Дисциплина: Зарубежная литература
Жанр: Малые жанры
O once I lov'd | 12429 |
Song, composed in August | 12431 |
I dream'd I lay | 12434 |
Song | 12435 |
A Penitential thought, in the hour of Remorse - Intended for a tragedy | 12438 |
Song | 12440 |
A Fragment | 12443 |
Song | 12444 |
Song | 12446 |
Winter, A Dirge | 12447 |
Song | 12449 |
To Ruin | 12452 |
A Prayer, in the Prospect of Death | 12454 |
Stanzas on the same Occasion | 12456 |
A Prayer, Under the Pressure of violent Anguish | 12458 |
[Though fickle Fortune has deceiv'd me] | 12459 |
[O raging Fortune's withering blast] | 12460 |
Extempore | 12461 |
The First Psalm | 12462 |
The First Six Verses of the Ninetieth Psalm | 12463 |
Song | 12465 |
Fragment | 12469 |
John Barleycorn. A Ballad | 12470 |
The Death and Dying Words of Poor Mailie | 12475 |
Poor Mailie's Elegy | 12479 |
[Remorse] | 12482 |
Song | 12484 |
On Ja.s Grieve, Laird of Boghead, Tarbolton | 12487 |
On an Innkeeper in Tarbolton | 12488 |
Song. - In the character of a ruined Farmer - | 12489 |
Mary Morison | 12492 |
Epitaph on my own friend, and my father's friend, Wm Muir in Tarbolton Miln | 12494 |
On a Celebrated Ruling Elder | 12495 |
On a Noisy Polemic | 12496 |
On Wee Johnie | 12497 |
For the Author's Father | 12498 |
For R.A. Esq | 12499 |
For G.H. Esq | 12500 |
A Fragment | 12501 |
Address to the Unco Guid, or the Rigidly Righteous | 12505 |
The Ronalds of the Bennals | 12509 |
The Tarbolton Lasses | 12512 |
Song | 12514 |
O leave novels | 12515 |
A Fragment | 12516 |
Green grow the Rashes. A Fragment | 12517 |
Song | 12519 |
Epistle to J. R******, Enclosing some Poems | 12520 |
Lines Addressed to Mr. John Ranken | 12524 |
Verses | 12525 |
Lines | 12526 |
Epistle to Davie, a Brother Poet | 12527 |
The Holy Tulzie | 12535 |
Holy Willie's Prayer | 12540 |
Epitaph on Holy Willie | 12546 |
Death and Doctor Hornbook. A True Story | 12547 |
[On Tam the Chapman] | 12556 |
Epistle to J. L*****k, An Old Scotch Bard | 12557 |
To the Same | 12563 |
To W. S*****n, Ochiltree | 12568 |
A Poet's Welcome to his love-begotten Daughter | 12577 |
The Fornicator. A New Song | 12580 |
The Vision | 12583 |
Duan First | 12583 |
Duan Second | 12589 |
Epistle to John Goldie in Kilmarnock | 12597 |
Man was Made to Mourn, A Dirge | 12600 |
A Song. - On Miss P- K- | 12605 |
The Braes o' Ballochmyle | 12607 |
[Third Epistle] to J. Lapraik | 12608 |
To the Rev. John M'Math | 12611 |
To a Mouse, On turning her up in her Nest | 12616 |
The Holy Fair | 12619 |
The Twa Dogs. A Tale | 12632 |
The Cotter's Saturday Night | 12644 |
Halloween | 12655 |
[The Mauchline Wedding] | 12673 |
The Auld Farmer's New-year-morning Salutation | 12676 |
Address to the Deil | 12681 |
Scotch Drink | 12687 |
Brose and Butter | 12693 |
To J. S**** | 12695 |
The rantin dog the Daddie o't | 12703 |
The Author's Earnest Cry and Prayer | 12704 |
Sketch | 12713 |
To a Louse, On Seeing one on a Lady's Bonnet at Church | 12716 |
Love and Liberty - A Cantata | 12719 |
The Ordination | 12738 |
The Inventory | 12745 |
To Mr. John Kennedy | 12749 |
Adam A-'s Prayer | 12751 |
Song. On Miss W.A | 12753 |
Letter to J-s T-t, Gl-nc-r | 12755 |
[To Mrs. C-] | 12758 |
To a Mountain-Daisy | 12759 |
The Lament | 12762 |
Despondency, an Ode | 12767 |
Jeremiah 15th Ch. 10 V | 12771 |
Epitaph on a Henpecked Country Squire | 12772 |
Epigram on said Occasion | 12773 |
Another | 12774 |
Extempore - to Mr Gavin Hamilton | 12775 |
On a Scotch Bard Gone to the West Indies | 12778 |
[Second Epistle to Davie] | 12781 |
[To] Mr Gavin Hamilton, Mauchline | 12784 |
A Dedication To G**** H******* Esq | 12786 |
A Bard's Epitaph | 12792 |
Epistle to a Young Friend | 12794 |
[Lines written on a Bank-note] | 12799 |
Highland Lassie O - | 12800 |
[Address of Beelzebub] | 12802 |
Libel Summons | 12806 |
Epitaph on John Dove, Innkeeper, Mauchline | 12814 |
Epitaph on a Wag in Mauchline | 12815 |
[On Willie Chalmers] | 12816 |
A Dream | 12819 |
[To Dr. John Mackenzie] | 12827 |
The Farewell. To the Brethren of St. James's Lodge, Tarbolton | 12828 |
The Farewell | 12830 |
Tam Samson's Elegy | 12832 |
[To John Kennedy] | 12838 |
[Answer to an Epistle from a Taylor] | 12839 |
The Brigs of Ayr, a Poem. Inscribed to J. B*********, Esq; Ayr | 12846 |
Wrote on the blank leaf of a copy of my first Edition | 12857 |
Song | 12858 |
The Northern Lass | 12860 |
A Fragment | 12861 |
The Calf | 12863 |
Nature's Law | 12865 |
Extempore Verses on Dining with Lord Daer | 12868 |
The Sons of old Killie | 12871 |
Epistle to Captn. Willm. Logan at Park | 12872 |
A Winter Night | 12876 |
[Extempore Reply to an Invitation] | 12881 |
Lying at a Reverend Friend's house one night | 12882 |
[The Night was still] | 12884 |
[Rusticity's ungainly Form] | 12885 |
Address to Edinburgh | 12886 |
To a Haggis | 12890 |
Verses intended to be written below a noble Earl's picture | 12893 |
Song | 12894 |
To Miss L- | 12897 |
[There was a lad] | 12898 |
Elegy on the Death of Robert Ruisseaux | 12900 |
Epitaph. Here lies Robert Fergusson, Poet | 12901 |
[On Fergusson] | 12902 |
[Ill-fated Genius! Heaven-taught Fergusson] | 12903 |
To a Painter | 12904 |
To Mr E- on his translation of and commentaries on Martial | 12905 |
The Answer [to: The Guidwife of Wauchope-House] | 12906 |
[To Miss Isabella Macleod] | 12911 |
Extempore, in the Court of S- | 12912 |
Extempore Epistle to Mr Mc Adam of Craigengillan | 12914 |
Prologue | 12916 |
Epistle to Mr Tytler of Woodhouselee | 12919 |
[To Miss Ainslie, in Church] | 12921 |
[To William Creech] | 12922 |
[To Symon Gray] | 12926 |
[To Renton of Lamerton] | 12928 |
Bonie Dundee | 12929 |
[At Roslin Inn] | 12930 |
Epigram | 12931 |
On the death of Sir J. Hunter Blair | 12932 |
[To Miss Ferrier] | 12935 |
On reading, in a Newspaper, the Death of - M'L-, Esq | 12937 |
Yon wild mossy mountains | 12939 |
My Harry was a Gallant gay | 12941 |
Verses written on a window of the Inn at Carron | 12943 |
[Lines on Stirling] | 12944 |
On a Schoolmaster in Cleish Parish, Fifeshire | 12946 |
Strathallan's Lament | 12947 |
Written with a Pencil over the Chimney-piece | 12948 |
The Birks of Aberfeldey. - Composed on the spot | 12950 |
[Amang the trees] | 12952 |
The Humble Petition of Bruar Water to the Noble Duke of Athole | 12953 |
A Verse composed and repeated by Burns | 12957 |
Written with a Pencil, standing by the Fall of Fyers, near Loch-Ness | 12958 |
Castle Gordon - intended to be sung to Morag | 12959 |
The young Highland Rover | 12961 |
Theniel Menzies' bony Mary | 12963 |
Lady Onlie | 12965 |
Song. - Composed at Auchtertyre on Miss Euphemia Murray of Lentrose | 12966 |
On scaring some Water-Fowl in Loch-Turit | 12968 |
My Peggy's face | 12970 |
Where braving angry Winter's storms | 12971 |
The banks of the Devon | 12972 |
[Epitaph for William Nicol] | 12973 |
Ca' the ewes | 12974 |
On the death of the late Lord President Dundas | 12976 |
Answer to Clarinda | 12978 |
Scots Ballad | 12981 |
A Birth-day Ode. December 31st 1787 | 12983 |
Hunting Song | 12986 |
[On Johnson's Opinion of Hampden] | 12988 |
Song | 12989 |
An Extemporaneous Effusion on being appointed to the Excise | 12990 |
To the Weaver's gin ye go | 12991 |
I'm o'er young to Marry Yet | 12993 |
McPherson's Farewell | 12994 |
Stay, my Charmer, can you leave me? | 12996 |
What will I do gin my Hoggie die | 12997 |
Jumpin John | 12998 |
Up in the Morning Early | 12999 |
Dusty Miller | 13000 |
Duncan Davison | 13001 |
Where Helen Lies | 13003 |
Duncan Gray | 13005 |
The Ploughman | 13007 |
Hey tuti tatey | 13009 |
Raving winds around her blowing | 13010 |
Musing on the roaring Ocean | 13011 |
To daunton me | 13012 |
[Interpolation] | 13014 |
O'er the water to Charlie | 13015 |
Up and warn a' Willie | 13016 |
The Rosebud | 13019 |
[Revision for Clarinda] | 13021 |
And I'll kiss thee yet, yet | 13022 |
Rattlin, roarin Willie | 13023 |
Clarinda | 13025 |
The Winter it is Past | 13026 |
[To Clarinda] | 13027 |
Song | 13028 |
Epitaph on R. Muir | 13029 |
Epistle to Hugh Parker | 13030 |
Thou whom chance may hither lead | 13032 |
Written in Friar's Carse Hermitage on the banks of Nith - June - 1788 | 13032 |
Altered from the foregoing - Dec - 1788 | 13034 |
The Fкte Champetre | 13037 |
[To Alexander Cunningham] | 13040 |
O Mally's meek, Mally's sweet | 13042 |
I love my Jean | 13043 |
O, were I on Parnassus Hill | 13044 |
The Banks of Nith | 13046 |
To Robt Graham of Fintry Esqr., with a request for an Excise Division | 13047 |
The seventh of November | 13052 |
The blue-eyed Lassie | 13053 |
A Mother's Lament for the loss of her only Son | 13054 |
The lazy mist | 13055 |
Whistle o'er the lave o't | 13056 |
Tam Glen | 13057 |
To the beautiful Miss Eliza J-n, on her principles of Liberty and Equality | 13059 |
[Sketch for an Elegy] | 13060 |
Elegy on Capt. M- H-, a Gentleman | 13062 |
Auld lang syne | 13069 |
Epitaph for J.H. Writer in Ayr | 13071 |
My bony Mary | 13072 |
Ode, Sacred to the Memory of Mrs.- of - | 13073 |
[Versicles on Sign-posts] | 13075 |
To Mr. John Taylor | 13076 |
A Sonnet upon Sonnets | 13077 |
The Cares o' Love | 13078 |
Louis what reck I by thee | 13079 |
Sketch. New Year's Day. To Mrs. Dunlop | 13080 |
Elegy on the Year 1788 | 13083 |
Robin shure in hairst | 13085 |
[Come rede me, dame] | 13086 |
[Caledonia] | 13088 |
[At Whigham's Inn, Sanquhar] | 13091 |
[To William Stewart] | 13092 |
[Lines written in the Kirk of Lamington] | 13094 |
Afton Water | 13095 |
Ode to the departed Regency-bill - 1789 | 13097 |
On Seeing a Wounded Hare limp by me, which a Fellow had just shot at | 13100 |
A new Psalm for the Chapel of Kilmarnock | 13101 |
To Mr. McMurdo, with a pound of Lundiefoot Snuff | 13103 |
Sketch. Inscribed to The Rt. Hon. Ch. J. Fox Esq | 13104 |
[To Peter Stuart] | 13107 |
The Kirk of Scotland's Garland - a new Song | 13108 |
To Mr. Graham of Fintry, On being appointed to my Excise Division | 13116 |
A Grace before dinner, Extempore | 13117 |
Grace after Meat | 13118 |
Willie brew'd a peck o' maut | 13119 |
The Five Carlins - A Ballad - Tune, Chevy chase | 13121 |
The Laddies by the Banks o' Nith | 13126 |
To Miss C*********, a very young Lady | 13128 |
The Whistle. A Ballad | 13130 |
[Answer to an Invitation] | 13135 |
Answer to Dr. Blacklock | 13136 |
A Song | 13141 |
On the Late Captain Grose's Peregrinations thro' Scotland | 13143 |
Written under the picture of the celebrated Miss Burns | 13146 |
Song | 13147 |
Prologue | 13150 |
Nithsdale's welcome hame | 13152 |
Green Sleeves | 13153 |
[To Alexander Findlater] | 13154 |
[To a Gentleman who had sent him a News-paper] | 13156 |
Elegy on Peg Nicholson | 13158 |
I love my Love in secret | 13159 |
Tibbie Dunbar | 13160 |
The Taylor fell thro' the bed | 13161 |
Ay waukin O | 13162 |
Beware o' bonie Ann | 13163 |
My Wife's a wanton, wee thing | 13164 |
[Lassie lie near me] | 13165 |
The Gardener wi' his paidle - or, The Gardener's March | 13166 |
On a bank of Flowers | 13167 |
My love she's but a lassie yet | 13169 |
Cauld frosty morning | 13170 |
Jamie come try me | 13172 |
The Captain's Lady | 13173 |
Johnie Cope | 13174 |
[O dear Minny, what shall I do?] | 13177 |
[Carl an the king come] | 13178 |
There's a youth in this City | 13179 |
My heart's in the Highlands | 13180 |
John Anderson my Jo | 13181 |
Awa whings awa | 13182 |
I'll mak you be fain to follow me | 13184 |
Merry hae I been teethin a heckle | 13185 |
The White Cockade | 13186 |
My Eppie | 13187 |
The Battle of Sherra-moor | 13188 |
Sandy and Jockie | 13191 |
Young Jockey was the blythest lad | 13192 |
A waukrife Minnie | 13193 |
Song | 13195 |
Killiecrankie | 13197 |
The Campbells are comin | 13198 |
Scots Prologue, For Mrs. Sutherland's Benefit Night | 13199 |
Lament of Mary Queen of Scots on the Approach of Spring | 13202 |
Song | 13205 |
Epistle to Robt. Graham Esq: of Fintry | 13206 |
On the Birth of a Posthumous Child | 13213 |
Song | 13215 |
Tam o' Shanter. A Tale | 13217 |
[Ken ye ought o' Captain Grose?] | 13227 |
Epigram on Capt. Francis Grose, The Celebrated Antiquary | 13229 |
A Fragment, which was meant for the beginning of an Elegy | 13230 |
To Terraughty, on his birth-day | 13232 |
There'll never be peace till Jamie comes hame | 13234 |
I look to the North | 13235 |
The Banks o' Doon (A) | 13236 |
The Banks o' Doon (B) | 13238 |
On Mr. James Gracie | 13239 |
Orananaoig, or, The Song of death | 13240 |
Address, To the Shade of Thomson | 13241 |
Extempore - on some Commemorations of Thomson | 13243 |
Lovely Davies | 13245 |
Lament for James, Earl of Glencairn | 13247 |
To R***** G***** of F*****, Esq | 13251 |
Gloomy December | 13255 |
Song | 13256 |
[There was twa Wives] | 13258 |
O saw ye bonie Lesley | 13259 |
Craigieburn-wood - A Song | 13261 |
Frae the friends and Land I love | 13263 |
Hughie Graham | 13264 |
John come kiss me now | 13267 |
Cock up your Beaver | 13268 |
My Tochers the Jewel | 13269 |
Then Guidwife count the lawin | 13270 |
What can a young lassie do wi' an auld man | 13271 |
The bonie lad that's far awa | 13272 |
I do confess thou art sae fair | 13274 |
Galloway Tam | 13275 |
Song | 13276 |
Lord Ronald my Son | 13277 |
Bonie laddie, Highland laddie | 13278 |
It is na, Jean, thy bonie face | 13279 |
Eppie McNab | 13280 |
Wha is that at my bower door? | 13281 |
The bonny wee thing | 13283 |
Geordie - An old Ballad | 13284 |
As I was a wand'ring | 13287 |
The weary Pund o' Tow | 13288 |
I hae a wife o' my ain | 13290 |
When she cam ben she bobbed | 13291 |
O, for ane and twenty Tam | 13292 |
O Kenmure's on and awa, Willie | 13293 |
Bessy and her spinning wheel | 13295 |
My Collier laddie | 13297 |
The Shepherd's Wife | 13299 |
Johnie Blunt | 13301 |
Country Lassie | 13303 |
Fair Eliza | 13305 |
Ye Jacobites by name | 13307 |
The Posie | 13309 |
Song - Sic a wife as Willie's wife | 13311 |
My bonie laddie's young but he's growin yet | 13313 |
Such a parcel of rogues in a nation | 13314 |
Kellyburnbraes | 13316 |
[Jockey fou and Jenny fain] | 13319 |
The Slave's Lament | 13320 |
Bonie Bell | 13321 |
The gallant Weaver | 13322 |
Hey Ca' thro' | 13323 |
Can ye labor lea | 13324 |
The deuks dang o'er my daddie | 13325 |
As I went out ae May morning | 13326 |
She's fair and fause | 13328 |
The De'il's awa wi' th' Exciseman | 13329 |
Song | 13330 |
My wife's a winsome wee thing | 13332 |
Highland Mary | 13333 |
The Rights of Woman - Spoken by Miss Fontenelle on her benefit night | 13335 |
Here's a Health to them that's awa | 13337 |
The lea-rig | 13339 |
Auld Rob Morris | 13341 |
Duncan Gray | 13342 |
[Why should na poor folk mowe] | 13344 |
Here awa', there awa' | 13346 |
Galla Water | 13347 |
Song | 13348 |
Lord Gregory | 13350 |
Sonnet - On hearing a thrush sing on a morning walk in January | 13352 |
Address to General Dumourier | 13353 |
[A Toast] | 13354 |
Open the door to me Oh | 13355 |
Jessie - A new Scots song | 13356 |
Song | 13357 |
When wild War's deadly Blast was blawn | 13359 |
O ken ye what Meg o' the mill has gotten | 13362 |
Ken ye what Meg o' the mill has gotten | 13363 |
Song | 13364 |
Song | 13365 |
On being asked why God had made Miss D- so little and Mrs A- so big | 13367 |
[Maxwell of Cardoness] | 13368 |
[On] Maxwell of Cardoness | 13368 |
Extempore - On being shown a beautiful Country seat belonging to the same | 13369 |
[Annotations in Verse] | 13370 |
O were my Love yon Lilack fair | 13371 |
A Ballad | 13372 |
[Epigrams on Lord Galloway] | 13375 |
[On the death of Echo, a Lap-dog] | 13377 |
[In wood and wild, ye warbling throng] | 13377 |
[Ye warblers of the vocal grove] | 13378 |
On J-hn M-r-ne, laird of L-gg-n | 13379 |
Phillis the fair | 13380 |
Song | 13382 |
Song | 13383 |
Song | 13384 |
Allan Water | 13387 |
Song | 13389 |
Dainty Davie | 13390 |
Robert Bruce's March to Bannockburn | 13392 |
To Maria | 13394 |
Down the burn Davie | 13395 |
[Passion's Cry] | 13396 |
The Primrose | 13398 |
Thou hast left me ever | 13399 |
Song | 13400 |
Fair Jenny | 13401 |
On Captn W- R-dd-ck of C-rb-ton | 13403 |
Thine am I, my Chloris fair | 13404 |
[Bonie Mary] | 13405 |
Act Sederunt of the Session - A Scots Ballad | 13407 |
To Captn G-, on being asked why I was not to be of the party | 13409 |
Impromptu, on Mrs. W. Riddell's Birthday, 4th Novr. 1793 | 13411 |
Occasional Address, Spoken by Miss Fontenelle, on her Benefit-Night | 13412 |
On seeing Miss Fontenelle in a Favourite Character | 13415 |
English Song | 13416 |
To Miss Graham of Fintray | 13418 |
Monody on Maria | 13419 |
Wilt thou be my Dearie | 13421 |
Sonnet, on the Death of Robert Riddel, Esq. of Glen Riddel, April 1794 | 13422 |
On Robert Riddel | 13423 |
Banks of Cree | 13424 |
Pinned to Mrs R-'s carriage | 13425 |
In answer to one who affirmed of a well-known Character here, Dr B- | 13426 |
Extempore [on The Loyal Natives' Verses] | 13427 |
Ode [For General Washington's Birthday] | 13428 |
On W. R-, Esq | 13431 |
A red red Rose | 13432 |
On the seas and far away | 13433 |
To Dr Maxwell, on Miss Jessy Staig's recovery | 13436 |
Ca' the yowes to the knowes | 13437 |
She says she lo'es me best of a' | 13439 |
Saw ye my Phely (quasi dicat, Phillis) | 13441 |
How lang and dreary is the night | 13442 |
Song | 13443 |
The auld man's winter thought | 13444 |
The Lovers morning salute to his Mistress | 13445 |
On seeing Mrs Kemble in Yarico | 13447 |
To the Honble Mr R. M-, of P-nm-re, on his high Phaeton | 13448 |
Song, altered from an old English one | 13449 |
Lassie wi' the lintwhite locks | 13450 |
[To Chloris] | 13452 |
Song | 13453 |
Can you leave me thus, my Katy | 13456 |
Scotish Song | 13457 |
Song | 13459 |
My Nanie's awa | 13460 |
[Dumfries Epigrams] | 13461 |
[C-d faithful likeness] | 13461 |
[Should he escape the slaughter of thine Eyes] | 13462 |
[Pray, who are these Natives] | 13463 |
[On an old acquaintance] | 13464 |
[Friend Commissar] | 13465 |
[On Mr. Burke] | 13466 |
[At the election of Magistrates for Dumfries] | 13467 |
On Chloris requesting me to give her a spray of a sloe-thorn in full blossom | 13468 |
Ode to Spring | 13469 |
Song - For a' that and a' that | 13471 |
Sweet fa's the eve on Craigieburn | 13473 |
The Dumfries Volunteers | 13474 |
Let me in this ae night | 13476 |
Fragment - Epistle from Esopus to Maria | 13479 |
On Miss J. Scott, of Ayr | 13483 |
Song | 13484 |
Song - (On Chloris being ill) | 13487 |
Elegy on Mr William Cruikshank A. M | 13489 |
[The Heron Ballads, 1795] | 13490 |
[Wham will we send to London town] | 13490 |
The Election: A New Song | 13493 |
Johnie B-'s lament | 13497 |
Buy Braw Troggin. An Excellent New Song | 13501 |
Address to the woodlark | 13505 |
Song | 13506 |
Song | 13507 |
Altered from an old English song | 13508 |
Song | 13509 |
Address to the Tooth-Ache | 13511 |
English Song | 13513 |
Scotch Song | 13515 |
Scotish Ballad | 13517 |
Fragment | 13519 |
Poetical Inscription, for an Altar to Independence at Kerrouchtry | 13520 |
[To Chloris] | 13521 |
Song | 13523 |
Scotish Song | 13525 |
Song | 13526 |
[To John Syme] | 13528 |
On Mr Pit's hair-powder tax | 13529 |
[The Solemn League and Covenant] | 13530 |
The Bob o' Dumblane | 13531 |
Poem | 13532 |
The Dean of Faculty - A new Ballad | 13534 |
Hey for a lass wi' a tocher | 13536 |
Poem on Life | 13538 |
Here's a health to ane I lo'e dear | 13541 |
[On Jessy Lewars] | 13542 |
[Talk not to me of savages] | 13542 |
[Fill me with the rosy wine] | 13543 |
[Say, sages, what's the charm on earth] | 13544 |
[But rarely seen since Nature's birth] | 13545 |
To a Young Lady, Miss Jessy L-, Dumfries | 13546 |
[Oh wert thou in the cauld blast] | 13547 |
Song | 13548 |
To Mr. S. McKenzie | 13549 |
A Fragment - On Glenriddel's Fox breaking his chain | 13550 |
[To Captain Riddell] | 13553 |
[Reply to Robert Riddell] | 13554 |
[Grim Grizzle] | 13555 |
Burns grace at Kirkudbright | 13559 |
[Graces - at the Globe Tavern] | 13560 |
[Lines Written on windows of the Globe Tavern, Dumfries] | 13562 |
[The greybeard, old wisdom, may boast of his treasures] | 13562 |
Song | 13563 |
[My bottle is a holy pool] | 13564 |
[In politics if thou would'st mix] | 13565 |
Lines Written on a window, at the King's Arms Tavern, Dumfries | 13566 |
[You're welcome, Willie Stewart] | 13567 |
[At Brownhill Inn] | 13568 |
On W- Gr-h-m Esq: of M-sskn-w | 13569 |
[Epitaph on Mr. Burton] | 13570 |
Epitaph on D- C- | 13571 |
Epitaph Extempore, On a person nicknamed the Marquis | 13572 |
Epitaph on J-hn B-shby | 13573 |
On Captn L-lles | 13574 |
[On John M 'Murdo] | 13575 |
[On Gabriel Richardson] | 13576 |
On Commissary Goldie's Brains | 13577 |
The Hue and Cry of John Lewars | 13578 |
[The Keekin'Glass] | 13580 |
[Inscription on a Goblet] | 13581 |
[On Andrew Turner] | 13582 |
[The Toadeater] | 13583 |
The lovely lass o' Inverness | 13584 |
Song | 13585 |
The Wren's Nest | 13587 |
O an ye were dead Gudeman | 13588 |
Tam Lin | 13589 |
Had I the wyte she bade me | 13598 |
Comin thro' the rye | 13600 |
The rowin 't in her apron | 13601 |
Charlie he's my darling | 13603 |
The Lass of Ecclefechan | 13605 |
We'll hide the Couper behint the door | 13606 |
Leezie Lindsay | 13608 |
For the sake o' Somebody | 13609 |
The cardin o't | 13610 |
Sutors o' Selkirk | 13611 |
Tibbie Fowler | 13612 |
There's three true gude fellows | 13614 |
The bonie lass made the bed to me | 13615 |
Sae far awa | 13618 |
The Reel o' Stumpie | 13619 |
I'll ay ca' in by yon town | 13620 |
The rantin laddie | 13621 |
O May thy morn | 13624 |
As I cam o'er the Cairney mount | 13625 |
Highland laddie | 13626 |
Lovely Polly Stewart | 13628 |
The Highland balou | 13629 |
Bannocks o' bear-meal | 13630 |
Wae is my heart | 13631 |
Here's his health in water [A] | 13632 |
Here's his health in water [B] | 13633 |
Gude Wallace | 13634 |
The auld man's mare's dead | 13637 |
The Taylor | 13639 |
There grows a bonie brier-bush | 13640 |
Here's to thy health my bonie lass | 13642 |
It was a' for our rightfu' king | 13644 |
The Highland widow's lament | 13646 |
O steer her up and had her gaun | 13648 |
Wee Willie Gray | 13649 |
Gudeen to you kimmer | 13650 |
O ay my wife she dang me | 13652 |
Scroggam | 13653 |
O gude ale comes | 13654 |
My Lady's gown there's gairs upon't | 13655 |
Sweetest May | 13657 |
Jockey's ta'en the parting kiss | 13658 |
O lay thy loof in mine lass | 13659 |
Cauld is the e'enin blast | 13660 |
There was a bonie lass | 13661 |
There's news lasses news | 13662 |
O that I had ne'er been Married | 13663 |
The German lairdie | 13664 |
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