D’rymple mild!
D’rymple mild, tho’ your heart’s
like a child,
And your life like the
new-driven snaw,
Yet that winna save
you, auld Satan must have you,
For preaching that three’s
ane an’ twa,
D’rymple mild!^5
For preaching that three’s ane an’ twa.
Rumble John! rumble
John, mount the steps with a groan,
Cry the book is with
heresy cramm’d;
Then out wi’ your
ladle, deal brimstone like aidle,
And roar ev’ry
note of the damn’d.
Rumble John!^6 And roar
ev’ry note of the damn’d.
[Footnote 1: Dr. M’Gill, Ayr.—R.B,]
[Footnote 2: See the advertisement.—R.B.]
[Footnote 3: John Ballantine,—R.B.]
[Footnote 4: Robert Aiken.—R.B.]
[Footnote 5: Dr. Dalrymple, Ayr.—R.B.]
[Footnote 6: John Russell, Kilmarnock.—R.B.]
Simper James! simper
James, leave your fair Killie dames,
There’s a holier
chase in your view:
I’ll lay on your
head, that the pack you’ll soon lead,
For puppies like you
there’s but few,
Simper James!^7 For
puppies like you there’s but few.
Singet Sawnie! singet
Sawnie, are ye huirdin the penny,
Unconscious what evils
await?
With a jump, yell, and
howl, alarm ev’ry soul,
For the foul thief is
just at your gate.
Singet Sawnie!^8 For
the foul thief is just at your gate.
Poet Willie! poet Willie,
gie the Doctor a volley,
Wi’ your “Liberty’s
Chain” and your wit;
O’er Pegasus’
side ye ne’er laid a stride,
Ye but smelt, man, the
place where he sh—t.
Poet Willie!^9 Ye but
smelt man, the place where he sh—t.
Barr Steenie! Barr
Steenie, what mean ye, what mean ye?
If ye meddle nae mair
wi’ the matter,
Ye may hae some pretence
to havins and sense,
Wi’ people that
ken ye nae better,
Barr Steenie!^10 Wi’people
that ken ye nae better.
Jamie Goose! Jamie
Goose, ye made but toom roose,
In hunting the wicked
Lieutenant;
But the Doctor’s
your mark, for the Lord’s holy ark,
He has cooper’d
an’ ca’d a wrang pin in’t,
Jamie Goose!^11 He has
cooper’d an’ ca’d a wrang pin in’t.
Davie Bluster!
Davie Bluster, for a saint ye do muster,
The corps is no nice
o’ recruits;
[Footnote 7: James Mackinlay, Kilmarnock.—R.B.]
[Footnote 8: Alexander Moodie of Riccarton.—R.B.]
[Footnote 9: William Peebles, in Newton-upon-Ayr, a poetaster, who, among many other things, published an ode on the “Centenary of the Revolution,” in which was the line: “And bound in Liberty’s endering chain.”—R.B.]
[Footnote 10: Stephen Young of Barr.—R.B.]
[Footnote 11: James
Young, in New Cumnock, who had lately been
foiled in an ecclesiastical
prosecution against a Lieutenant
Mitchel—R.B.]