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  2. Highland Laddie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland_Laddie

    Highland laddie is also the name of a dance in Scottish Highland dancing, of the "national dance" subtype.This version of the dance was first published by D. G. MacLennan in 1952, who referred to it as a Hebridean dance, collected by MacLennan in 1925 from Archie MacPherson on the island of South Uist.

  3. Bluebells of Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluebells_of_Scotland

    O where and O where does your highland laddie dwell; He dwells in merry Scotland where the bluebells sweetly smell, And all in my heart I love my laddie well' [1] A broadside ballad version (words only) from slightly later in the 19th century makes references to George III and the Napoleonic wars: Oh, where, and oh, where is my highland laddie ...

  4. Did You Ever See a Lassie? - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Did_You_Ever_See_a_Lassie?

    The song is often accompanied by a circle singing game.Players form a circle and dance around one player. When they reach the end of the verse they stop, the single in the middle performs an action (such as Highland dancing), which everyone then imitates, before starting the verse again, often changing the single player to a boy, or a boy can join the center player - thus creating an extra ...

  5. Bill Millin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Millin

    Millin saw further action with 1 SSB in the Netherlands and Germany before being demobilised in 1946 and going to work on Lord Lovat's highland estate. In the 1950s he became a registered psychiatric nurse in Glasgow, moving south to a hospital in Devon in the late '60s until he retired in the Devon town of Dawlish in 1988. [ 6 ]

  6. Frederick Grice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Grice

    The Bonny Pit Laddie, a story of an aspirational teenage boy in a County Durham pit village, was runner-up for the 1961 Carnegie Medal. [4] [1] At the time of its publication working-class children's stories were notably rare. [3]

  7. The Rantin Laddie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rantin_Laddie

    The (Bonnie) Rantin' Laddie or Lord Aboyne (Child # 240, Roud # 103) is a traditional Scottish folk ballad telling of the valiant rescue of his lover by a noble Highland lord. [ 1 ] Synopsis

  8. Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poems,_Chiefly_in_the...

    [2] [3] The book cost three shillings, in a temporary paper binding that most purchasers soon had replaced. There is no formal dedication at the start of the book, but Burns includes a dedication poem to Gavin Hamilton at pp. 185-191, and "The Cotter's Saturday Night" is "inscribed to R.A. Esq.," i.e. Robert Aitken.

  9. Willie Ross (piper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willie_Ross_(piper)

    Willie Ross on the left, with G.S. McLennan in the middle and John Macdonald of Inverness on the right Memorial cairn at his birthplace. Ross was born on 14 June 1878 at Ardchuilc in Glen Strathfarrar, the second son of Alexander Ross and Mary Collie.