Literary Monthly, 1897.
THE GYPSY STRAIN
ARTHUR KETCHUM ’98
It comes with the autumn’s silence,
When great Hills dream apart,
And far blue leagues of distance
Call to the Gypsy-heart.
When all the length of sunny roads,
A lure to restless feet,
Are largesses of goldenrod
And beck of bitter-sweet.
Then the wand’rer in us wakens
And out from citied girth,
To go a-vagabonding down
The wide ways of the Earth.
Literary Monthly, 1898.
THE SONG OF THE CAVALIERS
JAMES B. CORCORAN ex-’01
When our sabers rattle merrily against
our lances’ butt,
And our bugles ring out clearly
in the coolness of the dawn,
You can see the guidons waving as the
ranks begin to shut,
And the morning sun beams
forth on the sabers that are drawn.
Then the bits begin to jangle and our
horses paw the air,
When we vault into the saddle
and we grasp the bridle-rein;
Of danger we are fearless and for death
we do not care,
For we fight for good Don
Carlos and the grim grandees of Spain.
So
to horse and away,
At
the break of day,
With never a thought
of fears;
For
Spain and the right
We’ll
die or we’ll fight,
Sing ho, for the
cavaliers!
As we gallop through the villages or through
the sylvan glades,
Merry maid and buxom matron
smile and wave as we ride by;
There are broken hearts behind us as well
as broken blades,
For the cavaliers are gallants
till the war-notes rend the sky.
But when summer breezes waver and grow
cold with news of war,
We gird our good swords closer
and we arm us for the fight;
Maid and wine cup fade behind us, lance
and helmet to the fore,
And we wheel into our battle
line for Carlos and the right.
So
to horse and away,
At
the break of day,
With never a thought
of fears;
We’ll
die or we’ll fight,
For
Spain and the right;
Sing ho, for the
cavaliers
When at last the brazen bugles ripple
out the ringing charge,
We rise up in our stirrups
and we wave our swords on high,
The dust clouds rise beneath us, and the
demons seem at large—
The cavaliers are charging
in to conquer or to die.
Grim death may claim his victims from
out our whirling ranks,
Our plumes may be down-trodden
in the grimy, bloody sod:
The cavaliers will meet their fate without
a word of thanks,
But they’ve died for
good Don Carlos, for old Spain, and for their God.
So
to horse and away,
At
the break of day,
With never a thought
of fears;
We’ll
die or we’ll fight
For
Spain and the right;
Sing ho, for the
cavaliers!