THE
CAJUNS AND THE GATOR
One day me
an' Papa, We been fishin' at the
crick
And Ma she
brung the skillet, For the family picnic
'Twas Uncle Ebenezer
an' his youngins trailin' too
Got Jimmy-Joe
and Bertha, Linda-Sue to name a few.
The fish begun
t'a bitin', Fast as Papa reeled 'em
in
A finer day
for fishin' - Nare a one 'tis ever
been
Ma wid' her
iron skillet, She done firin' up the
heat
The rice it
were a'cookin' an' the Gumbo smellin'
sweet.
Now ever'thang
be goin' jes' as nice as they
could be
But somethin'
were to happen that done even rattle
me !
Papa yelled "A
Gator ! " - Den' his line began to
shook
Then Uncle Ebenezer,
He run down to take a look.
It were swishin'
and a'swoshin', It were puttin' up
a fight
But Papa he
determined, Hold dat line wid all his
might !
Me an' cousin
Bertha, We was fetchin' us a rope
To tie aroun'
dat Gator - (we knowed dat were little
hope )
Papa gettin' 'verbal',
Sed ' I'll reel dat Gator in !'
And Ma, she
hollered "Papa, you know cursin' is
a sin !"
We all was
in the water, Tryin' to git dat
rope to fit
Tho' plum sure
'nuf dat Gator - He not havin' none
of it.
Long into the
evenin' we done struggled to and fro'
(Look like Cajuns
in dat water dancin' to the 'dosey-doe')
Dat Gator sure
were stubborn, But now Ma she gittin'
mad
She laid dat
iron skillet on it's head wid all
she had !
Dat Gator, he
were dizzy an' his eyes began to
roll
Oh yea we
seen it happen, Dat big skillet took
it's toll
As Ma climb
out da water, Yelled 'Now let
dat Gator be !'
'You ain't a'gonna
skin 'em, Best you set dat critter
free !'
We let dat
Gator loose and Papa he were spittin'
mad
He claimed dat
were the bestest fun dat he done
ever had
Papa, he in
trouble 'coz his language 'twernt so good
Cried 'See ya
later Alligator, we'd a'eat ya if we
could. '
I won't forget
dat picnic and Ma's skillet I recall
The way she
hit dat Gator - Funniest sight I ever
saw !
An' that be
in the summer of one 1928
Dat Gator wid
the headache an' the one we never
ate.
Author/Poem written by:
Tammy Boatman-Young
2002
