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- Mang Howes
- an Knowes
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- A Day's Dander throwe
- Border Waeter - Gates.
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- For aa that the sun, hoisin itsel i the lift owreheed, thraetent an
- efter-heat that wad be fit ti muzz folk, the forenuin air was caller an
- clear, an stoor was awanteen whan A tuik ti the lang road that rins doon
- throwe Newtoon an bye the Dryburgh loaneen on ti Bosells Green. Everly,
- the road was thrang wui droves o nowt-aa keinds, untellin-kye an tiups
- an keilies an yowes, mixty- maxty, rowtin an mehhin an blehhin; doddies
- an starks an queys an stots an gimmers an hoggies an grumphies an
- guissies-wui nurrin teikes snackin an yowfin an boochin at ther cluits;
- bit fient a steekin bull ti yoke on ov a body, for the bease war
- mensefih, an ilka herd hed a bleithe word i the byegangeen. Still an on,
- thir billies hed a sair hatter or they got the bruits weerd bye the
- cairts an hurlbarrihs an yirrint-vans an thing, that every-wee-bittie
- dunsht other i the strooshie. Faix, it was aa leike thon killeen-hoose
- brae at Mainchester, thonder (div ee kenn'd?); bit no a biggeen keind
- was there ti be seen, nor was there ony warden polis ti redd oot the
- bizz wui skeely maig.
- Now, at lang last, the hinmaist doonfaa o the 0road brings ee oot richt
- at Bosells Green, an there the road pairts i twae. The maist feck o the
- hooses cooer coothy on the tae hand i the yeh straigglin street o
- Bosells, croonin the braeheeds hich abuin Tweed an forenent bieldy
- Dryburgh; an on the tother hand- the richt-the road wunds aboot the
- Green an makes up the brae.
- A cood fain heh dwinglt, an daikert aboot in sleepery Bosells, bit A
- fair durstna, or thance A micht never heh gotten off the bit aa day. Bit
- afore A sterteet neice an cannie on the brae up atween the planteens, A
- cruikeet ma hoach an clappeet masel doon a meenint on ov a toggle bank,
- athort the Green, an luit ma een feast on the bonnie gerssy haugh- that
- weel-sorteet an taen sic grand care o. For Bosells hes muckle mense o er
- Green!
- A beguid the climm as A meent ti end eet- "huillie, huillie, up the
- brae" ! The leikes o yon's no ti be munteet at a teerin kip, an forbye,
- it was harly the waather for stressin. An, whan A tuik the kaik, an
- turnt keindih pechlt, A was rale glad ti caa cannie an keek backiewards
- at the airt A'd comed. Fleis an midges an bummies war skiddlin an bizzin
- aboot ma lugs in cluds, areddies-kittle craiters (mae ways as yin) an
- fasheez ti middle wui, inti buit. A luit thir yins birr at, an fasht
- thum nane, an they did iz nae skaith.
- Ferrer on, the road turnt bieldeet o baith seides, wui derk fir
- planteens that (on the skleff, strecht streetch at the heed o the brae)
- aamaist pletteet ther
- brainches abuinheed. A met twae awfih sairious-on chiels, rale leike as
- ther seam was ti girn the bits o moppies skiltin aboot; an than a
- chairkin road-injin, skreevin an skrauchin leike a skartin skeelie on a
- skuil sklate. A duist hyit jairgin things, an that menseless road-injin
- fair garrd mei girrl! The bummies sterteet ther kittleen an daffeen
- again be A was weel oot o the skuggin wuds, an seine, at the kaim o the
- hicht, A turnt roond for another keek ahint. An, whow! it was a sicht ti
- be meindeet!
- There, at the yeh hand, tooered the threeple Eeldons; there spaaldert,
- in a weide, weel-wuddeet howe wui gressy haughlands an trei-cled glens,
- Tweed's storied dale; an there, doon ablow, smuillin- in laeuch at the
- brae-fit, little Bosells Beekeet i the sun. A was fair cairreet! A was
- vext A'd naebody nerr iz ti speak ti, so ti geet vent A e'en blethert ti
- masel! An a feelin-herteet yallih-yorleen, hippin alang the deike,
- cockeet eis luggie an cheepeet-in rale kaif an innerly.
- Let cleverality, mockreef folk that are unco smert, wui ther tale, an
- ready ti hoonsh an take a len o hyimmalt claivers the leikis o meine,
- dae a eer or twae's woark- ay ! yeh roond twalmont's, duist!- parrackeet
- in ov a ceetie, mang reekin lums an chawkin smuists, where yin canna sei
- bye yin's neb for skomfeeshin rowks an drowes, an than yibbleens they'd
- think as muckle, an aa, o a cuintrie-seide where yin's sicht can spang
- owre dizzens o meiles; where yin braiths God's air clear an no soddlt
- wui suitty flichts; where, forbye, isteed o caimeecal-laden cluds, a
- body can finnd the praicious scents o field an foggeege, flueesh an
- flooer! A vast o folk dinna ken whan they're weel off
- Yet, yince in a day, thir braes hed seen unco sichts. Thonder was the
- moniment A jaloozed ti be the Lilliard's Edge Memorial, so that A was
- stannin on bluiddy Ancrum Muir. Nae cannie daffin bull- reel splore that
- fearfih fecht, whan the Dooglas an the Scott wrait off a wheen auld
- scores an saw day-aboot wui the auld-enemy.
- Threh the mids o thir verra busses wad stert the huirn oo read aboot in
- oor bulks: ilk sheuch an heidie-hole i thir verra rigs was den for
- fairce sodgers in fechtin-graith-Scots an Ingleesh in a fraineeshin,
- fidgin mad-keen ti teer the harrigals oot o other; ilk lirk o thir
- knowes wad heide the gear o war. Hei'd little need be hen-herteet that
- hed ti beer the ramstam onfaa threh whan the slogan waekent the waller
- an sterteet the fray i the gray-daylicht,-eendon throwe aa the grewsome
- mowlie-; whan billies fell seide-be- seide till the brae-face was
- traisselt an the gress ran reed wui bluid; whan naigs an troopers-the
- deed- ruckle glutherin i-ther weizants-war cowpeet inti ilka seike,
- heeds an thraws,-on till the derkeneen rowed its hap roond deed an
- dei-in, an garrd the hyill yins devall an take a barley. Oor forebears
- an ther Southron neebers coodna sit soft ava i thae days: they war
- everly natterin an fechtin. An-sic veeshyis fechteen as it was, tui!
- Folk are muckle ti mean that beide on aether seide o the Mairches atween
- twae prood an towty countries 'at canna grei an are aye cuissen-oot. The
- Borderers lang syne geh thersels an awfih leife o'd. Their's was nae
- canty doon-sitteen!
- Duist a hip-step-an-a-lowp, an A cam on o an- other kenspeckle
- landmerk-Peinelheuch. This eez the saicant sic column, A've haar'tell;
- for, yeh gowsty nicht (wui a wund fit ti blaw doors oot wundihs) a
- turbleent woare as the ordnar dang doon the firsst Peinelheuch moniment
- (the whulk, A unk, maun heh been buggen keinda jingle-jointeet, or maim
- heh cowblt on ov a gey coaggly foond ; ony o the ways, it geh a steiter,
- an yownt-owre it tirlt!) Bit Border folk are no that easy bett ; they
- juist paat up a moniment fer better an brawer be what the auld yin was.
- An now, aabody stravaigin the Borderland-gangers an reiders-sood ken
- Peinelheuch.
- A'd breesteet the brae now, an the road swaipeet doon afore iz. Ay! doon
- ti ma caav-grund o Teviot- dale-an A lilteet a sang an whewed an
- yuooted, leike as A'd gane wuth, an laap an flaang as yauld-as a
- wuddie--boondin bleithely on wui ma' airms shuggiein lowce threh ma
- oxters. A was abuin-the- woarlt! A was naether ti haud nor ti binnd! If
- onybody hed eyed iz, hei'd heh thocht A was shuir ready for Bowden!!
- Yeh thing ailed iz; A'd turnt awfih dry!
- "Bring ben the loch!" yince quo "Jamie the Poyeter;" an faith A was
- muckle o his meind eenow. A felt A cood heh drucken
- waeter-(waeter-waeter, waal-waeter, sprigget-waeter, or waeter threh a
- pownd!) -till ma lugs played crack! or till there, was nochts left o the
- nerrest-hand loch bit paddihs, fishes stankin for braith, an glet. So,
- raison or nane, A claam a fence o spakes an stuckeens, an jookeet doon
- ti a wumplin burnie, where A cood sei sic a gliff as A gien the baggies
- an preenheeds whan A shot ma dish inti the waeter. Weiceleik-e, A juist
- tuik a toot-a sirple ti seind oot ma mooth, juist-an than back A speeld
- ti the road again.
- Bye the policies o Ancrum Hoose-fair cled o treis-A stoaggeet-on on the
- shadeet seide, where juist the sunny blinks, keekin throwe atween the
- leafs, spurtelt the road wui greimeens o licht. Doon ablow glinteet Yill
- Waeter, trinnlin alang owre its staney chennel an trinklin ti its treist
- wui Teiot. The fisslin leafs trimmelt an bevvert i the simmer breeze on
- its banks, an the flicherin burdies daibbelt an dookeet; an A fair
- ill-wulled thum o ther plowtereen an ther swattereen. A bittock fether
- on, the road splet, an, ti the richt, spanged the Yill owre a brig
- aseide a creeper-kivvert cottage wuin wui its gairdeen a perfect sotter
- o bonnie flooers. An a wutchy-butterflei was makin the maist o its grand
- bat, jikkerin aboot threh flooer ti flooer.
- There, yoint the waeter, an fell croose an canty on the brae-face, lay
- Ancrum!
- Yeh bit sate on the kei-stane o the brig; yeh deek at the gurlin Yill;
- an A hoyed strecht for the "clachan." A maun heh been woare ti waeter as
- ti corn, a hantle, for A'll ouwn A was dry again, turnt, lang or this!
- Bit A was yap now, tui; no a beite o meat hed a etten threh ma brekfist
- ti the now, an A was vext A hedna socht a piece i ma pootch for ti
- mootle i the road. So ee sei A thocht A micht fell twae dogs wui yeh
- bane: sei Ancrum, an geet a chack o something ti serr as an off-pit, if
- it was duist a gowpeenfih berries or a penny gray rowe, wui a slokener
- owre an abuin. Hunger's a grand kitcheen; it was aa yin ti mei,
- forgimmih-tih! A wasna saucy! No that A was hert-hungery nih, aether; or
- thance A micht heh been gaun pookin "cheese-an-breed" off o the hedges
- ti nattle at.
- Aa vow yins thas's ooreet an oold wui this neeger-wheeper ov a woarlt,
- an yirns ti sid-doon in ov a hyimmly bit away threh aa the strowe an the
- catter- battereen-ee sood gang an stop at Ancrum! Ancrum -where
- weel-putten-on Naiter's buskeet in er bonniest braws, where the caller
- air ud seek roses back ti the chafts o the palliest peenge an wad
- spruish an turn leify again the maist shilpeet an disjaskeet! Ay! thon's
- the keind o bit! wui rowth o simmer sheine, an wui waalth o leaf an
- flooer, an wui breezes threh the Border hills ti blaw away the ooder an
- the speeder-wobs threh a body's herns-ti gar the reed bluid lowp, an pit
- yin that's off eis bat suin on the way o mends again; ti gar yin that's
- duist a peike at eis meat turn that ei can heck leike a pick-maw. Thon's
- the keind o bit-steepeet i the lore o the bye-gane days; a bit that saw
- weild toozy dae-eens lang or monie a massy jumpeet-up toon was buggen or
- thocht o. Monie a creestin bit wui a guid ruice o itsel A ken that
- coodna haud the cannle ti Ancrum for wurth!
- A sud-doon on ov a furm oot-bye the road-end, yonder, duist for ti take
- a richt look at yin o the bonniest an pleesantest bits 'at ever A've
- clappeet een on o. Planteet aboot the Green i the mids, the treis gien
- skug ti the Auld Cross-sair duifft an neiteet an nickeet wui Teime an
- the waather . The bairns new oot o the skuil for leave, gaed lowpin an
- rinnin aboot deike an gerss, -the wainches jumpin the tow, an the
- callants daein kittles. A dandert aboot amang the auld byres an smiddie
- ends an yetts; an than a gaed inti a bit an slokent ma drooth (oot ov a
- tanker lippin- fowe-nane o eer eend-mizzer!) wui a lang waucht that
- garrd iz sich. Neext A speerd if A cood geet ochts ti eat,-if there was
- a mael o meat ti be bocht- skecht-gotten a len o (!)-mumpeet(!!).
- Ehhbit NA!! Nehh!
- A was telld that if A was for a richt denner A wad need ti trodge on ti
- Jethart: that was a richt toon an big eneuch ti fother an fend for fremd
- folk an gangerels. An A'd thocht A wad be aa the road i Ancrum! It serrd
- naething for ti stert simmereen an wuntereen, for it's ill speakin
- atween a fowe man an a fastin; bit A bocht an ett twae cookies an a
- whank o cheese ti keep iz gaun till A wan ti Jethart. Than A wasteet nae
- mair wund in Aarum, bit made tracks for the auld fechtin toon on Jed.
- The heat wasna cannie as A cam ti the main road ayownt the Yill, again.
- Aathings whufft an dovert bar the midges an mei, an thegither oo turnt
- ti the richt for the Teiot an the coonty toon. At the fit o the brae a
- flitteen was gaun on; twae-threi chiels war biggin f urniter an
- plaeneesheen on ti laarries, an still another road-injin, wui the
- inspeirin name: "Jethart's Here!", stuid nerrbye,-nidgin ti dae the
- poween. Ancrum Brig, weel-kennd ti fisher-folk, is baith braid an
- strang, an a gledge owre luit iz sei the bonnie Teviot, dooce an
- purpose-leike (for aa it's new hoven wui Yill!) gleidin neth the pends.
- Oot threh aboot the Brig-end hoose lampeet a muckle big, bang fallih,
- braid-shoodert, rash an stuffy, that staapeet alang the Jethart road wui
- a taatih- steppin streide. Game for ochts, A snuived steevely on aboot
- therty yards ahint um. Whow! sic a bleezer as it was, wui no a whuff o
- wund, an wui nae bield! The sweet was duist hailin off iz till A was
- nerrhand swutten deed; ma serk was drackeet wui weet till it stack ti ma
- verra back; an, dicht as A micht, dreeps rowld doon owre brow, haffets
- an chowks, forbye. Ma collar lay roond ma craigie as wanrestfih as
- branks an brecham roond a yaud. Birsselt an scowdert, leike a
- bubbly-jock duine weel in ov an oven, A cood heh f und eet i ma hert ti
- heh stoppeet an gane in for a dook, isteed, i the cuill, silver Teiot,
- where it laippeet bye leafy- Monteviot. Bit the buirdly Borderer snodged
- on a guid yin, an on A poalled ahint um at the same jock-trot !
- Up-bye, as A paat on a bit aixtra brash, a grocer body gaun eis
- yirrints, gien iz the weel-wurn hail: "It's a grand-day!" " Dead ay!"
- says A, "bit, man, it's byordnar het for huz yins that's walkin!" A'll
- aye meind the lauch ei leuch! Hei leuch till ei was away in a kink, an
- fair soople; so that eis beiceecle steitert aneth um, an A thocht the
- sowl wad take a dwam, an kilt owre,-banyels, creel, an aa thegither.
- Dod, the snirtin body! Hei wad think A was fond,-braisslin on ao
- stressin masel that gait in ony sicwaather. (Yibbles ei thocht it was
- for a weejer). Hei cam tui, an rallied, tho, an away ei birrlt, still
- buffin an smudgin inti eis sel.
- A pairteet threh the leesh, swank-leike fallih ('at A'd been followin
- eis lead) at the whusht road-end at Jedfit, for there ei tuik tae airt
- for Kelsih. Threh the fitba-field ti the little wee station at the back
- o beyond, no a leevin sowl-no a body keind-did A sei aa-the- gate doon
- Jedseide, bar yeh haaflang chaap as black as Eppie Suittie (wui a face
- aa coal-coom, an a perr o reed-ribbon een glintin leike slaes). Hei was
- on ov a laarrie comin birrlin alang leike the bars o Ayr, -as hard as it
- cood lick for Haaick. Yoint the road, an bye the station, A crosst Jed
- Waeter, an suin ma shuin war clankin yince mair alang owre causa an
- chennel.
- It wad want a twae-threi meenints a twae i the efternuin whan A turnt
- inti the High Street o Jethart, where there was an unordnar stur for the
- teime o day. At the Mercat Place A maircht eend ti the "Gazette" Office,
- an bocht a wheen picter-postcairds for ti send away up Ingland (they
- gien iz yin intil't), an speerd anent the Haaick motor.
- Now that's nate where A got a drop that reether taen iz ti the fair! I
- the new, A was telld, the Hawick motor hed been stoppeet rinnin.
- ("Aha!", thinks A, "it'll no hev cood gar ends meet this bittie back,
- nih, A'se warran!")
- This was a fessener, an A was keinda stucken, for A'd lippent on that
- wanchancy motor as the maist mensefih way o wunnin threh Jethart ti
- Haaick. However, it was nae uice o turnin roozd, an, bairn- leike,
- kickin up a wa at no canneen geet a hurl; bit, for aa that, A'd taen the
- maggot inti ma heed, an A ettlt at finndin some machine ti serr ma ends.
- Weel, A ranged the haaf o the toon, or A turnt staaed. An fient a trap,
- boaggie, geeg, laarraie, caager's caairt or hurlie cood A airt oot or
- hear tell-o gaun up Teiot. Sic a hatter! A was in a habble. Bit lod
- sakes mei! It wasna leike as A was muitteet oot or onyways trasht ; an,
- forbye, it was lang or nicht!
- There was a snod bit leikely-leike eateen-hoose, nerr bye; so in A gaed
- ti fill ma empy keite, for my certies! A was howe! A was owre lang for
- taatihs, bit A made a faiasable mael oot o pie-soop(a pickle grand
- thing, 'at war they!), caald flesh, picklt ingans, an nae skrimp o laif;
- wui twae rake o curny-dumpleen owre-an-abuin,-seindin the whole o'd doon
- wui a waucht owaeter. Nane o eer mim-mowed peikeen got that Jethart
- toozy table threh mei; for A puisteet an lained masel weel. It was as
- muckle as A cood dae no ti slorp! An whan A'd ti haud-sae, A wasna
- boass, if the truith be telld, A was riftin-fowe!-an, forbye, there was
- a gey little hote o muilleens left for Lazarus! Yow yins that's keinda
- perjink menna be uggeet at iz for aa this-set ee up wui eer feiky
- mollups an eer friggeen an falderals! Some folk heh sic a tredd wui
- thersels,-primpin!
- A faand the guid o that denner as suin as A'd gaen wui'd; an, wui ma
- wame fowe, ma thochts redd thersels the better oot. A paid ma laween (it
- was naething owre-the-maitter - A wasna saateet), an than A lifteet the
- sneck an gaed oot again ti the Mercat Cross.
- It was ti be Shankum's Naigie, thin,-ti Denum, onyway. Yince an A'd wun
- there, A thocht, A micht mebbies cood geet a hurl the lenth o Hawick. An
- A'd geet mair guid yeh way as the tother, atweel; for snodgin on, A wad
- aye geet seen the better aboot iz, an geet taen the mair guid o the
- Bonnie Borderland. It was a Day's Dander A wanteet, an no a raam-race
- duist.
- So ti the tuine o:
- "Oo're aa gaun ti Denum!"
- oot A suitt towrt the Auld Jail, thonder, an yokeet till't up the Casle-
- gate. Whow! yon brae o the Caslegate o Jethart! Sic a byordnar grand bit
- for a sledge- sky or a yoke-a- tuillie! By!! The gaird wad need ti bei
- richt an skeely at the merreen, tho, A'm thinkin, for it wad be a gey
- sair pliskie ti rin dunt up again' the braw moniment at the fit. It wad
- take a vast o sow-same, a richt claat o creesh, ti cleester a cloor
- gotten that gait! Ee meind what Jamie Tamson wrait aboot the
- guitter-bluid callants o Haaick an "the battert gavel o the Auld Mid
- Raw?"
- What a different shapes, firrst an last, as Jethart Casle saw,where
- Jethart Jail stands nowadays. The seams an ploys o grit-folk an
- Royalties; ther splun- teens an ther mairryeens; ther shooteens an ther
- buirryeens. Did the deed-raap soond throwe its gampy ends, A wunder, i
- the nicht efter guid King Alisaunder's waddeen-foy, - whan the grewsome
- gaisener ov a geizart, i the girnin Daita's Heed, coonjert wui its
- moween an its skeeletin-maigs, aa the braw folk weegin an dancin?
- Jethart Casle! A body wad need ti ken'd aff leike as Wattie Laidlaw
- kennd eet, for ti tell owre, off-luif, aa its dambrod-cheekeet story.
- Puir auld Wattie Laidlaw! It was waesome ti think that hei was awanteen
- threh eis weet-1eikeet Aibbey doon i the howe. A think A sei um yet: a
- patriarch-leike body,-heed bared, an airm hoised as ei hailed the
- Muises; eis baird, wheite as the drieen snaw, flaffin the wund, as
- (yince an ei',d been suitten on) hei laid on an ranted off yirrds o
- Border rheime an lore,-that nae man was better aqcuaint wui. Never
- huivvin ti ruize Jethart high; never devaaldin ti crack prood an massy
- aboot its bonnie bits an its history: a geyan yibble poyeter an a leal
- Border Scot ti buit, Walter Laidlaw maun be a sair miss ti the
- Waeter-gate o Jed. Let this beide as a merk o the respeck o the wreiter
- o this leibult ti yin that may the muils lie licht on; the auld ye-teime
- keeper o Jethart Aibbey!
- Thereckly, as a hechult up that teedisome brae, the muckle
- Cairter-booksome an blewe-leike wui the ferness o'd-raise fer owre on ma
- left. "Teedisome brae," quo A, eenow, bit for aa A stecht keinda, it was
- rale neice, that sklimm, wui the efternuin sun daabin sheddihs oot owre
- the knowes an fells. Guid- bethankeet, tui, nocht ailed ma cluits; A'd
- hed naething woare as a lowce wheing aa the day,-a faut easy eneneh
- putten richt. A was nae hippeet heipalt, hirplin on. A'd naether bumple,
- brizz, bate, nor blusht-bit ti play the limm an gar iz humple or turn
- lameter. Nor was A tewd or mauchless, bit limbber an lither.
- Forbye, A was i the hert's hyimm, els! Strecht afore iz, an keekin bye
- the shooder o' the Dunion, hoized the loor-brows o derk Ruberslaw. Be
- this, it wasna fer ti heed o the brae-the hinmaist bit bairge ov a powe
- bringin iz alang bye a boaggly, gloomin planteen, where the whussellin
- wunt gaed soachin throwe. An oh! (whan yince A'd gotten ti the top o the
- rig, an-forfeuchen a weilock-hed hoakkert doon on ti ma hunkers till A
- gethart back ma braith)-glorious sicht!!
- A was on yin o thae hichts-Lilliard's Edge hed been sic-an-so that verra
- day-that the Borderland hes sic rowth o; yin o thae watch-knowe hichts,
- clean abuin haugh an howe, that in days o auld gien wairneen ti a hyill
- waeter-gate, bit that i thir days juist gae keeks inti a yarthly
- pairideise. Jethart lay hidden on the yeh seide at the boddom o the lang
- swaip that hed garrd mei pech; on the tother the road gaed brent doon
- inti thick planteens abuin Bedrule an Denum.
- A cood wale oot Rule Waeter's coorse feine,- merkeet wui raws on raws o
- treis-where it jookeet doon threh the knowes away ayownt Buinster an
- Hobkirk. An another ribbon,-verder-cled, rinnin eassla-wassla-telld the
- coorse o bonnie Teviot, wumplin bye paster an pairk an bussy dean.
- Fornent iz, athort the fer seide o Teiot's flooery vale, Mintih Craigs
- (haappeet an rowed in their leafy maud) brent raise ther skerrs; an the
- gray waas o Fatlips keekeet oot threh atween the treis that skuggeet
- Barnhill's staney bed an hade Mintih Hoose threh sicht. Away yownt baith
- Teiot an Yill, bit stannin oot clear as clear, the Eeldon threisome
- pointeet the airt A'd comed: by seike an deike an waeter; bve burn an
- brig an haa. Wastwards, it wasna ill ti ken threh whaiten bits Teiot hed
- run: a pickle blewe reek threh the hoose-lums o Denum draiggelt in a
- swutherin clud; an, ferrer up the waeter yet plain ti ma aiger lookeen,
- hang another caal, leike a bruch roond a muin. Duist there lay auld
- Hawick Amang the Hills; an oh! the sicht garrd the guitter-bluid gang
- lowpin an puttin an stoondin throwe aa ma book.
- Door an dochty, framin the view, war rankeet Naeter's Wardens o the
- Mairches-The Cairter, Cat- cleuch Shin, Peel Fell, Penchrise Pen,
- Skelfhill Pen, an the lave.
- A wheen folk oot picnickin at a deike-fit on Dunionseide hed kinnelt a
- lunt an war thrang poatchin aboot an maskin tei. A pewl o reek fuffelt
- abuin the gleed, an swurlt an yilleet away in a pirlin braith o wund,
- roond owre the shooder o the knowe, till it saanteet i the caller air.
- Hicher up, nerr the croon o the hill, men war layin on an chaappin,
- lootin doon an howkin threh a skerr, the teime a stane-nappin injin
- gaed-on leike a tuim mill,-skrunshin- chaampin-
- haanshin-nickerin-dirrlin-snokerin-an reesellin, -withoot lissance. Ti
- the sooth, ayownt the sweire, stuide Black Law; an ahint hit, Ruberslaw
- michty noal, wui plewed rigs an planteens-reed-land an greenery- dinkin
- its merly-merkeet braes, an Peden's Poopit buinmaist. Dunion, wui its
- muckle mell heed, is buirdly billie ti Ruberslaw, an there the perr
- stand, shooder ti shooder, leike as they war glunshin an shuirrin doon
- at aabodie that wad middle-thum. A hantle heh the twaesome seen sin the
- beacons war kuittelt on ther heathery pows, an mosstrooper an reever
- rade bye ti foray an fecht an reipin raid. Now, the "ern-horse" rins
- roond ahint the Mintih Hills; the motor birls up the stoor on the
- Jethart road; an the aeroplane gangs whurrin bye i the cluds abuin-
- heed.
- A hained that view an taen the guid o'd as lang's A durst an cood. It
- wad heh been naething till iz ta heh bidden aa nicht ti sei'd owre
- again, bonnier as ever, at the skrich o day! Bit "nae man can tether
- tieme nor teide," an, sweerdrawn an laith tho A was, A'd ti turn away
- for aa aa ma offpitteen an daidelleen, an stert on the doon-gangeen ti
- the Waeter o Ruile.
- Bit, Guidbethankeet, there's nocht ti hinder a body threh seekin away
- wui um thochts o sic bonnie bits ti pit bye an huirrd in eis posie o
- pleezant maimeries. An so it is that A heh thae thochts ti faa back on
- gin Fortun takes a pick at iz an things gang geite; whan A turn dowie an
- hum-jum, or take a demuirrd dwam, fair leike ti faa of the spake wui the
- wuddles an the vexes o woark i the mids o a michty ceetie fer aa
- sindert; whan A hatter on, maist deeved an daivert an donnert wui the
- rummellin dunner o an eend-on bizz-a stramoosh unendeen-the skirls an
- the dirls, the raameen an the raackeen an the cammelleen, the daads an
- the dunts an the skraucheon an the skreeveen. An so it is atweenhands,
- tui, whan A keek oot ov a slaistert woark-place wundih on ti bowkin lums
- an platchin cloots an ruiffs an waas baith suitteet an ratcht on derk
- wunter days, whan aathing's dinnellin an cruppen-thegither wui the
- nurlin hackin clap o Jock Nipneb's nitherin neeve, or the daggy drowe
- comes drifflin on an a smairggin rowk feiles ilka thing, or the
- snaw-brui's strampeet inti a caald-broon platch, a chaamp that turns
- foats an cuittlekins soappin-wat an lauchs at tacketty shuin; an I
- simmer, whan the smuists are woarst an the pluiffin ter froes up atween
- the causa-stanes, whan the bruizzin, frizzlin heat turns frush things
- tewd an rizzert, an leify folk dawallt an waaf, whan wud turns geizant
- an ern lowps abreed. Everly, whan A haiggle on alang streets chowky wui
- cluds o shairny stoor an smuirrin reek or clairty wui lifty glaar an
- creeshy glet threh fooel seier an brander; whan A'm owther geetin
- jaappeet an splairggeat wui dirrt, or dunsht wui folk, whan A'm
- seek-staaed o the wundy, aippeen an the putten-on mimpeen an the
- preidfih bluistereen that a body often hes ti thole; whan A'm scunnert
- ti deed wui speakin feine; whan ma lugs are staaed o throaply blethers
- an ma paap-o-the-hass is yookin ti let oot some richt, guid, braid
- Haaick:-A duist caa cannie a weilock,-steek ma een,-an gae ma meind
- leave ti spang owre ti Lilliaird's Edge or the heed o the Dunion,- an,
- losh sakes mei! the thochts that come seipin, seilin throwe an rowl owre
- an owre amang ma herns are fit ti gar aa the trauchles an the fashes
- gang leike the snaw off the deike in a thowe, an-een as the flaam o the
- waather-gleam skails afore'd the clutds threh an owrecuissen lift-thae
- thochts help iz ti cast ma dowth, thole-muiddy boot; they set a spunk ti
- ma gleed o Hope till it comes ti leife again; they gar iz bang up
- bleithe again an buckle tui in nettle-yirrnist!
- A met a doiterin, duddy, auld hallanshaker as A laampeet doon that lang
- brae; a shauchlin, husslin- shoodert skeiabult wui a toozy, taaty heed
- that wad be richt an ruggy ti redd, an a baird sair needin a
- redden-kaim, - wui stoory claes aa tairgets an spatches an
- faizzent-ends, an skluiffin shuin wurn inti bauchels. Puir sowl! Hei
- didna set the bonnie cuintrie-seide.
- It hed been a stey climm up ti Dunion-heed, an it was an unco lang
- doonfaa ti Rule-Waeter-seide, an aa. Bien an braw wui skuggin shaws an
- bonnie busses, the road gaed wundin doon, till suin, aa that was left o
- ma vie was the toppeen o Ruberslaw an the brows o the Mintih Hills. Whan
- A'd joined the Haaick-ti- Jethart turnpeike, yeh loonge owre the brig an
- a gledge doon inti the Rule as it ran rowlin ti link in wui Teiot, an -
- A was luntin alang the skleff, towrt Denum.
- Duist at the gangeen-in ti the village, alang the laeuch road thonder, a
- muckle great, big hivvy, motor- laarrie-a perfeet killogie for reek-cam
- snorkin an dunnerin bye, gaun Haaick airt. Sittin curmudd ahint, an
- geetin a hurl for nochts, twae-threi bleithe- leike fallihs i glarry
- moleskins smokeet their claey peipes, tho their chafts war ditherin an
- beverrin leike as they war pairlt, wui the awfih deedelleen an joaggleen
- o rampaajin laarrie. It was at ma tung-ruits ti cry on the hoattery
- affair, for fear it was ma hinmaist chance o a cairrie ti Haaick; bit A
- hedna muckle brow o'd, an A hickeet an tuik the rewe, for the rummelleen
- o'd an the clairty, creeshy look o'd wad heh gien a body the scunners. A
- canna meind now whae was ocht the naisty infiel, bit A meind o wunderin
- its folk didna think black burnin shame o its ongangeen!! There's a guid
- mids! Bit A daar- say there's a selly bit aboot uz aa,-they warna
- finndin the skomfeesheen. So away A luit eet gang, i swurlin cluds o
- stoor o its ain soopeen; An on A snodged ma leifih-lane, till the
- riggens an ruiffs o Denum-theekeet yins an sklaitteet yins-cam in sicht;
- an seine A gaed stairgin up the "Canniegate!"
- A cleckeen o guidweives at a gairdeen-yett whuttert ti other whan they
- eyed iz; an aamaist the whole road-end cam oot-ther-oot ti waal an glowr
- at the unordnar munsie; the stoory stravaiger. Shuir eneuch, A wad look
- a richt jeeg ti thum. Imagin iz: A reed, lowpin, broazy face leike a
- bermy bannih, sweet-begrutten an bairkent wui dirrt; hair aa torfellt an
- toozellt; collar raandeet, an waaffelt lang seine; rufflt claes, creest
- an huggery-muggery; an shuin wheite o stoor, for aa ma dichteen an
- daaddeen. Sic a brattie! Sic a sain! Bit A never goamed the folk, an A
- never luit bat; aa that A heedeet was: Here A was at Denum,-the same
- auld Denum as it was aye! A didna ken a grain o odds o'd for aa A hedna
- seen't threh kens-whan. There was the Leyden Moniment: there the Frei
- Kirk clock; an aa the weel- kennd howffs an hooses; a waaller o barefit
- getts; a wumman wui a bairn cairryin i the shawl; an auld herd wul a
- maud on, an a nibble in eis neeve; an a snowkin collie!
- At yeh shop-door a motor stuid, an forrit A gaed ti finnd oot whae was
- ocht eet. A bit beekin callant, eis chuffy chowks aa fairnytickles, an
- eis airm up ti shade eis een, gleimed gleide against the sun's licht as
- A cam up. A axt um if this was the Haaick motor, an whuther it was gaun
- back ti Haaick that nicht or no.
- "Ay!", says hei.
- Off-luif, ei made twae wrang shots anent the teime if wad set oot (ei
- said firrst that it was gaun ti Haaick at "haaf-past 'hrei!," an neext
- ei said "haaf- past fowr!", whan A kennd feine naether the tain nor the
- tother cood be the richt oor, for it was weel-on o haaf-past five,
- els!): bit for aa ei threepeet, ei gaed yins-yirrint an fand oot the
- richt teime for iz i the hinder-end, an A I gien um a thripny-bit. Sic a
- nibble for um! The little bleckie was fair upmade whan A said: "Hyeh!"
- Hei glaammed at eet leike a cock at a grozert, an waird eet afore ma
- lookin een on o leemeenade or sic-another fussy drink, for A saw um,
- thereckly, bebbin an taain oot ov a bottle, an whoam- mlin't ti geet the
- verra grands, wui the weeks o eis mooth aa froe, an riftin gas till eis
- een grat.
- As for mei, A gaed an got masel cleaned an spruisht wui a grand swaibble
- o waeter, a shed i ma hair, a lick o bleckneen on ma buits, an a skuff
- doon wui a claes-brush,-an a hantle the better A fand masel, for a clean
- thing's aye feel. Than A pandert up an doon a bittie, hed a bit crack
- wui yin an another; an, whan the motor dreiver, trig in eis ticht
- leggums, beguid o kirneen an caain eis injin, A planteet masel i the
- machine, takin tent no ti crack ma cantel as A claam in.
- Jimp hed a gotten sutten doon, afore wei war off-wui a yerk an a dunsh
- an a stech an a "Parp!" -off leike billie-hoy on the lang rin "by
- Teviot's flooery border." No that lang, aether,-it was nae teime
- owregane or oo war birlin owre the Trow Burn leike five ell o wund; bye
- auld Hornshole, -a picter o gray an green-wui a glisk o the Moniment;
- bye Lindean an Weensland; raisin at yeh whup a steer an a stoor, an
- gliffin auld folk an bairns, baith.
- An so, efter a smert hurl, oo clattert inti Hawick High Street duist on
- the chaap o six,-an ma lang Dander throwe the Bonnie Borderland, mang
- Howes an Knowes, an alang the Waeter-gates,-cam ti an end i the hert o a
- lichtsome strooshie, ti the droang o the Toon's clock an the bumm o the
- jumboes; whan the mills war skailin an the mill-yins war toavin hyimm
- efter ther simmer-efternuins yokeen.
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