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Young squire's frolic/The answer

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Young Squire's Frolic (1802)
The Answer
3177607Young Squire's Frolic — The Answer1802

THE ANSWER.

HArd by a clear river in the sweet month of May,
In search of my true love I happ’ned to stray,
I heard a young damsel there loudly complain,
In sorrow for parting from her darling swain.

O cruel parents wherever you be,
That banish’d my darling sweet Jamie from me,
No other man breathing my favour shall gain,
But the pride of all Nature’s my own darling swain.

Through lonely wild desarts and hills i'll roam,
To wild birds and sisnes I will make my moan,
All riches and grandeur I now will disdain,
Thro’ the world I will wander for my darling swain.

His breath is more sweet than the roses in June,
His eyes are like diamonds, or the orbs of the moon,
His skin's like clear amber just come from the mine,
He’s cut up to perfection my own darling swain.

My love he is proper, he is tall, and he’s trim,
There’s none in the world that can equal with him;
O all sorrow and trouble I’ll endure without pain,
Was I sure to meet with my own darling swain.

My Father he thought then his point for to gain,
By parting his Daughter from her darling swain;
But now for to vex him, I ever will be
Jamie’s true and constant young Gragal ma Chree.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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