The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume 6. / The Songs of Scotland of the Past Half Century
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  • Fain wad I, fain wad I hae the bloody wars to cease, vol. i., 269.
  • Fair are the fleecy flocks that feed, vol. ii., 128.
  • Fair as a star of light, vol. vi., [179].
  • Fair Ellen, here again I stand, vol. v., 141.
  • Fair modest flower of matchless worth, vol. i., 157.
  • Fair Scotland, dear as life to me, vol. v., 137.
  • Fare-thee-weel, for I must leave thee, vol. iii., 263.
  • Fare-thee-weel, my bonnie lassie, vol. iii., 225.
  • Fareweel, O! fareweel, vol. i., 238.
  • Fareweel to ilk hill whar the red heather grows, vol. v., 91.
  • Fareweel, ye fields and meadows green, vol. i., 121.
  • Farewell, and though my steps depart, vol. iii., 116.
  • Farewell, our father's land, vol. iii., 249.
  • Farewell ye braes of broad Braemar, vol. vi., [117].
  • Farewell, ye streams sae dear to me, vol. ii., 232.
  • Far lone amang the Highland hills, vol. ii., 139.
  • Far over yon hills of the heather sae green, vol. ii., 50.
  • Fierce as its sunlight, the East may be proud, vol. vi., [28].
  • Fife, an' a' the land about it, vol. ii., 112.
  • Float forth, thou flag of the free, vol. vi., [221].
  • Flowers of summer sweetly springing, vol. v., 251.
  • Flow saftly thou stream through the wild spangled valley, vol. iii., 243.
  • For mony lang year I hae heard frae my granny, vol. ii., 250.
  • For success a prayer with a farewell bear, vol. iii., 284.
  • For twenty years and more, vol. v., 80.
  • From beauty's soft lips, like the balm of its roses, vol. iv., 97.
  • From the climes of the sun all war-worn and weary, vol. ii., 220.
  • From the deep and troubled waters, vol. vi., [25].
  • From the village of Leslie with a heart full of glee, vol. i., 182.
  • Fy, let us a' to the wedding, vol. i., 136.
  • Gae bring my guid auld harp ance mair, vol. iv., 58.
  • Gane were but the winter cauld, vol. iii., 12.
  • Gang wi' me to yonder howe, bonnie Peggie, O! vol. iv., 133.
  • Give me the hour when bells are rung, vol. vi., [149].
  • Give the swains of Italia, vol. vi., [223].
  • Glad tidings for the Highlands, vol. ii., 335.
  • Gloomy winter's now awa', vol. ii., 145.
  • Good morrow, good morrow, warm, rosy, and bright, vol. v., 16.
  • Good night, and joy be wi' ye a', vol. ii., 214.
  • Good night, the silver stars are clear, vol. v., 246.
  • Go to Berwick, Johnnie, vol. i., 121.
  • Go to him then if thou canst go, vol. ii., 300.
  • Grim winter was howlin' owre muir and owre mountain, vol. iii., 55.
  • Guid night and joy be wi' ye a', vol. iv., 114.
  • Had I the wings of a dove I would fly, vol. v., 261.
  • Hae ye been in the north, bonnie lassie, vol. ii., 308.
  • Hail to the chief who in triumph advances, vol. i., 295.
  • Hark, hark, the skylark singing, vol. ii., 202.
  • Hark, the martial drums resound, vol. ii., 164.
  • Haste all ye fairy elves hither to me, vol. iv., 131.
  • Heard ye the bagpipe or saw ye the banners, vol. iv., 78.
  • Heart, take courage, 'tis not worthy, vol. vi., [9].
  • Heaven speed the righteous sword, vol. i., 254.
  • Hech, what a change hae we now in this toun, vol. ii., 215.
  • Hech, hey, the mirth that was there, vol. i., 205.
  • He left his native land, and far away, vol. v., 111.
  • He loved her for her merry eyes, vol. v., 244.
  • Here 's to them, to them that are gane, vol. i., 237.
  • Her eyes were red with weeping, vol. iii., 136.
  • Here we go upon the tide, vol. ii., 69.
  • Here 's to the year that 's awa', vol. v., 78.
  • Her hair was like the Cromla mist, vol. ii., 177.
  • Her lip is o' the rose's hue, vol. v., 117.
  • Hersell pe auchty years and twa, vol. ii., 71.
  • He 's a terrible man, John Tod, John Tod, vol. i., 216.
  • He is gone, he is gone, vol. iii., 240.
  • He 's gone on the mountain, vol. i., 299.
  • He 's lifeless amang the rude billows, vol. i., 202.
  • He 's no more on the green hill, he has left the wide forest, vol. i., 272.
  • He sorrowfu' sat by the ingle cheek, vol. vi., [138].
  • He 's ower the hills that I lo'e weel, vol. i., 211.
  • Hey for the Hielan' heather, vol. iv., 110.
  • Hey, my bonnie wee lassie, vol. v., 18.
  • Home of my fathers, though far from thy grandeur, vol. iii., 136.
  • Hope cannot cheat us, vol. vi., [15].
  • How blest were the days o' langsyne, when a laddie, vol. iii., 39.
  • How blithely the pipe through Glenlyon was sounding, vol. v., 26.
  • How brightly beams the bonnie moon, vol. iii., 73.
  • How early I woo'd thee, how dearly I lo'ed thee, vol. v., 160.
  • How eerily, how drearily, how eerily to pine, vol. iii., 137.
  • How happy a life does the parson possess, vol. i., 28.
  • How happy lives the peasant by his ain fireside, vol. iii., 78.
  • How often death art waking, vol. i., 321.
  • How pleasant, how pleasant to wander away, vol. ii, 274.
  • How sweet are Leven's silver streams, vol. iii., 36.
  • How sweet are the blushes of morn, vol. v., 35.
  • How sweet is the scene at the waking of morning, vol. ii., 243.
  • How sweet the dewy bell is spread, vol. iii., 259.
  • How sweet thy modest light to view, vol. ii., 196.
  • Hurra! for the land o' the broom-cover'd brae, vol. vi., [103].
  • Hurrah for Scotland's worth and fame, vol. v., 229.
  • Hurrah for the Highlands, the brave Scottish Highlands, vol. v., 249.
  • Hurrah for the Thistle, the brave Scottish Thistle, vol. v., 232.
  • Hurrah, hurrah for the boundless sea, vol. vi., [189].
  • Hurrah, hurrah, we 've glory won, vol. v., 89.
  • Hush, ye songsters, day is done, vol. iii., 159.
  • I ask no lordling's titled name, vol. ii., 166.
  • I canna leave my native land, vol. vi., [228].
  • I canna sleep a wink, lassie, vol. v., 183.
  • I cannot give thee all my heart, vol. vi., [11].
  • I dream'd thou wert a fairy harp, vol. vi., [29].
  • If Fortune with a smiling face, vol. vi., [12].
  • I fleet along, and the empires fall, vol. vi., [167].
  • I fly from the fold since my passion's despair, vol. i., 316.
  • I form'd a green bower by the rill o' yon glen, vol. iv., 62.
  • If there 's a word that whispers love, vol. v., 266.
  • If wealth thou art wooing, or title, or fame, vol. v., 7.
  • I gaed to spend a week in Fife, vol. vi., [55].
  • I hae naebody noo, I hae naebody noo, vol. ii., 77.
  • I have wander'd afar, 'neath stranger skies, vol. vi., [88].
  • I heard a wee bird singing, vol. v., 32.
  • I heard the evening linnet's voice the woodland tufts amang, vol. iii., 61.
  • I lately lived in quiet ease, vol. ii., 62.
  • I like to spring in the morning bricht, vol. v., 98.
  • I 'll no be had for naething, vol. i., 230.
  • I 'll no walk by the kirk, mother, vol. vi., [42].
  • I 'll sing of yon glen of red heather, vol. ii., 74.
  • I 'll tend thy bower, my bonnie May, vol. v., 155.
  • I 'll think on thee, Love, when thy bark, vol. vi., [50].
  • I 'll think o' thee, my Mary Steel, vol. iv., 268.
  • I 'll twine a gowany garland, vol. vi., [105].
  • I lo'ed ne'er a laddie but ane, vol. i., 90.
  • I love a sweet lassie, mair gentle and true, vol. vi., [144].
  • I love the free ridge of the mountain, vol. iii., 108.
  • I love the merry moonlight, vol. iv., 135.
  • I love the sea, I love the sea, vol. iv., 162.
  • I 'm afloat, I 'm afloat on the wild sea waves, vol. vi., [187].
  • I mark'd her look of agony, vol. iii., 167.
  • I 'm a very little man, vol. vi., [147].
  • I 'm away, I 'm away like a thing that is wild, vol. v., 255.
  • I 'm naebody noo, though in days that are gane, vol. v., 182.
  • I 'm now a guid farmer, I 've acres o' land, vol. i., 263.
  • I 'm wand'rin' wide this wintry night, vol. v., 158.
  • I 'm wearin' awa', John, vol. i., 196.
  • I met four chaps yon birks amang, vol. ii., 208.
  • In a dream of the night I was wafted away, vol. iii. 257.
  • In a howm, by a burn, where the brown birks grow, vol. vi., [234].
  • In all its rich wildness her home she is leaving, vol. i., 200.
  • In a saft simmer gloamin', vol. iii., 236.
  • In distant years when other arms, vol. v., 123.
  • I neither got promise of siller nor land, vol. iii., 147.
  • I never thocht to thole the waes, vol. iv., 221.
  • In her chamber, vigil keeping, vol. vi., [213].
  • In life's gay morn, when hopes beat high, vol. iii., 42.
  • In that home was joy and sorrow, vol. vi., [184].
  • In the morning of life, when its sunny smile, vol. iii., 200.
  • I pray for you of your courtesy, before we further move, vol. v., 144.
  • I remember the time, thou roaring sea, vol. vi., [13].
  • Isabel Mackay is with the milk kye, vol. i., 318.
  • I sat in the vale 'neath the hawthorns so hoary, vol. iv., 60.
  • I saw my true love first on the banks of queenly Tay, vol. iii., 121.
  • I see, I see the Hirta, the land of my desire, vol. v., 282.
  • I see the wretch of high degree, vol. i., 315.
  • Is not the earth a burial-place, vol. v., 269.
  • I sing of gentle woodcroft gay, for well I love to rove, vol. v., 92.
  • Is our Helen very fair, vol. vi., [182].
  • Is your war-pipe asleep, and for ever, M'Crimman, vol. iv., 166.
  • It fell on a morning when we were thrang, vol. i, 146.
  • It has long been my fate to be thought in the wrong, vol. i., 22.
  • It 's dowie in the hint o' hairst, vol. v., 62.
  • It 's hame, and it 's hame, hame fain wad I be, vol. iii., 13.
  • It was an English ladye bright, vol. i., 289.
  • I 've listened to the midnight wind, vol. iii., 203.
  • I 've a guinea I can spend, vol. vi., [22].
  • I 've been upon the moonlit deep, vol. vi., [70].
  • I 've loved thee, old Scotia, and love thee I will, vol. ii., 296.
  • I 've met wi' mony maidens fair, vol. vi., [91].
  • I 've no sheep on the mountain nor boat on the lake, vol. i., 132.
  • I 've rocked me on the giddy mast, vol. iii., 20.
  • I 've seen the lily of the wold, vol. iii., 48.
  • I 've seen the smiling summer flower, vol. iv., 245.
  • I 've wander'd east, I 've wander'd west, vol. iii., 233.
  • I 've wander'd on the sunny hill, I 've wander'd in the vale, vol. iv., 192.
  • I wadna gi'e my ain wife, vol. iv., 246.
  • I walk'd by mysel' owre the sweet braes o' Yarrow, vol. iii., 86.
  • I wander'd alane at the break o' the mornin', vol. vi., [89].
  • I warn you, fair maidens, to wail and to sigh, vol. ii., 197.
  • I wiled my lass wi' lovin' words to Kelvin's leafy shade, vol. v., 274.
  • I will sing a song of summer, vol. vi., [186].
  • I will think of thee yet, though afar I may be, vol. iv., 167.
  • I will wake my harp when the shades of even, vol. iv., 170.
  • I winna bide in your castle ha's, vol. iv., 229.
  • I winna gang back to my minny again, vol. ii., 248.
  • I winna love the laddie that ca's the cart and pleugh, vol. iv., 63.
  • I wish I were where Helen lies, vol. i., 111.
  • Jenny's heart was frank and free, vol. i., 114.
  • John Anderson, my jo, John, vol. i., 155.
  • Joy of my earliest days, vol. i., 203.
  • Keen blaws the wind o'er the braes o' Gleniffer, vol. ii., 141.
  • Land of my fathers! night's dark gloom, vol. iii., 167.
  • Land of my fathers, I leave thee in sadness, vol. vi., [207].
  • Lane on the winding Earn there stands, vol. i., 223.
  • Lass, gin ye wad lo'e me, vol. iv., 224.
  • Lassie, dear lassie, the dew 's on the gowan, vol. iv., 168.
  • Lassie wi' the gowden hair, vol. i., 87.
  • Last midsummer's morning, as going to the fair, vol. i., 123.
  • Lat me look into thy face, Jeanie, vol. vi., [135].
  • Leafless and bare were the shrub and the flower, vol. iv., 76.
  • Leave the city's busy throng, vol. vi., [143].
  • Let Highland lads, wi' belted plaids, vol. iv., 77.
  • Let ither anglers choose their ain, vol. v., 222.
  • Let the maids of the Lowlands, vol. iii., 272.
  • Let the proud Indian boast of his jessamine bowers, vol. iv., 177.
  • Let us go, lassie, go, vol. ii., 143.
  • Let us haste to Kelvin grove, bonnie lassie, O, vol. iv., 264.
  • Let wrapt musicians strike the lyre, vol. iii., 146.
  • Life's pleasure seems sadness and care, vol. vi., [194].
  • Liking is a little boy, vol. vi., [120].
  • Listen to me, as when ye heard our father, vol. iii., 183.
  • Lock the door, Lariston, lion of Liddisdale, vol. ii., 75.
  • Look up, old friend, why hang thy head, vol. vi., [199].
  • Lord Ronald came to his lady's bower, vol. ii., 181.
  • Loudon's bonnie woods and braes, vol. ii., 137.
  • Love brought me a bough o' the willow sae green, vol. iii., 188.
  • Love flies the haunts of pomp and power, vol. v., 79.
  • Love is timid, love is shy, vol. iii., 196.
  • Loved land of my kindred, farewell, and for ever, vol. iv., 111.
  • Lovely maiden, art thou sleeping, vol. iii., 76.
  • Lowland lassie, wilt thou go, vol. ii., 151.
  • 'Mang a' the lasses young and braw, vol. iii., 214.
  • Meet me on the gowan lea, vol. v., 147.
  • Meg muckin' at Geordie's byre, vol. i., 244.
  • Men of England, who inherit, vol. ii., 268.
  • Mild as the morning, a rose-bud of beauty, vol. v., 37.
  • More dark is my soul than the scenes of yon islands, vol. iv., 57.
  • Mourn for the mighty dead, vol. vi., [21].
  • Mournfully, oh, mournfully, vol. iii., 239.
  • Musing, we sat in our garden bower, vol. v., 100.
  • My beauty dark, my glossy bright, vol. ii., 347.
  • My beauty of the shieling, vol. vi., [250].
  • My Bessie, oh, but look upon these bonnie budding flowers, vol. iv., 189.
  • My bonnie wee Bell was a mitherless bairn, vol. v., 67.
  • My bonnie wee wifie, I 'm waefu' to leave thee, vol. v., 13.
  • My brothers are the stately trees, vol. iv., 254.
  • My brown dairy, brown dairy, vol. ii., 327.
  • My couthie auld wife, aye blithsome to see, vol. vi., [102].
  • My darling is the philabeg, vol. v., 290.
  • My dearest, wilt thou follow, vol. vi., [252].
  • My dear little lassie, why, what 's the matter? vol. i., 246.
  • My hawk is tired of perch and hood, vol. i., 298.
  • My lassie is lovely, as May-day adorning, vol. iii., 48.
  • My love, come let us wander, vol. iii., 197.
  • My love 's in Germanie, send him hame, send him hame, vol. i., 95.
  • My luve 's a flower in garden fair, vol. v., 189.
  • My mother bids me bind my hair, vol. i., 41.
  • My mountain hame, my mountain hame, vol. iv., 194.
  • My name it is Donald M'Donald, vol. ii., 48.
  • My native land, my native land, vol. vi., [206].
  • My soul is ever with thee, vol. v., 106.
  • My spirit could its vigil hold, vol. iv., 152.
  • My tortured bosom long shall feel, vol. iii., 141.
  • My wee wife dwells in yonder cot, vol. iv., 187.
  • My wife 's a winsome wee thing, vol. ii., 299.
  • My young heart's luve! twal' years hae been, vol. iv., 259.
  • My young, my fair, my fair-haired Mary, vol. i., 335.
  • Nae mair we 'll meet again, my love, by yon burn-side, vol. iii., 227.
  • Name the leaves on all the trees, vol. vi., [118].
  • Never despair! when the dark cloud is lowering, vol. v., 75.
  • Night turns to day, vol. i., 255.
  • No homeward scene near me, vol. iv., 290.
  • No more by thy margin, dark Carron, vol. vi., [202].
  • No one knows what silent secrets, vol. vi., [24].
  • No sky shines so bright as the sky that is spread, vol. iv., 61.
  • No sound was heard o'er the broom-covered valley, vol. iv., 86.
  • Not the swan on the lake, or the foam on the shore, vol. iv., 281.
  • Now bank and brae are clad in green, vol. ii., 245.
  • Now, Jenny lass, my bonnie bird, vol. ii., 92.
  • Now, Mary, now, the struggle 's o'er, vol. iii., 229.
  • Now rests the red sun in his caves of the ocean, vol. ii., 254.
  • Now simmer decks the field wi' flowers, vol. ii., 304.
  • Now smiling summer's balmy breeze, vol. ii., 229.
  • Now summer shines with gaudy pride, vol. ii., 116.
  • Now the beams of May morn, vol. iii., 149.
  • Now there 's peace on the shore, now there 's calm on the sea, vol. iii., 177.
  • Now winter wi' his cloudy brow, vol. ii., 147.
  • Now winter's wind sweeps o'er the mountains, vol. i., 165.
  • Oh! are ye sleeping, Maggie, vol. ii., 156.
  • Oh! away to the Tweed, vol. v., 94.
  • Oh, beautiful and bright thou art, vol. vi., [197].
  • Oh, blaw ye westlin winds, blaw saft, vol. i., 124.
  • Oh, blessing on her star-like e'en, vol. v., 102.
  • Oh! blessing on thee, land, vol. v., 104.
  • Oh, bonnie are the howes, vol. iv., 200.
  • Oh, bonnie buds yon birchen-tree, vol. ii., 240.
  • Oh, bonnie Nelly Brown, I will sing a song to thee, vol. v., 276.
  • Oh, bonnie 's the lily that blooms in the valley, vol. v., 194.
  • Oh, brave Caledonians, my brothers, my friends, vol. iii., 114.
  • Oh, bright the beaming queen o' night, vol. v., 146.
  • Oh, Castell Gloom! thy strength is gone, vol. i., 221.
  • Oh, Charlie is my darling, vol. iii., 53.
  • Oh, come my bonnie bark, vol. iii., 16.
  • Oh, come with me for the queen of night, vol. iii., 59.
  • October winds wi' biting breath, vol. ii., 203.
  • O dear, dear to me, vol. vi., [92].
  • Oh! dear to my heart are my heather-clad mountains, vol. v., 239.
  • Oh! dear were the joys that are past, vol. iii., 62.
  • Oh, dinna ask me gin I lo'e thee, vol. v., 78.
  • Oh, dinna be sae sair cast down, vol. v., 43.
  • Oh, dinna cross the burn, Willie, vol. v., 150.
  • Oh, dinna look ye pridefu' doon on a' beneath your ken, vol. v., 204.
  • Oh, dinna think, bonnie lassie, I 'm gaun to leave thee, vol. i., 96.
  • Oh, distant, but dear, is that sweet island wherein, vol. ii., 109.
  • O'er mountain and valley, vol. iii., 169.
  • O'er the mist-shrouded cliffs of the gray mountain straying, vol. v., 47.
  • Of learning long a scantling was the portion of the Gael, vol. v., 295.
  • Of Nelson and the north, vol. ii., 265.
  • Of streams that down the valley run, vol. ii., 129.
  • Oh, gentle sleep wilt thou lay thy head, vol. iii., 90.
  • Oh, gin I were where Gadie rins, vol. iv., 117.
  • Oh, grand bounds the deer o'er the mountain, vol. i., 55.
  • Oh, guess ye wha I met yestreen, vol. vi., [129].
  • Oh, hame is aye hamely still, though poor at times it be, vol. iv., 218.
  • Oh, hast thou forgotten the birk-tree's shade, vol. iv., 269.
  • Oh, haud na' yer noddle sae hie, ma doo! vol. v., 108.
  • Oh, heard ye yon pibroch sound sad in the gale, vol. ii., 263.
  • O hi', O hu', she 's sad for scolding, vol. v., 288.
  • Oh! how can I be cheerie in this hameless ha', vol. iii., 125.
  • Oh, how I love the evening hour, vol. v., 265.
  • Oh! I have traversed lands afar, vol. v., 12.
  • Oh! I lo'ed my lassie weel, vol. iii., 253.
  • O June, ye spring the loveliest flowers, vol. v., 44.
  • Oh, lady, twine no wreath for me, vol. i., 302.
  • Oh, lassie! I lo'e dearest, vol. v., 47.
  • Oh, lassie! if thou 'lt gang to yonder glen wi' me, vol. iv., 65.
  • Oh, lassie! wilt thou gang wi' me, vol. iii., 65.
  • Oh, lassie! wilt thou go? vol. ii., 287.
  • Old Scotland, I love thee, thou 'rt dearer to me, vol. v., 250.
  • Oh, leave me not! the evening hour, vol. v., 74.
  • Oh, leeze me on the bonnie lass, vol. ii., 178.
  • Oh, let na gang yon bonnie lassie, vol. v., 58.
  • Oh, love the soldier's daughter dear, vol. v., 270.
  • Oh, many a true Highlander, many a liegeman, vol. iii., 280.
  • Oh! Mary, while thy gentle cheek, vol. v., 122.
  • Oh, merrily and gallantly, vol. v., 116.
  • Oh, mind ye the ewe-bughts, Marion, vol. i., 56.
  • Oh, mony a turn of woe and weal, vol. i., 347.
  • Oh, mony a year has come and gane, vol. v., 20.
  • Oh, my lassie, our joy to complete again, vol. ii., 54.
  • Oh, my love, leave me not, vol. i., 106.
  • Oh! my love 's bonnie, bonnie, bonnie, vol. v., 52.
  • Oh! my love is very lovely, vol. vi., [8].
  • Oh, my love was fair as the siller clud, vol. vi., [173].
  • Once more on the broad-bosom'd ocean appearing, vol. iv., 199.
  • Once more in the Highlands I wander alone, vol. v., 257.
  • Oh, neighbours! what had I to do for to marry? vol. i., 139.
  • On, on to the fields where of old, vol. iv., 56.
  • On fair Clydeside thair wonnit ane dame, vol. v., 119.
  • On thee, Eliza, dwell my thoughts, vol. ii., 173.
  • On the greensward lay William in anguish extended, vol. ii., 163.
  • On the airy Ben-Nevis the wind is awake, vol. iv., 250.
  • On the banks o' the burn, while I pensively wander, vol. ii., 316.
  • On the fierce savage cliffs that look down on the flood, vol. iv., 105.
  • On this unfrequented plain, vol. ii., 294.
  • O our childhood's once delightful hours, vol. iii., 198.
  • Or ere we part, my heart leaps hie to sing ae bonnie sang, vol. v., 193.
  • Oh, saft is the blink o' thine e'e, lassie, vol. v., 208.
  • Oh, sarely may I rue the day, vol. ii., 58.
  • Oh, sair I feel the witching power, vol. iii., 192.
  • Oh, saw ye my wee thing, saw ye my ain thing, vol. i., 82.
  • Oh, saw ye this sweet, bonnie lassie o' mine, vol. ii., 70.
  • Oh, saw ye this sweet, bonnie lassie o' mine, vol. iv., 271.
  • Oh! say na you maun gang awa, vol. iv., 201.
  • Oh! say not life is ever drear, vol. v., 88.
  • Oh! say not o' war the young soldier is weary, vol. iv., 214.
  • Oh! say not 'tis the March wind, 'tis a fiercer blast that drives, vol. v., 293.
  • Oh! say not, my love, with that mortified air, vol. i., 305.
  • Oh, softly sighs the westlin' breeze, vol. v., 167.
  • Oh, some will tune their mournful strain, vol. i., 232.
  • Oh! stopna, bonnie bird, that strain, vol. iii., 134.
  • O sweet is the blossom o' the hawthorn-tree, vol. v., 187.
  • O sweet is the calm, dewy gloamin', vol iv., 247.
  • Oh, sweet were the hours, vol. iii., 94.
  • Oh, swiftly bounds our gallant bark, vol. vi., [154].
  • O tell me, bonnie young lassie, vol. i., 85.
  • Oh! tell me what sound is the sweetest to hear, vol. iv., 69.
  • Oh, that I were the shaw in, vol. ii., 329.
  • Oh, the auld house, the auld house! vol. i., 224.
  • Oh! the bonnie Hieland hills, vol. iv., 230.
  • Oh, the breeze of the mountain is soothing and sweet, vol. ii., 19.
  • Oh! the happy days o' youth are fast gaun by, vol. iii., 266.
  • Oh! the happy time departed, vol. vi., [17].
  • Oh! the sunny peaches glow, vol. iii., 150.
  • O these are not my country's hills, vol. iv., 127.
  • Oh, to bound o'er the bonnie, blue sea, vol. iv., 133.
  • Oh! the land of hills is the land for me, vol. iv., 270.
  • Oh! the winning charm of gentleness, so beautiful to me, vol. v., 242.
  • Oh, there 's naebody hears Widow Miller complain, vol. v., 237.
  • Our ain native land, our ain native land, vol. iv., 54.
  • Oh, tuneful voice, I still deplore, vol. i., 44.
  • Our Mary liket weel to stray, vol. iv., 70.
  • Our minstrels a', frae south to north, vol. iii., 95.
  • Our native land, our native vale, vol. iii., 106.
  • Ours is the land of gallant hearts, vol. iv., 51.
  • Oh, wae be to the orders that march'd my love awa, vol. iii., 238.
  • Oh! wae's me on gowd, wi' its glamour and fame, vol. vi., [148].
  • Oh, wae 's my life, and sad my heart, vol. v., 17.
  • Oh, waft me to the fairy clime, vol. iv., 92.
  • Oh! waste not thy woe on the dead, nor bemoan him, vol. vi., [126].
  • Oh, we aft hae met at e'en, bonnie Peggie, O! vol. iii., 227.
  • Oh, weel's me on my ain man, vol. i., 204.
  • Oh, weel befa' the maiden gay, vol. ii., 64.
  • Oh, weel I lo'e our auld Scots sangs, vol. v., 85.
  • Oh! weep not thus, though the child thou hast loved, vol. iii., 201.
  • Oh! we hae been amang the bowers that winter didna bare, vol. vi., [236].
  • Oh, wha 's at the window, wha, wha, wha? vol. iv., 253.
  • Oh, what are the chains of love made of, vol. iv., 136.
  • Oh, what care I where Love was born, vol. v., 11.
  • Oh! what is in this flaunting town, vol. vi., [203].
  • Oh, when shall I visit the land of my birth, vol. i., 254.
  • Oh, where are the pretty men of yore, vol. v., 129.
  • Oh, where has the exile his home, vol. iv., 250.
  • Oh, where snared ye that bonnie, bonnie bird, vol. v., 14.
  • Oh, where, tell me where is your Highland laddie gone, vol. i., 104.
  • Oh! why left I my hame, vol. iii., 264.
  • O! why should old age so much wound us, vol. i., 20.
  • Oh! will ye go to yon burn-side, vol. iii., 68.
  • Oh! will ye walk the wood wi' me, vol. iv., 273.
  • Oh! would I were throned on yon glossy golden cloud, vol. iv., 139.
  • Oh! would that the wind that is sweeping now, vol. iv., 180.
  • Oh! years hae come an' years hae gane, vol. iv., 193.
  • Oh, yes, there 's a valley as calm and as sweet, vol. iv., 255.
  • O ye tears! O ye tears! that have long refused to flow, vol. vi., [18].
  • Oh, young Lochinvar is come out of the West, vol. i., 290.