• Address to a Haggis is a poem written by Robert Burns in 1786 and read here by John Gordon Sinclair.
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  • But mark the Rustic, haggis-fed, The trembling earth resounds his tread, Clap in his ample fist a blade, He’ll make it whistle; And legs, and arms, and heads will cut...
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  • First, a bit of background: it is a longstanding Scottish tradition to serve a haggis on Burns’ birthday, and to recite his poem “Address to a Haggis” as a toast.
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  • The ode, called Address to a Haggis, was written by Robert Burns in 1787 and celebrates all that is good about haggis.
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  • Tomorrow is Robert Burns’s birthday, aka Burns Night, which is to say, probably the zenith of the haggis-eating year.
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  • Thus starts the Scottish Bard Robert Burns’s Address To A Haggis, penned in 1786.
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  • Read the full Address To A Haggis poem and discover its historical and cultural significance.
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  • "Address to a Haggis" is read out loud every year on Robert Burns Day, which is celebrated in Scotland and Northern Ireland every year around Burn's...
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  • But mark the Rustic, haggis-fed, The trembling earth resounds his tread.
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