
audiobook
by William Henry Giles Kingston
Chapter One. - The Grateful Indian, A Tale of Rupert’s Land. By William H.G. Kingston.
Chapter Two. - The Shepherd Lord, by Julia Corner, Author of the “Historical Library,” etcetera.
Chapter Three. - The Story of Nelson, by W.H.G. Kingston.
Chapter Four. - An Adventure on the Black Mountain, by Frances M. Wilbraham.
Chapter Five. - The Boatswain’s Son: A Tale of the Sea, by William H.G. Kingston.
Chapter Six. - Voices of the Night. - Prelude.
Chapter Seven. - Earlier Poems.
Chapter Eight. - Translations. - King Christian. A National Song of Denmark. From the Danish of Johannes Evald.
A seasoned settler recounts his youth on the frontier of Rupert’s Land, painting a vivid picture of the vast, mist‑kissed prairies and the tangled tapestry of Indigenous peoples who call it home. He describes the Crees, Ojibways, Sioux and countless other nations, their customs, their conflicts, and the uneasy coexistence with the mixed‑heritage families that have sprung up around the early trading posts. The narrative is steeped in the quiet rhythm of daily life—building cabins, planting fields, and watching the long, bright days of an Indian summer give way to crisp, frosty evenings.
All of a sudden, the calm is shattered by the desperate rush of a young Ojibwe warrior, pursued by hostile hunters. He bursts into the settlers’ cabin, pleading for sanctuary as his pursuers close in, weapons glinting in the fading light. The settlers must decide whether to offer protection or face the looming threat, setting the stage for a tense encounter that reveals both courage and cultural clash on the edge of the wilderness.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (383K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2008-02-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1814–1880
Best known for lively sea stories and adventure tales, this Victorian writer helped shape generations of young readers' taste for travel, danger, and moral courage. His books drew on a life that stretched between London and Portugal, giving his fiction an outward-looking, international feel.
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