chuckiebay wrote:Ah wush yez wid stop menshoning that Deer Hill. It's enythin but dear tae me. It jeest sounds a prissy name fur an English Hill. Ah bet Humphlock agrees wi me.
Aye, chuckiebay, it's me that's allergic to this denged "Deer Hill" too. Sure Cnoc nan Gabhar means the Hill of the Goat so how the divil could they no haive called it that?
Ah'm fair enjoyin readin all yer yarns from the last couple of weeks. Ah mind fine o Hughie Sticks and Clockie and them - embdy else mind o' Tobermory Jock? He wiz a chentleman o' the rod an' he used to frighten the life oot o me as a wee fla.
Anyway, the muse wiz upon me for a while there and ah kinna went intae hibernation, but ah've finally finished ma poem aboot the Torrisdale Toads. It's jeest kinna doggerel and it gets dafter as it goes on. It's too long tae pit on here in the wan go, though. Ah'll stert it the night and then pit a wee bit more on tomorra.
Here goes with the first ten verses:
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"The Torrisdale toads came over the road to see the puddocks dancing"
So goes the rhyme that you might have heard
At yer granny's knee,
But if you would like to find oot a bit more,
Then listen closely to me.
The Torrisdale toad population decreases
By half, as all o' the males o' the species
Gether together from far and from near,
On a particular night in the spring o' the year.
From Lepincorrach and the heid o' the Glen,
From Lepinbeg and Sooth Dippen,
They embark on a journey, come rain, snow or hail,
To visit the puddocks of Carradale.
There is wan year the toads of today still can mind,
It has entered the annals of amphibian-kind.
So if ye'll allow me the tale to recite,
Ye'll find oot exactly whit heppened that night.
There were young blades and bodachs and wee fellas too,
Each in his best Sunday kilt or trews,
In command wis the toad who had them all scared,
Tam McToad-Hall, the wee Toad Laird.
A bumptious wee character, in full highland get-up
For a ceilidh he was very well set-up,
Under one oxter were his dancing shoes,
He had a ukelele with him too.
He marshalled them all roond Torrisdale Square,
Lecturing them till they all were aware
That puddocks are pongal, and how they should dance,
Then on to the highway he let them advance.
The racket they made wis jeest like thunder,
As they blethered and yarned goin' along the road.
They must have numbered aboot a hunder,
Oh, a great night oot if ye were a toad.
They were screchin' and croakin', some craturs were boakin',
So foonert were they at the top o' the brae,
But they dived in a dub, for a sploonge and a soakin',
And then cerried on upon their way.
Jeest like linties, they were skippin',
As doon they came to the bridge at Dippen.
But they never crossed over the watter yit,
For they turned doon the road to Watterfit.
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With apologies to David Attenborough (no' that he wid understand the half o' it)
Ah'm afraid there's forty-odd more verses laik that tae go. Ah'll put another ten or so on tomorra.