The nabob surrounded with splendour may pine; And there's nought like the circle of friendship Let statesmen delight in the court's vain parade, For there's nought like the circle of friendship While thc coxcomb is lost in the butterfly throng, We enjoy our bit crack, wi' a canty Scots song ; · For there's nought like the circle of friendship To brighten life's path with a smile. Then blest be the faces that welcom'd me here, For there's nought like the circle of friendship CII. THE NEW YEAR'S GIFT. All white hung the bushes o’er Elaw's sweet stream, * And pale from its banks the long icicles gleam; The first peep of morning just peers thro' the sky, CIII. WHEN LIFE FROM THIS BOSOM. When life from this bosom for ever is fled, Is there one for poor Jack that will mourn ? Is there one that will say, “'neath this sod there is laid A good fellow as ever was born ?” Nom the friends of his youth, for a short fleeting year, May remember, when over the bowl, “ Poor Jack, on the whole a good soul.” But, oh! it was not to companions like these That his heart and his feelings were known, Tho' oft, to drown care, and ambitious to please, O'er the most.of the club has he shone. Nor is it from these that a tear he would ask, Should his mem'ry in theirs ever live ; Enough that a bumper they give.. But, oh! when he's laid in his last peaceful sleep, When his heart is for ever at rest, Sweet Lela, shouldst thou o'er his ashes e'er weep, Or his mem’ry e'er heave thy fair breast, Then, if spirits of aught that is mortal can taste, Lov'd Lela, what joys will be mine, To breathe a soft murmur with thine. civ. BONNIE LADIE ANN There's kames o' hinney 'tween my luve's lips, And gowd amang her hair, Nae mortal een keek there. * This truly excellent ballad was recovered, according to Cromek, from the recitation of Miss Catherine Macartney, of Hacket Leaths, Galloway, and 18 to be found in his Remains of Nithsdale and Galloway song, a work does infinité honour to the taste of the Editor.--" There is a'noble sublimi y, a heart-melting tenderness," says the immortal Burns, “in some of our ancient ballads, which shew them to be the work of a masterly hand : and it What lips dare kiss, or what hand dare touch, Or what arm of luve dare span Or the waist o' Lady Ann ! has often given me many a heart-ache to reflect, that such glorious old bards -bards, who very probably owed all their talents to native genius, yet have described the exploits of heroes, the pangs of disappointment, and the meltings of love, with such fine strokes of nature,--that their very names (0 how mortifying to a bard's vanity!) are now “buried among the wreck of things which were." “ A fairer specimen of romantic Scottish love than is contained in this song, is rarely to be met with. It was first introduced to Nithsdale and Galloway about thirty years ago, by a lady whose mind was deranged. She wandered from place to place, followed by some tamed sheep. The old people describe her as an amiable and mild creature. She would lie all night under the shade of some particular tree, with her sheep around her. They were as the ewe-lamb in the scripture parable ;--they lay in her bosom, ate of her bread, drank of her cup, and were unto her as daughters. Thus she wandered through part of England, and the low part of Scotland; esteemed, respected, pitied, and wept for by all! She was wont to sing this song unmoved, until she came to the last verse, and then she burst into tears. The old tree, under which she sat with her sheep, is now cut down. The school boys always paid a kind of religious respect to it-there, on fine sabbath evenings, the old women sat down and read their Bibles; there the young men and maidens learned their Psalms, and then went home full of the meek and holy composure of religion."-Cromek. |