
The story opens on a quiet lakeside camp on the north shore of Michigan, where the sturdy bark of pine trees frames a makeshift settlement of canvas tents, a sand‑floor kitchen, and a loyal collie named Jess. Brown, a practical Canadian Irishman, docks his boat and is greeted by the strange pair of a half‑French, half‑Indian widow and her mud‑covered four‑year‑old son, refugees of a tragic accident. Their unexpected arrival stirs the uneasy hospitality of Frank Puttany, a German‑accented guide who speaks a mix of languages the locals call a ‘cursed patois.’ As the men argue over space and propriety, the tension between rugged frontier life and the fragile needs of the newcomers becomes palpable.
The narrative balances humor and hardship, portraying the clash of cultures—Irish, German, French‑Indian, and the rough‑hewn American guides—through witty dialogue and vivid descriptions of camp life. Listeners will be drawn into the daily rhythms of fishing, cooking over a stove, and the quiet moments when the lake’s mist hides secrets. Yet beneath the banter lies a deeper question of responsibility: how far will these strangers go to protect a widow and child left adrift on the frontier?
Full title
The Cursed Patois From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899
Language
en
Duration
~27 minutes (25K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2007-10-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1847–1902
A popular American novelist and short-story writer of the late 19th century, she became especially known for vivid historical fiction set in early North America. Her work blends careful research with lively storytelling, bringing frontier settlements and French colonial life into sharp focus.
View all books