Three excellent new sons (sic)/The unco bit want

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Three Excellent New Sons
The Unco Bit Want

Spelling error in title of original pamphlet.

3177926Three Excellent New Sons — The Unco Bit Want

THE UNCO BIT WANT.

I AM a young Lass in my prime,
My age it is just twenty-one;
I think it a very fit time,
To buckle myself to a man,
I’ve baith bread and kitchen nae scant,
I gang i’ the fashion fu’ braw;
Yet still I've an unco bit want,
That fashes me mair than them a’

CHORUS.

For I’m ripe, an’ ready an’ a’,
Ready, an’ ripe an’ a’,
I wish I may get a bit man,
Before that my beauty gae wa’,

A’ day as I spin wi’ my mither,
An lilts o’er to mysel, a bit sang
How Lasses an’ Lads gang the gither,
O sirs but it gars me think lang,
In bed I am like to gang crazy;
I dram, I row, an' I gaunt,
Where I might be lying fu’ easy,
Were’t no for this unco bit want,
For I’m ripe, &c.

Young Andrew comes whiles in the glomin,
An’ draws in a stool by my side,
But he’s ay sae fleed for a woman,
That after his face he maun hide,
I steer up my temper-string gayly,
An’ whiles a verse I will rant,
Young women you ken maun be wyilie,
To make up that unco bit want.
For a’m ripe, &c.,

I’m thinkin’ sometime when he’s rising,
To make a bit stap to the door,
An' raise a wee crack that’s enticing,
Parhads that he kent nae afore.
An‘ O if the Laddie wad tak me,
An’ raise a bit canty wee rant,
There’s naething mair pleasure wad gi’ me,
For that’s just my unco bit want,
For I'm ripe, &c.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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