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Home  »  The Book of Georgian Verse  »  Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne (1766–1845)

William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. The Book of Georgian Verse. 1909.

The Auld House

Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne (1766–1845)

OH, the auld house, the auld house!

What though the rooms were wee?

Oh, kind hearts were dwelling there,

And bairnies fu’ o’ glee!

The wild rose and the jessamine

Still hang upon the wa’:

How mony cherished memories

Do they, sweet flowers, reca’!

Oh, the auld laird, the auld laird,

Sae canty, kind, and crouse!

How mony did he welcome to

His ain wee dear auld house!

And the leddy, too, sae genty,

That sheltered Scotland’s heir,

And clipt a lock wi’ her ain hand

Frae his lang yellow hair.

The mavis still doth sweetly sing,

The blue-bells sweetly blaw;

The bonnie Earn’s clear winding still,

But the auld house is awa’.

The auld house, the auld house!

Deserted though ye be,

There ne’er can be a new house

Will seem sae fair to me.

Still flourishing the auld pear tree,

The bairnies liked to see;

And oh, how often they did speir

When ripe they a’ wad be!

The voices sweet, the wee bit feet

Aye rinnin’ here and there;

The merry shout—oh! whiles we greet

To think we’ll hear nae mair.

For they are a’ wide scattered now,

Some to the Indies gane,

And ane, alas! to her lang hame;

Not here will meet again.

The kirkyaird! the kirkyaird!

Wi’ flowers o’ every hue,

Sheltered by the holly’s shade,

And the dark sombre yew.

The setting sun, the setting sun,

How glorious it gaed doun!

The cloudy splendour raised our hearts

To cloudless skies abune.

The auld dial, the auld dial,

It tauld how time did pass;

The wintry winds ha’e dung it doun,

Now hid ’mang weeds and grass.