The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Habitant and Other French-Canadian Poems by William Henry Drummond Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the header without written permission. Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. **Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** **eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** *****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** Title: The Habitant and Other French-Canadian Poems Author: William Henry Drummond Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9801] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on October 18, 2003] Edition: 10 Language: French and English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HABITANT AND OTHERS *** Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Keren Vergon, Andrew Sly and PG Distributed Proofreaders THE HABITANT AND OTHER FRENCH-CANADIAN POEMS By William Henry Drummond, M.D. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY Louis Frechette AND WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY Frederick Simpson Coburn TO MY DEAR FRIEND AND FORMER TEACHER GEORGE MURRAY, ESQ., B.A., A.K.C., F.R.S.C. THESE VERSES ARE DEDICATED WITH SINCERE ADMIRATION AND RESPECT INTRODUCTION On me demande, pour ce charmant volume, un mot de préface en français; le voici: Quand, en 1863, je publiai mon premier recueil de poésies--écrites au collège, pour la plupart,--le grand poète américain Longfellow eut la flatteuse bienveillance de m'appeler _The pathfinder of a new land of song_. Avec mille fois plus de raison puis-je aujourd'hui passer le compliment à mon sympathique confrère et ami, l'auteur de ce livre; car, si jamais quelqu'un, chez nous, a mérité le titre de _pathfinder of a new land of song_, c'est assurément lui. Non seulement il a découvert le champ, la clairière, la vallée fertile et encore inexplorée; il en a fait l'exploitation à sa manière, avec des outils et des moyens de son invention; et, fier de sa conquête, il laisse, de son épaule robuste, tomber à nos pieds le fruit de son travail, la gerbe plantureuse aux ors vierges, à l'arôme sauvage, aux savoureuses promesses, toute fraîche et toute crissante dans sa rusticité saine. N'est-elle pas, en effet, d'une originalité peu commune, l'idée de prendre un pauvre illettré, de le présenter comme un type national à part, de lui mettre aux lèvres une langue qui n'est pas la sienne et qu'il ne connaît qu' à demi; d'en faire en même temps un personnage bon, doux, aimable, honnête, intelligent et droit, l'esprit en éveil, le coeur plein d'une poésie native stimulant son patriotisme, jetant un rayon lumineux dans son modeste intérieur, berçant ses heures rêveuses de souvenirs lointains et mélancoliques? Et cela sans que jamais, dans ce portrait d'un nouveau genre, le plus subtil des critiques puisse surprendre nulle part le coup de crayon de la caricature! Dans ses inimitables contes villageois, George Sand a peint les paysans du Berry sous des dehors très intéressants. Elle nous les montre même d'un sentiment très affiné dans leur simplicité naïve et leur cordiale bonhomie. En somme, elle en fait des natures, des tempéraments, quelque chose de typique, en même temps qu' harmonieux de teinte et de forme. Mais George Sand faisait parler ses personnages dans la langue du pays, dans la langue de la chaumière, dans leur propre dialecte, enfin. Elle n'avait, pour ainsi dire, qu' à faire pénétrer le souffle de son talent sous le réseau de la phrase, pour animer celle-ci d'un reflet de lyrisme ou d'une vibration attendrie. La tâche abordée par M. Drummond présentait un caractère beaucoup plus difficile. Ici, le poète avait bien, il est vrai, le milieu à saisir, placé, droit en face de son objectif. Il était assez familier avec ses acteurs pour les grouper avantageusement, en ménageant les effets d'ombres et de lumière. Il est naturellement assez artiste pour ne rien négliger de ce qui ajoute du pittoresque à la pose; surtout, il connaissait à fond le type à reproduire, ses moeurs, ses passions, ses sentiments, ses penchants, ses superstitions et ses faiblesses. Mais comment, sans tomber dans la charge ou la bouffonnerie, faire parler systématiquement à ses personnages une langue étrangère, forcément incorrecte dans la bouche de quelqu'un qui l'a apprise par oreille, sans savoir lire même dans sa propre langue? La tentative était hardie; mais on sait que le succès a un faible pour les audacieux. Dans son étude des Canadiens-français, M. Drummond a trouvé le moyen d'éviter un écueil qui aurait semblé inévitable pour tout autre que pour lui. Il est resté vrai, sans tomber dans la vulgarité, et piquant sans verser dans le grotesque. Qu'il mette en scène le gros fermier fier de son bien ou de ses filles à marier, le vieux médecin de campagne ne comptant plus ses états de service, le jeune amoureux qui rêve au clair de la lune, le vieillard qui repasse en sa mémoire la longue suite des jours révolus, le conteur de légendes, l'aventurier des "pays d'en haut," et même le Canadien exilé--le _Canadien errant_, comme dit la chanson populaire--qui croit toujours entendre résonner à son oreille le vague tintement des cloches de son village; que le récit soit plaisant ou pathétique, jamais la note ne sonne faux, jamais la bizarrerie ne dégénère en puérilité burlesque. C'est là un tour de force comme il ne s'en fait pas souvent, et c'est avec enthousiasme que je tends la main à M. Drummond pour le féliciter de l'avoir accompli. Il a véritablement fait là oeuvre de poète et d'artiste. J'ajouterai qu'il a fait aussi oeuvre de bon citoyen. Car le jour sous lequel il présente mes compatriotes illettrés ne peut manquer de valoir à ceux-ci--et partant à tout le reste de la nationalité--un accroissement désirable dans l'estime de nos compatriotes de langue anglaise, qui n'ont pas été à même de les étudier d'aussi près que M. Drummond. La peinture qu'en fait le poète est on ne peut plus sympathique et juste; et de semblables procédés ne peuvent que cimenter l'union de coeur et d'esprit qui doit exister entre toutes les fractions qui composent la grande famille canadienne appelée à vivre et à prospérer sous la même loi et le même drapeau. En lisant les vers de M. Drummond, le Canadien-français sent que c'est là l'expression d'une âme amie; et, à ce compte, je dois à l'auteur plus que mes bravos, je lui dois en même temps un chaleureux merci. LOUIS FRÉCHETTE. MONTRÉAL, 13 octobre 1897. PREFACE In presenting to the public "The Habitant and other French-Canadian Poems," I feel that my friends who are already, more or less, familiar with the work, understand that I have not written the verses as examples of a dialect, or with any thought of ridicule. Having lived, practically, all my life, side by side with the French-Canadian people, I have grown to admire and love them, and I have felt that while many of the English-speaking public know perhaps as well as myself the French-Canadian of the cities, yet they have had little opportunity of becoming acquainted with the habitant, therefore I have endeavored to paint a few types, and in doing this, it has seemed to me that I could best attain the object in view by having my friends tell their own tales in their own way, as they would relate them to English-speaking auditors not conversant with the French tongue. My good friend, Dr. Louis Frechette, Poet Laureate, has as a French-Canadian, kindly written an "Introductory" in his own graceful language, and I have to thank him above all for his recognition of the spirit which has actuated me in writing "dialect" verse. To Mr. F. S. Coburn, the artist, also, I am deeply indebted for the faithful manner in which he has interpreted the different characters and scenes contained in this volume. All the pictures have been sketched from nature or life, and the keenest critic will agree with me, that Mr. Coburn's illustrations are most typical, both of the people and the soil. WILLIAM HENRY DRUMMOND. CONTENTS. DE HABITANT THE WRECK OF THE "JULIE PLANTE" LE VIEUX TEMPS DE PAPINEAU GUN HOW BATEESE CAME HOME DE NICE LEETLE CANADIENNE 'POLEON DORÉ DE NOTAIRE PUBLIQUE MAXIME LABELLE MEMORIES PHIL-O-RUM JUNEAU DE BELL OF ST. MICHEL PELANG MON CHOUAL "CASTOR" OLE TAM ON BORD-A PLOUFFE THE GRAND SEIGNEUR M'SIEU SMIT' WHEN ALBANI SANG DE CAMP ON DE "CHEVAL GRIS" DE STOVE PIPE HOLE DE SNOWBIRD THE HABITANT'S JUBILEE ODE OLE DOCTEUR FISET DE HABITANT. De place I get born, me, is up on de reever Near foot of de rapide dat's call Cheval Blanc Beeg mountain behin' it, so high you can't climb it An' whole place she's mebbe two honder arpent. De fader of me, he was habitant farmer, Ma gran' fader too, an' hees fader also, Dey don't mak' no monee, but dat isn't fonny For it's not easy get ev'ryt'ing, you mus' know-- All de sam' dere is somet'ing dey got ev'ryboddy, Dat's plaintee good healt', wat de monee can't geev, So I'm workin' away dere, an' happy for stay dere On farm by de reever, so long I was leev. O! dat was de place w'en de spring tam she's comin', W'en snow go away, an' de sky is all blue-- W'en ice lef' de water, an' sun is get hotter An' back on de medder is sing de gou-glou-- W'en small sheep is firs' comin' out on de pasture, Deir nice leetle tail stickin' up on deir back, Dey ronne wit' deir moder, an' play wit' each oder An' jomp all de tam jus' de sam' dey was crack-- An' ole cow also, she's glad winter is over, So she kick herse'f up, an' start off on de race Wit' de two-year-ole heifer, dat's purty soon lef' her, W'y ev'ryt'ing's crazee all over de place! An' down on de reever de wil' duck is quackin' Along by de shore leetle san'piper ronne-- De bullfrog he's gr-rompin' an' doré is jompin' Dey all got deir own way for mak' it de fonne. But spring's in beeg hurry, an' don't stay long wit' us An' firs' t'ing we know, she go off till nex' year, Den bee commence hummin', for summer is comin' An' purty soon corn's gettin' ripe on de ear. Dat's very nice tam for wake up on de morning An' lissen de rossignol sing ev'ry place, Feel sout' win' a-blowin' see clover a-growin' An' all de worl' laughin' itself on de face. Mos' ev'ry day raf' it is pass on de rapide De voyageurs singin' some ole chanson 'Bout girl down de reever--too bad dey mus' leave her, But comin' back soon' wit' beaucoup d'argent. An' den w'en de fall an' de winter come roun' us An' bird of de summer is all fly away, W'en mebbe she's snowin' an' nort' win' is blowin' An' night is mos' t'ree tam so long as de day. You t'ink it was bodder de habitant farmer? Not at all--he is happy an' feel satisfy, An' cole may las' good w'ile, so long as de wood-pile Is ready for burn on de stove by an' bye. W'en I got plaintee hay put away on de stable So de sheep an' de cow, dey got no chance to freeze, An' de hen all togedder--I don't min' de wedder-- De nort' win' may blow jus' so moche as she please. An' some cole winter night how I wish you can see us, W'en I smoke on de pipe, an' de ole woman sew By de stove of T'ree Reever--ma wife's fader geev her On day we get marry, dat's long tam ago-- De boy an' de girl, dey was readin' it's lesson, De cat on de corner she's bite heem de pup, Ole "Carleau" he's snorin' an' beeg stove is roarin' So loud dat I'm scare purty soon she bus' up. Philomene--dat's de oldes'--is sit on de winder An' kip jus' so quiet lak wan leetle mouse, She say de more finer moon never was shiner-- Very fonny, for moon isn't dat side de house. But purty soon den, we hear foot on de outside, An' some wan is place it hees han' on de latch, Dat's Isidore Goulay, las' fall on de Brulé He's tak' it firs' prize on de grand ploughin' match. Ha! ha! Philomene!--dat was smart trick you play us Come help de young feller tak' snow from hees neck, Dere's not'ing for hinder you come off de winder W'en moon you was look for is come, I expec'-- Isidore, he is tole us de news on de parish 'Bout hees Lajeunesse Colt--travel two forty, sure, 'Bout Jeremie Choquette, come back from Woonsocket An' t'ree new leetle twin on Madame Vaillancour'. But nine o'clock strike, an' de chil'ren is sleepy, Mese'f an' ole woman can't stay up no more So alone by de fire--'cos dey say dey ain't tire-- We lef' Philomene an' de young Isidore. I s'pose dey be talkin' beeg lot on de kitchen 'Bout all de nice moon dey was see on de sky, For Philomene's takin' long tam get awaken Nex' day, she's so sleepy on bote of de eye. Dat's wan of dem ting's, ev'ry tam on de fashion, An' 'bout nices' t'ing dat was never be seen. Got not'ing for say me--I spark it sam' way me W'en I go see de moder ma girl Philomene. We leev very quiet 'way back on de contree Don't put on sam style lak de big village, W'en we don't get de monee you t'ink dat is fonny An' mak' plaintee sport on de Bottes Sauvages. But I tole you--dat's true--I don't go on de city If you geev de fine house an' beaucoup d'argent-- I rader be stay me, an' spen' de las' day me On farm by de rapide dat's call Cheval Blanc. THE WRECK OF THE "JULIE PLANTE." A LEGEND OF LAC-ST. PIERRE. On wan dark night on Lac St. Pierre, De win' she blow, blow, blow, An' de crew of de wood scow "Julie Plante" Got scar't an' run below-- For de win' she blow lak hurricane Bimeby she blow some more, An' de scow bus' up on Lac St. Pierre Wan arpent from de shore. De captinne walk on de fronte deck, An' walk de hin' deck too-- He call de crew from up de hole He call de cook also. De cook she's name was Rosie, She come from Montreal, Was chambre maid on lumber barge, On de Grande Lachine Canal. De win' she blow from nor'-eas'-wes,'-- De sout' win' she blow too, W'en Rosie cry "Mon cher captinne, Mon cher, w'at I shall do?" Den de Captinne t'row de big ankerre, But still the scow she dreef, De crew he can't pass on de shore, Becos' he los' hees skeef. De night was dark lak' wan black cat, De wave run high an' fas', W'en de captinne tak' de Rosie girl An' tie her to de mas'. Den he also tak' de life preserve, An' jomp off on de lak', An' say, "Good-bye, ma Rosie dear, I go drown for your sak'." Nex' morning very early 'Bout ha'f-pas' two--t'ree--four-- De captinne--scow--an' de poor Rosie Was corpses on de shore, For de win' she blow lak' hurricane Bimeby she blow some more, An' de scow bus' up on Lac St. Pierre, Wan arpent from de shore. MORAL. Now all good wood scow sailor man Tak' warning by dat storm An' go an' marry some nice French girl An' leev on wan beeg farm. De win' can blow lak' hurricane An' s'pose she blow some more, You can't get drown on Lac St. Pierre So long you stay on shore. LE VIEUX TEMPS. Venez ici, mon cher ami, an' sit down by me--so An' I will tole you story of old tam long ago-- W'en ev'ryt'ing is happy--w'en all de bird is sing An' me!--I'm young an' strong lak moose an' not afraid no t'ing. I close my eye jus' so, an' see de place w'ere I am born-- I close my ear an' lissen to musique of de horn, Dat's horn ma dear ole moder blow--an only t'ing she play Is "viens donc vite Napoléon--'peche toi pour votre souper."-- An' w'en he's hear dat nice musique--ma leetle dog "Carleau" Is place hees tail upon hees back--an' den he's let heem go-- He's jomp on fence--he's swimmin' crik--he's ronne two forty gait, He say "dat's somet'ing good for eat--Carleau mus' not be late." O dem was pleasure day for sure, dem day of long ago W'en I was play wit' all de boy, an' all de girl also; An' many tam w'en I'm alone an' t'ink of day gone by An' pull latire an' spark de girl, I cry upon my eye. Ma fader an' ma moder too, got nice, nice familee, Dat's ten garçon an' t'orteen girl, was mak' it twenty t'ree But fonny t'ing de Gouvernement don't geev de firs' prize den Lak w'at dey say dey geev it now, for only wan douzaine. De English peep dat only got wan familee small size Mus' be feel glad dat tam dere is no honder acre prize For fader of twelve chil'ren--dey know dat mus' be so, De Canayens would boss Kebeck--mebbe Ontario. But dat is not de story dat I was gone tole you About de fun we use to have w'en we leev a chez nous We're never lonesome on dat house, for many cavalier Come at our place mos' every night--especially Sun-day. But tam I'member bes' is w'en I'm twenty wan year--me-- An' so for mak' some pleasurement--we geev wan large soirée De whole paroisse she be invite--de Curé he's come too-- Wit plaintee peep from 'noder place--dat's more I can tole you. De night she's cole an' freeze also, chemin she's fill wit snow An' on de chimley lak phantome, de win' is mak' it blow-- But boy an' girl come all de sam an' pass on grande parloir For warm itself on beeg box stove, was mak' on Trois Rivières-- An' w'en Bonhomme Latour commence for tune up hees fidelle It mak' us all feel very glad--l'enfant! he play so well, Musique suppose to be firs' class, I offen hear, for sure But mos' bes' man, beat all de res', is ole Bateese Latour-- An' w'en Bateese play Irish jeeg, he's learn on Mattawa Dat tam he's head boss cook Shaintee--den leetle Joe Leblanc Tak' hole de beeg Marie Juneau an' dance upon de floor Till Marie say "Excuse to me, I cannot dance no more."-- An' den de Curé's mak' de speech--ole Curé Ladouceur! He say de girl was spark de boy too much on some cornerre-- An' so he's tole Bateese play up ole fashion reel a quatre An' every body she mus' dance, dey can't get off on dat. Away she go--hooraw! hooraw! plus fort Bateese, mon vieux Camille Bisson, please watch your girl--dat's bes' t'ing you can do. Pass on de right an' tak' your place Mamzelle Des Trois Maisons You're s'pose for dance on Paul Laberge, not Telesphore Gagnon. Mon oncle Al-fred, he spik lak' dat--'cos he is boss de floor, An' so we do our possibill an' den commence encore. Dem crowd of boy an' girl I'm sure keep up until nex' day If ole Bateese don't stop heseff, he come so fatigué. An' affer dat, we eat some t'ing, tak' leetle drink also An' de Curé, he's tole story of many year ago-- W'en Iroquois sauvage she's keel de Canayens an' steal deir hair, An' say dat's only for Bon Dieu, we don't be here--he don't be dere. But dat was mak' de girl feel scare--so all de cavalier Was ax hees girl go home right off, an' place her on de sleigh, An' w'en dey start, de Curé say, "Bonsoir et bon voyage Menagez-vous--tak' care for you--prenez-garde pour les sauvages." An' den I go meseff also, an' tak' ma belle Elmire-- She's nicer girl on whole Comté, an' jus' got eighteen year-- Black hair--black eye, an' chick rosée dat's lak wan fameuse on de fall But don't spik much--not of dat kin', I can't say she love me at all. Ma girl--she's fader beeg farmeur--leev 'noder side St. Flore Got five-six honder acre--mebbe a leetle more-- Nice sugar bush--une belle maison--de bes' I never see-- So w'en I go for spark Elmire, I don't be mak' de foolish me-- Elmire!--she's pass t'ree year on school--Ste. Anne de la Perade An' w'en she's tak' de firs' class prize, dat's mak' de ole man glad; He say "Ba gosh--ma girl can wash--can keep de kitchen clean Den change her dress--mak' politesse before God save de Queen." Dey's many way for spark de girl, an' you know dat of course, Some way dey might be better way, an' some dey might be worse But I lak' sit some cole night wit' my girl on ole burleau Wit' lot of hay keep our foot warm--an' plaintee buffalo-- Dat's geev good chances get acquaint--an' if burleau upset An' t'row you out upon de snow--dat's better chances yet-- An' if you help de girl go home, if horse he ronne away De girl she's not much use at all--don't geev you nice baiser! Dat's very well for fun ma frien', but w'en you spark for keep She's not sam t'ing an' mak' you feel so scare lak' leetle sheep Some tam you get de fever--some tam you're lak snowball An' all de tam you ack lak' fou--can't spik no t'ing at all. Wall! dat's de way I feel meseff, wit Elmire on burleau, Jus' lak' small dog try ketch hees tail--roun' roun' ma head she go But bimeby I come more brave--an' tak' Elmire she's han' "Laisse-moi tranquille" Elmire she say "You mus' be crazy man." "Yass--yass," I say, "mebbe you t'ink I'm wan beeg loup garou, Dat's forty t'ousand 'noder girl, I lef' dem all for you, I s'pose you know Polique Gauthier your frien'on St. Cesaire I ax her marry me nex' wick--she tak' me--I don't care." Ba gosh; Elmire she don't lak dat--it mak' her feel so mad-- She commence cry, say "'Poleon you treat me very bad-- I don't lak see you t'row you'seff upon Polique Gauthier, So if you say you love me sure--we mak' de mariée."-- Oh it was fine tam affer dat--Castor I t'ink he know, We're not too busy for get home--he go so nice an' slow, He's only upset t'ree--four tam--an' jus' about daylight We pass upon de ole man's place--an' every t'ing's all right. Wall! we leev happy on de farm for nearly fifty year, Till wan day on de summer tam--she die--ma belle Elmire I feel so lonesome lef' behin'--I tink 'twas bes' mebbe-- Dat w'en le Bon Dieu tak' ma famme--he should not forget me. But dat is hees biz-nesse ma frien'--I know dat's all right dere I'll wait till he call "'Poleon" den I will be prepare-- An' w'en he fin' me ready, for mak' de longue voyage He guide me t'roo de wood hesef upon ma las' portage. "DE PAPINEAU GUN." AN INCIDENT OF THE CANADIAN REBELLION OF 1837. Bon jour, M'sieu'--you want to know 'Bout dat ole gun--w'at good she's for? W'y! Jean Bateese Bruneau--mon pere, Fight wit' dat gun on Pap'neau War! Long tam since den you say--C'est vrai, An' me too young for 'member well, But how de patriot fight an' die, I offen hear de ole folk tell. De English don't ack square dat tam, Don't geev de habitants no show, So 'long come Wolfred Nelson Wit' Louis Joseph Papineau. An' swear de peep mus' have deir right. Wolfred he's write Victoriaw, But she's no good, so den de war Commence among de habitants. Mon pere he leev to Grande Brulé So smarter man you never see, Was alway on de grande hooraw! Plaintee w'at you call "Esprit!" An' w'en dey form wan compagnie All dress wit' tuque an' ceinture sash Ma fader tak' hees gun wit' heem An' marche away to Saint Eustache, W'ere many patriots was camp Wit' brave Chenier, deir Capitaine, W'en 'long come English Generale, An' more two t'ousan' sojer man. De patriot dey go on church An' feex her up deir possibill; Dey fight deir bes', but soon fin' out "Canon de bois" no good for kill. An' den de church she come on fire, An' burn almos' down to de groun', So w'at you t'ink our man can do Wit' all dem English armee roun'? 'Poleon, hees sojer never fight More brave as dem poor habitants, Chenier, he try for broke de rank Chenier come dead immediatement. He fall near w'ere de cross is stan' Upon de ole church cimitiere, Wit' Jean Poulin an' Laframboise An' plaintee more young feller dere. De gun dey rattle lak' tonnere Jus' bang, bang, bang! dat's way she go, An' wan by wan de brave man's fall An' red blood's cover all de snow. Ma fader shoot so long he can An' den he's load hees gun some more, Jomp on de ice behin' de church An' pass heem on de 'noder shore. Wall! he reach home fore very long An' keep perdu for many day, Till ev'ry t'ing she come tranquille, An' sojer man all gone away. An' affer dat we get our right, De Canayens don't fight no more, Ma fader's never shoot dat gun, But place her up above de door. An' Papineau, an' Nelson too Dey're gone long tam, but we are free, Le Bon Dieu have 'em 'way up dere. Salut, Wolfred! Salut, Louis! HOW BATEESE CAME HOME. W'en I was young boy on de farm, dat's twenty year ago I have wan frien' he's leev near me, call Jean Bateese Trudeau An offen w'en we are alone, we lak for spik about De tam w'en we was come beeg man, wit' moustache on our mout'. Bateese is get it on hees head, he's too moche educate For mak' de habitant farmerre--he better go on State-- An' so wan summer evening we're drivin' home de cow He's tole me all de whole beez-nesse--jus' lak you hear me now. "W'at's use mak' foolish on de farm? dere's no good chances lef' An' all de tam you be poor man--you know dat's true you'se'f; We never get no fun at all--don't never go on spree Onless we pass on 'noder place, an' mak' it some monee. "I go on Les Etats Unis, I go dere right away An' den mebbe on ten-twelve year, I be riche man some day, An' w'en I mak' de large fortune, I come back I s'pose Wit' Yankee famme from off de State, an' monee on my clothes. "I tole you somet'ing else also--mon cher Napoleon I get de grande majorité, for go on parliament Den buil' fine house on borde l'eau--near w'ere de church is stand More finer dan de Presbytere, w'en I am come riche man!" I say "For w'at you spik lak dat? you must be gone crazee Dere's plaintee feller on de State, more smarter dan you be, Beside she's not so healtee place, an' if you mak' l'argent, You spen' it jus' lak Yankee man, an' not lak habitant. "For me Bateese! I tole you dis: I'm very satisfy-- De bes' man don't leev too long tam, some day Ba Gosh! he die-- An' s'pose you got good trotter horse, an' nice famme Canadienne Wit' plaintee on de house for eat--W'at more you want ma frien'?" But Bateese have it all mak' up, I can't stop him at all He's buy de seconde classe tiquette, for go on Central Fall-- An' wit' two-t'ree some more de boy,--w'at t'ink de sam' he do Pass on de train de very nex' wick, was lef' Rivière du Loup. * * * * * Wall! mebbe fifteen year or more, since Bateese go away I fin' mesef Rivière du Loup, wan cole, cole winter day De quick express she come hooraw! but stop de soon she can An' beeg swell feller jomp off car, dat's boss by nigger man. He's dressim on de première classe, an' got new suit of clothes Wit' long moustache dat's stickim out, de 'noder side hees nose Fine gol' watch chain--nice portmanteau--an' long, long overcoat Wit' beaver hat--dat's Yankee style--an' red tie on hees t'roat-- I say "Hello Bateese! Hello! Comment ça va mon vieux?" He say "Excuse to me, ma frien' I t'ink I don't know you." I say, "She's very curis t'ing, you are Bateese Trudeau, Was raise on jus' sam' place wit' me, dat's fifteen year ago?" He say, "Oh yass dat's sure enough--I know you now firs' rate, But I forget mos' all ma French since I go on de State. Dere's 'noder t'ing kip on your head, ma frien' dey mus' be tole Ma name's Bateese Trudeau no more, but John B. Waterhole!" "Hole on de water's" fonny name for man w'at's call Trudeau Ma frien's dey all was spik lak dat, an' I am tole heem so-- He say "Trudeau an' Waterhole she's jus' about de sam' An' if you go for leev on State, you must have Yankee nam'." Den we invite heem come wit' us, "Hotel du Canadaw" W'ere he was treat mos' ev'ry tam, but can't tak' w'isky blanc, He say dat's leetle strong for man jus' come off Central Fall An' "tabac Canayen" bedamme! he won't smoke dat at all!-- But fancy drink lak "Collings John" de way he put it down Was long tam since I don't see dat--I t'ink he's goin' drown!-- An' fine cigar cos' five cent each, an' mak' on Trois-Rivières L'enfant! he smoke beeg pile of dem--for monee he don't care!-- I s'pose meseff it's t'ree o'clock w'en we are t'roo dat night Bateese, hees fader come for heem, an' tak' heem home all right De ole man say Bateese spik French, w'en he is place on bed-- An' say bad word--but w'en he wake--forget it on hees head-- Wall! all de winter w'en we have soirée dat's grande affaire Bateese Trudeau, dit Waterhole, he be de boss man dere-- You bet he have beeg tam, but w'en de spring is come encore He's buy de première classe tiquette for go on State some more. * * * * * You 'member w'en de hard tam come on Les Etats Unis An' plaintee Canayens go back for stay deir own contrée? Wall! jus' about 'dat tam again I go Rivière du Loup For sole me two t'ree load of hay--mak' leetle visit too-- De freight train she is jus' arrive--only ten hour delay-- She's never carry passengaire--dat's w'at dey always say-- I see poor man on char caboose--he's got heem small valise Begosh! I nearly tak' de fit,--It is--it is Bateese! He know me very well dis tam, an' say "Bon jour, mon vieux I hope you know Bateese Trudeau was educate wit' you I'm jus' come off de State to see ma familee encore I bus' mesef on Central Fall--I don't go dere no more." "I got no monee--not at all--I'm broke it up for sure-- Dat's locky t'ing, Napoleon, de brakeman Joe Latour He's cousin of wan frien' of me call Camille Valiquette, Conductor too's good Canayen--don't ax me no tiquette." I tak' Bateese wit' me once more "Hotel du Canadaw" An' he was glad for get de chance drink some good w'isky blanc! Dat's warm heem up, an den he eat mos' ev'ryt'ing he see, I watch de w'ole beez-nesse mese'f--Monjee! he was hongree! Madame Charette wat's kip de place get very much excite For see de many pork an' bean Bateese put out of sight Du pain doré--potate pie--an' 'noder t'ing be dere But w'en Bateese is get heem t'roo--dey go I don't know w'ere. It don't tak' long for tole de news "Bateese come off de State" An' purty soon we have beeg crowd, lak village she's en fête Bonhomme Maxime Trudeau hese'f, he's comin' wit' de pries' An' pass' heem on de "Room for eat" w'ere he is see Bateese. Den ev'rybody feel it glad, for watch de embrasser An' bimeby de ole man spik "Bateese you here for stay?" Bateese he's cry lak beeg bebè, "Bâ j'eux rester ici. An if I never see de State, I'm sure I don't care--me." "Correc'," Maxime is say right off, "I place you on de farm For help your poor ole fader, won't do you too moche harm Please come wit' me on Magasin, I feex you up--bâ oui An' den you're ready for go home an' see de familee." Wall! w'en de ole man an' Bateese come off de Magasin Bateese is los' hees Yankee clothes--he's dress lak Canayen Wit' bottes sauvages--ceinture fléché--an' coat wit' capuchon An' spik Français au naturel, de sam' as habitant. * * * * * I see Bateese de oder day, he's work hees fader's place I t'ink mese'f he's satisfy--I see dat on hees face He say "I got no use for State, mon cher Napoleon Kebeck she's good enough for me--Hooraw pour Canadaw." DE NICE LEETLE CANADIENNE. You can pass on de worl' w'erever you lak, Tak' de steamboat for go Angleterre, Tak' car on de State, an' den you come back, An' go all de place, I don't care-- Ma frien' dat's a fack, I know you will say, W'en you come on dis contree again, Dere's no girl can touch, w'at we see ev'ry day, De nice leetle Canadienne. Don't matter how poor dat girl she may be, Her dress is so neat an' so clean, Mos' ev'rywan t'ink it was mak' on Paree An' she wear it, wall! jus' lak de Queen. Den come for fin' out she is mak' it herse'f, For she ain't got moche monee for spen', But all de sam' tam, she was never get lef', Dat nice leetle Canadienne. W'en "un vrai Canayen" is mak' it mariée, You t'ink he go leev on beeg flat An' bodder hese'f all de tam, night an' day, Wit' housemaid, an' cook, an' all dat? Not moche, ma dear frien', he tak' de maison, Cos' only nine dollar or ten, W'ere he leev lak blood rooster, an' save de l'argent, Wit' hees nice leetle Canadienne. I marry ma famme w'en I'm jus' twenty year, An' now we got fine familee, Dat skip roun' de place lak leetle small deer, No smarter crowd you never see-- An' I t'ink as I watch dem all chasin' about, Four boy an' six girl, she mak' ten, Dat's help mebbe kip it, de stock from run out, Of de nice leetle Canadienne. O she's quick an' she's smart, an' got plaintee heart, If you know correc' way go about, An' if you don't know, she soon tole you so Den tak' de firs' chance an' get out; But if she love you, I spik it for true, She will mak' it more beautiful den, An' sun on de sky can't shine lak de eye Of dat nice leetle Canadienne. 'POLEON DORÉ. A TALE OF THE SAINT MAURICE. You have never hear de story of de young Napoleon Doré? Los' hees life upon de reever w'en de lumber drive go down? W'ere de rapide roar lak tonder, dat's de place he's goin' onder, W'en he's try save Paul Desjardins, 'Poleon hese'f is drown. All de winter on de Shaintee, tam she's good, and work she's plaintee, But we're not feel very sorry, w'en de sun is warm hees face, W'en de mooshrat an' de beaver, tak' some leetle swim on reever, An' de sout' win' scare de snowbird, so she fly some col'er place. Den de spring is set in steady, an' we get de log all ready, Workin' hard all day an' night too, on de water mos' de tam, An' de skeeter w'en dey fin' us, come so quickly nearly blin' us, Biz--biz--biz--biz--all aroun' us till we feel lak sacrédam. All de sam' we're hooraw feller, from de top of house to cellar, Ev'ry boy he's feel so happy, w'en he's goin' right away, See hees fader an' hees moder, see hees sister an' hees broder, An' de girl he spark las' summer, if she's not get marieé. Wall we start heem out wan morning, an' de pilot geev us warning, "W'en you come on Rapide Cuisse, ma frien', keep raf' she's head on shore, If you struck beeg rock on middle, w'ere le diable is play hees fiddle, Dat's de tam you pass on some place, you don't never pass before." But we'll not t'ink moche of danger, for de rapide she's no stranger Many tam we're runnin' t'roo it, on de fall an' on de spring, On mos' ev'ry kin' of wedder dat le Bon Dieu scrape togedder, An' we'll never drown noboddy, an' we'll never bus' somet'ing. Dere was Telesphore Montbriand, Paul Desjardins, Louis Guyon, Bill McKeever, Aleck Gauthier, an' hees cousin Jean Bateese, 'Poleon Doré, Aimé Beaulieu, wit' some more man I can't tole you, Dat was mak' it bes' gang never run upon de St. Maurice. Dis is jus' de tam I wish me, I could spik de good English--me-- For tole you of de pleasurement we get upon de spring, W'en de win' she's all a sleepin', an' de raf' she go a sweepin' Down de reever on some morning, w'ile le rossignol is sing. Ev'ryt'ing so nice an' quiet on de shore as we pass by it, All de tree got fine new spring suit, ev'ry wan she's dress on green W'y it mak' us all more younger, an' we don't feel any hunger, Till de cook say "'Raw for breakfas'," den we smell de pork an' bean. Some folk say she's bad for leever, but for man work hard on reever, Dat's de bes' t'ing I can tole you, dat was never yet be seen, Course dere's oder t'ing ah tak' me, fancy dish also I lak me, But w'en I want somet'ing solid, please pass me de pork an' bean. All dis tam de raf' she's goin' lak steamboat was got us towin' All we do is keep de channel, an' dat's easy workin' dere, So we sing some song an' chorus, for de good tam dat's before us, W'en de w'ole beez-nesse she's finish, an' we come on Trois Rivieres. But bad luck is sometam fetch us, for beeg strong win' come an' ketch us, Jus' so soon we struck de rapide--jus' so soon we see de smoke, An' before we spik some prayer for ourse'f dat's fightin' dere, Roun' we come upon de beeg rock, an' it's den de raf' she broke. Dat was tam poor Paul Desjardins, from de parish of St. Germain, He was long way on de fronte side, so he's fallin' overboar' Couldn't swim at all de man say, but dat's more ma frien', I can say, Any how he's look lak drownin', so we'll t'row him two t'ree oar. Dat's 'bout all de help our man do, dat's 'bout ev'ryt'ing we can do, As de crib we're hangin' onto balance on de rock itse'f, Till de young Napoleon Doré, heem I start for tole de story, Holler out, "Mon Dieu, I don't lak see poor Paul go drown hese'f." So he's mak' beeg jomp on water, jus' de sam you see some otter An' he's pass on place w'ere Paul is tryin' hard for keep afloat, Den we see Napoleon ketch heem, try hees possibill for fetch heem But de current she's more stronger, an' de eddy get dem bote. O Mon Dieu! for see dem two man, mak' me feel it cry lak woman, Roun' an' roun' upon de eddy, quickly dem poor feller go, Can't tole wan man from de oder, an' we'll know dem bote lak broder, But de fight she soon is finish--Paul an' 'Poleon go below. Yass, an' all de tam we stay dere, only t'ing we do is pray dere, For de soul poor drownin' feller, dat's enough mak' us feel mad, Torteen voyageurs, all brave man, glad get any chances save man, But we don't see no good chances, can't do not'ing, dat's too bad. Wall! at las' de crib she's come way off de rock, an' den on some way, By an' by de w'ole gang's passin' on safe place below de Cuisse, Ev'ryboddy's heart she's breakin', w'en dey see poor Paul he's taken Wit' de young Napoleon Doré, bes' boy on de St. Maurice! An' day affer, Bill McKeever fin' de bote man on de reever, Wit' deir arm aroun' each oder, mebbe pass above dat way-- So we bury dem as we fin' dem, w'ere de pine tree wave behin' dem An de Grande Montagne he's lookin' down on Marcheterre Bay. You can't hear no church bell ring dere, but le rossignol is sing dere, An' w'ere ole red cross she's stannin', mebbe some good ange gardien, Watch de place w'ere bote man sleepin', keep de reever grass from creepin' On de grave of 'Poleon Doré, an' of poor Paul Desjardins. DE NOTAIRE PUBLIQUE. M'sieu Paul Joulin, de Notaire Publique Is come I s'pose seexty year hees life An' de mos' riche man on Sainte Angelique W'en he feel very sorry he got no wife-- So he's paint heem hees buggy, lak new, by Gor! Put flower on hees coat, mak' hese'f more gay Arrange on hees head fine chapeau castor An' drive on de house of de Boulanger. For de Boulanger's got heem une jolie fille Mos' bes' lookin' girl on paroisse dey say An' all de young feller is lak Julie An' plaintee is ax her for mak' mariée, But Julie she's love only jus' wan man, Hees nam' it is Jérémie Dandurand An' he's work for her sak' all de hard he can 'Way off on de wood, up de Mattawa. M'Sieu Paul he spik him "Bonjour Mamzelle, You lak promenade on de church wit' me? Jus' wan leetle word an' we go ma belle An' see heem de Curé toute suite, chérie; I dress you de very bes' style à la mode, If you promise for be Madame Paul Joulin, For I got me fine house on Bord à Plouffe road Wit' mor'gage also on de Grande Moulin." But Julie she say "Non, non, M'Sieu Paul, Dat's not correc' t'ing for poor Jérémie For I love dat young feller lak not'ing at all, An' I'm very surprise you was not know me. Jérémie w'en he's geev me dat nice gol' ring, Las' tam he's gone off on de Mattawa Say he's got 'noder wan w'en he's come nex' spring Was mak' me for sure Madame Dandurand. "I t'ank you de sam' M'Sieu Paul Joulin I s'pose I mus' be de wife wan poor man Wit' no chance at all for de Grande Moulin, But leev all de tam on some small cabane." De Notaire Publique den is tak' hees hat, For he t'ink sure enough dat hees dog she's dead; Dere's no use mak' love on de girl lak dat, Wit' not'ing but young feller on de head. Julie she's feel lonesome mos' all dat week, Don't know w'at may happen she wait till spring Den t'ink de fine house of Notaire Publique An' plaintee more too--but love's funny t'ing! So nex' tam she see de Notaire again, She laugh on her eye an' say "M'Sieu Paul Please pass on de house, or you ketch de rain, Dat's very long tam you don't come at all." She's geev him so soon he's come on de door Du vin de pays, an' some nice galettes, She's mak' dem herse'f only day before An' he say "Bigosh! dat is fine girl yet." So he's try hees chances some more--hooraw! Julie is not mak' so moche troub' dis tam; She's forget de poor Jérémie Dandurand An' tole de Notaire she will be hees famme. W'en Jérémie come off de wood nex' spring, An' fin' dat hees girl she was get mariée Everybody's expec' he will do somet'ing, But he don't do not'ing at all, dey say; For he's got 'noder girl on Sainte Dorothée, Dat he's love long tam, an' she don't say "No," So he's forget too all about Julie An' mak' de mariée wit' hese'f also. A CANADIAN VOYAGEUR'S ACCOUNT OF THE NILE EXPEDITION. "MAXIME LABELLE." Victoriaw: she have beeg war, E-gyp's de nam' de place-- An' neeger peep dat's leev 'im dere, got very black de face, An' so she's write Joseph Mercier, he's stop on Trois Rivieres-- "Please come right off, an' bring wit' you t'ree honder voyageurs. "I got de plaintee sojer, me, beeg feller six foot tall-- Dat's Englishman, an' Scotch also, don't wear no pant at all; Of course, de Irishman's de bes', raise all de row he can, But noboddy can pull batteau lak good Canadian man. "I geev you steady job for sure, an' w'en you get 'im t'roo I bring you back on Canadaw, don't cos' de man un sou, Dat's firs'-class steamboat all de way Kebeck an' Leeverpool, An' if you don't be satisfy, you mus' be beeg, beeg fool." We meet upon Hotel Dufresne, an' talk heem till daylight, An' Joe he's treat so many tam, we very near get tight, Den affer w'ile, we mak' our min' dat's not bad chance, an' so Joseph Mercier he's telegraph, "Correc', Madame, we go." So Joe arrange de whole beez-nesse wit' Queen Victoriaw; Two dollar day--work all de tam--dat's purty good l'argent! An' w'en we start on Trois Rivieres, for pass on boar' de ship, Our frien' dey all say, "Bon voyage," an' den Hooraw! E-gyp'! Dat beeg steamboat was plonge so moche, I'm 'fraid she never stop-- De Capitaine's no use at all, can't kip her on de top-- An' so we all come very sick, jus' lak one leetle pup, An' ev'ry tam de ship's go down, de inside she's go up. I'm sorry spoke lak dis, ma frien', if you don't t'ink it's so, Please ax Joseph Mercier hese'f, or Aleck De Courteau, Dat stay on bed mos' all de tam, so sick dey nearly die, But lak' some great, beeg Yankee man, was never tole de lie. De gang she's travel, travel, t'roo many strange contree, An' ev'ry place is got new nam', I don't remember, me, We see some fonny t'ing, for sure, more fonny I can tell, But w'en we reach de Neel Riviere, dat's feel more naturel. So many fine, beeg sojer man, I never see before, All dress heem on grand uniform, is wait upon de shore, Some black, some green, an' red also, cos' honder dollar sure, An' holler out, "She's all right now, here come de voyageurs!" We see boss Generale also, he's ride on beeg chameau, Dat's w'at you call Ca-melle, I t'ink, I laugh de way she go! Jomp up, jomp down, jomp ev'ry place, but still de Generale Seem satisfy for stay on top, dat fonny an-i-mal. He's holler out on Joe Mercier, "Comment câ va Joseph You lak for come right off wit' me, tak' leetle ride yourseff?" Joseph, he mak' de grand salut, an' tak' it off hees hat, "Merci, Mon Generale," he say, "I got no use for dat." Den affer we was drink somet'ing, an' sing "Le Brigadier," De sojer fellers get prepare, for mak' de embarquer, An' everybody's shout heem out, w'en we tak' hole de boat "Hooraw pour Queen Victoriaw!" an' also "pour nous autres." Bigosh; I do hard work mese'f upon de Ottawa, De Gatineau an' St. Maurice, also de Mattawa, But I don't never work at all, I'sure you dat's a fack Until we strike de Neel Riviere, an' sapré Catarack! "Dis way, dat way, can't keep her straight," "look out, Bateese, look out!" "Now let her go"--"arrete un peu," dat's way de pilot shout, "Don't wash de neeger girl on shore," an' "prenez garde behin'," "W'at's matter wit' dat rudder man? I t'ink he's goin' blin'!" Some tam of course, de boat's all right, an' carry us along An' den again, we mak portage, w'en current she's too strong On place lak' dat, we run good chance, for sun-struck on de neck, An' plaintee tam we wish ourseff was back on ole Kebeck. De seconde Catarack we pass, more beeger dan de Soo, She's nearly t'orty mile for sure, it would astonish you, Dat's place t'ree Irishman get drown, wan day we have beeg storm, I s'pose de Queen is feel lak cry, los' dat nice uniform! De night she's very, very cole, an' hot upon de day, An' all de tam, you feel jus' lak you're goin' melt away, But never min' an' don't get scare, you mak' it up all right, An' twenty poun' you los' dat day, she's comin' back sam' night. We got small bugle boy also, he's mebbe stan' four foot, An' firs' t'ing ev'ry morning, sure, he mak' it toot! toot! toot! She's nice enough upon de day, for hear de bugle call, But w'en she play before daylight, I don't lak dat at all. We mus' get up immediatement, dat leetle feller blow, An' so we start heem off again, for pull de beeg batteau, De sojer man he's nice, nice boy, an' help us all he can, An' geev heem chance, he's mos' as good lak some Canadian man. Wall all de tam, she go lak dat, was busy every day, Don't get moche chance for foolish-ness, don't get no chance for play, Dere's plaintee danger all aroun', an' w'en we're comin' back We got look out for run heem safe, dem sapré Catarack. But w'ere's de war? I can't mak' out, don't see no fight at all! She's not'ing but une Grande Piqnique, dat's las' in all de fall! Mebbe de neeger King he's scare, an' skip anoder place, An' pour la Reine Victoriaw! I never see de face. But dat's not ma beez-nesse, ma frien', I'm ready pull batteau So long she pay two dollar day, wit' pork an' bean also; An' if she geev me steady job, for mak' some more l'argent, I say, "Hooraw! for all de tam, on Queen Victoriaw!" MEMORIES. O spirit of the mountain that speaks to us to-night, Your voice is sad, yet still recalls past visions of delight, When 'mid the grand old Laurentides, old when the earth was new, With flying feet we followed the moose and caribou. And backward rush sweet memories, like fragments of a dream, We hear the dip of paddle blades, the ripple of the stream, The mad, mad rush of frightened wings from brake and covert start, The breathing of the woodland, the throb of nature's heart. Once more beneath our eager feet the forest carpet springs, We march through gloomy valleys, where the vesper sparrow sings. The little minstrel heeds us not, nor stays his plaintive song, As with our brave coureurs de bois we swiftly pass along. Again o'er dark Wayagamack, in bark canoe we glide, And watch the shades of evening glance along the mountain side. Anon we hear resounding the wizard loon's wild cry, And mark the distant peak whereon the ling'ring echoes die. But Spirit of the Northland! let the winter breezes blow, And cover every giant crag with rifts of driving snow. Freeze every leaping torrent, bind all the crystal lakes, Tell us of fiercer pleasures when the Storm King awakes. And now the vision changes, the winds are loud and shrill, The falling flakes are shrouding the mountain and the hill, But safe within our snug cabane with comrades gathered near, We set the rafters ringing with "Roulant" and "Brigadier." Then after Pierre and Telesphore have danced "Le Caribou," Some hardy trapper tells a tale of the dreaded Loup Garou, Or phantom bark in moonlit heavens, with prow turned to the East, Bringing the Western voyageurs to join the Christmas feast. And while each backwoods troubadour is greeted with huzza Slowly the homely incense of "tabac Canayen" Rises and sheds its perfume like flowers of Araby, O'er all the true-born loyal Enfants de la Patrie. And thus with song and story, with laugh and jest and shout, We heed not dropping mercury nor storms that rage without, But pile the huge logs higher till the chimney roars with glee, And banish spectral visions with La Chanson Normandie. "Brigadier! répondit Pandore Brigadier! vous avez raison, Brigadier! répondit Pandore, Brigadier! vous avez raison!" O spirit of the mountain! that speaks to us to-night, Return again and bring us new dreams of past delight, And while our heart-throbs linger, and till our pulses cease, We'll worship thee among the hills where flows the Saint-Maurice. PHIL-O-RUM JUNEAU. A STORY OF THE "CHASSE GALLERIE." In the days of the "Old Regime" in Canada, the free life of the woods and prairies proved too tempting for the young men, who frequently deserted civilization for the savage delights of the wilderness. These voyageurs and coureurs de bois seldom returned in the flesh, but on every New Year's Eve, back thro' snowstorm and hurricane--in mid-air--came their spirits in ghostly canoes, to join, for a brief spell, the old folks at home and kiss the girls, on the annual feast of the "Jour de l'an," or New Year's Day. The legend which still survives in French-speaking Canada, is known as "La Chasse Gallerie." He sit on de corner mos' every night, ole Phil-o-rum Juneau, Spik wit' hese'f an' shake de head, an' smoke on de pipe also-- Very hard job it's for wake him up, no matter de loud we call W'en he's feex hese'f on de beeg arm-chair, back on de kitchen wall. He don't believe not'ing at all, at all 'bout lates' new fashion t'ing Le char 'lectrique an' de telephome, was talk w'en de bell she ring Dat's leetle too moche for de ole bonhomme, mak' him shake it de head an' say "Wat's use mak' de foolish lak dat, sapré! I'm not born only yesterday." But if you want story dat's true, true, true, I tole you good wan moi-meme An de t'ing you was spik, dat I don't believe, for sure she was beat all dem. So he's cough leetle cough, clear 'im up de t'roat, fill hees pipe wit' some more tabac, An' w'en de chil'ren is come tranquille, de ole man begin comme câ. L'enfant! l'enfant! it's very strange t'ing! mak' me laugh too w'en I hear De young peep talk of de long, long tam of seventy, eighty year! Dat's only be jus' eighty New Year Day, an' quickly was pass it by It's beeg, beeg dream, an' you don't wake up, till affer you're comin' die. Dat's true sure enough, you see curi's t'ing, if you only leev leetle w'ile, So long you got monee go all de place, for mebbe t'ree t'ousan' mile, But monee's not everyt'ing on dis worl', I tole you dat, mes amis, An' man can be ole lak' two honder year, an' not see it, La Chasse Gal'rie. I never forget de fine New Year night, nearly seexty year ago, W'en I'm lef' it our place for attend soiree, on ole Maxime Baribault, Nine mile away, I can see tin roof, on church of de St. Joseph, An' over de snow, de leaf dat die las' fall, was chasin' itse'f. Dere was some of de neighbor house I call, dat's be de ole fashion style, An' very nice style too, mes amis, I hope she will las' long w'ile, I shak' it de han', I drink santé, an' kiss it de girl she's face, So it's come ten o'clock, w'en I pass on road, for visit Maxime hees place. But I'm not go more mebbe t'ree arpent, w'en de sky is get black all roun', An' de win' she blow lak I never see, an' de beeg snowstorm come down. I mak' it my min' she's goin' be soon, de very bad night for true, Dat's locky I got plaintee whiskey lef', so I tak' it wan leetle "coup." Purty quick affer dat, I'm comin' nice place, was stan'in' some fine beeg tree W'ere de snow don't dreef', an' it seem jus' lak dat place it is mak' for me, So I pass it on dere, for mak' safe mese'f, w'ile de storm is blow outside, As if all de devil on hell below, was tak' heem some fancy ride. Wan red fox he's comin' so close, so close, I could ketch him wit' de han', But not on de tam lak dis ma frien', "Marche toi all de quick you can," Poor feller he's tire an' seem los' hees way, an' w'en he reach home dat night Mebbe he fin' it all was close up, an' de door it was fassen tight. But w'at is dat soun' mak' de hair stan' up, w'at is it mean, dat cry? Comin' over de high tree top, out of de nor'-wes' sky Lak cry of de wil' goose w'en she pass on de spring tam an' de fall, But wil' goose fly on de winter night! I never see dat at all. On, on t'roo de night, she is quickly come, more closer all de tam, But not lak de cry of some wil' bird now, don't seem it at all de sam'; An' den wit' de rush of de win', I hear somebody sing chanson An' de song dey sing is de ole, ole song, "Le Canayen Errant."' But it's mak' me lonesome an' scare also, jus' sam' I be goin' for die W'en I lissen dat song on night lak dis, so far away on de sky, Don't know w'at to do at all mese'f, so I go w'ere I have good view, An' up, up above t'roo de storm an' snow, she's comin' wan beeg canoe. Den somebody call it ma nam' out loud, firs' tam it was scare me so, "We know right away, dat was you be dere, hello Phil-o-rum, hello!" An' soon I see him dat feller spik, I 'member him too mese'f, We go de sam' school twenty year before, hees nam's Telesphore Le Boeuf. But I know on de way canoe she go, dat de crowd he mus' be dead man Was come from de Grande Riviere du Nord, come from Saskatchewan, Come too from all de place is lie on de Hodson Bay Contree, An' de t'ing I was see me dat New Year night, is le phantome Chasse Gal'rie. An' many de boy I was see him dere, I know him so long before He's goin' away on de far contree--for never return no more-- An' now on phantome he is comin' home--t'roo de storm an' de hurricane For kiss him de girl on jour de l'an, an' see de ole peep again. De beeg voyageur w'at is steer canoe, wit' paddle hol' on hees han' Got very long hair was hang down hees neck, de sam' as wil' Injin man Invite me on boar' dat phantome canoe, for show it dead man de way-- Don't lak it de job, but no use refuse, so I'll mak' it de embarquer. Den wan of de gang, he mus' be foreman, say it's tam for have leetle drink, So he pass heem black bottle for tak' un "coup," an' it's look lak ma own I t'ink, But it can't be de sam', I'll be swear for dat, for w'en I was mak' de go, I fin' dere is not'ing inside but win', an' de whiskey's phantome also. Dey be laugh affer dat, lak dey tak' some fit, so de boss spik him, "Tiens Phil-o-rum, Never min' on dem feller--mus' have leetle sport, dat's very long way we come, Will you ketch it de paddle for steer us quick on place of Maxime Baribault?" An' he's ax me so nice, I do as he please', an den away off she go. Wan minute--two minute--we pass on dere, Maxime he is all hooraw! An' we know by musique dat was play inside, mus' be de great Joe Violon, Dat feller work fiddle on very bes' way, dat nobody never see Mak' de boy an' de girl, ole peep also, dance lak dey was go crazee. You s'pose dey was let me come on dat house? Not at all, for de boss he say, "Phil-o-rum, it's long tam we don't see our fren', can't get heem chance ev'ry day, Please stop on canoe so she won't blow off, w'ile we pass on de house an' see Dem frien' we was lef' an' de girl we spark, before we go strange contree." An' me I was sit on canoe outside, jus' lak I was sapré fou, Watchin' dem feller dat's all dead man, dance heem lak Loup Garou. De boss he kiss Marie Louise, ma girl, dat's way he spen' mos' de tam, But of course she know not'ing of dat biz-nesse--don't lak it me jus' de sam'. By tam I'm commence it for feel de col', dey're all comin' out encore, An' we start off again t'roo de sky, hooraw! for mak' de visite some more, All de place on de parish we go dat night, w'erever dey get some dance, Till I feel it so tire, I could sleep right off, but dey don't geev it me no chance. De las' place w'ere passin' dat's Bill Boucher, he's very good frien' of me, An' I t'ink it's near tam I was lef' dat crowd, so I'll snub de canoe on tree, Den affer dead man he was safe inside, an' ev'rywan start danser, I go on de barn wat's behin' de house, for see I can't hide away. She's nice place de barn, an' got plaintee warm, an' I'm feel very glad be dere, So long dead feller don't fin' me out, an' ketch it me on de hair, But s'pose I get col', work him hard all night, 'cos I make it wan leetle cough, W'en de rooster he's scare, holler t'ree, four tam, an' whole t'ing she bus' right off. I'll never see not'ing so quick again--Canoe an' dead man go scat! She's locky de rooster he mak' de noise, bus' ev'ryt'ing up lak dat, Or mebbe dem feller get me encore, an' tak' me on Hodson Bay, But it's all right now, for de morning's come, an' he see me ole Bill Boucher. I'm feel it so tire, an' sore all de place, wit' all de hard work I do', 'Cos I'm not very use for mak' paddle, me, on beeg, beeg phantome canoe, But Bill an' hees boy dey was leef me up, an' carry me on maison W'ere plaintee nice t'ing dey was mak' me eat, an' drink it some whiskey blanc. An' now w'en I'm finish, w'at you t'ink it youse'f, 'bout story dat you was hear? No wonner ma hair she is all turn w'ite before I get eighty year! But 'member dis t'ing, I be tole you firs, don't los' it mes chers amis, De man he can leev him on long, long tam, an' not see it La Chasse Gal'rie! * * * * * He sit on de corner mos' every night, ole Phil-o-rum Juneau, Spik wit' hese'f, an' shak' de head, an' smoke on de pipe also, But kip very quiet, don't wak' him up, let him stay on de kitchen wall, For if you believe w'at de ole man say, you believe anyt'ing at all. DE BELL OF ST. MICHEL. Go 'way, go 'way, don't ring no more, ole bell of Saint Michel, For if you do, I can't stay here, you know dat very well, No matter how I close ma ear, I can't shut out de soun', It rise so high 'bove all de noise of dis beeg Yankee town. An' w'en it ring, I t'ink I feel de cool, cool summer breeze Dat's blow across Lac Peezagonk, an' play among de trees, Dey're makin' hay, I know mese'f, can smell de pleasant smell O! how I wish I could be dere to-day on Saint Michel! It's fonny t'ing, for me I'm sure, dat's travel ev'ryw'ere, How moche I t'ink of long ago w'en I be leevin' dere; I can't 'splain dat at all, at all, mebbe it's naturel, But I can't help it w'en I hear de bell of Saint Michel. Dere's plaintee t'ing I don't forget, but I remember bes' De spot I fin' wan day on June de small san'piper's nes' An' dat hole on de reever w'ere I ketch de beeg, beeg trout Was very nearly pull me in before I pull heem out. An' leetle Elodie Leclaire, I wonner if she still Leev jus' sam' place she use to leev on 'noder side de hill, But s'pose she marry Joe Barbeau, dat's alway hangin' roun' Since I am lef' ole Saint Michel for work on Yankee town. Ah! dere she go, ding dong, ding dong, its back, encore again An' ole chanson come on ma head of "a la claire fontaine," I'm not surprise it soun' so sweet, more sweeter I can tell For wit' de song also I hear de bell of Saint Michel. It's very strange about dat bell, go ding dong all de w'ile For when I'm small garçon at school, can't hear it half a mile; But seems more farder I get off from Church of Saint Michel, De more I see de ole village an' louder soun' de bell. O! all de monee dat I mak' w'en I be travel roun' Can't kip me long away from home on dis beeg Yankee town, I t'ink I'll settle down again on Parish Saint Michel, An' leev an' die more satisfy so long I hear dat bell. PELANG. Pelang! Pelang! Mon cher garçon, I t'ink of you--t'ink of you night and day-- Don't mak' no difference, seems to me De long long tam you're gone away. * * * * * De snow is deep on de Grande Montagne-- Lak tonder de rapide roar below-- De sam' kin' night, ma boy get los' On beeg, beeg storm forty year ago. An' I never was hear de win' blow hard, An' de snow come sweesh on de window pane-- But ev'ryt'ing 'pear lak' it's yesterday An' whole of ma troub' is come back again. Ah me! I was foolish young girl den It's only ma own plaisir I care, An' w'en some dance or soirée come off Dat's very sure t'ing you will see me dere. Don't got too moche sense at all dat tam, Run ev'ry place on de whole contree-- But I change beeg lot w'en Pelang come 'long For I love him so well, kin' o' steady me. An' he was de bes' boy on Coteau, An' t'ink I am de bes' girl too for sure-- He's tole me dat, geev de ring also Was say on de inside "Je t'aime toujours." I geev heem some hair dat come off ma head, I mak' de nice stocking for warm hees feet, So ev'ryt'ing's feex, w'en de spring is come For mak' mariée on de church toute suite. "W'en de spring is come!" Ah I don't see dat, Dough de year is pass as dey pass before, An' de season come, an' de season go, But our spring never was come no more. * * * * * It's on de fête of de jour de l'an, An' de worl' outside is cole an' w'ite, As I sit an' watch for mon cher Pelang For he's promise come see me dis very night. Bonhomme Peloquin dat is leev near us-- He's alway keep look heem upon de moon-- See fonny t'ing dere only week before, An' say he's expec' some beeg storm soon. So ma fader is mak' it de laugh on me' "Pelang he's believe heem de ole Bonhomme Dat t'ink he see ev'ryt'ing on de moon An' mebbe he's feel it too scare for come." But I don't spik not'ing I am so sure Of de promise Pelang is mak' wit' me-- An' de mos' beeg storm dat is never blow Can't kip heem away from hees own Marie. I open de door, an' pass outside For see mese'f how de night is look An' de star is commence for go couché De mountain also is put on hees tuque. No sooner, I come on de house again W'ere ev'ryt'ing feel it so nice an' warm, Dan out of de sky come de Nor'Eas' win'-- Out of de sky come de beeg snow storm. Blow lak not'ing I never see, Blow lak le diable he was mak' grande tour; De snow come down lak wan avalanche, An' cole! Mon Dieu, it is cole for sure! I t'ink, I t'ink of mon pauvre garçon, Dat's out mebbe on de Grande Montagne; So I place chandelle we're it's geev good light, An' pray Le Bon Dieu he will help Pelang. De ole folk t'ink I am go crazee, An' moder she's geev me de good night kiss; She say "Go off on your bed, Marie, Dere's nobody come on de storm lak dis." But ma eye don't close dat long long, night For it seem jus' lak phantome is near, An' I t'ink of de terrible Loup Garou An' all de bad story I offen hear. Dere was tam I am sure somet'ing call "Marie" So plainly I open de outside door, But it's meet me only de awful storm, An de cry pass away--don't come no more. An' de morning sun, w'en he's up at las', Fin' me w'ite as de face of de snow itse'f, For I know very well, on de Grande Montagne, Ma poor Pelang he's come dead hese'f. It's noon by de clock w'en de storm blow off, An' ma fader an' broder start out for see Any track on de snow by de Mountain side, Or down on de place w'ere chemin should be. No sign at all on de Grande Montagne, No sign all over de w'ite, w'ite snow; Only hear de win' on de beeg pine tree, An' roar of de rapide down below. An' w'ere is he lie, mon cher Pelang! Pelang ma boy I was love so well? Only Le Bon Dieu up above An' mebbe de leetle snow bird can tell. An I t'ink I hear de leetle bird say, "Wait till de snow is geev up it's dead, Wait till I go, an' de robin come, An' den you will fin' hees cole, cole bed." An' it's all come true, for w'en de sun Is warm de side of de Grande Montagne An' drive away all de winter snow, We fin' heem at las', mon cher Pelang! An' here on de fête of de jour de l'an, Alone by mese'f I sit again, W'ile de beeg, beeg storm is blow outside, An' de snow come sweesh on de window pane. Not all alone, for I t'ink I hear De voice of ma boy gone long ago; Can hear it above de hurricane, An' roar of de rapide down below. Yes--yes--Pelang, mon cher garçon! I t'ink of you, t'ink of you night an' day, Don't mak' no difference seems to me How long de tam you was gone away. MON CHOUAL "CASTOR." I'm poor man, me, but I buy las' May Wan horse on de Comp'nie Passengaire, An' auction feller w'at sole heem say She's out of de full-breed "Messengaire." Good trotter stock, also galluppe, But work long tam on de city car, Of course she's purty well break heem up, So come leetle cheap--twenty-wan dollarre. Firs' chance I sen' heem on St. Cesaire, W'ere I t'ink he's have moche better sight, Mebbe de grass an' de contree air Very soon was feex heem up all right. I lef' heem dere till de fall come 'long, An' dat trotter he can't eat grass no more, An' w'en I go dere, I fin' heem strong Lak not'ing I never see before. I heetch heem up on de light sulkee, L'enfant! dat horse he is cover groun'! Don't tak' long tam for de crowd to see Mon choual he was leek all trotter roun'. Come down de race course lak' oiseau Tail over datch boar', nice you please, Can't tell for sure de quick he go, S'pose somew'ere 'bout two, t'ree forties. I treat ma frien' on de whiskey blanc, An' we drink "Castor" he's bonne santé From L'Achigan to St. Armand, He's bes' horse sure on de whole comté. * * * * * 'Bout week on front of dis, Lalime, Dat man drive horse call "Clevelan' Bay" Was challenge, so I match wit' heem For wan mile heat on straight away. Dat's twenty dollarre on wan side, De lawyer's draw de paper out, But if dem trotter come in tied, Wall! all dat monee's go on spout. Nex' t'ing ma backer man, Labrie, Tak' off his catch-book vingt cinq cents, An' toss Lalime bes' two on t'ree For see who's go on inside fence. Bateese Lalime, he's purty smart, An' gain dat toss wit' jockey trick. I don't care me, w'en "Castor" start, Very soon I t'ink he's mak' heem sick. Beeg crowd of course was dere for see Dem trotter on de grand match race Some people come from St. Remi An' some from plaintee 'noder place. W'en all is ready, flag was fall An' way dem trotter pass on fence Lak not'ing you never see at all, It mak' me t'ink of "St. Lawrence."[1] "Castor," hees tail was stan' so straight Could place chapeau on de en' of top An' w'en he struck two forty gait Don't seem he's never go for stop. Wall! dat's all right for firs' half mile W'en Clevelan' Bay commence for break, Dat mak' me feel very moche lak smile, I'm sure "Castor" he's took de cake. But Lalime pull heem hard on line An' stop "Clevelan'" before go far, It's all no good, he can't ketch mine I'm go more quicker lak express car. I'm feel all right for my monee, For sure mon Choual he's took firs' place, W'en 'bout arpent from home, sapré, Somet'ing she's happen, I'm los' de race. Wan bad boy he's come out on track, I cannot see dat bad boy's han'; He's hol' somet'ing behin' hees back, It was small bell, I understan'. Can spik for dat, ma horse go well, An' never show no sign of sweat, Until dat boy he's ring hees bell-- Misere! I t'ink I hear heem yet! Wall! jus' so soon mon Choual "Castor" Was hear dat bell go kling! klang! kling! He's tink of course of city car, An' spose mus' be conductor ring. Firs' t'ing I know ma trotter's drop Dat tail was stan' so straight before, An' affer dat, mebbe he stop For me, I don't know not'ing more. But w'en I'm come alive again I fin' dat horse call "Clevelan' Bay" Was got firs' place, an' so he's gain Dat wan mile heat on straight away. An' now w'erever I am go Bad boy he's sure for holler an' yell Dis donc! Dis donc! Paul Archambault! W'at's matter wit' your chestnutte bell? Mak' plaintee troub' dem bad garçons, An' offen ring some bell also, Was mad! Could plonge on de St. Laurent An' w'at to do, "Castor" don't know. Las' tam I pass de railway track For drive avec mon frere Alfred, In-jinne she's ring, "Castor" he's back, Monjee! it's fonny I'm not come dead! Toujours comme ça! an' mak' me sick, But horse dat work long on les chars Can't broke dem off on fancy trick So now I'm busy for sole "Castor." [Footnote 1: "St. Lawrence," the Canadian "Dexter."] OLE TAM ON BORD-A PLOUFFE. I lak on summer ev'ning, w'en nice cool win' is blowin' An' up above ma head, I hear de pigeon on de roof, To bring ma chair an' sit dere, an' watch de current flowin' Of ole Riviere des Prairies as she pass de Bord-a Plouffe. But it seem dead place for sure now, on shore down by de lan'in'-- No more de voyageurs is sing lak dey was sing alway-- De tree dey're commence growin' w'ere shaintee once is stan'in', An' no one scare de swallow w'en she fly across de bay. I don't lak see de reever she's never doin' not'in' But passin' empty ev'ry day on Bout de l'ile below-- Ma ole shaloup dat's lyin' wit' all its timber rottin' An' tam so change on Bord-a Plouffe since forty year ago! De ice dat freeze on winter, might jus' as well be stay dere, For w'en de spring she's comin' de only t'ing I see Is two, t'ree piqnique feller, hees girl was row away dere, Don't got no use for water now, on Riviere des Prairies. 'Twas diff'rent on dem summer you couldn't see de reever, Wit' saw-log an' squar' timber raf', mos' all de season t'roo-- Two honder man an' more too--all busy lak de beaver, An' me! I'm wan de pilot for ronne 'em down de "Soo." Don't 'member lak I use to, for now I'm gettin' ole, me-- But still I can't forget Bill Wade, an' Guillaume Lagassé, Joe Monferrand, Bazile Montour--wit' plaintee I can't tole, me, An' king of all de Bord-a Plouffe, M'sieu' Venance Lemay. Lak small boy on hees lesson, I learn de way to han'le Mos' beeges' raf' is never float upon de Ottawaw, Ma fader show me dat too, for well he know de channel, From Dutchman Rapide up above to Bout de l'ile en bas. He's smart man too, ma fader, only t'ing he got de bow-leg, Ridin' log w'en leetle feller, mebbe dat's de reason w'y, All de sam', if he's in hurry, den Bagosh! he's got heem no leg But wing an' fedder lak oiseau, was fly upon de sky! O dat was tam we're happy, an' man dey're alway singin', For if it's hard work on de raf', w'y dere's your monee sure! An' ev'ry summer evenin', ole Bord-a Plouffe she's ringin' Wit' "En Roulant ma Boulé" an' "J'aimerai toujour." Dere dey're comin' on de wagon! fine young feller ev'ry wan too, Dress im up de ole tam fashion, dat I lak for see encore, Yellin' hooraw! t'roo de village, all de horse upon de ronne too, Ah poor Bord-a Plouffe! she never have dem tam again no more! Very offen w'en I'm sleepin', I was feel as if I'm goin' Down de ole Riviere des Prairies on de raf' de sam as den-- An' ma dream is only lef' me, w'en de rooster commence crowin' But it can't do me no harm, 'cos it mak me young again. An' upon de morning early, wen de reever fog is clearin' An' sun is makin' up hees min' for drive away de dew, W'en young bird want hees breakfas', I wak' an' t'ink I'm hearin' Somebody shout "Hooraw, Bateese, de raf' she's wait for you." Dat's voice of Guillaume Lagassé was call me on de morning Jus' outside on de winder w'ere you look across de bay, But he's drown upon de Longue "Soo," wit' never word of warning An' green grass cover over poor Guillaume Lagassé. I s'pose dat's meanin' somet'ing--mebbe I'm not long for stay here, Seein' all dem strange t'ing happen--dead frien' comin' roun' me so-- But I'm sure I die more happy, if I got jus' wan more day here, Lak we have upon de ole tam Bord-a Plouffe of long ago! THE GRAND SEIGNEUR. To the hut of the peasant, or lordly hall, To the heart of the king, or humblest thrall, Sooner or late, love comes to all, And it came to the Grand Seigneur, my dear, It came to the Grand Seigneur. The robins were singing a roundelay, And the air was sweet with the breath of May, As a horseman rode thro' the forest way, And he was a Grand Seigneur, my dear, He was a grand Seigneur. Lord of the Manor, Count Bellefontaine, Had spurr'd over many a stormy plain With gallants of France at his bridle rein, For he was a brave Cavalier, my dear-- He was a brave Cavalier. But the huntsman's daughter, La Belle Marie, Held the Knight's proud heart in captivity, And oh! she was fair as the fleur de lys, Tho' only a peasant maid, my dear, Only a peasant maid. Thro' the woodland depths on his charger grey To the huntsman's cottage he rides away, And the maiden lists to a tale to-day That haughtiest dame might hear, my dear, That haughtiest dame might hear. But she cried "Alas! it may never be, For my heart is pledged to the young Louis, And I love him, O Sire, so tenderly, Tho' he's only a poor Chasseur, my Lord, Only a poor Chasseur." "Enough," spake the Knight with a courtly bow, "Be true to thy lover and maiden vow, For virtue like thine is but rare, I trow, And farewell to my dream of love, and thee, Farewell to my dream of thee." And they say the gallant Count Bellefontaine Bestowed on the couple a rich domain, But you never may hear such tale again, For he was a Grand Seigneur, my dear, He was a Grand Seigneur! M'SIEU SMIT. THE ADVENTURES OF AN ENGLISHMAN IN THE CANADIAN WOODS. Wan morning de walkim boss say "Damase, I t'ink you're good man on canoe d'ecorce, So I'll ax you go wit' your frien' Philéas An' meet M'sieu' Smit' on Chenail W'ite Horse. "He'll have I am sure de grosse baggage-- Mebbe some valise--mebbe six or t'ree-- But if she's too moche for de longue portage 'Poleon he will tak' 'em wit' mail buggee." W'en we reach Chenail, plaintee peep be dere, An' wan frien' of me, call Placide Chretien, 'Splain all dat w'en he say man from Angleterre Was spik heem de crowd on de "Parisien." Fonny way dat Englishman he'll be dress, Leetle pant my dear frien' jus' come on knee, Wit' coat dat's no coat at all--only ves' An' hat--de more stranger I never see! Wall! dere he sit on de en' some log An' swear heem in English purty loud Den talk Français, w'ile hees chien boule dog Go smellim an' smellim aroun' de crowd. I spik im "Bonjour, M'sieu' Smit', Bonjour, I hope dat yourse'f and famille she's well?" M'sieu Smit' he is also say "Bonjour," An' call off hees dog dat's commence for smell. I tell heem my name dat's Damase Labrie I am come wit' Philéas for mak' de trip, An' he say I'm de firs' man he never see Spik English encore since he lef' de ship. He is also ax it to me "Damase, De peep she don't seem understan' Français, W'at's matter wit' dat?" An' I say "Becos You mak' too much talk on de Parisien." De groun she is pile wit' baggage--Sapré! An' I see purty quick we got plaintee troub-- Two tronk, t'ree valise, four-five fusil, An' w'at M'sieu Smit' he is call "bat' tubbe." M'sieu Smit' he's tole me w'at for's dat t'ing, An' it seem Englishman he don't feel correc' Until he's go plonge on some bat' morning An' sponge it hees possibill high hees neck. Of course dat's not'ing of my beez-nesse, He can plonge on de water mos' ev'ry day, But I t'ink for mese'f it mak foolishness An' don't do no good w'en your bonne santé. W'en I tell 'Poleon he mus' mak' dat job, Dere's leetle too moche for canoe d'écorce, He's mad right away an' say "Sapré diable! You t'ink I go work lak wan niggerhorse? "I'm not manufacture dat way, bâ non, Dat rich stranger man he have lot monee, I go see my frien' Onésime Gourdon, An' tole heem bring horse wit' some more buggee." Wall! affer some w'ile dey'll arrange all dat, 'Poleon an' hees frien' Onésime Gourdon, But w'en 'Poleon is tak' hole of bat', He receive it beeg scare immediatement! Dat chien boule dog, I was tole you 'bout, I am not understan' w'at good she's for, Eat 'Poleon's leg w'it hees teet' an' mout, 'Poleon he is feel very mad--by Gor! Of course I am poule heem hees tail toute suite But I don't know some reason mak all dis troub', W'en I hear me dat Englishman, M'sieu Smit' Say 'Poleon, w'at for you took my tubbe? "Leff 'im dere--for I don't low nobodee Walk heem off on any such way lak dat; You may tak' all de res', an' I don't care me-- But de man he'll be keel who is tak' my bat'." "I will carry heem wit' me," say M'sieu Smit'-- "W'erever dat tubbe she mus' go, I go-- No matter de many place we visite, An' my sponge I will tak' mese'f also." Philéas say "Damase, we mus buil' some raf' Or mebbe some feller be sure get drown"; Dis geev me plaisir, but I'm scare mak' laf', So I'll do it mese'f, inside, way down. At las' we are start on voyage, sure nuff, M'sieu Smit' carry tubbe on de top hees head, Good job, I t'ink so, de lac isn't rough, Or probably dis tam, we're all come dead. De dog go wit' Onésime Gourdon, An' Onésime afferwar' say to me, "Dat chien boule dog is eat 'Poleon Was de more quiet dog I never see." But fun she's commence on very nex' day W'en we go camp out on de Castor Noir. Dat Englishman he'll come along an' say "I hope some wil' Injun she don't be dere. "I have hear many tam, dat de wood be foule Of Injun w'at tak' off de hair your head. But so surely my name she's Johnnie Boule If I see me dem feller I shoot it dead." Philéas den pray harder, more quick he can Mebbe he's t'ink dat's hees las' portage De moder hees fader, she's Injun man Derefore an' also, he is wan Sauvage. I say "Don't mak' it some excitement; Saison she is 'close' on de spring an' fall, An' dem peep dat work on de Gouvernement Don't lak you shoot Injun dis mont' at all." Nex' day M'sieu Smit' is perform hees plonge We see heem go done it--Philéas an' me, An' w'en he's hang up bat' tubbe an' sponge We go on de wood for mak' Chasse perdrix. An' mebbe you will not believe to me, But w'en we come back on de camp encore De sponge of dat Englishman don't be see, An' we fin' beeg bear she's go dead on shore. Very fonny t'ing how he's loss hees life, But Philéas he'll know hese'f purty quick, He cut M'sieu Bear wit' hees hunter knife, An' sponge she's fall out on de bear stummick. Day affer we get two fox houn' from Boss Dat's good for ketch deer on de fall an' spring, Den place Englishman w'ere he can't get los' An' tole heem shoot quicker he see somet'ing. Wat's dat leetle deer got no horn at all? She'll be moder small wan en suite bimeby, Don't remember mese'f w'at name she's call, But dat's de kin' start w'en de dog is cry. We see heem come down on de runaway De dog she is not very far behin' An' w'en dey pass place M'sieu Smit' is stay We expec' he will shoot or make noise some kin'! But he's not shoot at all, mon cher ami, So we go an' we ax "Is he see some deer?" He say "Dat's long tam I am stay on tree But I don't see not'ing she's pass on here." We spik heem once more, "He don't see fox houn'?" W'at you t'ink he is say, dat Englishman? "Yes, I see dem pass quickly upon de groun', Wan beeg yellow dog, an' two small brown wan." He's feel de more bad I don't see before W'en he know dat beeg dog, she's wan small deer, An' for mak' ev'ryt'ing correc' encore We drink I am sure six bouteilles de bière. Nex' day--dat's Dimanche--he is spik to me, "Damase, you mus' feel leetle fatigué, You may slep' wit' Philéas w'ile I go an' see I can't get some nice quiet tam to-day." So for keep 'way skeeter, an' fly also Bouteille from de shelf M'sieu Smit' he tak', Den he start wit' his chien boule dog an' go For nice quiet walk on shore of lac. We don't slep' half hour w'en dere's beeg, beeg yell, Lak somet'ing I'm sure don't hear long tam, An' we see wan feller we cannot tell, Till he spik it, "Damase! Philéas!! dam dam!!!" Den we know it at once, mon cher ami, But she's swell up hees face--hees neck an' han'! It seem all de skeeter on w'ole contree Is jump on de head of dat Englishman. Some water on poor M'sieu Smit' we'll t'row, An' w'en he's tranquille fin' out ev'ryt'ing; Bouteille he's rub on, got some nice sirop I was mak' mese'f on de wood las' spring. Dere was jus' 'noder t'ing he seem for care An' den he is feel it more satisfy, Dat t'ing, my dear frien', was for keel some bear, If he'll do dat wan tam, he's prepare for die. Philéas say he know w'ere some blue berree Mak' very good place for de bear have fonne, So we start nex' day on morning earlee, An' M'sieu Smit' go wit' hees elephan' gun. Wan woman sauvage she is come be dere, Mebbe want some blue berree mak' some pie, Dat' Englishman shoot, he is t'ink she's bear, An' de woman she's holler, "Mon Dieu, I'm die!" M'sieu Smit' he don't do no harm, becos He is shake hese'f w'en he shoot dat squaw, But scare he pay hunder' dollar cos' For keel some sauvage on de "close" saison. T'ree day affer dat, we start out on lac For ketch on de water wan Cariboo, But win' she blow strong, an' we can't get back Till we t'row ourse'f out on dat canoe. We t'ink M'sieu Smit' he is sure be drown, Leetle w'ile we can't see heem again no more, An' den he's come up from de place go down An' jomp on hees bat' tubbe an' try go shore. W'en he's pass on de bat', he say "Hooraw!" An' commence right away for mak' some sing; I'm sure you can hear heem ten-twelve arpent 'Bout "Brittanie, she alway mus' boss somet'ing." Dat's all I will tole you jus' now, my frien'; I s'pose you don't know de more fonny case, But if Englishman go on wood again I'll have more storee w'en you pass my place. WHEN ALBANI SANG. Was workin' away on de farm dere, wan morning not long ago, Feexin' de fence for winter--'cos dat's w'ere we got de snow! W'en Jeremie Plouffe, ma neighbor, come over an' spik wit' me, "Antoine, you will come on de city, for hear Ma-dam All-ba-nee?" "W'at you mean?" I was sayin' right off, me, "Some woman was mak' de speech, Or girl on de Hooraw Circus, doin' high kick an' screech?" "Non--non," he is spikin'--"Excuse me, dat's be Ma-dam All-ba-nee Was leevin' down here on de contree, two mile 'noder side Chambly. "She's jus' comin' over from Englan', on steamboat arrive Kebeck, Singin' on Lunnon an' Paree, an' havin' beeg tam, I expec', But no matter de moche she enjoy it, for travel all roun' de worl', Somet'ing on de heart bring her back here, for she was de Chambly girl. "She never do not'ing but singin' an' makin' de beeg grande tour An' travel on summer an' winter, so mus' be de firs' class for sure! Ev'ryboddy I'm t'inkin' was know her, an' I also hear 'noder t'ing, She's frien' on La Reine Victoria an' show her de way to sing!" "Wall," I say, "you're sure she is Chambly, w'at you call Ma-dam All-ba-nee? Don't know me dat nam' on de Canton--I hope you're not fool wit' me?" An' he say, "Lajeunesse, dey was call her, before she is come mariée, But she's takin' de nam' of her husban'--I s'pose dat's de only way." "C'est bon, mon ami," I was say me, "If I get t'roo de fence nex' day An' she don't want too moche on de monee den mebbe I see her play." So I finish dat job on to-morrow, Jeremie he was helpin' me too, An' I say, "Len' me t'ree dollar quickly for mak' de voyage wit' you." Correc'--so we're startin' nex' morning, an' arrive Montreal all right, Buy dollar tiquette on de bureau, an' pass on de hall dat night. Beeg crowd, wall! I bet you was dere too, all dress on some fancy dress, De lady, I don't say not'ing, but man's all w'ite shirt an' no ves'. Don't matter, w'en ban' dey be ready, de foreman strek out wit' hees steek, An' fiddle an' ev'ryt'ing else too, begin for play up de musique. It's fonny t'ing too dey was playin' don't lak it mese'f at all, I rader be lissen some jeeg, me, or w'at you call "Affer de ball." An' I'm not feelin' very surprise den, w'en de crowd holler out, "Encore," For mak' all dem feller commencin' an' try leetle piece some more, 'Twas better wan' too, I be t'inkin', but slow lak you're goin' to die, All de sam', noboddy say not'ing, dat mean dey was satisfy. Affer dat come de Grande piano, lak we got on Chambly Hotel, She's nice lookin' girl was play dat, so of course she's go off purty well, Den feller he's ronne out an' sing some, it's all about very fine moon, Dat shine on Canal, ev'ry night too, I'm sorry I don't know de tune. Nex' t'ing I commence get excite, me, for I don't see no great Ma-dam yet, Too bad I was los all dat monee, an' too late for de raffle tiquette! W'en jus' as I feel very sorry, for come all de way from Chambly, Jeremie he was w'isper, "Tiens, Tiens, prenez garde, she's comin' Ma-dam All-ba-nee!" Ev'ryboddy seem glad w'en dey see her, come walkin' right down de platform, An' way dey mak' noise on de han' den, w'y! it's jus' lak de beeg tonder storm! I'll never see not'ing lak dat, me, no matter I travel de worl', An' Ma-dam, you t'ink it was scare her? Non, she laugh lak de Chambly girl! Dere was young feller comin' behin' her, walk nice, comme un Cavalier, An' before All-ba-nee she is ready an' piano get startin' for play, De feller commence wit' hees singin', more stronger dan all de res', I t'ink he's got very bad manner, know not'ing at all politesse. Ma-dam, I s'pose she get mad den, an' before anyboddy can spik, She settle right down for mak' sing too, an' purty soon ketch heem up quick, Den she's kip it on gainin' an' gainin', till de song it is tout finis, An' w'en she is beatin' dat feller, Bagosh! I am proud Chambly! I'm not very sorry at all, me, w'en de feller was ronnin' away, An' man he's come out wit' de piccolo, an' start heem right off for play, For it's kin' de musique I be fancy, Jeremie he is lak it also, An' wan de bes' t'ing on dat ev'ning is man wit' de piccolo! Den mebbe ten minute is passin', Ma-dam she is comin' encore, Dis tam all alone on de platform, dat feller don't show up no more, An' w'en she start off on de singin' Jeremie say, "Antoine, dat's Français," Dis give us more pleasure, I tole you, 'cos w'y? We're de pure Canayen! Dat song I will never forget me, 'twas song of de leetle bird, W'en he's fly from it's nes' on de tree top, 'fore res' of de worl' get stirred, Ma-dam she was tole us about it, den start off so quiet an' low, An' sing lak de bird on de morning, de poor leetle small oiseau. I 'member wan tam I be sleepin' jus' onder some beeg pine tree An song of de robin wak' me, but robin he don't see me, Dere's not'ing for scarin' dat bird dere, he's feel all alone on de worl', Wall! Ma-dam she mus' lissen lak dat too, w'en she was de Chambly girl! Cos how could she sing dat nice chanson, de sam' as de bird I was hear, Till I see it de maple an' pine tree an' Richelieu ronnin' near, Again I'm de leetle feller, lak young colt upon de spring Dat's jus' on de way I was feel, me, w'en Ma-dam All-ba-nee is sing! An' affer de song it is finish, an' crowd is mak' noise wit' its han', I s'pose dey be t'inkin' I'm crazy, dat mebbe I don't onderstan', Cos I'm set on de chair very quiet, mese'f an' poor Jeremie, An' I see dat hees eye it was cry too, jus' sam' way it go wit' me. Dere's rosebush outside on our garden, ev'ry spring it has got new nes', But only wan bluebird is buil' dere, I know her from all de res', An' no matter de far she be flyin' away on de winter tam, Back to her own leetle rosebush she's comin dere jus' de sam'. We're not de beeg place on our Canton, mebbe cole on de winter, too, But de heart's "Canayen" on our body, an' dat's warm enough for true! An' w'en All-ba-nee was got lonesome for travel all roun' de worl' I hope she 'll come home, lak de bluebird, an' again be de Chambly girl! DE CAMP ON DE "CHEVAL GRIS." You 'member de ole log-camp, Johnnie, up on de Cheval Gris, W'ere we work so hard all winter, long ago you an' me? Dere was fourteen man on de gang, den, all from our own paroisse, An' only wan lef' dem feller is ourse'f an' Pierre Laframboise. But Pierre can't see on de eye, Johnnie, I t'ink it's no good at all! An' it wasn't for not'ing, you're gettin' rheumateez on de leg las' fall! I t'ink it's no use waitin', for neider can come wit' me, So alone I mak' leetle visit dat camp on de Cheval Gris. An' if only you see it, Johnnie, an' change dere was all aroun', Ev'ryt'ing gone but de timber an' dat is all fallin' down; No sign of portage by de reever w'ere man dey was place canoe, W'y, Johnnie, I'm cry lak de bebé, an' I'm glad you don't come, mon vieux! But strange t'ing's happen me dere, Johnnie, mebbe I go asleep, As I lissen de song of de rapide, as pas' de Longue Soo she sweep, Ma head she go biz-z-z lak de sawmeel, I don't know w'at's wrong wit' me, But firs' t'ing I don't know not'ing, an' den w'at you t'ink I see? Yourse'f an' res' of de boy, Johnnie, by light of de coal oil lamp, An' you're singin' an' tolin' story, sittin' aroun' de camp, We hear de win' on de chimley, an' we know it was beeg, beeg storm, But ole box stove she is roarin', an' camp's feelin' nice an' warm. I t'ink you're on boar' of de raf', Johnnie, near head of Riviere du Loup, W'en LeRoy an' young Patsy Kelly get drown comin' down de Soo, Wall! I see me dem very same feller, jus' lak you see me to-day, Playin' dat game dey call checker, de game dey was play alway! An' Louis Charette asleep, Johnnie, wit' hees back up agen de wall, Makin' soche noise wit' hees nose, dat you t'ink it was moose on de fall, I s'pose he's de mos' fattes' man dere 'cept mebbe Bateese La Rue, But if I mak fonne on poor Louis, I know he was good boy too! W'at you do over dere on your bunk, Johnnie, lightin' dem allumettes, Are you shame 'cos de girl she write you, is dat de las' wan you get? It's fonny you can't do widout it ev'ry tam you was goin' bed, W'y readin' dat letter so offen, you mus have it all on de head! Dat's de very sam' letter, Johnnie, was comin' t'ree mont' ago, I t'ink I know somet'ing about it, 'cos I fin' it wan day on de snow. An' I see on de foot dat letter, Philomene she is do lak dis: * * * I'm not very moche on de school, me, but I t'ink dat was mean de kiss. Wall! nobody's kickin' de row, Johnnie, an' if allumettes' fini, Put Philomene off on your pocket, an' sing leetle song wit' me; For don't matter de hard you be workin' toujours you're un bon garçon, An' nobody sing lak our Johnnie, Kebeck to de Mattawa! An' it's den you be let her go, Johnnie, till roof she was mos' cave in, An' if dere's firs' prize on de singin', Bagosh! you're de man can win! Affer dat come fidelle of Joe Pilon, an' he's feller can make it play, So we're clearin' de floor right off den, for have leetle small danser. An' w'en dance she was tout finis, Johnnie, I go de sam' bunk wit' you W'ere we sleep lak two broder, an' dream of de girl on Riviere du Loup, Very nice ontil somebody call me, it soun' lak de boss Pelang, "Leve toi, Jeremie ma young feller, or else you'll be late on de gang." An' den I am wak' up, Johnnie, an' w'ere do you t'ink I be? Dere was de wood an' mountain, dere was de Cheval Gris, But w'ere is de boy an' musique I hear only w'ile ago? Gone lak de flower las' summer, gone lak de winter snow! An' de young man was bring me up, Johnnie, dat's son of ma boy Maxime, Say, "Gran'fader, w'at is de matter, you havin' de bad, bad dream? Come look on your face on de well dere, it's w'ite lak I never see, Mebbe 't was better you're stayin', an' not go along wit' me." An' w'en I look down de well, Johnnie, an' see de ole feller dere, I say on mese'f "you be makin' fou Jeremie Chateauvert, For t'ink you're garçon agen. Ha! ha! jus' 'cos you are close de eye, An' only commence for leevin' w'en you're ready almos' for die!" Ah! dat's how de young day pass, Johnnie, purty moche lak de t'ing I see, Sometam dey be las' leetle longer, sam' as wit' you an' me, But no matter de ole we're leevin', de tam she must come some day, W'en boss on de place above, Johnnie, he's callin' us all away. I'm glad I was go on de camp, Johnnie, I t'ink it will do me good, Mebbe it's las' tam too, for sure, I'll never pass on de wood, For I don't expec' moche longer ole Jeremie will be lef', But about w'at I see dat day, Johnnie, tole nobody but yourse'f. DE STOVE PIPE HOLE. Dat's very cole an' stormy night on Village St. Mathieu, W'en ev'ry wan he's go couché, an' dog was quiet, too-- Young Dominique is start heem out see Emmeline Gourdon, Was leevin' on her fader's place, Maxime de Forgeron. Poor Dominique he's lak dat girl, an' love her mos' de tam, An' she was mak' de promise--sure--some day she be his famme, But she have worse ole fader dat's never on de worl', Was swear onless he's riche lak diable, no feller's get hees girl. He's mak' it plaintee fuss about hees daughter Emmeline, Dat's mebbe nice girl, too, but den, Mon Dieu, she's not de queen! An' w'en de young man's come aroun' for spark it on de door, An' hear de ole man swear "Bapteme!" he's never come no more. Young Dominique he's sam' de res',--was scare for ole Maxime, He don't lak risk hese'f too moche for chances seein' heem, Dat's only stormy night he come, so dark you cannot see, An dat's de reason w'y also, he's climb de gallerie. De girl she's waitin' dere for heem--don't care about de rain, So glad for see young Dominique he's comin' back again, Dey bote forget de ole Maxime, an' mak de embrasser An affer dey was finish dat, poor Dominique is say-- "Good-bye, dear Emmeline, good-bye; I'm goin' very soon, For you I got no better chance, dan feller on de moon-- It's all de fault your fader, too, dat I be go away, He's got no use for me at all--I see dat ev'ry day. "He's never meet me on de road but he is say 'Sapré!' An' if he ketch me on de house I'm scare he's killin' me, So I mus' lef' ole St. Mathieu, for work on 'noder place, An' till I mak de beeg for-tune, you never see ma face." Den Emmeline say "Dominique, ma love you'll alway be An' if you kiss me two, t'ree tam I'll not tole noboddy-- But prenez garde ma fader, please, I know he's gettin ole-- All sam' he offen walk de house upon de stockin' sole. "Good-bye, good-bye, cher Dominique! I know you will be true, I don't want no riche feller me, ma heart she go wit' you." Dat's very quick he's kiss her den, before de fader come, But don't get too moche pleasurement--so 'fraid de ole Bonhomme. Wall! jus' about dey're half way t'roo wit all dat love beez-nesse Emmeline say, "Dominique, w'at for you're scare lak all de res? Don't see mese'f moche danger now de ole man come aroun'," W'en minute affer dat, dere's noise, lak' house she's fallin' down. Den Emmeline she holler "Fire! will no wan come for me?" An Dominique is jomp so high, near bus' de gallerie,-- "Help! help! right off," somebody shout, "I'm killin' on ma place, It's all de fault ma daughter, too, dat girl she's ma disgrace." He's kip it up long tam lak dat, but not hard tellin' now, W'at's all de noise upon de house--who's kick heem up de row? It seem Bonhomme was sneak aroun' upon de stockin' sole, An' firs' t'ing den de ole man walk right t'roo de stove pipe hole. W'en Dominique is see heem dere, wit' wan leg hang below, An' 'noder leg straight out above, he's glad for ketch heem so-- De ole man can't do not'ing, den, but swear and ax for w'y Noboddy tak' heem out dat hole before he's comin' die. Den Dominique he spik lak dis, "Mon cher M'sieur Gourdon I'm not riche city feller, me, I'm only habitant, But I was love more I can tole your daughter Emmeline, An' if I marry on dat girl, Bagosh! she's lak de Queen. "I want you mak de promise now, before it's come too late, An' I mus' tole you dis also, dere's not moche tam for wait. Your foot she's hangin' down so low, I'm 'fraid she ketch de cole, Wall! if you give me Emmeline, I pull you out de hole." Dat mak' de ole man swear more hard he never swear before, An' wit' de foot he's got above, he's kick it on de floor, "Non, non," he say "Sapré tonnerre! she never marry you, An' if you don't look out you get de jail on St. Mathieu." "Correc'," young Dominique is say, "mebbe de jail's tight place, But you got wan small corner, too, I see it on de face, So if you don't lak geev de girl on wan poor habitant, Dat's be mese'f, I say, Bonsoir, mon cher M'sieur Gourdon." "Come back, come back," Maxime is shout--I promise you de girl, I never see no wan lak you--no never on de worl'! It's not de nice trick you was play on man dat's gettin' ole, But do jus' w'at you lak, so long you pull me out de hole." "Hooraw! Hooraw!" Den Dominique is pull heem out tout suite An' Emmeline she's helpin' too for place heem on de feet, An' affer dat de ole man's tak' de young peep down de stair, W'ere he is go couchè right off, an' dey go on parloir. Nex' Sunday morning dey was call by M'sieur le Curé Get marry soon, an' ole Maxime geev Emmeline away; Den affer dat dey settle down lak habitant is do, An' have de mos' fine familee on Village St. Mathieu. "DE SNOWBIRD." O leetle bird dat's come to us w'en stormy win' she's blowin', An' ev'ry fiel' an' mountain top is cover wit' de snow, How far from home you're flyin', noboddy's never knowin' For spen' wit' us de winter tam, mon cher petit oiseau! We alway know you're comin', w'en we hear de firs' beeg storm, A sweepin' from de sky above, an' screamin' as she go-- Can tell you're safe inside it, w'ere you're keepin' nice an' warm, But no wan's never see you dere, mon cher petit oiseau! Was it 'way behin' de mountain, dat de nort' win' ketch you sleepin' Mebbe on your leetle nes' too, an' before de wing she grow, Lif' you up an' bring you dat way, till some morning fin' you peepin' Out of new nes' on de snow dreef, mon pauv' petit oiseau! All de wood is full on summer, wit' de many bird is sing dere, Dey mus' offen know each oder, mebbe mak' de frien' also, But w'en you was come on winter, never seein' wan strange wing dere Was it mak' you feelin' lonesome, mon pauv' petit oiseau? Plaintee bird is alway hidin' on some place no wan can fin' dem, But ma leetle bird of winter, dat was not de way you go-- For de chil'ren on de roadside, you don't seem to care for min' dem W'en dey pass on way to schoolhouse, mon cher petit oiseau! No wan say you sing lak robin, but you got no tam for singin' So busy it was keepin' you get breakfas' on de snow, But de small note you was geev us, w'en it join de sleigh bell ringin' Mak' de true Canadian music, mon cher petit oiseau! O de long an' lonesome winter, if you're never comin' near us, If we miss you on de roadside, an' on all de place below! But le bon Dieu he will sen' you troo de storm again for cheer us, W'en we mos' was need you here too, mon cher petit oiseau! THE HABITANT'S JUBILEE ODE. I read on de paper mos' ev'ry day, all about Jubilee An' grande procession movin' along, an' passin' across de sea, Dat's chil'ren of Queen Victoriaw comin' from far away For tole Madame w'at dey t'ink of her, an' wishin' her bonne santé. An' if any wan want to know pourquoi les Canayens should be dere Wit' res' of de worl' for shout "Hooraw" an' t'row hees cap on de air, Purty quick I will tole heem de reason, w'y we feel lak de oder do, For if I'm only poor habitant, I'm not on de sapré fou. Of course w'en we t'ink it de firs' go off, I know very strange it seem For fader of us dey was offen die for flag of L'Ancien Regime, From day w'en de voyageurs come out all de way from ole St. Malo, Flyin' dat flag from de mas' above, an' long affer dat also. De English fight wit' de Frenchman den over de whole contree, Down by de reever, off on de wood, an' out on de beeg, beeg sea, Killin', an' shootin', an' raisin' row, half tam dey don't know w'at for, W'en it's jus' as easy get settle down, not makin' de crazy war. Sometam' dey be quiet for leetle w'ile, you t'ink dey don't fight no more, An' den w'en dey're feelin' all right agen, Bang! jus' lak' she was before. Very offen we're beatin' dem on de fight, sometam' dey can beat us, too, But no feller's scare on de 'noder man, an' bote got enough to do. An' all de long year she be go lak' dat, we never was know de peace, Not'ing but war from de wes' contree down to de St. Maurice; Till de las' fight's comin' on Canadaw, an' brave Generale Montcalm Die lak' a sojer of France is die, on Battle of Abraham. Dat's finish it all, an' de English King is axin' us stayin' dere W'ere we have sam' right as de 'noder peep comin' from Angleterre. Long tam' for our moder so far away de poor Canayens is cry, But de new step-moder she's good an' kin', an' it's all right bimeby. If de moder come dead w'en you're small garçon leavin' you dere alone, Wit' nobody watchin' for fear you fall, an hurt youse'f on de stone, An' 'noder good woman she tak' your han' de sam' your own moder do, Is it right you don't call her moder, is it right you don't love her too? Bâ non, an' dat was de way we feel, w'en de ole Regime's no more, An' de new wan come, but don't change moche, w'y it's jus' lak' it be before. Spikin' Français lak' we alway do, an' de English dey mak no fuss, An' our law de sam', wall, I don't know me, 'twas better mebbe for us. So de sam' as two broder we settle down, leevin' dere han' in han', Knowin' each oder, we lak' each oder, de French an' de Englishman, For it's curi's t'ing on dis worl', I'm sure you see it agen an' agen, Dat offen de mos' worse ennemi, he's comin' de bes', bes' frien'. So we're kipin' so quiet long affer dat, w'en las' of de fightin's done, Dat plaintee is say, de new Canayens forget how to shoot de gun; But Yankee man's smart, all de worl' know dat, so he's firs' fin' mistak' wan day W'en he's try cross de line, fusil on hee's han', near place dey call Chateaugay. Of course it's bad t'ing for poor Yankee man, De Salaberry be dere Wit' habitant farmer from down below, an' two honder Voltigeurs, Dem feller come off de State, I s'pose, was fightin' so hard dey can But de blue coat sojer he don't get kill, is de locky Yankee man! Since den w'en dey're comin on Canadaw, we alway be treat dem well, For dey're spennin' de monee lak' gentil-hommes, an' stay on de bes' hotel, Den "Bienvenu," we will spik dem, an' "Come back agen nex' week, So long you was kip on de quiet an' don't talk de politique!" Yass, dat is de way Victoriaw fin' us dis jubilee, Sometam' we mak' fuss about not'ing, but it's all on de familee, An' w'enever dere's danger roun' her, no matter on sea or lan', She'll find that les Canayens can fight de sam' as bes' Englishman. An' onder de flag of Angleterre, so long as dat flag was fly-- Wit' deir English broder, les Canayens is satisfy leev an' die. Dat's de message our fader geev us w'en dey're fallin' on Chateaugay, An' de flag was kipin' dem safe den, dat's de wan we will kip alway! OLE DOCTEUR FISET. Ole Docteur Fiset of Saint Anicet, Sapré tonnerre! he was leev long tam! I'm sure he's got ninety year or so, Beat all on de Parish 'cept Pierre Courteau, An' day affer day he work all de sam'. Dat house on de hill, you can see it still, She's sam' place he buil' de firs' tam' he come Behin' it dere's one leetle small jardin Got plaintee de bes' tabac Canayen Wit' fameuse apple an' beeg blue plum. An' dey're all right dere, for de small boy's scare No matter de apple look nice an' red, For de small boy know if he's stealin' some Den Docteur Fiset on dark night he come, An' cut leetle feller right off hees head! But w'en dey was rap, an' tak' off de cap, M'sieu' le Docteur he will say "Entrez," Den all de boy pass on jardin behin' W'ere dey eat mos' ev'ryt'ing good dey fin', Till dey can't go on school nearly two, t'ree day. But Docteur Fiset, not moche fonne he get, Drivin' all over de whole contree, If de road she's bad, if de road she's good, W'en ev'ryt'ing's drown on de Spring-tam flood, An' workin' for not'ing half tam' mebbe! Let her rain or snow, all he want to know Is jus' if anywan's feelin' sick, For Docteur Fiset's de ole fashion kin' Doin' good was de only t'ing on hees min' So he got no use for de politique. An' he's careful too, 'cos firs' t'ing he do, For fear dere was danger some fever case, Is tak' w'en he's come leetle w'isky chaud, Den 'noder wan too jus' before he go, He's so scare carry fever aroun' de place! On nice summer day w'en we're makin' hay Dere's not'ing more pleasant for us I'm sure Dan see de ole man come joggin' along, Alway singin' some leetle song, An' hear heem say "Tiens, mes amis, Bonjour!" An' w'en de cole rain was commence again An' we're sittin' at home on some warm cornerre, If we hear de buggy an' see de light Tearin' along t'roo de black, black night, We know right off dat's de ole Docteur! An' he's smart horse sure, w'at he call "Faubourg," Ev'ry place on de Parish he know dem all, An' you ought to see de nice way he go For fear he's upsettin' upon de snow, W'en ole man's asleep on de cariole! I 'member w'en poor Hormisdas Couture Get sick on hees place twenty mile away An' hees boy Ovide he was come "Raquette" W'at you call "Snowshoe," for Docteur Fiset, An' Docteur he start wit' hees horse an' sleigh. All de night before, de beeg storm she roar, An' mos' of de day it's de sam' also, De drif' was pilin' up ten feet high You can't see not'ing dis side de sky, Not'ing but wan avalanche of snow. I'm hearin' de bell w'en I go on de well For water de cattle on barn close by, But I only ketch sight of hees cheval blanc An' hees coonskin coat wit' de capuchon An' de storm tak' heem off, jus' de sam' he fly. Mus' be le Bon Dieu dat is help him t'roo, Ole Docteur Fiset an' hees horse "Faubourg," 'Twas somet'ing for splain-me, wall I don't care, But somehow or 'noder he's gettin' dere, An' save de life Hormisdas Couture. But it's sam' alway, lak' dat ev'ry day, He never was spare hese'f pour nous autres, He don't mak' moche monee, Docteur Fiset, An' offen de only t'ing he was get Is de prayer of poor man, an' wan bag of oat. * * * * * Wall! Docteur Fiset of Saint Anicet He is not dead yet! an' I'm purty sure If you're passin' dat place about ten year more You will see heem go roun' lak' he go before Wit' de ole cariole an' hees horse "Faubourg!" End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Habitant and Other French-Canadian Poems, by William Henry Drummond *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HABITANT AND OTHERS *** This file should be named 8hbtn10.txt or 8hbtn10.zip Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 8hbtn11.txt VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 8hbtn10a.txt Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Keren Vergon, Andrew Sly and PG Distributed Proofreaders Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing. Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections, even years after the official publication date. Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement. The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment and editing by those who wish to do so. Most people start at our Web sites at: http://gutenberg.net or http://promo.net/pg These Web sites include award-winning information about Project Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!). Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter. http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03 Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90 Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want, as it appears in our Newsletters. Information about Project Gutenberg (one page) We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2 million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+ We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002 If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end. The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks! This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers, which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users. Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated): eBooks Year Month 1 1971 July 10 1991 January 100 1994 January 1000 1997 August 1500 1998 October 2000 1999 December 2500 2000 December 3000 2001 November 4000 2001 October/November 6000 2002 December* 9000 2003 November* 10000 2004 January* The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium. We need your donations more than ever! As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones that have responded. As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states. Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state. In answer to various questions we have received on this: We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have, just ask. While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to donate. International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are ways. Donations by check or money order may be sent to: Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation PMB 113 1739 University Ave. Oxford, MS 38655-4109 Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment method other than by check or money order. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN [Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states. We need your donations more than ever! You can get up to date donation information online at: http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html *** If you can't reach Project Gutenberg, you can always email directly to: Michael S. Hart Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message. We would prefer to send you information by email. **The Legal Small Print** (Three Pages) ***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START*** Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers. They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to. *BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request. ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project"). Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark. Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market any commercial products without permission. To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment. LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below, [1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that time to the person you received it from. If you received it on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement copy. If you received it electronically, such person may choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to receive it electronically. THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you may have other legal rights. INDEMNITY You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation, and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook, [2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook, or [3] any Defect. DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm" You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this "Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg, or: [1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however, if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form, including any form resulting from conversion by word processing or hypertext software, but only so long as *EITHER*: [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and does *not* contain characters other than those intended by the author of the work, although tilde (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may be used to convey punctuation intended by the author, and additional characters may be used to indicate hypertext links; OR [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent form by the program that displays the eBook (as is the case, for instance, with most word processors); OR [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC or other equivalent proprietary form). [2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this "Small Print!" statement. [3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the gross profits you derive calculated using the method you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation" the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to let us know your plans and to work out the details. WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO? Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed in machine readable form. The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time, public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses. Money should be paid to the: "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at: hart@pobox.com [Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be they hardware or software or any other related product without express permission.] *END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*