These are your hills, John Cavalier. Your father's kids you tended here, And grew, among these mountains wild, A humble and religious child. Fate turned the wheel; you grew and grew; Bold Marshals doffed the hat to you; God whispered counsels in your ear To guide your sallies, Cavalier. You shook the earth with martial tread; The ensigns fluttered by your head; In Spain or France, Velay or Kent, The music sounded as you went. Much would I give if I might spy Your brave battalions marching by; Or, on the wind, if I might hear Your drums and bugles, Cavalier. In vain. O'er all the windy hill, The ways are void, the air is still, Alone, below the echoing rock, The shepherd calls upon his flock. The wars of Spain and of Cevennes, The bugles and the marching men, The horse you rode for many a year -- Where are they now, John Cavalier? All armies march the selfsame way Far from the cheerful eye of day; And you and yours marched down below About two hundred years ago. Over the hills, into the shade, Journeys each mortal cavalcade; Out of the sound, out of the sun, They go when their day's work is done; And all shall doff the bandoleer To sleep with dead John Cavalier. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FUNERAL HYMN by LOUIS UNTERMEYER THE DAUGHTER OF DEBATE by ELIZABETH I BLIND by LASCELLES ABERCROMBIE SONNET: 13 by RICHARD BARNFIELD THE CROWDED STREET by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT THE INVERSNAID INN by WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER A POETICAL VERSION OF A LETTER, FROM THE EARL OF ESSEX TO SOUTHAMPTON by JOHN BYROM WRITTEN IN VISTORS' BOOK AT THE BIRTHPLACE OF ROBERT BURNS by GEORGE WASHINGTON CABLE |