CONTENTS

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FIRST VOLUME

CHAPTER PAGE
I. In Which the Reader Will Find a Sketch of a Village in the West, and Will Be Introduced to Some of the Dramatis PersonÆ. 1
II. Containing an Account of the Marriage of Colonel Brandon, and Its Consequences. 8
III. Containing Some Further Account of Colonel and Mrs. Brandon, and of the Education of Their Son Reginald. 15
IV. Containing Sundry Adventures of Reginald Brandon and His Friend Ethelston on the Continent; Also Some Further Proceedings at Squire Shirley’s; and the Return of Reginald Brandon to His Home.—in This Chapter the Sporting Reader Will Find an Example of an Unmade Rider On a Made Hunter. 20
V. An Adventure in the Woods.—reginald Brandon Makes the Acquaintance of an Indian Chief. 31
VI. Reginald and Baptiste Pay a Visit to War–eagle.—an Attempt at Treachery Meets With Summary Punishment. 39
VII. Containing Some Particulars of the History of the Two Delawares and of Baptiste. the Latter Returns With Reginald to Mooshanne, the Residence of Colonel Brandon. 50
VIII. Containing a Sketch of Mooshanne.—reginald Introduces His Sister to the Two Delawares. 59
IX. How Reginald Brandon Returned to Mooshanne With His Sister, Accompanied by Wingenund; and What Befell Them On the Road. 71
X. In Which the Reader Is Unceremoniously Transported to Another Element in Company With Ethelston; the Latter Is Left in a Disagreeable Predicament. 79
XI. Ethelston’s Further Adventures at Sea, and How He Became Captor and Captive in a Very Short Space of Time. 87
XII. Visit of Wingenund to Mooshanne.—he Rejoins War–eagle, And They Return to Their Band in the Far West.—m. Perrot Makes an Unsuccessful Attack on the Heart of a Young Lady. 97
XIII. In Which the Reader Will Find That the Couch of an Invalid Has Perils Not Less Formidable Than Those Which Are to Be Encountered at Sea. 107
XIV. Narrating the Trials and Dangers That Beset Ethelston; And How He Escaped from Them, and from the Island of Guadaloupe. 117
XV. What Took Place at Mooshanne During the Stay of Ethelston In Guadaloupe.—departure of Reginald For the Far–west. 128
XVI. The Escape of Ethelston from Guadaloupe, and the Consequences Which Ensued from That Expedition. 136
XVII. Excursion on the Prairie.—the Party Fall in With a Veteran Hunter. 148
XVIII. Reginald and His Party Reach the Indian Encampment. 156

SECOND VOLUME

I. Reginald and His Party at the Indian Encampment. 165
II. Reginald Holds a Conversation With the Missionary. 173
III. An Arrival at Mooshanne.—a Calm Ashore After a Storm At Sea. 181
IV. An Elk–hunt.—reginald Makes His First Essay in Surgery.—the Reader Is Admitted Into Prairie–bird’s Tent. 193
V. Symptoms of a Rupture Between the Delawares and Osages.—mahÉga Comes Forward in the Character of a Lover.—his Courtship Receives an Unexpected Interruption. 212
VI. Ethelston Prepares to Leave Mooshanne.—mahÉga Appears As An Orator, in Which Character He Succeeds Better Than in That of a Lover.—a Storm Succeeded by a Calm. 222
VII. In Which the Reader Will Find a Moral Disquisition Somewhat Tedious, a True Story Somewhat Incredible, a Conference That Ends in Peace, and a Council That Betokens War. 239
VIII. War–eagle and Reginald, With Their Party, Pursue the Dahcotahs. 257
IX. A Deserted Village in the West.—mahÉga Carries Off Prairie–bird, and Endeavours to Baffle Pursuit. 264
X. An Ambuscade.—reginald Brandon Finds His Horse, and M. Perrot Nearly Loses His Head.—while Indian Philosophy Is Displayed in One Quarter, Indian Credulity Is Exhibited in Another. 273
XI. Ethelston Visits St. Louis, Where He Unexpectedly Meets An Old Acquaintance, and Undertakes a Longer Journey Than He Had Contemplated. 290
XII. The Osages Encamp Near the Base of the Rocky Mountains.—an Unexpected Visitor Arrives. 297
XIII. War–eagle’s Party Follow the Trail.—a Skirmish and Its Results.—the Chief Undertakes a Perilous Journey Alone, And His Companions Find Sufficient Occupation During His Absence. 307
XIV. An Unexpected Meeting.—reginald Prepares to Follow the Trail. 328
XV. Showing How Wingenund Fared in the Osage Camp, and the Issue of the Dilemma in Which Prairie–bird Was Placed by MahÉga. 337
XVI. MahÉga Finds the Bodies of His Two Followers Slain by War–eagle.—some Reflections on the Indian Character.—war–eagle Returns to His Friends, and the Osage Chief Pushes His Way Further Into the Mountains. 347

THIRD VOLUME

I. War–eagle and His Party Reach the Deserted Camp of the Osages.—the Latter Fall in With a Strange Band of Indians, and MahÉga Appears in the Character of a Diplomatist. 367
II. Containing Various Incidents That Occurred to the Party Following the Trail.—plots and Counterplots, and a Discussion Upon Oratory, Which Is Very Much Out of Place, And, Fortunately For the Reader, Is Not Very Long. 385
III. A Scene in the Tent of Prairie–bird, Who Gives Some Good Advice, and Receives in a Short Space of Time More Than One Unexpected Visitor.—the Crows Led by MahÉga Attack The Delaware Camp by Night.—the Defeated Party Achieve a Kind of Triumph, and the Victors Meet With an Unexpected Loss. 403
IV. The Negotiation Set on Foot by Reginald For the Release Of His Friends.—besha Becomes an Important Personage. 422
V. David Muir and His Daughter Pay a Visit to Colonel Brandon.—the Merchant Becomes Ambitious; He Entertains Projects For Jessie’s Future Welfare, Which Do Not Coincide With That Young Lady’s Wishes. 430
VI. Besha Pursues His Career As a Diplomatist.—an Agreeable Tete–a–tete Disagreeably Interrupted.—the Steps That MahÉga Took to Support His Declining Interests Among the Crows. 440
VII. Wingenund Devises a Plan For the Liberation of His Friends, and Seeks to Obtain by Means Equally Unusual and Effective the Co–operation of the One–eyed Horse–dealer.—a Further March Into the Mountains.—wingenund Pays a Visit to His Friends, and the Latter Make Acquaintance With a Strange Character. 460
VIII. The Root–digger Makes Friends With the Party.—an Adventure With a Grisly Bear.—the Conduct of War–eagle. 478
IX. MahÉga Is Found in Strange Company, and Wingenund Defers, On Account of More Important Concerns, His Plan For the Liberation of His Friends.—a Council, a Combat, and a Skirmish, in Which Last the Crows Receive Assistance from A Quarter Whence They Least Expected It. 487
X. Wingenund and His Friends Return Towards Their Camp.—a Serious Adventure and a Serious Argument Occur by the Way.—showing, Also, How the Extremes of Grief, Surprise, And Joy May Be Crowded Into the Space of a Few Minutes. 507
XI. Containing a Treaty Between the Crows and Delawares, and The Death of an Indian Chief. 527
XII. War–eagle’s Funeral.—the Party Commence Their Homeward Journey.—Besha Exerts His Diplomatic Talents For the Last Time, and Receives Several Rewards, With Some of Which He Would Willingly Have Dispensed. 540
XIII. The Scene Is Shifted to the Banks of the Muskingum, and Prairie–bird Returns to the Home of Her Childhood. 553
Supplementary Chapter. 557

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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