Allen-a-Dale by Sir Walter Scott
Allen-a-Dale by Sir Walter Scott
Allen-a-Dale has
no faggot for burning,
Allen-aDale has
no furrow for turning,
Allen-a-Dale has
no fleece for the spinning,
Yet Allen-a-Dale
has red gold for the winning.
Come read me my
riddle! come, hearken my tale;
And tell me the
craft of bold Allen-a-Dale.
The Baron of
Ravensworth prances in pride,
And he views his
domains upon Arkindale side,
The mere for his
net, and the land for his game,
The chase for
the wild, and the park for the tame;
Yet the fish of
the lake, and the deer of the vale,
Are less free to
Lord Dacre than Allen-a-Dale!
Allen-a-Dale was
ne'er belted a knight,
Though his spur
be as sharp, and his blade be as bright;
Allen-a-Dale is
no baron or lord,
Yet twenty tall
yeomen will draw at his word;
And the best of
our nobles his bonnet will vail,
Who at
Rere-cross on Stanmore meets Allen-a-Dale.
Allen-a-Dale to
his wooing is come;
The mother, she
ask'd of his household and home:
"Though the
castle of Richmond stand fair on the hill,
My hall,"
quoth bold Allen, "shows gallanter still;
"Tis the
blue vault of heaven, with it's crescent so pale,
And with all
it's bright spangles!" said Allen-a-Dale.
The father was
steel, and the mother was stone;
They lifted the
latch, and the bade him be gone;
But loud, on the
morrow, their wail and their cry:
He had laugh'd
on the lass with his bonny black eye.
And she fled to
the forest to hear a love-tale,
And the youth it
was told by was Allen-a-Dale!
-by Sir Walter Scott
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