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LONE PINE
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New Fiction
SMITH BRUNT
United States Navy. By WALDRON K. POST, author of "Harvard Stories,"etc. 12mo, 459 pages, $1.50.
"A rattling good story of the Old Navy.... The book recalls Harry Gringo by its breadth and interest of plot; which means it is a first-class sea story. It is not an imitation, however.... The prevailing thought of the book is the unity of aims, ideals and race between Englishmen and Americans, and this idea is brought out so well that, even though the reader enjoys the story of the fierce sea-fights, he deplores the shedding of blood by brothers' hands."--_Buffalo Courier._
BEARERS OF THE BURDEN
Being Stories of Land and Sea. By Major W. P. DRURY, Royal Marines. 12mo,286 pages, $1.00.
"Major Drury's stories combine pathos and humor with an underlying earnestness that betrays a clear moral vision. The whole volume is of a rare and wholesome quality."--_Chicago Tribune._
ROSALBA
The Story of Her Development. By OLIVE PRATT RAYNER (Grant Allen),author of "Flowers and Their Pedigrees," etc. Hudson Library, No. 39.12mo, 396 pages, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00.
"A story which holds the reader with profound interest to the closing lines."--_Chicago Inter-Ocean._
ABOARD "THE AMERICAN DUCHESS"
By HEADON HILL. Hudson Library, No. 41. 12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth,$1.00.
NOTE.--This is a reprint of a work previously published under the title of "Queen of the Night"--with certain changes of names.
"He has certainly given to the reading public a capital story full of action. It is a bright novel and contains many admirable chapters. Life on the ocean is well depicted, many exciting episodes are well told, and it will interest readers of all classes."--_Knoxville Sentinel._
THE PRIEST'S MARRIAGE
By NORA VYNNE, author of "The Blind Artist's Picture," etc. HudsonLibrary, No. 42. 12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00.
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, NEW YORK AND LONDON
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LONE PINE
The Story of a Lost Mine
by
R. B. TOWNSHEND
Decoration]
G. P. Putnam's SonsNew York & LondonThe Knickerbocker Press1900
Copyright, 1899by G. P. Putnam's Sons
The Knickerbocker Press, New York
TOMY FRIENDS IN SANTIAGO
RED AND WHITE
AND
IN MEMORY OFA BRINDLED BULLDOG
I have to thank Senor F. de Arteaga y Pereira, Reader of Spanish in theUniversity of Oxford, for the Spanish version of Heine's poem whichappears in Chapter XXIX.
A lone pine stands in the Northland On a bald and barren height. He sleeps, by the snows enfolded In a mantle of wintry white. He dreams of a lonely palm-tree, Afar in the morning-land, Consumed with unspoken longing In a waste of burning sand. _After Heine._
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE I.--INDIAN LOVERS 1
II.--A LONE HAND 12
III.--BLASTING THE ACEQUIA 22
IV.--A RACE WITH A MULE 38
V.--"OJOS AZULES NO MIRAN" 46
VI.--AN OLD WOUND REOPENED 59
VII.--DESDEMONA LISTENS 74
VIII.--CHILDREN OF THE SUN 90
IX.--A SQUAW FOR A FEE 105
X.--AN ELOPEMENT 119
XI.--MY DUCATS AND MY DAUGHTER 131
XII.--PACIFYING A GHOST 144
XIII.--A GIRL'S TEARS 163
XIV--A STERN CHASE 180
XV.--THE ROD DESCENDS 188
XVI.--THE FEE IS ACCEPTED 197
XVII.--MADAM WHAILAHAY 214
XVIII.--HUNTING A TRAIL 229
XIX.--RUN TO GROUND 244
XX.--THE WOLF'S LAIR 258
XXI.--DRIVING A BARGAIN 269
XXII.--A WOUNDED MAN 285
XXIII.--A PICNIC PARTY 297
XXIV.--WEIGHING THE SILVER 308
XXV.--A PREHISTORIC HEARTH 323
XXVI.--THE SNAKE'S VERDICT 340
XXVII.--AULD ACQUAINTANCE 353
XXVIII.--ELEVEN TO ONE 366
XXIX.--PEACE WITH HONOUR 384
LONE PINE
Lone Pine: The Story of a Lost Mine Page 1