The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1959, Page 26

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1959, Page 26
24 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1959 by CAROLINE GUNNARSSON A visitor sees Nova Scotia as an aristo- crat basking in the afterglow of history as old as the nation. CAROLINE GUNNARSSON But to the native Nova Scotian early Canadian history is a living mem- ory, flowing from generation to gen- eration like the blood in their vein? Sometimes the past comes at them out of the soil at their feet and there can be no feeling of life beginning with each new generation. In the Annapolis Valley families have farmed the same land for un- broken generations since they took over from -the Acadians, and have in- herited the stories of their plight with the dykes and apple orchards which were to become the foundation of a way of life for the new settlers. Every summer, too, pilgrims from Louisiana come to Grand Pre to lay sentimental claim to the land of Evan- geline. Descendants of the Acadians, they’re born with a ready answer for sophisticates who dismiss their heroine as -a romantic figment of Longfellow’s imagination. There wasn’t ju-st one pair of Acadian lovers separated by their cruel expulsion from the land they’d tilled and toiled for. There were many. They’d heard the stories from their parents, who heard them from their parents, right back to the generation who had lived out the or- deal. They pause beside Evangeline’s Well in the little park dedicated to her mem- ory and gaze at her statue -with its two symbolic profiles. On one side the face is that of eager, hopeful youth. On the other it is deeply etched with weary age and the disillusionment of -a life spent in fruitless search for a -lost lover. The pilgrims worship in the chapel, and sometimes their reminiscing en- riches local lore with bits of the valley’s early history. They’re telling their children’s child- ren the stories they’ve heard from their grandparnts, stories of ancestors herd- ed into their own church to hear the fateful British proclamation ordering them to swear allegiance to the British crown or be gone from their homes in the valley.

x

The Icelandic Canadian

Direct Links

If you want to link to this newspaper/magazine, please use these links:

Link to this newspaper/magazine: The Icelandic Canadian
https://timarit.is/publication/1976

Link to this issue:

Link to this page:

Link to this article:

Please do not link directly to images or PDFs on Timarit.is as such URLs may change without warning. Please use the URLs provided above for linking to the website.