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The Gowk

Topics: classic

I see the Gowk an' the Gowk sees me         Beside a berry-bush by the aipple-tree.                 Old Scots Rhyme.     'Tib, my auntie's a deil to wark,         Has me risin' 'afore the sun;     Aince her heid is abune her sark         Then the clash o' her tongue's begun!     Warslin', steerin' wi' hens an' swine,     Naucht kens she o' a freend o' mine -     But the Gowk that bides i' the woods o' Dun             He kens him fine!     Past the yaird an' ahint the stye,         O the aipples grow bonnilie!     Tib, my auntie, she canna' spy         Wha comes creepin' to kep wi' me.     Aye! she'd sort him, for, dod, she's fell!     Whisht nou, Jimmie, an' hide yersel'     An' the wice-like bird i' the aipple-tree             He winna' tell!     Aprile-month, or the aipples flower,         Tib, my auntie, will rage an' ca';     Jimmie lad, she may rin an' glower -         What care I? We'll be far awa'!     Let her seek me the leelang day,     Wha's to tell her the road we'll gae?     For the cannie Gowk, tho' he kens it a',             He winna' say!

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"I see the Gowk an' the Gowk sees me..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Violet Jacob delivers a powerful performance in "The Gowk"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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"Lay me in yon place, lad,         The gloamin's th..."

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