Lay me in a cushioned chair 
 Carry me, ye four 
 With cushions here and there 
 To see the world once more 
    To stable and to kennel go 
 Bring what there is to bring 
 Lead my Lollard to and fro 
 Or gently in a ring   
 Put the chair upon the grass 
 Bring Rody and his hounds 
 That I may contented pass 
 From these earthly bounds   
 His eyelids drop, his head falls low 
 His old eyes cloud with dreams 
 The sun falls on all things that grow 
 Falls in sleepy streams   
 Brown Lollard treads upon the lawn 
 And to the armchair goes 
 There the old man's dreams are gone 
 He smoothes the long, brown nose   
 And now moves many a pleasant tongue 
 Upon his wasted hands 
 Leading aged hounds and young 
 The huntsman near him stands   
 The servants round his cushioned place 
 Are with new sorrow wrung 
 The hounds are gazing on his face 
 The aged hounds and young   
 The fire is in the old man's eyes 
 His fingers move and sway 
 When the wandering music dies 
 They hear him feebly say   
 Oh huntsman Rody, blow the horn 
 Make the hills reply 
 I cannot blow upon my horn 
 I can but weep and sigh   
 One blind hound lies apart 
 On the sun-smitten grass 
 He holds commune with his heart 
 The moments pass and pass   
 The blind hound with a mournful wail 
 He lifts his wintry head 
 The servants bear the body in 
 The hounds wail for the dead   
 Huntsman Rody, blow the horn 
 Make the hills reply 
 Huntsman Rody, blow the horn 
 Make the hills reply 
 The huntsman loosens on the morn 
 A gay and mournful cry