The Auld Doctor and other Poems and Songs in Scots eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 37 pages of information about The Auld Doctor and other Poems and Songs in Scots.

The Auld Doctor and other Poems and Songs in Scots eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 37 pages of information about The Auld Doctor and other Poems and Songs in Scots.

Then aye afore he socht his bed
He danced the Gillie Callum,
An’ wi’s Kilmarnock owre his neb
What evil could befall him! 
Hech mon!  The pawky duke! 
What evil could befall him? 
When he cast his buits an’ soopled his cuits
Wi’ a gude-gaun Gillie Callum!

But they brocht a joke, they did indeed,
Ae day for his eedification,
An’ they needed to trephine his heid
Sae he deed o’ the operation! 
Hech mon!  The pawky duke! 
Wae’s me for the operation! 
For weel I wot this typical Scot
Was a michty loss to the nation!

MACFADDEN AND MACFEE.

[This ballad is of great interest, and, as far as we know, has not hitherto appeared in print.  It is certainly not in Child’s Collection.  It was taken down from the singing of an aged man of 105 years, in Glen Kennaquhair.  Internal evidence would tend to show that the incidents recorded in the ballad occurred in the seventeenth century, and that Sir Walter Scott had heard at least one verse of it.  The aged singer-now, alas! no more-sang it to the air of “Barbara Allen.”]

It was an’ aboot the Lammas time,
In sixteen forty-three, sirs,
That there fell oot the awfu’ fecht
‘Twixt Macfadden an’ Macfee, sirs.

Macfadden, wha was gaun to kirk
Upon the morn’s morn,
Had washed his kilt an’ cleaned his dirk
An’ combed his Sabbath sporran.

An’ bein’ for the time o’ year
Remarkably fine weather,
These articles o’ dress were laid
To air upon the heather.

Waes me!  Macfee, while dandrin’ owre
The bonnie braes o’ Lorne,
Maun gang an’ pit his muckle fit
Upon Macfadden’s sporran.

A piece o’ carelessness like this
The brichtest heart would sadden,
An’ when he saw the caitiff deed
It fair gaed owre Macfadden.

For he was shavin’ at the time,
An’ when the sicht he saw, sir,
Wi’ rage he shook an’ nearly took
His neb aff wi’ his raazor.

A while he swore and staunched the gore
An’ ere Macfee got ae lick,
Macfadden cursed him heid an’ heels
In comprehensive Gaelic.

Syne when his breath was a’ but gane,
An’ when he couldna say more,
He lat a muckle Heelant yell
An’ at him wi’ his claymore.

What sweeter sound could warrior hear
Unless it was the daddin’
That echoed oot when’er Macfee
Got hame upon Macfadden?

Nae sweeter soond I weel could ween,
Exceppin’ it micht be, sirs,
The soond that hurtled oot when’er
Macfadden hit Macfee, sirs.

An awfu’ fecht it was to see,
A fecht baith fell an’ dour, sirs,
For ere the tuilzie weel began
The glen was fu’ o’ stour, sirs.

An awfu’ fecht, again I say’t,
And on each auld clay biggin’,
The freends o’ baith, like hoodie craws,
Were roostin’ on the riggin’.

And aye they buckled till’t wi’ birr;
In combat sair an’ grievous,
They glanced like lightnin’ up Strathyre
An’ thundered doon Ben Nevis.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Auld Doctor and other Poems and Songs in Scots from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.