The Song of the Oak

The Druids waved their golden knives

And danced around the Oak

When they had sacrificed a man;

But though the learned search and scan,

No single modern person can

Entirely see the joke.

But though they cut the throats of men

They cut not down the tree,

And from the blood the saplings sprang

Of oak-woods yet to be.

But Ivywood, Lord Ivywood,

He rots the tree as ivy would,

He clings and crawls as ivy would

About the sacred tree.

King Charles he fled from Worcester fight

And hid him in an Oak;

In convent schools no man of tact

Would trace and praise his every act,

Or argue that he was in fact

A strict and sainted bloke,

But not by him the sacred woods

Have lost their fancies free,

And though he was extremely big

He did not break the tree.

But Ivywood, Lord Ivywood,

He breaks the tree as ivy would,

And eats the woods as ivy would

Between us and the sea.

Great Collingwood walked down the glade

And flung the acorns free,

That oaks might still be in the grove

As oaken as the beams above,

When the great Lover sailors love

Was kissed by Death at sea.

But though for him the oak-trees fell

To build the oaken ships,

The woodman worshipped what he smote

And honoured even the chips.

But Ivywood, Lord Ivywood,

He hates the tree as ivy would,

As the dragon of the ivy would

That has us in his grips.