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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 2. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 5 total hits in 3 results.
Bunker Camp (Missouri, United States) (search for this): chapter 223
Yankee (search for this): chapter 223
Aytoun (search for this): chapter 223
82.
A song for the time.
[As surely as the leaves are coming out under the breath of Spring, so surely will that nobler spirit of patriotism, which is now stirring the North, create music and songs for us. In the meanwhile, until the poets begin to sing in articulate notes the unwritten music, to which the popular heart is beating time, the following paraphrase of a few stanzas of Aytoun's Scottish Cavalier, which may be sung to the familiar tune of The old English gentleman, may do a little service by way of relief.] Come, listen to another song That shall make your heart beat high, Bring the crimson to your forehead, And the lustre to your eye; A song of the days of old, Of the years that have long gone by, And of the yeomen stout and bold, As e'er wore sword on thigh. Of the brave old Yankee
We use the term “Yankee” in the sense in which the South uses it, as synonymous with “Free-State men.” yeomen Of the days of Seventy-six! For when the news was spread abroad, The s