Central - SWE | ( | Barbour | , Legends of the Saints) |
Doric - ABN | Anither half ooer an Dunbar, | Barbour | , Lindsay an a puckle mair wer |
Central - SEC | Wyntoun’s “Kronikill”, | Barbour | ’s “The Bruce” an the po |
Central - WCE | hat foondation is: the Scots. | Barbour | , Henryson, Dunbar, i the medi |
Doric - DOR | Syne | Barbour | screived his poem, The Brus, |
Central - LAL | anent politics, an lang afore | Barbour | ’s day, in Auld-Angles an Au |
Ulster - PUL | 's ridin breeks, ir tweeds an | Barbour | jeckit, |
Central - EDN | raw an fouthie, as makars sen | Barbour | hes funn ... An the owersetti |
Central - LAL | Pairlament’. The word John | Barbour | uises in his Scots epic poem |
Central - SEC | huid try tellin thon tae John | Barbour | but, gin it's really modren S |
Central - AYR | ner year. When the makar John | Barbour | in Aiberdeen scrievit the chr |
Central - LAL | Fae the time that John | Barbour | pit quill tae parchment in th |
Central - LAL | human richts hes resultit in | barbour | acts that |
Central - LAL | feinishes wi the leitratur o | Barbour | , Bower an Henryson. Indeed, t |
Central - LAL | fae the playgrund or reams o | Barbour | learnt as a saicont langage a |
Central - LAL | literature in Inglis, such as | Barbour | 's Brus (c.1375), Wyntoun's Kr |
Central - WCE | Whaur is this freedom that | Barbour | kent weel? |
Central - SWE | FIR JOHN ANTHONY | BARBOUR |