Annotation:Kind Robin Lo'es Me

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 KIND ROBIN (LO'ES ME). AKA and see "Robin Cushie." Scottish, Slow Air (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The song "Kind Robin Lo'es Me" was included in David Herd's 1776 Ancient and Modern Songs and Johnson's Scots Musical Museum (vol. 5, 1797, No. 478). Melodic material from this tune appears in the song "Bonny Banks o' Loch Lomond." "Very Old" states Gow (1817), a statement explained in John Greig's Scottish Minstrelsy (p. 400, notes XXXV), which dates the original version of the words to a song of c. 1685: The last verse of the present song, differing, as it does, in the rhythm of it's latter half from the rhythm of the other ''verses, is supposed to be a remnant of its progenitor. The superseded original, rather indelicate in some of it's passages,'' opens thus: ''Hech, Hey! Robin, quo' she,'' ''Hech, Hey! Robin, quo' she;'' ''Hech, Hey! Robin, quo' she,'' Kind Robin lo'es me. Robin, Robin, let me be, Until I win the norrice-fee; And I will spend it a' wi' thee, For Kind Robin lo'es me. McGibbon (1762) prints the melody as "Robin Cushie," and a version of the air is contained in the MacFarlane Manuscipt (written for the Laird of MacFarlane, 1740-1743). The lyric by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne (1766–1845), said to be a tribute to Lord Nairne, begins: Robin is my ain gudeman, Now match him, carlins, gin ye can,	 For ilk ane whitest thinks her swan, But kind Robin lo’es me. To mak’ my boast I’ll e’en be bauld, For Robin lo’ed me young and auld, In simmer’s heat, and winter’s cauld,	 My kind Robin lo’es me. Robin he comes hame at e’en, Wi’ pleasure glancin’ in his een; He tells me a’ he’s heard and seen, ''And syne how he lo’es me.  There’s some ha’e land, and some ha’e gowd,'' Mair wad ha’e them gin they cou’d,	 But a’ I wish o’ warld’s gude Is Robin aye to lo’e me.  Source for notated version:  Printed sources: Johnson (Scots Musical Museum, vol. 5), 1796; No. 478, p. 492. Gow (Complete Repository), Part 4, 1817; p. 5.  Recorded sources:

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