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lloway. * * * * * THE BANKS OF THE TWEED. This song is one of the many attempts that English composers have made to imitate the Scottish manner, and which I shall, in these strictures, beg leave to distinguish by the appellation of Anglo-Scottish productions. The music is pretty good, but the verses are just above contempt. * * * * * THE BEDS OF SWEET ROSES. This song, as far as I know, for the first time appears here in print.--When I was a boy, it was a very popular song in Ayrshire. I remember to have heard those fanatics, the Buchanites, sing some of their nonsensical rhymes, which they dignify with the name of hymns, to this air. * * * * * ROSLIN CASTLE. These beautiful verses were the production of a Richard Hewit, a young man that Dr. Blacklock, to whom I am indebted for the anecdote, kept for some years as amanuensis. I do not know who is the author of the second song to the tune. Tytler, in his amusing history of Scots music, gives the air to Oswald; but in Oswald's own collection of Scots tunes, where he affixes an asterisk to those he himself composed, he does not make the least claim to the tune. * * * * * SAW YE JOHNNIE CUMMIN? QUO' SHE. This song, for genuine humour in the verses, and lively originality in the air, is unparalleled. I take it to be very old. * * * * * CLOUT THE CALDRON. A tradition is mentioned in the "Bee," that the second Bishop Chisholm, of Dunblane, used to say, that if he were going to be hanged, nothing would soothe his mind so much by the way as to hear "Clout the Caldron" played. I have met with another tradition, that the old song to this tune, "Hae ye onie pots or pans, Or onie broken chanlers," was composed on one of the Kenmure family, in the cavalier times; and alluded to an amour he had, while under hiding, in the disguise of an itinerant tinker. The air is also known by the name of "The blacksmith and his apron," which from the rhythm, seems to have been a line of some old song to the tune. * * * * * SAW YE MY PEGGY. This charming song is much older, and indeed superior to Ramsay's verses, "The Toast," as he calls them. There is another set of the words, much older still, and which I take to be the original one, bu
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