Says Tweed to Till

.

River Tweed near source, Glenbreck, Scotland: photo by Andrew Barclay, 26 March 2009



S
ays Tweed to Till --





The River Till: photo by jillyspoon, 14 January 2012




'What gars ye rin sae still?'




File:River Tweed from Mertoun House.jpg

River Tweed from Mertoun House, near St Boswells: photo by Jean Walley, 17 May 2003



Says Till to Tweed --







Falling water: main channel of the River Till flowing through an overspill: photo by borderglider, 14 September 2007




'Though ye rin with speed







Waves on River Tweed on a windy day: photo by Karen V Bryan, 29 May 2011



And I rin slaw,







Trout rising to flies, River Till, Northumberland: photo by borderglider, 14 September 2007




For ae man that ye droon







Paxton House on the River Tweed from Union Bridge: photo by Michael Lindley, 17 February 2009





I droon twa.'






View over River Till joining River Tweed: photo by Karen V Bryan, 14 January 2012


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/19/River_Tweed_at_Coldstream.jpg/1024px-River_Tweed_at_Coldstream.jpg

The River Tweed at Coldstream in the Scottish Borders: photo by Mick Knapton, 24 August 2004



The River Tweed between Birgham and Coldstream: photo by Adrian Johnston, 16 January 2012



gars = makes
droon = drown

Says Tweed to Till: anonymous, 17th/18th c.

The bare rolling stretch of country from the North Tyne and Cheviots to the Scottish southern uplands was for a long time the territory of men who spoke English but had the outlook of Afghan tribesmen; they prized a poem almost as much as plunder...

-- A. L. Lloyd, Folk Song in England, 1967

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