Page:Mill o' Tiftie's Annie, or, Andrew Lammie, the trumpeter of Fyvie (1).pdf/2

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Mill o' Tiftie's Annie.

The ill-starred loves of Tiftie's bonnie Annie, and the Trumpeter of Fyvie, have already been made familiar to the reader of Ballad poetry by Mr. Jamieson, who has published in his collection two different sets of this simple but not unpathetic ditty.[1] Neither of these sets, however, is so complete as the present version, which is a reprint from a stall copy published at Glasgow several years ago, collated with a recited copy, which has furnished one or two verbal improvements.

"The beauty, gallantry, and aimiable qualities of Bonny Andrew Lammie,' seem," says Mr. Jamieson, "to have been proverbial wherever he went, and the good old cummer in Allan Ramsay, as the best evidence of the power of her own youthful charms, and the best apology for her having cast a leggen girth hersel, says,

'I'se warrant ye have a heard tell
Of bonny Andrew Lammie?
Stiffly in love wi' me he fell,
As soon as e'er he saw me—
That was a day!'

"In this instanec, as in most others in the same piece, it seems most probable that Allan Ramsay forgot that he was writing of the days of the original author of 'Christis kirk on the Green,' and copied only the manners and traditions of his own times. If a woman, who could boast of having had an intrigue with the Trumpeter of Fyvie, was hale and hearty at the time when Allan wrote, we may reasonably suppose poor Tiftie's Nanny, to have died sometime about the year 1670." This conjecturc, as to the period when

"The fairest Flower was cut down by love,
That e'er sprung up in Fyvie,"

is very near the truth, if the notice contained in the title of the stall copy referred to can be admitted as evidence on the point. It is this:—"Andrew Lammie: or Mill o' Tiftie's Annie. This Tragedy was acted in the year 1674."

  1. Vide Popular Ballads and Songs. Edinburgh, 1806. Vol. I, p. 129, and vol. II. p. 382.