THE OLD SCOTTISH CAVALIER

I.

Come listen to another song,

Should make your heart beat high,

Bring crimson to your forehead,

And the lustre to your eye;—

It is a song of olden time,

Of days long since gone by,

And of a Baron stout and bold

As e'er wore sword on thigh!

Like a brave old Scottish cavalier,

All of the olden time!

II.

He kept his castle in the north,

Hard by the thundering Spey;

And a thousand vassals dwelt around

All of his kindred they.

And not a man of all that clan

Had ever ceased to pray

For the Royal race they loved so well,

Though exiled far away

From the steadfast Scottish cavaliers,

All of the olden time!

III.

His father drew the righteous sword

For Scotland and her claims,

Among the loyal gentlemen

And chiefs of ancient names

Who swore to fight or fall beneath

The standard of King James,

And died at Killiecrankie pass

With the glory of the Graemes;

Like a true old Scottish cavalier,

All of the olden time!

IV.

He never owned the foreign rule,

No master he obeyed,

But kept his clan in peace at home,

From foray and from raid;

And when they asked him for his oath,

He touched his glittering blade,

And pointed to his bonnet blue,

That bore the white cockade:

Like a leal old Scottish cavalier,

All of the olden time!

V.

At length the news ran through the land—

THE PRINCE had come again!

That night the fiery cross was sped

O'er mountain and through glen;

And our old Baron rose in might,

Like a lion from his den,

And rode away across the hills

To Charlie and his men,

With the valiant Scottish cavaliers,

All of the olden time!

VI.

He was the first that bent the knee

When the STANDARD waved abroad,

He was the first that charged the foe

On Preston's bloody sod;

And ever, in the van of fight,

The foremost still he trod,

Until, on bleak Culloden's heath,

He gave his soul to God,

Like a good old Scottish cavalier,

All of the olden time!

VII.

Oh! never shall we know again

A heart so stout and true—

The olden times have passed away,

And weary are the new:

The fair White Rose has faded

From the garden where it grew,

And no fond tears save those of heaven

The glorious bed bedew

Of the last old Scottish cavalier,

All of the olden time!

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