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The Song of Three Friends

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Epic poem about mountain men explorers in the American West.

Excerpt from The Song of Three Friends
The following narrative, though complete in itself, is designed to be the first piece in a cycle of poems dealing with the fur trade period of the Trans-Missouri region. "The Song of Hugh Glass," which was published in the fall of 1915, is the second in the series.
The four decades during which the fur trade flourished west of the Missouri River may be regarded as a typical heroic period, differing in no essential from the many other great heroic periods that have made glorious the story of the Aryan migration. Jane Harrison says that heroic characters do not arise from any peculiarity of race or even of geographical surroundings; but that, given certain social conditions, they may and do appear anywhere and at any time. The heroic spirit, as seen in heroic poetry, we are told, is the outcome of a society cut loose from its roots, of a time of migrations, of the shifting of populations.

126 pages, Unbound

First published September 1, 2008

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About the author

John G. Neihardt

60 books49 followers
John Gneisenau Neihardt

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1,093 reviews
April 29, 2017
I did not really understand what was happening at the beginning of this story. It has taken me forever to read this (still reading the rest of the book, it is three 'stories'). Also I like poetry but not sure I liked the lyrical story poetry. Or maybe it was the subject matter. The story was a bit depressing.
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