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Songs and lyrics of Robert Burns cover

Songs and lyrics of Robert Burns

Chapter 77: POOR MAILIE’S ELEGY
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About This Book

A collected selection of the poet's songs and shorter lyrics presents his explorations of love, nature, rural Scottish life, patriotism, and social observation, often rendered in Scots dialect and intended for musical performance. The volume groups brief pieces alongside several longer poems, supplies a glossary of dialect terms and an index of first lines, and includes illustrative plates. Many lyrics evoke landscapes, domestic scenes, and communal gatherings, balancing tenderness and satire while varying tone from celebratory to elegiac. The arrangement favors lyrical vitality rather than strict chronology, offering readers both popular airs and more extended narrative poems within a single accessible anthology.

POOR MAILIE’S ELEGY

Lament in rhyme, lament in prose,
Wi’ saut tears tricklin’ down your nose;
Our bardie’s fate is at a close,
Past a’ remead;
The last sad cape-stane of his woes—
Poor Mailie’s dead!
It’s no the loss o’ warl’s gear
That could sae bitter draw the tear,
Or mak our bardie, dowie, wear
The mourning weed:
He’s lost a friend and neibor dear
In Mailie dead.
Thro’ a’ the toun she trotted by him;
A lang half-mile she could descry him;
Wi’ kindly bleat, when she did spy him,
She ran wi’ speed:
A friend mair faithfu’ ne’er cam nigh him
Than Mailie dead.
I wat she was a sheep o’ sense,
An’ could behave hersel wi’ mense;
I’ll say’t, she never brak a fence
Thro’ thievish greed.
Our bardie, lanely, keeps the spence
Sin’ Mailie’s dead.
Or, if he wanders up the howe,
Her living image in her yowe
Comes bleating to him, owre the knowe,
For bits o’ bread,
An’ down the briny pearls rowe
For Mailie dead.
She was nae get o’ moorland tups,
Wi’ tawted ket, an’ hairy hips;
For her forbears were brought in ships
Frae yont the Tweed:
A bonnier fleesh ne’er cross’d the clips
Than Mailie’s, dead.
Wae worth the man wha first did shape
That vile wanchancie thing—a rape!
It maks guid fellows girn an’ gape,
Wi’ chokin’ dread;
An’ Robin’s bonnet wave wi’ crape
For Mailie dead.
O a’ ye bards on bonnie Doon!
An’ wha on Ayr your chanters tune!
Come, join the melancholious croon
O’ Robin’s reed;
His heart will never get aboon
His Mailie dead!