Des rails sur la Prairie

Des rails sur la Prairie is a Lucky Luke comic written by Goscinny and Morris. It is the ninth album in the series and the first on which Goscinny worked. It is also the first in which Lucky Luke, moving away towards the setting sun at the last box, sings his song "I'm a poor lonesome cowboy ..." The comic was printed by Dupuis in 1957 and in English by Cinebook in 2011 as Rails on the Prairie.

Des rails sur la Prairie
(Rails on the Prairie)
Cover of the Belgian edition
Date1957
SeriesLucky Luke
PublisherDupuis
Creative team
WritersGoscinny
Morris
ArtistsMorris
Original publication
Date of publication1957
LanguageFrench
Chronology
Preceded byLucky Luke contre Phil Defer (1956)
Followed byAlerte aux Pieds Bleus (1958)

Synopsis

Lucky Luke must protect the construction of the railway to the West against the threats of a crooked shareholder of the stagecoaches who sees in the arrival of the train the end of his business.

The story is inspired by the construction of the line from Omaha to Sacramento, decided in 1862 during the American Civil War, but started only in 1865. The Central Pacific started from Sacramento and headed east, and the Union Pacific started from Omaha and went west, the junction was made at Promontory Summit in May 1869.

Characters

  • Yellow Foot Indians
    • Crouching Bison: Chief of the tribe, after the failure of the attack on the train, he expels the men of Black Wilson by threatening them to scalp them if he sees them again.
    • Terrible Vulture: Main deputy of Crouching Bison, he leads the attack of the tribe against the train and realizes that "Fire horse too fast".
  • The villains
    • Harry: Mayor of Nothing City, owner of the saloon and cattle breeder, under the influence of Black Wilson he opposed the railroad; he will change his attitude when the works allow the discovery of an oil deposit.
    • Honest Smith: Dead Ox Gulch judge convinces Lucky Luke to defend the railway workers.
    • Black Wilson: Owner of stagecoach companies, he does not want the railway to develop.
gollark: Do you actually spend enough time admiring your house that the substantially greater cost would be any use?
gollark: I see.
gollark: Unfortunately, shipping container houses have various issues.
gollark: I would much prefer a giant plastic/metal cuboid with some holes in it over the bespoke designs of today if it was fairly modular.
gollark: Even if it costs half as much and you can actually replace bits?

References


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