Page:Coalman's courtship to the creel-wife's daughter (10).pdf/4



4 breeks and a ragget doublet; gade always wi' his bosom bare, sometimes had ae garter, a lingle or strae rape was gude enough for Sawny. His very belly was a' sunburnt like a piper's bag, or the head of an auld drum, and yet his beard began to sprout out like herring banes. He took thick brose to his breakfast, and baps and ale through the day; and when the coals selled dear, and the win' was cauld, bought an oven-farl, and twa Dunbar Wadders, or a Glasgow Magistrate, which fish-wifes ca's a wastlin herrin'.

His mither, auld Mary, plagued him ay in the morning; she got up when the hens kec- kled, riping the ribs, blew her snotterbox, primed her nose, kindled her tobacco-pipe, and at every puff breathed out fretting a- gainst her hard fortune and lanely, single life. O but a widow be a poor name; but I live in a wilderness in this lang-lonen, mony a man gaes by my door, but few folks looks in to poor Mary! Hoch hey, will I never win out of this wearied life. Wa Sawny, man, wilt thou no rise the day, the sun's up, and a' the nibours round about; Willie and Charlie is on the hill an hour syne, and half gate hame again. Wilt thou rise an gie the beasts a bite, thou minds na them, I wat man. Grump grump, quo Sawny, they got their supper an hour after I got mine. Shut to dead come on them every ane an they get a bit frae me till they work for't.