
A hot August day in 1862 finds a bustling steamer threading the brown waters of the Minnesota, its deck crowded with a kaleidoscope of emigrants, merchants and strangers. Among them are a calculating speculator, a solemn English gentleman, a brightly‑dressed Scotsman, and even a mysterious African trader, each carrying hopes, grudges and secret desires. The river’s sweeping vistas promise new horizons, and the air hums with whispered plans for the untamed West.
At the heart of this motley crowd stands a tall, confident young painter, Adolphus Halleck, his sketchbook brimming with eager studies of the landscape he hopes to immortalise. Beside him, his spirited cousin Maria teases his romantic obsession with the “noble savage,” longing to witness the legends of the plains firsthand. Their conversation hints at an imminent encounter with the very people who inspire Halleck’s art, setting the stage for a journey that will test both his creative ambitions and his notions of civilization.
Language
fr
Duration
~3 hours (220K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-10-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1818–1883
Best remembered for fast-paced adventure novels set in the American West and Mexico, this 19th-century French writer turned years of travel into stories full of scouts, frontier conflict, and dramatic escapes. His books helped feed Europe's fascination with the Wild West.
View all booksb. 1820
Best known for fast-moving 19th-century adventure novels, this French writer brought frontier drama, historical conflict, and popular storytelling to a wide readership. His books often blend action with the flavor of travel tales and serialized fiction.
View all books