Trois Héros de la colonie de Montréal

audiobook

Trois Héros de la colonie de Montréal

by Paul Dupuy

FR·~51 minutes·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total

I. ARRIVÉE DE MM. LE MAITRE ET VIGNAL EN CANADA.

4:04

II. MARTYRE DE M. LE MAITRE, 29 AOÛT 1661.

4:53

III. CIRCONSTANCES MERVEILLEUSES QUI SUIVIRENT LA MORT DE M. LE MAITRE.

6:39

IV. MARTYRE DE M. VIGNAL, 27 OCTOBRE 1661.

8:43

V. M. VIGNAL JUGÉ PAR SES CONTEMPORAINS.

2:38

I. DES QUALITÉS ET DU COURAGE DE LAMBERT CLOSSE.

4:10

II. RÉSULTATS DES EXERCICES QUE LE MAJOR FAISAIT FAIRE AUX SOLDATS.

5:50

III. COMBAT CONTRE LES IROQUOIS, 14 OCTOBRE 1652.

8:02

IV. LAMBERT CLOSSE REMPLACE M. DE MAISONNEUVE.—SON MARIAGE.

2:35

V. MORT DE LAMBERT CLOSSE, 16 FÉVRIER 1662.

3:20

Description

A desperate sea crossing in 1659 brings a small group of missionaries, priests, and devoted hospital sisters to the fledgling settlement of Montréal. Battling a sudden outbreak of plague aboard the ship, the sisters—led by the spirited Marie de l’Incarnation—tend the sick, their care turning the tide of mortality even as storms and a shortage of fresh water threaten the voyage. Their arrival is greeted with great joy by the colonists, who view the presence of clergy as a vital blessing for the fragile community.

Among the new arrivals, Father Le Maître stands out for his fierce determination to learn the Iroquois language and to reach out to Indigenous peoples. Tasked with managing the colony’s supplies, he uses his position to extend generosity to nearby tribes, hoping to build bridges of faith. His early days in New France set the stage for a life marked by compassion, perseverance, and an unwavering spiritual drive.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~51 minutes (49K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by La Bibliothèque Nationale du Québec, Renald Levesque and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

Release date

2004-08-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

PD

Paul Dupuy

1831–1891

Drawn to the early history of Montreal, this 19th-century French-language writer focused on vivid, reverent accounts of New France and its remembered heroes. His surviving books suggest a strong interest in religious and historical storytelling rooted in Canada's colonial past.

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