NEW YORK, N.Y.- Each New Years Eve, millions raise their voices in a chorus of Auld Lang Syne, standing with friends and looking back with nostalgia on days past. But how did a traditional Scots folk songwith lyrics that many people scarcely understandemerge as one of the worlds most enduring popular songs? It was Robert Burns (17591796), the great eighteenth-century Scottish poet, who transformed the old verses into the version we know today. Robert Burns and Auld Lang Syne at The Morgan Library & Museum untangles the complex origins of the song that has become, over time, a globally shared expression of friendship and longing. On view from December 9, 2011 at noon, through February 5, 2012, the