The Hunted Outlaw - or, Donald Morrison, the Canadian Rob Roy by Anonymous
page 18 of 76 (23%)
page 18 of 76 (23%)
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Donald read this letter thoughtfully. "My father going to the bad, and Minnie going away," he muttered. He rose from his seat, and walked the narrow room in which he lodged. "I will go home," he said. CHAPTER X. "BE IT EVER SO HUMBLE, THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME." Donald Morrison is back to the simple life of Marsden again. Five years had changed him enormously. His figure had always promise of athletic suppleness. It was now splendidly compact. He left the type of the conventional farmer. He returned the picturesque embodiment of the far West. Perhaps, in his long locks, wide sombrero, undressed leggings, and prodigal display of shooting irons, there may have been a theatrical suggestion of Buffalo Bill. The village folk accepted him with intense admiration. Here was something new to study. Had Donald not been to the great and wonderful Far West, so much the more fascinating because nobody knew anything about it? Had he not shot the buffalo roaming the plains? Had he not mingled in that wild life which, without moral lamp-posts, allures all the more because of a certain flavoring spice of deviltry? Every |
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