Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Scotland: Vols. VI–VIII. 1876–79.
Ordé Braes
By Robert Nicoll (18141837)T
Nae ither spot sae fair;
Nae ither faces look sae kind
As the smilin’ faces there.
An’ I ha’e sat by mony streams,
Ha’e travelled mony ways;
But the fairest spot on the earth to me
Is on bonnie Ordé Braes.
Wi’ the ither neebor bairns,
To pu’ the hazel’s shining nuts,
An’ to wander ’mang the ferns;
An’ to feast on the bramble-berries brown,
An’ gather the glossy slaes,
By the burnie’s side, an’ aye sinsyne
I ha’e loved sweet Ordé Braes.
An’ its kindly dwellers a’,
O, the friends I loved wi’ a young heart’s love
Ere care that heart could thraw,
Are twined wi’ the stanes o’ the silver burn,
An’ its fairy crooks an’ bays,
That onward sang ’neath the gowden broom
Upon bonnie Ordé Braes.
By the bonnie Ordé’s side:
Nane ken how meikle peace an’ love
In a straw-roofed cot can bide.
But the hames are gane, an’ the hand o’ time
The roofless wa’s doth raze;
Laneness an’ sweetness hand in hand
Gang ower the Ordé Braes.
An’ O, an’ I were there,
Wi’ twa three friends o’ auld langsyne,
My wanderin’ joy to share!
For though on the hearth o’ my bairnhood’s hame
The flock o’ the hills doth graze,
Some kind hearts live to love me yet
Upon bonnie Ordé Braes.