Bawbee

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A bawbee was a Scottish halfpenny.

It was metaphorically used for a fortune by Sir Alexander Boswell, the son of the more famous James Boswell, the biographer of Dr. Johnson. It occurs in the song of Jennie’s Bawbee

Quoth he, "My goddess, nymph, and queen,
Your beauty dazzles baith my e’en,
But deil a beauty had he seen
But Jennie’s bawbee

Sir Alexander took the hint of his song from a much older one:-

A’ that e’er my Jeanie had,
My Jeanie had, my Jeanie had,
A’ that e’er my Jeanie had
Was ae bawbie
There’s your plack, and my plack,
And your plack, and my plack,
And Jeanie’s bawbie.

The term "bawbee" was still being used in Lowland Scots in the 20th Century, and may still be in minor use somewhere. A popular song, The Crookit Bawbee, was recorded by The Alexander Brothers and Kenneth McKellar amongst others, and the tune remains a staple for Scottish country dance band music. The song has a rich suitor asking why his "bright gowd" and "hame.. in bonnie Glenshee" are being turned down, the lady referring to a laddie when she was a young "bairnie", and her heart "Was gi'en him lang-syne, for this crookit bawbee."[1] Inevitably the rich suitor turns out to be the laddie returned to his love. Songs like this may explain a later Scottish enthusiasm for country and western.

[edit] See also

[edit] Reference

  • MacKay, Charles – A Dictionary of Lowland Scotch (1888)