THE BRIDAL O’T.

This song is the work of a Mr. Alexander Ross, late schoolmaster at Lochlee; and author of a beautiful Scots poem, called “The Fortunate Shepherdess.”

“They say that Jockey ‘ll speed weel o’t,
They say that Jockey ‘ll speed weel o’t,
For he grows brawer ilka day,
I hope we’ll hae a bridal o’t:
For yesternight nae farder gane,
The backhouse at the side wa’ o’t,
He there wi’ Meg was mirden seen,
I hope we’ll hae a bridal o’t.

An’ we had but a bridal o’t,
An’ we had but a bridal o’t,
We’d leave the rest unto gude luck,
Altho’ there should betide ill o’t:
For bridal days are merry times,
And young folks like the coming o’t,
And scribblers they bang up their rhymes,
And pipers they the bumming o’t.

The lasses like a bridal o’t,
The lasses like a bridal o’t,
Their braws maun be in rank and file,
Altho’ that they should guide ill o’t:
The boddom o’ the kist is then
Turn’d up into the inmost o’t,
The end that held the kecks sae clean,
Is now become the teemest o’t.

The bangster at the threshing o’t.
The bangster at the threshing o’t,
Afore it comes is fidgin-fain,
And ilka day’s a clashing o’t:
He’ll sell his jerkin for a groat,
His linder for anither o’t,
And e’er he want to clear his shot,
His sark’ll pay the tither o’t

The pipers and the fiddlers o’t,
The pipers and the fiddlers o’t,
Can smell a bridal unco’ far,
And like to be the middlers o’t;
Fan[293] thick and threefold they convene,
Ilk ane envies the tither o’t,
And wishes nane but him alane
May ever see anither o’t.

Fan they hae done wi’ eating o’t,
Fan they hae done wi’ eating o’t,
For dancing they gae to the green,
And aiblins to the beating o’t:
He dances best that dances fast,
And loups at ilka reesing o’t,
And claps his hands frae hough to hough,
And furls about the feezings o’t.”