The Sentimental Songster/The Rose of Allandale

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For other versions of this work, see The Rose of Allandale.
The Sentimental Songster (1840s)
The Rose of Allandale by Charles Jefferys
4172140The Sentimental Songster — The Rose of Allandale1840sCharles Jefferys


SONGS


THE ROSE OF ALLANDALE.

The morn was fair, the skies were clear,
No breath came o’er the sea,
When Mary left her Highland cot,
And wander’d forth with me.

Tho’ flowers deck’d the mountain side.
And fragrance fill’d the vale;-
By far the sweetest flower there,
Was the Rose of Allandale.

Where’er I wander’d east or west;
Though fate began to low’r—
A solace still was she to me,
In sorrow’s lonely hour.

When tempests lash’d our gallant bark.
And rent her shiv’ring sail—
One maiden form withstood the storm,
’Twas the Rose of Allandale.

And when my fever’d lips were parch'd.
On Afric’s burning sand,
She whisper’d hopes of happiness,
And tales ofdistant land.

My life had been a wilderness,
Unbliss’d by fortune’s gale—
Had fate not link’d my lot to hers,
The Rose of Allandale