a. “Scotch Ballads, Materials for Border-Minstrelsy,” No. 77. Written down from the recitation of Mrs Graham, of Inchbrakie, by Mrs Steuart, of Dalguise, and given, September, 1802, to Mr Robert Carlyle, by whom it was communicated to Sir Walter Scott. b. Smith’s Scotish Minstrel, IV, 78 (of the second edition).
1
‘There’s fifty young nobles rides up the king’s hall
And bonny Glenlogie’s the flower of them all;
Wi his milk-white steed, and his black rolling ee,
If I get na Glenlogie, it’s certain I’ll die.
2
‘Where will I get a bonny boy, to win hose and shoon,
To go to Glenlogie and bid Logie come?’
‘Here am I a pretty boy, to win baith hose and shoon,