Майн Рид

Osceola the Seminole; or, The Red Fawn of the Flower Land


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Chapter Fifty Five.

       Chapter Fifty Six.

       Chapter Fifty Seven.

       Chapter Fifty Eight.

       Chapter Fifty Nine.

       Chapter Sixty.

       Chapter Sixty One.

       Chapter Sixty Two.

       Chapter Sixty Three.

       Chapter Sixty Four.

       Chapter Sixty Five.

       Chapter Sixty Six.

       Chapter Sixty Seven.

       Chapter Sixty Eight.

       Chapter Sixty Nine.

       Chapter Seventy.

       Chapter Seventy One.

       Chapter Seventy Two.

       Chapter Seventy Three.

       Chapter Seventy Four.

       Chapter Seventy Five.

       Chapter Seventy Six.

       Chapter Seventy Seven.

       Chapter Seventy Eight.

       Chapter Seventy Nine.

       Chapter Eighty.

       Chapter Eighty One.

       Chapter Eighty Two.

       Chapter Eighty Three.

       Chapter Eighty Four.

       Chapter Eighty Five.

       Chapter Eighty Six.

       Chapter Eighty Seven.

       Chapter Eighty Eight.

       Chapter Eighty Nine.

       Chapter Ninety.

       Chapter Ninety One.

       Chapter Ninety Two.

       Chapter Ninety Three.

       Chapter Ninety Four.

       Chapter Ninety Five.

       Chapter Ninety Six.

       Table of Contents

      The Historical Novel has ever maintained a high rank—perhaps the highest—among works of fiction, for the reason that while it enchants the senses, it improves the mind, conveying, under a most pleasing form, much information which, perhaps, the reader would never have sought for amid the dry records of the purely historic narrative.

      This fact being conceded, it needs but little argument to prove that those works are most interesting which treat of the facts and incidents pertaining to our own history, and of a date which is yet fresh in the memory of the reader.

      To this class of books pre-eminently belongs the volume which is here submitted to the American reader, from the pen of a writer who has proved himself unsurpassed in the field which he has, by his various works, made peculiarly his own.

      The brief but heroic struggle of the celebrated Chief, Osceola, forms the groundwork of a narrative which is equal, if not superior, to any of Mr. Reid’s former productions; and while the reader’s patriotism cannot fail to be gratified at the result, his sympathy is, at the same time, awakened for the manly struggles and untimely fate of the gallant spirit, who fought so nobly for the freedom of his red brethren and the preservation of their cherished hunting-grounds.

       Table of Contents

      The Flowery Land.

      Linda Florida! fair land of flowers!

      Thus hailed thee the bold Spanish adventurer, as standing upon the prow of his caravel, he first caught sight of thy shores.

      It was upon the Sunday of Palms—the festival of the flowers—and the devout Castilian beheld in thee a fit emblem of the day. Under the influence of a pious thought, he gave thee its name, and well deservedst thou the proud appellation.

      That was three hundred years ago. Three full cycles have rolled past, since the hour of thy baptismal ceremony; but the title