Mo Shùil Ad Dhèidh

Mo Shùil Ad Dhèidh ("My Eye is After You"), also known as Och Òin, Mo Chailinn ("Alas, My Maiden"), is a traditional Scottish song of lost love, originally written as a poem by the Reverend Donald MacNicol (1735-1802).

The thirty-five-year-old Rev. MacNicol wrote the poem in lament of being snubbed by Lillias Campbell, a local laird's daughter. He had requested the seventeen-year-old girl's hand in marriage, but Lillias had already accepted the hand of her cousin, Captain Alexander Campbell. However, Sir Alexander made an ungallant bet with a servant which left the angered Lillias no choice but to accept the alternate proposal of the Rev. MacNicol. They married just after her eighteenth birthday, and would go on to have sixteen children. The poem was later set to music and remains a popular Highland folk song.

Lyrics

gollark: I want tablets with physical keyboards, but nobody seems to make those.
gollark: Windows is dumb and no one should use it.(unless there's an irreplaceable application they *need* to use)
gollark: It's not that it will be too hard to speak, just that people will drift a lot.
gollark: How many people are going to appreciate and stick to your Perfectly Logical Langauge™?
gollark: People would probably, without some mechanism to stop that, drop down to a simpler or easier to say/learn version.

References

  • Lee, Sidney, ed. (1893). "Macnicol, Donald" . Dictionary of National Biography. 35. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • "Och Òin Mo Chailinn".
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