Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes. Scotland: Vols. VIVIII. 187679. | | | | Arranteenie | | The Lass o Arranteenie | | Robert Tannahill (17741810) |
| | | FAR lone amang the Highland hills, | |
| Midst Natures wildest grandeur, | |
| By rocky dens and woody glens | |
| With weary steps I wander. | |
| The langsome way, the darksome day, | 5 |
| The mountain mist sae rainy, | |
| Are naught to me when gaun to thee, | |
| Sweet lass o Arranteenie. | |
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| Yon mossy rosebud down the howe, | |
| Just opening fresh and bonny, | 10 |
| Blinks sweetly neath the hazel bough, | |
| And s scarcely seen by ony; | |
| Sae sweet amidst her native hills | |
| Obscurely blooms my Jeanie, | |
| Mair fair and gay than rosy May, | 15 |
| The flower o Arranteenie. | |
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| Now from the mountains lofty brow | |
| I view the distant ocean, | |
| There Avarice guides the bounding prow, | |
| Ambition courts promotion: | 20 |
| Let Fortune pour her golden store, | |
| Her laurelled favors many; | |
| Give me but this, my souls first wish, | |
| The lass o Arranteenie. | | | | |
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