Frontier and Midland: A Magazine of the West, Volumi 10-11published at Montana state university by H.G. Merriam, 1971 |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 77
Pagina 186
... talk in low voices and every now and then laugh loudly . There was only one of the men with whom the boy had much talk . This was a dark - skinned meager man with a great terror in his eyes . His hands and his feet moved in ...
... talk in low voices and every now and then laugh loudly . There was only one of the men with whom the boy had much talk . This was a dark - skinned meager man with a great terror in his eyes . His hands and his feet moved in ...
Pagina 187
... talk . Why ? " Because their speech Had cleared up and taken meaning and suddenly become plain . The old men were talking about herding . . . . I had thought That it was a big thing to have charge of another man's sheep ; But they said ...
... talk . Why ? " Because their speech Had cleared up and taken meaning and suddenly become plain . The old men were talking about herding . . . . I had thought That it was a big thing to have charge of another man's sheep ; But they said ...
Pagina 37
... talk to Harris . He had lost track of the days - they were sort of like the nightmares that he used to have when he was a little boy , before he was seven . He met Harris at the door and hugged him . Harris hugged him back- not so very ...
... talk to Harris . He had lost track of the days - they were sort of like the nightmares that he used to have when he was a little boy , before he was seven . He met Harris at the door and hugged him . Harris hugged him back- not so very ...
Parole e frasi comuni
asked Aunt Bee beautiful Bert camp Chinook Chinook Jargon Chinook Texts City Columbia river Company creek dark door editor eyes face father feet fire Forby Frontier girl gone Grace Stone Coates H. L. DAVIS hand Harris head hills horses Hudson's Bay Company Indians Jargon Jeff Joaquin Miller knew land laughed light live looked miles Miller Missoula Montana morning mother mountains never Nez Perces night Northwest Oregon Oregonian Paul Paul Bunyan Phone poems prairie ranch ride river seemed side smoke snow spring stood stopped story talk tell Teressa things thought tion told took town trail trees turned University of Montana voice wagon Waiilatpu walked watch western wild wind winter woman words writing young