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Simms, William Gilmore, 1806-1870 [1845], The wigwam and the cabin, volume 2 (Wiley & Putnam, New York) [word count] [eaf371v2].
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Front matter Covers, Edges and Spine

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[figure description] Top Edge.[end figure description]

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[figure description] Front Cover.[end figure description]

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[figure description] Spine.[end figure description]

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[figure description] Front Edge.[end figure description]

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[figure description] Back Cover.[end figure description]

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[figure description] Bottom Edge.[end figure description]

Preliminaries

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[figure description] Reader.[end figure description]

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[figure description] Halftitle page.[end figure description]

WILEY AND PUTNAM'S
LIBRARY OF
AMERICAN BOOKS.—

THE WIGWAM AND THE CABIN.
SECOND SERIES.

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[figure description] Blank Leaf.[end figure description]

Title Page [figure description] Title page.[end figure description]

THE
WIGWAM AND THE CABIN.

“The ancient tales
Which first I learn'd,
Will I relate.”
Edda of Saemund.
NEW YORK:
WILEY AND PUTNAM, 161 BROADWAY.
1845.

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[figure description] Copyright page.[end figure description]

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1845, by
W. GILMORE SIMMS,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the Southern
District of New-York.
R. Craighead's Power Press,
112 Fulton Street.
T. B. Smith, Stereotyper,
216 William Street.

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ADVERTISEMENT.

[figure description] Advertisement.[end figure description]

I have but a single word to deliver in regard to this little
volume. I am conscious—in one at least of the stories in the
ensuing collection,—that entitled “Caloya, or the Loves of
the Driver,”—of a certain Flemish freedom of touch which, in
the minds of very fastidious persons, may subject me to a certain
degree of censure. The materials are coarse in character,
delineating the negro slave in his moments of excess, and
the Indian in his condition of deepest degradation. It has
not been without a purpose that I have so designed it, since,
I am free to believe that, I have succeeded in showing how
happily Virtue can be seen to triumph even in the worst estates,
and with what loveliness of aspect Purity can make
her progress, like the Lady in Milton's Comus, even through
the foul rabble of lewd spirits that hang about her path. I
flatter myself that, in this little story, I have wrought out
the most healthful and encouraging results of virtue, even
from an atmosphere wholly vicious and impure; and that
the Indian woman, Caloya, is, in moral respects, such a being
as might serve for the model of the purest lady in the land.

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[figure description] Blank Leaf.[end figure description]

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CONTENTS.

[figure description] Contents page.[end figure description]

PAGE


The Giant's Coffin; or, the Feud of Holt and Houston... 1

Sergeant Barnacle; or, the Raftsman of the Edisto... 44

Those Old Lunes! or, Which is the Madman?... 79

The Lazy Crow. A Story of the Cornfield... 99

Caloya; or, the Loves of the Driver... 127

Lucas de Ayllon... 196

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[figure description] Blank Leaf.[end figure description]

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Simms, William Gilmore, 1806-1870 [1845], The wigwam and the cabin, volume 2 (Wiley & Putnam, New York) [word count] [eaf371v2].
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