YE KITE-FLYERS OF SCOTLAND.

By T. C.

(THOMAS CAMPBELL)

Quel chio vi debbo posso di parole

Pagare in parte, e d'opera d'inchiostro.

Ariosto.

Ye kite-flyers of Scotland,

Who live from home at ease;

Who raise the wind, from year to year,

In a long and strong trade breeze:

Your paper kites let loose again

On all the winds that blow;

Through the shout of the rout

Lay the English ragmen low;

Though the shout for gold be fierce and bold,

And the English ragmen low.

The spirits of your fathers

Shall peep from every leaf;

For the midnight was their noon of fame,

And their prize was living beef.

Where Deloraine on Musgrave fell,

Your paper kites shall show,

That a way to convey

Better far than theirs you know,

When you launch your kites upon the wind

And raise the wind to blow.

Caledonia needs no bullion,

No coin in iron case;

Her treasure is a bunch of rags

And the brass upon her face;

With pellets from her paper mills

She makes the Southrons trow,

That to pay her sole way

Is by promising to owe,

By making promises to pay

When she only means to owe.

The meteor ray of Scotland

Shall float aloft like scum,

Till credit's o'erstrained line shall crack,

And the day of reckoning come:

Then, then, ye Scottish kite-flyers,

Your hone-a-rie must flow,

While you drink your own ink

With your old friend Nick below,

While you burn your bills and singe your quills

In his bonny fire below.