And gie's a hand o' thine; give me

And we'll tak a right guid-willie waught, draught of good will

For auld lang syne.

A more remarkable case of patchwork is [A Red, Red Rose]. Antiquarian research has discovered in chap-books and similar sources four songs, from each of which a stanza, in some such form as follows, seems to have proved suggestive to Burns:

  1. Her cheeks are like the Roses
  2. That blossom fresh in June,
  3. O, she's like a new strung instrument
  4. That's newly put in tune.
  5. Altho' I go a thousand miles
  6. I vow thy face to see,
  7. Altho' I go ten thousand miles
  8. I'll come again to thee, dear Love,
  9. I'll come again to thee.
  10. The seas they shall run dry,
  11. And rocks melt into sands;
  12. Then I'll love you still, my dear,
  13. When all those things are done.
  14. Fare you well, my own true love,
  15. And fare you well for a while,
  16. And I will be sure to return back again,
  17. If I go ten thousand mile.

The genealogy of the lyric is still more complicated than these sources imply, but the specimens given are enough to show the nature of the ore from which Burns extracted the pure gold of his well-known song:

MY LOVE IS LIKE A RED RED ROSE

O, my love is like a red red rose

That's newly sprung in June:

O, my love is like the melodie