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evangeline
"Evangeline, A Tale of Acaie" is a poem published in 1847 by the American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
Trivia about evangeline
This Longfellow poem is subtitled "A Tale of Acadie"
First name shared by Charles Lindbergh's mother & Longfellow's Acadian heroine
In preparing to write this poem, Longfellow used "An historical and statistical account of Nova Scotia"
In "Uncle Tom's Cabin", Littte Eva's first name is actually this, like the heroine of a Longfellow poem
Poem that begins, “This is the forest primeval”
A statue of this Longfellow character in St. Martinsville, Louisiana honors exiled Acadians
The Presbytere in New Orleans boasts a life-size painting of this tragic Longfellow heroine & her lover, Gabriel
First name of the Longfellow character Ms. Bellefontaine
Longfellow poem that begins in "The forest primeval" where "hemlocks… stand like Druids of eld"
Subtitled "A Tale of Acadie", this Longfellow poem describes the tragic romance of an Acadian woman
This 19th c. poem begins with the line "This is the forest primeval"
The Cajuns are descended from the Acadians, the subject of this famous 1847 poem
This poem is set "in the Acadian land, on the shores of the basin of Minas"