Their father’s
laird, and weel he can spare’t,
Braid money to tocher
them a’, man;
To proper young men,
he’ll clink in the hand
Gowd guineas a hunder
or twa, man.
There’s ane they
ca’ Jean, I’ll warrant ye’ve seen
As bonie a lass or as
braw, man;
But for sense and guid
taste she’ll vie wi’ the best,
And a conduct that beautifies
a’, man.
The charms o’
the min’, the langer they shine,
The mair admiration
they draw, man;
While peaches and cherries,
and roses and lilies,
They fade and they wither
awa, man,
If ye be for Miss Jean,
tak this frae a frien’,
A hint o’ a rival
or twa, man;
The Laird o’ Blackbyre
wad gang through the fire,
If that wad entice her
awa, man.
The Laird o’ Braehead
has been on his speed,
For mair than a towmond
or twa, man;
The Laird o’ the
Ford will straught on a board,
If he canna get her
at a’, man.
Then Anna comes in,
the pride o’ her kin,
The boast of our bachelors
a’, man:
Sae sonsy and sweet,
sae fully complete,
She steals our affections
awa, man.
If I should detail the
pick and the wale
O’ lasses that
live here awa, man,
The fau’t wad
be mine if they didna shine
The sweetest and best
o’ them a’, man.
I lo’e her mysel,
but darena weel tell,
My poverty keeps me
in awe, man;
For making o’
rhymes, and working at times,
Does little or naething
at a’, man.
Yet I wadna choose to
let her refuse,
Nor hae’t in her
power to say na, man:
For though I be poor,
unnoticed, obscure,
My stomach’s as
proud as them a’, man.
Though I canna ride
in weel-booted pride,
And flee o’er
the hills like a craw, man,
I can haud up my head
wi’ the best o’ the breed,
Though fluttering ever
so braw, man.
My coat and my vest,
they are Scotch o’ the best,
O’pairs o’
guid breeks I hae twa, man;
And stockings and pumps
to put on my stumps,
And ne’er a wrang
steek in them a’, man.
My sarks they are few,
but five o’ them new,
Twal’ hundred,
as white as the snaw, man,
A ten-shillings hat,
a Holland cravat;
There are no mony poets
sae braw, man.
I never had frien’s
weel stockit in means,
To leave me a hundred
or twa, man;
Nae weel-tocher’d
aunts, to wait on their drants,
And wish them in hell
for it a’, man.
I never was cannie for
hoarding o’ money,
Or claughtin’t
together at a’, man;
I’ve little to
spend, and naething to lend,
But deevil a shilling
I awe, man.
Song—Here’s To Thy Health
Tune—“Laggan Burn.”