Sung at the Autumn Meeting of the Innerleven Golfing Club, 1841. Tune—Dainty Davie. Wha wad be free from doctor's bills— From trash o' powders and o' pills— Will find a cure for a' his ills On the Links o' Innerleven. For there whar lassies bleach their claes, And bairnies toddle doun the braes, The merry Golfer daily plays On the Links o' Innerleven. Sae hie ye to the Golfer's ha', And there, arranged alang the wa', O' presses ye will see a raw, At the Club o' Innerleven. A club and second-handed ba',— A Gourlay pill's the best o' a' For health at Innerleven. And though the Golfer's sport be keen, Yet oft upon the putting-green He'll rest to gaze upon the scene That lies round Innerleven— To trace the steamboat's crumpled way Through Largo's loch-like silvery bay, Or to hear the hushing breakers play On the beach o' Innerleven. When in the evening of my days, I wish I could a cottage raise Beneath the snugly-sheltering braes O'erhanging Innerleven. There in the plot before the door I'd raise my vegetable store, Or tug for supper at the oar In the bay near Innerleven. But daily on thy matchless ground I and my caddie would be found, Describing still another round On thy Links, sweet Innerleven! Would I care then for fortune's rubs, And a' their Kirk and State hubbubs, While I could stump and swing my clubs On the Links o' Innerleven? |