A Toast to Rabbie
If a Scot be ripe for toastin’,
If a Scot be fit for praise,
If a Scot stands high above the rest
For the way he spent his days,
Let’s raise a cup now, all about,
And celebrate the cheer
That Rabbie Burns has brought to the world
Now for two hundred, fifty years.
Nay, no poet was ’ere as fecund or fine
To be borne out of dear Scotland’s womb.
Dear Rabbie Burns, fervent, fiery and fair,
Was plucked in the prime of his bloom.
’Tis Rabbie who wrote of the “red, red rose,”
And told of Tam ’o Shanter’s fierce ride
’Tis Rabbie who still sings us the new year in,
And strolls with us through the rye.
’Tis Rabbie who says that a man is a man,
That a witch can run faster than fast,
’Tis Rabbie who pities the mouse in the field
And scolds the louse on the bonnet of a lass.
Yes, Rabbie’s eye looked both high and low
For details in life’s daily endeavors
Sure, Rabbie’s wit could capture an instant’s joy
To make it endure forever.
He wrote poems on paper, on shingles and walls
On windows and hearthstones and trees
Wher ’ere his eager heart found a free spot
He’d jot verses with the ease of a breeze.
Yes,’Tis Rabbie brings the tongue of the Scot
Into parlance beyond Scotland’s shores
And as we Scotts wander the wide world ’oer
’Tis our Rabbie’s verse sparkles and soars.
(If during his life Rabbie shared of his loins
With a lassies in bowers or on lawns
Still, modern DNA tests prove beyond doubt
Rob’s a virgin, compared to Genghis Khan.)
Yes, he walked his path with insatiable yearning
To know what the Creator hath wrought
Showing in verse and song the beauty
With which Scotland and the world is fraught.
And always with eagerness, wonder and glee
At the marvelous gift we’re allowed.
Let us never forget the humility he showed
For what God’s nature has endowed.
So if a man be ripe for toastin’,
If a man be fit for praise,
If a man stands high above the rest
For the way he spent his days,
Let’s raise a cup now, all about,
And celebrate the cheer
That Rabbie Burns has brought to the world
Now for two hundred, fifty years.
— Gerry Yukevich
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