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Reference
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Cambridge History
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From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift
>
Scottish Popular Poetry before Burns
> Alexander Ross
Sir John Clerk and George Halkett
Alexander Geddes
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume IX. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift.
XIV.
Scottish Popular Poetry before Burns
.
§ 15. Alexander Ross.
Alexander Ross, a graduate of Aberdeen university, who became schoolmaster at Lochlee in Forfarshire, acquired much fame in the northern counties by his pastoral
Helenore or the Fortunate Shepherdess,
which, with a few of his songs, was published at Aberdeen, in 1768, a revised edition appearing in 1778. Linguistically, it is of special interest as a specimen of the Aberdeenshire dialect; but it is a rather wearisome production, and cannot compare with Ramsays pastoral, on which it is largely modelled, though the plot is of quite a different and much more romantic character. Its prosy commonplace strikingly contrasts with the wit and vivacity of Rosss songs, such as
The Rock and the Wee Pickle Tow, Wooed and Married and a
and
The Bridal Ot,
which, apart from lyric effectiveness, are really admirable sketches of Scottish peasant life in the olden time. Quite the equal, and, indeed, the superior, of Ross, as a song-writer, was John Skinner, episcopalian minister of Longside, Aberdeenshire, the irresistible sprightly cheerfulness of whose
Tullochgorum
so captivated Burns that he pronounced it to be the best Scots song Scotland ever saw. In much the same vein are
Tune your Fiddle
and
Old Age;
but a much finer achievement than any of these is the
Ewie wi the Crookit Horn.
Though suggested by the older elegies of Sempill and Hamilton, it is in a different stanza, one of three lines riming together, with a refrain ending in a throughout the poem, and it altogether surpasses them in pathetic humour. To it, Burns owed more than the suggestion for
Poor Mailies Elegy,
following not merely its general drift but partly parodying its expressions, more particularly those in the last stanza, beginning O all ye bards benorth Kinghorn.
17
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Sir John Clerk and George Halkett
Alexander Geddes
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