Home on the Double Bayou : : Memories of an East Texas Ranch / / Ralph Semmes Jackson.

Once again, through a boy’s eyes, Ralph Jackson sees a winter sky darkened with geese and ducks, a kitchen stove glowing with cheerful warmth, Aunt May strolling in her flower garden, moonlight filtering through treetops to cast patches of white light on a sandy woodland road. Again he catches odors...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter University of Texas Press Complete eBook-Package Pre-2000
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Place / Publishing House:Austin : : University of Texas Press, , [2021]
©1961
Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Series:Personal Narratives of the West
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (156 p.)
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Description
Other title:Frontmatter --
FOREWORD --
CONTENTS --
PHOTOGRAPHS --
MAPS --
Introduction --
HOME ON THE DOUBLE BAYOU --
From Ireland to Texas --
Grandpa and Grandma Jackson, Pioneers --
Law and Order on Double Bayou --
Grandpa Jackson's Eleven Children --
From Scotland to Texas --
The 1915 Hurricane --
Our Ranch Home --
Christmas on the Ranch --
Hog-Killing Time --
Blue Northers --
Winter Was for Hunting --
Wolves in the Herd --
Gators --
Spring Roundup --
Our Railroad --
The Woods in Springtime --
Summer Was for Fishing --
Tumblebug Time --
Goats—and So Forth --
Across the Bayou --
Sugar-Cane Mill --
Our Old Barn --
Schoolin' --
The Store --
The Burying-Ground
Summary:Once again, through a boy’s eyes, Ralph Jackson sees a winter sky darkened with geese and ducks, a kitchen stove glowing with cheerful warmth, Aunt May strolling in her flower garden, moonlight filtering through treetops to cast patches of white light on a sandy woodland road. Again he catches odors once so familiar: of a mysterious attic, of burning salt grass in late summer, of mountain streams with their fresh green smell, of dark-roast coffee and of slab bacon sizzling in the pan. He hears again a panther’s scream from the darkness surrounding a campfire, the scampering of mice across the barnloft floor, the sigh of a felled pine tree changing to a crashing roar as it meets the ground, the sounds of a meal in preparation, the hum of a mosquito swarm rising from the marshes. He remembers the taste of barbecued goat, the sweet sharpness of peppermint candy, the flavor of gumdrops from the country store—where, as showcase neighbors of cigars and chewing tobacco, they acquired a faint tobacco taste. And he feels again the welcome shock of frigid spring water on a hot perspiring body, the pleasant sensation of sand between his toes, the breathtaking exhilaration of swinging on a sapling top. The joy of childhood on an East Texas ranch is the subject of this book: exciting events like the arrival of the first norther of the season, swimming with alligators, hogkilling, building tree houses, roundup, hunting and fishing, calf-riding, fording strange streams. Interspersed among these episodes are others of darker mood: a smallpox epidemic, the burning of the ranch house, wolves attacking the cattle. Jackson’s characters come alive. Scenes are vivid; moods are various and enveloping. The author has told the delightful story of his boyhood from a highly personal yet universal perspective, and in doing so he has presented a picture of a region of the state previously largely neglected in Texas literature.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780292757431
9783110745351
DOI:10.7560/732674
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Ralph Semmes Jackson.