THE personality and achievement of Daulac des Ormeaux make him the most chivalrous figure in Canadian history. There is a quieter and more insistent heroism in the lives and d**hs of such men as Bréboef and La Salle. But the “forlorn hope” of the little band of the Long Sault has no parallel in our New-World annals.
This play, also, endeavors to depict the ultimate triumph of fate of an unsuspecting innocence over the wiles and plots of a clever and scheming malice, and to show that the final heroic deed was but the natural outcome of an unusually noble nature in the personality of Daulac.
DRAMATIS PERSONÆ.
DAULAC, the Hero of the Long Sault.
DESJARDINS, a scheming notary.
THE SIEUR D'ELENE, uncle to Daulac.
MAISONNEUEVE, Governor of Montreal.
FILLET, a French innkeeper.
A King's Officer.
PORNAC, servant to Daulac.
PIOTR, servant to Desjardins.
Seventeen Young Men of Montreal.
HELÈNE, niece to D'Elene.
FANCHON, her maid.
A Mother Superior.
Nuns, women and girls.
Men, old and young; priests, soldiers, Indians and servants.