Th T D(5 / 6)
y aback frae urts,
an&039; please thesels wi&039; untry sports,
it wad for ev&039;ry ane be better,
the ird, the tenant, an&039; the tter!
for thae frank, rant, rabl billies,
fet haet o&039; the&039;s ill-hearted fellows;
except for break o&039; their tir,
or speak lightly o&039; their lir,
or shoot of a hare or oor-ck,
the ne&039;er-a-bit they&039;re ill to poor folk,
but will ye tell , aster caesar,
sure great folk&039;s life&039;s a life o&039; pleasure?
nae cauld nor hunr e&039;er can steer the,
the very thought o&039;t need na fear the
caesar
lord, an, were ye but whiles whare i a,
the ntles, ye wad ne&039;er envy the!
it&039;s true, they need na starve or sweat,
thro&039; ter&039;s cauld, or sir&039;s heat:
they&039;ve nae sair wark to craze their banes,
an&039; fill auld a wi&039; grips an&039; granes:
but huan bodies are sic fools,
for a&039; their lles an&039; schools,
that when nae real ills perplex the,
they ak enow thesel&039;s to vex the;
an&039; aye the less they hae to sturt the,
like proportion, less will hurt the
a untry fellow at the pleugh,
his acre&039;s till&039;d, he&039;s right eneugh;
a untry girl at her wheel,
her dizzen&039;s dune, she&039;s un weel;
but ntlen, an&039; dies warst,
wi&039; ev&039;n-down want o&039; wark are curst
they loiter, loungg, nk an&039; zy;
tho&039; deil-haet ails the, yet uneasy;
their days sipid, dull, an&039; tasteless;
their nights uniet, ng, an&039; restless
an&039;ev&039;n their sports, their balls an&039; races,
their gallopg through public pces,
there&039;s sic parade, sic pop, an&039; art,
the joy can scarcely reach the heart
the n cast out party-atches,
then wther a&039; deep debauches
ae night they&039;re ad
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