LI.. ;Y UHIVC.KJUY or CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO MflRY WfiLLIHGFORD DAME r> i C v^xjOxA-a^-,^ V_a-A-*--4, -L.cu<. e fcet; VOLUME SECOND l)e cEber <0en A COLLECTION OF coto Bonus Wrote by the Ingenious before 1 600 BY ALLAN RAMSAY tteprmteto from (fie riflinal lST>ition IN TWO VOLUMES VOLUME SECOND ROBERT FORRESTER, 1 ROYAL EXCHANGE SQUARE 1875 Printed by M'LAREN & ERSKINE, Glasgow. THE Ever Green, BEING A COLLECTION O F SCOTS POEMS, Wrote by the Ingenious before 1600. VOL. I. Publijbed by ALLAN RAMSAY. &/// green ivitA Bays each ancient Altar JlanJs, Abwe the Reach of facrllegiout Hands, Secure from Flames, from Envy Z un > Zier, Zou, Sec., Yellow, Yap, Young, Year, You. Chryfts-Kirk of the Grene. Ane cryd, Fy, he had flain a Prieft, A Myle bezond a Myre. Then Bow and Bag frae him he keift, And fled as ferfs as Fyre Frae Flint, at, &c. that Day. XIII. WITH Forks and Flails, thay lent grit Flaps, And flang togidder lyk Friggs : With Bowgars of Barns thay beft blew Kapps, Quhyle thay of Berns maid Briggs. The Reird raife rudely with the Rapps, Quhen Rungs war laid on Riggs : The Wyfis came forth with Crys and Clapps, Lo, quhair my Lyking liggs, Quoth thay, at, &c. that Day. XIV. THAY girnit and lute gird with Grains, Ilk Goffip uder greivt : Sum ftrak with Stings, fum gaddert Stains, Sum fled and ill mifchevt. The 10 Chryfts-Kirk of the Grene. The Menftral wan within twa Wains, That Day full weil he preivt: For he came hame with unbirs'd Bains, Quhair Fechtairs war mifcheivt, For evir, at, &c. that Day. XV. HEICH Hutchon with a Hiflil Ryfs, To red can throw them rummill} He muddillt them down lyk ony Myfs, He was nae Baity bummill. Thocht he was wicht, he was nocht wyfs, With fie Jangleurs to jummill; For frae his Thoume they dang a Sklyfs, Quhyle he cry'd Barlafummlll^ I am (lain, at, &V. this Day. XVI. QUHEN that he faw his blude fae reid, To fle might nae Man let him, He weind it had been for auld feid, He thocht ane cry'd, Haif at him. He Chryfts-Kirk of the Grene. He gart his Feit defend his Heid, The far fairer it fet him; Quhyl he was paft out of all pleid, They fould bene fwift that gat him Throw Speid, at, &c. that Day. XVII. THE Town-Soutar in Grief was bowdin, His Wyfe hang at his Waift ; His Body was in Blude all browdin, He graint lyk ony Ghaift. Her Glitterand Hair that was fae gowden, Sae hard in Lufe him laift, That for her Saik he was not zowden, Seven Myle that he was chaift, And mair, &c. that Day. XVIII. THE Millar was of manly Mak, To meit him was nae Mows, There durft not Ten cum him to tak, Sae noytit he thair Pows. The Chryfts-Kirk of the Grene. The Bufchment hale about him brak, And bikkert him with Bows, Syne traytorly behind his Bak, They hewt him on the Hows, Behind, at, &c. that Day. XIX. TWA that war Herdmen of the Herd, On udder ran lyk Rams, Then followit Feymen, richt unaffeird, Bet on with Barrow trams, But quhair thair Gobs thay war ungeird, They gat upon the Gams ; Quhyl bludy berkit war thair Baird, As they had worriet Lamms, Maift lyk, at, &c. that Day. XX. THE Hewt him on the Hvws, Hew'd or cut him down, by ftriklng him behind on the Houghs or Hams. Cum, Sum, &c., Come, Some. The a in Place of o. Lamms, Thvwme, Dum, Sec., Lambs, Thumb, Dumb. The b feldom made Ufe of in such Words. Chryfts-Kirk of the Grene. J 3 XX. THE Wyves keift up a hideous Zell, Quhen all thir Zounkers zokkit, Als ferfs as ony Fyre-flauchts fell; Freiks to the Feilds they flokit. The Carlis with Clubs did uder quell, Quhyl Elude at Breifts out bokit; Sae rudely rang the common Bell, That all the Steipill rokkit For reid, at ChryJls-Kirk on the Grene that Day. XXI. QUHEN thay had beirt lyk baitit Bulls, And branewod brynt in Bails, They wer as meik as ony Mulis, That mangit ar with Mails. For Mulls, Mules. In feveral Words like this, where an ; goes between an / and another Confonant, we are to pronounce fliort, as Mules, not Mulls. Mangit ar with Mails, Maim'd with Burdens. Flaiochtlr Falls, Turf that Country People flea for covering Houfes. Halld the Dulls, is a Phrafe us'd at Foot Ball, or fuch Games, where the Party that gains the Dule or Goal is faid to hall it, or win the Game. 14 Chryfts-Klrk of the Grene. For Faintnefs thae forfochtin Fulis, Fell down lyk flauchtir Fails : Frefh Men came in and hail'd the Dulis, And dang them down in Dails, Bedene, at, &c. that Day. XXII. QUHEN all was done, Dik with an Aix, Came furth to fell a Fudder, Quod he, quhair are zon hangit Smaiks, Richt now wald (lain my B rudder. His Wyfe bade him gae hame, Gib Glaiks^ And fae did Meg his Mudder. He turn'd and gaif them baith their Paiks; For he durft ding nane udder, For Feir, at ChryJl-Kirk of the Grene that Day. Finis quod King JAMES I. The Fudder, properly a Load, relating to Lead. It is 1600 Pound Weight: in our old Authors it often metaphorically means a great many. The THISTLE and the ROSE, O'er Flowers and Herbage green, By Lady Nature chofe, Brave King and lovely Queen. POEM In Honour of MARGARET, Daughter to HENRT the VII. of England, Queen to JAMES the IV. King of SCO TS. I. ^~\UHEN Merch with variand Winds was overpaft, ^^ And fweit Apryle had with his Silver Showers Tane Leif of Nature, with an orient Blaft, And lufty May, that Mudder is of Flowrs, Had maid the Birds begin be tymous Hours; Amang the tendir Odours reid and quhyt, Quhois Harmony to heir was grit Delyt. II. IN Lufty May, Defireable May. Lufty, through thefe Poems, is an Epithet frequently us'd in this Senfe j alfo in our Language it expreffes Youthful, Blooming, Large, Jolly. 1 6 The Ihiftle and the Rofe. II. IN Bed at Morrow, fleiping as I lay, Methocht Aurora with her Ruble Ene, In at my Window lukit by the Day, And halfit me, with Vifage pale and grene, Upon her Hand a Lark fang frae the Splene, Luvers, awake out of your Slumbering, Se how the lufty Morning dois upfpring. III. METHOCHT frefh May before my Bed upftood, In Weid depainted of ilk diverfe Hew, Sober, benyng, and full of Menfuetude, In Bright Atyre of Flours, all forget new, Of heavenly Colour quhyt, reid, brown and blew, Balmit in Dew, and gilt with Phebus Beims, Quhyle all the Houfe ilumynt with her Leims. IV. SLUGART, fcho faid, awake annon, for Schame, And in my Honour fumthing thou gae wrytej The Lark has done, the merry Day proclaim, Luvers to rais with Comfort and Delyte, Will nocht increafe thy Courage to indytj Quhafe Lukit by the Day, Looked in at my Window by Day or the Dawn- ing. Hal/it, Hail'd or Saluted. Menfuetude, Mildnefs, or good Humour. The niftle and the Rofe. 17 Quhafe Heart fomtyme has glad and blifsful bene, Sangs oft to mak under the Brenches grene. V. QUHERTO, quoth I, fall I upryfe at Morrow, For in thy Month few Birds haif I hard fing, Thay haif mair Caufe to weip and plein their Sorrow : Thy Air it is not holfum nor benyng, Lord Eolus dois in thy Seafon ring, Sae boufteous ar the blafts of his (hill horn, Amang thy Bews to walk I haif forborn. VI. WITH that the Lady foberly did fmyle, And faid, Upryfe and do thy Obfervance : Thou did promift in Mayis lufty quhyle, Then to difcryve the ROSE of moft Plefance. Go fee the Birdis how they fmg and dance, And how the Skyes iluminat ar bricht, Enamylt richly with new azure Licht. VII. QUHEN Do thy Objervance, Perform thy Duty or Refpedts. Here 'tis proper we take notice of the Cadency of fuch Words ; many in that Age being pronounced long that now are exprefled fliort : But our Union with France, and French Auxiliaries fo often in Scotland at that Time, can eafily account for that Manner of Pronunciation. C The mjlle and the Rofe. VII. QUHEN this was faid, away then went the Quene, And entert in a lufty Garden gent ; And then methocht, full haftylie befene, In Sark and Mantle after her I went Into this Garth moft dulce and redolent, Of Herb and Flowir, and tender Plants moft fweit, And grene Leivs doing of Dew doun fleit. VIII. THE pourpour Sun, with tender Rayis reid, In orient bricht as Angel did appeir, Throu golden Skys advancing up his Heid, Whofe gildet TrefTes fchone fae wonder cleir, That all the Warld tuke Comfort far and neir, To luke upon his frefh and blifsful Face, Doing all fable frae the Heavenis chace. IX. AND as the blifsful Sun drave up the Sky, All Nature fang throu Comfort of the Licht ; The Minftrells wingd with open Voyces cry, O Luvers now is fled the dully Nicht, Come welcome Day that comforts every Wicht. Hail The Thijlle and the Rofe. 19 Hail May, hail Flora, hail Aurora fhene, Hail Princefs Nature, hail Luves hartfome Quene. X. DAME Nature gave an Inhibition ther To Neptune ferfs and Eolus the bauld, Not to perturb the Water nor the Air, That nowther blafhy Shower, nor Blasts mair cauld Suld Flowirs effray nor Fowles upon the Fauld. Scho bad eik Juno Goddes of the Sky, That fcho the Heaven fuld keep amene and dry. XL ALS fcho ordaind that every Bird and Beift Before her Hienefs fuld annone compeir, And every Flowir of Virtue maift and leift, And every Herb in fair Feild far and neir, As they had wont in May frae Yeir to Yeir : To hir thair Quene to mak Obediens, Full law inclynand with dew Reverens. XII. WITH Obediens and Reverent, as obferved before in the Words Observance and Plefance, muft be accented long. 20 The Tbiflle and the Rofe. XII. WITH that annone fcho fent the fwift fute Roe, To bring in alkind Beift frae Dale and Doun, The reftlefs Swallow ordert fcho to go, And fetch all Fowl of fmall and grit Renown, And to gar Flowirs appeir of all FafToun : Fully craftely conjurit fhe the Yarrow. Quhilk did forth fwirk as fwift as ony Arrow. XIII. ALL brocht in were, in twynkling of an Ee, Baith Beift and Bird and Flowlr before the And firft the Lyon greateft of Degre Was fummond ther, and he, fair to be fene, With a full hardy Countenance and kene, Before Dam Nature came, and did inclyne, With Vifage bauld, and Courage Leonyne. XIV. THIS Courage Leonyne. This perhaps may be fmil'd at, but there 's as much Reafon to laugh at the modern Phrafe of one's looking like himfelf. The Tbiftle and the Rofe. 21 XIV. THIS awful Beift was terrible of Cheir, Perfing of Luke, and ftout of Countenance, Right ftrong of Corps, of FafTon fair, bot feir, Lufty of Shape, licht of Deliverance, Reid of his Colour, as the Ruby Glance : In Feild of Gold he ftude full rampantly, With Flowr-de-Lyces circlet plefantly. XV. THIS Lady liftit up his Cluves fae cleir, And lute him liftlie lein upon hir Knee, And crownit him with Diadem full deir, Of radyous Stanes maift ryall there to fee, Saying, The King of all Delfts mak I thee, And If one were to comment and illuftrate every poetical Beauty that ftrikes our Imaginations fo agreeably, and come fo frequent, he would fwell the Notes too much, and rob the Reader of a Pleafure which is his own Property ; wherefore fuch Annotations fhall be declined. When Folks are ravifhed with any Pleafure tho' it be obvious to every By-ftander, yet they cannot help exprefling what delights them many Times over, when there is not the leaft Occafion for Information. This was juft my Cafe, on reading this excellent Defcription of the Lyon and the Scots Arms, never fo happily blazoned. 22 The T hi/lie and the Rofe. And the Prote&or cheif in Wodes and Schaws, Go furth, and to thy Leiges keip the Laws. XVI. JUSTICE exerce, with Mercy and Confciens, And let nae fmall Beift fuffir Skaith nor Skorns, Of greiter Beifts that bein of more Pufiance. Do Law alyke to Apes and Unicorns, And lat na Bowgle with his boufteous Horns Opprefs the meik Pluch-Ox, for all his Pryd, But in the Yok go quietly him befyd. XVII. WHEN this was faid, with Noyfe and Sound of Jy> All Kynd of Quadrupeds in thair Degree, Attains cry'd, Laud^ and then, Vive le Roy; Syne at his Feit fell with Humility; To him they all made Homage and Feiltie ; And he did tham refaif with princely Laits, Whofe noble Yre his Greitnefs mitigates. XVIII. SYNE crownit fcho the Eagle King of Fowls ; And fharp as Darts of Steil fcho made his Penns, And bade him be as juft to fFhawps and Owls, As The Tbiflle and the Rofe. 23 As unto Peakoks^ Papingos^ or Crans^ And mak ane Law for wicht Fowls and for Wrens, And let nae Fowl of Rapine do affray, Nor Birds devore but his own proper Prey. XIX. THEN callt fcho all the Flowirs grew in the Feild, Difcryving all thair Faflbns and EfFeirs, Upon the awfull THISTLE fhe beheld, And faw him guarded with a Bum of Speirs, Confiddering him fae able for the Weirs, A radiant Crown of Rubies fcho him gaif, And faid, in Feild go forth, and fend the laif. XX. AND fen thou art a King, be thou defcreit, Herb without Value hald not of fie Pryce, As Herb of Vertew and of Odour fweet, And let no Netle vyle and full of Vyce Hir fallow with the gudly Flowr-de-Lyce, Nor let no wyld Weid, full of Churliflinefs, Compare hir to the Lillys Nobilnefs. XXI. NOR 24 The Tbiflle and the Rofe. XXI. NOR hald nane other Flowir in flc denty As the frefh ROSE, of Colour reid and quhytj For if thou dois, hurt is thyne Honefty, Confiddering that no Flowir is fae perfyte, Sae full of Plefans, Vertew and Delyte, Sae full of blifsful Angellyke Bewtie, Imperial Birth, Honour and Dignitie. XXII. THEN to the ROSE fcho did her Vifage turn, And faid, O lufty Dochter moft benyng, Abofe the Lilly thou art ilufterous born, Frae Ryal Linage ryfing frefh and yung, But ony Spot or Macull doing fprung : Cum Blume of Joy with richeft Jems be crownd, For owre the laif thy Bewtie is renound. XXIII. A coflly Crown with Stanes clarified bricht, This comely Quene did on hir Heid inclofe, .Quhyle all the Land illumynat of Licht; Quhairfor QuMs, Doh, Hir, &c., Whofe, Does, Her. The e in many fuch Words is fupplied with /. But ony Spot, Without Spot. The mjlk and the Rofe. 25 Quhairfor methocht, the Flowirs did all rejofe, Crying attaints, Hail to the fragrant ROSE, Hail Emprefs of the Herbs, frefch Quene of Flowirs, To the be Glore and Honour at all Hours. XXIV. THEN all the Birds thay fang with Voice on hicht, Whofe mirthfull Sound was marvellous to heir; The Mavys fang, Hail ROSE moft rich and richt, That does upflurifs under Phebus Sphere, Hail Plant of Youth, Hail Princes Dochter deir, Hail Blofome breking out of Blude Ryal, Quhois precious Vertew is Imperial. XXV. THE Merle fcho fang, Hail ROSE of moft Delyt, Hail of all Flowirs the fweit and foverain Quene: The Lark fcho fang, Hail ROSE baith reid and quhyt, Moft plefand Flowir of michty Colours twain j Nichtingails fang, Hail Nature's SufFragane, In Bewty, Nurture, and each Nobilnefs, In rich Array, Renown and Gentilnefs. XXVI. THE That the Houfe of York and Lancafter (the White and Red Rofe) were united in the Perfon of our Queen, is well known. 26 The Tbiftle and the Rofe. XXVI. THE common Voice upraife of Birdis fmall, Upon this Ways, O bliffit be the Hour That thou was chofe to be our Principal, Welcome to be our Princes crownd with Powir y Our Perle, our Plefance, and our Paramour, Our Peace, our Play, our plain Felicity : CHRYST the conferve from all Adverfity. XXVII. THEN all the Confort fang with fie a Shout, That I anone awakent quhair I lay, And with a Braid I turnit me about To fe this Court, but all wer gone away; Then up I leint me, halflings in affray, Callt to my Mufe, and for my Subjeck chofe To fing the Ryal THISTLE and the ROSE. Mr. W m - DUNBAR. A A PANYGYRICK ON S R PENNY. I. "D ICHT fain wald I my Qwaintance mak Sr Penny with, and wate ye quhy? He is a Man will undertak A Lairdfhip of braid Lands to buy; Thairfoir methink richt fain wald I With him in Fellowfhip repair, JBecaufe he is in Company A noble Gyde baith late and air. II. SR 28 A Panygyrick on Sr Penny. II. SR Penny for till hald in Hand, His Company they think fae fweitj Sum does not care to fell thair Land, With gude Sr Penny for to meit, Becaufe he is of a noble Spreit, A furthy Man and a forfeiand ; There is no Mater ends compleit, Till he fet to his Seil and Hand. III. SR Penny is a valiant Man, Of mekle Strenth and Dignitie, And evir fen this Warld began, In this Land autoreift is he: The King or Quene ze may not fee, They ftill fo tenderlie him trete, That ther can nathing endit be, Without his Company ze get. IV. SR Penny is a Man of Law, And (witt ye weil) baith wyfe and war; He mony Reafons can furth fchaw, Quhen he is {landing at the Bar, Is A Panygyrick on Sr Penny. 29 Is ifane fae fharp that can him fear, Quhen he propons furth ony Pleyj Nor zit fae hardy Man as dar Sr Penny tyne or difobey. V. SR Penny is baith leird and wyfe, The Kirk to fteir he taks in Hand, Difponer of ilk Benefice In this Realm, throu all the Land; Is nane fae wicht dar him gainftand, Sae wyfely can Sr Penny wirk ; And als Sr Symohie his Servand, That now is Gydar of the Kirk. VI. GIF to the Court thou mak repair, And ther haif Matters to proclame, Thou art unable weil to fair, Sr Penny gif thou leif at hame, To bring him furth think thou nae Schame ; I do thee weil to underftand, Into thy Bag beir thou his Name, Thy Matter cums better to hand. VII. SR 3 A Panygyrick on Sr Penny. VII. SR Penny now is maid an Owll, They wirk him mekle Tray and Tene, They hald him in till he hair-moull, And maks him blind of baith his Ene ; Thirout he is but fmdle fene, Sae faft tharin they can him fteik, That Commons pure cannot obtain Ane Day to byd with him and fpeik. Tray and Tene, Anger. Hair-moull, Grown hoary with Mouldinefs. VERTUE VERTUE and V YC E. A POEM, Addreft to JAMES V. King of SCOTS, By the famous and renown'd Clerk, Mr. JOHN BELLENTYNE, Arch-Dean of Murray. I. /^VUHEN Silver Diane full of Beims bricht, -^ Frae dark Eclips was paft this uther Nicht, And to the Crab hir proper Manflon gane j drtophilax contending with his Micht In the grit Eift to fet his Vifage richt j I mene the Leider of the Charle-wane: Aboif our Heid then was the Urfis twain, Quhen Starris fmall obfcure grew to our Sicht, And Lucifer left twinkling him alane. II. THE 3 2 Vertue and Vyce. II. THE frofty Nicht with her prolixit Hours, Her Mantle quhyt fpred on the tender Flours ; When ardent Labour has addreffit me, Tranflate the Tale of our Progenitours, Thair greit Manheid, Wifdom and hie Honours, Quhair we may cleir, as in a Mirrour, fee The furious End fomtymes of Tyranie ; Somtymes the Gloir of prudent Governours, Ilk State apprylit in thair Facultie. III. MY weary Spreit defiring to reprefs My emptive Pen of frutelefs Biflinefs, Awalkit forth to tak the recent Air, When Priapus with ftormy Weid opprefs, Requeiftit me, in his maifr. Tendernefs, To reft a while amids his Gardens bare. But I no maner coud my Mynd prepare To fet afyde unplefant Havynefs On this and that contempling Solitare. IV. AND Priapus, who prefides over Gardens. Vertue and Vyce. 33 IV. AND firft occurrt to my remembering, How that I was in Service with the King, Put to his Grace in Zeirs tendereft, Clerk of his Compts, althocht I was inding, With Heart and Hand, and evry uther thing, That micht him pleife in ony manner beft, While Envy grit me from his Service keft, By them that had the Court in governing, As Bird bot Plumes is herryt of her Neft. V. OUR Lyfe, our Gyding, and our Aventuris, Dependance have on thir celeft Creaturis, Apperandly by fome Neceffitiej For thocht a Man wald fet his bifly curis, Sae far as Labour and his Wifdom furis, To flie hard Chance of Infortunitie, Tho he efchew it with Difficultie, The curfid Weird yet ithandly enduris, Gien to him firft in his Nativitie. VI. OF D 34 Vertue and Vyce. VI. OF eardlie State bewailing thus the Chance Of Fortune gude I had nae Efperance, Sae lang I had fwomt in hir Seis fae deip, That fad Avyfing with her thochtfull Lance Coud find nae Port to anker her Firmance, Till Morpheus the dreiry God of Sleip, For very Rewth did on my Cures weip, And fet his Slewth and deidly Countenance, With fnorand Vains to throw my Body creip. VII. METHOCHT I was into a plefand Meid, Quhair Flora made the tender Bluims to fpreid Throw kindly Dew, and Humours nutrative, Quhen golden Titan with his Flamis fae reid, Aboif the Seis upraift his glorious Heid, Defounding down his Heit reftorative To evry Fruit that Nature maid to live, Whilk was afore into the Winter deid, With Stormis cauld, and Har-froft penetrive. VIII. A Vertue and Vyce. 35 VIII. A Silver Fountain fprang with Watir cleir Into that Place, quhair I approchit neir; Quhair I did fone efpy a fellon Reird Of courtly Gallants in thair gayeft Weir, Rejoycing them in Seafon of the Zeir, As it had bene of Mayis fweit Day the Feird, Their gudelie Havings made me nocht affeird ; With them I faw a crownit King appeir, With tender Downs arrifmg on his Beird. IX. THIR courtly Gallants fettand thair Intents To fing and play on divers Inftruments ; According to this PRINCIS Appetyte, Twa Ladyis fair came pranfand owre the Bents, Thair coftly Cleathing fhawd their mighty Rents ; Quhat Heart micht wifh, they wanted not a Myte, The Rubies fhone upon thair Fingers quhyt : And finaly I knew by thair Confents This VERTUE was, that uther hecht Delyte. X. THIR Vertue and Vyce. X. THIR Goddefles arrayt in this fine Ways, As Reverence and Honour lift devyfe, Afore this PRINCE fell down upon thair Kneis, Syne dreft themfells into thair beft Avyfe, Sae far as Wifdom in thair Powir lyes, To do the Thing that micht him beft appleife, Quhair he rejoyced in his heavenly Gleis, And him defyret that for his Emperyfs, Ane of them twa unto his Lady cheis. XI. AND firft Delyte unto the PRINCE faid thus, Maift valiant Knycht, in Actions amorous, And luftyeft that evir Nature wrocht, Quha in the Flour of Zouth mellyfluous, With Notes fweit, and fang mellodious, Awalketh heir amang the Flowirs foft, Thou has nae Game, but in thy mirry Thocht, My heavenly Blifs is fo delicious, All Wealth in Eard bot it availeth nocht. XII. THO Vert ue and Vyce. 37 XII. THO thou had France^ and all beyont the Pa, Spain, Ingland, Pole, with uther Kingdoms moe, And reign cure them in State moft glorious, Thy pufliant Empyre is not worth a Stro, Gif it unto thy Pleifurs is a Foe, Or pains thy Mind with Cares are dolourus ; Ther is nathing may be fae odious To Man, as leif in Mifery and Woe, Defrauding God of Nature Genius. XIII. DRESS thee thairfor with all thy bifly Cure, That thou in Joy and Pleifure may endure; Be Sicht of thir four Bodyis elementar, Twa grofs and heavy, twa are licht and pure, Thir Elements be working of Nature, In uther change ; and tho they be richt far Frae uther twind, with Qualitys contrair, Of them are made all Creatures Eard eir bure, And finaly in them refolvit ar. XIV. THE 38 Vertue and Vyce. XIV. THE Fyre in Air, the Air in Watter cleir, In Eard the Watter turns withouten Weir, The Eard in Watter it turns ower again ; Sae furth in Order nochts confumed heir, And Man new born begins sone to appeir Ane uther Figure than afore was tane, Quhen he is deid, the Matter does remain, Tho it refolve into fum new Manner, Naething is new, nocht but the Form is gane. XV. THUS naething is in Eard but fugitive, Pafland and command fpreiding fucceilivej And as a Beift, fo is a Man confave Of Seid infufd in Members genitive, And furth his Tyme in Plefoure does out dryve As Chance him leids, till he be laid in Grave : Thairfor thy Hevin and Plefour now refave, Quhile thou art heir into this prefent Lyve, For after Death thou fall no Plefour haif. XVI. THE Vertue and Vyce. 39 XVI. THE Rofe, the Lilly, and the Violet, Unpult, fone wither, and with winds owrefet, Wallout falls down hot ony Fruit, I wifs, Thairfore I fay, Sen that naething may let, But thy bricht Hew maun be with Zeirs all fret, (For every Thing but for a Seafon is) Thou may not haif a mair excellent Blifs Than ly all Nicht into my Arms plet, To hals and brais with mony a lufty Kifs. XVII. AND haif my tender Body by thy Syde, So proper fet, quhilk Nature has provyde With every Plefour, that thou mayft divyne, Ay quhile my tender Zeirs be overflyde ; Then gif thou pleis that I thy Brydel gyde, Thou maun allways from agit men declyne, Syne drefs thy Hairt, thy Courage and Ingyne, To fuffer nane fall in thy Houfe abyde, But gif thay will unto thy Luft inclyne. XVIII. GIF 4 Vertue and Vyce. XVIII. GIF thou defyres into the Seis to fleit Of hevinly Blifs, than me thy Lady treit; For it is faid by Clerks of fair Renown, Thair is nae Pleafour in this Eard fo grit, As quhen a Luver dois his Lady meit, To raife his Lyf frae mony a deidlie Soun, As hieft plefour but Comparifoun. I fall the geif in thy Zeirs zoung and fweit, A lufty Halk with mony Plumes full broun. XIX. QUHILK fall be found fae joyous and Plefant, Gif thou into her mirry Flichts fall hant, Of evry Blifs that may in Eard appeir, As Hairt will think thou fall nae Plenty want, Quhile Zeirs fwift with Quheils properant, Confume thy Strenth, and all thy Bewtie cleir. And quhen Delyt had faid on this Maner, As Rage of Zowtheid thocht maifl relivant; Then Vertew fpake, as after ye fall heir. XX. MY Vertue and Vyce. 4 l XX. MY Lands full braid with mony a plenteous Shyre, Sail give thy Hienefs, (gif thou lift difyre) Triumphant Glore, hie Honour, Fame divyne, With fie Puiflance, that them nae furious Yre, Nor weirand Age, nor Flames of birnand Fyre, Nor bitter Death may bring unto Rewyne, But thou maun firft enfuffer meikle Pyne, Abune thy felf, that thou may haif Empyre, Then fall thy Fame and Honour haif no Fyne. XXI. AMANG my Faes my Realms fet ar all, Quhilk haif with me a Weir continual, And ever ftill dois on my Border ly : And tho' thay may nae Ways me overthrawl, Thay ly in wait, gif ony Chance may fall, Of me fumtyme to get the Victory. Thus is my Lyfe an ithand Chevalry, And Labour halds me ftrong as ony Wall, And nathing breks me but vyl Slugardy. XXII. NAE 4 2 Vertue and Vyce. XXII. NAE Fortune may againft me ocht avail, Tho fcho with cloudy ftorms me aft aflail. I brek the Streim of {harp adverfity, In Wedder lown, and maift tempeftous Hail, Bot any Dreid I beir an equal Sail : My Ships fae ftrong, that I may never die, Wit, Reafon, Manheid governs me fae hie, Nae influence of Starns can eir prevail To rigne owre me with Infortunitie. XXIII. THE Rage of Zouth can never dantit be, Bot grit Diftrefs and (harp Adverfity, As be this Reafon is experience ; The fyneft Gold or Silver that we fe, May not be wrocht to our Utility, Without kein Flames and bitter Violence; The mair Diftrefs, the mair Intelligence. Quha eir fails lang in hie Profperity, Ar fune owrefet, gainft ftorms have nae Defence. XXIV. THIS Vertue and Vyce. 43 XXIV. THIS fragill Lyfe, as Moment induring, Bot doubt fall thee and all the Warld bring To ficker Blifs, or then eternal Wae. Gif thou by honeft Labour dois a Thing, Thy Labour vaniefis but tarrying; Howbeit thy honeft Warks they do not fae. Gif thou does ocht of Luft be Nicht or Day, The fhameful Deid, without diflevering, Continues ftill when Plefour is away. XXV. As Carvell ticht, faft tending throw the Sie, Leives nae imprent amang the Wallis hie. As fwifteft Birds with mony a bifly Plume Pern's the Air, and wates not quhair thay flie, Sicklyks our Lyfe without A&ivitie j It gifles na Fruit, howbeit a Shadow blume. Quha dois thair Lyfe in Ydlenefs confume, Bot Vertews Deids, thair Fame and Memorie Sail vanife foner than the reiky Fume. XXVI. As 44 Vertue and Vyce. XXVI. As Watter purges and maks Bodys fair, As Fyre afcends be Nature in the Air, And purefies with Heit thats vehement: As Flowir does fmell, as Fruit is nurifare : As precious Balmes reverts the Things ar fair, And maks them of the Rot impatient. As Spyce maift fweit, and Rofe maift redolent As ftern of Day by Motion circulair, Chaifes the Nicht with Beims refplendent. XXVII. SICKLYKE my Warks they perfyt every Wicht, In fervent Luve of maift excellent Licht, And maks a Man into this Eard bot Peir, And does the Saul frae all Disorder dicht, With Odour dulce, and maks it ftill mair bricht Than Diane full, or zet Apollo cleir, Syn raifes it into the hieft Sphere, Immortally to fhine in GODS awin Sicht, His chofen Creature, and as Spous maift deir. XXVIII. THIS Vertue and Vyce. 45 XXVIII. THIS uther Wretch that clipit is Delyte^ Involves Mankynd be fenfual Appityte, In every Kind of Vyce and Miferie, Because nae Wit nor Reafon is perfyte Quhair flic is Gyde, but Skaith thats infinyt; With Dolour, Shame, and urgent Povertie; For fcho fprang frae the licht Froth of the Se. Quhilk fignifies hir Plefour venomit, Is minglit ay with fhairp Adverfitie. XXIX. DUKE Hannibal^ as mony Authors wrait, Throw Spenzie came be mony a PafTage ftrait; To Italy in Furor bellical, Brak down hie Walls, and hieft Mountains flait, And to his Army made an open Gait, And Vi&ories had on the Romans all. At Capua by Plefour fenfual, The Duke was made fae faft and delicate, That by his Faes he was fone overthrawll. XXX. Or 46 Vertue and Vyce. XXX. OF ferfs Achlll the weirly Deids fprang, In Troy and Greice, quhyle he in VERTUE rang, How Luft him flew it is but Rewth to heir: Siclyk the Trojans with thair Knichts ftrang, The valiant Grelks furth frae thair Ruins dang, Viftorioufly exercit mony a Zeir; That Nicht they went to thair Luft and Plefour, The fatal Horfs did throw thair Walls fang, Quhais pregnant Sydes wer full of Men of Weir, XXXI. SARDANAPALL, that Prince efeminat, Frae Deids of Knichts bafely degenerat, Twynand the Threid of whyt or purpour Lint, With Fingers faft amang the Ladyis fat, And with his Luft couth not be fatiate, Till frae his Faes came laft the bitter Dint. Quhat nobil Men and Ladyis haif bene tint, Quhen they with Luft have bene intoxicat, To fchaw at lenth my Tung wald nevir flint. XXXII. BUT Vertue and Vyce. 47 XXXII. BUT brave Camll the valiant Chevalier, (When he the Gauls had dantint be his Weir) Of Heritage wald haif nae Recompence ; For gif his Bairns, his Kin and Friends maift deir Were verteous, they could not fail ilk Zeir To haif enough, be Roman Providence. Gif they wer given to Vyce and Infolence, It was not neidfull he fould conqueifs Geir, To be the Caufe of thair Incontinence. XXXIII. SUM nobil Men, as Poets lift declair, Were Deifeit, fum made Gods of the Air, Sum of the Heaven, as Eolus, Vulcan, Apollo, Saturn, Hermes, Jupiter, Mars, Hercules, and uther Men preclair, That Fame imortall in this Warld wan : Quhy wer thir People called Gods than ? Becaufe they had a VERTUE fingulair, Excellent hie abune the Ingyne of Man. XXXIV. AND 48 Vertue and Vyce. XXXIV. AND uthers are in Reik fulphurious, As Ixion^ and weiry Syfyphus^ Eumenides^ the Furys odibil, The proud Gyants, and thrifty Tantalus^ With ugly Drink, and Fude maift vennomus, Quhair Flames bauld, and Mirknefs ar fenfibil Quhy ar thir Folk in Pains fae terribil? Becaufe they were but Shrews maift vicious Into thair Lyfe, with Deids maift horribil. XXXV. AND tho nae Fruit wer after confequent Of mortall Lyfe, but for this Warld prefent Ilk Man to haif allenerlie Refpedt; Zet VERTUE fould frae Vice be different, As quick frae deid, as rich frae indigent; That ane to hieft Honour does direcl:, This uther Saul and Body does neglect. That ane of Reafon maift intelligent, This uther of Beifts following the EfFedt. XXXVI. FOR Vertue and Vyce. 49 XXXVI. FOR he that nold againft his vyl Lufts ftryve, But lives as Beifts of Knawlege fenfityve, Grows faft to Eild, and Death him fone owrehails: Thairfor the Mule is of a langer Lyfe Than the ftaind Horfe; alfo the barrand Wyfe Zouthfull appeirs, when that the Brudie fails: We alfo fe when Nature nocht prevails, The Pain and Dolour ar fae pungityve, Nae Medycyne the Patient then avails. XXXVII. / SEN our Intents baith we half fhawn thee thus, Cheis of us twae the maift delicious, Or to fuftene a fharp Adverfitie, Danting the Rage of Zouth-heid furious, And fyn pofles Triumphs innumerous, With hie Empyre, and lang Felicitie; Or haif ane Moment Senfualitie Of fulifh Zouth, in Lyf voluptous, And all thy Days full of fad Miferie. XXXVIII. PHE- 5 Vertue and Vyce. XXXVIII. PHEBUS be this his fyrie Cart did wry, Frae South to Weft declynand biflyly To dip his Steids into the Weftlin Main ; When ryfmg Damps owrefaild his Vifage dry With Vapours thick, and cluddet all the Sky, And Notus brym, the Wind meridian, With Wings donk, and Fedders full of Rain, Awakent me, that I could not efpy Quhilk of the twa was for his Lady tane. XXXIX. BUT fone I knew they were the Goddefles That came in Sleip to valiant Hercules, When he was zung, and free of every Lore, To Luft or Honour, Purtith or Riches, Quhair he contempnit Luft and Idlenefs, That he in VERTUE micht his Lyfe decore; Then Warks he did of maift excellent Glore; The mair increfst his painfull Biffinefs, His hie Triumphs and Loving was the more. A Bytand BALL AT on ivarlo Wives , That gar thalr Men live pinging Lives. I. "D E merry, Brethrene, ane and all, And fet all Sturt afide ; And every ane togither call To GOD to be our Gyd; For as lang lives the mirry Man, As dois the Wretch for ocht he can, When Deid him ftrakes, he wats na whan, And charges him to byde. II. THE Rich then fall not fpared be, Thocht they haif Gold and Land, Nor zit the Fair, for their Bewty, Cannot that Charge gainftand. Tho 5 2 A lytand Ballat, &c. Tho Wicht or Weak wald flee away, Nae Doubt but all maun Ranfom pay, Quhat Place or quhare can nae Man say, Be Se or zit be Land. III. THE mirryeft Man that leives on Lyfe, He fails upon the Se; For he knaws neither Sturt nor Stryfe, But blyth and glad is he: But he that has an evil Wyfe, Has Sour and Sorrow all his Lyfe, And that Man quilk leives ay in Stryf, How can he mirry be? IV. ANE evil Wyfe is the warft aught That ony Man can haif; For he may nevir fit in Saught, Unlefs he be her Slaif: But A bytand Ballat^ &c. 53 But of that Sort I knaw nane uther, Except a Cuckald or his Bruther; Sunt Lairds and Cuckalds altogither, May wifs their Wyves in Graif. V. BECAUSE thair Wyves haif Maiftery, That they dar naeways cheip, But gif it be in Privity, Quhen they are fail afleip j Ane mirry in thair Company, To them is worth baith Gold and Fie : A Menftrell neir coud dairthful be, Thair Mirth if he coud belt. VI. BUT of that Sort whilk I report, I knaw nane in this Ring : But we may all baith grit and fmall, Glaidly baith dance and fmg, Quha Sunt Lairds. Here is spelled with an S, as it ought, and not with a C, as many of the Englijb do. 54 A bytand Ballat, &c. Quha lifts not here to make gude Cheir, Perchance his Guids an uthir Yeir Be fpent, quhen he is brought to Beir, Quhen his Wyfe taks the Fling. VII. IT has been fene, that wyfe Women, After their Hufband's Deid, Has gotten Men has gart them ken, If they could bear a Laid. With a grene Sting, hes gart them bring The Geir that won was by a Dring ; And fyne gart all the Bairnies fing, Ramukloch in their Bed. VIII. THEN wad fcho fay, Alake this Day, For him that wan this Geir, Quhen I him had, I fkairfly faid, My Heart anes mak gude Cheir. Or I had letten him fpend a Plak, I lure haif witten him brake his Bak, Or els his Craig had gotten a Crak, Ower the Hicht of the Stair. IX. ZE A bytand Ballat, &c. 55 IX. ZE Niggarts then Example tak, And leir to fpend your awn, And with gude Freynds ay mirry mak, That it may well be knawn, That thou art he quha wan this Geir; And for thy Wyfe fe thou nocht fpair, With blyth Freynds ay to make Repair, Sae fall thy Worth be fliawn. X. FINIS quod I, quha sets not by The ill Wy ves of this Toun, Tho for Difpyte with me wald flyte, Gif thay micht put me doun. Gif they wald ken quha maid this Sang, Quhidder they will him heid or hang, Flemyings his Name quhair eir he gang, In Country and in Toun. ^uod FLEMYNG. Sets not by, Does not Value. Put doun, Murder. ROBIN V7^^^K\^X^>?^&?^ i/^*/^'/js"/^J > /t^*/M'^'''i**^*^*'j''/t v "^"^''^ ^ ^*^*^ ^'i '^ovJ/i \!'4N t '<.-4'..vV..vV..xi/ < .v!'i.v l '<.v l '>.^' < . -!'.>^''^'i> 1 ^'..!''>^'^<"^!''^l'.rV yy^^y^^^y^^^A^^ ROBIN and M A K Y N E, A PASTORAL. I. "D OB IN fat on the gude grene Hill, Keipand a Flock of Fie, Quhen mirry Makyne faid him till, O Robin rew on me. I half thee luivt baith loud and ftill, Thir Towmonds twa or thre ; My Dule in dern but gif thou dill, Doubtlefs bot Dreid I die. II. ROBIN replied, Now by the Rude, Naithirig of Luve I knaw, But keip my Sheip undir yon Wod, Lo quhair they raik on Raw. Quhat Dule In dern, Sorrow in fecret. Dill, ftill, calm, or mitigate. Raik on Raw, go apace in a Row. Robin and Makyne. 57 Quhat can have mart thee in thy Mude, Thou Makyne to me fchaw ? Or quhat is Luve, or to be lude ? Fain wald I leir that Law. III. THE Law of Luve gin thou wald leir, Tak thair an A, B, C j Be keynd, courtas, and fair of Feir, Wyfe, hardy, kind and frie, Sae that nae Danger do the deir, What dule in dern thou drie ; Prefs ay to pleis, and blyth appeir, Be patient, and privie. IV. ROBIN he anfwert her again, I wat not quhat is Luve, But I haif Marvell uncertain Quhat maks thee thus wanrufe. The Fair of Feir, of a fair and healthful Look. Robin and Makyne. The Wedderis fair, and I am fain; My Sheip gaes hail abuve, Gif we fould play us on the Plain, They wald us baith repruve. V. ROBIN tak tent unto my Tale, And do all as I reid ; And thou fall haif my Heart all hale, Eik and my Maidenheid : Sen GOD he fends Bute for Bale, And for Murning Remeid. I dern with thee, but give I dale, Doubtlefs I am but deid. VI. MAKTNE the Morn be this ilk Tyde, Gif ye will meit me heir, May be my Sheip may gang besyde, Quhyle we have liggd full neir ; But Wedderis, Weather's. It is to be noticed, that our Elders never apoftrophifed, yet by this one may judge that in every like Cafe they pronounced, as if fuch Vowels were cut off with an Apoftrophe: Without allowing this, many of their Lines will not be Numbers. Robin and Makyne. 59 But maugre haif I, gif I byde, Frae thay begin to fteir, Quhat lyes on Heart I will nocht hyd, Then Makyn mak gude Cheir. VII. ROBINthou reivs me of my Reft; I luve but thee alane. Makyne^ adieu^ the Sun goes Weft, The Day is neir-hand gane. Robin in Dule^I am fo dreft, That Luve will be my Bane. Makyne gae luve quhair eir ye liftj For Lemans I luid nane. VIII. ROBIN I ftand in fie a Style, I fich, and that full fair. Makyne I have been heir this quyle, At hame I wifh I were. Robin^ my Hinny, talk and fmyle, Gif thou will do nae mair. Makyne sum uther Man beguylej For hameward I will fare. IX. SYNE 60 Robin and Makyne, . IX. SYNE Robin on his Ways he went, As light as Leif on Tree : But Makyne murnt and made Lament, Scho trow'd him neir to fee. Robin he brayd attowre the Bent. Then Makyne cryd on hie, Now may thou fmg, for I am fhent! Quhat can ail Luve at me? X. MAKYNE went hame withouten fail, And weirylie could weip ; Then Robin in a full fair Dale AfTemblit all his Sheip, Be that fomepart of Makyns Ail, Outthrow his Heart coud creip, Hir faft he followt to aflail, And till her tuke gude keip. XL ABYD Brayd attowre the Bent, hafted over the Field. Tuke gude Keip, kept a clofe Eye upon her. Robin and Makyne. 61 XI. ABYD, abyd, thou fair Makyne, A Word for ony Thing; For all my Luve it fall be thyne, Withoutten departing, All hale thy Heart for till have myne, Is all my coveting; My Sheip quhyle Morn till the Hours Nyne, Will mifter nae keiping. XII. ROBIN, thou has heard fung and fay, In Jefts and Storys auld, The Man that will not when he may, Sail have nocht when he wald. I pray to Heaven baith Nicht and Day, Be eikd their Cares fae cauld, That prefTes firft with thee to play, Be Forreft, Firth or Fauld. XIII. MAKYNE, the Nicht is foft and dry, The Wether warm and fair, And the grene Wod richt neir hand by To walk attowre all where : There 62 Robin and Makyne. There may nae Janglers us efpy, That is to Luve contrair, Therm, Makyne^ baith you and I, Unfeen may mak Repair. XIV. ROBIN, that Warld is now away, And quyt brocht till an End, And neir again thereto perfay, Sail it be as thou wend ; For of my Pain thou made but Play, I Words in vain did fpend; As thou has done fae fall I fay, Murn on, I think to mend. XV. MAKTNE, the Hope of all my Heal, My Heart on thee is fet ; I'll evermair to thee be leil, Quhile I may live but lett, Never to fail as uthers feil, Quhat Grace fo eir I get. Robin , with thee I will not deal; ieu^ for this we met. XVI. MA- Robin and Makyne. 63 XVI. MAKTNE went hameward blyth enough, Outowre the Holtis Hair. Pure Robin murnd and Makyne leugh ; Scho fang, and he fichd fair: Scho left him in baith Wae and Wreuch, In Dolor and in Care, Keipand his Herd under a Heuch, Amang the rafhy Gair. Finis quod Mr. ROB. HENRYSON. Advice Advice to Man to enjoy his ain. I. TV/T AN, fen thy Lyfe is ay in Weir, And Deid is ever drawing neir, The Tyme unflker and the Place, Thyne ain Gude fpend quhile thou has Space. II. GIF it be thyne, thy felf it ufes, Gif it be not, thee it refufes, Another of thee Profit has, Then fpend thy ain quhile thou has Space. III. THOU may to Day have Gude to fpend, In haift to Morn may from it wend, And leive an uther thy Baggs to brace, Then fpend thy ain quhile thou has Space. IV. QUHILE Advice to Man to enjoy bis ain. 65 IV. QUHILE thou has Space, fe thou difpone That for thy Geir: quhen thou art gone, Nae Wicht ane other flay or chace, Enjoy t thy felf quhile thou has Space. V. SUM all his Days dryves owre in vain, Ay gatherand Geir with Greif and Pain, Is nevir glade at Zuk nor Pals; Thyne ain Gude fpend quhile thou has Space. VI. SYNE cums ane blythfome of his Sorrow, That for him prayd nor Even nor Morrow, And fangs it all with Merrynefs; Then fpend thy ain quhile thou has Space. VII. SUM gathers Gude, and ay it fpares, And after him cum braw young Airs, That his auld Thrift fets on an Ace, And fendft a Sheiring in fhort Space. VIII. ITS F 66 Advict to Man to enjoy his am. VIII. ITS juft all thyne that here thou fpends, And not all that on thee depends, But his to fpend it that has Grace; Then fpend thyn ain quhyle thou has Space. IX. TRUST not annother will do ye to, It that thy felf wald nevir doj For gif thou dois, ftrange is thy Cace ; Thine ain Gude fpend quhyle thou has Space. X. LUKE how the Bairn dois to the Mother, And tak Example be nane uther, That it not after be thy Cafe ; Sae fpend thy ain quhyle thou has Space. >uod DUMBAR. On 6 7 On a bonny Veffel called THE FLEMING / // BARK, belonging to Edinburgh. I. T HAVE a little FLEMING Berge Of cleanly Wark, and fcho is wichtj Quhat Pylot taks my Schip in Charge, Maun hald her cleanly, trim and ticht: Hir Hatches maun be handlit richt, With Steir Burd, Baburd, Luf and Lie; Scho will fail all the Winter Nicht, And nevir tak a Tellzevie. II. WITH ane even Keil afore the Wind, Scho is richt fairdy with a Sail; But at a Lufe fcho lyis behind, Gar heis her quhile her Howbands fkail j Draw 68 The Fleming Bark. Draw weil the tackle to her Tail, Scho will not mifs to lay zour Maft, To pump as aft as ze may fail, Ze will neir hald her Watter-faft. III. To coif hir aft, can do no ill, And talloun quhair the Flude-mark flows ; But gif fcho lekks, get Men of Skill To ftap the Holes laigh in the Hows : For faut of Hemp, tak hairy Tows, And Stane-balaft withouten other, In moonlefs Nichts it is nae Mows, Except a ftout Man fteir the Ruther. IV. A Veflell fair abune the Walter, And is but laitly reikit too, Quhairto till deave ze with hir Blatter Are nane fie in the Flot as fcho: Plum weil the Grund, quhat eir ze do, Hail on the Fore-fheit and the Blind ; Scho will tak in at Cap and Ko, Without fcho balaft be behind. V. NAE The Fleming Bark. 69 V. NAE Pedders Pak fcho will refufe, Altho hir Travel fcho fhoud tine, Nae Cuckold Carle or Carlings Pet, That dois their Corn and Catle trayn ; And quhere scho finds a Fallow fyne, He will be fraught free for a Sowfe, She carries nocht but Men and Wyne, And Bulion to the Cunzie-Houfe. VI. FOR Merchand Men I may haif Money, But nane fie as I wald defy re, And I am laith to mell with ony, To leif my Matter in the My re; That man that wirks beft for his Hyre Its he fall be my Marriner, But Nicht and Day he maunna tyre That fails my bonny Ballenger. VII. QUHEN Anker-hald nane can be fund, I pray you caft the Leid-lyne out; And gif ye cannot get the Ground, Steir be the Compafs, keep her Rout; Syne 7 'The Fleming Bark. Syne travers ftill, and lay about, And gar her top twiche Wind and Waw, When Anker dryves, there is nae Dout Thir tripand Tydes may tyne us a. VIII. Now is my pretty Pinnage ready, Abydand on fum Merchand Block, But be fcho empty, be our Lady, Scho will be kitle of her Dok; Scho will refufe nae Landwart Jok^ Tho he fhoud fraught her for a Crown : Thus fair ze weil, fays gude John Cok^ A nobil Sailor in this Toun. )uod SEMPLE. The 'The Defens of GrifTell Sandylands For ufing of hir felf contralr the Ten Commands^ Being In Ward for playing of the Loun With every one lift gife hir half a Croun. I. OERNITIOUS People, partial in Defpyte, Sufannas Juges, Sawers of Sedition, Zour cankert Council is the Caufe and Wyte, Bowftert with Pryde, and blinded with Ambition, Finding nae Cryme, nor haifing a Comiffion To hurt Dame Venus Virgins as ze do j Gif ze fae rafhly rin upon Sufpition, Ze may put others on the Pannell too. II. To Sandylands ze war ower-fair to fchame hir, Sen ze with Council quietly might command hir; Grit Fulis ze war with Fallows to defame hir, Haifing nae Caufe, b;it common Fame and Sklan der, Ouhen 7 2 The Defens ofGnffdl Sandylands. Quhen finding no Man in the Houfe neir hand hir, Exept a * Clerk of godly Converfation, Quhat gif befyde John Duries felf ye fand hir, Dar ze fufpe& the haly Congregation. III. ZOUR fleftily Confciens gars zou tak this Feir, Believe ze Virgins will be won fae fune, Na, GOD forbid, but Men may bourd as neir, And Women be nae war, quhen that is done, Had fcho bene * * * * That war a perelous Play, ane micht fufpe& them, But Lads and LafTes will meit after None, When Dick and Dune baith dow not correct them. IV. SEN Drunkards, Gluttons and contentious Men, Scheders of Blude, and Subje&s given to Greid, May not pofTefs, or Heavens high Hall get ben, As in the Byble daylie we may reid : Let * The MInifter, Beaton. Had fcho bene * * * * In fuch Places as are fo fullied or torn in our old Copies, that they cannot be read, we chufe rather to leave a Blank than fill them up, tho' they might be fupplied with fmall Difficulty. The Defens ofGnffdl Sandylands. 73 Let thir be weyd alyke, till every Leid, Syne Fornication placit amang the laif, Exempt zour felves throu all the Toun in Deid, Then luke how mony zou unmarkid haif. V. GIF ye belife not Betoun be his Word, In hir Defens, it cannot be refufit ; Let him that follows fecht it with the fword, Ane auntient Law quhen Ladyis are accufit. Are Minifters fie Men to be abufit, That knaw the Scripture and the Ten Commands ? Tho he and fcho wer in a Houfe inclufit, That fays not he fell foul on Sandylands. VI. As for the reft, I knaw not thair Vocation, Thair Lyfe and Manners ; but I heir Folk name Catholick Virgins of the Congregation, [them Syne were to tyne them, if ze wald obtein them : Quhat can ze fay, exept that ze haid fein them With rem in re all nakit, bot Adherance; Then tak a Bow-ftring,draw it down betwein them, And gif it flicks, that has an ill Appeirance. VII. ZE 74 T'he Defens o/'Griffell Sandylands. VII. ZE cative Clerks, that Colege ze frequentit Quhen ze were Wanflers of the wanton Band, Now ze are laimt frae Labour, I lamment it, Zour Piftols tuimt, and Backfprent like a Wand, Snap Wark, Adieu frae * And warfe than that, ze want zour pry ming Powder ; Then confciens cums with crukit Staff in Hand, Greitand for bygane bowing Back and Shouder. VIII. REMEMBER firft zour former Quality, And wrak nae Virgins with zour wilfull Weir; But gif ze do, then our Regality Has Power plainly then to replege them heir, Micht they win to the Girth, I tak nae Feir, Doun by the Canno-Croce I pray zou fend them, Where *Bannatyn has promift to cojnpeir, With lawfull Reafon ready to defend them. IX. ANE * Mr. Patrick. The Defens ofGriffdl Sandylands. 75 IX. ANE Caufe there is, thay cannot be convick, Ze had nae Power after the Sun was fet. The Provoft gave nae Charge to Gilbert Dick; The fpecial Thing that fould not bein forzet, They were not Thieves, nor yet condemt in Dett, Nor Red-hand tane, then was nae Caufe ze knaw, * But ze let Rukes and Gleds rin throu the Nett, And faiklefs Daws make fubject to the Law. ZOUR partial Juge we may declyne him to, But fet me doun the Parfon Penny cuik^ Or Sanders Guthrie fee quhat he can do : He kens the Law, and keeps zour ain Court- Buke: For Men of Law, I wait not quhere to luke : James Banantyne was anes a Man of Skill ; And gif he comes not there, I wifh we tuke, To keip our Dyet, Mes David MakgilL XI. QUHAT Little Villains muft fubmit to Fate, That great Ones may enjoy the World in State. 76 'The Defens o/'Griffell Sandylands. XL QUHAT Kimmer cafts the formeft Stane, lets fe, At thae poor Queans, ze wrangfully fufpeck For fklenting Bouts ; now better war let be, Than to begin and get zour felves a Geek, The greateft Fait I find in this Effeft; They baith tuke Pay, and put themfelves in Schame ; But quhen the Court cums to the Town, quhat We fall reftore them to their Stock again. [Reck, XII. IN zour Tolbuith fie Prifoners to plant, Will be receivd richt weil, ye may confider, Gude Captane Adam will not let them want Bedding, howbeid they fould lig all togidder. As for his Wife, I wald ye fould forbid her, Hir Eyndling Toits, I true ther be nae Danger, Becaufe his Back is larbour groun and lidder, Bot Underftanding now to treit a Stranger. XIII. THE greateft Greif I find, ze haif defamed Thir Luvers leil, and done their Friends but Lack, Becaufe thair Bands were juft to be proclaimd, Partys had met, and made a fair Contrack: But The Defens qfGnffell Sandylands. 77 But now alas the Men are loppen back; For oppen Sklander callt a fpeikand Deil, In grit Affairs ze had not bein fae (hack, About the ruleing of the Common-weil. XIV. To punifh Part is Partiality, To punifh all is hard to do indeid ; But fend them heir to our Regality, And we fall fee gif we can ferve their Neid ; This rural Ryme whaever likes to reid, To Dick and Dury 'tis directed plain, Quhere I offend them in my Landwart Leid, I fall be ready to reform again. )uod SEMPLE. THE The Battle of Harlaw, Fought en upon Friday, July 24, 1411, againft Donald of the. Ifles. I. Dunideir as I cam throuch, Doun by the Hill of Banochie^ Allangft the Lands of Garioch; Grit Pitie was to heir and fe The Noys and dulefum Hermonie, That evir that dreiry Day did daw, Cryand the Corynoch on hie, Alas ! alas ! for the Harlaw. II. I marvlit quhat the Matter meint, All Folks war in a fiery fairy : , I wift nocht quha was Fae or Freindj Zit quietly I did me carrie. But Battle of Harlaw. 79 But fen the Days of auld King Hairy Sic Slauchter was not hard nor fene, And thair I had nae Tyme to tairy, For Biffinefs in jfberdene. III. THUS as I walkit on the Way, To Inventry as I went, I met a Man and bad him ftay, Requeifting him to mak me quaint, Of the Beginning and the Event, That happenit thair at the Harlaw; Then he entreited me tak tent, And he the Truth fould to me fchaw. IV. Grit Donald of the Yles did claim, Unto the Lands of Rofs fum Richt, And to the Governour he came, Them for to haif gif that he micht : Quha Governor, Robert Duke of Albany, Uncle to King James I. The Account of this famous Battle may be feen in our Scots Hiftories. 8o Battle of Harlaw. Quha faw his Intereft was but flichtj And thairfore anfwerit with Difdain; He haftit hame baith Day and Nicht, And fent nae Bodward back again. V. BUT Donald richt impatient Of that Anfwer Duke Robert gaif, He vowd to GOD Omnipotent, All the hale Lands of Rofs to haif, Or ells be graithed in his Graif. He wald not quat his Richt for nocht. Nor be abufit lyk a Slaif, That Bargin fould be deirly bocht. VI. THEN haiftylie he did command, That all his Weir-Men fhould convene, Ilk an well harnifit frae Hand, To meit and heir quhat he did mein j He waxit wrath and vowit Tein, Sweirand he wald furpryfe the North, Subdew the Burgh of Aberdene, sj Angus , and all Fyfe^ to Forth. VII. THUS Battle of Harlaw. 81 VII. THUS with the Weir-men of the Ties, Quha war ay at his bidding bown, With Money maid, with Forfs and Wyls, Richt far and neir baith up and doun: Throw Mount and Muir, frae Town to Town, Allangft the Land of Rofs he roars, And all obey'd at his Bandown, Evin frae the North to Suthren Shears. . VIII. THEN all the Countrie Men did zield; For nae refiftans durft they mak, Nor offer Battill in the Feild, Be forfs of Arms to beir him bak; Syne they refolvit all and fpak, That beft it was for thair Behoif, They fould him for thair Chiftain tak, Believing weil he did them luve. IX. THEN he a Proclamation maid All Men to meet at Invernefs, Throw Murray Land to mak a Raid, Frae Arthurfyre unto Spey-nefs. And 82 Battle of Harlaw. And further mair, he fent Exprefs, To fchaw his Collours and Enfenzie, To all and findry, mair and lefs, Throchout the Boundis of Boyn and Enzie. X. AND then throw fair Strathbogie Land, His Purpofe was for to purfew, And quhafoevir durft gainftand, That Race they fhould full fairly rew. Then he bad all his Men be trew, And him defend by Forfs and Slicht, And promift them Rewardis anew, And mak them Men of mekle Micht. XI. WITHOUT Refiftans as he faid, Throw all thefe Parts he ftoutly paft, Quhair fum war wae, and fum war glaid, But Garioch was all agaft. Throw all thefe Feilds he fped him faft, For fie a Sicht was never fenej And then, forfuith, he langd at laft To fe the Bruch of Aberdene. XII. To Battle of Harlaw. 83 XII. To hinder this prowd Enterprife, The ftout and michty Erie of MARR With all his Men in Arms did ryfe, Even frae Curgarfto Craigyvar^ And down the fyde of Don richt far, Angus and Mearns did all convene To fecht, or DONALD came fae nar The Ryall Bruch of Aberdene. XIII. AND thus the Martial Erie of MARR, Marcht with his Men in richt Array, Befoir the Enemie was aware, His Banner bauldly did difplay. For weil enewch they kend the Way, And all thair Semblance weil they faw, Without all Dangir, or Delay, Came haiftily to the HARLAW. XIV. WITH MARR, Alexander Earl of Mar, Son of Alexander the Governour's Brother. 84 Battle of Harlaw. XIV. WITH him the braif Lord OGILVT, Of Angus Sherriff-principall, The Conftabill of gude Dunde^ The Vanguard led before them all. Suppofe in Number they war fmall, Thay firft richt bauldlie did purfew, And maid thair Faes befoir them fall, Quha then that Race did fairly rew. XV. AND then the worthy Lord SALTON, The ftrong undoubted Laird of DRUM, The ftalwart Laird of Lawrlftone^ With ilk thair Forces all and fum. PANMUIR with all his Men did cum, The Provoft of braif Aberdene^ With Trumpets and with Tuick of Drum, Came fchortly in thair Armour fchene. XVI. THESE with the Erie of MARR came on, In the Reir-ward richt orderlie, Thair Enemies to fett upon ; In awfull Manner hardily, Togither Battle o/'Harlaw. 8 5 Togither vowit to live and die, Since they had marchit mony Mylis For to fupprefs the Tyrannic Of douted DONALD of the Ties. XVII. BUT he in Number Ten to Ane, Richt fubtilie alang did ryde, With Malcomtofch and fell Maclean^ With all thair Power at thair Syde, Prefumeand on thair Strenth and Pryde, Without all Feir or ony Aw, Richt bauldlie Battill did abyde, Hard by the Town of fair HARLAW. XVIII. THE Armies met, the Trumpet founds, The dandring Drums alloud did touk, Baith Armies byding on the Bounds, Till ane of them the Feild fould bruik. Nae Help was thairfor, nane wald jouk, Ferfs was the Fecht on ilka Syde, And on the Ground lay mony a Bouk Of them that thair did Battill byd. XIX. WITH 86 Battle of Harlaw. XIX. WITH doutfum Victorie they dealt, The bliidy Battill laftit lang, Each Man his Nibours Forfs thair feltj The weakeft aft-tymes gat the Wrang: Thair was nae Mowis thair them amang, Naithing was hard but heavy Knocks, That Eccho maid a dulefull Sang, Thairto refounding frae the Rocks. XX. BUT Donalds Men at laft gaif back; For they war all out of Array. The Earl of MARRIS Men throw them brak, Purfewing fhairply in thair Way, Thair Enemys to tak or flay, Be Dynt of Forfs to gar them yield, Quha war richt blyth to win away, And fae for Feirdnefs tint the Feild. XXI. THEN Donald fled, and that full faft, To Mountains hich for all his Michtj For he and his war all agaft, And ran till they war out of Sicht; And Battle of Harlaw. 87 And fae of Rofs he loft his Richt, Thocht mony Men with him he brocht, Towards the Ties fled Day and Nicht, And all he wan was deirlie bocht. XXII. THIS is (quod he) the richt Report Of all that I did heir and knaw, Thocht my Difcourfe be fumthing fchort, Tak this to be a richt futhe Saw : Contrairie GOD and the Kings Law, Thair was fpilt mekle Chriftian Elude, Into the Battill of Harlaw; This is the Sum, fae I conclude. XXIII. BUT zit a bony Quhyle abyde, And I fall mak thee cleirly ken Quhat Slauchter was on ilkay Syde, Of Lowland and of Highland Men, Quha for thair awin haif evir bene: Thefe lazie Lowns micht weil be fpaird, Cheflit lyke Deirs into thair Dens, And gat thair Waiges for Rewaird. XXIV. MAL- 88 Battle of Harlaw. XXIV. MALCOMTOSH of the Clan Held Cheif, Macklean with his grit hauchty Heid, With all thair Succour and Releif, War dulefully dung to the Deid : And now we are freid of thair Feid, They will not lang to cum again ; Thoufands with them without Remeid, On Donalds Syd that Day war (lain. XXV. AND on the uther Syde war loft, Into the Feild that difmal Day, Chief Men of Worth (of mekle Coft) To be lamentit fair for ay. The Lord Saltoun of Rothemay^ A Man of Micht and mekle Main ; Grit Dolour was for his Decay, That fae unhappylie was flain. XXVI. OF the beft Men amang them was, The gracious gude Lord OGILVY y The Sheriff-principal of Angus; Renownit for Truth and Equide, For Battle of Harlaw. For Faith and Magnanimitie ; He had few Fallows in the Field, Zit fell by fatall Deftinie, For he nae ways wad grant to zield. XXVII. SIR "James Scrimgeor of Duddap^ Knicht, Grit Conftabill of fair Dunde^ Unto the dulefull Deith was dicht, The Kingis cheif Banner-man was he, A valziant Man of Chevalrie, Quhais Predeceflbrs wan that Place At Spey^ with gude King WILLIAM frie, Gainft Murray and Macduncans Race. XXVIII. GUDE Sir Allexander Irving, The much renownit Laird of Drum, Nane in his Days was bettir fene, Quhen they war femblit all and fum ; To praife him we fould not be dumm, For Valour, Witt and Worthynefs, To end his Days he ther did cum, Quhois Ranfom is remeidylefs. XXIX. AND 9 Battle of Harlaw. XXIX. AND thair the Knicht of Lawrlfton Was flain into his Armour fchene, And gude Sir Robert Davtdfon^ Quha Proveft was of Aberdene^ The Knicht of Panmure^ as was fene, A mortall Man in Armour bricht, Sir Thomas Murray ftout and kene, Left to the Warld thair laft gude Nicht. XXX. THAIR was not fen King Keneths Days Sic ftrange intefline crewel Stryf In Scotland fene, as ilk Man fays, Quhair mony liklie loft thair Lyfe ; Quhilk maid Divorce twene Man and Wyfe, And mony Childrene fatherlefs, Quhilk in this Realme has bene full ryfej LORD help thefe Lands, our Wrangs redrefs. XXXI. IN y#/y, on Saint James his Even, That Four and twenty difmall Day, Twelve hundred, ten Score and eleven Of Zeirs fen CHRYST, the Suthe to fay: Men will remember as they may, Quhen thus the Veritie they knaw, And mony a ane may murn for ay, The brim Battil of the Harlaw. Ane 9 l ^^^ BALL AT of the fenziet Frier of Tungland, How he fell In the Myre fleand to Turkland. I. A S zung Auror with Chryftal Hail, In Orient fchewd hir Vifage pail, A fwenyng Swyth did me afTail, Of Sonis of Sathanis Seid ; Methocht a Turk of Tartary^ Come throw the Bounds of Barbary, And lay forloppin in Lombardy Full lang, in Watchmans Weid. II. FRAE An Account of this Friar, who was an Italian, may be feen in Mr. Lefty's Hiftory. K. James IV. made him Abbot of Tungland: He pretended and attempted to make Gold out of other Mettalsj but failing of that, he next gave out, That he could fly, and very boldly appointed the Day and Place, which was from Stir/ing-CaMe, where the King and many Spectators faw him throw himfelf with his large Wings from the Rock, and break his Thigh-bone. 9 2 The Frier of Tungland. II. FRAE baptafmg for to efchew, Thair a religious Man he flew, And cled him in his Habeit new, For he couth wryte and reid. Quhen kend was his Diffimulance, And all his curfit Governance; For Feir he fled, and come in France, With litill Lombard Leid. III. To be a Leiche he fenyt him thair, Quhilk mony micht rew evirmair, For he left nowthir fick nor fair Unflane, or he hyne zed : Vane-Organs he full cleinly carvit, Quhen of his Straik fae mony ftarvit, Dreid he had got quhat he defarvit, He fled away gude Speid. IV. IN Scotland then the narreft Way He come, his Cunning till aflay; To fum Men thair it was nae Play, The preiving of his Sciens. In Frier of Tungland. 93 In Pottingrie he wrocht grit Pyne, He murdreift mony in Medecyne, The Jew was of a grit Engyne, And generit was of Gyans. V. IN Leich-craft he was homecyd, He wald haif for a Nicht to byd, A Haiknay and the Hurtmans Hyd, Sae mekle he was of Myance. His Yrons was rude as ony Rawchter, Quhair he leit Blude, it was nae Lauchter; Full mony an Inftrument for Slauchter Was in his Gardevyance. VI. HE couth gif Cure for Laxatyve, To gar a wicht Horfe want his Lyfe, Quha eir aflay wald Man or Wyfe, Thair Hipps zied hiddy-giddy. His Pra&icks neir war put to Preif, Bot fudden Deid or grit Mifchief; He had Purgation to mak a Thief To die without a Widdy. VII. UNTO 94 The Frier of Tungland. VII. UNTO nae Mefs eir preft this Prekt, For Sound of facring Bell nor Skellat, As Blackfmyth brukit was his Pallat, For batting at the Study. Thocht he come hame a new maid Channoun. He had difpenfit with Matynis Cannoun On him come nowdir Stole nor Fannoun, For fmuking of the Smydy. VIII. METHOCHT feir Faflbnis he aflailziet To mak the Quinteflance, and failziet ; And when he faw that nocht availziet, A Fedrem on he tuke : And fchupe in Turkic for to flie, And quhen that he did mont on hie, All Fowl ferliet quhat he fould be, That did upon him luke. IX. SUM held he had bene Dedalus, Sum the Minotaur marvellous, And fum the Smyth of Mars, Vulcanus, And fum Saturnus Kuke. And The Frier of Tungland. 95 And ay the Cufchetts at him tuggit, The Ruiks him rent, the Ravyns druggitj The hudit Craws his Hair furth ruggit, The Hevin he micht not bruke. X. THE Mytane and Saint Martyns Fowl Wend he had bene the hornit Howie j They fet upon him with a Zowle, And gaif him Dynt for Dynt. The Golk, the Gormaw, and the Gled, Beft him with Buffets till he bled; The Spar-halk to the Spring him fped, As ferfs as Fyre off Flint. XI. THE Tarfall gaif him Tug for Tug, A Stanchell hang in ilka Lug, The Pyot furth his Pens did rug, The Stork ftraik ay bot Stynt. The Biffart biffy bot Rebuke, Scho was fae cleverous of her Cluke, His B s he micht nae langer bruke, Scho held them at a Hynt. XII. THICK 96 The Frier of Tungland. XII. THICK was the Cloud of Kayis and Crawis, Of Marlzeons, Mittains, and of Mawis, That bikkirt at his Baird with Blawis, In Battill him about. They nybillt him with dinfome Cry, The Rerd of them raife to the Sky, And evir he cryd on Fortune, Fy, His Lyfe was into Dowt. XIII. THE Jae him fkrippit with a Skryke, And fkornit him as it was lyk, The Egill ftrong at him did ftryk, And rawcht him mony a Rout. For Feir uncunnandly he cawkit, Quhyle all his Penns wer drownt and drawkit, He maid a hundreth Nolt all hawkit, Beneath him with a Spowt. XIV. HE fchure his Feddreme that was fchene, And flippit out of it full clene, And in a Myre, up to the Ene, Amang the Glar did glyd. The 'The Frier of Tungland. 97 The Fowlis all at the Fedreme dang, As at a Monfter, them amang, Quhyle all the Penns of it outfprang Intill the Air full wyde. XV. AND he lay at the Plunge eirmair, Sae langs he hard a Ravin rair; The Craws him focht with Crys of Cair In every Schaw befyde. Had he reveild bene to the Ruiks, They had him riven with thair Cluiks : Thre Days in Dubs amang the Duiks, He did with Dirt him hyde. XVI. THE Air was dirkint with the Fowls, That came with Zawmers and with Zowls, With Skryking, Skryming, and with Scouls To tak him in the Tyde. I walknit with the Noyfs and Schout, Sic hydious Beir was me about, Senfyne I curft that cankirt Rout, Quaireir I gang or ryde. Finis quod DuNBAR. r y d- H TYDINGS frae the SESSION. I. A MURELANDS Man of Uplands Mak, At Hame thus to his Nychbour fpak, What Tydings, Goflip, Peice or Weir? The tother rounit in his Eir, I tell zou this under Confeffion, But laitly lichtit affmy Meir, I come of Edinburgh frae the Seffion. II. QUHAT Tydings hard ze thair, I pray zou? The tother anfwert, I fall fay zou, Keip this all fecreit, gentil Brothir, Is nae Man thair that trefts ane uther : ' A common Doer of Tranfgreffion, Of Innocents preveins a Futher : Sic Tydings hard I at the Seffion. III. SUM Ty dings frae the Seffion. 99 III. SUM with his Maik, rowns him to pleis, That envyous wald byt aff his Neis ; His Fae him by the Oxter leids; Sum Patters with his Mouth on Beids, That has his Mynd all on Oppreffion : Sum becks full law, and fchaws bair Heids, Wald luke full heich war not the Seffion. IV. SUM bydand Law, lays I/and in Wed j Sum fuperexpendit gaes to Bed, Sum fpeids, caufe he in Court has Meins, Sum of Partiality compleins, How Feid and Favour fleims Difcretion : Sum fpeiks full fair and falfly feins; Sic Things I hard and faw at Seffion. V. SUM Summonds cafts, and fum excepts, Sum ftand befyd and fkaild Law kepps j Sum is delayd, fum wins, fum tynes; Sum maks him merry at the Wynes ; Sum is put out of his Pofleffion; Sum herrit, and on Credance dynes j Sic Tydings hard I at the Seffion. VI. SUM ioo 'Tydings frae the Sefflon. VI. SUM fweirs, and gaes clein up with GOD, Sum in a Lamb-lkin is a Tod, Sum in his Tung his Kindnefs turfes, Sum cuts at Throats, and fum pyks Purfes : Sum gaes to Gallows with Proceflion ; Sum fains the Seit, and fum them curfes; Sic Tydings hard I at the Seflion. VII. RELIGIOUS Men of divers Places, Cum thair to wou, and fee fair Faces, Baith Carmelites and Cordiliers^ To Gemer cum, and get mae Friers, Unmindful of thair cheft Profeffion, The zunger at the elder leirs j Sic Tydings hard I at the Seflion. VIII. THAIR cums zung Monks of hie Complexion, Of Mynd devote, Luve and Affection; And in the Court thair het Flefh dant, Full Father-lyk, with Pech and Pant : They are fae humble of Interceflion, Thair Errand all kynd Women grant : Sic Tydings hard I at the Seflion. IX. SUM Tydings frae the Seffion. I01 IX. SUM honeft Lords adorn the Bench, Sum mynds nocht but his Wine and Wench j Sum has Law Learning of his awin, Sum wants and lippens to his Man, In ilka Caufe to get a LefTon; Sum cankirt girns, be Party thrawin, And fleims fair Juftice frae the Seffion. X. THE Advocates I may nocht wyte, Nor yet the Lads that Lybalds wryte; For its thair Craft, and they maun fen, This has nae Spevie in his Pen, Nor that a Palfie in Expreffion j But weil I wate an of ilk Ten, Micht very weil gane all the Seffion. ghiod DUNBAR. 102 Generall SATTRE. I. TP\EvoRiT with Dreim devifing in my Slumber, How that this Realm with Nobles out of Number, Gydit, provydit fae mony Years has bene; And now fie Hunger, fie Cowarts, and fie Cumber, Within this Land was nevir hard nor fene. II. Sic Pryd with Prelats, fae few to preich and pray ; Sic hunt of Harlots, with them baith Nicht and Day, They that fould have ay thair GOD afore thair Ene, Sae nyce in Array, fae ftrange to thair Abay, Within this Land was nevir hard or fene. III. SAE A generall Satyre. 103 III. SAE mony Preifts cled up in fecular Weid, With blafmg Breifts r cafting thair Clais abreid; It is no Neid to tell of quhome I mein, To quhome the Creid and Teftament to reid Within this Land was nevir hard nor fene. IV. SAE mony Maifters, fae mony gowckit Clerks, Sae mony Waifters, to GOD and all His Warks, Sic fyrie Sparks, difpytful frae the Splene, Sic lofin Sarks, fae mony Glengore Marks, Within, &V. V. SAE mony Lords, fae mony naturale Fules, That better accords, to play them at the Trules, Nor feis the Dules, that commons did fuftene. New tane frae Schules, fae mony Anis and Mules, Within, fcfc. VI. SAE meikle Treaflbn, fae mony partial Saws, Sae little Reafon, to help the common Caufe, That all the Laws are not fet by ane Bene, Sic fenziet Flaws, fae mony waftit Waws, Within, &V. VII. SAE I0 4 A general! Satyre. VII. SAE mony Theivs and Murderers well kend, Sae grit Releivs of Lords them till deffend, Becaufe they fpend the Pelf them betwene, Sae few till wend this Mifcheif till amend, Within, &V. VIII. THIS to correct, they fhore with mony Cracks, But fmall the Effect of Speir or bartar Ax, [kein, Quhen Courage lacks, that fuld the Corfs mak Sae mony Jacks, and Brats on Beggars Baks, Within, &c. IX. Sic Vant of Wouftours,with Hearts in fmful Satures, Sic brawland Bofters, degenerate frae thair Natures, And fie Regratours, the pure Man to prevene ; Sae mony Traytors, fae mony Rubeators, Within, t3c. X. SAE mony Juges, and Lords new made of late, Sae fmall Refuges, the pure Man to debate; Sae mony Eft ate, for common Weil fae quhene, Owre all the Gate, fae mony Theives fa tait, Within, &fV. / XI. SAE A genera// Satyr e. 105 XL SAE mony a Sentance retreitit for to win Geir and Aquentance, or Kyndnefs of thair Kin; Thay think nae Sin, quhair Proffit cums betwene Sae mony a Gin, to haift them to the Pin, Within, fcfV. XII. Sic Knavis and Crakkars, to play at Cards and Dyce, Sic Haland-Shakers, quhilk ate Cowkelbys Gryce, Ar halden of Pryce, when Lymers do convene j Sic Store of Vyce, sae mony Witts unwyfe, Within, &ff . XIII. SAE mony Merchands, fae mony ar menfworne, Sic pure Tennands, fie curfing Ein and Morn, Quhilk flays the Corn, and Fruit that grows grene; Sic Skaith and Skorn, fae mony Paitlaits worn, Within, fcfr. XIV. SAE mony Rackets, fae mony Ketch Pillars, Sic Balls, fie Nackets, and fie Tutivilaris, And fie Ill-willars, to fpeik of King and Quene, Sic Pudding-fillars, defcending doun frae Millars, Within, &c. XV. Sic io6 ^ generall Satyr e. XV. Sic Fardingails on Flags as fat as Quhails, Fattit lyk Fouls, with Hatts that nocht avails, And fie foul Tails, to fweip the Caufy clene, The Duft up fails, fae mony with uck fails Within, 3V. XVI. SAE mony a Kitty, dreft up in Golden Chenze, Sae few witty, that weil can Fables fenze, With apil Renze, ay fliawand her Golden Chene \ Of Sathans Senzie fure fie an unfall Menzie Within this Land was nevir hard nor fene. ^uod DUNBAR. Wife Wife SAYINGS. TT that I gife, I haif, It that I len, I craif, It that I fpend, is myne, It that I leif, I tyne : Get and faif, and thou fait haif, Len and grant, and thou fait want ; Wha in his Plenty taks not Heid, He fall haif Fait in Tyme of Neid : When eir I lend, I am a Friend, And whan I craif, I am unkynd; Thus of my Friend, I mak a Fae, I Ihrew me, gif I mair do fae. A zung Man Chiftane, wittles, A pure Man Spendar, gettles, Ane auld Man Trechour, truthlefs, A Woman Lowpar, landlefs ; Be gude Saint G/V/, Sail nevir ane of thir do weil. THE io8 THE COMPLAINT. An EPISTLE to bis Mijlrefs on the Force of LUVE. I. /~\UHAIR Luve is kendlit comfortlefs, "^ Ther is nae Fever half fae fell, Frae Cupid keift his Dart begefs, I had nae Hap to faif my fell, Lyk as my wofull Heart can tell, My inwart Pains and Siching fair; For weil I wat the Pains of Hell Unto my Pain can nocht compair. II. FOR Complaint to his Miftrefs. II. FOR ony Malledy, ze ken, Except peuir Luve, or than ftark Deid, Help may be had frae Hands of Men, Throw Medicines to mak Remeid : For Harms of Body, Hands or Held, The Pottingars will purge the Pains; But all the Members are at Feid, Quhair that the Law of Luve remains. III. As Tantalus in Walter ftands, To ftanche his thrifty Appetyte, Bewailing Body, Heid and Hands, The River fleis him in Difpyte ; Sae does my lufty Lady qwhyte, She fleis the Place where I repair : To hungry Men is fmal Delyte To twitch the Meit, and eit nae mair. IV. THE nar the Flame, the hetter Fyre, The mair I pyne, zet I perfew, The mair enkindlis my Difyre, Frae I behald her heavenly Hew; Pure no Complaint to his Miftrefs. Pure Ptramus himfelf he flew, Made Saul and Body to diflaver, He diet but anes, farwel, adiew, I daylie die, and zet dies never. V. ZiT Jafon did enjoy Medea, And Thefeus gat his Adriane, Dido diflaved was with Enea, And Demophoy his Lady wan ; Gif Women trowd fie Traytors than, For till enjoy the Fruits of Luve, Quhy wald ze flay zour faikles Man, Quha never mynds for to remuve. VI. THOCHT ferfs AMI, that worthie Knicht, Was flain for Luve, the Suthe to fay, Leander on a ftormy Nicht Diet fleitand on the Bilious gray; Thocht Troyalus he langourt ay, Still waitand for his Luves Return, Had not fie Pyne (thairs was but Play) As daylie does my Body burn. VII. As Complaint to his Mijlrefs. in VII. As Pol to Pylatts does appeir Far brichtar than the Stars about, Sae does zour Vifage fhine as cleir As Rofe amang the rafkal Rout; War Paris leivand now, bot Dout, And had the Golden Ball to ferve, I wate he wald fune wail zou out, And leif baith Venus and Minerve. VIII. Now Paper pas, and at her fpeir, Gif pleife her Prudence to imprint it ? My faithfull Heart I fend it heir, In Signe of Paper I prefent it; Wad GOD my Body war foment it, That I micht ferve hir Grace bot Glammer, To be hir Knaif I am contentit, Or fmalleft Varlet of hir Chammer. uod ALEX'. SCOT. THE THE Auld Mans inveighing againft Mouth - Thanklefs. I. A NE agit Man twyce Forty Zeirs, After the haly Days of Zule, I hard him carp amang the Freirs, Of Order gray, makand grit Dule, Richt as he war a furious Fule; Aft-tymes he ficht, and faid Alace ! Be Claud my Care may nevir cule, That I fervt evir. Mouth-thanklefe. II. THROCH Ignorance, and Folly, Zouth, My Preterit Tyme I wald neir fpair, Plefance to put into that Mouth, Till Aige faid, Fule, let be thy Fare, And Auld Mans inveighing And now my Heid is quhyt and Hair, For feiding of that fowmart Face, Quhairfor I murn baith late and air, That I fervt evir Mouth-thanklefs. III. SILVER and Gold that I micht get Beifands, Brotches, Robes and Rings, Frelie to gife, I wald nocht let, To pleife the Mulls attour all Things. Right as the Swan for Sorrow fings, Before her Deid a little Space, Richt fae do I, and my Hands wrings, That I fervt evir Mouth-thanklefs. IV. BETTIR it were a Man to ferve With Honour brave beneath a Sheild, Nor her to pleis, thocht thou fould fterve, That will not luke on thee in Eild, Frae that thou has nae Hair to heild Thy Heid frae harming that it hes, Quhen Pen and Purfe and all ar peild, Tak then a Meis of Mouth-thanklefs. V. IT Agalnft Moutb-thanklefs. "7 V. IT may be in Example fene, The Grund of Truth wha underftude, * Frae in thy Bag thou beirs thyne Een, Thou gets nae Grace but for thy Gude, At Venus Clofet, to conclude, Call ze not this a cankert Cafe : Now GOD help and the haly Rude, And keip all Men frae Mouth-thanklefs. VI. O brukil Zouth in Tyme behald, And in thy Heart thir Words gae graif, Or thy Complexion gather Cauld, Amend thy Mifs, thy felf to faif, The Blifs abune gif thou wald haif, And of thy Gilt Remit and Grace. All this I hard an auld Man raif, After the Zule, of Mouth-thanklefs. Quod KENNEDY. * Makes use of Spectacles. THE u8 ^^c^Tii^^f^T^^r^^r^ The Soutar defcryvit by the Tailzior. i. '"PHou leis Loun, thou leis, thou leis, Zone are Soutars that thou feis, Kneiland full lawly on thair Kneis, Thair Gods till adorn. Be Saint Girnega^ that grim Ghaift, To hale ther HairfnefTes on haift, Of moltin Tauch thay tak a Teft On Monandays at Morn. II. To hald them halefome at the Heart, Sum of fat Uly fpews a Quart, Uthers a Pynt for thair awn Part, Of foul Soutars Blek, Thus The Soutar defer yvit. Thus fum fits, and fum fews, Sum byts the Birs, fum Uly fpews, And he keips ay beft his Kews, Spouts in his Nichbours Nek. III. OF Tauch or Uly when thay want, Sir Girnega will give a Gant, And bok a Pynt at ilka Pant, And dr them Roset rowth. Wald Man and Wyf all do as I, When eir we faw them we fould cry, Fy on them, fich ! and fy ! fy ! fy ! Thay fyle the Wind in trowth. THE 120 THE Soutars Anfwer to the Tailzior. i. clatterand Kenfy, Kuckold Knaif, Blafphemand Baird in thy Backbyting, Of me thou fall an Anfwer half, Fumart cum forth, and face my Flyting, Warfe than a Warlo in thy Wry ting; Thou Sathans Seid ay fet to Evil, Mandrag, Memerkyn, mifmade Myting, I fall thee conjure lyk the Devil. II. FY on the Tailzior never trew, Frae Claith weil can thou cleik a Clout, Of Stomoks ftown baith red and blew, A Bag fou anes thou bore about. They The Soutars Anfwer. I21 They followt thee with Cry and Shout, Hey, hald the Thief that ftaw the Claith ; Thou will be hangt, haif thou nae Dout, For mony prefumptous forfworn Aith. III. AMANG the Wyves it fall be witten Thou was ane Knakat in the Way, For loufy Seims that thou haft bitten, Thy Gumes are giltin grein and gray; Thy Couch is on a Sonk of Strae, Peild Prick-loufe of a Pudding Price, Breik Boutcher on a Suny Brae; Wae worth thee Wirryar of quhyt Lyce. IV. THOU zeid with Elwand, Sheir and Thymbill, Full mony a Day feikand thy Craft; For Halfpenies thy Hand zeid nimble, Grit Blads and Bitts thou ftaw full aft ; Quha delt with thee thay wer full daft, For on thy Back, as all Men kens, Wer broken mony a gude Ax Shaft, For wrangus Geir of uther Mens. V. THY 122 The Soutars Anfwer. V. THY Wyfe fcho wont a Man fhe gat Of thee, quhen that thou was well brankit, And fcho gat but ane Cur Knakat, A foul Taid Carle, all Tailzior fhankit, For Clais that thou mifmade and mankit, Thou dar not dwell wher thou was born; Zet afterwart thou fall be hankit Betwixt Kirkaldy and Kingorne. g)uod STEWART. "D ETWIX twa Tods a crawing Cok, Betwix twa Friers a Maid in her Smok, Betwix twa Cats a Mous, Betwix twa Tailziors a Lous; Schaw me, gude Sir, not as a Stranger, Quhilk of thir Fours in griteft Danger ? ANSWER. Foxis ar fell at crawing Coks, Friers are fers at Maids in thair Smoks, Cats ar cautelus in taking Myce, Tailziors ar Tyrrans in killing Lyce. 123 A BALL AT made to the Scorn and Deri/ion of 'wanton Women. I. yPE lufty Ladyis, luke The rackles Lyves ze leid, Haunt nocht in Hole or Nuke, To hurt zour Womanheidj I red, for beft Remeid, Forbeir all Place prophane j Gif this be Caufe of Feid, I fall not fayt again. II. QUHAT is fie Luve but Luft, A lytill for Delyte, To hant that Game robuft, And beiftly Apetyte ; I now- In Deri/ion of 'wanton Women. I nowther fleich nor flyte, But Veritie tell plain; Tak ye this in Defpyte, I fall not fayt again. III. THE wyfeft Scho may fone Seducit be and fchent, Syne frae the Deid be done, Perchance fall fair repent ; Ower late is to lament, Frae Belly dow not lane, Therfor in Tyme tak tent : I fall not fayt again. IV. LIGHT Wenches Luve will fawin, Evin lyke a Spanzeolis Lauchter, Be them, lift Geir bechaucht hir; For Conzie ze may caucht hir, p o * * * And nevir fpeir quhais aucht hir; I fall not fayt again. V. THOCHT In Deri/ton of wanton Women. I2 5 V. THOCHT bruckle Women Hants In Luft to leid their Lyvis, And Widdow Men that wants To fteil a Pair of Wy vis ; But quhere that marriet Wyvis Gaes by thair Hufbands Bane, That Houfhald nevir thryvis, I fayt, and fayt again. VI. IT fets not Maidens als To let Men lowfe thair Lace, Nor clym about Mens Hals, To clap, to kifs, and brace, Nor round in fecret Place ; Sic Treatment is a Train To cleave thair Quaver-Cafe, And breid them Dule and Pain. VII. FAREWEIL with Cheftetie, Frae Wenches fall a Chucking, Thair follows Things thre, To gar them gae a Gucking, Imbracing, 120 In Deri/ion of wanton Women. Imbracing, Tigging, Plucking j Thir foure the Suth to fane, Enforfis them * * * I fall not fayt again. VIII. SUM lykes new cum to Toun, With Jeigs to mak them joly, Sum lykes danfs up and doun To miefs thair Melancholy; Sum lykes Sang, troly loly, And fum of rigging fain; Lyk Fillocks full of Foly, With litle Gier thair ain. IX. SUM Mune-brunt Maidens myld, At None-tyde of the Nicht, Are chapit up with Chyld, Bot Coal or Candle-licht j Sua EnforJIs them * * * "Pis not impoflible but a complete Copy of this old Ballad may be found to fupply thefe few Blanks. In Deri/ion of wanton Women. 127 Sua fum faid, Mayds has Slicht To play, and tak nae Pane, Syne fchift thair fells frae Sicht, I fall not fayt again. X. SUM thinks nae Schame to clap And kifs in open Ways; Sum cannot keip her ap Frae lanfing, as fcho lyes; Sum goes fae gymp in Gyfe, Or fcho war kiffd, but plain, Scho leur be married thryis, And thre Tymes thryis again. XI. MAIR Gentrice is to jot Undir a Silkin Goun, Than with quhyt Pettycot And redyar ay boun, The denkeft foneft doun, The faireft but refrain, The gayeft greateft Loun, But dinna tellt again. XII. THE In Deri/ion of 'wanton Women. XII. THE moir degeft and grave, The grydiar * * * The nyceft to reflave Upon thair * * * The quhytlieft will quhipit, And nocht thair * * * The lefs, the larger hippitj I fall not fayt again. XIII. Lo Ladyis gif this be, A gude Counfale I geife zou, To fave zour Honeftie, Frae Sklander to releife zou ; But Ballats mae to breif zou, I will not break my Brain, Suppofe ze fould mifcheive you, I fall not fayt again. g)uod SCOTT. On 129 On the Uncertainty of Life and Fear of Death ^ or a Lament for the Lofs of the Poets. I. /~\UR Pleafance heir is all vain Glory, This Warld falfe but tranfatory; The Flefh is bruckle, the Feynd is flie, Timor mortis conturbat me. II. THE State of Man dois change and vary, Now found, now feik, now blyth, now fary, Now danfand merry, now lyk to die, Timor mortis conturbat me. III. No State in all the Eard ftands ficker, But as the Weft- Wind wavis the wicker, Sae wanes this warldly Vanity, Timor mortis, &c. IV. DOUN Lament for the Lofs of the Poets. IV. DOUN to the Death gois all Eftates, Princes, Prelates and Potentates, Baith rich and pure of all Degree, Timor, &c. V. HE taks the Knichts into the Feild, Enarmed under Helm and Sheild, He Viftor is at all mellie, Timor, &c. VI. THAT ftrang invynfable Tyrrand Taks, on the Muthers Rreift fuckand, The Babe, full of Benignkie, Timor, &c. VII. HE taks the Campion in the Stour, The Captain clofd within the Towir, The Lady in Bowre, full of Bewtie, Timor, &c. VIII. HE Lament for the Lofs of the Poets, 13* VIII. HE fpares no Lord for his Pufiance, Nor Clerk for his Intelligence j His awfull Strake may no Man flee, Timor, &c. IX. ART Magicians and Aftrologs, Rethoris, Logitians, Theologs, Get Help frae nae Conclufions flee, Timor , &c. X. IN Medecyne the moft Pra&itians, Leiches, Surrigians and Phefitians, Themfelves frae Death may not fupplie, Timor, &c. XL I fee the Makkars, mang the laif, Plays here thair Padzians, fyne goes to Graif ; Not fpairt is thair fweit Facultie, Timor, &c. XII. HE Lament for the Lofs of the Poets. XII. HE has done petoufly devore, The nobil *Chawfer of Makkars Flowir, The Monk of Berry and Gower all thre, Timor mortis conturbat me. XIII. THE gude Sr Hew of Egllntoun^ Etrick^ Heriot and Winton^ He has tane out of this Countrey, Timor , &c. XIV. THAT Scorpion fell has done infek, Maifter John Clerk and James Affleck^ Frae Ballat making and Tragedy, ^ &c. XV. Ho- * 'Tis worthy of Notice how generoufly Mr. Dunbar pays his Refpedfe to the Memory of the renowned Chaucer, Gower and Lidgate, before he names his own Country Poets. Lament for the Lofs of the Poets. XV. Holand and Barbor he has bereft, Allace ! that he not with us left Sr JVLungo Lockhart of the Lte^ Timor mortis conturbat me. XVI. CLERK, of Tranent eik he has tane, That made the Aventers of Sr Gawane^ Sr Gilbert Gray endit has he, Timor^ &c. XVII. HE has Blind Hary and Sandy Trail Slain with his Shot of mortall Hail, Quhilk Patrick Johnfon micht not flie, Timor^ &c. XVIII. HE has reft Merfar his Indyte, That did in Luve fo lyflie wryte, So fchort, fo quick, of Sentens hie, Timor, &c. XIX. HE J 34 Lament for the Lofs of the Poets. XIX. HE has tane Row I of Aberdene, And gentle Row I of Corftorphyne ; Twa bettir Fallows did no Man fie, Timor mortis conturbat me. XX. IN Dumfermling he has tane Broun, With gude Mr. Robert Henry fon; Sr John the Rofs imbraift has he, Timor, &c. XXI. AND he has now tane, laft of aw, The gentle Stobo and htintene Schaw, Of quhome all Wichts has grit Pitie, Timor, &c. XXII. AND Mr. Walter Kennedy In Poynt of Death lyes werelyj Grit Rewth it wer that fo fould be, Timor, &c. XXIII. SEN POSTSCRIPT. 135 XXIII. SEN he has all my Brethren tane, He will not let me leive alane ; On Forfs I maun his nixt Prey be, Timor ^ &c. XXIV. SEN for the Death Remeid is none. Beft is that we for Death difponej Aftir our Death, that live may we, Timor mortis conturbat me. POSTSCRIPT. XXV. O UTHE I forfie, if Spae-craft had, Frae Hethir-Muirs fall ryfe a LAD, Aftir twa Gentries pas, fall he Revive our Fame and Memorie. XXVI. THEN i3 6 POSTSCRIPT. XXVI. THEN fall we flourifh EVIR GRENE ; All Thanks to carefull Bannantyne^ And to the *PATRON kind and frie, Quha lends the LAD baith them and me. XXVII. FAR fall we fare, baith Eift and Weft, Owre ilka Clyme by Scots pofleft j Then fen our Warks fall nevir die, Timor mortis non turbat me. )uod STEWART. On I. f~*OD by His Word His Wark began, To form this Erth and Hevin for Man, The Sie and Watter deip; The Sun, the Mime and Stars fae bricht, The Day devydit from the Nicht, Thair Courfes juft to keip; The Beifts that on the Grund do muve, And Fifties in the Sie; Fowls in the Air to flie abuve, Of ilk Kind formed HE: Sum creiping, fum fleiting, Sum fleing in the Air, Sae heichly, fae lichtly, In muving heir and thair. II. THIR M the Creation, II. THIR Warks of gret Magnificence, Perfytit by His Providence, According to His Will: Nixt He made Man; To gife him Glore, Did with His Image him decore, Gaife Paradyce him till; Into that Garden hevinly wrocht, With Pleafures mony a one, The Beifts of every Kynd wer brocht, Thair Names he fuld expone; Thefe kenning and nameing, As them he lift to call, For eifing and pleifing Of Man, fubdued them all. III. IN heavenly Joy Man fae pofTeft, To be alane GOD thocht not beft, Made Eve to be his Maik ; Bad them increafs and multiplie, And of the Fruit frae every Tree Thair Pleafure they fuld take, Except and Paradyce loft. Except the Tree of Gude and 111 That in the Midft dois ftand, Forbad that they fuld cum thertill, Or twitch it with thair Hand ; Left luking and plucking, Baith they and all thair Seid, Seveirly, awfteirly, Suld die without Remeid. IV. Now Adam and his lufty Wyfe In Paradyce leidand thair Lyfe, With Pleafures infineit; Wanting nae thing fuld do them Eafe, The Beifts obeying them to pleife, As they could wifh in Spreit: Behald the Serpent fullenlie Envyand Mans Eftate, With wicket Craft and Subtiltie Eve temptit with Defait; Nocht feiring, but fpeiring, Quhy fcho tuke not her till, In ufing and chufmg The Fruit of Gude and 111? V. COM- 164 On the Creation^ V. COMMANDIT us, fcho faid, the LORD, Noways therto we fuld accord, Undir eternall Pain ; But grantit us full Libertie To eit the Fruit of every Tree, Except that Tree in plain. No, no, nocht fae, the Serpent faid, Thou art defaifet therm; Eit ze therof, ze fall be made In Knawledge lyke to Him, In feiming and deiming Of every thing aricht, As dewlie, as trewly, As ze wer Gods of Micht. VI. EVE thus with thefe fals Words allurit, Eit of the Fruit, and fyne procurit Adam the fame to play: Behald, faid fcho, how precious, Sae dilicate and delicious, Befyde Knawledge for ay : Adam and Paradyce loft. Adam puft up in warldly Glore, Ambition and high Pryd, Eit of the Fruit j allace therfore, And fae they baith did flyd ; Negle&ing, forzetting The eternall GODS Command, Quha fcurged and purged Them quyt out of that Land. VII. QUHEN they had eiten of that Fruit, Of Joy then war they deftitute, And faw thair Bodys bare. Annon they paft with all thair Speid, Of Leives to mak themfelves a Weid, To cleith them, was thair Care : During the Tyme of Innocence, Nae Sin or Schame they knew, Frae Tyme they gat Experience, Unto ane Bufs they drew, Abyding and hyding, As GOD fuld not them fee, Quha fpyed, and cryed, Adam, quhy hyds thou thee ? VIII. I 1 66 On the Creation, VIII. I being naikit, LORD, throu Feir, For Schame I durft not to compeir, And fae I did refufe : Had thou not elten of the Tree^ That Knowledge had not beln in thee^ Nor zit nae fee Excufe; The Helper, LORD, thou gaife to me, Has Cawfit me to tranfgrefs, SaydfchO) the Serpent fubtillie^ Perfuadit me nae lefs^ Intreiting, be eitlng^ That we fuld be perfyte^ Mefylit^ begyllty In him lyes all the Wyte. IX. JEHOVE that evir juged richt, Bringing His Juftice to the Licht, The Serpent firft did juge: Becaufe the Woman thou begylt, For evir thou fall be exylt, Said He, without Refuge ; Betwixt and Paradyce loft. 167 Betwixt her Seid and thy Offspring Nae Peace nor Reft fall be, And hir Seid fall thy Heid doun thring, For all thy Subtiltie; Abhorred, deformed, Thou on thy Breift fall gang, In feiding and leiding Thy Lyfe the Beifts amang. X. THE Woman nixt, for her Offence, Did of the LORD refave Sentence, Her Sorrow fuld encreafe, With Wae and Pain her Childrene beir, Subdewt to Man, under his Feir, No Libertie pofTefs : For Adams Fait he curfd the Erth, That barrane it fuld be, Without Labour fuld zield nae Birth Of Corns, nor Herb, nor Tree; Bot working and irking For evir fuld remain, And being in deing, In Erth returnd again. XL O the Creation, XL O cruel Serpent venemous, Difpytfull and feditious, The Grund of all our Care; Thou fals-bound Slave unto the Devill, Thou firft Inventar of this Evill Of Blifs, quhilk made us bare; O devlifh Slave, did thou believe, Or hou had thou fie Grace, Therby for evir thou micht live Abuve into that Place : Thy Grudging gat Scrudging, And fae GOD lute the fe, Defavers no Gravers Of His Reward fuld be. XII. O dainty Dame, with Eirs bent That harkent to that fals Serpent, Thy Bains we may fair ban ; Without Excufe thou art to blame, Thou juftly has obtaint that Name, The very Wo of Man : With and Paradyce loft. With Teirs we may bewail and greit That wickit Tyme and Tyde, Quhen Adam was obligit to fleip, And thou tane off his Syde. No Sleiping hot Weiping Thy Seid hes fund fenfyne, Thy Eiting and Sweiting, Is turn'd to Wo and Pyn. XIII. ADAM, thy Part, quha can excufe, With Knawledge thou that did abufe Thyne awn Felicitie. The Serpent his inventing fals, The Womans fune confenting als, Was nocht fae wicketly. GOD did prefer thee to this Day, And them fubdewt to thee, Sae all that they culd mein or fay, Suld not have moved thee To breaking, abje&ing That hie Command of Lyfe Quhilk gydid, provydit The ay to live bot Stryf. XIV. BE- i7 On the Creation. XIV. BEHALD the State that Man was in, And als how it he tynt throw Sin, And loft the fame for ayj Zet GOD His Promife dois perform, Sent His Son of the Virgin born, Our Ranfome deir to pay. To that great GOD let us give Glore, To us has bein fae gude, Quha be His Grace did us reftore, Quherof we were denude; Not careing nor fparing His Body to be rent, Redeiming, releiving Us quhen we wer all fchent. g)uod Sir Ricn d - MAITLAND of Lethingtoutty K nt - The The Devils Advice to all and fun dry of his beft Freinds. I. '""PHis Nicht in Sleip I was agaft, Methocht the Deil was tempand faft, People with Aiths of Crueltie, Sayand as throw the Fair he paft, Renunce zour GOD, and cum to me. II. METHOCHT as he went forth the Way, A Preift fweirt braid be GOD verry, Quhilk at the Alter reflavit he: Thou art my Clerk, the Deil can fay, Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me, III. THEN fwore a Courtier of grit Pryd, Be Chryfts Woundis bludy and wyd, And be his Harmis was rent on Tree ; Then fpak the Deil hard him befyd, Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me. IV. A 1 7 2 The Devils Advice IV. A Merchant as he Geir did fell, Renuncit his Part of Heaven for Hell : The Deil cryd, Welcome mot thou be, Thou fall be Merchand for my fell, Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me. V. A Goldfmlth faid, This Goldis fae fyne, That all the Warkmanfhip I tyne, The Feynd refTaife me, gif I lie. Think on, quod Nik^ that thou art myne ; Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me. VI. A Tallzior faid, In all this Town, Be thair a bettir weil made Gown, I gife me to the Feynd all frie: Gramercy Tailzeor, faid Mahoun^ Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me. VII. A Soutar faid, In gude Effeck, Nor I be hangit be the Neck, Gif better Butes of Lether be. Fy, quoth the Deil, thou fawrs of Blek, Gae clenge the clene, and cum to me. VIII. A to his beft Fretnds. VIII. A Baxter faid, I quat with GOD, And all His Warks baith even and od, Gif fyner Stuff ther neids to be. The Devil leuch, and gae him a Nod, Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me. IX. THE Flejhour fwore be Sacrament, And be the Blude maift inocent, Neir fattir Flefh Man faw with Ee. The Deil faid, Hald on thy Intent, Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me. X. THE Maltman fays, I Blifs forfake, And may the Deil of Hell me taik, Give ony better Malt may be, And of this Kill I haif Inlaik, Says Sathan, Cum thy Ways to me. XI. A Erowjler fwore the Malt was ill, Baith reid and reikit on the Kill, It will be nae Ale worth a Flie; A Boll will not fax Gallons fill : Mahoun cryis, Cum and mafk with me. XII. THE J 74 The Devils Advice XII. THE Smith he fwore be Rude and Raip, Infill a Gallows mot I gaip, Gif I ten Days win Pennies three, For laik of Ale I Water laip : Quod Nicj Thoull get far les with me. XIII. A Mlnftrel faid, The Feynd me ryve, Gif I do ocht but drink and yve : The Deil faid, Hardly mot it be, Exerce that Craft throu all thy Lyfe, And thouill be fure to cum to me. XIV. A Dycer bad, with Words of Stryf, The Deil cum flick him with a Knyf; But he keft up fair Syces three: The Deil faid, Endit is thy Lyfe, Renunce thy Creid, and cum to me. XV. A 77z/faid, 111 that eir I chaip, Nor a ftark Woddy gar me gaip, But- 1 in Hell for Geir wald be. The Deil faid, Welcom in a Raip, Gae lift a Cow, and cum to me. XVI. THE to his befl Freinds. 175 XVI. THE Fifh-wyves flet, and fwore with Granes, And to Auld-nick fauld Flefli and Banes, And gaif them with a Schout on hie. The Deil cryd, Welcome all attaines, Sling by zour Creils, and cum to me. XVII. METHOCHT the Deils as blak as Pile, Solifand were as Beis thick, Ay tempand Folk with Ways flie, Rounand to Robin and to Dick^ Renunce zour Creid, and cum to me. DUNBAR. THE 176 THE Claith-Merchant ; Or, a Eallat made on Jonet Reid, Jean Violet, and Anna Whyt, being Jlicht Women, and Taverners. I. /^~\F Collours cleir, Quha lykes to weir, Are mony Sorts into this Toun, Grene, Zellow, Blew, And ilka Hew, Baith Paris Black, and Inglis Broun"; Braw London Sky, Quha lykes to buy, Colour de Roy is clene laid down, And Dunde Gray This mony a Day Is lichtlyt baith be Lad and Loun. II. BUT The Claith- Merchant. *77 II. BUT ftanch my Fyking, And ftryd my Lyking, Are feimly Hews for Simmer Playj Din dipt in Zellow For ilka gude fallow, As Will of ^uhyt-hauch bad me fay; I will not deny it To them that will buy it, For Silver nane fall be faid nayj Ze neid not plenze, It will not ftenzie, Suppofe ye weit it Nicht and Day. III. AND I have ghthyt Of great Delyt, And Violet quha lykes to weir, Weil wearand Reid Till ze be dead ; It fall not failzie, tak ze no Feir. The Quhyt is gude, And richt weil lued, But N 178 The Claith-Mer chant. But zit the Reid is twice as deir: The Violet fyne, Baith frefh and fyne, Sail ferve ye Hofeing for a Zeir. IV. THE 0>)uhyt is teuch, And frefh enouch, Saft as the Silk, as all Men feis. The Reid is bonny, And focht be mony; They hyve about the Houfe lyke Beis. My Violet faft, Quhen ye have coft, Will ply lyk Satin to zour Theis ; Sure be my witting Not burnt in the Lifting, Suppofe baith Lads and Limmers leis. V. OF thir thrie Hews I haif left Clews, To be our Court-Men Winter Weid, Weill The Claith- Merchant. i/9 Weill twynt and fmal, The beft of them all May weir the Claith for Woul and Threid; But in the Wawk-mill, The Wedderisill: Thefe are not drying Days indeid ; And gif it be wat, I hecht for that, It tuggs in Holes and gaes abreid. VI. ZIT its weil wawkit, Cardit and cawkit, As warm a Weid as weir the Dule, Weil wrocht in Luims, With Wobfters Guims, Baith thick and nymble gaes the Spulej Cottond and {horn, The mair it be worn, Ze will find zour fell the greater Fule, Zit bony forfuith, Cum buyit in my Buith, To mak ze Garments againft Zule. VII. THIR 'The Claith-Mer chant. VII. THIR mixt togither, Zour fell may confider, Quhat fyner Colour can there be fund, And namely for Breiks, Gif ony Man feiks, Heill purchace the Pair ay for a Fund : Abeit it be fkant, Nae Wowars fall want, That to my bidding will be bund, Weil may they bruik it, They neid not luke it, But grape it Mirklyns be the Grund. VIII. OUR Court-Men heir, Has made my Claith deir, Raifd it Twall-penies of ilka Ell, Zit is my Claith fure, Beft Sadies to cure, Suppofe the hale Seffion fhould ryd themfel. The Violet certain, Was maid at Dumbartain; The Reid was wawkit at Dunkell: The The Clalth-Mer chant. 181 The Quhyt has bein dicht In mony mirk Nicht, But Tyme and Place I cannot well tell. IX. Now gif ye work wyflie, And ihape it precyflie; The Ellwand * * * Gif the Bys be wyde, Gar lay it on Syde ; And fae ze cannot weil gae wrangj And for the lang Lift, It wald be fewd faft, And care not by how deip ze gang; But want ze quhyt Threid, Ye will not cum fpeid, Black Waluway maun be zour Sang. X. AND tho it be auld, And Twenty Tymes fald, Zit will the Freprie ot mak ze fain, With 1 82 The Claith-Mer chant. With Oyls to renew it, And mak it well hewt, And gar it glans lyk Silk in Grain j Syne with the fleik Stains That fervis for the Nains, They raife the Pyle quhen it falls plain : With mony braid Aith, We fell this fame Claith, To gar the Buyers cum faft again. XL Now is my Wob wrocht, And arlet and bocht, Cum lay the Payment in my Hand ; And gif my Claith felzie, Zeis not pay a Melzie, The Wob fall be at zour Command. The Market is thrang, And will not laft lang ; They buy faft in the Border Land; Abeit I haif Tinfel ; Zij: maun I tak Handfell, To pay my Buith-Mail and my Stand. XII. Mr The Claith- Merchant. 183 XII. MY Claith wald be lude, Be great Men of gude, Gif Lads and Lowns wald let me be, Zit maun I excufe them; How can I refufe them, Sen all Mens Penny males him frie ? The beft and Gay ot, My felf tuke a Sey ot, A Wylie-coat I will nocht lie, Quhilk did me nae Harm, But held my Coft warm, A fymple Merchant ye may fee. XIII. THIS far to relive me, That nane may reprive me, In Jedbrugh at the Jufticeair, This Sang of thrie LafTes Was made abune GlafTes, That Tyme that they wer Tapfters thair. The firft was a Quhyt^ A Lafs of Delyte; The 1 84 On K. James V. his MiftreJJes. The Violet was baith gude and fair: Keip Reid frae all Skaith. Scho is wordie them baith j Sae to be fhort I fay nae mair. )uod SEMPLE. On King JAMES V. his three Miftrejfes. O Aw not thy Seid on Sandylands^ Spend not thy Strength on And ryd not on the Oliphant^ For hurting of thy Geir. THE i8 5 $ THE LTON and the MO US. I. T N Midft of June^ that jolly Seafon fweit, Quhen Phebus fair, with his warm Beams fae bricht Had dryit frae Dale and Dawn the dewy Weit, And all the Land made with his leiming Licht, In a gay Morn, betwixt Mid-day and Nicht, I raife and put all Slouth and Sleip on Syde, And went allone untill a Forreft wyde. II. SWEIT was the Smell of Flowirs, blae, quhyt and reid, The Noyfe of Birds was maift melodious, The bobing Bews bluimd braid abune my Heid, The Grund growand with Grafs maift verderous, Of all Pleifance that Place was plenteous, With fweit Odour and Birds faft Hermonie, The Morning myld increafd the Mirth and Glee. III. THE 1 86 The Lyon and the Mous. III. THE Rofes reid arrayt the Rone and Ryfs, The Primrofe and the Purpure Violae ; To heir it was a Poynt of Paradyce, Sic Mirth the Mavis and the Merle couth maej The Blofoms blyth brak up on Bank and Brae, The Smell of Herbs, and the Wing-minftrell Cry, Contending quha fould haif the Vi&ory. IV. ME to conferve frae the Suns birning Heit, Undir the Schadow of an Awthorn-grene, I leant me doun amang the Flowirs fweit, Syn made a Crofs, and closed baith myne Een; On Sleip I fell amang the Bewis bein, And in my Dream methocht came throw the Schaw The faireft Man that eir before I faw. / V. His Goun was of a Claith as quhyte as Milk, His Chymers wer of Chamelet Purpure broun, His Hude of Scarlet, borderit round with Silk In hekle Ways, untill his Girdle doun; Of the auld FafToun was his Bonnat roun, His Heid was quhyt, his Een was grene and gray, With lokar Hair, quhilk owre his Shuld9r lay. VI. A 'The Lyon and the Mo us. 187 VI. A Row of Paper in his Hand he bair, A Swans quhyt Pen ftickand beneth his Eir, Ane Inkhorn with a pretty gilt Pennair, A Bag of Silk, all at his Belt he weir; Thus was he gudely grathit in his Geir, Of Stature large, and with a feirfull Face, To quher I lay he came with fturdy Pace. VII. AND fayd, God-fpeid, my Son, and I was fain Of that couth Word, and of his Company; With Reverence I falutet him again, Welcome Fader, and he fat doun by me ; Difpleis zou not, my gude Mailer, tho I Demand zour Birth, zour Facultie and Name, Quhat brings ze hier, and quher ze dwell at hame? VIII. MY Son, he fayd, I am of gentle Blude, My natall Land is Rome, withouten nay, And in that Toun firft to the Schulis I zied, And ftudyt Sciens ther full mony a Day, And now my winning is in Heaven for ay; Efope I hecht my Wryting and my Wark, Is couth and kend to many a cunnand Clark. IX. O Lyon and the Mous. IX. O Maifter Efope^ Poet and Laureat, God wate ze are full deir welcome to mej Are ze not he that all thir Fables wrat, Quhilk in Effect, altho they fenziet be, Are full of Prudence and Moralitie ? Fair Son, he fayd, I am the famyne Man; My flichterand Heart I wate grew mirry than. X. ESOPE, faid I, my Maifter venerable, I heartilie zou befeik, for Cheritie, Ze wald dedene to tell a pritty Fable, Concludand with a gude Moralitie; Schekand his Heid, he fayd, My Son let be, For quhat ift worth to tell a fenziet Tale, Quhen hale preiching may naithing now avail ? XL Now in this Warld methinks richt few or nane To haly Scripture has the leift Regaird; The Eir is deif, the Hairt is hard as Stane, They nevir mynd Punition or Rewaird, Thair Lukes inclynand allways to the Eard; Sae rouftet is the Warld with Canker black, That all my Tales may little Succour mak. XII. ZIT The Lyon and the Mous. 189 XII. ZIT gentle Sr, fayd I, for my Requieft, Not to difpleis zour Fatherheid I pray, Undir the Figure of fum brutal Beift, A moral Fable ze wald grant to fay; Quha kens nor I may leir and beir away Sumthing therby, hereaftir may avail : I grant, quoth he, and thus began his Tale. XIII. A Lyon at his Prey weiry forrun, To recreate his Limbs and tak his Reft, Beikand his Breift and Bellie at the Sun, Undir a Tree lay in the fair Foreft ; Then came a Trip of Myce out of thair Neft, Richt tait and trig, all danfand in a Gyfs, And owre the Lyon lanfit twyfs or thryfs. XIV. HE lay fae ftill, the Myce was not affeird, But to and frae atowre him tuke thair Trace ; Sum tirlt at the Whiskers of his Beird, Sum did not fpare to claw him on the Face : Merry and glade thus danfit they a Space, Till at the laft the nobil Lyon wouk, And with his Paw the Maifter Mous he tuke. XV. HE 19 'The Lyon and the Mous. XV. HE gaif a Cry, and all the laif agaft, Their Danfing left, and hid them heir and thair; He that was tane cryit out and weipit faft, And fayd, Allace for now and evermair ! Now am I tane a wofull Prifoner, And for my Gilt believes incontinent Jugement to thole, and unto Death be fent. XVI. THEN fpak the Lyon to that carefull Mous, Thou catyve Wretch, and vyle unwordy Thing, Owre malapert and owre prefumpteous, Thou was to mak atowre me thy Tripping; Know thou not weil I was baith Lord and King Of all the Beifts? This (quod the Mous) I knaw, But I mifknew, becaufe ze lay fae law. XVII. LORD, I befiek thy Princely Ryaltie, Heir quhat I fay, and tak in Patience; Confidder firft my fimple Povertie, And fyne thy mighty high Magnificence; Se als how Things that is done by negligence, Not frae malicious Thocht, or ill defynd, Sould gain Remiflion frae a Kingly Mynd. XVIII. WITH The Lyon and the Mous. XVIII. WITH gret Aboundance we wer all repliet Of alkynd Fude, fie as to us affeird, And us to dans, provokit the Seafon fweit, And mak fie Mirth as Nature to us laird; Ze lay fae ftill and law upon the Eard, That be my Saul we weind ze had bein deid, Ells wald we not haif danfit owre zour Heid. XIX. THY falfe Excufe, the Lyon fayd again, Sail not avail a Myt, I undertae; I put the Cafe, had I bene deid or (lain, And fyne my Skin bene ftapit full of Strae, Thocht thou had found my Figure lyand fae, Becaufe it bare the Prent of my Perfoun, Thou fould for Dreid on Kneis haif falen doun. XX. Now for thy Cryme thou can mak nae Defence, My Ryal Perfon thus to vylipend, Nowther by Forfs nor thyne oun Negligence, For till Excufe thou can nae Caufe prettendj Therfore thou fuffer fall a fchamefull End, And Deid, fie as to TrefTon is decreit, ' t To be hung on a Gallows be the Fiet. XXI. O I 9 2 The Lyon and the Mous. XXI. O Mercy, Lord ! at thy Gentrice I afs, As thou art King of all Beifts corronat, Sobir thy Wrath, and let thyn Yre owrepafs, And mak thy Mynd to Mercy inclynat; I grant Offens is done to thy Eftate, Therfore I wirdy am to fuffir Deid, But gif thy Kingly Mercy reik Remeid. XXII. IN evry Juge Mercy and Rewth fuld be, As AfTeflbrs and collaterall} Without Mercy, Juftice is Crewelltie, As faid is in the Law fpirituall: When Rigour fits upon the hygh Tribunall, The Equitie of Law quha may fuftain? Richt few or nane bot Mercy gae betwein. XXIII. BESYDS ze knaw the Honour Triumphs zeild, To every Vi&or, on the Strength depends Of his Compeir, quhilk manly in the Feild, Throw Jepordy of Arms he lang deffends j Quhat Pryce or Lowding, quhen the Battle ends, Is fayd of him that overcomes a Man; Him to deffend that nowther dow nor can. XXIV. A The Lyon and the Mous. XXIV. A Thoufand Myce to murder and devore, Is litle Manheid in a Lyon ftrang; Full litle Worfhip can ze win thairfore, To quhofe vaft Strenth is nae Comparefon : It will degrad fum Part of zour Renown To flay a Mous that can mak nae Deffence, But afkand Mercy at zour Excellence. XXV. ALSO it not becomes zour Celfitude, That ufes daylie Meit delicious, To fyle zour Lipps or Grinders with my Blude, Quhilk to zour Stomak is contagious ; Unhalefom Melteth is a fairy Mous, And namely to a nobil Lyon ftrang, Wont to be fed with gentil Venifon. XXVI. MY Lyfe is litle, and my Deid far lefs ; Zit, gif I live, I may peraventure Supplie zour Highnes being in Diftrefs : For aft is fene a Man of fmall Stature Refkewed has a Lord of hygh Honnour, Kept that has bene in Poynt to be owre-thrawn, Throu Fortunes Fait; fie Cafe me be zour awn. XXVII. QUHEN o The Lyon and the Mous. XXVII. QUHEN this was fayd, the generous Lyon paufit, And thocht this arguing did not Reafon want; His Yre afTwageit, and his kynd Mercy caufit Him to the Mous a full Remiffion grant, Opent his Paw; He on his Kneis doun bent, And baith his Hands unto the Heaven upheild, Cryand, Almichty "Jove give zou lang Eild. XXVIII. QUHEN he was gane, the Lyon zeid to hunt, For he had nocht, but livd upon his Prey, And flew baith tame and wyld, as he was wont, And in the Countrie made a grit Deray; Till at the laft the People fand the Way This crewell Lyon with a Girn to tak, Of hempin Cords richt ftrang Netts coud they mak. XXIX. AND in a Road quhair he was wont to rin, With Raips rude frae Trie to Trie it band, Syne curie a Raing on Raw the Wod within, With Blafts of Horns and Cauits faft calland; The Lyon fled, and throu the Rone rinnand Fell in the Net, and hankit Fute and Heid, For all his Strenth he coud mak nae Remeid. XXX. ROLAND The Lyon and the Mous. T 95 XXX. ROLAND about with hydious Rowmiffing, Quhyles to quhyles frae, gif he micht Succor get j But all in vain, that velziet him naething, The mair he flang, the fafter he was knit : The Raips rude about him fae was plet On every Syde, that Succor faw he nane, But ftill lyand, thus murnand maid his Mane. XXXI. O fair lameit Lyon, liggand heir fae law, Quhair is the Micht of thy Magnificence, Of quhom all brutal Beift in Eard ftand Aw, And dreid to luke on thy gret Excellence; Bot Hope or Help, bot Succor or Defence, In ftrang Hemp-bands heir maun I ly, allace ! Till I be flain, I fe nae uther Grace. XXXII. THER is nae Joy that will my Harms wraik, Nor Creature to do Comfort to my Crown, Quha fall me bute? Quha fall thir Bands brek? Quha fall me put frae Pain of this Prifon? Be that he had his Lamentation done, Perchance the litle pardond Mous came neir, And of the Lyon hard the pityous Beir. XXXIII. AND The Lyon and the Mous. XXXIII. AND fuddainly it came intill his Mynd That it fuld be the Lyon did him Grace, And fayd, Now wer I fals and richt unkynd, Bot gif I quit fum Part thy Gentilnefs Thou did to me, - and on with that he gaes To all his Maiks, and on them faft did cry, Cum help, cum help; and they came all on hy. XXXIV. Lo, quoth the Mous, this is our Ryal Lord, Quha gaif me Grace quhen I was by him tane, And now is faft heir fanklet in a Cord, Wrekand his Hurt with Murning fair and Mane, Bot we him help, of Suplie kens he nane; Cum help to quyt ane gude Turn with annither, Sae belt, cryd all; fyn fell to Wark togither. XXXV. THEY tuke nae Knyf, thair Teith wer fherp enewgh ; To fe that Sicht forfuith it was grit Wonder, How that they ran amang the Halters tewgh, Before, behind, fum zeid abune, fum under, And fchure the Raips with the maift eifs in Sunder, Syne bad him ryfe, - and he ftart up annone, And thankit them ; fyn to the Bent is gane. XXXVI. Now The Moralitie. XXXVI. Now dois the Lyon frie of Danger fkour, Lowfe, and delivert till his Libertie, By litle Animals of fmalleft Power, As ze haif hard, becaufe he had Pitie: Quoth I, Maifter, is ther Moralitie Into this Fable ? - Son^ fayd he, rlcht gude ; I pray zou gieft, quoth I, or ze conclude. ttc MORALITIE. XXXVII. "\ A7"E may fuppofe this Lyon of Renoun May fignifie ane Emperour or King, Or ony Poteftate that weirs a Croun, That fould be wakryfe in his governing, But of his Peple taks flicht noticeing, To rule and fteir the Land, and Juftice keip, But lazy lyes in luftie Slouth and Sleip. XXXVIII. THE Foreft fair with Bloflbms lown and lie, The fmgand Birds and Flowirs fae ferly fweit, Ar but this Warld, and his Profperitie, As Pleifands fals mingillit with Care repleit, Richt, as the Rofe with Froft and Winter weit, Wallous ; fae dois the Warld and them defaif That Confidence in lufty Pleafures haif. XXXIX. THIR The Moralitie. XXXIX. THIR litle Myce ar Comonalitie, Wanton, unwyfe, without Core&ion due; Sic Lords and Princes, quhen they chanfs to fe That execute, the richteous Laws on few, They dreid naithing, but with rebellious Brow Dar difobey; for quhy? they ftand nae Aw, That maks them aft thair Soverains to mifknaw. XL. AND be this Fable, Lords of prudent Sence Confidder may the Virtue of Pitie, And fuld remit fumtyme a grit Offence, And Mercy metigate with Crueltie ; Aftymes is fene a Man of fmall Degree Has quit a Common baith for Gude and 111, As Lords has Rigour done, or Grace him till. XLI. QUHA wates how fune a Lord of grit Renoun, Rowand in warldly Luft and vain Pleifance, May be owrthrawin, diftroyed, or put doun Throu Fortune fals, that of all Variance Is hale Miftres, and Leader of the Dance To lufly Men, and binds them up fae foir, That they nae Perell can provyd befor. XLII. THIR The Moralltie. XLII. THIR crewell Men that ftentit has the Net In quhilk the Lyon fuddenlie was tane, Waited allway that they a Mends micht get; For Hurt, Men wryts with Steil in Marble-ftane, Mair till expone, as now, I let alane : But King and Lord may weil wate what I mein, The Figure hereof aftymes has bein fene. XLIII. QUHEN this was fayd, quoth Efop, My fair Chyld, Perfuade the Kirkmen eydentlie to pray, That Treafon off this Countrie be exyld, That Juftice 'ring, and Nobles keip their Fay Unto thair Soverain Lord baith Nicht and Day : And with that Word he vaneift, and I woke, Syne throu the Schaw my Jurney hamewart tuke. ghiod Mr. Ro. HENRYSON. THE 200 THE "TOD and the LAME, OR, Follows the Wowing of the King when he was at Dumfermeling. I. '"PHis hinder Nicht in Dumfermeling^ To me was tald a wonder Thing, That late a Tod was with a Lamb, And with hir playd, and made gude Game ; Syne to his Breift did hir imbrace, And wald haif ridden hir lyk a Ram, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. II. HE braift hir bonny Bodie fweit, And halft hir with his forder Feit, Syne fchuke his Tail with Whindge and Zelpj And todlit with hir lyke a Quhelp, Then lourit on growf, and afked Grace j And ay the Lamb cryd, Lady help, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. III. THE The Tod and the Lamb. III. THE Tod was nowthir lein nor fcowry, He was a lufty reid-haird Lowry, Ane lang taild Beift and grit withall; The filly Lamb was all to fmall, With fie a Trible to hald a Bafe : Scho fled him not, fair mot her fall, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. IV. THE Tod was reid, the Lamb was quhyte, Scho was a Morfell of Delyte j He luvit nae Ews auld teuch and Sklender, Becaufe this Lamb was zung and tender. He ran upon her with a Race, And fcho fchup nevir to defend hir, And this methocht a ferly Cafe. V. HE gripit her about the Waift, And handilt her as gif in Hafte ; This Inocent that neir trefpaft, Tuke Heart that fcho was handilt faft, And lute him kifs her lufty Face : His girnand Gams hir nocht agaft, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. VI. HE 202 The Tod and the Lamb. VI. HE held hir till him be the Hals, And fpake full fair thocht he was fals ; Syne faid and fwore to hir in Mode, That he fuld not twitch hir Prein-cod. The filly Thing trow'd him, allace ! The Lamb gaif Creddance to the Tod, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. VII. I will nae Leifings put in Verfe, Lyke as fum Janglers do reherfe } But be quhat Manner they wer mard, Quhen Licht was out and Dores were bard : I wate not gif he gaif hir Grace ; But Winnocks all were ftappit hard, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. VIII. QUHEN Folk do fleit in Joy maift far, Thair fune cums Wae or they be War, Quhen carpand wer thir twa maift croufe, The Wolf he umbefet the Houfe, Upon the Tod to make a Chace : The Lamb fcho cheipit lyke a Moufe, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. IX. THROW The Tod and the Lamb. 203 IX. THROW hydious Howling of the Wowf, This wylie Tod plait doun on Growf j And in the filly wie Lambs Skin, He crap as far as he micht win, And hid him thair a gay lang Space; The Ews befyde they made nae Din, And that methocht a ferly Cafe. X. QUHEN of the Tod was heerd nae Peip, The Wowf wont all had bene afleip ; And quhyle the Tod had ftriken Ten, The Wowf he dreft him to his Den, Proteftand for the fecond Place : And this Report I with my Pen, How at Dumfermling fell the Cafe. )uod DUNBAR. On 204 On anes being his own Enemy. I. TIT E that has Gold and Riches great, And may live at a merry Rate; And Gladnefs dois frae him expell, And lives into a wretched State ; He worketh Sorrow to himfell. II. HE that may be bot Sturt and Stryf, And live a lufty lightfome Lyfe, And fyne with Marriage dois him mell, And buckles with a wicked Wyfe, He worketh Sorrow to himfell. III. HE that has for his awin Genzie A plefand Prop bot Mank or Menzie, And fhutes fyne at an uncow Schell, And is forfairn with Fleis of Spenzie^ He worketh Sorrow to himfell. IV. AND On anes being his own Enemy. 20 5 IV. AND he that with gude Life and Treuth, Bot Variance or other Slewth, Dois evir with a Mafter dwell, That nevir of him will have Rewth, He worketh Sorrow to himfell. V. Now all this Time let us be merry, And fet not by this Warld a Cherry, Now quhyle thair is gude Wyne to fell; The Cheil that dois on dry Breid wirry, I give them to the Devil of Hell. >uod D UNBAR. The 206 * f ~}^^~y^ f ~y^^^ f ~y^ c ~}^ ;:: ^^ The Benifite of them 'who have Ladies wha can be gude Soliciters at Court. I. HPHiR Ladys fair, that mak Repair, And at the Court are kend, In three Days thair, they will do mair, Ane Matter for till end, Than ther Gude-men will do in Ten, For any Craft they can, Sae weil they ken, what Time and quhen, Thair Manes they fuld mak than. II. WITH little Noy they can convoy A Matter finally, Richt myld and Moy, and keip it coy, On Evens fae quietly; They do no mifs, but gif they kifs, And keip Colation, Quhat Reck of this, thair Matter is Brocht to Conclufion. III. THEN tte Benifite of, &c. 20 7 III. THEN wit ye weil, they half grit Fell, And Matter to folift, Treft as the Steil, fyne neir a Deil, Quhen they come hame are mift. Thir Lairds they are, methink richt far, Sic Wyves behalden to, That fae weil dar gae to the Bar, Quhen there is ocht to do. IV. THEREFORE I reid, gif ze haif Pleid, Or Matter in the Play, To mak Remeid, fend in zour Steid Zour Ladys graitht up gay; They can deffend, even to the End, And Matters forth exprefs; Suppofe they fpend, it is unkend; Thair Geir is nocht the lefs. V. IN quiet Place, gin they have Space, Within lefs than twa Hours, They can percafe, purchafe fum Grace, At the Compofitours; Thair The Beriifite of, &c. Thair Compofhion with full Remiflion, Thair finally is endit, With Expedition, and full Condition, Thair Seals then are to pendit. VI. ALL hale almoft they make the Coft, With fober Recompence, Richt little loft, they get indorft, All hale thair Evidence, Sic Ladys wyfe, they are to pryze, To fay the Verity, Sae can devyfe, and not furpryze Thame nor thair Honefty. Quod DUNBAR. Annother 209 Annother of the famen Pend be the Poet 'wrote the loft. I. HTHE Ufe of Court richt weil I knaw, Ladyis Soliceters of the Law; At hame remain the filly Lairds, And fend thair Wyves behind the Yards, Well ftuft with Money and Rewards, To furder thair Errands frae Nicht faw. II. IN Clouks they cum full braw quhyte cled, And rouns to have thair Matter fped j They give nae Budds, But on thair Fudds They get grit Skuds, In nakit Bed. III. BUT Annother of the famen^ &c. UK BUT neirthelefs the Laird maun fyn, For all hir Miens, a Tun of Wyne : His Wyfe cums hame thus fynely ufd, But zit he maun hald hir excufd j And fmaly the Folks that doift Denys and laughs at them baith fyne. IV. THE Laird murns quhen he may not mend it, His Lady jaipt his Siller fpend it, And all his Labour turnd in vain; But ay the Lady fays full plain, That fcho maun to the Court again, Or els the Plea will not be endit. V. HIR Buckler bord, and backward born, And all hir Caufe is quite forlorn; Up gets hir Wame, Scho thinks nae Schame Syne to bring hame The Laird a Horn. THE 211 THE VISION. Compylit in Latin be a moft lernit Clerk* in Tyme of our Hair/hip and OppreJ/ion, anno 1300, and tranjlatit in 1524. I. "D EDOUN the Bents of Banquo Brae Milane I wandert waif and wae, Mufand our main Mifchaunce; How be thay Faes we ar undone, That ftaw ti\z facred\ Stane frae Scone, And leids us fie a Daunce : Quhyle * The Hiftory of the Scots Sufferings, by the unworthy Con- defcenfion of Eallol to Edward I. of England, till they recovered their Independence by the Conduct and Valour of the Great BRUCE, is fo univerfally known, that any Argument to this antique Poem feems ufelefs. f The old Chair (now in Weftmmfter Abbey) in which the Scots Kings were always crown'd, wherein there is a Piece of Marble with this Infer iption; 2V/ fallat fatum, SCOTI, quocunque locatum Invenknt lapidem, regnare tenentur ibidem. 212 Vifion. Quhyle Inglands Edert taks our Tours, And Scotland ferft obeys, Rude Ruffians ranfakk Ryal Bours, And Ballol Homage pays ; Throch Feidom our Freidom Is blotit with this Skore, Quhat Romans or no Mans Pith culd eir do befoir. II. THE Air grew ruch with boufteous Thuds, Bauld Boreas branglit outthrow the Cluds, Main 1 lyke a drunken Wicht; The Thunder crakt, and Flauchts did rift Frae the blak Viflart of the Lift : The Forreft fchuke with Fricht j Nae Birds abune thair Wing extenn, They ducht not byde the Blaft, Ilk Beift bedeen bangd to thair Den, Untill the Storm was paft : Ilk Creature in Nature That had a Spunk of Sence, In Neid then, with Speid then, Methocht cryt, In Defence. III. To The Vlfion. 213 III. To fe a Morn in May fae ill, I deimt Dame Nature was gane will, To rair with rackles Reil j Quhairfor to put me out of Pain, And fkonce my Skap and Shanks frae Rain, I bure me to a Beil, Up ane hich Craig that lundgit alaft, Out owre a canny Cave, A curious Cruif of Natures Craft, Quhilk to me Schelter gaif j Ther vexit, perplexit, I leiiit me doun to weip, In brief ther, with Grief ther I dottard owre on Sleip. IV. HEIR Somnus in his filent Hand Held all my Sences at Command, Quhyle I forzet my Cair; The myldeft Meid of mortall Wichts Quha pafs in Peace the private Nichts, That wauking finds it rare j Sae The Vlfion. Sae in faft Slumbers did I ly, But not my wakryfe Mynd, Quhilk ftill ftude Watch, and couth efpy A Man with Afpeck kynd, Richt auld lyke and bauld lyke, With Baird thre Quarters fkant, Sae braif lyke and graif lyke, He feemt to be a Sanct. V. GRIT Darring dartit frae his Ee, A Braid-fword fchogled at his Thie, On his left Arm a Targe; A fhynand Speir filld his richt Hand, Of ftalwart Mak, in Bane and Brawnd, Of juft Proportions, large; A various Rain-bow colourt Plaid Owre his left Spaul he threw, Doun his braid Back, frae his quhyt Heid, The Silver Wymplers grew ; Amaifit, I gaifit To fe, led at Command, A ftrampant and rampant Ferfs Lyon in his Hand. VI. QUHILKL The Vifion. 215 VI. QUHILK held a Thiftle in his Paw, And round his Collar graift I faw This Poefie pat and plain, Nemo me impune lacefs- -Et: In Scots, Nane fall opprefs Me, unpunijt with Pain; Still fchaking, I durft naithing fay, Till he with kynd Accent Sayd, Fere let nocht thy Hairt affray, I cum to hier thy Plaint j Thy graining and maining Haith laitlie reikd myne Eir, Debar then affar then All Eirynefs or Feir. VII. FOR I am ane of a hie Station, The Warden of this auntient Nation, And can nocht do the Wrang ; I viflyt him then round about, Syne with a Refolution ftout, Speird, Quhair he had bene fae lang ? Quod 216 Vlfion. Quod he, Althocht I fum forfuke, Becaus they did me flicht, To Hills and Glens I me betuke, To them that luves my Richt; Quhafe Mynds zet inclynds zet To damm the rappid Spate, Devyfmg and pryfing Freidom at ony Rate. VIII. OUR Trechour Peirs thair Tyranns treit, Quha jyb them, and thair Subftance eit, And on thair Honour ftramp; They, pure degenerate ! bend thair Baks, The Victor, Lang/hanks^ proudly cracks He has blawn out our Lamp : Quhyle trew Men, fair complainand, tell, With Sobs, thair filent Greif, How Baliol thair Richts did fell, With fmall Howp of Releifej Regretand and fretand Ay at his curfit Plot, Quha rammed and crammed That Bargin doun thair Throt. IX. BRAIF The Vifion. 2I 7 IX. BRAIF Gentrie fweir, and Burgers ban, Revenge is muttert be ilk Clan Thats to thair Nation trews The Cloyfters cum to cun the Evil, Mailpayers wifs it to the Devil, With its contryving Crew : The Hardy wald with hairty Wills, Upon dyre Vengance fall; The fecklefs fret owre Heuchs and Hills, And Eccho Anfwers all, Repetand and greitand, With mony a fair Alace, For Blafting and Cafting Our Honour in Difgrace. X. WAES me! quod I, our Cafe is bad, And mony of us are gane mad, Sen this difgraceful Pa&ion. We are felld and herryt now by Forfej And hardly Help fort, thats zit warfe, We are fae forfairn with Fa&ion. Then Vifion. Then has not he gude Caufe to grumble, Thats forft to be a Slaif; Oppreflion dois the Judgment Jumble And gars a wyfe Man raif. May Cheins then, and Pains then Infernal be thair Hyre Quha dang us, and flang us Into this ugfum Myre. XL THEN he with bauld forbidding Luke, And ftaitly Air did me rebuke, For being of Sprite fae mein : Said he its far beneath a SCOT To ufe weak Curfes quhen his Lot May fumtyms four his Splein, He rather fould mair lyke a Man, Some braif Defign attempt ; Gif its nocht in his Pith, what than, Reft but a Quhyle content, Nocht feirful, but cheirful, And wait the Will of Fate, Which mynds to defygns to Renew zour auntient State. XII. I The Vifion. 219 XII. I ken fum mair than ze do all Of quhat fall after wart befall, In mair aufpicious Tymes ; For aften far abufe the Mune, We watching Beings do convene, Frae round Eards outmoft Climes, Quhair evry Warden reprefents Cleirly his Nations Cafe, Gif Famyne, Peft, or Sword Torments, Or Vilains hie in Place, Quha keip ay, and heip ay Up to themfelves grit Store, But rundging and fpunging The leil laborious Pure. XIII. SAY then, faid I, at zour hie Sate, Lernt ze ocht of auld Scotland* Fate, Gif eir fchoil be her fell ; With Smyle Celeft, quod he, I can, But its nocht fit an mortal Man Sould ken all I can tell : But 220 Vifion. But Part to the I may unfold, And thou may faifly ken, Quhen Scottljh Peirs flicht Saxon Gold, And turn trew heartit Men j Quhen Knaivry and Slaivrie, Ar equally difpyfd, And Loyalte and Royalte, Univerfalie are pryfd. XIV. QUHEN all zour Trade is at a Stand, And Cunzie clene forfaiks the Land, Quhilk will be very fune, Will Preifts without their Stypands preich, For nocht will Lawyers Caufes Streich j Faith thatis nae eafy done. All this and mair maun cum to pafs, To cleir zour glamourit Sicht; And Scotland maun be made an Afs, To fet her Jugment richt. Theyil jade hir and blad hir, Untill fcho brak hir Tether, Thocht auld fchois zit bauld fchois, And teuch lyke barkit Lethe r. XV. BUT The Vifion. 221 XV. BUT mony a Corfs fall braithlefs ly, And Wae fall mony a Widow cry, Or all rin richt again j Owre Cheviot prancing proudly North^ The Faes fall tak the Feild neir Forthe, And think the Day thair ain : But Burns that Day fall rin with Blude Of them that now opprefsj Thair Carcafles be Corbys Fude, By thoufands on the Grefs. A King then fall ring them, Of wyfe Renoun and braif, Quhafe Pufians and Sapiens, Sail Richt reftoir and faif. XVI. THE View of Freidomis fweit, quod I, O fay, grit Tennant of the Skye, How neiris that happie Tyme. We ken Things but be Circumftans, Nae mair, quod he, I may advance, Leift I commit a Cryme. > Quhat V'tfion. Quhat eir ze pleis, gae on, quod I, I fall not fafh ze moir, Say how, and quhair ze met, and quhy, As ze did hint befoir. With Air then fae fair then, That glanft like Rayis of Glory, Sae Godlyk and oddlyk, He thus refumit his Storie. XVII. FRAE the Suns Ryfing to his Sett, All the pryme Rait of Wardens met, In folemn bricht Array, With Vehicles of Aither cleir, Sic we put on quhen we appeir To Sauls rowit up in Clay; Thair in a wyde and fplendit Hall, Reird up with fhynand Beims, Quhais Rufe-treis wer of Rainbows all, And paift with ftarrie Gleims, Quhilk prinked and twinkled Brichtly beyont Compair, Much famed and named A Caftill in the Air. XVIII. IN The Vifion. 223 XVIII. IN midft of quhilk a Tabill ftude, A fpacious Oval reid as Blude, Made of a Fyre-Flaucht, Arround the dazeling Walls were drawn, With Rays be a celeftial Hand, Full mony a curious Draucht. Inferiour Beings flew in Haift, Without Gyd or Dere&our, Millions of Myles throch the wyld Wafte, To bring in Bowlis of Ne&ar: Then roundly and foundly We drank lyk Roman Godsj Quhen Jove fae dois rove fae, That Mars and Bacchus nods. XIX. QUHEN Phebus Heid turns licht as Cork, And Neptune leans upon his Fork, And limpand Vulcan blethers : Quhen Pluto glowrs as he were wyld, And Cupid luves we wingit Chyld, Fals down and fyls his Fethers. Quhen 224 The V'ifion. Quhen Pan forzets to tune his Reid, And flings it cairlefs bye, And Hermes wingd at Heils and Heid, Can nowther ftand nor lye: Quhen ftaggirand and fwagirrand, They ftoyter Hame to fleip, Quhyle Centeries at Enterics Imortal Watches keip. XX. THUS we tuke in the high browin Liquour, And bangd about the Ne&ar Biquourj But evir with his Ods : We neir in Drink our Judgments drenfch, Nor fcour about to feik a Wenfch Lyk thefe auld baudy Gods, But franklie at ilk uther afk, Quhats proper we fuld know, How ilk ane hes performt the Tafk, Affignd to him below. Our Minds then fae kind then, Are fixt upon our Care, Ay noting and ploting Quhat tends to thair Weilfair. XXI. Gothus The Vtfion. 225 XXI. Gothus and Vandall baith lukt bluff, Quhyle Gallus fneerd and tuke a Snuff, Quhilk made Allmane to ftare ; Latinus bad him naithing feir, But lend his Hand to haly Weir, And of cowd Crouns tak Care ; Batavius with his Paddock-Face Luking afquint, cryd, Pifch, Zour Monks ar void of Sence or Grace, I had leur ficht for Fifch ; Zour Schule-men ar Fule-men, Carvit out for dull Debates, Decoying and deftroying Baith Monarchies and States. XXII. Iberlus with a gurlie Nod Cryd, Hogan^ zes we ken zour God, Its Herrings ze adore ; Heptarchus y as he ufd to be, Can nocht with his ain Thochts agre, But varies bak and fore ; Ane 226 The Vifion. Ane quhyle he fays, It is not richt A Monarch to refift, Neift Braith all Ryall Powir will flicht, And paflive Homage jeft; He hitches and fitches Betwein the Hie and Hoc^ Ay jieand and flieand Round lyk a Wedder-cock. XXIII. 1 ftill fupport my Precedens Abune them all, for Sword and Sens, Thocht I haif layn richt now lown, Quhylk was, becaus I bure a Grudge At fum fule Scotis, quha lykd to drudge To Princes no thair awin; Sum Thanis thair Tennants pykit and fqueift, And purfit up all thair Rent, Syne wallopit to far Courts, and bleift, Till Riggs and Schaws war fpent ; Syne byndging and whyndging, Quhen thus redufit to Howps, They dander and wander About pure Lickmadowps. XXIV. BUT The Vifwn. 227 XXIV. BUT now its Tyme for me to draw My fhynand Sword againft Club-Law, And gar my Lyon roir; He fall or lang gie fie a Sound, The Ecchoe fall be hard arround Europe^ frae Schore to Schore; Then lat them gadder all thair Strenth, And ftryve to wirk my Fall, Tho numerous, zit at the lenth I will owrecum them all, And raife zit and blafe zit My Braifrie and Renown, By gracing and placing Arright the Scottis Crown. XXV. QUHEN my braif BRUCE the fame fall weir Upon his Ryal Heid, full cleir The Diadem will fliynej Then fall zour fair Oppreffion ceis, His Intreft zours he will not fleice, Or leif zou eir inclyne : Thocht 228 Vifwn. Thocht Millions to his Purfe be lent, Zell neir the puirer be, But rather richer, quhyle its fpent Within the Scottijh Se : The Feild then fall zeild then To honeft Hufbands Welth, Gude Laws then fall caufe then A fickly State haif Helth. XXVI. QUHYLE thus he talkit, methocht ther came A wondir fair Etherial Dame, And to our Warden fayd, Grit Callidon I cum in Serch Of zou, frae the hych ftarry Arch, The Counfill wants zour Ayd; Frae every Quarter of the Sky, As fwift as Quhirl-wynd, With Spirits fpeid the Chiftains hy, Sum grit Thing is defygnd Owre Muntains be Funtains, And round ilk fairy Ring, I haif chaift ze, O haift ze, They talk about zour King. XXVII. WITH The Vifion. 229 XXVII. WITH that my Hand methocht he fchuke, And wifcht I Happynefs micht bruke, To eild be Nicht and Day; Syne quicker than an Arrows Flicht, He mountit upwarts frae my Sicht, Straicht to the milkie Way; My Mynd him followit throw the Skyes, Untill the brynie Streme For Joy ran trinckling frae myne Eyes, And wakit me frae Dreme; Then peiping, half fleiping, Frae furth my rural Beild, It eifit me and pleifit me To fe and fmell the Feild. XXVIII. FOR Flora in hir clene Array, New wafhen with a Showir of May^ Lukit full fweit and fair; Quhyle hir cleir Hufband frae aboif Sched doun his Rayis of genial Luve, Hir Sweits perfumt the Air; The 230 ne Vifion. The Winds war hufht, the Welkin cleird, The glumand Clouds war fled, And all as faft and gay appeird As ane Elyfion Schedj Quhilk heifit and bleifit My Heart with fie a Fyre, As raifes thefe Praifes That do to Heaven afpyre. >uod AR. SCOT. Jok 231 Jok Up-a-lands Complaint againft the Court in the Kings Nonaige. I. TVT Ow is the King in tendir Aige, O CHRYST ! conferva him in his Eild, To do Juftice to Man and Page, t That gars our Land ly lang unteild, Thocht we do double pay thair Wage j Pure Commons prefentlie ar peild. They ryde about in fie a Rege, Be Firth and Forreft, Muir and Feild, With Bow Buckler and Brand. Lo quhair they ryde intill the Ry, The Deil mot fane the Company, I pray it frae my Heart trewly : This faid Jok Up-a-land. II. HE 2 3 2 Jok Up-a-lands Complaint. II. HE that was wont to beir the Barrows, Betwixt the Bake-hous and the Brew-hous On Twenty Shilling now he tarrows, To ryd the Heigait by the Plewis; But were I King, and haif gude Fallows, In Norroway they fould heir of Newis, I fould him tak, and all his Marrows, And hing them hich upon zon Hewis, And thairto plichts my Hand. And all thir Lordis and Barronis grit, Upon an Gallows fould I knit, That this doun treddit has our Quhit : This faid Jok Up-a-land. III. BUT wald ilk Lord that our Law leids, To Hufbands RefTone do with Skill, To chak thir Chiftains be the Heids, And hing them heich upon ane Hill ; Then Hufbands labour micht their Steids, And Preifts micht pattir and pray their Fill: For Hufbands fould nocht haif fie Pleids, And Scheip and Nolt micht ly full ftill, And Stakis and Rukis micht ftandj For Jok Up-a-lands Complaint. 233 For fen they raid amang our Dorrs, With Splent on Spald and joufty Spurrs, Thair grew nae Fruit intill our Furrs : This faid Jok Up-a-land. IV. TAK a pure Man a Scheip or twae, For Hungir or for Fait of Fude, To five or fax wie Bairns or mae, They will him hang in Halters rude; But gif an tak a Flok or fae, A Bow of Ky, and lat them blude, Full faifly may he ryd or gae : I wait nocht gif thir Laws be gude, I fchrew them firfr. them fand. O JESU, for thy haly Paffioun, Grant to him Grace that weirs the Crown, To ding thir mony Kings all doun : This faid Jok Up-a-land. And at the hich Buird I was fet, But now they let me ftand aback, Sen auld Kyndnefs is quite forzet. III. Now 200 Auld Kyndnefs quite forget. III. Now I can find but Friends few, Sen I was prized to be pure, They hald me now but for a Shrew; Of me they tak but little Cure; All that I do is but Injure: Thocht I be bair I may not bett, They let me ftand upon the Flure, Sen auld Kyndnefs is quite forzet. IV. SUPPOSE I mein I am nocht mendit, Sen I held part with Povertie, Away fen that my Pack was fpendit, Adieu all Liberality. The Proverb now is trew I fee, Quha may not give will little get; Therefore to fay the Verity, Now auld Kyndnefs is quite forzet. V. THEY wald me hals with Hude and Hat, Quhyle I was rich and had enouch, About me Friends enow I gatj Richt blythly then on me they leuch, But now they mak it wonder teuch, And lets me ftand before the Zet; Therfoir this Warld is very freuch, And auld Kyndnefs is quite forzet. VI. As Auld Kyndnefs quite forget. 2 ^7 VI. As lang as my ain Cap ftude even, I zied but feindle myne allane, I fquyrit was with Sax or Sevin, Ay quhyle I gave them twa for ane ; But fuddenly frae that was gane, They pafsd me by with Hands plett, With puirtith frae I was oertane, Then auld Kyndnefs was quite forzet. VII. INTO this Warld fuld nae Man trow, Thou may weil fee the Reafon quhy; For ay but gif thy Hand be fou, Thou art but little fetten by, Thou art not tane in Company, Bot ther be fund Fifh in thy Net : Therfore this falfe Warld I defy, Sen auld Kyndnefs is quite forzet. VIII. SEN that nae Kyndnefs kepit is, Into this Warld that is prefent, Gif thou wald cum to Heavins Blifs, Thyfelf appleift with fober Rent, Live weil and give with gude Intent, To every Man his proper Debt, Quhat eir God fend hald thee content, Sen auld Kyndnefs is quite forzet. AD- 268 AD V ICE to be Liberal and Blyth. i. T MAKE it kend, he that will fpend, And luve GOD late and Air, He will him mend, and Grace him fend, Quhyle Catives fhall have Care : But Praife weil pend, fall him comend, That of his Rowth can fpare ; We knaw the End, that all maun wend Away nakit and bare, With an O and an I, And a Wretch fall haif nae mair, But a fchort Sheit at Heid and Feit, For all his Wrak and Ware. II. FOR Advice to be liberal and blyth. 269 II. FOR all the Wrak a Wretch can pack, And in his Bags embrace, Zit Deid fall tak him be the Back, And gar him cry Alace ! Then fall he fwak, away with Lak, And wate not to what Place, Then will they mak, at him a Knack, That maift of his Geir hes j With ane O and an I, Quhyle we haif Tyme and Space, Mak we gude Cheir, quhyle we are heir, And thankful be for Grace. III. WERE there a King to rax and ring, Amang Gude-fallows crownd, Wretches wad wring, and mak Murning, For Dule they fould be drownd. Quha finds a Dring, or auld or zing, Gar hoy him out and hound. Now 2 7 Advice to be liberal and blyth. Now let us fmg, our Cares to ding, And mak a gladfome Sound, With an O and ane I : Now are we further bound, Drink thou to me, and I to thee, And let the Cap go round. IV. QUHA underftude, fuld have his Gude, Or he were clofd in Clay, Sum in thair Mude they wald ga wid, And die lang or thair Day; Not worth a Hude, or an auld Snude Thou fhall bear hence away; Wretch be the Rude, now to conclude, Full few fall for thee pray, With an O and ane I, Gude Fallows as langs we may, Be merry and free, fyne blyth let us be, And fmg on tway and tway. >uod Jo. BLYTH. The End of the Jirjl Volume. 271 CONTENTS OF THE Firft VOLUME. Kirk on the Grene, . The Thiftle and the Rofe, .. Panygyrick on Sr Penny, . . Virtue and Vyce, . . . Bytand Ballat on