
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
Part 7
Part 8
Part 9
Part 10
A rugged young man of the open prairie steps out of the forest with an axe in hand, his eyes scanning the endless park lands that have become a patchwork of log‑houses, straw‑stacks, and endless fields. The fertile belt, once the hunting ground of the Cree and Ojibway, now bears the marks of a growing settler community, each farm grappling with the promise and pressure of the land’s bounty. As he tends his own modest herd and hauls poplar rails, the rhythm of daily labor is interrupted by the distant hum of a neighbor’s mower, a sound that signals shifting boundaries and rising tensions among the pioneers.
The encounter with Hines, a fellow farmer whose own claim to the nearby slough is being tested, unfolds into a casual yet uneasy conversation about fences, hay rights, and the unspoken rules of frontier coexistence. Their exchange hints at the fragile balance between cooperation and competition that defines life on the prairie, setting the stage for a story of perseverance, community, and the inevitable challenges that come with taming a new world.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (605K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-09-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1867–1919
An English-born writer who turned life on the Canadian frontier and in early California into fiction, he produced a remarkably large body of work in a short life. He wrote more than 200 short stories along with several novels, and moved in the same Bay Area literary circles as Jack London.
View all books
by Herman Whitaker

by Herman Whitaker

by Vinceslas-Eugène Dick

by Philippe Aubert de Gaspé

by Abraham Cahan

by Pauline E. (Pauline Elizabeth) Hopkins

by Laure Conan