Consider, sirs, how
we’re beset;
There’s scarce
a new herd that we get,
But comes frae ’mang
that cursed set,
I winna name;
I hope frae heav’n
to see them yet
In fiery flame.
[Footnote 3: Dr. Robert Duncan of Dundonald.]
[Footnote 4: Rev. Wm. Peebles of Newton-on-Ayr.]
[Footnote 5: Rev. Wm. Auld of Mauchline.]
Dalrymple^6 has been
lang our fae,
M’Gill^7 has wrought
us meikle wae,
An’ that curs’d
rascal ca’d M’Quhae,^8
And baith the Shaws,^9
That aft hae made us
black an’ blae,
Wi’ vengefu’
paws.
Auld Wodrow^10 lang
has hatch’d mischief;
We thought aye death
wad bring relief;
But he has gotten, to
our grief,
Ane to succeed him,^11
A chield wha’ll
soundly buff our beef;
I meikle dread him.
And mony a ane that
I could tell,
Wha fain wad openly
rebel,
Forby turn-coats amang
oursel’,
There’s Smith^12
for ane;
I doubt he’s but
a grey nick quill,
An’ that ye’ll
fin’.
O! a’ ye flocks
o’er a, the hills,
By mosses, meadows,
moors, and fells,
Come, join your counsel
and your skills
To cowe the lairds,
An’ get the brutes
the power themsel’s
To choose their herds.
Then Orthodoxy yet may
prance,
An’ Learning in
a woody dance,
An’ that fell
cur ca’d Common Sense,
That bites sae sair,
Be banished o’er
the sea to France:
Let him bark there.
Then Shaw’s an’
D’rymple’s eloquence,
M’Gill’s
close nervous excellence
[Footnote 6: Rev. Dr. Dalrymple of Ayr.]
[Footnote 7: Rev. Wm. M’Gill, colleague of Dr. Dalrymple.]
[Footnote 8: Minister of St. Quivox.]
[Footnote 9: Dr.
Andrew Shaw of Craigie, and Dr. David Shaw of
Coylton.]
[Footnote 10: Dr. Peter Wodrow of Tarbolton.]
[Footnote 11: Rev.
John M’Math, a young assistant and successor
to Wodrow.]
[Footnote 12: Rev. George Smith of Galston.]
M’Quhae’s
pathetic manly sense,
An’ guid M’Math,
Wi’ Smith, wha
thro’ the heart can glance,
May a’ pack aff.
1785
Epistle To Davie, A Brother Poet
January
While winds frae aff
Ben-Lomond blaw,
An’ bar the doors
wi’ driving snaw,
An’ hing us owre
the ingle,
I set me down to pass
the time,
An’ spin a verse
or twa o’ rhyme,
In hamely, westlin jingle.
While frosty winds blaw
in the drift,
Ben to the chimla lug,
I grudge a wee the great-folk’s
gift,
That live sae bien an’
snug:
I tent less, and want
less
Their roomy fire-side;
But hanker, and canker,
To see their cursed
pride.