The Book of Scottish Song/The Wearie Body

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
2268925The Book of Scottish Song — The Wearie Body1843Alexander Whitelaw

The Wearie Body.

[Air, "Donald Caird."]

The wearie body's back again,
The unco body's back again:
Fye let a' the neebors ken
The wearie body's back again.

Weel ye mind for monie a year,
He kept the kintra side in fear;
The bairnies toddlin' wi' their dame
Would cower to hear the cadger's name:
For he was kent baith far and wide,
For he could den and he could hide,
And cadge wha like the kintra thro',
Nane could cadge like him, I trow.
The wearie body, &c.

Lang did they curse his soupple legs,
When he ran aff wi' hens and eggs,
The wives would cry, the deil be in't,
If I hinna lost my tait o' lint;
And then they'd rue his freenly gills,
That gart them aft to sign his bills,
And mony a wearie wicht, I trow,
Paid dear enough for gettin' fou.
The wearie body, &c.

At last he thocht to save his neck,
He hied him aff to cauld Quebec,
And there set up the grocer trade,
And many a pauky trick he play'd;
But Yankie he was nae sic fool,
He dipp'd the cadger in the pool,
And for fear he would their country stain,
They kickit the body back again.
The wearie body, &c.

O! had you seen sic consternation,
Ilk face was mark'd wi' pale vexation;
And young and auld allke complain,
Is the wearie body back again?
The shuttle chocked in the shed,
The list'nin' tailor brak' his thread;
The wright, wi' spite, threw by his plane,
Is the body really back again?
The wearie body, &c.

The sturdy mason drapp'd his mell
The blacksmith's big fore-hammer fell;
The cannie nurse let fe' the wean—
Losh! woman, d'ye think he's back again!
The chattin' barber cut the face,
The auld guidman forgat the grace,
Na! the lasses wadna lie their lane,
Sin' e'er they heard o' him back again.
The wearie body, &c.

Weel may Scotland greet wi' spite,
And gi'e the Yankies a' the wite,
That wadna let the wicht remain,
But pest us wi' him back again;
For weel I wat they kent fu' weel,
A rogue like him was just a deil;
They micht had mair respect for men,
Than sent the body back again.
The wearie body, &c.