Revised Edition of Poems
At last owd Coilia sed enough, Mi bardy thah did sing, Then gently tuke his muirland harp, And brack it ivvery string.

An’ bindin’ up the holly wreath, Wi’ all its berries red, Shoo placed it on his noble brow, An’ pensively shoo said:—

“So long as Willies brew ther malt, An’ Robs and Allans spree; Mi Burns’s songs an’ Burns’s name, Remember’d they shall be.”

Waiting for t’ Angels.

Ligging here deead, mi poor Ann Lavina, Ligging alone, mi own darling child, Just thi white hands crost on thi bosom, Wi’ features so tranquil, so calm, and so mild.

Ligging here deead, so white an’ so bonny, Hidding them eyes that oft gazed on mine; Asking for summat withaht ever speaking, Asking thi father to say tha wur fine.

Ligging here deead, the child that so lov’d me, At fane wod ha’ hidden mi faults if shoo could; Wal thi wretch of a father despairin’ stands ower tha, Wal remorse and frenzy are freezin’ his blood.

p. 26Ligging here deead, i’ thi shroud an thi coffin, Ligging alone in this poor wretched room; Just thi white hands crossed ower thi bosom, Waiting for t’angels to carry tha home.

p. 26

The Lass o’ Newsholme Dean.

[Having spent the whole of the afternoon in this romantic little glen, indulging in pleasant meditations, I began to wend my way down the craggy pass that leads to the bonny little hamlet of Goose Eye, and turning round to take a last glance at this enchanting vale—with its running whimpering stream—I beheld the “Lass o’ Newsholme Dean.” She was engaged in driving home a Cochin China hen and her chickens. Instantaneously I was seized with a poetic fit, and gazing upon her as did Robert Tannyhill upon his imaginary beauty, “The Flower of Dumblane,” I struck my lyre, and, although the theme of my song turned out afterwards to be a respectable old woman of 70 winters, yet there is still a charm in my “Lass o’ Newsholme Dean.”]

Thy kiss is sweet, thy words are kind, Thy love is all to me; Aw couldn’t in a palace find A lass more true ner thee: An’ if aw wor the Persian Shah, An’ thee mi Lovely Queen, The grandest diamond i’ mi Crown Wor t’ lass o’ Newsholme Dean.

p. 27The lady gay may heed tha not, An’ passing by may sneer; The upstart squire’s dowters laugh, When thou, 
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