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قراءة كتاب The Homesteader: A Novel

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The Homesteader: A Novel

The Homesteader: A Novel

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE HOMESTEADER



From a painting by W.M. Farrow.

"SOMETHING HAPPENED AND I WAS STRANGELY GLAD AND CAME HERE BECAUSE I—I—JUST HAD TO SEE YOU, JEAN."


THE HOMESTEADER

A NOVEL

BY

OSCAR MICHEAUX

Author of "The Forged Note"

ILLUSTRATED BY W.M. FARROW

SIOUX CITY, IOWA

WESTERN BOOK SUPPLY COMPANY

PUBLISHERS


COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY OSCAR MICHEAUX
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED


BELOVED MOTHER

THIS
TO
YOU


PUBLISHERS TO THE READER

How much of the story of Jean Baptiste is a work of the author's own imagination and how much comes from an authentic source we do not consider it necessary to say. But that he has in this instance drawn more largely and directly from fact than is the practice of the novelist is admitted, and we have his consent therefore, to make certain statements concerning himself that relate to the story, and why he has written it.

To begin with, that which any writer has been more closely associated with, are the things he can best portray. Wherefore, in "THE HOMESTEADER," Oscar Micheaux has written largely along the lines he has lived, and, naturally of what he best knows. His experience has been somewhat unusual; his association largely out of the ordinary. Born thirty-three years ago in Southern Illinois, he left those parts at an early age to come into his larger education in the years that followed through extensive traveling and a varied association. Purchasing a relinquishment on a homestead in South Dakota at the age of twenty; five years later he had succeeded and owned considerable lands in the country wherein he had settled. Always literarily inclined he wrote articles for newspapers and magazines as a beginner, and then during his twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh years occurred the conflicting incident that changed the whole course of his life, and gave him more than anything else, the subsequent material for the building of this story.

Shortly after this his first book appeared, and he at last had found his calling. He wrote his second book two years later. But the episode that had changed his life from ranching to writing was ever in his mind and always so forcibly until he was never a contented man until he had written it—and "The Homesteader" is the story.


CONTENTS

  EPOCH THE FIRST  
CHAPTER   PAGE
I Agnes 13
II The Homesteader 21
III At the Sod House 28
IV She Could Never Be Anything to Him 37
V When the Indians Shot the Town Up 43
VI The Infidel, A Jew and A German 49
VII The Day Before 56
VIII An Enterprising Young Man 61
IX "Christine! Christine!" 75
X "You Have Never Been This Way Before" 80
XI What Jean Baptiste Found in the Well 85
XII Miss Stewart Receives a Caller 89
XIII The Coming of the Railroad 97
XIV The Administrating Angel 107
XV Oh, My Jean 115
XVI "Bill" Prescott Proposes 123
XVII Harvest

Pages