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ther groat of postage. You must know that there is an old ballad beginning with-- "My bonnie Lizzie Baillie I'll rowe thee in my plaidie, &c." So I parodied it as follows, which is literally the first copy, "unanointed, unanneal'd;" as Hamlet says.-- O saw ye bonny Lesley As she gaed o'er the border? She's gane like Alexander, To spread her conquests farther. So much for ballads. I regret that you are gone to the east country, as I am to be in Ayrshire in about a fortnight. This world of ours, notwithstanding it has many good things in it, yet it has ever had this curse, that two or three people, who would be the happier the oftener they met together, are, almost without exception, always so placed as never to meet but once or twice a-year, which, considering the few years of a man's life, is a very great "evil under the sun," which I do not recollect that Solomon has mentioned in his catalogue of the miseries of man. I hope and believe that there is a state of existence beyond the grave, where the worthy of this life will renew their former intimacies, with this endearing addition, that, "we meet to part no more!" . . . . . . . . . . . . "Tell us, ye dead, Will none of you in pity disclose the secret, What 'tis you are, and we must shortly be?" BLAIR A thousand times have I made this apostrophe to the departed sons of men, but not one of them has ever thought fit to answer the question. "O that some courteous ghost would blab it out!" but it cannot be; you and I, my friend, must make the experiment by ourselves and for ourselves. However, I am so convinced that an unshaken faith in the doctrines of religion is not only necessary, by making us better men, but also by making us happier men, that I should take every care that your little godson, and every little creature that shall call me father, shall be taught them. So ends this heterogeneous letter, written at this wild place of the world, in the intervals of my labour of discharging a vessel of rum from Antigua. R. B. * * * * * CCXXXIII. TO MR. CUNNINGHAM. [There is both bitterness and humour in this letter: the poet discourses on many matters, and woman is among them--but he places the bottle at his elbow as an antidote against the discourtesy of scandal.] _Dumfries, 10th September, 1792._ No! I will not attempt an a
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