The book Novel 1972 - Callaghen (V5.0) was written by author L'amour, Louis Here you can read free online of Novel 1972 - Callaghen (V5.0) book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Novel 1972 - Callaghen (V5.0) a good or bad book?
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Overhead the stars hung bright in the black sky, and around them the mountain seemed to crouch, waiting.Callaghen stepped from the firelight into the darkness, and stood still, listening.Ridge moved close to him. “I surely heard something out yonder,” he said softly. “Heard it clear.”Callaghen heard nothing. Ridge was not a tenderfoot. If he believed he had heard something, that was the way to bet.They moved farther away from the fire, into the darkness. “Stay close, Ridge. I’ll scout around.” H...e hesitated, then added, “Keep an eye on Wylie and his partner. I don’t trust them.”“Heard you had a run-in with Wylie.”“So did Major Sykes. He’s got something going, but I don’t know what it is.”The night was cool. Away from the fire, he saw at once how good their choice for a camp had been. At a distance of perhaps sixty steps only a faint glow was visible, and as he moved away that diminished, then disappeared.The camp was in a cul-de-sac, a break that notched the wall of the mountain, and was screened by a slight bend in the notch as well as by rocks and brush.
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Callaghen is 34. The "Rebellion" was in 1848. This present time MUST not be later than1867. SO "Mrs. Murphy's Cabbage Patch" was 19 years before. Adding Calleghen's military and seafaring exploits he must be at least 38-40 There was NO need to purposely mis spell his name, the O'Callaghans in Ireland lost any relevance at least 1000 years before, and never were very large or strong. Astonishingly Lamour invents a load of "Irish " names that are only gibberish. MacBrody seems to know everything to do with O'Callaghan History for hundreds of years.
Guest11 months ago
The Irish rebellion Lamour is talking about is almost completely unknown. It was only in a small country village, against 47 Constabulary. They ran away with only 2 killed So that this was Callaghen's reason for running is ludicrous. No one was hunting for him in Ireland.
Lamour makes it sound as if there were pitched battles with hundreds or thousands of casualties . Such nonsense.
I was born and grew up in Dublin and I'd never heard of it so Iooked it up just now on Wiki.
To illustrate it's importance, It's been called "The Battle of Widow Murphy's Cabbage Patch".
Guest11 months ago
He wouldn't/couldn't join the "French Army" It would have had to have been the French Foreign Legion. And the minimum enlistment period was 5 years. So with all his wanderings a round the world by land and sea he must be now about 40 years old, but is being written as a young man. In those days 40 was regarded as late middle aged.
Guest11 months ago
Lamour makes him say he'd "fled" the country on the first boat he could get. That meant he's have to go to Dublin, the HEADQUARTERS of the "enemy" stay there for weeks maybe before a ship to Canada would, be leaving. In 848, passage anywhere was hard to get, because of the over a million starvation deaths from the Potato blight still ongoing.
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