Drysdale moved to Edinburgh. In 1894 a dramatic cantata
The Kelpie, was performed there, and in the same year the
Borders-inspired overture
Herondean was performed in London. A mystic musical play,
The Plague, created a strong impression when produced in Edinburgh in 1896. Two years later, a romantic light opera,
The Red Spider, with libretto by
Sabine Baring-Gould, was enthusiastically received when first produced at Plymouth, and toured the provinces for twenty weeks. His
Border Romance, an orchestral poem composed at
Henry Wood's request, was given at Queen's Hall, London, in 1904. From 1904 to 1905 he was theoretical master at the
Athenæum School of Music, Glasgow; later he was conductor of the Glasgow Select Choir, for which he wrote, among other things, the choral ballade
Barbara Allan. In 1905 he composed the incidental music for Euripides'
Hippolytus, staged in Glasgow, and a dramatic cantata,
Tamlane. With appropriate insight, Drysdale set Scots lyrics and arranged folk-songs. Many arrangements are included in the
Dunedin Collection of Scots Songs (1908), which he edited. In 1907 he collaborated with the
Duke of Argyll in
The Scottish Tribute to France, for chorus and orchestra; it remained unperformed at his death. He died in Edinburgh of pneumonia, on 18 June 1909, and was buried in
Peebles. He was unmarried. ==Works left at his death==