#AULD LANGY SYNE 2 VERSES ARCHIVE#
Golf Blog ArchivesĪrchives: An archive of all the posts on this golf blog, going back to 2004. The Golfblogger is a member of the Golf Writers Association of America. This is the golf blog of golf's 99%: The working stiff who plays at munis with ten-year-old clubs and whose family and work take precedence, but whose love of the game never diminishes. GolfBlogger.Com is a daily golf blog featuring golf news, golf course reviews, golf equipment and golf book reviews, golf lifestyle, golf fitness, golf history, Michigan golf news and reviews, photography, cigars, food and beverages, the PGA Tour and the LPGA with essays and musings. Subscribe GolfBlogger Golf Blog GolfBlogger Sadly, Burns lived just 37 years, dying after a dental extraction. ORDER: I V1 C1 V2 C2 V3 C3 V4 C4 E INTRO: D VERSE 1: D A7 Should auld acquaintance be forgot D G And never brought to mind D A7 Should auld acquaintance be forgot F7 Bm Em A7 D And days of auld lang syne CHORUS: D A7 For auld lang syne, my dear, D G For auld lang syne, D A7 We'll take a cup o'kindness yet F7 Bm Em A7 D And days of auld lang syne VERSE 2: D A7 We twa hae run aboot the braes D.
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In 2009, Burns was chosen as the greatest Scot by the Scottish public in a vote run by Scottish television channel STV. A pioneer of the Romantic movement, Burns’ life and work today is widely celebrated. Robert Burns (1758 – 1796) is Scotland’s national poet, and is known for his work in Scottish dialect and for preserving Scottish folk songs and poems.
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Auld lang syne means “days gone by.”Īnd surely ye’ll be your pint-stowp !Īnd pu’d the gowans fine Īnd there’s a hand, my trusty fiere !Īnd we’ll tak a right gude-willy waught , The song’s first two stanzas, paired by a celebratory chorus, seem fit for a cheerful Scottish pub, where members of a merry chorus offer each other winks and drinks for. Scotland, the Home of Golf, also gave us Robert Burns, author of the traditional New Year’s Song, which he wrote in 1788.