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Bonnie Joann, and other poems cover

Bonnie Joann, and other poems

Chapter 25: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The collection gathers dialect songs and lyrics rooted in Angus, depicting rural and coastal life through concise, musical poems. Seasonal labor, local customs, Hallowe’en rituals, and the coming and going of ships provide recurring settings. Voices range from wry, comic sketches of small‑town behaviour to elegiac meditations on longing, loss, and memory, often anchored by vivid natural imagery and plainspoken phrasing. Short narrative pieces and lyrical fragments alternate, and the volume closes with a couple of poems presented in standard English.

THE MUCKLE MOU’

When ye are auld an’ pitten past,
Ye’ll whiles be sittin’ wi’ a freen’
And crackin’, as ye hear the blast
Rage i’ the lum, o’ fowk ye’ve seen.
There’s some gangs whingein’,[18] singin’ sma’,
An’ some that taks a baulder tune,
But ae thing’s aye the same wi’ a’—
Their mou’s owre muckle for their spune.

Ye’ll see a lad—his hoose the best,
A thrivin’ swine in till his yaird,
His gairden fu’—he winna rest,
He’s wud because he’s no a laird!
He coorts a lass; she’ll tak’ her aith
He isna fit to dicht her shune,
What’s wrang wi’ ane is wrang wi’ baith—
Their mou’s owre muckle for their spune.

O’ tinkler-fowk, an’ fowk wi’ means
Ye’ll scarcely hae the time to speak,
Men, wives an’ widdies, lords an’ weans,
The mair they get, the mair they’ll seek.
Ye’d think the vera warld was deav’d
Wi’ them that’s roarin’ for the mune,
Nae maitter what they’ve a’ receiv’d
Their mou’s owre muckle for their spune.

But when ye’ve lookit mony a year
Upon yersel’ and ither men,
Although to lairn ye’ve whiles been sweir,
There’s twa-three things ye’re like to ken;
Ye winna need to mak’ ado
An’ warstle wi’ the powers abune,
Yer spune’s the measure o’ yer mou’,
Gin ane is wrang, it’s no the spune!

FOOTNOTES:

[18] Whining.