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The Phantom of the River

by Edward Sylvester Ellis

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Language
EN
Format
EPUB
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345 KB

Description

Set in the American frontier during the late 18th or early 19th century, the novel recounts the adventures and struggles of early settlers and frontiersmen. It focuses on prominent figures such as Daniel Boone and Simon Kenton as they confront threats from hostile Native American tribes, particularly the Shawanoes, amid the challenges of wilderness survival and defence. The narrative depicts their strategic planning and dangers faced in protecting settlements, highlighting the conflicts and alliances of the period. As a work of historical adventure fiction, it aims to portray the hazards and heroism characteristic of the frontier era, emphasizing themes of loyalty, resourcefulness, and the perilous nature of early American expansion.

The story opens with Kenton and Boone discussing perceived threats in the wilderness, illustrating the tense atmosphere of frontier life and the importance of leadership during hostile encounters. Written in the late 19th century, the novel offers a depiction of early American frontier experience through dramatized events involving renowned pioneers and their efforts to safeguard settlers from Native American conflicts.

From the opening pages

The first remark was made by the famous pioneer ranger, Simon Kenton, and the second fell from the lips of the more famous Daniel Boone. It was at the close of a warm day in August, more than a century ago, that these veterans of the woods came together for the purpose of consultation. They had threaded their way along parallel lines, separated by hardly a furlong, for a mile from their starting-point, when the above interchange of views took place. Boone had kept close to the Ohio while stealthily moving eastward, while Kenton took the same course, gliding more deeply among the shadows of the Kentucky forest until, disturbed by the evidence of danger, he trended to the left and met Boone near the river. The two sat down on a fallen tree, side by side, and, while talking in low tones, did not for a moment forget their surroundings. They had lived too long in the perilous wilderness to forget that there was never a moment when a pioneer was absolutely safe from the fierce or stealthy red man. "Dan'l," said Kenton, in that low, musical voice which was one of his most marked characteristics, "this 'ere bus'ness has took the qu'arest shape of anything that you or me have been mixed up in." "I haven't been mixed up in it, Simon," corrected Boone, turning his somewhat narrow, but clean-shaven face upon the other, and smiling gently in a way that brought the wrinkles around a pair of eyes as blue as those of Kenton himself. "Not yet, but you're powerful sartin to be afore them folks reach the block-house." Boone nodded his head to signify that he agreed with his friend. "You wasn't at the block-house, Dan'l, when the flatboat stopped there?" "No." "Neither was I; I was tramping through the woods on my way to make a call on Mr. Ashbridge." "That's the man who put up the cabin a mile back down the river?" "Yes; you see Norman Ashbridge or his son George—and the same is a powerful likely younker—come down the Ohio last spring in their flatboat, and stopped at the clearing a mile below us, where they put up a tidy cabin. A few weeks ago the father started east to bring down his family in another flatboat. George, the younker, got tired of waiting and set out to meet 'em; him and…

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