
In the quiet stillness of a California mission in 1855, Padre Ignacio watches the endless blue of the Pacific from his garden cloister, the scent of oleanders and blooming flowers filling the air. His heart aches for distant Paris and Seville, and the absent sail on the horizon becomes a symbol of the world he has left behind. As the evening bells toll, the routine of vespers drifts over the valley, reaching the Padre and the scattered community of adobe homes, cattle ranchers, and hopeful townsfolk.
A lone youth arrives from the south, embodying the temptation that pulls at Ignacio’s yearning for the old world. Their brief encounter sets the priest on a path of introspection, where music, memory, and faith intertwine. With his organist Felipe ready to rehearse the familiar chant, Ignacio finds a small, comforting rhythm amid the vast, untamed landscape, hinting at the choices that will shape his life in this frontier outpost.
Language
en
Duration
~55 minutes (52K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Bill Brewer, and David Widger
Release date
1998-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1860–1938
Best known for helping define the Western with The Virginian, this American writer brought the landscapes and manners of the frontier to a wide audience. He was also a musician, essayist, and observer of American life whose work reached far beyond a single famous novel.
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