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with critical observations and biographical notices, by Robert Burns

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261<br />

Wi' bougers o' barns they beft blue caps.<br />

While they o* bairns made brigs/<br />

Christ^s Kirk on the Green.<br />

The benmost bore is the deepest hole or recess of<br />

the place.<br />

No. VI.<br />

Th€7i neist outspak a raucle carlin,<br />

Wha kenned fu* weel to cleek the sterlin\<br />

A raucle carlin ; a sturdy, raw-boned, weather-<br />

beaten, outspoken Dame, finely explained in familiar<br />

Scotch, as, ^ Ane wha wad gie a bluidy snout sooner<br />

than a mensfu' word.<br />

The word cleek alludes to the crooking of the fin-<br />

gers when employed in the act of picking a pocket<br />

'For mony a pursie she had hooked.'<br />

No. VII.<br />

Her love had been a Highl<strong>and</strong> laddie^<br />

But voearyfci the waefu* ivoodie !<br />

The woodie, a sort of rope formed of twisted wil-<br />

low-w<strong>and</strong>s used occasionally, in ancient times, in<br />

the summary executions of prisoners of war, or<br />

thieves caught in woods.<br />

:

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