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Saint Botolph

Topics: classic

Saint Botolph flourished in the olden time,      In the days when the saints were in their prime.      Oh, his feet were bare and bruised and cold,      But his heart was warm and as pure as gold.      And the kind old saint with his gown and his hood      Was loved by the sinners and loved by the good,      For he made the sinners as pure as the snow,      And the good men needed him to keep them so.      CHORUS         Then drink, brave gentlemen, drink with me         To the Lincolnshire saint by the old North Sea.         A glass and a toast and a song and a rhyme         To the barefooted saint of the olden time.      He loved a friend and a flagon of wine,      When the friend was true and the bottle was fine.      He would raise his glass with a knowing wink,      And this was the toast he would always drink: -      "Oh, here's to the good and the bad men too,      For without them saints would have nothing to do.      Oh, I love them both and I love them well,      But which I love better, I never can tell."      CHORUS         Then drink, brave gentlemen, drink with me         To the Lincolnshire saint by the old North Sea.         A glass and a toast and a song and a rhyme         To the barefooted saint of the olden time.      As he journeyed along on the king's highway      He gave all the boys and the girls "Good-day,"      And never a child saw the hood and gown      But ran to the father of Botolph's Town.      He'd a word for the wicked, and he called them kin,      And he said, "I am certain that there must be sin      While a few get the loaves and many get the crumbs,      And some are born fingers and some born thumbs."      CHORUS         Then drink, brave gentlemen, drink with me         To the Lincolnshire saint by the old North Sea.         A glass and a toast and a song and a rhyme         To the barefooted saint of the olden time.      But the saint grew old, and sorry the day      When his life went out with the tide in the bay;      But he left a name and he left a creed      Of the cheerful life and the kindly deed.      Then remember the man of the days of old      Whose heart was warm and as pure as gold,      And remember the tears and the prayers he gave      For any poor devil with a soul to save.      CHORUS         Then drink, brave gentlemen, drink with me         To the Lincolnshire saint by the old North Sea.         A glass and a toast and a song and a rhyme         To the barefooted saint of the olden time.

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"Saint Botolph flourished in the olden time,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Arthur Macy delivers a powerful performance in "Saint Botolph"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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