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One lovely hand she stretch'd for aid,
And one was round her lover.

Come back, come back, he cried in grief,

Across this stormy water;

And I'll forgive your highland chief—
My daughter!-oh, my daughter!
'Twas vain; the loud waves lash'd the shore,
Return, or aid preventing :

The waters wild went o'er his child,

And he was left lamenting.

THE PIRATE'S SONG.

ALLAN CUNNINGHAM.

O lady, come to the Indies with me,
And reign and rule on the sunny sea;
My ship's a palace, my deck's a throne,
And all shall be thine the sun shines on.

A gallant ship, and a boundless sea,

A piping wind and the foe on our lee,
My pennon streaming so gay from the mast,
My cannon flashing all bright and fast.

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The Bourbon lilies wax wan as I sail;
America's stars I strike them pale:

The glories of sea and the grandeur of land,
All shall be thine for the wave of thy hand.

Thy shining locks are worth Java's isle-
Can the spices of Saba buy thy smile?
Let kings rule earth by a right divine,
Thou shalt be queen of the fathomless brine.

HALUCKET MEG.

REV. J. NICOL.

Meg, muckin' at Geordie's byre,
Wrought as gin her judgment was wrang;
Ilk daud o' the scartle strack fire,
While loud as a lavrock she sang!

Her Geordie had promis'd to marrie,
An' Meg, a sworn fae to despair,
Not dreamin' the job cou'd miscarrie,
Already seem'd mistress an' mair!

My neebours, she sang, aften jeer me,
An' ca' me daft, halucket Meg,
An' say, they expect soon to hear me

I' the kirk, for my fun, get a fleg!

An' now, 'bout my marriage they clatter,
An' Geordie, poor fallow! they ca'
An auld doitit hav'rel!-Nae matter,
He'll keep me aye brankin an' braw!

I grant ye, his face is kenspeckle,

That the white o' his e'e is turn'd out, That his black beard is rough as a heckle, That his mou to his lug's rax'd about ; But they needna let on that he's crazie, His pike-staff wull ne'er let him fa': Nor that his hair's white as a daisie, For fient a hair has he ava!

But a weel-plenish'd mailin has Geordie,
An' routh o' gude goud in his kist;
An' if siller comes at my wordie,
His beautie I never wull miss't!
Daft gouks, wha catch fire like tinder,
Think love-raptures ever wull burn!
But wi' poortith, hearts het as a cinder
Wull cauld as an iceshugle turn!

There'll just be ae bar to my pleasure,
A bar that's aft fill'd me wi' fear,
He's sic a hard, near-be-gawn miser,
He likes his saul less than his gear
But though I now flatter his failin',

!

An' swear nought wi' goud can compare,

Gude sooth! it sall soon get a scailin'!
His bags sall be mouldie nae mair!

I dreamt that I rade in a chariot,
A flunkie ahint me in green;
While Geordie cry'd out, he was harriet,
An' the saut tear was blindin' his een;
But though 'gainst my spendin' he swear aye,
I'll hae frae him what ser's my turn;
Let him slip awa whan he grows wearie,
Shame fa' me! gin lang I wad mourn!

But Geordie, while Meg was haranguin,

Was cloutin his breeks i' the bauks, An' whan a' his failins she brang in,

His strang, hazle pike-staff he taks,
Designin to rax her a lounder:

He chanc'd on the lather to shift,
An' down frae the bauks, flat's a flounder,
Flew like a shot-starn frae the lift!

THOU HAST VOW'D BY THY FAITH, MY JEANIE.

ALLAN CUNNINGHAM.

Thou hast vow'd by thy faith, my Jeanie,
By that pretty white hand of thine,
And by all the lowing stars in heaven,
That thou wad aye be mine:

And I have sworn by my faith, my Jeanie,
And by that kind heart of thine,
By all the stars sown thick o'er heaven,
That thou shalt aye be mine.

Foul fa' the hands wad loose sic bands,
And the heart wad part sic love;

But there's nae hand can loose the band,
But the finger of Him above.

Though the wee wee cot maun be my bield,
And my clothing e'er sae mean,

I should lap up rich in the faulds of love
Heaven's armfu' of my Jean.

Thy white arm wad be a pillow to me,

Far softer than the down;

And love wad winnow o'er us his kind kind wings, And sweetly we'd sleep and soun'.

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