Ode To Big Blue

Gordon Lightfoot

Transposer:

Album: Don Quixote (1972) [Verse 1] The oceans of the world were the home of big blue He was the greatest monster that the world ever knew And the place that he loved best --- Was the waters to the west Around the blue Pacific he did roam [Verse 2] Big Blue moved alone for a mighty blue was he And the battles of the whales was an awesome sight to see And he took them one by one and he drove them all away In the mating of the day he was the king [Verse 3] Big blue had fifty wives and he sired forty sons Though most of them fell victim to the cruel harpoon guns Ah but he was too much wise to get caught by the gunners’ eyes And so he lived at sea a hundred years [Verse 4] His mouth was as large as a tunnel so they say His hide was thick as leather and his eyes quick and small And his back was all scarred by the times he got away And he knew the smell of whalers did Big Blue [Verse 5] Big Blue passed away to his natural decay Beside the Arctic Circle as he travelled up that way And there never was a man who was born with a gunner’s hand Who ever took a pan to Big Blue [Verse 6] Now the gray whale has run and the sperm is almost done The finbacks and the Greenland rights have all passed and gone They’ve been taken by the men for the money they could spend And the killing next ends it just goes on [Verse 7] The oceans of the world were the home of big blue He was the greatest monster that the world ever knew And the place that he loved best --- Was the waters to the west Around the blue Pacific he did roam

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La chanson évoque l'histoire légendaire d'un immense baleineau, connu sous le nom de Big Blue, qui avait pour territoire l'immensité des océans, particulièrement ceux du Pacifique. Ce monstre marin, considéré comme le roi des mers, menait une vie solitaire, se célébrant en chassant et en dominant les autres baleines avec sa force impressionnante. Il était doté d'une sagesse qui lui permettait d'échapper aux harpons mortels, assurant sa survie pendant un siècle, malgré la menace constante des chasseurs. Avec le temps, Big Blue finit par rejoindre les profondeurs de l'océan, chutant dans l'inévitabilité de la mort naturelle. La chanson se penche sur la disparition tragique de nombreuses espèces de baleines, victimes de la cupidité humaine. Elle met en lumière la beauté des océans et nous rappelle la fragilité de ces géants marins face à l'avidité des hommes.