
The Project Gutenberg E-text of Se-Quo-Yah, from Harper's New Monthly, V. 41, 1870
SE-QUO-YAH.
From Harper's New Monthly, V. 41, 1870
In 1768 a restless German peddler named George Gist slips past the tangled web of colonial licences and ventures into the Cherokee Nation with a modest cargo of trade goods. The frontier market bustles with pack‑horses, flatboats and hungry traders, all scrambling for furs while officials from Georgia, South Carolina and the British superintendency vie for control. Gist, unable to secure a licence, turns to the unofficial channels that define the “grab game” of early American commerce. His daring gamble places him at the edge of law and wilderness, setting the stage for a story steeped in cultural clash and survival.
To navigate this precarious world, Gist marries a Cherokee woman of a respected family, gaining both protection and a foothold in the tribe’s matrilineal society. Their son, christened Se‑quo‑yah, is raised amid the rhythms of Cherokee life—tending cattle, planting fields, and absorbing the turbulent backdrop of the Revolutionary era. As the boy grows, his unique heritage and the steadfast love of his mother hint at a destiny that will echo far beyond the modest cabin where he first learned to walk.
Language
en
Duration
~33 minutes (32K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Robert Rowe, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
2003-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
This work is credited to an unknown or anonymous author, which gives it an extra sense of mystery. Many enduring classics have survived this way, with the writing remembered even when the writer’s name was lost.
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