From Dr. Joseph Robertson's interleaved and annotated
copy of The New Deeside Guide, [nominally] by James
Brown [but written by Joseph Robertson], Aberdeen [1832];
inserted at p. 12.
1 |
The Laird of Drum is a wooing gane,
All in a morning early,
And there he spied a weel-far'd may,
She was shearing at her barley. |
2 |
'Will you fancy me, my bonny may,
And will you fancy me? O
And will you come and be Lady Drum,
And let your shearing a be?' O |
3 |
'It's I winna fancy you, kind sir,
I winna fancy thee;
For I'm too low to be lady o Drum,
And your whore I would scorn to be.' |
4 |
Ye'll cast aff the robes of gray,
And put on the silk and the scarlet,
And here to you I'll make a vow
Ye'se neither be whore nor harlot.' |
5 |
'I winna cast aff the robes o gray,
To put on the silk and the scarlet,
But I'll wear the colour of the ewe,
For they set me better that a' that. |
6 |
'But ye'll do you doun to my father dear,
Keeping sheep on yonder hill,
And the first ae thing that he bids me I'll do,
For I wirk aye at his will.' |
7 |
He's done him doun to her father dear,
Keeping sheep on yonder hill:
'Ye hae a pretty creature for your daughter;
Dear me! but I like her well.' |
8 |
'It's she can neither read nor write,
She was never brought up at the squeel;
She canna wash your china cups,
Nor yet mak a dish o tea. |
9 |
'But well can she do a' ither thing,
For I learnt the girly mysell;
She'll fill in your barn, and winnow your corn,
She'll gang to your kill and your mill,
And, time o need, she'll saddle your steed,
And draw your boots hersell.' |
10 |
'Wha will bake my bridal bread,
And wah will brew my ale?
Wha will welcome my lady in?
For it's more than I can tell.' |
11 |
There was four-and-twenty gentlemen
Stood a' in the yetts o Drum,
But there was nane o them lifted their hats
To welcome the young lady in. |
12 |
But up spake his ae brither,
Says, Brither, ye hae done wrang;
Ye have married a wife this day
A lauch to a' our kin. |
13 |
'I've married ane to win my bread,
But ye married ane to spend;
But as lang's I'm able to walk to the yetts o Drum
On me she may depend. |
14 |
'The last lady that I did wed
Was far above my command;
I durst not enter the bower where she was
But my hat low in my hand.' |
15 |
When bells were rung, and mass was sung,
And a' man bound for bed,
The Laird o Drum and the Shepherd's dother
In one bed they were laid. |
16 |
'If ye were come o noble bleed
An were as high as me,
We could gang to the yetts o Drum
Amangst gueed companie.' |
17 |
'I tald you ere we was wed
I was oer low for thee,
But now we are wedd and in ae bed laid,
And you must be content wi me. |
18 |
'For an ye were dead, an I were dead,
And laid in the dust low down,
When we were baith turnd up again
Wha could ken your mould frae mine?' |