SCOTCH SONG.

The lassie we love and the friend we can trust,

And a bumper to wash from our spirits the rust;

Then let gear-scraping carls make o' life catch-the-plack,

And strod to the de'il wi' the trash on their back.

This life is a garden where all choose their posies:

In the spring of our youth let us gather the roses;

For brief is their bloom like the dews of the morn,

If you seek them too late you will find but a thorn.

If Care steal amang us he's narrowly watch'd,

By a smile or a squeeze of the hand he's dispatch'd;

Or the arm of a friend should the stout villain meet,

One blink of true love lays him dead at your feet.

Then fill up a glass to the absent and dear—

May their lives be serene as their breasts are sincere;

And to crown our true bliss, let us give, ere we part—

May we have in our arms whom we love in our heart.

London Weekly Review.