
audiobook
In the waning years of the seventeenth century, a small New England settlement clings to the edge of a wild, untamed forest. The townsfolk have turned ordinary homes into brick‑walled garrisons, their windows narrow slits and doors barely wide enough for a single figure. Nights are restless, filled with the crack of musket fire at phantom silhouettes and the constant hum of watchmen’s vigilance. This atmosphere of uneasy safety provides a vivid backdrop for life on the frontier, where even routine tasks like brick‑making demand a convoy of soldiers.
Amid this tension, two young cousins—Joseph and Mary—find their ordinary world upended when a sudden raid snatches them from the fortified house. Their desperate struggle to survive in unfamiliar, hostile terrain introduces the raw humanity of captivity and the fragile bonds of family. The narrative follows their early ordeal, offering a glimpse into the harsh realities faced by children caught in the crossfire of a colonial war.
Language
en
Duration
~16 minutes (15K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Anthony J. Adam, and David Widger
Release date
1997-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1807–1892
A leading 19th-century American poet, he brought warmth, plainspoken feeling, and strong moral conviction to both his verse and public life. His work is especially remembered for its New England settings and for poems that stood firmly against slavery.
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