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It was the charming month of May

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Keen blows the wind o'er Donochthead
Lassie wi' the lint-white locks

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Last May a braw wooer came down the lang

glen

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Let me wander where I will

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Let not woman e'er complain

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Long, long the night

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Mark yonder pomp of costly fashion

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Maxwell, if merit here you crave

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My Chloris, mark how green the groves

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Now in her green mantle blythe nature

arrays

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Now spring has elad the grove in green
Now rosy May comes in wi' flowers

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O ken ye what Meg o' the mill has gotten

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O Lassie, art thou sleeping yet

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O leese me on my wee thing

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O Logan, sweetly didst thou glide
O Mary, at the window be

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O mirk, mirk is the midnight hour

O poortith cauld, and restless love

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O whistle and I'll come to you, my lad

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Sweet fa's the eve on Craigie-burn

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The hunter lo'es the mor..ing sun

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Their groves o' sweet myrtle let foreign
lands reckon

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There's auld Rob Morris that wons in yon

glen

There's braw, braw lads on Yarrow braes
There was a lass and she was fair

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Thine am I, my faithful fair

This wot ye all whom it concerns
Thou hast left me ever, Jamie

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Thou lingering star, with less'ning ray
Thou sweetest minstrel of the grove
"Twas even, the dewy fields were green
'Tis friendship's pledge, my young, fair
friend

'Twas na her bonie blue e'e was my jewel

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True hearted was he, the sad swain o' the

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Where are the joys I hae met in the morning 356

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LIFE

OF

ROBERT BURNS.

PREFATORY REMARKS.

THOUGH the dialeet in which many of the Rappiest effusions of Robert Burns are composed be peculiar to Scotland, yet his reputation has extended itself beyond the limits of that country, and his poetry has been admired as the offspring of original genius by persons of taste in every part of the sister islands. The interest excited

by his early death and the distress of his infant family, has been felt in a remarkable manner wherever his writings have been known; and these posthumous volumes, which give to the world his works complete, and which it is hoped may raise his widow and children from penury, are printed and published in England. It seems proper, therefore, to write the memoirs of his life, not with the view of their being read by Scotchmen only, but also by natives of England, and of other countries where the English language is spoken or understood.

Robert Burns was in reality what he has been represented to be, a Scottish peasant. To render the incidents of his humble story generally intelligible, it seems therefore advisable to prefix some observations on the character and situation of the order to which he belonged, a class of men distinguished by many peculiarities. By this means we shall form a more correct notion of the advanVol. I.

A

tages with which he started, and of the obstacles which he surmounted. A few observations on the Scottish peasantry, will not perhaps be found unworthy of attention in other respects, and the subject is in a great measure new. Scotland has produced persons of high distinction in every branch of philosophy and literature, and her history, while a separate and independent nation, has been successfully explored. But the present character of the people was not then formed; the nation then presented features similar to those which the feudal system and the catholic religion had diffused over Europe, modified indeed by the peculiar nature of her territory and climate. The Reformation, by which such important changes were produced on the national character, was speedily followed by the accession of the Scottish monarchs to the English throne, and the period which elapsed from that accession to the Union. has been rendered memorable, chiefly, by those bloody convulsions in which both divisions of the island were involved, and which in a eonsiderable degree concealed from the eye of the historian, the domestic history of the people, and the gradual variations in their condition and manners. Since the Union, Scotland, though the seat of two unsuccessful attempts to restore the house of Stewart to the throne, has enjoyed a comparative tranquillity, and it is since this period that the present character of her peasantry has been in a great measure formed, though the political causes affecting it are to be traced to the previous acts of her separate legislature.

A slight acquaintance with the peasantry of Scotland will serve to convince an unprejudiced observer, that they possess a degree of intelligence not generally found among the same class of men in the other countries of Europe. In the very humblest condition of the Scottish peasants every one can ead, and most persons are more or less. skilled in writing and arithmetic; and under the disguise of their uncouth appearance, and of

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