
By Charles Franklin Carter - Author of “The Missions of Nueva California" and “Some By-ways of California” - San Francisco - Copyright 1917, by Paul Elder and Company
Foreword
The Indian Sibyl’s Prophecy
The Flight of Padre Peyri
Father Zalvidea’s Money
La Beata
Juana
Father Uria’s Saints
Pomponio
In this modest collection, six of the seven tales draw on real events from early California, offering a window into the daily lives of the native peoples and the Spanish missionaries who first settled the region. The stories unfold against the stark beauty of the Mojave desert, where ruined lakes shimmer like mirages and solitary hills overlook endless plains. With a gentle narrative voice, the author paints vivid scenes of adobe missions, humble wickiups, and the fragile balance between cultures.
The opening story, “The Indian Sibyl’s Prophecy,” introduces a lone native dwelling perched on an isolated rise, where a mysterious seer foretells the fate of her people amid the changing landscape. As the desert’s colors shift from dawn to moonlit night, the tale captures both the harshness and the hidden splendor of a world on the brink of transformation. Listeners will be drawn into a quietly powerful portrait of a vanished era, where history and imagination intertwine.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (251K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Schwann, and David Widger
Release date
2004-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1890–1957
Best known for stories set around California’s early missions, this American writer brought the state’s Spanish and Indigenous past to life for general readers. His books blend local history, landscape, and storytelling in a way that still feels vivid and approachable.
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