Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Americas: Vol. XXX. 1876–79.
Grand Pré
By Sarah D. ClarkG
Far up the deep-cut dikes thy waves roll on,
Free, as a hundred years ago to-day,
They climb the slopes of rocky Blomidon.
Look out like exiles o’er a foreign sea,
Their haggard fronts grown gray on alien soil,
Far from the province of fair Lombardy.
I close my eyes to see the vision pass,
As one shuts out the daylight with his hand,
To view the pictures in a magic glass.
With meadows rich in flocks and plenteous grain,
Whose peasants knelt beside each vine-clad door,
As the sweet Angelus rose o’er the plain.
Their thrifty life a prospering fame did bring;
They held the reins o’er peaceful field and flood,
Lords of their lands, and rivals of a king.
The poet’s song reclaims their scattered fold;
Blown in melodious notes to every shore,
The story of their mournful fate is told.
Two lovers from a shadowy realm are seen,
A fair, immortal picture of the past,
The forms of Gabriel and Evangeline.
Full many a pilgrim as the years roll on,
While the lone bittern pauses on the wing,
Above the crest of rocky Blomidon.
The twilight deepens, and the time is brief,
I bid farewell to beautiful Grand Pré,
While yet on summer’s heart bloom flower and leaf.