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Showing 1 - 25 of
111 matches in All Departments
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The Short Cut (Hardcover)
Jackson Gregory; Edited by 1stworld Library
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R647
Discovery Miles 6 470
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Here was a small stream of water, bright, clear and cool, running
its merry way among the tall pines, hurrying to the dense shade of
the lower valley. The grass on its banks stood tall, lush and
faintly odorous, fresh with the newly come springtime, delicately
scented with the thickly strewn field flowers. The sunlight lay
bright and warm over all; the sky was blue with a depth of colour
intensified by the few great white clouds drifting lazily across
it. No moving thing within all the wide rolling landscape save the
sun-flecked water, the softly stirring grass and rustling forests,
the almost motionless white clouds. For two miles the hills
billowed away gently to the northward, where at last they were
swept up into the thickly timbered, crag-crested mountains. For
twice two miles toward the west one might guess the course of the
stream before here, too, the mountains shut in, leaving only Echo
Canon's narrow gap for the cool water to slip through. To the south
and to the east ridges and hollows and mountains, and beyond a few
fast melting patches of last winter's snow clinging to the lofty
summits, looking like fragments broken away from the big white
clouds and resting for a moment on the line where land and sky met.
It was springtime in the California Sierra. Never were skies bluer,
never did the golden sun-flood steep the endless forest lands in
richer life-giving glory. Ridge after ridge the mountains swept on
and fell away upon one side until in the vague distances they sank
to the monotonous level of the Sacramento Valley; down there it was
already summer, and fields were hot and brown. Ridge after ridge
the mountains stretched on the other side, rising steadily, growing
ever more august and mighty and rocky; on their crests across the
blue gorges the snow was dazzling white and winter held stubbornly
on at altitudes of seven thousand feet. Thus winter, spring-time,
and ripe, fruit-dropping summer coexisted, touching fingers across
the seventy miles that lie between the icy top of the Sierra and
the burning lowlands. Here, in a region lifted a mile into the rare
atmosphere, was a ridge all naked boulder and spire along its
crest, its sides studded with pine and incense cedar. The afternoon
sunlight streaked the big bronze tree trunks, making bright gay
spots and patches of light, casting cool black shadows across the
open spaces where the brown dead needles lay in thick carpets.
In the dusk a pack-horse crested a low-lying sand-ridge, put up its
head and sniffed, pushed forward eagerly, its nostrils twitching as
it turned a little more toward the north, going straight toward the
water-hole. The pack was slipping as far to one side as it had
listed to the other half an hour ago; in the restraining rope there
were a dozen intricate knots where one would have amply sufficed.
The horse broke into a trot, blazing its own trail through the
mesquite; a parcel slipped; the slack rope grew slacker because of
the subsequent readjust-ment; half a dozen bundles dropped after
the first. A voice, thin and irritable, shouted 'Whoa ' and the man
in turn was briefly outlined against the pale sky as he scrambled
up the ridge. He was a little man and plainly weary; he walked as
though his boots hurt him; he carried a wide, new hat in one hand;
the skin was peeling from his blistered face. From his other hand
trailed a big handkerchief. He was perhaps fifty or sixty. He
called 'Whoa ' again, and made what haste he could after his horse.
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Man to Man (Hardcover)
Jackson Gregory; Edited by 1stworld Library
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R646
Discovery Miles 6 460
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Steve Packard's pulses quickened and a bright eagerness came into
his eyes as he rode deeper into the pine-timbered mountains. To-day
he was on the last lap of a delectable journey. Three days ago he
had ridden out of the sun-baked town of San Juan; three months had
passed since he had sailed out of a South Sea port. Far down there,
foregathering with sailor men in a dirty water-front
boarding-house, he had grown suddenly and even tenderly reminiscent
of a cleaner land which he had roamed as a boy. He stared back
across the departed years as many a man has looked from just some
such resort as Black Jack's boarding-house, a little wistfully
withal. Abruptly throwing down his unplayed hand and forfeiting his
ante in a card game, he had gotten up and taken ship back across
the Pacific. The house of Packard might have spelled its name with
the seven letters of the word "impulse."
Bud Lee, horse foreman of the Blue Lake Ranch, sat upon the gate of
the home corral, builded a cigarette with slow brown fingers, and
stared across the broken fields of the upper valley to the rosy
glow above the pine-timbered ridge where the sun was coming up. His
customary gravity was unusually pronounced. "If a man's got the
hunch an egg is bad," he mused, "is that a real good and sufficient
reason why he should go poking his finger inside the shell? I want
to know " Tommy Burkitt, the youngest wage-earner of the outfit and
a profound admirer of all that taciturnity, good-humor, and quick
capability which went into the make-up of Bud Lee, approached from
the ranch-house on the knoll. "Hi, Bud " he called. "Trevors wants
you. On the jump."
Jim Kendric had arrived and the border town knew it well. All who
knew the man foresaw that he would come with a rush, tarry briefly
for a bit of wild joy and leave with a rush for the Lord knew where
and the Lord knew why. For such was ever the way of Jim Kendric. A
letter at the postoffice had been the means of advising the entire
community of the coming of Kendric. The letter was from Bruce West,
down in Lower California, and scrawled across the flap were
instructions to the postmaster to hold it for Jim Kendric who would
arrive within a couple of weeks. Furthermore the word URGENT was
not to be overlooked. Among the men drawn together in hourly
expectation of the arrival of Kendric, one remarked thoughtfully:
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Under Handicap (Hardcover)
Gregory Jackson Gregory, Jackson Gregory; Edited by 1stworld Library
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R648
Discovery Miles 6 480
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Outside there was shimmering heat and dry, thirsty sand, miles upon
miles of it flashing by in a gray, barren blur. A flat, arid,
monotonous land, vast, threatening, waterless, treeless. Its
immensity awed, its bleakness depressed. Man's work here seemed but
to accentuate the puny insignificance of man. Man had come upon the
desert and had gone, leaving only a line of telegraph-poles with
their glistening wires, two gleaming parallel rails of burning
steel to mark his passing. The thundering Overland Limited, rushing
onward like a frightened thing, screamed its terror over the desert
whose majesty did not even permit of its catching up the shriek of
the panting engine to fling it back in echoes. The desert ignored,
and before and behind the onrushing train the deep serenity of the
waste places was undisturbed.
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Six Feet Four
Jackson Gregory
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R843
Discovery Miles 8 430
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Man to Man (Paperback)
Jackson Gregory
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R575
R508
Discovery Miles 5 080
Save R67 (12%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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