakes and streams, all are carved on a sublime pattern. There is a river of North America—not like the Danube, Rhine, or Rhone, whose banks are covered with towns, plantations, and time-worn castles: whose sources and tributaries are magnificent streams, the waters of which, confined in a narrow bed, rush onwards as if impatient to lose themselves in the ocean—but deep and silent, wide as an arm of the sea, calm and severe in its grandeur, it pours majestically onwards, its waters augmented by innumerable streams, and lazily bathes the banks of a thousand isles, which it has formed of its own sediment. These isles, covered with tall thickets, exhale a sharp or delicious perfume which the breeze bears far away. Nothing disturbs their solitude, save the gentle and plaintive appeal of the dove, or the hoarse and strident voice of the tiger, as it sports beneath the shade. At certain spots, trees that have fallen through old age, or have been uprooted by the hurricane, collect on its waters; then, attached by creepers and concealed by mud, these fragments of forests become floating islands. Young shrubs take root upon them: the petunia and nenuphar expand here and there their yellow roses; serpents, birds, and caimans come to sport and rest on these verdurous rafts, and are with them swallowed up in the ocean. This river has no name! Others in the same zone are called Nebraska, Platte, Missouri; but this is simply the Mecha-Chebe the old father of waters, the river before all! the Mississippi in a word! Vast and incomprehensible as is infinity, full of secret terrors, like the Ganges and Irrawaddy, it is the type of fecundity, immensity, and eternity to the numerous Indian nations that inhabit its banks.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
America is the land of prodigies! Everything there assumes gigantic proportions, which startle the imagination and confound the reason. Mountains, rivers, lakes and streams, all are carved on a sublime pattern. There is a river of North America—not like the Danube, Rhine, or Rhone, whose banks are covered with towns, plantations, and time-worn castles: whose sources and tributaries are magnificent streams, the waters of which, confined in a narrow bed, rush onwards as if impatient to lose themselves in the ocean—but deep and silent, wide as an arm of the sea, calm and severe in its grandeur, it pours majestically onwards, its waters augmented by innumerable streams, and lazily bathes the banks of a thousand isles, which it has formed of its own sediment. These isles, covered with tall thickets, exhale a sharp or delicious perfume which the breeze bears far away. Nothing disturbs their solitude, save the gentle and plaintive appeal of the dove, or the hoarse and strident voice of the tiger, as it sports beneath the shade. At certain spots, trees that have fallen through old age, or have been uprooted by the hurricane, collect on its waters; then, attached by creepers and concealed by mud, these fragments of forests become floating islands. Young shrubs take root upon them: the petunia and nenuphar expand here and there their yellow roses; serpents, birds, and caimans come to sport and rest on these verdurous rafts, and are with them swallowed up in the ocean. This river has no name! Others in the same zone are called Nebraska, Platte, Missouri; but this is simply the Mecha-Chebe the old father of waters, the river before all! the Mississippi in a word! Vast and incomprehensible as is infinity, full of secret terrors, like the Ganges and Irrawaddy, it is the type of fecundity, immensity, and eternity to the numerous Indian nations that inhabit its banks.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Colonel Thorndyke's Secret by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Tara: A Mahratta Tale by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Myths and Marvels of Astronomy by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book William Shakespeare: Attorney at Law and Solicitor in Chancery by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Corleone: A Tale of Sicily by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Wanderings Through Unknown Austria by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Ancient Curious and Famous Wills by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Abraham Lincoln's First inaugural Address by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Mary Tudor: Queen of France by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book The Talmud: Selections by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book The Lost Middy: Being the Secret of the Smugglers' Gap by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Notes of a Twenty-Five Years' Service in the Hudson's Bay Territory (Complete) by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Essays on Modern Novelists by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book John Deane of Nottingham: Historic Adventures by Land and Sea by Gustave Aimard
Cover of the book Ingersoll in Canada: A Reply to Wendling, Archbishop Lynch, Bystander and Others by Gustave Aimard
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy