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with critical observations and biographical notices, by Robert Burns

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18<br />

To this day among people who know nothing of<br />

Ramsay^ verses^ thefollowing is the song, <strong>and</strong> all<br />

the song that ever I heard —<br />

Gin ye meet a bonie lassie,<br />

Gie her a kiss <strong>and</strong> let her gae<br />

But gin ye meet a dirty hizzie,<br />

Fye, gar rub her o^er wi' strae.<br />

Fye, gae rub her, rub her, rub her,<br />

Fye, gae rub her o'er wi' strae<br />

An' gin ye meet a dirty hizzie,<br />

Fye, gar rub her o'er wi' strae.<br />

Look up to Pentl<strong>and</strong>'s tow'ring tap,"^<br />

Bury'd beneath great wreaths of snaw,<br />

O'er ilka cleugh, ilk scar, <strong>and</strong> slap.<br />

As high as ony Roman wa'.<br />

* This spirited imitation of the *' Vides ut alta stet nive c<strong>and</strong>i-<br />

dum, Soracte," of Horace, is considered as one of the happiest<br />

efforts of the author's genius.—For a very elegant critique on<br />

the poem, <strong>and</strong> a comparison of its merits <strong>with</strong> those of the ori-<br />

ginal, the reader is referred to Lord fVoodhomelee's Remarks on<br />

the Writings of Ramsay, vol. i. p. 98. London, 1800.

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