William McCarty, comp. The American National Song Book. 1842.
The Green-Mountain FarmerRobert Treat Paine, Jr. (17731811)
B
Contented, yet acquiring;
Below ambition’s gilded charm,
Yet rich beyond desiring;—
The hill-born rustic, hale and gay,
Ere prattling swallows sally,
Or ere the pine-top spies the day,
Sings cheerly through his valley.
Green Mountains, echo Heaven’s decree!
Live, Virtue, Law, and Liberty.
Enrich’d by honest labour,
He cheers the friend of humbler wealth,
Nor courts his prouder neighbour;
At eve, returning home, he meets
His nut-brown lass, so loving;
And still his constant strain repeats,
Through groves and meadows roving,
Green Mountains, &c.
With treacherous folds to entwine him,
Undaunted by his venom’d sting,
To flames he would consign him.
The hardy yeoman, like the oak
That shades his woodland border,
Would baffle Anarch’s vengeful stroke,
To shelter law and order.
Green Mountains, &c.
By home-bred traitors aided,
No free-born hand would till the vale
By slavery degraded;
Each heart would join the patriot brave,
To die proud Freedom’s martyr,
And shed its latest drop to save
His country’s glorious charter.
Green Mountains’ echo then would be,
Fight on, fight on, for Liberty!