The Girl at the Halfway House 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Girl at the Halfway House, by 
Emerson Hough 
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Title: The Girl at the Halfway House 
Author: Emerson Hough 
Release Date: February 7, 2005 [eBook #14948] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL 
AT THE HALFWAY HOUSE*** 
E-text prepared by Al Haines 
 
THE GIRL AT THE HALFWAY HOUSE 
A Story of the Plains 
by
EMERSON HOUGH 
Author of The Covered Wagon, 54-40 or Fight, North of 36, etc. 
Grosset & Dunlap Publishers New York 
1900 
 
TO EDWARD KEMEYS, 
SOLDIER, HUNTER, AND SCULPTOR, 
WHO KNEW AND LOVED THE WEST, 
AND WHO HAS PRESERVED ITS SPIRIT IMPERISHABLY, 
THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED WITH MANY GRATEFUL 
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. 
 
CONTENTS 
BOOK I 
THE DAY OF WAR 
CHAPTER 
I. 
THE BRAZEN TONGUES II. THE PLAYERS OF THE GAME III. 
THE VICTORY 
BOOK II 
THE DAY OF THE BUFFALO
IV. BATTERSLEIGH OF THE RILE IRISH V. THE TURNING OF 
THE ROAD VI. EDWARD FRANKLIN, LAWYER VII. THE NEW 
WORLD VIII. THE BEGINNING IX. THE NEW MOVERS X. THE 
CHASE XI. THE BATTLE XII. WHAT THE HAND HAD TO DO 
XIII. PIE AND ETHICS XIV. THE FIRST BALL AT ELLISVILLE 
XV. ANOTHER DAY XVI. ANOTHER HOUR 
BOOK III 
THE DAY OF THE CATTLE 
XVII. ELLISVILLE THE RED XVIII. STILL A REBEL XIX. THAT 
WHICH HE WOULD XX. THE HALFWAY HOUSE XXI. THE 
ADVICE OF AUNT LUCY XXII. EN VOYAGE XXIII. MARY 
ELLEN XXIV. THE WAY OF A MAID XXV. BILL WATSON 
XXVI. IKE ANDERSON XXVII. THE BODY OF THE CRIME 
XXVIII. THE TRIAL XXIX. THE VERDICT 
BOOK IV 
THE DAY OF THE PLOUGH 
XXX. THE END OF THE TRAIL XXXI. THE SUCCESS OF 
BATTERSLEIGH XXXII. THE CALLING XXXIII. THE GREAT 
COLD XXXIV. THE ARTFULNESS OF SAM XXXV. THE HILL 
OF DREAMS XXXVI. AT THE GATEWAY 
 
BOOK I 
THE DAY OF WAR 
CHAPTER I 
THE BRAZEN TONGUES 
The band major was a poet. His name is lost to history, but it deserves a 
place among the titles of the great. Only in the soul of a poet, a great
man, could there have been conceived that thought by which the music 
of triumph should pass the little pinnacle of human exultation, and 
reach the higher plane of human sympathy. 
Forty black horses, keeping step; forty trumpeters, keeping unison; this 
procession, headed by a mere musician, who none the less was a poet, a 
great man, crossed the field of Louisburg as it lay dotted with the heaps 
of slain, and dotted also with the groups of those who sought their slain; 
crossed that field of woe, meeting only hatred and despair, yet leaving 
behind only tears and grief. Tears and grief, it is true, yet grief that 
knew of sympathy, and tears that recked of other tears. 
For a long time the lines of invasion had tightened about the old city of 
Louisburg, and Louisburg grew weaker in the coil. When the clank of 
the Southern cavalry advancing to the front rang in the streets, many 
were the men swept away with the troops asked to go forward to 
silence the eternally throbbing guns. Only the very old and the very 
young were left to care for the homes of Louisburg, and the number of 
these grew steadily less as the need increased for more material at the 
front. Then came the Southern infantry, lean, soft-stepping men from 
Georgia and the Carolinas, their long black hair low on their necks, 
their shoes but tattered bits of leather bound upon their feet, their 
blankets made of cotton, but their rifles shining and their drill 
perfection. The wheat lay green upon the fields and the odours of the 
blossoms of the peach trees hung heavy on the air; but there was none 
who thought of fruitage or of harvest. Out there in front, where the guns 
were pulsing, there went on that grimmer harvest with which the souls 
of all were intimately concerned. The boys who threw up their hats to 
greet the infantry were fewer than they had been before the blossoming 
of the peach. The war had grown less particular of its food. A boy 
could speed a bullet, or could stop one. There were yet the boys. 
Of all the old-time families of this ancient little city none held position 
more secure or more willingly accorded than the Fairfaxes and the 
Beauchamps. There had always been a Colonel Fairfax, the leader at 
the local bar, perhaps the representative in the Legislature, or in some    
    
		
	
	
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