Evangeline eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 86 pages of information about Evangeline.
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Evangeline eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 86 pages of information about Evangeline.

“All that vast bay, around which but lately an industrious people worked like a swarm of bees, was now deserted.  In the silent village, where the doors swung idly in the wind, nothing was heard but the tramp of soldiery and the lowing of cattle, wandering anxiously around the stables as if looking for their masters....The total amount of live-stock owned by the Acadians at the time of the deportation has been variously estimated by different historians, or to speak more correctly, very few have paid any attention to this subject....Rameau, who has made a much deeper study than any other historian of the Acadians, sets the total at 130,000, comprising horned cattle, horses, sheep, and pigs.”

Edouard Richard quotes the following from two contemporaries of the exiled Acadians.  “The Acadians were the most innocent and virtuous people I have ever known or read of in any history.  They lived in a state of perfect equality, without distinction of rank in society.  The title of ‘Mister’ was unknown among them.  Knowing nothing of luxury, or even the conveniences of life, they were content with a simple manner of living, which they easily compassed by the tillage of their lands.  Very little ambition or avarice was to be seen among them; they anticipated each other’s wants by kindly liberality; they demanded no interest for loans of money or other property.  They were humane and hospitable to strangers, and very liberal toward those who embraced their religion.  They were very remarkable for their inviolable purity of morals.  If any disputes arose in their transactions, they always submitted to the decision of an arbitrator, and their final appeal was to their priest.”—­Moses de les Derniers.

“Young men were not encouraged to marry unless the young girl could weave a piece of cloth, and the young man make a pair of wheels.  These accomplishments were deemed essential for their marriage settlement, and they hardly needed anything else; for every time there was a wedding the whole village contributed to set up the newly married couple.  They built a house for them, and cleared enough land for their immediate needs; they gave them live stock and poultry; and nature, seconded by their own labor, soon put them in a position to help others.”—­Brook Watson.

[Illustration:  Village of Grand Pre.  Rivers Gaspereau and Avon in the distance.]

EVANGELINE.

Prelude.

This is the forest primeval.  The murmuring pines and the hemlocks,
Bearded with moss, and in garments green, indistinct in the twilight,
Stand like Druids of eld, with voices sad and prophetic,
Stand like harpers hoar, with beards that rest on their bosoms. 
Loud from its rocky caverns, the deep-voiced neighboring ocean 5
Speaks, and in accents disconsolate answers the wail of the forest.

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Project Gutenberg
Evangeline from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.