The Way of the Wind, by Zoe
Anderson Norris,
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Title: The Way of the Wind
Author: Zoe Anderson Norris
Release Date: August 17, 2006 [eBook #19071]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
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+--------------------------------------------------------------+ | Transcriber's
Note: | | | | While this book is full of dialect and very odd spelling, | |
there are a number of obvious typographical errors which | | have been
corrected in this text. For a complete list, | | please see the end of this
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THE WAY OF THE WIND
by
ZOE ANDERSON NORRIS
Drawings by Oberhardt
[Illustration: ZOE ANDERSON NORRIS]
New York Published by the Author 1911 Copyright, 1911, by Zoe
Anderson Norris Printed in the United States of America Published in
October, 1911. By Zoe Anderson Norris. Office of the East Side
Magazine, 338 East 15th St., New York
PROLOGUE
And as the sturdy Pilgrim Fathers cut their perilous way through the
dense and dangerous depths of the Forest Primeval for the setting up of
their hearthstones, so the courageous pioneers of the desolate and
treeless West were forced to fight the fury of the winds.
The graves of them lie mounded here and there in the uncultivated
corners of the fields, though more often one wanders across the level
country, looking for them in the places where they should be and are
not, because of the tall and waving corn that covers the length and
breadth of the land.
And yet the dead are not without memorial. Each steady stalk is a
plumed standard of pioneer conquest, and through its palmy leaves the
chastened wind remorsefully sighs requiems, chanting, whispering,
moaning and sighing from balmy springtime on through the heat of the
long summer days, until in the frost the farmers cutting the stalks and
stacking them evenly about in the semblance of long departed tepees,
leave no dangling blades to sigh through, nor tassels to flout.
THE AUTHOR.
The Way of the Wind
CHAPTER I.
[Illustration]
Looking back upon it, the little Kentucky town seemed to blossom for
Celia like the rose, one broad expanse of sloping lawns bordered with
flower beds and shaded by quiet trees, elms and maples, brightly green
with young leaflets and dark with cedars and pines, as it was on the day
when she stood on the vine-covered veranda of her mother's home,
surrounded by friends come to say good-by.
Jane Whitcomb kissed her cheek as she tied the strings of her big poke
bonnet under her chin.
"I hope you will be happy out theah, Celia," she said; "but if it was me
and I had to go, I wouldn't. You couldn't get me to take such risks.
Wild horses couldn't. All them whut wants to go West to grow up with
the country can go, but the South is plenty good enough fo' me."
"Fo' me, too," sighed Celia, homesickness full upon her with the
parting hour. "It's Seth makes me go. Accordin' to him, the West is the
futuah country. He has found a place wheah they ah goin' to build a
Magic City, he says. He's goin' to maik a fortune fo' me out theah, he
says, in the West."
"Growin' up with the country," interrupted Sarah Simpson, tying a
bouquet of flowers she had brought for Celia with a narrow ribbon of
delicate blue.
"Yes," admitted Celia, "growing up with the country."
Sarah handed her the flowers.
"It's my opinion," concluded she, "that it's the fools, beggin' youah
pahdon, whut's goin' out theah to grow up with the country, and the
wise peepul whut's stayin' at home and advisin' of 'em to go."
Celia shuddered.
"I'm ha'f afraid to go," she said. "They say the wind blows all the time
out theah. They say it nevah quits blowin'."
"'Taint laik as if you wus goin' to be alone out theah," comforted Mansy
Storm, who was busy putting away a little cake she had made with
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