UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNi AT LOS ANGELES (T* ^^ J AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. EDITED BY ROBERT FORD, Author of "Hame-Spun Lays and Lyrics," " Hujiorods Scotch Keadings IX Prose and Verse," " Glints o' Glentoddt," etc. > < j> 1 J 3 > >3-3 >>^ 300 «<9 ALEXx\NDER GARDNER, i^ttiUslitr to "^tx iWafratB ttif ®.ttfen, PAISLEY; and PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. 1889 CM cr> PR PREFACE. Notwithstanding the many benefits resulting from the immense popularity of the Scottish daily and weekly news- o. papers, the universality of the latter has given an effectual O check to the circulation of the rude Old Ballad Literature "S which, from fifty to a hundred years ago, formed so impor- ttk tant an item in the pack of every itinerant chapman in the W land; and to-day the tragic ballads of "Sir James the Rose," and "Mill o' Tifty's Annie," "The Hunting of Chevy-Chase," the pathetic tale of "Gil Morrice," and the humorous and once popular story of " Thrummy Cap," and o others such like, are known chiefly to the literary anti- ^ quary. Some of our rare old chap-ballads, indeed, such as ^ "Thrummy Cap," "The Wife o' Beith," "The Herd's ""' Ghaist," " Young Gregor's Ghost," and "The Blaeberry Courtship " — none of which, strange to say, has been in- C/J corporated in the Standard Collections — are fast threaten- C ing to become extinct, copies of some of them being already it, almost unobtainable. This being the case, and considering ^ that the custom hitherto has been to publish the collections ^ of what has been aptly termed " the literature of the com- mon people " at a price almost beyond the limits of the common purse, it occurred to me some time ago that a volume comprising the more popular and entertaining of the old Chap-Ballads, together with the best of those pre- served in the Collections, would, if published at a moderate price, meet with approval. In the course of last year I accordingly issued a little collection in paper covers, under the title of "Rare Old Scotch Ballads." That pub- ii/^3 vi PREFACE. lication received the hearty approval of the Scottish press, and met with such gratifying success otherwise, that it is already out of print ; and the success of that earlier volume is regarded as a not unreasonable excuse for this substantial and largely augmented collection. The present, like the earlier, makes no claim, of course, to being a Collection in the popular acceptation of that elastic term, but is merely a "reel-rail" budget, compris- ing a number of rare and curious " blads " of verse, together with the "pick and wale" of the more popular of the ancient ballads of Scotland. Of these latter, the versions presented will be found to have been chosen for some good reason. The prefatory notes — studiously made as concise as possible — will be helpful to the uninitiated reader ; and the introduction of several ballads, copies of which are not to be found in any previous collection, together with the interesting particulars which it contains of the authors of "Thrummy Cap" and "The Piper of Peebles," and other pieces, may render the volume not unacceptable to even wrinkled students and connoisseurs in Scottish ballad poetry. Of a number of the pieces which follow, it may, I am avTare, be argued by the literary purist that they do not, strictly speaking, belong to the category of Ballads at all, but are simply narrative poems ; and the contention might be backed with much sound reasoning. At the same time, the distinction between a narrative poem and a ballad can- not always be easily made out, the difference being fre- quently as slight as that which distinguishes a ballad from a song. If it is right and proper to term a narrative song a ballad, then there should be no great mistake, one would think, in calling a narrative poem by the same name. But enough here ! Robert Ford. CONTENTS. PAGE Thrummy Cap, ... ... ... ... i Gil Morrice, ... ... ... 14 The Bonnie Banks o' Fordie, ... ... 21 Sir James the Rose, ... ... ... 24 The Ghaist o' Garron Ha', . ... 31 Watty and Meg, ... ... ... ... 47 Bessie Bell and Mary Gray, ... ... 54 The Bonnie House o' Airlie, ... ... 67 Young Tamlane, ... ... ... 70 Will and Jean, ... ... ... ... 77 Aiken-Drum, ... ... ... ... 99 Mill o' Tifty's Annie, ... ... ... 104 Chevy Chase, ... ... ... ... 112 The Blaeberry Courtship, ... ... ... 121 The Herd's Ghaist, ... ... ... 125 Helen of Kirkconnell, ... ... ... 129 Captain Wedderburn's Courtship, ... 131 The Murder of King Kenneth, ... ... 136 The Wife o' Auchtermuchty, ... ... 143 The Weary Coble o' Cargill, ... ... 148 The Piper o' Peebles, ... ... ... 155 viii CONTENTS. The Queen's Marie, ... ... ... 169 Sir Patrick Spens, ... ... ... 174 The IIaugiis or Cromdale, ... ... ... 179 Gii.DEROY, ... ... ... ... 182 The Broom o' the Cowdenknowes, ... ... 186 Barbara Allan,... ... ... ... 190 The Kaim o' Mathers, ... ... .. 192 BiNNORIE, O BiNNORIE, ... ... ... 204 The Wife o' Beith,... ... ... ... 208 KnoM o' Gordon, ... ... ... 226 The Twa Corbies, ... ... ... ... 232 Annie o' Lochryan, ... ... ... 234 The Dowie Dens o' Yarrow, ... ... 239 Thomas the Rhymer, ... ... ... 243 Young Grigor's Ghost, ... ... ... 256 Archie Allan, ... ... ... ... 263 The Witch of Fife, ... ... ... 269 The Marchioness of Douglas, ... ... 279 Tayis Bank, ... ... ... ... 281 Belle Margaret, ... ... ... 2S6 The Gay Goss-Ha\vk, ... ... ... 291 ITFnnimmv^ Cap* (A Legend of the Castle of Fiddes.) " Thrummy Cap," here subjoined, though comparatively few of those even who know the ballad well are aware of the fact, was written by a cousin-german of Robert Burns, the national poet, namely, John Burnes or Burness, son of William Burness, farmer, Bogjordan, Glenbervie, Kincar- dineshire. Robert Burns's father, it is well known, belonged to this same part of the country, and was wont to spell his name Burness. John Burness, the author of "Thrummy Cap," was born at Bogjordan on the 22d of May, l^^\. Of his early life little is known, but partly on account of an injudicious marriage, and partly on account of a love of intoxicating liquor, his career was far from being a pros- perous one. He was for some time a baker in Brechin, and in other towns in Forfarshire, and entered the Angus Fencibles in 1794. In 1796, whilst stationed with his regiment in Dumfries, he wrote his tale of "Thrummy Cap." At this time he made the acquaintance of his illus- trious relative, Robert Burns, to whom, shortly before his death, the poem was shown. It is alleged that the great poet read and approved of the production of his less-gifted relative, and, apochryphal as the allegation may be, we like to believe it. John, on the disbandment of his regi- ment in 1799, went to Stonehaven and commenced business for himself as a baker, but, being unsuccessful, he entered the Forfarshire Militia, in which he served until his dis- charge in 1815, when he once more returned to Stonehaven, once more attempted the baker business, and was once more unsuccessful. Subsequently he was engaged as a canvasser by a company of booksellers, which occupation he followed until his death, either in January or March (authorities differ), 1S26, when he perished in a snowstorm near the church of Portlethen, Kincardineshire. His body was claimed by a relative in Aberdeen, and buried in Spittal Churchyard in that city. In addition to " Thrummy Cap," Burness wrote and published " Charles Montgomery — A Tragical Dramatic Tale," Stonehaven, 1800; "The Northern Laird," Dublin, 1815; "The Ghaist o' Garron A 2 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Ha'," and " The Recruit," Montrose, no date. A sort of collated edition of his little works was published in Mon- trose in 1819, in a vohime entitled, "Plays, Poems, Tales, &c." Most of these had appeared separately at various times, including the ones named above. Ix ancient times far i' the north, A hunder miles ayont the Forth, Upon a stormy winter day, Twa men forgather'd o' the way ; Ane was a sturdy bardoch chiel. An' frae the weather happit weel, Wi' a mill'd plaiding Jockey coat. An' eke he on his heid had got A thrummy cap, baith large an' stout, Wi' flaps ahint, as weel's a snout, Whilk buttoned close aneath his chin, Tae keep the cauld frae gettin' in ; Upon his legs he had gammashes, Whilk sodgers term their spatterdashes, An' on his hands, instead o' gloues. Large doddy mittens, whilk he'd roose, For warmness, an' an aiken stick, Nae vcrra lang, but unco thick, Intil his nieve — he drave awa', An' cared for neither frost nor snaw. The ither was just the reverse. For duds upo' him they w^ere scarce. An' unco frichtit glow'rin' body, Ve'd la'en him for a rin-the-wuddy. This ill -met pair gaed on th'gither, An' took nae thocht upo' the weather ; But a michty shoo'er o' snaw an' drift As ever dang doon frae the lift, Grew verra thick upo' the wind, Whilk to their wae they soon did find. An' John (that was the ill-happ'd buddy's name), THRUMMY CAP. Wish't himsel safe frae harm at hame, Kicht wild an' boisterous Boreas roar'd, " Preserve's," quo John, " we'll baith be smor'd, Oor trystic end we'll ne'er mak' oot." " Cheer up," says Thrummy, " never doot, I've some fears we've lost oor way, Hooever at the neist hoose we'll stay, Until we see gif it grow fair. Gin no, a' nicht we'll tarry there." '* Weel, weel," says Johnny, " we will try.'" Syne they a niansion-hoose did spy Upo' the road a piece afore ; Sae up they gaed unto the door, Whaur Thrummy chappit wi' his stick ; Syne to the door cam' very quick A meikle dog, wha barkit sair ; But Thrummy for him didna care. He handled weel his aiken staff. In spite o's teeth he kept him aff. Until the landlord cam' to see. An' ken fat micht the maitter be ; Then very soon the dog did cease, The landlord then did speir the case. Quo' Thrummy, " Sir, we ha'e gaen rill. We thocht we'd ne'er a hoose get till ; We near were smo'red amo' the drift, An' sae gudeman ye'll mak' a shift, To gi'e us quarters a' this nicht. For noo we dinna ha'e the licht, Farer to gang, tho' it were fair, .Sae gin ye ha'e a bed to spare, Whate'er you chairge, we sanna grudge. But satisfy ye ere we budge Tae gang awa' — an' fan 'tis day We'll pack oor a' an' tak' the way." The landlord said — " O' beds I've nane, AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Oor ain fowks they can scarce contain ; But gin ye'U gang but twa miles forrit, Aside the kirk dwalls Robbie Dorrit, Wha keeps a change-hoose, sells gude drink ; His hoose ye may mak' oot, I think." Quo' Thrummy — "That's ower far awa', The roads are sae blawn up wi' snaw, Tae mak' it is nae in oor poo'er For, look ye, there's a galherin' shoo'er Just comin' on. Ye'U lat us bide, Though we should sit by the fireside." The landlord said to him — " Na, na, I canna lat ye bide ava ; Chap aff, for 'tisna worth your while Tae bide, when ye ha'e jimp twa mile Tae gang. Sae quickly aff ye'U steer, For faith I doot ye'U no' be here." " Twa mile ! " quo' Thrummy, " deil speed nie, If frae this hoose this nicht I jee ; Are we to starve in a Christian land, As lang's my stick's intae my hand, An' siller plenty in ma pooch ? Tae nane aboot your hoose I'll crouch. Landlord, ye needna be sae rude. For, faith, we'll mak' oor quarters good. Come, John, lat's in, we'll tak' a seat, Fat sorrow gars ye look sae blate?" Sae in he gangs, an' sets bim doon. Says he — " There's nane aboot your toon Sail put me oot till a new day As lang's I've siller here to pay." The landlord said — " Ye're raither rash, To turn ye oot I canna fash. Since ye're sae positive tae bide ; But troth ye'se sit by the fireside. I tauld ye else o' bed I'd nane THRUMMY CAP. 5 Unoccupied, except bare ane, In it I fear ye winna lie, For stootest hearts ha'e aft been shy Tae venture in within the room Aifter the nicht begins to gloom ; For in it they can ne'er get rest, 'Tis haunted by a fearfu' ghaist ; Oorsel's are terrified a' nicht, Sae ye may chance tae get a sicht. Like that which some o' oor fowk saw ; Far better still ye gang awa' Or else ye"ll maybe rue the day." " Guid faith," quo' John, " I'm thinkin' sae ; Better intae the neuk tae sit. Than fley'd, Gude keep's, oot o' oor wit ; Preserve us ever frae a' evil, I wadna like tae see the deevil." "Whisht, gowk," quo' Thrummy, " baud yer peace. That sanna gar me quit this place. Nana great or sma' I e'er did ill, Nae ghaist or de'il my rest shall spill. I will defy the meikle deil, An' a' his warks, I wat fu' weel ; What sorra then mak's ye sae eerie ? Fling by your fears, an' come, be cheery. Landlord, gin ye'll male' up that bed, I promise I'll be verra gled Within the same a' nicht tae lie If that the room be warm and dry." The landlord says — " Ye'se get a fire, An' candle tae gin ye'll desire. Wi' beuks tae read, an' for yer bed I'll orders gi'e to get it made." John says — "As sure as I'm a Christian man Wha never likes to curse nor ban, I'll sit by the fireside a' nicht, AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. An' gang awa' whan it is licht." Says Thrummy till him, wi' a glower— '■ Ve coordly gowk, I'll mak' ye cower ; Come up the stair this nicht wi' me. An' I will caution for ye be." Then Johnny faintly gi'ed consent, An' up stairs to the room they went, Whaur soon they got baith fire an' licht, Tae haud them hearty a' the nicht. The landlord likewise gi'ed them meat. As meikle as they baith could eat. Showed them their bed, and bade them gang Tae it whene'er they did think lang, Sae wishin' them a guid repose. Straight syne tae his ain bed he goes. Oor travellers now being left alane, 'Cause that the frost was nippin' keen, Cuist aff their shoon, an' warni'd their feet An' syne gacd tae their bed tae sleep. But cooardly John wi' fear was quakin". He couldna sleep but still lay waukin', Sae troubled wi' a panic fricht, ^Vhan near the twalt oor o' the nicht. That Thrummy waukened nn' thus spoke — " Preserve's," quo' he, " I'm like tae choke Wi' thirst, an' I maun ha'e a drink ; I will gang doon the stair I tliink An' grapple fur the water pail ; for a waucht o' caller ale ! " Johnny grips till'm, an' says— "Na, 1 winna lat ye gang awa' ; Hoo wid ye gang an' leave me here Alane, to dee wi' perfect fear." " Rise an' gae wi' me then," quo Tlirumniy, " Ye senseless, gude-for-naething bummy ; I'm only gaun to seek some water, THRUMMY CAP. I will be back jist in a clatter." " Na, na," says John, «' I'll rather lie ; But, as I'm likewise something dry, Gin ye can get a jug or cap, Fesh me up a little drap." "Ay, ay," quo' Thrummy, "that I will, Altho' ye sudna get a gill." Sae doon he gaes tae seek a drink, While on his way he sees a blink O' licht, that shone upo' the floor Oot through the keyhole o' the door, Which wasna fast but stood ajee. Whatever's there, he thinks, I'll see. So bauldly ower the threshold ventures, An' in within the door he enters. But, reader, judge o' his surprise Whan there he saw, wi' wond'rin' eyes, A spacious vault weel stored wi' casks O' reamin' ale, an' some big flasks ; An' stridelegs ower a cask o' ale He saw the likeness o' himsel', Just in the dress that he cuist aff, A thrummy cap, an' aiken staff', Gammashes, an' the jockey coat. An' in its hand the ghaist had got A big four-leggit timmer bicker. Filled tae the brim wi' nappy liquor. , Oor hero at the spectre stared. But neither daunted was nor cared, But tae the ghaist strecht up did stap. An' says — "Dear brither, Thrummy Cap, The warst ye surely dinna drink, Sae I wi' you will taste, I think." Syne took a jug, pu'd oot the pail, An' filled it up wi' the same ale Frae under whaur the spectre sat. AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. An' up the stair wi' it he gat, Took a glide diink, ga'e John anither, But never tauld him o' his brither That he into the cellar saw, Mair than he'd naething seen ava. Light, brown, an' nappy was the beer, *' Whaur did ye get it ? " John did speir. Says Thrumniy— " Sure ye needna care ; I'll gang an' try tae get some niair." Sae doon the stair again he goes Tae get o' drink anither dose, Bein' positive tae ha'e some mair, But still he fand the ghaist was there, Noo on a butt ahint the door. Says he — " Ye did nae ill before, Dear brither Thrummy, sae I'll try You aince again, because I'm dry." He fills his jug stracht oot below, An' up the stair again does go. John marvelled sair, but didna speir Again whaur he had got the beer. For it was stronger than the first, Sae they baith drank till like to burst, Syne did compose themsel's tae rest ; Tae sleep awhile they thought it best. An 'oor in bed they hadna l)een. An' scarcely weel had closed their een, When just intae the neighbourin' chaum'er They heard a dreadfii' din and claum'er ; Aneath the bedclaes John did cower. But Thrummy jumped upon the fioor. Him by the sark-tail John did haud. " Lie still," quo' he ; "fat, are ye mad ? " Thrummy then gaed a hasty jump. An' took John on the ribs a thump. Till on the bed he tumbled doun THRUMMY CAr. In little better than a swoon ; While Thrummy, fast as he could rin, Set aff to see fat made the din. The chaum'er seemed tae him as licht As if the sun was shinin' bricht ; The ghaist was stannin' at the door, In the same dress he had afore ; An' o'er anent it at the wa' Were ither apparitions twa. Thrummy beheld them for awee, But deil a wird as yet spake he ; The speerits seemed tae kick a ba' The ghaist against the ither twa, Whilk close they drave baith back an' fore Atween the chimney an' the door. He stops awhile an' sees the play, Syne rinnin' up, he this did say — " Ane for ane may weel compare, But twa for ane is raither sair. The play's nae equal, sae I vow, Dear brither Thrummy, I'll help you." Then wi' his fit he kicked the ba', Gart it play stot again the wa'. Quick then, as lichtnin' frae the sky, The spectres wi' a horrid cry A' vanished in a clap o' thunder. While Thrummy at the same did wonder. The room was quiet noo and dark. An' Thrummy strippet tae his sark, Glauming his way back to his bed. He thinks he hears a person tread : An' e'er he gat withoot the door. The ghaist agen stood him before, An' in his face did starin' stand, Wi' a big candle in his hand. Quo' Thrummy, " Friend, I want to know lo AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. What brings ye frae the shades below. I in my Maker's name command You tell your story just aff hand. Fat wad ye ha'e? I'll do my best For you, tae lat you be at rest." Then says the ghaist — " 'Tis thirty year Since I was doomed to wander here ; In a' that time there has been none Behaved sae bold as you ha'e done ; Sae if you'll dae a job for me, Disturbance mair I'll never gi'e." " Say on your tale," quo' gentle Thrummy " To dae you justice I will try." "Then mark me weel," the ghaist replied, " And ye shall soon be satisfied. Frae this aback near forty year, I of this place was overseer ; When this laird's father had the land, A' thing was then at my command, Wi' pooer tae dae as I thocht fit. In ilka cause I chief did sit ; The laird paid great respect tae me, But I an ill return did gi'e ; The title deeds o' his estate, Oot o' the same I did him cheat, An' stole them frae whaur they did lie. Some days before the laird did die. His son at that time was in France, An' sae I thocht I had a chance Gif he should never come again, That the estate would be my ain ; But scarcely three bare weeks had passed, When death did come and grip me fast. Sac sudden that I hadna pooer. The charter back for to restore, Soon after that hame came the heir, THRUM MY CAP. ii An' syne got up the reefu' rair, What sorrow has come ower the richts ? They sought them several days an' nichts, But never yet ha'e they been seen As I beneath a niuckle stane Did hide them in this chaum'er wa', Weel sewed up in a leather ba', But I was ne'er allowed tae rest, Until that I the same confest ; But this to do I hadna power, Frae yon time to this verra hour, That I've reveal'd it a' to you ; An' noo I'll tell you what to do. Till nae langsyne nae mony kent, That this same laird the richts did want ; But noo they ha'e him at the law, And the neist ook the laird maun shaw Afore the court the richts o's land ; This puts him to an unco stand, For if he disna show them there, O' a' his lands he'll be stript bare ; Nae hopes has he to save his 'state, This makes him soor and unco blate : He canna think whar's richts can be, And ne'er expects them mair to see ; But noo, my freend, mark what I tell, And ye'll get something tae yoursel', Tak' oot the stane there in the wa', And there ye'll get a leather ba', 'Tis just the same that ye did see, When you said that you would help me. The richts are sewed up in its heart. But see you dinna wi' them pairt, Until the laird shall pay you doon. Just fifty guineas and a croon, Whilk at my death was due to me. 12 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. This for thy trouble Til gi'e tae thee ; And I'll disturb this hoose nae mair, 'Cause I'll be free frae a' my care." This Thrummy promised weel tae do, And syne the ghaist bade him adieu, And vanished wi' a pleasant sound, Doon through the laft, and through the ground. Thrummy gaed back syne till's bed, And cooardly John was verra gled, That he his neighbour saw aince mair, For of his life he did despair. Quo' John — " Wow, man, whaur ha'e ye been ? Come tell me a' that ye ha'e seen." "Na, bide," says Thrummy, "till day-licht, "And syne I'll tell ye hale and richt." Sae baith lay still and took a nap, Until the ninth oor it did chap. Thrummy syne rase, put on his clacs, And tae the chau'mer quick he gaes, Taks oot the stane intae the wa', And soon he fand the leather ba', Took oot the richts, replaced the stane. Ere John did ken whaur he had been. Then baith cam' stappin' doon the stair, The mornin' noo was calm and fair. " Weel," quo' the laird, " ye may noo gang, Ve ken the day's nae verra lang ; In the meantime it's calm and clear, Ye lose yer time in bidin' here." Quo' Thrummy — " Sir, mind what I tell, I've mair richt here than you yersel', Sae till I like I here shall bide." The laird at this began to chide : Says he, " My friend, ye're turnin' rude," Quo' Thrummy, " I'll my claim mak" guid. For here, I just before ye a', GIL MORRICE. 13 The richts o' this estate can shaw, And that is mair than ye can do." " What! " quo' the laird, " can that be true? " " 'Tis true," quo' Thrummy, " look an' see, Dae ye think that I wad tell a lee ?" Parchments frae his pouch then he drew, And doon upon the table threw. The laird at this up tae him ran, And cried, " Whaur did you get them, man? " Syne Thrummy tauld him a' the tale. As I've tauld you, baith clear and hale. The laird at this was fidgin' fain. That he had got his richts again ; And fifty guineas doon did tell. Besides a present frae himsel'. Thrummy thanked him, and syne his gowd Intae a muckle purse he stowed, And crammed it in his oxter pooch, And syne socht oot his aiken crutch : Said, " Fare ye weel, I maun awa', And see gin I get through the snaw." "Weel, fare ye weel," replied the laird ; " But hoo comes it ye hae'na shared. Or gien your neighbour o' the money ? " " Na' by my sowl, I, sir," quo' Thrummy, " When I the siller sair did win, Tae share wi' him wad be a sin, For ere that I the ghaist had laid The cooardly brute had fyle't the bed." And sae my tale I here do end, I hope that nane it will offend : My muse will nae assist me langer. The dorty jaud sometimes does anger, I thocht her aince a gey smart lass. But noo she's come to sicna pass That a' my cudgellin' and wheepin' 14 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Will hardly wauk her oot o' sleepin', Tae plague her mair I winna try, But dicht my pen and lay it bye. 6 a riDorricc. None of the ancient ballads preserved by the Scottish peasantry has excited more interest than the beautiful and pathetic narrative of "Gil Morrice," and this, as Mother- well observes, "no less on account of its own intrinsic merits as a piece of exquisite poetry than of its having furnished the plot of the justly celebrated tragedy of ' Douglas.' " Gray described it as divine, and it has been a fount of inspiration to various poets. It is believed to be founded on a real incident which happened in a remote period of our Scottish history. The " green wood " of the ballad was the ancient forest of Dundaff, in Stirlingshire, and Lord Barnard's castle is said to have occupied a pre- cipitous cliff, overhanging the Water of Carron, on the lands of Halbertshire. There are various readings of the ballad, under the titles, "Chield Morice," " Childe Maurice," and "Child Noryce." The following is the commoner copy of the chapman's wallet, and, in my opinion, the best. Gil Morricr was an Earl's son, His name it waxed wide ; It was nae for his great riches. Nor yet his mcikle pride. His face was fair, lang was his hair, In the wild woods he stay'd. But his fame was by a fair lady, That lived on Carron side. " Whare sail I get a bonny boy That will win hose and shoon. That will go to Lord Barnard's ha'. And bid his lady come. GIL MORRICE. 15 " It's ye maun rin this errand, Willie, And ye may rin wi' pride, When other boys gae on their feet. On horseback ye sail ride. " " O no ! O no ! my master dear, I dare not for my life, I'll no gae to the bauld Baron's For to tryste forth his wife." " My bird Willie, my boy Willie, My dear Willie," he said, " How can you strive against the stream ? For I sail be obeyed." " But Oh ! my master dear," he cried, " In green wood ye're your lane, Gie o'er sic thochts I would ye redd. For fear ye should be ta'en." " Haste, haste, I say, gae to the ha'. And bid her come wi' speed ; If ye refuse my high command, I'll gar your body bleed. " Gae bid her take this gay mantle, 'Tis a' gowd but the hem ; Bid her come to the good green wood, And bring nane but her lane. " And there it is, a silken sark. Her ain hand sewed the sleeve. And bid her come to Gil Morrice, Speir nae bauld Baron's leave." " Yes, I will gae your black errand. Though it be to your cost. Sin' ye by me will not be warned, In it ye shall find frost. l6 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " The Baron he's a man of might, lie ne'er could bide a taunt, And yc sail see before it's night, How sma' ye ha'e to vaunt. "And sin' I maun your errand rin, Sair, sair against my will, I'se make a vow, and keep it true, It sail be done for ill." And when he came to broken brig. He bent his bow and swam, And when he came to grass growing. Set down his feet and ran. And when he came to Barnard's ha' Would neither chap nor ca', But set his bent bow to his breast, And lichtly lap the wa'. He would nae man his errand tell. Though twa stood at the gate. But straight into the ha' he came, Where great folks sat at meat. ' ' Hail ! hail ! my gentle sire and dame, My message winna wait, Dame, ye maun to the green wood gang. Before that it be late. ' ' Ye're bidden take this gay mantle. It's a' gowd but the hem. Ye maun go to the good green wood, E'en by yourself alane. " There it is, a silken sark, Your ain hand sewed the sleeve, You maun come speak to Gil Morrice, Speir nae bauld Baron's leave." GIL MORRICE. 17 The lady stamped wi' her foot, And winked wi' her e'e, But all that she could do or say, Forbidden he wouldna be. " It's surely to my bower- woman. It ne'er could be to me ; " " I brought it to Lord Barnard's Lady, I trow that ye be she." Then up and spake the wily nurse, (The bairn upon her knee), " If it be come frae Gil Morrice, 'Tis dear welcome to me." " Ye lee, ye lee, ye filthy nurse, Sae loud's I hear ye lee ; I brought it to Lord Barnard's Lady, I trow ye be nae she." Then up and spake the bauld Baron, An angry man was he ; He's ta'en the table wi' his foot. In flinders gart it flee. " Gae bring a robe of yon cleiding. That hangs upon the pin, And I'll gae to the good green wood, And speak with your leman." ' ' O bide at hame now, Lord Barnard, I warn you, bide at hame ; Ne'er wyte a man wi' violence That ne'er wyte ye wi' nane." Gil Morrice sat in yon green wood, He whistled and he sang ; "Oh, what means a' thae folk coming? My mother tarries lang." B i8 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. The Baron cam' to the greenwood, Wi' muckle dule and care, And there he spied brave Gil Morrice Kaiming his yellow hair. His hair was like the threads o' gold Drawn frae Minerva's loom ; His lips like roses drapping dew. His breath a sweet perfume. His brow was like the mountain snaw Gilt by the morning beam ; His cheeks like living roses glowed, His een like azure stream. The boy was clad in robes o' green, Sweet as the infant spring ; And like the mavis on the bush, He gar't the valleys ring. " Nae wonder, nae wonder, Gil Morrice, My lady lo'ed thee weel, The fairest part of my body Is blacker than thy heel. " Yet ne'ertheless, now, Gil Morrice. For a' thy great beautie, Ye'se rue the day that ye was born, Thy head sail gae with me." Now he has drawn his trusty brand, And slait it on the strae, And through Gil Morrice' fair body He's gar'd cauld iron gae. And he has ta'en Gil Morrice' head, And set it on a spear ; The meanest man in a' his train Has got the head to bear. GIL MORRICE. 19 And he has ta'en Gil Morrice up, Laid him across his steed, And brought him to his painted bower, And laid him on a bed. The lady sat on the castle wa'. Beheld baith dale and down, And there she saw Gil Morrice' -head Come trailing to the town. " Far mair I lo'e that bloody head. But and that yellow hair, Than Lord Barnard and a' his lands. As they lie here and there." And she has ta'en Gil Morrice' head. And kissed baith mouth and chin ; " I ance was fu' of Gil Morrice, As hip is o' the stane. " I got thee in my father's house Wi' muckle grief and shame, And brought thee up in good green wood,. Under the heavy rain. •' Oft have I by thy cradle sat. And seen thee soundly sleep, But now I'll go about thy grave, Thesaut, saut tears to weep." And syne she kissed his bloody cheek. And syne his bloody chin ; " Better I lo'e my Gil Morrice, Than a' my kith and kin." " Away, away ye ill woman, An ill death may you dee. Gin I had kenn'd he'd been your son. He'd ne'er been slain by me." 20 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " Upraid me not, Lord Barnard, Upraid me not for shame, \Vi' that same spear, oh pierce my heart, And put me out of pain. " Since nothing but Gil Morrice' head Thy jealous rage could quell. Let that same hand now take her life, That ne'er to thee did ill. " To me nae after days nor nights Will e'er be saft or kind ; I'll fill the air with heavy sighs, And greet till I am blind." " Enough of blood by me's been spilt, Seek not your death from me ; I rather it had been niysel'. Than either him or thee. " With heart so wae I hear your plaint, Sair, sair I rue the deed, That e'er this cursed hand o' mine Did gar his body bleed. •' Dry up your tears, my winsome dame, Ye ne'er can heal the wound. You see his head upon my spear, His heart's blood on the ground. " I curse the hand that did the deed. The heart that thought the ill, The feet that bore me with such speed The comely youth to kill. " I'll aye lament for Gil Morrice As gin he were my ain ; I'll ne'er forget the dreary day On which the youth was slain." THE BONNIE BANKS O' FORDIE. tThc Bonnie Banhs o* jforbic. This old ballad was long a popular favourite in thu southern parishes of Perthshire ; and, I believe, is still occasionally heard by the cottage and bothy inglesides of that ilk. Its historical bearing (if any) and exact locality have never been clearly defined. Sometimes it is found under the title of " Baby-Lon," sometimes " The Duke of Perth's Three Daughters." But there is no tradition in the Perth ducal family corresponding with the story. There is, of course, the burn of Ordie in Perthshire — about equi-distant between Perth and Dunkeld — and no stream in Scotland of the name of Fordie, so far as I know ; and since editors generally name Perthshire as the native locality of the ballad, may the original phraseology of the oft repeated title not have been " The bonnie banks of Ordie"? From that to "The bonnie banks o' Fordie" would be a simple and likely transition — probably is a cleri- cal error. The name of the hero, " Baby-Lon," is evidently a cor- ruption by the reciters of " Burd-alane," signifying '"The Solitary." There were three ladies lived in a bower, Ech, wow, bonnie ! An' they went forth to pu' a flower On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. They hadna pu'd a flower but ane, Ech, wow, bonnie ! When up there started a banish'd man On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. He's taen the first sister by the hand, Ech, wow, bonnie ! An' he's turned her round and made her stand On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. 22 AULD SCOTS EALLANTS. " Now, whether will ye be a rank robber's wife," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " Or will ye dee by my wee penknife On the bonnie banks o' Fordie?" *' It's I'll no' be a rank robber's wife," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " But I'll rather dee I)y your wee penknife On the bonnie banks o' Fordie." He's killed this May, an' he's laid her by, Ech, wow, bonnie ! For to bear the red rose coni]ianie On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. He has ta'en the second ane by the hand, Ech, wow, bonnie ! An' he's turned her round and made her stand On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. " It's whether will ye be a rank robber's wife," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " Or will ye dee by my wee penknife On the bonnie banks o' Fordie?" " It's I'll no' be a rank robber's wife," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " But I'll rather dee by your wee penknife On the bonnie banks o' Fordie." He's killed this May, an' he's laid her by, Ech, wow, bonnie ! For to bear the red rose companie On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. Then he's ta'en the youngest by the hand, Ech, wow, bonnie ! An' he's turned her round and made her slanil On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. THE BONNIE BANKS O' FORDIE. Says " Will ye be a rank robber's wife," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " Or will ye dee by my wee penknife On the bonnie banks o' Fordie ? " " It's I'll no' be a rank robber's wife," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " Nor will I dee by your wee penknife On the bonnie banks o' Fordie. *' For I hae a brither in this wood," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " An' gin ye kill me, it's he'll kill thee On the bonnie banks o' Fordie." *' Now, tell me what is thy brother's name ?" Ech, wow, bonnie ! *' My brother's name is Baby-Lon, On the bonnie banks o' Fordie." " O, sister, sister, wae be to me," Ech, wow, bonnie ! " O, have I done this ill to thee On the bonnie banks o' Fordie ? " The lift shall lie on yonder green," Ech, wow, bonnie ! *' Or ever I shall again be seen On the bonnie banks o' Fordie." So he's ta'en out his wee penknife, Ech, wow, bonnie ! An' he's twyned himsel' o' his ain sweet life On the bonnie banks o' Fordie," 24 AULD SCOTS BALLAXTS. Sir 3amc5 tbc IRose^ This old north country ballad, which appears to be founded on fact, is well known all over Scotland. There are one ancient and two modern versions of it. The fol- lowing — one of the latter— is perhaps the most ]Dopular of the three. It is said to have been written by Michael Bruce, the author of the immortal "Ode to the Cuckoo." Bruce was a native of Kinneswood, in Kinross-shire, was born on the 27th of March, 1746, and died at the early age of twenty-one. The original copy which begins : — Oh, heard ye o' Sir James the Rose, The young heir o' Baleichan : For he has killed a gallant squire, Whase friends are out to take him, makes it appear that the heio of the ballad may have been the scion of a Perthshire house — namely Ballechan, near Ballinluig : — Of all the Scottish northern chiefs. Of high and warlike name, The bravest was Sir James the Rose — A knight of meikle fame. His growth was like the youthful oak That crowns the mountain's brow. And waving o'er his shoulders broad, His locks of yellow flew. Wide were his fields, his herds were large, And large his flocks of sheep, And numerous were his goats and deer. Upon the mountains steep. The chieftain of the good clan Rose, A firm and warlike band, Five hundred warriors drew the sword Beneath his high command. SIR JAMES THE ROSE. 25 In bloody fight thrice had he stood, Against the English keen, Ere two and twenty opening Springs The blooming youth had seen. The fair Matilda dear he loved — A maid of beauty rare ; Ev'n Margaret on the Scottish throne Was never half so fair, Long had he wooed, long she refused With seeming scorn and pride ; Yet oft her eyes confessed the love Her fearful words denied. At length she blessed his well-tried love, Allowed his tender claim ; She vowed to him her tender heart. And owned an equal flame. Her father, Buchan's cruel lord. Their passion disapproved ; He bade her wed Sir John the Grreme, And leave the youth she loved. One night they met, as they were wont. Deep in a shady wood. Where on the bank, beside the burn, A blooming saugh tree stood. Concealed among the underwood The crafty Donald lay. The brother of Sir John the Graeme, To hark what they might say. When thus the maid began — " My Sire, Our passion disapproves. He bids me wed Sir John the Graeme, So here must end our loves. 26 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " My father's will must be obeyed, Nought boots me to withstand, Some fairer maid, in beauty's bloom, Must bless thee with her hand. " Soon will Matilda be forgot. And from thy mind effaced ; But may that happiness be thine \Vhich I can never taste." " What do I hear ? Is this thy vow ? " Sir James the Rose replied ; "And will Matilda wed the Grceme, Though sworn to be my bride ? " His sword shall sooner pierce my heart Than reave me of thy charms ; " And clasped her to his throbbing breast, Fast locked within his arms. " I spoke to try thy love," she said, " I'll ne'er wed man but thee ; The grave shall be my bridal bed Ere Grceme my husband be. *' Then take, dear youth, this faithful kiss, In witness of my troth ; Anil every plague become my lot, That day I break my oath." They parted thus — the sun was set — Up hasty Donald flics, And, "Turn thee, turn thee, beardless youth !" lie loud insulting cries. Soon turned about the fearless chief, And soon his sword he drew ; For Donald's blade, before his breast, Had pierced his tartans through. SIR JAMES THE ROSE. 27 *' This for my brother's slighted love. His wrongs sit on my arm ; " Three paces back the youth retired, And saved himself from harm. Returning swift, his sword he reared, Fierce Donald's head above ; And through the brain and crashing bone, His furious weapon drove. Life issued at the wound — he fell A lump of lifeless clay ; " So fall my foes ! " quoth valiant Rose, And stately strode away. Thro' the green wood in haste he hied, Unto Lord Buchan's hall. Beneath Matilda's window stood. And thus on her did call — *' Art thou asleep, Matilda dear ? Awake, my love, awake ! Behold thy lover waits without, A long farewell to take. " For I have slain fierce Donald Gr?sme, His blood is on my sword ; And far, far distant are my men, Nor can defend their lord. -" To Skye I will direct my flight. Where my brave brothers bide, To raise the valiant of the Isles, To combat on my side." " O do not so," the maid replied, " With me till morning stay ; For dark and dreary is the night. And dangerous is the way. 28 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " All night I'll watch thee in the park, My faithful page I'll send In haste to raise the brave clan Rose, Their master to defend." He laid him down beneath a bush, And wrapped him in his plaid ; While, trembling for her lover's fate, At distance stood the maid. Swift ran the page o'er hill and dale, Till, in a lonely glen, He met the furious Sir John Grteme With twenty of his men. " Where goest thou, little page?" he said, " So late, who did thee send ? " " I go to raise the brave clan Rose, Their master to defend. " For he has slain fierce Donald Grceme, His blood is on his sword ; And far, far distant are his men, Nor can assist their lord." " And has he slain my brother dear? " The furious Graeme replies ; " Dishonour blast my name, but he By me, ere morning, dies ! " Say, page, where is Sir James the Rose, I will thee well reward." " He sleeps into Lord Buchan's park, Matilda is his guard." They spurred their steeds, and furious flew,. Like lightning o'er the lea ; They reached Lord Buchan's lofty lowers By dawning of the day. SIR JAMES THE ROSE. 29 Matilda stood without the gate, Upon a rising ground, And watched each object in the dawn, All ear to every sound. "Where sleeps the Rose?" began the Gnvme, " Or has the felon fled ? This hand shall lay the wretch on earth, By whom my brother bled." " Last day, at noon," Matilda said, "Sir James the Rose passed by, Well mounted on his noble steed. And onward fast did hie. " By this time he's at Edinburgh town. If horse and man hold good." " Your page then lied, who said, he was Now sleeping in the wood." She wrung her hands and tore her hair, " Brave Rose, thou art betrayed, And ruined by those very means From whence I hoped thine aid. " And now the valiant knight awoke, The virgin shrieking heard ; Straight up he rose and drew his sword, When the fierce band appeared. " Thy sword last night my brother slew, His blood yet dims its shine ; And ere the sun shall gild the morn, Thy blood shall reek on mine." (( You word it well," the chief returned, " But deeds approve the man. Set by your band, and hand to hand We'll try what valour can. 30 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " Oft boasting hides a coward's heart ; My weighty sword you fear, Which shone in front of Flodden field, When you kept in the rear." With dauntless step he forward strode, And dared him to the fight ; The Graeme gave back, he feared his arm, For well he knew its might. Four of his men, the bravest four, Sunk down beneath his sword ; But still he scorned the poor revenge, And sought their haughty lord. Behind him basely came the Graeme, And pierced him in the side ; Out spouting came the purple stream, And all his tartans dyed. But yet his hand dropped not the sword, Nor sank he to the ground. Till through his enemy's heart the steel Had forced a mortal wound. GrKme, like a tree by wind o'erthrown. Fell breathless on the clay ; And down beside him sank the Rose, And faint and dying lay. Matilda saw and fast she ran, " O spare his life ! " she cried, " Lord liuchan's daughter l)egs his life ; Let her not be denied ! " Her well-known voice the hero heard, And raised his death-closed eyes, He fixed them on the weeping maid. And weakly thus replies : THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. '* In vain Matilda begs a life, By death's arrest denied ; My race is run — adieu my love ! " Then closed his eyes and died. The sword, yet vk'arm, from his left side, With frantic hand she drew : " I come, Sir James the Rose," she cried, " I come to follow you ! " The hilt she leaned against the ground, And bared her snowy breast, Then fell upon her lover's face. And sunk to endless rest. Zhc (3bai6t o* (Barron t>a\ This probably was the last production of the author of ' Thrummy Cap." Mair than a hundred years sinsyne, (I'm nae exact just to the time) ; But ae thing o' I'm verra sure : Some short time after Shirramuir, Wast in Argjdeshire, then there stood An ancient Castle in a wood : The name o' it the fouk did ca' The Manor House o' Garron Ha'. 'Twas very strong, but nae that big. The laird o't was a true-blue Whig, An' Ranald Campbell was his name, An' at Fifteen he was frae hame, Out wi' the Duke at Shirramuir, An' there did fight, baith fierce and dour. For Solemn League he firmly stood. Yea, swore he'd freely shed his blood, AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Gin that wad set his country free Frae abjur'd Stuarts an' Prelacy. There in his hip he gat a wound, \Vhilk never after that was sound, But pain'd him sadly mony a day ; Yet aft exulting, he would say, lie got it in a glorious cause, Fighting for Covenanted laws ;' An' thought that he might fairly claim The glorious crown o' martyrdom. He'd crack o' Peden an' Cargill, An' Richard Cameron, wi' good will. An' a' wha fell on Bothwell plain. Or at the Pentland Hills were slain — He rank'd them a' o' saints the chief; But for that fause loon, traitor, thief. Archbishop Sharp, he said, 'twas true, He got nae mair but jnst his due ; An' the brave lads wha had sic zeal For truth, an' for the Church's weal, As rid the warld o' sic a knave, He rank'd them far aboon the lave. Sic themes as thae were just his hobby, An' aft he'd sit into the lobby, Wi' his twa sons, for sev'ral hours, An' there hold forth wi' a' his powers ; An' aft he'd twinge an' twist his lip. Aye whan the pains gae him a grip. His auldest son, whase name was Ranal', His thoughts just ran i' the same channel ; Pie swallow'd a' his father's lore, Was idoliz'd by him therefor ; An' as he was to be the heir, His brother Malcolm had sma' share Either o's father's love or gear ; Sae he to Ernbro' gaed to lear THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. 33 The law, wi' a relation there, Where he did stay three years an' mair ; Sair'd out his time, an' gat a place, An' fiU'd it wi' a decent grace ; Was sober, meek, and verra steady. An' for his business aye was ready ; But yet o' cash he was but bare, Clerks hadna then gryte deal to spare ; Fu' little did his father gi'e him ; An' seldom ever gade to see him. He'd now been sev'ral years awa. An' been but ance at Garron Ha', Sin' at the first that he gade south. An' that was in his early youth. But now his father took a blast, Whilk soon did bring him to his last ; A few days only he was spar'd, An' now young Ranald was the laird. Malcolm was now sent for wi' speed. An' hame he came right wae indeed, 'Cause he'd nae seen his father livin', Nor his last blessing to him given. The funeral it now took place, An' Malcolm, after some short space Of stopping wi' his brother there. Was now about streight to repair Back to his place, when Ranald said, " Malcolm, I would be verra glad, Gin you wade bide a day or twa Langer, afore ye gang awa ; An' ae day's hunting let us tak'. Case it be lang ere ye win back. I at the chase am now right clever, I'll show ye feats that ye saw never The like, in a' the Lothians three — Come, mount your horse, and gang wi' me." C 34 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Malcolm directly ga'e consent, Sae aft" the hunting party went, An' mony a hart did Ranald slay — The chase did last the live-long day ; An' mony a ditch an' dyke he lap, At five-barr'd gates he wadna stap, Till he was in a soom o' sweat, Wi' his exertions, an' the heat. When he came hame he sair complain'd. An' o' his inside sadly maned. They boot to put him till his bed, Whilst for a Doctor aff they rade : The Doctor made what haste he could. To see gin he could do him good ; But, feggs, he was a wee o'er late ; Sae was the sov'reign will o' fate, Ranald had yielded up his breath, A prey to all-devouring death ; An hour ere ever he got there. The man was gone — sae what needs mair ? He only ae bare month was laird, An' was for death nae sair prepar'd. This made an alteration now Wi' a' at Garron Ha', I trow : Malcolm, of course, was now the heir. An' nane ava to get a share. But just ae lass, about the house. 'Tis time that now we introduce This heroine into our tale, Because hereafter she'll na fail To act a chief part in our story, An' sae the reader won't be sorry To ken some little thing about her, Our tale would hardly tell without her : — Miss Baby Campbell then, 'twas clear, Had pass'd her seven-an'-twentieih year ; THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. An orphan brought up by the laird, An' high in his aflections shar'd. Forby she was a near relation, An' had a sort o' upper station, Like housekeeper at Garron Ha', Nae faut in her the auld man saw ; She was a hypocrite profound, By whilk means still she kept her ground j Auld Ranald thought her quite a saunt. An' o' her talents aft wou'd vaunt — He thought nane wi' her could compare, Au' wish'd to match her wi' his heir ; An' he himsel' had nae objection, He followed ay his sire's direction. Though she was aulder far than he, He thought they brawlie wad agree ; But Bab for him cared nae a spittle, His understanding was sae brittle ; But, as it fired up her ambition, She wadna cared a single snishin' AVhae'er she married- -sae that she The lady o' the land might be ; This was the point at whilk she ettl'd. Sae that affair seemed to be settl'd. But when young Malcolm now she saw Come back again to Garron Ha', Far mair accomplish'd than his brither. That chang'd her notions a' thegether ; Her mind was now right ill at ease, Tho' Malcolm did her fancy please. She ken'd fu' weel he had nae siller, Tho' he paid gryte attention till her ; Love an' ambition rack'd her heart, She ken'dna how to act her part ; Nor could she bear the thoughts ava, O' nae bein' lady o' the Ha' ; 36 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Vet whiles she thought wi' a' she'd part, Cou'd she but touch young Malcolm's heart. Sae in condition far frae easy, She little l)etter was than crazy. But now when Ranald was awa'. An' Malcolm was possessed o' a', She thought that now a' was her ain, For o' her talents she was vain ; Tho' she'd to beauty snia' pretension. She had a verra keen invention. Sae when the funeral was over, She set her cap to catch her lover ; But soon she fand that a' her art Made nae impression on his heart ; The reason o't was very plain, He had a sweetheart o' his ain — A merchant's daughter in Auld Reekie ; An' soon he set aff for that city. To settle his concerns there, An' see again his favourite fair. He meant there but short time to bide, Then fetch to Garron Ha' his bride ; Now cousin Bab wi' rage"was fdl'd, For a' her hopes were fairly kill'd — She saw she'd fairly lost the man. An' whilk was warse — she'd lost the Ian' ; Wad be flung out upon the warl', For weel she ken'd that the auld carl, Expecting that she'd get it a'. Left her nae legacy at a'. Her love did now to hatred turn, With fiend-like fires her breast did burn — Since she'd been slighted by the boy. She him determined to destroy. So now devised within her mind A plot of a most hellish kind ; THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. 37 \\1iilk, had it fairly ta'en effect, 'Twould hung young Malcohn by the neck ; But Providence did interfere, By whilk means Malcohn did get clear ; An' threw the guilt on their ain heads, Wha did contrive sic shamefu' deeds. Bab ken'd if Malcolm was awa' She'd heiress be hersel' at law. Sae she a project did invent Of diabolical intent : — Gif she could but some way consider To lay the murder o' his brither On Malcolm's back, and him impeach. She thought that syne her aim she'd reach ; She'd fa' on means his guilt to prove, An' sae revenge her slighted love. Amang the servants was a fallow, WTia (though his judgment was but shallow) Had o' low cunning some sma' share. His figure it was thin and spare. Just much the same o' Ranald's mak' ; His nose was shaped like his exact, 'Twas nearly what some fouk ca' Roman, Or hawk-nib'd noses termed in common. This man they ca'd him Duncan Graham. To him Miss Bab now thought nae shame To mak' her court, and tell her tale. Her scheme was this : that, without fail, Duncan young Ranald's ghaist should act. Because she ken'd he had a knack At sic odd jobs — and was right fit Baith by his mimicry and wit, To gar poor country fowk believe Whate'er he liked, and sae deceive The simple superstitious crew Wlia at the castle lived now. 410743 38 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. The parish priest, she ken'd fu' vveel, Was just a simple doited cliiel, As superstitious as the lave, Gif Duncan wad but right behave ; They'd gar him come an' speak the ghaist, Or try to lay him at the least ; Syne he wad tell a dismal tale, Wiilk if right manag'd cou'dna fail Of doing what they twa intended, To get young Malcolm apprehended For giein' Ranald poison Strang, Whilk cut him aff ere it was lang. An' gin the plot should right succeed, An' Malcolm number'd wi' the dead, Bab did a solemn promise mak' She'd Duncan for a husband tak', An' mak' him Laird o' Garron Ma' ; This setl'd was atween them twa ; For Duncan took the job in hand. An' Bab gae' him to understand, That night the job he boot begin. When it was night, to mak' a din. In different parts thro' a' the house, She ken'd the servants werna crouse, To come o'er near to find him out. An' thus there wark they set about ; — A suit o' Ranald's claise they got To help them forward i' their plot ; But, as that Duncan's hair was black, To mak' the likeness mair exact. That afternoon, 'twas Baby's care To mak' a wig o' lang red hair, As Ranald's locks were o' that hue. An' that wad make the figure true. Sae when the fowk were to their bed, Duncan that night began his trade. THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. 39 They soon fand that their plot did tak', For, i' the morning a' the crack Was the strange noises on the night, Whilk did the inmates sadly fright ; An' ilka night this din did last, Till a' the family aghast, Declar'd to Baby ane an' a', They'd frae the Castle gang awa', 'Cause they were sure it was the devil (Or something that was full o' evil) Had got possession o' the Ha' ; For ae chiel sware he plainly saw A gruesome spectre, wan as death, An' he was free to gi'e his aith That it had feet just like a cow, An' round its head were flames o' blue ; It graned and shook its bloody pow. An' a' the house seemed in a lowe ; It stalked slowly thro' the Ha' ; The lave heard din but naething saw. Baby heard this wi' seeming wonder ; An' Duncan silently did ponder. At length he says, " I muckle fear Some murder's been committed here ; We maun get fowk mair skill'd than we Ere we o' this grim ghaist get free." Just then the gard'ner came inby. For i' the house he didna lie, But in a bothie i' the yard. An' tauld how he yestreen was scar'd Wi' din, an' forc'd to leave his bed ; An' whan he looked forth, he said. He saw Young Ranald on the green As plain as ere in life he'd seen ; Just in his usual hunting dress. His lang red hair, an' thin pale face ; 40 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. He walked slowly o'er the loan, Wi' mony a dismal heavy groan ; Sign'd to the gard'ner to come near, But that he cudna do for fear ; The spectre vanish'd syne awa ; A' this the gard'ner sware he saw. Baby at this did sain hersel'. Said, " What to do I scarce can tell : This apparition does portend That Ranald's got a violent end, Or else he never wad come back. An' sic a strange disturbance mak' ; I had some doubts of this ere now, But what could a weak woman do. 'Tis my advice— we tell Mess John, And fetch him to this house anon ; What do we ken, but Ranald may Hae something that he'd wish to say. The Minister's the fittest man To put us on the wisest plan, To ken what is the spectre's will, For he's a man o' real skill ; Forby, his office as a priest Qualifies him to speak a ghaist." To this advice they a' agreed, The gard'ner syne set aff wi' speed To fetch Mess John — wha didna fail To come — and hear the unco tale ; He fairlied sair at what he heard, An' ay he mus'd, an' ay he speir'd About the strange and fearfu' sicht That fleg'd them sae the bypast night. Whan he had chew'd his cud awee : " This is an awfu' job," quoth he, " I'm nae that fond o' it ava ; But yet, I winna gang awa, THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. 41 This night at ony rate I'll stay, You'll a' attend, whilst I do pray That we may be endow'd wi' grace An' strength, this visitant to face. The priest syne gae a solemn prayer, Whilk being o'er, they did prepare Ranald's ain room for him that night. An' put in it baith fire and light ; Back frae that room there was anilher, A thin wa' sep'rate them frae ither, Thro' whilk there was a private door ; They plac'd a claiths screen it before ; Dunnan at that door could come in. An' nae mak' verra muckle din ; An' out again, as he thought fit, Whene'er he judged it time to flit. When a' their suppers now were o'er. An' chapters read — ay, three or four, The priest bade them a' gae to sleep. For he alane the watch wad keep ; Though he was quakin' ilka lith. And scarcely had sae mickle pith As stagger canny up the stair, Unto the room he did repair. The Bible up wi' him he took, An' down he sat intil the neuk. An' trembled like a quakin' ash. Thinking that now he'd been o'er rash To meddle wi' sic pranks him lane ; An' twenty guineas wad he gi'en That he'd been thirty miles awa. Although as yet he naething saw. When Duncan thought the lave asleep Up to his room he syne did creep, An' dressed himsel' to act his part. A dram he took to cheer his heart, 42 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Which spite o's neck now fell a beating, But now for him was nae retreating — He boot gae through some way or ilher To personate young Malcolm's brither. He saw the priest was vera eery, An' that made him a deal mair cheery. Sae, as soon's twal o'clock did chap, Duncan gae a gentle tap. The parson, wha was near asleep, Hearing the rap, he did up peep, Wi' a' his limbs sae sadly shakin', Duncan could hardly keep frae laughin'. He gae a groan baith loud and lang, The parson up till's feet did bang, An' stood twa-fauld up i' the neuk, An' firm he grasped the haly beuk. Duncan made his appearance now. An' stood close i' the parson's view, Wi' his pale face an' lang red hair, Ne'er moved an eye, but firm did stare The frightened parson i' the face, Wha never jeed out o' his place. At last, he says — '• I you conjure To speak : In name o' that great Power Wha made us baith, come tell to me Baith what you want, and what you be." Duncan gae a heavy groan. An' said — " Alas ! ohon ! ohon ! That ever I should come to this ; But I'm shut out frae heavenly bliss Till I mak' known this murder fell, An' yet I'm verra laith to tell ; But I maun do't an' mak a' plain Afore that I my rest can gain : — You see fu' weel I'm Ranald's spirit, An' Malcolm, wha does now inherit THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. 43 The land I lately did possess, Put arsenic in my breakfast mess ; Impeach him, an' revenge my death, Or else I'll hunt you while you've breath." The parson now fell o'er wi' fright ; An' Duncan syne slipt out o' sight, Stripp'd aff his claise, an' fause red hair, An' to his chamber did repair — Right glad he'd play'd his part sae weel. An' nae a bit remorse did feel. The priest a while lay like one dead ; At length he lifted up his head, An' wildly round him he did stare. To see gin still the ghaist was there ; But whan he look'd an naething saw. He was right blyth it was awa' ; Whan he'd a wee come till himsel', He pou'd the tow, an' rang the bell ; Baby hersel' was soon asteer. An' Duncan too, ye needna speer ; An' ilka ane within the biggin'. To rise they needit little priggin', They a' thrang'd to the servant's ha', To hear what 'twas the parson saw ; An' a' appeared extremely sorry, To hear this mighty dismal story. They said 'twou'd ne'er come i' their head That Malcolm wad done sic a deed. Baby held up her hands wi' wonder, Turn'd up her een Hke duck's in thunder ; As nat'rel's ever play was acted, Until the strings o' them maist cracked ; — An' a' the lave themsel's did bless, Crying, " O ! wha wad ever thought o' this? Poison his brither ! gude keep's a' ! The like o' this we never saw — 44 AULD SCOTS BALLAXTS. Nor scarcely heard o' sic a crime, Na, nae sin' ever Cain's time." Bab says, " I kenna' what to say, I wiss I'd never seen this day ; Is there nae way to hush this matter ; vSpeak, reverend sir, for you ken better What sud be done than sic as me ; Cou'd we na' get poor Malcolm free O' comin' till a shamefu' end ? Ye ken, he's now my nearest friend ; But I'll be ruled, sir, by you — Sae ye maun tell me what to do." Then says the priest : "As soon's 'tis'day I to a justice straught maun gae. An' there mak aith o' what I saw. Syne let it tak the course o' law — This I must do, or Ranald's ghaist Will never let me be at rest ; Likewise, the servants at the Ha', Maun gang an' tell a' that they saw ! I'll do his bidden ilka hair. I never wiss to see him mair, Yon was a fearfu' sight indeed ! Sae I maun till mysel' tak' heed." Weel ! whan 'twas day the parson now, An' a' the simple cozen'd crew, Unto his worship afif did set. An' him at hame by chance did get ; The justice, it maun be confess'd, Was just as senseless as the rest ; For whan the parson tauld this tale, He took his aith — syne, without fail, Examin'd a' came frae the Ha', An' straught to Embro' sent awa. An' Malcolm now was laid in prison Afore that he did ken the reason ; THE GHAIST O' GARRON HA'. 45 But his surprise ye weel may guess, When he acquainted was wi' this ; It struck the poor youth perfect dumb, An' did his senses sae benumb He cudna speak, but hung his head. An' look'd like's gin he had been dead, An' they wha saw him in that case, Said, guilt was printed on his face. The day o' trial now was set, An' a' concern'd did summons get ; An' mony ane, baith far an' near. Set aff this unco case to hear. Bab and the priest, frae Garron Ha', Did in a post chaise ride awa' ; The lave on horseback aff did ride ; But mark ye now, what did betide These guilty wretches at the last, WTien they thought Malcolm grippit fast :— Whan Duncan near Linlithgow got. His horse took fleg at a raised stot, Wha frae some butchers gat awa', An' ran an' puttit a' he saw. The fowk out o' his road did rin. An' screich'd an' made sae muckle din. That Duncan's horse awa' did gallop, An' on the road gar'd him play wallop, An' smashed him a', by this same token, His legs an' three o's ribs were broken, Forby a clink upo' the head, An' there he lay 's gin he'd been dead. To the neist house they trail'd him in, An' for a doctor aff did rin. \\Tien he'd a wee come to himsel' His state nae mortal man could tail. Nor half describe his awfu' case, When death did stare him i' th' face. 46 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. A priest he quickly did require, An' ane they brought at his desire. There he confess'd upo' the spot His share in a' the hellish plot. The priest did for the provost send, As Duncan seem'd near to his end, Wha came, an' his confession took, An' Duncan sware tiil't on the book. Near three hours Linger did he live, Prayin' his Maker to forgive His foul misdeeds, wi' his last breath, Syne sunk into the arms o' death. The provost now for Embro' set, For by this time the Court was met ; An' when the judges took their station, He shaw'd them Duncan's declaration. This fill'd the Court wi' gryte surprise. That any human could devise, A scheme sae horrid an' sae evil. Then quick laid hand on that she-devil. Baby, an' sent her to the prison. To try her at convenient season. This turn'd the chance wi' her, I trow. For Malcolm was acquitted now. An' she hersel' put in his place, To her confusion and disgrace. Now deep despair did fill her mind. An' ere she was an hour confin'd She wi' a razor nick't her throat, An' down she fell upo' the spot ; An' to the last did curse and swear, An' a' within the jail did fear. This story made nae little noise, But a' gude people did rejoice That Malcolm's innocence was clear. An' wi' loud shouts they did him cheer. WATTY AND MEG. 47 A few month after, Malcolm now Unto Auld Reekie bade adieu, Took hame his bride to Garron I la'. An' never after gade awa' ; But settled there wi' his dear wife. They liv'd a lang an' happy life, An' were respected mony a year, For a' the neipers lov'd them dear. Our tale we've now brought to an end ; We see that Heaven does aye defend The upright, who, in God do trust ; But lays the guilty in the dust. An' sic as vilely spurn his law. Witness " The Ghaist o' Garron Ha'." One of the most gifted of Paisley's many gifted sons, Alexander Wilson, the author of "Watty and Meg,'' was born on the 6th of July, 1766. He was originally designed for the ministry, but was instead brought up to the trade of a handloom weaver. Ultimately he developed into a ped- lar—an occupation which, he said, was more appropriate to a "mortal with legs" than tramping the treddles of a handloom. In his twenty-eighth year he went to America, where in a short time he developed into a valued ornitho- logist, and prepared a work on the American ornithology, which will ever be regarded as his magnum opus. He died in America on the 23rd of August, 1813, the cause of his death being a cold caught in swimming a river while in pursuit of a rare species of bird of which he had long been in search. Wilson's greatest poem, "Watty and Meg," was first issued anonymously in 1792, and sprang into immediate favour, no less than one hundred thousand copies of it being disposed of within a few weeks. The author was 48 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. much gratified with its great success, but still more by hearing it attributed to Robert Burns, for whom he enter- tained the highest regard. Burns also thought highly of the poem. It is on record, indeed, in this connection, that one day as the national poet was sitting at his desk by the side of his window, a well-known hawker, Andrew Bishop by name, went past crying— "' Watty and Meg,' a new ballad by Robert Burns." The poet looked out and cried — "That's a lee, Andrew ! but I wad mak' your plack a bawbee if it were true." Keen the frosty winds were blavvin', Deep the snaw had wreathed the ploughs, Watty, wearied a' day sawin', Daunert down to Mungo Blue's. Dryster Jock was sitting cracky, Wi' Pate Tamson o' the Hill ; " Come awa," quo' Johnny, " Watty — Haith, we'se hae anither gill ! " Watty, glad to see Jock Jabos, And sae mony neibours roun' ; Kicket frae his shoon the snawba's. Syne ayont the fire sat down. Owre a board, wi' bannocks heapit. Cheese, and stoups, and glasses stood ; Some were roaring, ithers sleepit, Ithers quietly chew their cud. Jock was selling Pate some tallow, A' the rest a racket hel' — A' but Watty, wha, poor fallow, Sat and smoket by himsel'. Mungo filled him up a toothfu' Drank his health and Meg's in ane ; AVatty, puffing out a mouthfu', Pledged him wi' a dreary grane. WATTY AND MEG. 49 " What's the matter, Watty, wi' you? Trouth your chafts are fa'in' in ! Something's wrang — I'm vexed to see you — Gudesake ! but ye're desperate thin ! " " Ay," quo' Watty, "things are altered, But its past redemption now ; L — d ! I wish I had been haltered When I married Maggy Howe ! " I've been poor, and vex'd, and ragg}- : Try'd wi' troubles no that sma' ; Them I bore— but marrying Maggy Laid the cap-stane o' them a'. " Nicht and day she's ever yelpin', Wi' the weans she ne'er can gree : When she's tired wi' perfect skelpin'. Then she flees like fire on me. "See you, Mungo ! when she'll clash on Wi' her everlasting clack, Whyles I've had my nieve, in passion, Lifted up to break her back." " O, for gudesake, keep frae cuffets ! " Mungo shook his head and said, " Wee! I ken what sort o' life it's ; Ken ye, Watty, how I did ? — "After Bess and I were kippled, Soon she grew like ony bear, Brak' my shins, and, when I tippled, Harl't out my very hair ! " For a wee I quietly knuckled, But, when naething wad prevail, Up my claes and cash I buckled — ' Bess, for ever fare-ye-weel ! ' D so AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " Then her din grew less and less aye, riaith, I gart her change her tune ; Now a l)etter wife than Bessy Never slept in leather shoon. " Try this, Watty — When you see her Raging like a roaring flood, Swear that moment that ye'll lea' her — That's the way to keep her good." Laughing, sangs, and lasses' skirls, Echoed now out through the roof, " Done ! " quo' Pate, and syne his arls Nailed the Dryster's wauket loof. In the tlirang o' stories tellin'. Shaking haun's, and ither cheer, Swith ! a chap comes on the hallan, " Mungo, is oor Watty here ? " Maggy's weel kent tongue and hurry. Darted through him like a knife, Up the door flew — like a fury In came Watty's scaulding wife. " Nasty, gude-for-naething being ! O, ye snuffy, drucken sow ! Bringing wife and weans to ruin. Drinking here wi' sic a crew ! " Devil nor your legs were broken. Sic a life nae flesh endures. Toiling like a slave to slocken You, ye dyvor and your whores ! " Rise ! ye drucken beast o' Bethel ! Drink's your night and day's desire ; Rise this precious hour ! or faith I'll Fling your whisky i' the fire," WATTY AND MEG. 51 Watty heard her tongue unhallow'd, Pay'd his groat wi' little din, Left the horse while Maggy follow'd, Flyting a' the road behin'. Fowk frae every door cam' lamping. Maggy curst them ane and a', Clappit wi' her haun's, and stamping, Lost her bauchles i' the snaw. Hame, at length, she turn'd the gavel, Wi' a face as white's a clout. Raging like a very devil. Kicking stools and chairs about. " Ye'll sit wi' your limmers round you ! Hang you, sir, I'll be your death ! Little bauds my haun's, confound you. But I'll cleave you to the teeth." Watty, wha, 'midst this oration, Eyed her whyles but durstna speak. Sat like patient Resignation, Trem'ling by the ingle-cheek. Sad his wee drap brose he suppet, Maggy's tongue gaed like a bell. Quietly to his bed he slippet Sighing aften to himsel' : ' ' Nane are free frae some vexation, Ilk ane has his ills to dree ; But through a' the hale creation Is a mortal vex'd like me ? " A' night lang he row'd and gaunted. Sleep or rest he couldna' tak' ; Maggy, aft wi' horror haunted, Mum'lin', started at his back. 52 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Soon as ere the morning peepit, Up rase Watty, waefu' chiel', Kiss'd his weanies while they sleepit, Wauken'd Meg, and socht fareweel. " Fareweel Meg ! — And O ! may Heaven Keep you aye within his care ; Watty's heart you've lang been grievin'. Now he'll never fash you mair. " Happy could I been beside you, Happy baith at morn and e'en ; A' the ills that e'er betide you, Watty aye turned out your frien'. " But ye ever like to see me Vex'd and sighin' late and ear', Fareweel, Meg, I've sworn to lea' thee. So thou'Il never see me mair." Meg, a' sabbing, sae to lose him, Sic a change had never wist, Held his haun' close to her bosom. While her heart was like to burst. " O my W^atty ! will ye lea' me, Frien'less, helpless, to despair? O ! for this ae time forgi'e me. Never will I vex you mair." "Ay ! ye've aft said that, and broken A' your vows ten times a- week, No, no, Meg ! — see, there's a token Glittering on my bonnet cheek. " Owre the seas I march this morning. Listed, tested, sworn and a', Forced by your confounded girning — ■ Fareweel, Meg ! for Fm awa'." WATTY AND MEG. 53 Then Poor Maggy's tears and clamour Gushed afresh, and louder grew, While the weans, wi' mournfu' yamour, Round their sabbing mither flew. " Through the yirth I'll waunder wi' you — Stay, O Watty ! stay at hame ; Here, upon my knees, I'll gie you Ony vow you like to name. " See your poor young lammies pleadin', Will ye gang and break our heart ? No a house to put our head in. No a friend to tak' our part ! " Ilka word came like a bullet, Watty's heart begoud to shake. On a kist he laid his wallet, Dichted baith his een and spake. " If ance niair I could by writing, Lea' the sodgers and stay still. Wad you swear to drap your flytin' ? " "Yes, Watty ! yes, I will." "Then," quo' Watty, " mind, be honest ; Aye to keep your temper strive ; Gin ye break this dreadfu' promise. Never mair expect to thrive. " Marg'et Howe ! this hour ye solemn Swear by everything that's good, Ne'er again yoor spouse to scauld him, While life warms your heart and blood. " That ye'll ne'er in Mungo's seek me, Ne'er put drucken to my name. Never out at e'ening steek me. Never gloom when I come hame. 54 AULD SCOTS BALLANTt^. "That ye'U ne'er, like Bessy Miller, Kick my shins or rug my hair, Lastly, I'm to keep the siller; This upon your saul you swear ? "' " O -h ! " quo' Meg ; " Awcel," quo' Watty, " Fareweel ! faith 111 try the seas ;" " O stand still," quo' Meg, and grat aye ; " Ony, ony way ye please." Maggy syne, because he prest her, Swore to a' thing owre again : ^Yatty lap, and danced, and kiss'd her ; Wow ! but he was wondrous fain. Down he threw his staff victorious ; Aff gaed bonnet, claes, and shoon ; Syne below the blankets, glorious. Held anither Ilinneymoon ! Bc00ic Bell anb flDaii^ 6ra^. The story on which this popular ballad is founded has been often told, and is so charged with tender pathos that it never fails to command attentive hearing. It belongs to the time of the great plague, or pestilence, which, down to the year 1665, was the terror of Scotland, and which at one time reduced the city of I'erth of about one-sixth of its population. The common tradition is that Bessie Bell and Mary Gray were the daughters of two country gentlemen in the neighbourhood of Perth, and an intimate friendship subsisted between them. Bessie Bell, daughter of the laird of Kinvaid, was on a visit to Mary (jray, at her father's house of Lednock, now called Lynedoch, when the plague of 1666 broke out in the country. To avoiil the in- fection, the two young ladies built themselves a bower in a very retired and romantic spot known as the Burn-braes, on the side of the Brachie Burn, situated about three-quar- BESSIE BELL AND MARY GRAY. 55 ters of a mile west from Lynedoch House. Here they lived for some time ; but the plague raging with great fury, they caught the infection from a young gentleman of Perth who, it is said, was in love with the one or the other, or vvith them both ; and who, having discovered their rural habita- tion and the scanty fare it afforded, had made it his daily duty to supply them with provisions from the "Borough toun." According to a traditionary story which I have re- ceived at various times from the lips of old persons in Perthshire, the provisions were not the vehicle by which the pestilence was conveyed. But the young gentleman on one of his visits having brought with him, among other pre- sents for their gratification, a rare necklace which he had purchased of a Jew, and which had unhappily been origin- ally the property of one who had died of the plague, the in- fection was in this way communicated to the young ladies, and proved fatal to them both. According to custom in cases of the plague, they were not buried in the ordinary place of sepulture, but in a secluded spot called the Dron- achhaugh, at the foot of the brae of the same name, and near to the bank of the river Almond. The young man having also died of the plague, was laid at their feet. Dranoch, or Dronoch, in the Gaelic means sorrowful, there- fore the likelihood is that this piece of ground takes its name from the fact of these hapless young persons being buried in it. The earliest authentic information concerning the grave of Bessie Bell and Mary Gray is found contained in a letter dated 21st June, 1781, written by Major Barry of Lednock, and published in the Transactions of the Society of Anti- quaries of Scotland, Vol. H., 1822. This gentleman ex- plains that when he came first to Lednock he was shown in a part of the grounds called the Dronach-haugh, a heap of stones almost covered with briers, thorn, and fern, and which he was assured was the bnrial place of the hapless ladies whose names are immortalised in the fragment of ballad poetry bearing their names as its title. Major Barry caused all the rubbish to be removed from the little spot of classic ground, and inclosed it with a wall, planted it round with flowering shrubs, made up the grave double, and fixed a stone in the wall, on which were engraved the names of Bessie Bell and Mary Gray. In 1787 Lynedoch estate passed into the possession of Mr. Thomas Graham of Balgowan, afterwards Lord Lyne- doch, and the wall erected round the graves in the Dron- 56 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. ach-haugh by Major Barry half a century before, being dis- coved by this later proprietor, on his return from a lengthened pilgrimage abroad, to have fallen into a dilapi- dated state, he had the remains of the wall removed and a neat stone parapet and iron railings five feet high placed round the spot. He also covered the graves with a stone slab, on which were inscribed the words, " They lived, they loved, they died." This railing still stands ; but the stone slab within the railing is not visible to the eye, being covered with stones heaiieil up cairn-wise, brought hither by the many visitors who have made pilgrimages to this famous Scottish shrine. The original verses — two in number — were first printed by Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe, under the title of " The Twa Lasses " ; and, one or two necessary corrections ex- cepted, are as follows : — O, Bessie Bell and Mary Gray, They war twa bonnie lassies ! They biggit a bower on yon burn-brae, And theekit it o'er wi' rashies. They theekit it o'er wi' rashies green, They theekit it o'er wi' heather, But the pest cam' frae the Borough's toun And slew them baith thegether. They thocht to lie in IMethven kirkyard Amang their noble kin ; But they maun lie in Dronach-liaut;h And beik foment the sun. And Bessie Bell and IVTary Gray, They war twa bonnie lassies ! They biggit a bower on yon burn-brae, And theekit it o'er wi' rashies. Starting with the first four lines of the above, Allan Ramsay produced a song which is sometimes printed in the collections. It is a performance not without merit, but as the author has dared to transform the burden of the verses from tender pathos to lively humour, we give him credit for it with a grudge, for the good reason that in so far as his version gains popularity a sweetly-pathetic historic romance loses its hold on the public mind. The subjoined beautiful rendering of the tradition in ballad verse will be welcome to many. The author, James Duff, known as "the Methven poet," was a gardener to trade, and flourished in the early part of the present cen- tury, lie was the author of the popular song, " Lassie wi' the yellow coatie." His volume of poems, published at BESSIE BELL AND MARY GRAY. 57 Perth in 1816, and which contains the following ballad, is now very scarce. Duff, it will be seen, does not adhere to the traditionary story, but gives free rein to his poetic fancy. Unlike Allan Ramsay, however, he maintains the original spirit of the tender romance. When plague and death, a dreary space, Pervaded Britain's isle ; When sorrow sat on many a face, And few were seen to smile. On Almond side, as poets tell, There dwelt two ladies gay ; The one was named fair Bessie Bell, The other Mary Gray. Fast knit in close relation's bands, Their friendship still increas'd ; And each was heiress of the lands Her sires had long possess'd. Thus Bessie Bell and Mary Gray To years of beauty grew ; While death around them ev'ry day Confirm'd his mission true. By fear impress'd, it struck their mind To live recluse from man ; And long they sought to find a spot Convenient for their plan — To build a bower on Almond side, Within a lonely wood, Where herbs and nuts and fruit supplied Those maidens for their food. 58 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Here many months in humble guise They fix'd their lone abode ; Unknown or seen by human eyes, They spent their time with God. Religion in their early youth Had oft their mind employ'd, And trusting now in sacred truth, Much comfort they enjoy'd. No costly table here was spread With dishes rich and fine ; Nor humble page, in liv'ry clad, Pour'd out the homely wine. The bramble grape, the hazel nut, The crystal spring that flow'd, Were all, it seem'd, those maidens sought. And all that heav'n bestow'd. No gaudy weeds those ladies wore. Nor di'monds had to boast ; Nor silk, nor fur, from foreign shore, Brought home with toil and cost. The flax that wav'd on yonder field Supplied them linen white : The wool which Scotia's mountains yield Here clad them day and night. Here Nature spread her beauties wide, In ev'ry flow'r that springs ; And music swell'd on either side, P'rom ev'ry bird that sings. The lark awak'd them in the morn, With her delightful note ; The linnet warbled from the thorn, Around their humble cot. BESSIE BELL AND MARY GRAY, 59 Thus far remov'd from humankind,' They thought themselves secure ; Nor foul infection could they find, Nor death discry their door. But ah ! the fire of ardent love Conceal'd in Bessie's breast, Which nought but fate could disapprove, Bereav'd her mind of rest. A neighb'ring youth, of manners mild, And much respected birth. Her near acquaintance from a child. And conscious of her worth. Who long had sighed for Bessie Bell, And long conceal'd his pain ; At length had told his tender tale. Nor was his suit in vain ; For she, it seems, had likewise lov'd. Though close she kept the same ; No wonder then her heart approv'd, When he declar'd his flame. Oft by sweet Almond's flow'ry side. This youthful pair had rov'd ; Where oft he styl'd fair Bess his bride, And told how much he lov'd. But now that he had lost his fair, No peace on earth had he ; His mind was fillVl with anxious care, And sad perplexity. Both town and country, far and near, He sought for Bessie Bell ; But ah ! no tidings he could hear, For none her home could tell. 6o AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Thus did this youth, day after day, His search for her renew ; Nor pass'd the stranger on his way, But ask'd if lie her knew. "Oh ! have you seen fair Bessie Bell, The flow'r of womankind ; Oh ! gentle stranger, can you tell Where I this nymph might find ? " Her hair is like the threads of gold, Tied with a ribbon blue ; Her frame was cast in beauty's mould, With Nature's likeness true." Then would he to the winds complain Of his hard destiny ; Or breath'd his plaint in mournful strain. Or sad soliloquy. " Oh ! love, my unrelenting foe, And cause of all my pain. Must I the sweets of life forego. And waste my youth in vain. "Oh ! hear my plaint, ye pow'rs above, And mitigate my woe ; Oh ! had she known how much I love, She had not left me so. " The dove may take a morning flight. And leave her mate to mourn ; But long before the fall of night Will to her nest return. "Sure some unhallow'd rival's hand Has borne my fair aside ; Perhaps this night in wedlock's band. My Bess becomes his bride. BESSIE BELL AND MARY GRAY. 6l " Oh ! would some angel lead the way, Or point what course to take ; Tho' thousand dangers round her lay, I'd brave them for her sake. " But why complain of Bessie Bell, Or think of fortune ill ! Oh ! could I hope (for who can tell), Perhaps she loves me still. " But see ! the sun has left the sky. The shades of night draw near ; The fleecy clouds of crimson dye Begin to disappear. "No hamlet round me I can spy. But bleak and dreary waste ; Where shall a wan'drer safely lye His wearied limbs to rest. "To Lynedock Hall I'll bend my way. Where friendship I shall find ; There lives her uncle, worthy Gray, Of feeling heart and kind. " My mournful tale of slighted love To him I will declare ; A heart like his, no doubt, 't will move To sympathetic care. " But see ! from yon embow'ring shade What glimm'ring taper shines ; Perhaps some Hermit there is fled. And now in hunger pines. " I'll haste me hence perhaps in time, Ere death has closed his eye, To succour life was ne'er a crime, Though even doomed to die." 62 AULD SCOTS B ALLAN TS. Then straight he hied him to the spot, From whence this taper shone ; At length he rcacli'd the humble cot, Built of green sod alone. The roof of pyramidal form, Cut from the neighb'ring bushes ; And as a shelter from the storm, 'Twas thatched o'er with rushes. lie round it gaz'd with wond'ring eyes. To think upon the choice ; But who can paint his sweet surprise. To hear a female voice. He paus'd to think what hapless fair Might in this bower dwell ; But oh ! think what his feelings were. To hear his Bessie Bell ! An eager transport fired his breast. Regardless of all harms, The door he gently backwards press'd, And lock'd her in his arms. But who can paint in colours fair. This sweet, this tender scene ; Ye fervent lovers now declare, Nor dare, for once, to feign. Her faithful cousin, Mary Gray, Upon a couch reclin'd ; The sacred volume by her lay, Her guide and counsel kind. Alarm'd to find a youth so rude, Had found their sweet retreat ; And see a stranger thus intrude, She sunk beside her seat. BESSIE BELL AND MARY GRAY. 63 Her balmy lips of rosy hue, Appear'd like lifeless clay ; Her eyes like pearly drops of dew, Their lustre died away. At length she heav'd a melting sigh, O'ercome with fear and grief; The stranger heard and turn'd his eye, Then sprung to her relief. E'en love, with all its boasted charms, He for a moment spurn'd, And held her friendly in his arms, Till life and sense return'd. Her eyes resum'd their lustre bright, Her lips their scarlet hue ; Her raven-locks and bosom white. His admiration drew. A sudden stupor seiz'd his thought, But how, he could not tell ; He, for a moment, quite forgot His peerless Bessie Bell. 'Twas but a moment, and no more. This conflict he endur'd ; The fair he long had lov'd before, But spake and he was cured. " Oh ! Mary dear, my cousin kind. And partner of my woe ; Was ruthless fate itself design'd To break my comfort so ? " This is my much-lamented friend. Young William is his name ; His love for me, which knows no end, Has been in this to blame. 64 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " But now that fortune's fickle wheel Has brought my friend to me, Come share with nic the joy I feel, And I'll do so with thee." Thus said, she spread a towel white. Upon her cousin's knee ; Then brought the best, that well she might, And served them cheerfully. No questions ask'd, no faults were found. Nor studied forms were here ; 'Twas sweet content the supper crown'd, And welcome for good cheer. With hand and heart they jointly strove His comfort to procure ; Sure love alone can answer love, And render bliss secure. I need not here in words describe The minutes wing their way Unheeded, til! the feather'd tribe Proclaim'd approaching day. The lark, the linnet, and the thrush. With warbling notes and wild. Began to chant on every bush, While bright Aurora smiled. "&' When hand in hand, the loving pair. They left the humble cell, The heartfelt joys of love to share. And all its griefs' to tell. 'Twas by sweet Almond's limpid stream, Where sporting fishes play. Young William and his lovely dame, That morning took their way. BESSIE BELL AND MARY GRAY. 65 Here all that love could say was said, Or virtuous truth invent ; And here the day was fix'd to wed, With blushing free consent. This done, young William took his leave, And homeward bent his way ; While Bess was left no more to grieve. But wait the wish'd-for day. With joy he hied him home to tell, So well's his journey sped, And how he found his Bessie Bell, Embow'r'd in yonder shade. He told his friends they must provide 'Gainst the appointed hour, To welcome home his lovely bride, And grace the nuptial bow'r. But now it pains my heart to speak, And all must grieve to hear, Our young bridegroom fell soon so sick That death itself seem'd near. The best of human skill was tried, The first advice was given ; But all in vain, young William died, He died in hopes of heaven. Thus to disease a victim fell, A youth of spotless fame, Whose latest words were, " Bessie Bell"; Life ended with her name. Now let us turn to yonder bow'r, Where these two maidens gay, Prepar'd to meet the nuptial hour, Th' appointed marriage day. E 66 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. But ah ! the pestilential breath, As many still suppose, Of their late stranger, prov'd their death. Though sweet as summer rose. And there, unseen, their bodies lay, Till by some wand'rer found ; And here their graves are seen this day. Denied the sacred ground. This simple stone and ivy'd wall, Directs the stranger's way. To let the tear of pity fall, A tribute due to pay. This worthy Barry fenced around, With many a shrub and tree ; This spot he styled sequester'd ground. And still deserves to be. Here Almond o'er its pebled bed. Meanders soft and sweet ; There many a winding walk and shade, Where lovers daily meet. Here gallant Graham, of well-won fame. Has fix'd his mansion seat. And greatly beautified the same With woods and gardens sweet. His matchless skill, and boundless taste. At Lynedock now to view, Have brought him many a noble guest. Which never Scotland knew. But here my muse must quit her theme. Nor more the numbers tell ; IMay fortune wait on worthy Graham, And peace to Bessie Bell. THE BONNIE HOUSE O' AIRLIE. 67 Zbc ISonnic Ibomc o' Hivlie* There arc various readings of this popular Ijallad : but they differ only in detail, the main incidents being always the same. Its locality and historical basis are briefly as follows : — During the great civil war of the seventeenth century, the Earl of Airlie, in Forfarshire, adhered firmly to the Royal cause, and in consequence rendered himself particularly obnoxious to the Covenanting party, who, during the Earl's absence in England, attacked his houses of Forter and Airlie, and plundered and burned them to the ground. Spalding says: — "The Earl of Airly went from home to England, fearing the troubles of the land, and that he should be pressed to subscribe the Covenant, whether he would or not, whilk by fleeing the land he re- solved to eschew as well as he could, and left his eldest son, the Lord Ogilvie, a brave young nobleman, behind him at home. The Estates or Tables learning of his de- parture, directed the Earls of Montrose and Kinghorne to go to the place of Airly, and to take in the same, and for that effect to carry cartows [cannon] with them ; who went and summoned the Lord Ogilvie to render the house (being an impregnable strength by nature, well manned by all sort of munition and provision necessary), who answered his father was absent, and he left no such commission with him as to render his house to any subjects, and that he would defend the samen to his power, till his father returned from England. There were some shots shot the house, and some from the house ; but the assailants finding the place invul- nerable, by nature of great strength, without great skaith, left the place without meikle loss on either side ; these de- parted therefrae in June. Now the Committee of Estates finding no contentment in this expedition, and hearing how their friends of the name of Forbes, and others in the coun- try, were daily injured and oppressed by Highland lymmers, broken out of Lochaber, Clan Gregor out of Brae of Athol, Brae of Mar, and divers other places ; therefore they gave order to the Earl of Argyle to raise men out of his own country, and first to go to Airly and Furtour, two of the Earl of Airly's principal houses, and to take in and destroy the same, and next to go upon their lymmers and punish them ; likeas, conform to his order, he raises an army of about five thousand men, and marches towards Airly ; but 68 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. the Lord Ogilvic, hearing of his coming with such irresis- til)le force, resolves to flee, and leave the lu)use manless : and so for their own safety they wisely fled ; but Argyle most cruelly and inhumanly enters the house of Airly, and beats the same to the ground, and right sua he does to Furtour, syne spoiled all within both houses, and such as could not be carried away, they masterfully brake down and destroyed." Argyle was at feud with the Ogilvies of Airlie, and is said to have heartily enjoyed the commission to sack their stronghold, and lost no time in putting his orders into execution. After plundering Airlie Castle, he set it on fire, and afterwards razed the walls. In an account written by James Gordon, parson of Rothiemay, it is said that Argyle "was seen taking a hammer in his hand and knocking down the hewed work of the doors and windows till he did sweat with heat at his work." From Airlie he proceeded to Forter — which, by the way, is the scene of the dialogue of the ballad, and not Airlie at all — where Lady Ogilvie was, being then near her confinement. Argyle is said to have behaved to her with much cruelty, turning her out of doors, and even refusing to grant permission to her grandmother, and his own kinswoman, the Lady Drummie, to receive her into her House of Kelly. The House of Forter was also razed to the ground, but not until the Campbells had kept possession of it for several months. The following version of the ballad will be found in some unimportant particulars to differ from any other, and to compare favourably with any one yet published. It fell upon a day, and a bonnie summer day. When the aits grew green and the barley, That there fell out a great dispute Between Argyle and Airlie. The Duke o' Montrose has written to Argyle To come in the morning early, And he's up and awa' by the back o' Dunkeld, To plunder the bonnie House o' Airlie. Lady Ogilvie look'd ower frae her high castle wa'. And O, but she sigh'd sairly, AVhen she saw Argyle wi' a hunder o' his men, Come to plunder the bonnie House o' Airlie. THE BONNIE HOUSE O' AIRLIE. 69 ♦' Come down, come down, Lady Ogilvie," he says, " Come down, and kiss me fairly. Or I swear by the sword that hangs in my hand I winna leave a stannin' stane in Airlie." " I'll no come down to thee, proud Argyle, Nor wad I kiss thee fairly ; I'll no come down thou fause, fause lord, The' thou shouldna leave a stannin' stane in'Alrlic. " But if my gude lord had been at hame. As he's awa' wi' Charlie,* There durstna a Campbell in a' Argyle Set a fit upon the bonnie green o' Airlie. " If my gude lord were here this nicht. As he is wi' King Charlie, The dearest blude o' a' thy kin Wad slocken the burnin' o' Airlie. " O, I ha'e borne him seven bonnie sons, The youngest ne'er saw his daddie, And though I had as mony ower again, I wad gi"e them a' to Prince Charlie." Argyle in a rage attacked the bonnie ha', And he's to the plundering fairly ; And tears tho' he saw, like dewdrops fa'. In a lowe he set the bonnie House o' Airlie. " What lowe is yon ? " quo' the gude Lochiel, "That lowps o'er the hill-taps clearly?" " By the God of my kin ! " cried the young Ogilvie, " It's my ain dear bonnie House o' Airlie ! * Charles I. 70 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " It's no' the bonnie house, nor the lands a' reft, That grieves my heart sae sairly ; But O, the winsome dame, and the sweet babes I left. They'll be smoor'd in the black reek o' Airlie." "Draw your dirks ! draw your dirks !" cried the brave Lochiel ; " Unsheath your swords ! " cried Charlie, *' And we'll kindle sic a lowe round the fause Argyle, And licht it wi' a spark out o' Airlie." 1^0 u no (TanUanc, The " Tale of the Young Tanilane," the scene of which is laid in Ettrick Forest, is mentioned in "The Complaynt of Scotland," printed in 1549 ; and the ballad is said to be a favourite still with the rural inhabitants of the Border counties. " Carterhaugh is a plain, at the conflux of the Ettrick and Yarrow, in Selkirkshire, about a mile above Selkirk, and two miles below Newark Castle, a romantic ruin which overhangs the Yarrow, and which is said to have been the habitation of our heroine's father, though others place his residence in the Tower of Oakwood. The peasants point out, upon the plain, those curious rings, which vulgar credulity supposes to be traces of the Fairy revels. Here they say, were placed the stands of milk and of water, in which ' Tamlane ' was dipped, in order to effect the dis- enchantment ; and upon these spots, according to their mode of expressing themselves, the grass will never grow. Miles Cross (perhaps a corruption of Mary's Cross,) where fair Janet is said to have awaited the arrival of the Fairy train, is said to have stood near the Duke of Euccleuch's seat of Bowhill, about half a mile from Carterhaugh. In no part of Scotland, indeed, has the belief in Fairies main- tained its ground with more pertinacity than in Selkirk- shire. The most sceptical among the lower ranks only venture to assert that their appearances and mischevious YOUNG TAMLANE. 71 exploits have ceased, or at least become infrequent since the light of the Gospel was diffused in its purity." — Whitelaiv. The following version is derived mainly from the "Border Minstrelsy," a good many verses, for various reasons, being deleted. " O I forbid ye, maidens a'. That wear gowd in your hair. To come or gae by Carterhaugh, For young Tamlane is there." But up and spak her, fair Janet, The fairest o' her kin, " I'll come and gae to Carterhaugh And ask nae leave o' him." She has kilted her green kirtle A little abune her knee ; And she has braided her yellow hair A little abune her bree. She has prink'd hersel', and preen'd hersel', By the ae light o' the moon, And she's awa' to Carterhaugh, To speak wi' young Tamlane. And when she cam' to Carterhaugh, She gaed beside the well. And there she fand his steed standing, But he wasna there himsel'. She hadna pu'd a red red rose, A rose but barely three. When up and starts a wee, wee man At Lady Janet's knee ! Says, " Why pu' ye the rose, Janet ? What gars ye break the tree ? Or why come ye to Carterhaugh, Withouten leave o' me?" 72 AULD SCOTS B ALLAN TS. Says, "Carterhaugh it is mine ain ; My daddie gave it me ; I'll come and gang to Carterhaugli, And ask nae leave o' thee." He's ta'en her by the milk-white hand, Amang the leaves sae green ; And sair and meikle was the love That fell the twa between. He's ta'en her by the milk-white hand, Amang the roses red ; And they hae vow'd a solemn vow Ilk ither for to wed. " The truth ye'll tell to me, Tamlane, A word ye maunna lee ; Gin e'er ye was in haly chapel, Or sained* in Christentie !" " The truth I'll tell to thee, Janet, A word I winna lee ; I was ta'en to the good church-door, And sained as well as thee. " Randolph, Earl Murray, was my sire, Dunbar, Earl March, is thine ; We loved when we were children small, Which yet you well may mind. "When I was a boy just turn'd of nine. My uncle sent for me, To hunt, and hawk, and ride wi' him. And keep him companie. * Hallowed. YOUNG TAMLANE. 73 " There came a wind out of the north, A sharp wind and a snell, And a dead sleep came over me, And frae my horse I fell ; " The Queen o' Fairies keppit me. In yon green hill to dwell. I am a fairy, lyth and limb ; Fair lady, view me well. " But we that live in Fairy-land No sickness know nor pain, I quit my body when I will And take to it again. •' We sleep in rose-buds, soft and sweet, We revel in the stream. We wanton lightly on the wind, Or glide on a sun-beam. "And I would never tire, Janet, In fairy-land to dwell ; But aye, at ilka seven years, They pay the teind to hell ; But I'm sae fat and fair o' flesh, I fear 'twill be mysel' ! " This night is Hallowe'en, Janet, The morn is Hallowday, And gin ye dare your true love win. Ye hae nae time to stay. " The night it is good Hallowe'en, When fairy folk will ride. And she that wad her true love win. At Miles Cross she maun bide. 74 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " And ye maun gae to the Miles Cross, Between twal hours and one, Tak' haly water in your hand, And cast a compass roun'." " And how shall I thee ken, Tamlane? And how shall I thee knaw, Aniang sae many unearthly knights, The like I never saw ? " " The first company that passes by, Say na, and let them gae ; The neist company that passes by, Say na, and do right sae ; The third company that passes by. Then I'll be ane o' thae. " For I ride on the milk-white steed, Wi' a gold star in my crown ; Because I was a christen'd knight. They gie me that renown. " First let pass the black, Janet, And syne let pass the brown, But grip ye to the milk-white steed, And pu' the rider doun. " My right hand will be gloved, Janet, My left hand will be bare ; And these the tokens I gie thee, Nae doubt I will be there. " They'll turn me in your arms, Janet, An adder and a snake ; But baud me fast, let me not pass. Gin ye would be my maik. YOUNG TAMLANE. 75 ■" They'll turn me in your arms, Janet, An adder and an ask ; They'll turn me in your arms, Janet, A bale that burns fast. " They'll turn me in your arms, Janet, A red-hot gad o' airn ; Eut haud me fast, let me not pass, For I'll do you nae harm. '• First dip me in a stand o' milk, Then in a stand o' water ; But haud me fast, let me not pass ; I'll be your bairn's father. ^' They'll shape me in your arms, Janet, A dove, but and a swan : And last they'll shape me in your arms A mother-naked man : Cast your green mantle over me — I'll be mysel' again." ■Gloomy, gloomy was the night, And eerie was the way, As fair Janet, in her green mantle. To Miles Cross she did gae. About the dead hour o' the night, She heard the bridles ring. And Janet was as glad o' that. As ony earthly thing. There's haly water in her hand, She's cast a compass round ; J^nd straight she sees a fairy band Come riding o'er the mound. 76 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Fair Janet stood witli mind unmoved, The dreary heath upon, And louder, louder waxed the sound As they came riding on. And first gaed by the black, black steed. And then gaed by the l>ro\vn ; But fast she gript the milk-white steed, And pu'd the rider down. She pu'd him frae the milk-white steed, And loot the bridle fa' ; And up there raise an elrish cry ; " He's won amang us a' ! " They shaped him in fair Janet's arms An ask, but and an adder ; She held him fast in every shape. To be her ain true lover. They shaped him in her arms at last A mother-naked man, She cuist her mantle over him, And sae her true love wan. Up then spak' the Queen o' Fairies, Out o' a bush o' broom : " She that has borrow'd young Tamlane, Has gotten a stately groom ! " Up then spak' the Queen o' Fairies, Out o' a bush o' rye : " She's ta'en away the bonniest knight In a' my companie ! " But had I kenn'd, Tamlane," she says, " A lady wad borrow thee, I wad hae ta'en out thy twa grey een, Put in twa een o' tree ! WILL AND JEAN. 77 " Had I but kenn'd, Tamlane," she says, " Before ye came frae hame, I wad tane out yer heart o' flesh, Put in a heart o' stane. " Had I but had the wit yestreen, That I ha'e coft the day— I'd paid my kane seven times to hell, Ere you'd been won away ! " Mill aub 3ean. " Scotland's Scaith : or the History of Will and Jean," was written by Hector Macneill, a lyric poet of fine taste and fancy, the author of " Jeanie's Black E'e," "Come under my Plaidie," " My Boy Tammy," and other popular songs and poems. He was born at Rosebank, on the Esk, near Roslin, on the 22nd of October, 1746, adopted a com- mercial profession, and spent about twenty-five years of his life in the West Indies. On his return to his native land, about 1788, he took up his residence in Stirling, and entered upon a literary career. He wrote several novels, and was editor for a time of the Scots Magazine. The latter years of his life were spent in Edinburgh, where he died on the 15th of March, 18 18, in his 72nd year. Macneill's reputation rests chiefly on his lyrical history of " Will and Jean," an ower true tale. Resembling Wilson's ballad of "Watty and Meg" in subject, its popularity was also somewhat similar, 10,000 copies of "Will and Jean" having been sold in a single month. The poem, were it more widely diffused, would be popular still. PART I. Wha was ance like Willie Gairlace — Wha in neighbouring town or farm ? Beauty's bloom shone in his fair face. Deadly strength was in his arm. 78 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Wha %vi' \yill could rin or wrastle, Throw the sledge, or toss the bar ? Hap what would, he stood a castle, Or for safety, or for war. Warm his heart, and mild as manfu'. With the bauld he hauld could be ; But to friends wha had their handfu'. Purse and service aye were free. When he first saw Jeanie Miller, Wha wi' Jeanie could compare ? Thousands had mair braws and siller. But were ony half sae fair ? Saft her smile raise like ^lay morning. Glinting ower Demait's * brow ; Sweet ! wi' opening charms adorning Strevlin'st lovely plains below. Kind and gentle was her nature ; At ilk place she bore the bell ; Sic a bloom, and shape, and stature ! But her look nae tongue can tell ! Such was Jean when Will first, mawing. Spied her on a thrawart beast ; Flew like fire, and, just when fa'ing, Kepp'd her on his manly breast. Light he bare her, i)ale as ashes, 'Cross the meadow, fragrant, green ; Placed her on the new-mawn rashes. Watching sad her opening een. * One of the Ochil Hills, near Stirling. Diin-via-chit (Gaelic), the hill of the good prospect. It is pronounced Demyit. t The ancient name of Stirling. WILL AND JEAN. 79 Such was Will, when poor Jean, fainting, Drapt into a lover's arms ; Waken'd to his saft lamenting. Sighed, and blushed a thousand charms. Soon they lo'ed, and soon they buckled ; Nane took time to think and rue ; Youth, and worth, and beauty coupled- Love had never less to do. Three short years flew by fu' canty Jean and Will thought them but ane ; Ilka day brought joy and plenty, Ilka year a dainty wean. Will wrought sair, but aye wi' pleasure, Jean, the hale day, spun and sang — Will and weans, her constant treasure. Blest wi' them, nae day seem'd lang. Trig her house, and, oh ! to busk aye Ilk sweet bairn was a' her pride ! But at this time news and whisky Sprang na up at ilk roadside. Luckless was the hour when Willie, Hame returning frae the fair, Owertook Tam, a neighbour billie. Sax miles frae their hame and mair. Simmer's heat had lost its fury. Calmly smiled the sober e'en ; Lasses on the bleachfield hurry, Skelping barefoot ower the green. Labour rang wi' laugh and clatter. Canty hairst was just begun, And on mountain, tree, and water, Glinted saft the setting sun. 8o AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Will and Tam, wi' hearts a' louping, Mark'd the hale, but couldna' bide ; Far frae hame, nae time for stopping, Baith wish'd for their ain fireside. On they travell'd, warm and drouthy, Cracking ower the news in town ; The mair they crack'd the mair ilk youthy Pray'd for drink to wash news down. Fortune, wha but seldom listens To poor merit's modest prayer, And on fools heaps needless blessin's, Ilarken'd to our drouthy pair. In a howm, whase bonnie burnie Whimpering row'd its crystal flood. Near the road, where travelers turn aye, Neat and bield, a cot-house stood. White the wa's, wi' roof new theekit, Window brods just painted red ; Lown 'mang trees and braes it reekit, Haflins seen and haflins hid. Up the gavel end, thick spreadin', Crap the clasping ivy green ; Back ower, firs the high craigs cleadin', Raised a' round a cozic screen. Down below, a flowery meadow Join'd the burnie's rambling line ;— Here it was Meg Howe, the widow. This same day set up her sign. Brattling down the brae, and near its Bottom, Will first marv'ling sees— '■'Porter, Ale, and British Spirits," Painted bright between twa trees. WILL AND JEAN. J " Goodsake ! Tam, here's walth for drinking ; (Wha can this new comer be ?") " Hoot !" quo' Tam, " there's drouth in thinking- Let's in, Will, and syne we'll see." Nae mair time they took to speak or Think of ought but reaming jugs. Till three times in humming liquor Ilk lad deeply laid his lugs. Sloken'd now, refresh'd and talking, In cam' Meg (weel skill'd to please) — " Sirs, ye're surely tired wi' walking — Ye maun taste my bread and cheese." "Thanks," quo' Will, " I canna tarry. Pick mirk night is setting in : Jean, poor thing ! 's her lane, and eerie — I maun to the road and rin." " Hoot !" quo' Tam, " what's a' the hurry ? Hame's now scarce a mile o' gate — Come ! sit down — Jean winna weary : Dear me, man, it's no sae late !" Will, owercome wi' Tam's oration, Baith fell to, and ate their fill ; " Tam," quo' Will, " in mere discretion, We maun hae the widow's gill." After ae gill cam' anither — Meg sat cracking 'tween them twa ; Bang ! cam' in Mat Smith and's brither, Geordie Brown, and Sandie Shaw. Neibours, wha ne'er thought to meet here, Now sat down wi' double glee ; Ilka gill grew sweet and sweeter — Will got hame 'tween twa and three. F 82 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Jean, poor thing, had lang been greetin' ; Will, next morning, blamed Tam Lowes ; But, ere lang, a weekly meetin' Was set up at Maggy Howe's. PART II. Maibt things hae a sma' beginning, But wha kens how things will end ? Weekly clubs are nae great sinning. If folk hae enough to spend. But nae man o' sober thinking E'er will say that things can thrive, 1 f there's spent in weekly drinking What keeps wife and weans alive. Drink maun aye hae conversation, Ilka social soul allows ; But in this reforming nation, Wha can speak without the news? News, first meant for state physicians, Deeply skill'd in courtly drugs ; Now, when a' are politicians, Just to set folks by the lugs. Maggie's club, wha could get nae light On some things that should be clear. Found ere lang the fault, and ae night Clul)b'd, and got the Gazetteer* * The Edinburgh Gazetteer, a violent opposition paper, published in 1793-4- WILL AND JEAN. 83 Twice a-week to Maggie's cot-house, Swift by post the papers fled ; Thoughts spring up, like plants in hot-house, Every time the news are read. Ilk ane's wiser than anither — "Things are no gaun right," quo' Tarn ; " Let us aftener meet thegither — Twice a-week's no worth a d — n." See them now in grave convention, To mak a' things " square and even ; " Or at least wi' firm intention To drink sax nights out o' seven. 'Mid this sitting up and drinking, Gathering a' the news that fell, Will, wha wasna yet past thinking, Had some battles wi' himsel'. On a'e hand, drink's deadly poison Bore ilk firm resolve awa' ; On the ither, Jean's condition Rave his very heart in twa. Weel he saw her smother'd sorrow, Weel he saw her bleaching cheek ! Mark'd the smile she strave to borrow. When, puir thing, she couldna speak f Jean, at first, took little heed o' Weekly clubs 'mang three or four ; Thought, kind soul ! that Will had need o*^ Heartsome hours when wark was ower. But when now that nightly meetings Sat and drank frae sax till twa — When she found that hard-earn'd gettings Now on drink were thrown awa ; 84 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Saw her Will, wha ance sae cheerie Raise ilk morning wi' the lark, Now grown mauchless, dowf, and sweer aye To look near his farm or wark ; Saw him tyne his manly spirit, Healthy bloom, and sprightly e'e ; And o' love and hame grown wearit ; Nightly frae his family flee ; — Wha could blame her heart's complaining ? Wha condemn her sorrows meek ? Or the tears that now ilk e'ening Bleach'd her lately crimson'd cheek ? Will, wha lang had rued and swither'd, (Aye ashamed o' past disgrace) Mark'd the roses as they wither'd Fast on Jeanie's lovely face. Mark'd — and felt wi' inward racking, A' the wyte lay wi' himsel' ; Swore next night he'd mak a breaking — D — d the club and news to hell. But, alas ! when habit's rooted. Few hae pith the root to pu' ; Will's resolves were aye non-suited — Promised aye, but aye got fou ; Aye at first at the convening. Moralised on what was right ; Yet over clavers entertaining, Dozed and drank till braid daylight. Things at length draw near an ending — - Cash runs out ; Jean, quite unhappy. WILL AND JEAN. 85 Sees that Will is now past mending, Tynes a' heart, and taks a — drappy ! * Ilka drink deserves a posey — Port makes men rude, claret civil ; Beer maks Britons stout and rosy. Whisky maks ilk wife — a devil. Jean, wha lately bore afiKction Wi' sae meek and mild an air, School'd by whisky, learns new tricks soon, Flytes, and storms, and rugs Will's hair. Jean, sae late the tenderest niither. Fond of ilk dear dawted wean : Now, heart-harden'd a' thegither, Skelps them round frae morn till e'en. Jean, wha vogie, loed to busk aye In her hame-spun, thrifty wark, Now sells a' her braws for whisky, To her last gown, coat, and sark ! Robin Burns, in mony a ditty, Loudly sings in whisky's praise ; Sweet his sang ! — the mair's the pity E're on it he wared sic lays. O' a' the ills poor Caledonia E'er yet pree'd, or e'er will taste, Brew'd in hell's black Pandemonia, Whisky's ill will scaith her maist ! * The author cannot refrain from seizing the last opportunity he may ever have, to caution his female readers against the vice here inten- tionally introduced. Women are not sufficiently aware of the dangers annexed to the smallest indulgence in spirituous liquors. A delicate frame or a susceptible mind experiencing a temporary relief frorn a pernicious stimulus, has recourse to it at a time when the best cordials are fortitude and resignation. Hence the deplorable habit of dram- drinking— a habit the most disgusting— the most degrading to the female character. 86 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Wha was ance like Willie Gairlace ? Wha in neighbouring town or farm ? Beauty's bloom shone in his fair face, Deadly strength was in his arm ! When he first saw Jeanie Miller, Wha wi' Jeanie could compare ? Thousands had mair braws and siller, But were ony half sae fair ? See them uotu — how changed wi' drinkin' ! A' their youthfu' beauty gane ? — Daver'd, doited, dazed, and blinkin'. Worn to perfect skin and bane ! In the cauld month o' November, (Claise, and cash, and credit out) Cow'ring ower a dying ember, Wi' ilk face as white's a clout ; Bond and bill, and debts a' stopped. Ilka sheaf selt on the bent ! Cattle, beds, and blankets rouped. Now to pay the laird his rent. No another night to lodge here. No a friend their cause to plead ! He taen on to be a sodger. She, wi' weans, to beg her bread ! O' a' the ills poor Caledonia E'er yet pree'd, or e'er will taste, Brew'd in hell's black I'andemonia Whisky's ill will scaith her maist ! WILL AND JEAN. 87 PART in. Oh ! that folk wad weel consider What it is to tyne a — name. What this vvarld is a' thegither, If bereft o' honest fame ! Pooitith ne'er can bring dishonour, Hardships ne'er breed sorrow's smart, If bright Conscience taks upon her To shed sunshine round the heart. But wi' a' that wealth can borrow, Guilty shame will aye look down ; What maun then shame, want, and sorrow, Wandering sad frae town to town ! Jeanie Miller, ance sae cheerie, Ance sae happy, good, and fair, Left by Will, next morning, drearie, Taks the road o' black Despair ! Cauld the blast — the day was sleeting ; Pouch and purse without a plack ! In ilk hand a bairnie greeting. And the third tied on her back. Wan her face, and lean and haggard, Ance sae sonsy — ance sae sweet ; What a change !— unhoused and beggar'd. Starving, without claise or meat ! Far frae ilk kent spot she wander'd, Skulking like a guilty thief ; Here and there uncertain daunder'd, Stupified wi' shame and grief ; 88 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. But soon shame for bygane errors Fled ower fast for e'e to trace, When grim death \vi' a' his terrors Cam' ower ilk sweet bairnie's face. Spent wi' toil, and cauld, and hunger, Baith down drapt, and down Jean sat ; Dazed and doited now nae longer, Thoiight— and felt — and bursting grat. Ciloamin' fast, wi' mirky shadow, Crap ower distant hill and plain ; Darken'd wood, and glen, and meadow, Adding fearfu' thoughts to pain. Round and round, in wild distraction, Jeanie turn'd her tearfu' e'c ; Round and round for some protection — Face nor house she coudna see ! Dark and darker grew the night aye ; Loud and sair the cauld winds thud ! Jean now spied a sma' bit lichtie Blinkin' through a distant wood. Up wi' frantic haste she started : Cauld nor fear she felt nae mair ; Hope for ae bright moment darted Through the gloom o' dark Despair. Fast ower fallow'il lea she brattled. Deep she wade through bog and burn ; Sair wi' steep and craig she battled. Till she reach'd the hoped sojourn. Proud, 'mang scenes o' simple nature, Stately auld, a mansion stood On a bank, whase sylvan feature Smiled out ower the roaring flood. WILL AND JEAN. 89 Summer here, in varied beauty, Late her flowery mantle spread, Where auld chestnut, aik, and yew tree. Mingling, lent their friendly shade. Blasted now wi' winter's ravage, A' their gaudy livery cast. Wood and glen, in wailings savage. Howl and murmur to the blast ! Darkness stalk'd wi' Fancy's terror — - Mountains moved, and castle rock'd ! Jean, half dead wi' toil and horror, Reach'd the door, and loudly knock'd. " Wha thus rudely wakes the sleeping ? " Cried a voice wi' angry grane ; " Help ! oh help ! " quo' Jeanie, weeping — " Help my infants, or they're gane ! " Nipp'd wi' cauld — wi' hunger faintin' — Baith lie speechless on the lea ! Help ! " quo' Jeanie, loud lamentin', " Help my lammies, or they'll dee ! " " Wha thus travels, cauld and hungry, Wi' young bairns sae late at een ? Beggars i " cried the voice, mair angry, "Beggars ! wi' their brats, I ween." " Beggars noru, alas ! wha lately Help'd the beggar and the poor ! " " Fy ! gudeman," cried ane discreetly, "Taunt nae poortith at our door. " Sic a night and tale thegither Plead for mair than anger's din ; Rise, Jock," cried the pitying mither — " Rise, and let the wretched in." 90 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " Beggars, now, alas ! wha lately rielp'd the beggar and the poor ! " " Enter ! " quo' the youth, fu' sweetly, While up llcw the open door. " Beggar, or what else, sad mourner ! Enter without fear or dread ; Here, thank God ! there's aye a corner To defend the houseless head. " For your bairnies cease repining ; If in life, ye'll see them soon." Aff he flew ; and, brightly shining, Through the dark clouds brak the moon. PART IV. Here, for ae night's kind protection, Leave we Jean and weans a while ; Tracing Will in ilk direction. Far frae Britain's fostering isle. Far frae scenes o' saft'ning pleasure, Love's delights and beauty's charms ! Far frae friends and social leisure — Plunged in murdering War's alarms ! Is it nature, vice, or folly. Or ambition's feverish brain. That sae aft wi' melancholy Turns, sweet Peace, thy joys to pain ?- Strips thee of thy robes of ermine, (Emblems of thy spotless life). And in War's grim look alarming, Arms thee with the murderer's knife ?- WILL AND JEAN. 91 A' thy gentle mind upharrows — Hate, revenge, and rage uprears ; And for hope and joy (twin marrows), Leaves the mourner drown'd in tears? Willie Gairlace, without siller, Credit, claise, or ought beside, Leaves his ance-loved Jeanie Miller, And sweet bairns, to warld wide ! — Leaves his native cozie dwelling, Shelter'd haughs, and birken braes, Greenswaird howes, and dainty mailing, Ance his profit, pride, and praise. Deck'd wi' scarlet, sword, and musket, Drunk wi' dreams as fause as vain ; Fleech'd and flatter'd, roosed and buskit, Wow ! but Will was wond'rous fain : Rattling, roaring, swearing, drinking — How could Thought her station keep ? Drams and drumming (faes to thinking) Dozed reflection fast asleep. But in midst o' toils and dangers, Wi' the cauld ground for his bed, Compass'd round wi' faes and strangers. Soon Will's dreams o' fancy fled. Led to battle's blood-dyed banners Waving to the widow's moan. Will saw glory's boasted honours End in life's expiring groan ! Round Valenciennes' strong-wa'd city, Thick ower Dunkirk's fatal plain, Will (though dauntless) saw wi' pity Britain's valiant sons lie slain. 92 AULD SCOTS BALL ANTS. Fired by Freedoiti's burning fever, Gallia strack death's slaughtering knell ; Frae the Schelde to Rhine's deep river, Britons fought — but Britons fell ! Fell unaided ! though cemented By the faith o' Friendship's laws ; Fell unpitied — unlamented, Bleeding in a thankless cause ! * In the thrang o' comrades deeing, Fighting foremost o' them a', Swift fate's winged ball cam' fleeing, And took Willie's leg awa' ; Thrice frae aft" the ground he started, Thrice to stand he strave in vain ; Thrice, as fainting strength departed, Sigh'd — and sank 'mang hundreds slain. On a cart, wi' comrades bleeding, Stiff wi' gore, and cauld as clay. Without cover, bed, or bedding, Five lang nights Will Gairlace lay In a sick house, damp and narrow, (Left behind wi' niony mair). See Will next, in pain and sorrow. Wasting on a bed o' care. Wounds, and pain, and burning fever, Doctors cured wi' healing art — Cured, alas ! but never, never Cool'd the fever at his heart. * Alluding to the conduct of the Dutch. WILL AND JEAN. 93 For when a' were sound and sleeping, Still and on, baith ear' and late, Will in briny grief lay steeping, Mourning o'er his hapless fate. A' his gowden prospects vanish'd, A' his dreams o' warlike fame, A' his glittering phantoms banish'd. Will could think o' nought but — hanie ! Think o' nought but rural quiet, Rural labour, rural ploys, Far frae carnage, blood, and riot, War, and a' its murdering joys. PART V. Back to Britain's fertile garden Will's return'd (exchanged for faes), Wi' ae leg, and no ae farden. Friend, or credit, meat, or claise. Lang through county, burgh, city, Crippling on a wooden leg, Gathering alms frae melting pity — See poor Gairlace forced to beg ! Placed at length on Chelsea's bounty, Now to langer beg thinks shame ; Dreams ance mair o' smiling plenty — Dreams o' former joys and hame, Hame ! and a' its fond attractions Fast to Will's warm bosom flee ; While the thoughts o' dear connexions Swell his heart and blind his e'e. 94 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " Monster ! wha could leave neglected Three sma' infants and a wife, Naked — starving — unprotected ! Them, too, dearer ance than life. Villain ! wha \vi' graceless folly Ruin'd her he ought to save. Changed her joys to melancholy, Beggary, and — perhaps a grave ! " Starting, wi' remorse distracted, Crush'd wi' Grief's increasing load, Up he bang'd ; and, sair aftlicted, Sad and silent took the road. Sometimes briskly, sometimes flaggin', Sometimes helpit. Will got forth ; On a cart, or in a waggon, Ilirplin' aye towards the north. Tired ae e'enin', stepping hooly. Pondering on his thrawart fate, In the bonny month o' July, Willie, heedless, tint his gate. Saft the southlan' breeze was blawin', Sweetly sugh'd the green aik wood ; Loud the din o' streams fast fa'in', Strak the ear wi' thundering thud. Ewes and lambs on braes ran bleeting, Linties chirp'd on ilka tree ; Frae the west, the sun, near setting, Flamed on Roslin's * towers sae hie. * Roslin Castle. WILL AND JEAN. 95 Roslin's towers, and braes sae bonnie, Craigs and water, woods and glen — Roslin's banks, unpeer'd by ony, Save the Muses' Hawthornden !* Ilka sound and charm delighting. Will (though hardly fit to gang) Wander'd on through scenes inviting, List'ning to the mavis' sang. Faint at length, the day fast closing. On a fragrant strawberry steep, Esk's sweet stream to rest composing, Wearied nature drapp'd asleep. " Soldier, rise ! — the dews o' e'ening Gathering, fa' wi' deadly scaith ; Wounded soldier, if complaining. Sleep na here and catch your death. "Traveller, waken! — night advancing, Cleads wi' grey the neighbouring hill ; Lambs nae mair on knowes are dancing — A' the woods are mute and still." "What hae I," cried Willie, waking, " What hae I frae nicht to dree ? Morn, through clouds in splendour breaking. Lights nae bright'ning hope to me. " House, nor hame, nor farm, nor steading. Wife nor bairns hae I to see ; House, nor hame, nor bed, nor bedding — What hae I frae nicht to dree ?" * The ancient seat of the celebrated poet, William Drummond, who flourished in 1585. 96 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. "Sair, alas ! and sad and many Are the ills poor mortals share ; Vet, though hame nor bed ye hae na, Yield na, soldier, to despair. "What's this life, sae wae and wearic, If Hope's bright'ning beams should fail ? See ! though night comes dark and eerie. Von sma' col-light cheers the dale. "There, though wealth and waste ne'er riot, Humbler joys their comforts shed — Labour, health, content, and quiet ; Mourner, there ye'll find a bed. " Wife, tis' true, wi' bairnies smiling, There, alas ! ye needna seek — Vet there bairns, ilk wae beguiling, Paint wi' smiles a mother's cheek. " A" her earthly pride and pleasure Left to cheer her widow 'd lot ; A' her warklly wealth and treasure To adorn her lancly cot. "Cheer, then, soldier! 'midst afiliction Bright'ning joys will aften shine ; Virtue aye claims Heaven's protection — Trust to Providence divine ! " PART VL Sweet as Rosebank's* woods and river, Cool when summer's sunbeams dart. Came ilk word, and cool'd the fever That lang burn'd at Willie's heart. * Rosebank, near Roslin, the author's place of nativity. WILL AND JEAN. 97 Silent stepp'd he on, puir fallow ! Listening to his guide before, Ower green knowe and flowery hallow, Till they reach'd the cot-house door. Laigh it was, yet sweet though humble, Deck'd wi' honeysuckle round ; Clear below Esk's waters rumble, Deep glens murmuring back the sound. Melville's towers,* sae white and stately. Dim by gloamin' glint to view ; Through Lasswade's dark woods keek sweetly Skies sae red, and lift sae blue. Entering now, in transport mingle, Mither fond and happy wean, Smiling round a canty ingle, Bleezin' on a clean hearthstane. " Soldier, welcome ! come, be cheerie, Here ye'se rest and tak' your bed ; Faint, waes me ! ye seem, and weary. Pale's your cheek sae lately red ! " " Changed I am," sigh'd Willie till her ; " Changed nae doubt, as changed can be ! Yet, alas ! does Jeanie Miller Nought o' Willie Gairlace see ? " Hae ye mark'd the dews o' morning Glittering in the sunny ray, Quickly fa', when, without warning, Rough blasts came and shook the spray ? * Melville Castle, the seat of the Right Honourable Henry Dundas [afterwards Viscount Melville.] G 98 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. ilae ye seen the bird, fast fleein', Drap, when pierced by death mair fleet ? Then, see Jean, wi' colour deein', Senseless drap at Willie's feet ! After three lang years' affliction, (A' their waes now hush'd to rest), Jean ance mair, in fond affection, Clasps her Willie to her breast ; Tells him a' her sad — sad sufferings ! How she wander'd, starving, poor, Gleaning pity's scanty offerings, Wi' three bairns, frae door to door. How she served, and toil'd, and fever'd, Lost her health, and syne her bread ; How that grief, when scarce recover'd, Took her brain, and turn'd her head. How she wander'd round the county Mony a live-lang night her lane ; Till at last an angel's bounty Brought her senses back again : Gae her meat, and claise, and siller, Gae her bairnies wark and lear ; Lastly, gae this cot-house till her, Wi' four sterling pounds a year. Willie, hearkening, wiped his een aye ; " Oh ! what sins hae I to rue ! But say, wha's this angel, Jeannie ? " " Wha," quo' Jeannie, "but Buccleuch ? ' * The Duchess of IJuccleuch, the unwearied patroness and supporter of the afflicted and the poor. AIKEN-DRUM. 99 " Here, supported, cheer'd, and cherish'd. Nine blest months I've lived, and mair ; Seen these infants clad and nourish'd, Dried my tears, and tint despair : " Sometimes sewin', sometimes spinnin', Light the lanesome hours gae round ; Lightly, too, ilk quarter rinnin' Brings yon angel's helping pound." " Eight pounds mair," cried Willie, fondly — " Eight pounds mair will do nae harm ; And, oh Jean ! gin friends were kindly, Twall pounds soon might stock a farm. "There, ance mair, to thrive by pleughin', Freed frae a' that peace destroys — Idle waste and drucken ruin, War, and a' its murdering joys ! " Thrice he kiss'd his lang-lost treasure — Thrice ilk bairn : but couldna speak : Tears of love, and hope, and pleasure Stream'd in silence down his cheek ! ai[icn^2)nim. Commonly printed under the title of "The Brownie of Blednoch," the ballad of " Aikendrum " has wakened the drowsy wits of many a rural Scot. The author, William Nicholson, was a native of the parish of Borgue, in Gallo- way, and was born in August, 1782. In his youth weak eyesight prevented his progress at school, and afterwards unfitted him for the occupations of shepherd or ploughman. Consequently he began life as a pedlar, and wandered up and down in his native district for thirty years singing his- loo AULD SCOTS CALLANTS. own songs, and reciting his own tales and ballads. Under the title of "Tales in Verse, and Miscellaneous Poems, descriptive of Rural Life and Manners," he issued in 1S14 a collection of his rhymed wares, by which it has been said he cleared the handsome sum of ;i^ioo. In 1828 a second edition of his poems appeared, with a memoir of the author from the pen of Mr. Macdiarmid of Dumfries. Latterly Nicholson fell into sadly dissipated habits, and became a ■wandering galierlunzie. lie died at Kildarroch, in Borgue, in May 1849. "We would rather have written these lines," said the late Dr. John Brown, "than any amount of Aurora Leighs, Festuses, or such like, with all their mighty ' somethingness,' as Mr. Bailey would say. For they, are they not the ' native woodnotes wild ' of one of nature's darlings ? Here is the indescribable, inestimable, unmistakable imjiress of genius. Chaucer, had he been a (ialloway man, might have written it, only he would have been more garrulous, and less compact and stern. It is like ' Tam o' Shanter ' in its living union of the comic, the pathetic, and the terriljle. Shrewdness, tenderness, imagina- tion, fancy, humour, word-music, dramatic power, even wit — all are here. I have often read it aloud to children, and it is worth anyone's while to do it. You will find them repeating all over the house for days such lines as take their heart and tongue." There cam' a strange wight to our town en'. An' the fient a body did him ken ; He tirled na lang, but he glided l)en, Wi' a weary, dreary hum. Flis face did glow like the glow o' the west, When the drumly cloud has it half o'ercast ; Or the struggling moon when she's sair distrest, O, sirs ! 'twas Aiken-drum, I trow the bauldest stood aback, Wi' a gape an' a glower till their lugs did crack, As the shapeless phantom mumblin' spak' — " Ilae ye wark for Ailcen-drum ? " AIKEN-DRUM. loi O ! had ye seen the bairns' fright As they stared at the wild and unearthly wight : As they skulkit in 'tween the dark an' the light, And graned out " Aiken-drum ! " " Sauf us ! " quoth Jock, " d'ye see sic een ? " Cries Kate, " There's a hole where a nose should ha' been : An' the mouth's like a gash that a horn had riVn ; Wow ! keep 's frae Aiken-drum ! " The black dog growlin' cowered his tail. The lassie swarfed, loot fa' the pail ; Rob's lingle brak as he nien't the flail, At the sight o' Aiken-drum. His matted head on his breast did rest, A lang blue beard wander'd down like a vest ; But the glare o' his e'e hath nae bard exprest. Nor the skimes o' Aiken-drum. Round his hairy form there was naething seen, But a philabeg o' the rashes green, An' his knotted knees played aye knoit between — What a sight was Aiken-drum ! On his wauchie airms three claws did meet. As they trailed on the grun' by his taeless feet ; E'en the auld gudeman himsel' did sweat. To look at Aiken-drum. But he drew a score, himsel' did sain, The auld wife tried, but her tongue was gane ; While the young ane closer clasped her wean, An' turned frae Aiken-drum, 102 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. But the cantie auld wife cam' till her breath, An' she thocht the Bible might ward aff scaith, Be it banshee, bogle, ghaist, or wraith — But it feared na Aiken-drum. "His presence protect us !" quoth the auld gudeman; "What wad ye, whare won ye, by sea or Ian'? I conjure ye— speak— by the beuk in my han' !" What a grane ga'e Aiken drum ! " I lived in a land whare we saw nae sky, I dwalt in a spot whare a burn rins na by ; But I'se dwall now wi' you gin ye like to try — Ilae ye wark for Aiken-drum ? " I'll shiel a' your sheep i' the mornin' sune, I'll berry your crap by the light o' the niune, An' ba' the bairns wi' an unkent tune, If ye'll keep puir Aiken-drum. " I'll lowp the linn when ye canna wade, I'll kirn the kirn, an' I'll turn the bread, An' the wildest filly that ever ran rede, I'se tame 't," quoth Aiken-drum. "To wear the tod frae the flock on the fell. To gather the dew frae the heather bell. An' to look at my face in your clear chrystal well, Might gi'e pleasure to Aiken-drum. " I'se seek nae guids, gear, bond, nor mark ; I use nae beddin', shoon, nor sark ; But a cogfu' o' brose 'tween the light an' the dark. Is the wage o' Aiken-drum." Quoth the wily auld wife, " The thing speaks weel ; Our workers are scant— we hae routh o' meal ; Gif he'll do as he says— be he man, be he deil — Wow ! we'll try this Aiken-drum." AIKEN-DRUM. 103 But the wenches skirl'd, " He's no be here ! His eldrich look gars us swarf wi' fear ; An' the fient a ane will the house come near, If they think but o' Aiken-drum. " For a foul an' a stalwart ghaist is he, Despair sits broodin' abune his e'e-bree, And unchancie to light on a maiden's e'e, Is the glower o' Aiken-drum." "Puir clipmalabors ! ye hae little wit ; Is'tna Hallowmas now, an' the crap out yet ? " Sae she silenced them a' wi' a stamp o' her fit — " Sit yer wa's down, Aiken-drum ! " Round a' that side what wark was dune By the streamer's gleam, or the glance o' the mune ; A word, or a wish, an' the brownie cam' sune, Sae helpfu' was Aiken-drum. But he slade aye awa or the sun was up, He ne'er could look straught on Macmillan's cup ; * They watch'd — but nane saw hiin his brose ever sup, Nor a spune sought Aiken-drum. On Blednoch banks, an' on chrystal Cree, For mony a day a toiled wight was he ; And the bairns they played harmless roun' his knee, Sae social was Aiken-drum. But a new-made wife, fu' o' frippish freaks, Fond o' a' things feat for the five first weeks, Laid a mouldy pair o' her ain man's breeks By the brose o' Aiken-drum. * A communion cup belonging to a minister of the name of Mac- millan, long preserved in the parish of Kirkcowan, and employed as a iest by which to ascertain the orthodoxy of suspected persons. 104 AULD SCOTS BALLAXTS. Let the learned decide when they convene, \Yhat spell was him an' the breeks between ; For frae that day forth lie was nae mair seen, An' sair miss'd was Aiken-drum. lie was heard by a herd gaun by the Thrieve, Crying, " Lang, lang now may I greet an' grieve y. For, alas ! I ha'e gotten baith fee an' leave — O ! luckless Aiken-drum ! " Awa', ye wrangling sceptic tribe, Wi' your pros an' your cons wad ye decide 'Gain the sponsible voice o' a hale countryside, On the facts 'bout Aiken-drum ? Though the Brownie o' Blednoch lang be gane. The mark o' his feet's left on mony a stane ; An' mony a wife an' mony a wean Tell the feats o' Aiken-drum. E'en now, light loons that jibe an' sneer At spiritual guests an' a' sic gear, At the Glashnoch Mill hae swat wi' fear, An' look'd roun' for Aiken-drum. An' gudely folks hae gotten a fright. When the mune was set, an' the stars gied nae light ;. At the roarin' linn, in the howe o' the night, Wi' sughs like Aiken-drum. riDiU 0' ^iftvVs Bnnic. This ballad is founded on real circumstances, the hero- ine being the daughter of the Miller of Tifly, near Fyvie, in Aberdeenshire, and the hero the Trumpeter of the Laird of Fyvie. Both parties are said to have been remarkable- INIILL O' TIFTY'S ANNIE. 105 for their good looks. They had met, they had looked, they had been conquered, each by the beauty of the other. Andrew Lammie wished to make Annie (or rather Agnes, for such it appears was her real name) Smith his happy bride, and Annie as ardently wished to become so ; but the ob- durate parent stepped in in the shape and character of the INIiller of Tifty, who esteemed the match beneath his dig- nity, and would have none of the Trumpeter. The un- happy result of the affair was that both lovers died of a broken heart. Annie's death, according to her gravestone in Fyvie Churchyard, took place on the 19th January, 1631. Andrew, however, it would appear, did not die as related in the ballad. It is asserted that several years afterwards the melancholy fate of Tifty's Annie being mentioned, and the ballad being sung in a company in Edinburgh where he was present, he remained silent and motionless, till at length he was discovered by a groan suddenly bursting from him, and several of the buttons flying from his waist- coat. " The beauty, gallantry, and amiable qualities of Bonnie Andrew Lammie seem," says Mr. Jamieson, "to have been proverbial wherever he went ; and the good old ' Cummer ' in Allan Ramsay as the best evidence of the power of her own youthful charms, and the best apology for having ' cast a leggen girth hersel', says : — I'se warrant ye have a' heard tell O' bonnie Andrew Lammie ; Stiffly in luve wi' me he fell, As soon as e'er he saw me. That was a day." It is an extremely pathetic and affecting story. At Mill o' Tifty lived a man, In the neighbourhood of Fyvie ; He had a lovely daughter fair, Was called bonnie Annie. Her bloom was like the springing flower That salutes the rosy morning ; With innocence, and graceful mien. Her beauteous form adorning. io6 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Lord Fyvie had a Trumpeter, Whose name was Andrew Lammie ; He had the art to gain the heart Of Mill o' Tifly's Annie. Proper he was, both young and gay, I lis like was not in Fyvie ; No one was there that could compare With this same Andrew Lammie. Lord Fyvie he rode by the door Where lived Tifty's Annie ; His Trumpeter rode him before, Even this same Andrew Lammie. Her mother call'd her to the door — " Come hear to me, my Annie ; Did you ever see a prettier man Than the Trumpeter of Fyvie ? " She sighed sore, but said no more ; Alas for bonnie Annie ! She durst not own her heart was won By the Trumpeter of Fyvie. At night, when they went to their beds, All slept full sound but Annie ; Love so opprest her tender breast. Thinking on Andrew Lammie. " Love comes in at my bedside, And love lies down beyond me ; Love has possess'd my tender breast, And love will waste my body. ■" The first time I and my love met, Was in the woods of Fyvie ; His lovely form and speech so sweet Soon gain'd the heart of Annie. MILL O' TIFTY'S ANNIE. 107 " He called me mistress ; I said, No — I'm Tifty's bonnie Annie ; With apples sweet he did me treat, And kisses soft and many. *' It's up and down in Tilly's den, Where the burn runs clear and bonnie, I've often gone to meet my love, My bonnie Andrew Lammie," But now, alas ! her father heard That the Trumpeter of Fyvie Had had the art to gain the heart Of Tifty's bonnie Annie. Her father soon a letter wrote. And sent it on to Fyvie, To tell his daughter was bewitched By his servant Andrew Lammie. When Lord Fyvie this letter read, Oh, dear ! but he was sorry ; " The bonniest lass in Fyvie's land Is bewitched by Andrew Lammie." Then up the stair his Trumpeter He called soon and shortly— "Pray, tell me soon, what's this you've done To Tifty's bonnie Annie ? " " In wicked art I had no part, Nor therein am I cannie ; True love alone the heart has won Of Tifty's bonnie Annie. •" But woe betide Mill o' Tifty's pride, For it has ruin'd many ; He'll no ha'e 't said that she should wed The Trumpeter of Fyvie. io8 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. «' Where will I find a boy so kind, That'll carry a IcUer cannie : \Vho will run on to Tifty's town, Give it to my love Annie ? " " Here you shall find a boy so kind, Who'll carry a letter cannie : Who will run on to Tifty's town, And gi'e 't to thy love Annie." "It's Tifty he has daughters three, W^ho all are wond'rous bonnie ; But ye'll ken her o'er a' the lave, — Gi'e that to bonnie Annie." " It's up and down in Tifty's den. Where the burn rins clear and bonnie. There wilt thou come and meet thy love, Thy bonnie Andrew Lammie. " When wilt thou come, and I'll attend, My love, I long to greet thee ? " "Thou may'st come to the Bridge of Sleugh, And there I'll come and meet thee." " My love I go to Edinbro', And for a while must leave thee." She sighed sore, and said no more. But " I wish that I were with thee." "I'll buy to thee a bridal gown, My love, I'll buy it bonnie." " But I'll be dead ere you come back To see your bonnie Annie." " If you'll be true and constant too, As my name's Andrew Lammie, I shall thee wed when I come back To see the lands of Fyvie." MILL O' TIFTV'S ANNIE. 109 " I will be true, and constant too, To thee, my Andrew Lammie ; But my bridal bed will ere then be made In the green churchyard of Fyvie." " Our time is gone and now comes on, My dear, that I must leave thee ; If longer here I should appear. Mill o' Tifty he would see me." " I now for ever bid adieu To thee, my Andrew Lammie ; Ere ye come back, I will be laid In the green churchyard of Fyvie." He hied him to the head of the house. To the housetop of Fyvie ; He blew his trumpet loud and shrill, 'Twas heard at Mill o' Tifty. Her father locked the door at night, Laid by the keys fu' cannie ; And when he heard the trumpet sound. Said — " Your cow is lowing, Annie." " My father dear, I pray forbear, And reproach no more your Annie ; For I'd rather hear that cow to low, Than hae a' the kye in Fyvie. " I would not for my braw new gown, And a' your gifts sae many, That it were told in Fyvie's land, How cruel you are to Annie. "But if you strike me, I will cry, And gentlemen will hear me ; Lord Fyvie will be riding by, And he'll come in and see me." no AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. At this same time my lord came in ; He said—" What ails thee, Annie ? " •' 'Tis all for love now I must die, For bonnie Andrew Lammie." " Pray, Mill o' Tifty, gi'e consent, And let your daughter marry." " It will be with some higher match Than the Trumpeter of Fyvie." " If she were come of as high a kind As she's adorn'd with beauty, I would take her unto myself, And make her mine own Ladyc." *' It's Fyvie's lands are fair and wide, And they are rich and bonnie ; But I would not leave my own true love, For all the lands of Fyvie." Her father struck her wond'rous sore. As also did her mother ; Her sisters both they did her scorn- But woe be to her brother ! Iler brother struck her wond'rous sore, With cruel strokes and many ; He brake her back in the hall door, For liking Andrew Lammie. " Alas ! my father and mother dear, Why so cruel to your Annie ? My heart was broken first by love — My brother has broken my body. " Oh, mother dear, make ye my bed, And lay my face to Fyvie ; Thus will I lie, and thus will die, For my love Andrew Lammie ! MILL O' TIFTY'S ANNIE. in "Ye neighbours dear, both far and near, Ye'll pity Tifty's Annie ; WTio dies for love of one poor lad, For bonnie Andrew Lammie. *' No kind of vice e'er stained my life, Nor hurt my virgin honour ; My youthful heart was won by love. But death will me exoner." Her mother then she made her bed, And laid her face to Fy vie ; Her tender heart it soon did break ; She ne'er saw Andrew Lammie. But the tidings soon went up and down, Through all the lands of Fyvie ; That she was dead and buried, Even Tifty's bonnie Annie. Lord Fyvie he did wring his hands ; — "Alas! for Tifty's Annie! The fairest flow'r's cut down by love. That e'er sprung up in Fyvie. " Oh, woe betide Mill o' Tifty's pride ! He might have let them marry ; I should have gi'en them both to live Into the lands of Fyvie." Her father sorely now laments The loss of his dear Annie, And wishes he had gi'en consent To wed with Andrew Lammie. Her mother grieves both ear' and late, Her sisters, 'cause they scorn'd her ; Sorely her brother doth mourn and grieve, For the cruel usage gi'en her. 112 AULD SCOTS JiALLANTS. But now, alas ! it was too late, For they could not recall her ; Through life unhappy is their fate, Because they did control her. When Andrew harae from Kdinbro' came, With meikle grief and sorrow ; " My love has died for me to-day, I'll die for her to-morrow. "Now I will on to Tifty's den, Where the burn runs clear and bonnie ; With tears I'll view the Bridge of Sleugh, Where I parted last with Annie. "Then will I speed to the churchyard, To the green churchyard of Fyvie ; With tears I'll water my love's grave. Till I follow Tifty's Annie." Ve parents grave, who children have, IiT crushing them be canny. Lest, when too late, you do repent ; Remember Tifty's Annie. This rude, but graphic, old heroic ballad has commanded alike the admiration of the illiterate and the learned. Ben Jonson envied its author, and Sir Philip Sidney confessed how his own soul was moved by its vigorous strains. " I never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas," said Sir Philip, " that I found not my heart moved more than with a trumpet ; and yet it is sung by some blind crowder, with no rougher voice than rude style, which being so evil apparelled in the dirt and cobweb of that uncivil age, what CHEVY CHASE. 113 would it be trimmed in the gorgeous eloquence of Pin- dar ? " Many authorities affirm that the ballad has no historical foundation whatever, and that its incidents have been borrowed from the older ballad which celebrates the " Battle of Otterbourne," fought by Percy and Douglas in the year 13S8. This may be cjuite true ; and if so, it just proves that, if fact is sometimes stranger than fiction, fiction is sometimes more enduring than fact. There are two versions of " Chevy Chase" extant — an ancient and a modern one. The older copy is in antique orthography, and chiefly for that reason I have printed the modern one, which is described in the advertisement as "The Hunting of Chevy-Chase, a bloody battle fought by Earls Douglas and Percy, where above fourteen hundred Scotsmen and near two thousand Englishmen were slain in one day," In English copies of the ballad, the position of parties, of course, are just reversed. God prosper long our noble King, Our lives and safeties all — A woeful hunting once there did In Chevy Chase befall. To drive the deer with hound and hoin Earl Percy took the way, The child may rue that is unborn, The himting of that day. The stout Earl of Northumberland A vow to God did make. His pleasure in the Scottish woods, Three summer days to take — The choicest harts in Chevy Chase To kill and bear away ; These tidings to Earl Douglas came, In Scotland where he lay, H 114 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Wlio sent Earl Percy present word, He would prevent the sport ; The English Earl not fearing him, Did to the woods resort, With twenty hundred bowmen bold, All chosen men of might — Who knew full well in time of need To aim their shafts aright. The gallant greyhounds swiftly ran, To chase the fallow deer ; On Monday they began to hunt. When daylight did appear. And long before high noon they had An hundred fat bucks slain, Then having dined, the rovers went To rouse them up again. Earl Percy to the quarry went, To view the fallow dear. Quoth he, " Earl Douglas promised This day to meet me here ; "But if I thought he would not come, No longer would I stay." With that a brave young gentleman, Thus to the Earl did say — " Lo ! yonder doth Earl Douglas come. His men in armour bright ; Full fifteen hundred Scottish spears, All marching in our sight ; " All pleasant men of Teviotdale, Dwell on the river Tweed," " Then cease your sport," Earl Percy said, "And take your arms with speed. CHEVY CHASE. 115 " And now with me, my countrymen, Your courage forth advance ; For there was ne'er a champion yet, In Scotland or in France, " That ever did on horseback come, But, if my hap it were, I durst encounter man for man, With him to break a spear. " Lord Douglas on a milk-white steed, Most like a baron bold, Rode foremost of his company, His armour shone like gold. " Show me," he said, "Whose men ye be. That hunt so boldly here ; That without my consent do chase And kill my fallow deer." The first man that did answer make Was noble Percy, he. Who said, " We list not to declare Nor show whose men we be. *' Yet we will spend our dearest blood. Thy choicest harts to slay," ' Then Douglas swore a solemn oath. And thus in rage did say — "E'er thus I will out-braved be. One of us two shall die ; I know thee well, an Earl thou art, Lord Percy— so am I. " But trust me, Percy, pity it were. And great offence, to kill Any of these our harmless men. For they have done no ill. Ii6 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " Let thou and I the battle try, And set our men aside ; " ♦' Accurs'd be he," said Earl Tercy, " By whom this is denied." Then stept a gallant squire forth, Witherington by name ; Who said he would not have it told To Henry his King for shame, " That e'er my captain fought on foot, And I stood looking on ; Ye be two Earls," said Witherington, " And I a squire alone. " I'll do the best that I may do. Whilst I have power to stand— Whilst I have power to wield my sword, I'll fight with heart and hand." Our Scottish archers bent their bows, Their hearts were good and true ; At the first flight of arrows sent. They fourscore English slew. To drive the deer with hound and horn, Douglas bade on the bent, A captain mov'd with meikle pride, The spears in shivers went. They closed full fast on every side, No slackness there was found, And many a gallant gentleman Lay gasping on the ground. Oh, but it was a grief to see, And likewise for to hear. The cries of men lying in their gore, All scattered here and there. CHEVY CHASE. 117 At last these two stout Earls did meet, Like chieftains of great might ; Like lions mov'd, they feared no lord, They made a cruel fight. They fought until they both did sweat, With swords of temper'd steel — Until the blood like drops of rain, They trickling down did feel. "Yield thee, Percy," Douglas said, " In faith, I will thee bring Where thou shalt high advanced be By James our Scottish King. "Thy ransom I will freely give. And this report of thee — Thou art the most courageous knight That ever I did see." "Nay, Douglas," quoth Lord Percy then, ' ' Thy proffer I do scorn ; I will not yield to any Scot That ever yet was born." With that there came an arrow keen. Out of an English bow, Which struck Lord Douglas to the heart, A deep and deadly blow. W^ho never spoke more words than these — " Fight on, my merry men all ! For why, my life is at an end, Lord Percy sees my fall." Then leaving off, Lord Percy took The dead man by the hand, And said, " Lord Douglas, for thy life I would have lost my land. Ii8 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. "01 but my very heart doth bleed With sorrow for thy sake, For sure a more renowned knight Mischance did never lake." A knight among the Scots there was, Who saw Earl Douglas die, \\Tio straight in wrath did vow revenge Upon the Earl Percy. Sir Hugh Montgomery was he call'd, Wlio, with a spear full bright, Well mounted on a gallant steed, Rode fiercely through the fight. He pass'd the English archers all, Without e'er dread or fear. And through Earl Percy's body then He thrust his hateful spear. With such a vehement force and might He did his body gore. The spear went through the other side, A long cloth yard and more. So thus did these two nobles die. Whose courage none could stain. An English archer then perceived His noble lord was slain. He had a bow bent in his hand, Made of a trusty tree. An arrow of a cloth yard's length, Unto the head thew he. Against Sir Hugh Montgomery tlieii So right his shaft he set, The grey goose wing that was therein In his heart's blood was wet. CHEW CHASE. 119 The fight did last from break of day Till setting of the sun ; For when they rung the evening bell, The battle scarce was done. With Earl Percy there was slain, Sir John of Ogerton ; Sir Robert Ratclifife, and Sir John, Sir James, the bold baron ; Sir George, and also good Sir Hugh, Both Knights of good account, ■Good Sir Ralph Raby there was slain, Whose prowess did surmount. For Witherington I needs must wail, As one in doleful dumps — For when his legs were smitten off. He fought upon his stumps. And with Earl Douglas there was slain, Sir Hugh Montgomery ; Sir Charles Murray, that from the field One foot would never fly ; Sir Charles Murray of Ratcliffe too. His sister's son was he : Sir David Lamb, so well esteemed. Yet saved he could not be. And Lord Maxwell e'en likewise Did with Earl Douglas die. Of fifteen hundred Scottish men, Went home but fifty-three. Of twenty-hundred Englishmen, Scarce fifty-five did flee ; The rest were slain at Chevy Chase, Under the greenwood tree. I20 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. Next day did many widows come Their husbnnds to bewail ; They washed their wounds with brinishetl tears. But all could not prevail. Their bodies, bathed in purple blood, They carried them away ; They kissed them dead a thousand limes, When they were cold as clay. The news was brought to Edinburgh, Where Scotland's King did reign, The brave Earl Douglas suddenly. Was by an arrow slain. " Now God be with him ! " said the King, "Sith 'twill no better be ; I trust I have within my realm Five hundred good as he." Like tidings to King Henry came, Within as short a space. That Percy of Northumberland, Was slain at Chevy Chase. " O heavy news ! " King Henry said, " England can witness be — I have not any cajitain more Of such account as he." Now of the rest, of small account. Did many hundreds die ; Thus ends the Battle of Chevy Chase, Made by the Earl Percy. THE BLAEBERRY COURTSHIP. 121 ^be Blacbcrrp (Tourtcihip, This ballad was long a popular favourite with the peasantry of the northern counties of Scotland, and copies of it are occasionally asked for even yet. As a literary eftbrt it is much below mediocrity, but there is a charm about the story which has made it dear to the heart of the rural Scot. In Whitelaw's "Book of Scottish Ballads" there is a modern and verbally improved version given, but I prefer to print here the old Chapman's copy in all its rude simplicity : — " Will ye go to the Highlands, my jewel, with me ? Will ye go to the Highlands, my flocks for to see ? It is health to my jewel to breathe the sweet air, And to pull the blaeberries in the forest so fair." "To the Highlands, my love, I will not go with thee, For the road it is long, and the hills they are high ; I love this green valley and sweet corn field More than all the blaeberries your wild mountains yield." "Our hills they are bonnie when the heather's in bloom. It would cheer a fine fancy in the sweet month of June To pull the blaeberries and carry them home, And set them on your table when December comes on." Out spake her father, that saucy old man, "Why choose not a mistress among your own clan ? It's but poor entertainment to our Lowland dames To promise them berries and blue heather blooms. 122 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. " Kilt up your green plaidie, walk over yon hill, For the sight of your Highland face does me much ill ; I'll wed my own daughter, and spare pennies too, To whom my heart jileases, and what's that to you ? " " My plaid it is broad, it has colours anew, Goodman, for your kindness, I'll leave it with you ; I have got a warm cordial keeps the cold from me — The blythe blinks of love from your fair daughter's e'e. " My flocks they are thin, and my lodgings but l)are. And you that has meikle the more you can spare ; Some of your spare pennies with me you will share. And you winna send your lassie o'er the hills bare." He went to his daughter to give her advice. Said, " If you go with him I'm sure you're not wise ; lie's a rude Highland fellow, as poor as a crow. He's of the clan Caithness for aught that I know. " But if you go with him, I'm sure you'll go bare. You'll have nothing your father or mother can spare ; Of all I possess I'll deprive you for aye, If o'er the hills, lassie, you do go away." " It's father keep what you're not willing to give, For I will go with him as sure as I live ; What signifies gold or treasure or fee, If the hills are between my true love and me ?" Now she is gone with him in spite of them a', Away to a place where her eyes never saw ; He had no gallant steed for to carry her on. But still he said, " Lassie, think not the road long." In a warm summer's evening they came to a glen, Being wearied with travel, the lassie sat down ; " Get up, my brave lassie, and let us step on, For the sun will go down before we get home." THE BLAEBERRY COURTSHIP. 123 " My feet are all torn, my shoes are all rent, I'm wearied with travel and just like to faint ; Were it not for the sake of your kind companie, I would lay myself down in the desert and die." "The day is far spent and the night's coming on, So step you aside to yon lonely mill-town. And there ask lodgings for thee and for me, For glad would I be in a barn for to lie." " The place it looks pleasant and bonnie indeed, But the folks are hard-hearted to them that's in need ; Perhaps they'll not grant us their barn nor byre, But I will go and ask, as it is your desire." The lassie went foremost. " Sure I was to blame, To ask for a lodging myself I thought shame ; " The lassie replied, with tears not a few — " It's ill ale," said she, " that's sour when it's new." In a short time thereafter they came to a grove. Where the flocks they were feeding, a numberless drove, Allan stood musing the flocks for to see, "Step on," says the lady, "that's no pleasure to me." A beautiful laddie, with green tartan trews, And twa bonnie lassies were buchting in ewes, They said — "Honoured master, you're welcome again, Lang, lang have we look'd for your coming hame." "Bucht in your ewes, lassies, and gang your way hame, I've brought a swan frae the south, I have her to tame. Her feathers are fallen, say where can she lie ?" " The best bed in the house her bed it shall be." The lady's heart was far down, it couldna well rise Till many a lad and lass came in with a phrase To welcome the lady, to welcome her home — Such a hall in the Highlands she never thought on. 124 AULD SCOTS BALLANTS. The laddies