Beaubassin

 

 

      Green grows the grass on the Beaubassin's gentle slopes,
      The distant cows, heavy with milk, mooing.
      For fisherman, farmer, baker, blacksmith and miller,
      Beaubassin's life was quiet, kind and gentle.
      A ship entering the harbour, broke the stillness of the day.
      St. George's emblem on mast top flying,
      Bodes ill for all, for only trouble this lot could bring us.
      Fly Acadie fly, the darkness is coming!

      The cannon roars, again and again,
      The countryside quiet viciously broken.
      Redcoats slowly advancing,
      Killing intent on their faces.
      Flames rising against the suns setting,
      Le Loutre burning it all.
      Years of effort, generation passed forward,
      Destroyed black in a handful of minutes.

      We flee into the night, half naked
      Carrying only what we can handle.
      Amidst cannon, lost children, fire, and chaos,
      Will Beausejour welcome us all?
      The English victors now celebrate.
      Our lands and herds are now George's forever!
      Under the cross of St. Andrew, will they prosper?

      Acadie is now homeless!
      Far flung across the world's lands.
      Someday we will be back together,
      Brother and sister restored to the family.
      The blood in our veins, will match the stains
      On the ground, where lives were taken.

      Imprisonment, deportation or death,
      For many there is not a difference.
      Children left orphans, parents gone forever.
      Destitute, desperate, hungry and cold,
      The young cry day and night for succor.

      Yellowed starred blue, white and red,
      Flags fly at the border now welcome Acadie
      Come home, to celebrate four hundred
      Your old lands now cry out in gladness.

      The spilt blood on the ground is now long gone
      As you walk on the gentle grass slopes
      The cows distant mooing is heard, once again

      The future is bright with promise, Acadie rises again!
      God bless you, dear Acadie forever;

      Amen and Amen and Amen

 

       Author : James Perry of Prince Edward Island ;

        Thank you for given me permission to add it
        to my website .. THANKS !

 

 

 

© Rick Arsenault - My Acadian History
2004 - Present