Alone in an Untamed Land : the "Filles du Roi" Diary of Hélène St. Onge / Maxine Trottier.
Par : Trottier, Maxine.
Collection : Dear Canada. Éditeur : Markham, ON : Scholastic Canada, 2003Édition : 1st ed.Description :215 p. : ill., maps ; 20 cm.ISBN : 9780439989695 (hbk).Sujet(s) : Frontier and pioneer life -- Québec (Province) -- Fiction | Marriage customs and rites -- Québec (Province) -- Fiction | Diaries -- Fiction | Canada -- History -- To 1763 (New France) -- Juvenile fiction | Canada -- History -- To 1763 (New France) -- Fiction | Montréal (Quebec) -- History -- 17th century -- FictionRessources en ligne : Publisher's Website. | Check the Ottawa Public Library (OPL). Résumé : ''In 1666, thirteen-year-old Hélène chronicles her journey from France to Montréal, New France, and her life in the new country as a ''fille à marier'' or marriageable girl. ''Le 22 juin 1666, I stood on the deck and watched France disappear in the mist. Catherine stayed inside the ship, below, the captain calls it. But I had to watch. I may never see France again. I wept. My cheeks were damp with the mist and so I think that no one saw. I did not care if they did. I only wished to be alone inside myself and let the image of France burn into my mind. Then I heard a sound. It was the Indian girl. She had come up on deck and now stood at the ship's rail near me. Her cheeks were as wet with tears as mine were. There was a difference, I soon learned from her. My tears were of loss, born from the idea of leaving France. Hers were tears of joy. ''I am going home,'' she said.'' (Book Cover)Type de document | Site actuel | Collection | Cote | Numéro de copie | Statut | Notes | Date d'échéance | Code à barres |
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Livres | CR Julien-Couture RC (Learning) Fiction | Fiction | REA DEA 2 (Parcourir l'étagère) | 1 | Disponible | Listed in the L/R section. | A024468 |
''In 1666, thirteen-year-old Hélène chronicles her journey from France to Montréal, New France, and her life in the new country as a ''fille à marier'' or marriageable girl. ''Le 22 juin 1666, I stood on the deck and watched France disappear in the mist. Catherine stayed inside the ship, below, the captain calls it. But I had to watch. I may never see France again. I wept. My cheeks were damp with the mist and so I think that no one saw. I did not care if they did. I only wished to be alone inside myself and let the image of France burn into my mind. Then I heard a sound. It was the Indian girl. She had come up on deck and now stood at the ship's rail near me. Her cheeks were as wet with tears as mine were. There was a difference, I soon learned from her. My tears were of loss, born from the idea of leaving France. Hers were tears of joy. ''I am going home,'' she said.'' (Book Cover)
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