Had to
wake up at half past four this afternoon.
There’s way too much work slowing down my life’s stream L
________________
Poor
Mailie's Elegy
By Robert
Burns
Lament in
rhyme, lament in prose,
Wi' saut
tears trickling down your nose;
Our
bardie's fate is at a close,
Past a'
remead!
The last,
sad cape-stane o' 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 an' neebor dear
In Mailie
dead.
Thro' a'
the town 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 till him, owre the knowe,
For bits
o' bread;
An' down
the briny pearls rowe
For
Mailie dead.
She was
nae get o' moorland tips,
Wi'
tauted ket, an' hairy hips;
For her
forbears were brought in ships,
Frae
'yont the Tweed.
A bonier
fleesh ne'er cross'd the clips
Than
Mailie's dead.
Wae worth
the man wha first did shape
That
vile, wanchancie thing-a raip!
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 bonie 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's dead!
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