
"THE DEBATABLE LAND"
Chapter I "Hinter die Kirche blühe die blaue Blume der Zufriedenheit."—Meister Eckhart.
Chapter II Of Thaddeus Bourn and his Purposes
Chapter III Of Morgan Map and his Purposes
Chapter IV In which Thaddeus uses the term "Moral Justification"
Chapter V Introducing Hamilton and Saint Mary's Organ
Chapter VI Introducing Gard Windham and the Brotherhood of Consolation
Chapter VII Introducing Moselle and Mavering
Chapter VIII Of Mrs. Mavering, and of the Philosophy of the Individual
Chapter IX Of Estates in Happiness
In a remote corner of early New England, a thin strip of wilderness—caught between the claims of two nations—holds a restless, almost mythic quality. Here, Widow Bourn tends her garden of lilacs behind a modest church, her quiet dignity a stark contrast to the rugged, unsettled hills that have challenged five generations of her family. The land, described as “debateable,” is steeped in folklore, whispered legends of warlocks and witches, and the lingering echo of an ancestor’s uneasy final request: “Remember me.”
Through the widow’s steady routine, the novel paints a portrait of a community grappling with its own history, the weight of inherited regrets, and the raw, stubborn spirit of the frontier. As the Bourns’ legacy unfolds, the reader is drawn into the subtle tensions between memory and survival, hinting at the larger struggles that will shape the characters’ lives in this contested, ever‑shifting landscape.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (333K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Ron Stephens, Greg Bergquist and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2013-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1868–1943
A Yale-trained writer with a taste for travel, adventure, and poetry, this American author moved easily between novels, essays, and verse. His work often blends literary polish with a strong feeling for distant places and restless journeys.
View all books
by Arthur Colton

by Arthur Colton

by Arthur Colton

by Arthur Colton

by Arthur Colton

by Arthur Colton

by Arthur Colton

by Vinceslas-Eugène Dick