C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
An Thou Were My Ain Thing
By Allan Ramsay (16861758)
A
I would love thee, I would love thee;
An thou were my ain thing,
How dearly would I love thee.
Frae flowers of sweetest scent and hue,
Sae wad I dwell upo’ thy mou’,
And gar the gods envy me.
An thou were, etc.
I’d on thy beauties feast my sight;
Syne in saft whispers through the night
I’d tell how much I looed thee.
An thou were, etc.
She moves a goddess o’er the green:
Were I a king, thou should be queen,
Nane but myself aboon thee.
An thou were, etc.
Whilst thou like ivy, or the vine,
Around my stronger limbs should twine,
Formed hardy to defend thee.
An thou were, etc.
In shining youth let’s make our hay,
Since love admits of no delay;
Oh, let na scorn undo thee.
An thou were, etc.
Hae, there’s my heart, gi’e me thy hand,
And with ilk smile thou shalt command
The will of him wha loves thee.
An thou were, etc.