| Ken you how a whig can fight, Aikendrum, Aikendrum?
|
| Ken you how a whig can fight, Aikendrum?
|
| He can fight the hero bright with his heels and armor light
|
| And the wind of heavenly night, Aikendrum, Aikendrum.
|
| Is not Rowley in the right, Aikendrum?
|
| Did you hear of Sunderland, Aikendrum, Aikendrum?
|
| Did you hear of Sunderlund, Aikendrum?
|
| That man of high command, who has sworn to clear the land,
|
| He has vanished from our strand, Aikendrum, Aikendrum.
|
| Or the eel has taken the sand, Aikendrum.
|
| Donals’s running round and round, Aikendrum, Aikendrum.
|
| Donald’s running round and round, Aikendrum.
|
| But the chief cannot be found, and the Dutchmen they are drowned
|
| And King Jamie — he is crowned, Aikendrum, Aikendrum.
|
| But the dogs will get a stound, Aikendrum.
|
| We have heard of Whigs galore, Aikendrum, Aikendrum.
|
| We have heard of Whigs galore, Aikendrum.
|
| But we’ve sought the country o’er, with the cannon and claymore
|
| And still they are beford, Aikendrum, Aikendrum.
|
| We may seek forever more, Aikendrum.
|
| Ken ye how to gain a Whig, Aikendrum, Aikendrum?
|
| Ken ye how to gain a Whig, Aikendrum?
|
| Look jolly, blythe and big, take his ain blest side and prig,
|
| And the poor, worm-eaten Whig, Aikendrum, Aikendrum
|
| For opposition’s sake you will win, Aikendrum! |