The Bonnie lass O' Ballochmyle
Fair is the morn in flow'ry May,
And sweet is night in autumn mild,
When roving thro' the garden gay,
Or wand'ring in the lonely wild;
But woman nature's darling child
There all her charms she does compile;
E'en there her other works are foil'd
E'en there her other works are foil'd
By the bonnie lass 0' Ballochmyle.
Chorus
The bonnie lass 0' Ballochmyle
The bonnie lass!
--The bonnie, bonnie lass!
The bonnie lasso' Ballochmyle.
O had she been a country maid,
And I the happy country swain,
Tho' shelter'd in the lowest shed
That ever rose on Scotland's plain!
Thro' weary winter's wind and rain,
Withjoy, with rapture, I would toil;
And nightly to my bosom strain,
And nightly to my bosom strain,
The bonnie lass 0' Ballochmyle.
Chorus;
The bonnie lass 0' Ballochmyle
The bonnie lass!
The bonnie, bonnie lass!
The bonnie lass 0' Ballochmyle.
(Bonnie Lass 0' Ballochmyle)
Ballochmyle stands on the banks of the
River Ayr and the song was written by
Robert Burns to a lady he admired in 1786.
His feelings were not reciprocated but
are immortalised in these words.