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Life & Wisdom Quote by Robert Burns

"The snowdrop and primrose our woodlands adorn, and violets bathe in the wet o' the morn"

About this Quote

Burns opens with a small riot of softness: snowdrops, primroses, violets, morning wet. It reads like pure pastoral, but the craft is sharper than the dew he’s praising. The line is engineered to make spring feel inevitable and intimate. “Adorn” gives the woodlands a human vanity; “bathe” turns violets into bodies. Nature isn’t background here, it’s a cast of actors performing renewal, and Burns stages them with tactile precision: you can almost feel the cold gloss of “wet o’ the morn” on your fingers.

The Scots diction matters. “Wet o’ the morn” isn’t just local color; it’s a refusal of polished, metropolitan English at a moment when Scottish writers were negotiating their cultural status after Union. Burns uses vernacular to claim authority over the landscape he’s describing. The subtext is ownership: these flowers, this morning, this particular dampness belong to a lived Scottish world, not an abstract “Nature” for genteel readers.

Contextually, Burns is writing in a late-18th-century Britain newly obsessed with sensibility and the rural as moral counterweight to commerce and enclosure. His flowers aren’t random decoration; they’re a coded argument for attentiveness to ordinary beauty, the kind you’d miss if you only value what can be bought or improved. The line flatters the reader into slowing down, then quietly asserts that a nation, like a season, is made of small, stubborn things returning.

Quote Details

TopicSpring
Source
Verified source: The World's Best Poetry, Vol. 10: Poetical Quotations (Robert Burns, 1904)
Text match: 98.44%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The snowdrop and primrose our woodlands adorn, And violets bathe in the wet o' the morn. My Nannie's Awa'. R. BURNS.. Primary-source attribution: the line is from Robert Burns’s song/poem “My Nannie’s Awa” (Scots: “My Nannie’s awa”). The wording most often quoted in modern English spelling (“snowdrop… wet o’ the morn”) corresponds to Burns’s Scots text where it appears as “snaw-drap … weet o’ the morn.” A reliable early 20th-c. compilation (Gutenberg) and Hoyt’s 1922 quotation cyclopedia both attribute the couplet to “My Nannie’s Awa.” However, I did not, in this pass, locate and verify a scan of the *earliest* first publication in Burns’s lifetime (e.g., the relevant volume of George Thomson’s Scottish song publications or an 18th‑century broadside/periodical print) with a page number. So: the *original work* is identified with high confidence, but the *first publication venue/year/page* is not fully verified from a primary 18th‑century imprint here.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Burns, Robert. (2026, February 11). The snowdrop and primrose our woodlands adorn, and violets bathe in the wet o' the morn. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-snowdrop-and-primrose-our-woodlands-adorn-and-20483/

Chicago Style
Burns, Robert. "The snowdrop and primrose our woodlands adorn, and violets bathe in the wet o' the morn." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-snowdrop-and-primrose-our-woodlands-adorn-and-20483/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The snowdrop and primrose our woodlands adorn, and violets bathe in the wet o' the morn." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-snowdrop-and-primrose-our-woodlands-adorn-and-20483/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Robert Burns

Robert Burns (January 25, 1759 - July 21, 1796) was a Poet from Scotland.

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