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Song—Had I the wyte, she bade me

by Robert Burns, 1795

Had i the wyte, had I the wyte,
  Had i the wyte? she bade me;
She watch'd me by the hie-gate side,
  And up the loan she shaw'd me.
And when I wadna venture in,
  A coward loon she ca'd me:
Had Kirk an' State been in the gate,
  I'd lighted when she bade me.

Sae craftilie she took me ben,
  And bade me mak nae clatter;
"For our ramgunshoch, glum gudeman
  Is o'er ayont the water."
Whae'er shall say I wanted grace,
  When i did kiss and dawte her,
Let him be planted in my place,
  Syne say, I was the fautor.

Could i for shame, could I for shame,
  Could i for shame refus'd her;
And wadna manhood been to blame,
  Had i unkindly used her!
He claw'd her wi' the ripplin-kame,
  And blae and bluidy bruis'd her;
When sic a husband was frae hame,
  What wife but wad excus'd her!

I dighted aye her e'en sae blue,
  An' bann'd the cruel randy,
And weel I wat, her willin' mou
  Was sweet as sugar-candie.
At gloamin-shot, it was I wot,
  I lighted on the Monday;
But i cam thro' the Tyseday's dew,
  To wanton Willie's brandy.

Published in Poems and Songs of Robert Burns
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