
[Illustration: "Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock, ain't you got dat cooked?"]
CHAPTER II. - OTHER CHARACTERS.
CHAPTER III. - OONOMOO AND THE SHAWNEES.
CHAPTER IV. - THE YOUNG LIEUTENANT AND CATO.
CHAPTER V. - THE HOME OF THE HURON.
CHAPTER VI. - ADVENTURES ON THE WAY.
CHAPTER VII. - THE PLAN FOR THE RESCUE.
CHAPTER VIII. - THE EXPLOIT OF HANS VANDERBUM.
CHAPTER IX. - A NEW DANGER.
CHAPTER X. - CONCLUSION.
Deep in the Ohio woodlands, where the Miami River winds through a sea of emerald spring, a small Indian village awakens beneath a sky so blue it seems Italian. The lodges, simple cones of bark and skin, puff thin spirals of smoke as dawn birds trill and eagles circle the distant peaks. This tranquil world, full of life and the scent of fresh dew, is framed by golden sunlight and shadowed valleys, setting a vivid stage for the story’s humor and heart.
At the centre of this scene lies Hans Vanderbum, a rotund Dutch trader whose marriage to a Shawnee widow has left him stranded between two cultures. His lazy mornings in the warm wigwam are constantly interrupted by the lively antics of his mixed‑heritage sons and the sharp rebukes of their mother, Keewaygooshturkumkankangewock. Vanderbum’s blustery attempts to impose his will—“Stop that noise!”—only highlight his baffling indifference and the gentle chaos of frontier family life.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (222K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-10-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1916
A remarkably prolific 19th-century writer, he turned frontier adventure, history, and biography into fast-moving reading for generations of young Americans. Before becoming known for hundreds of stories and articles, he also worked as a teacher, school administrator, and journalist.
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by Edward Sylvester Ellis

by Edward Sylvester Ellis

by Edward Sylvester Ellis

by Edward Sylvester Ellis

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by Edward Sylvester Ellis

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by Edward Sylvester Ellis