FEE HIM, FATHER. TUNE_Fee him, Father. O, saw ye Johnnie comin'? quo she, ye Johnnie comin'? Johnnie comin'? Johnnie comin', And his doggie rinnin'? quo she, O, fee him, father, fee him, quo she, Fee him, father, fee him ; Fee him, father, fee him; And a weel-doin'; Gangs wi' me when I see him, quo she, Gangs wi' me when I see him. What will I do wi' him ? And I hae nane to gie him. And ane o' them I'll gie him ; Dinna stand wi' him, quo she, For weel do I loe bim, quo she, For weel do I loe him, quo she, Weel do I loe him. Fee him, father, fee him ; And crack wi' me at e'en, quo she, CRAIL TOUNT TUNE-Sir John Malcolm. AND was ye e'er in Crail toun ? Igo and ago; Sing irom, igon, ago. His wig was like a doukit hen, Igo and ago ; Sing irom, igon, ago. And dinna ye ken Sir John Malcolm ? Sing irom, igon, ago. And haud ye weel frae Sandie Don, Igo and ago; Sing irom, igon, ago. From Herd's Collection, 1776. | There is a somewhat different version of this strange song in Her's Collection, 1776. The present, which I think the best, is copied irom The Scottish Minstrel. # The person known in Scottish song and tradition by the epithet Clerk Dishington, was a notary who resided about the middle of the last century in Crail, and acted as the town-clerk of that ancient burgh. I have been iuformed that he was a person of great local celebrity in his time, as an uncompromising humourist. To hear them o' their travels talk, Igo and ago; to London's but a walk, Sing irom, igon, ago. Igo and ago, Sing irom, igon, ago. To see the leviathan skip, Igo and ago, Sing irom, igon, ago. MY ONLY JO AND DEARIE, 0. GALL.* TUNE-My only jo and dearie, 0. My only jo and dearie, 0; Upon the bank sae briery, 0. My only jo and dearie, O. The birdie sings upon the thorn Its sang o' joy, fu' cheery, 0; Nae care to make it eerie, O. * Richard Gall, the son of a dealer in old furniture in St Mary's Wynd, Edinburgh, was brought up to the business of a printer, and died, at an early age, about the beginning of the present century. Ah, little kens the sangster sweet, My only jo and dearie, O! When we were bairnies on yon brae, And youth was blinkin' bonnie, 0, Aft we wad daff the lee lang day, Our joys fu' sweet and monie, O. Aft I wad chase thee ower the lee, And round about the thorny tree; Or pu' the wild flow'rs a' for thee, My only jo and dearie, O. I bae a wish I canna tine, 'Mang a'the cares that grieve me, O; A wish that thou wert ever mine, And never mair to leave me, 0; My only jo and dearie, 0. TARRY WOQ. TUNE_Tarry w00. TARRY Woo, tarry woo, Tarry woo is ill to spin ; Card it weil, ere ye begin, be cleadin for a queen. Sing my bonnie harmless sheep, Bleating sweetly, as ye go How happy is the shepherd's life, He lives content, and envies none : * From the Tea-Table Miscellany, 1724. |