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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Period of the French Revolution
>
Burns
> The
Christis Kirk
stave
The Auld Farmers New Year Salutation to his Mare Maggie
The Holy Fair
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XI. The Period of the French Revolution.
X.
Burns
.
§ 10. The
Christis Kirk
stave.
Next to the six-line stave in
rime couée,
the favourite stave of Ramsay, Fergusson and other poets of the revival was what may be termed the
Christis Kirk
stave, which, though probably the invention of the author of that poem and of
Peblis to the Play,
is also, the metre of whatfrom a reference of Sir David Lyndsaymust be regarded as a very old poem,
Sym and his Brudir,
and is used by Alexander Scott in his
Justing and Debait.
It is formed by the addition of a bobwheel to the old ballad octave in rollicking metre as represented in, for example,
The Hunting of the Cheviots,
and Henrysons
Robene and Makyne.
Burns, like Ramsay and Fergusson, contracted the bobwheel into a refrain of one line; but, unlike Ramsay, he did not vary the ending of the refrain. He uses the stave for five pieces:
The Holy Fair, Halloween, The Ordination, A Dream
and
The Mauchline Wedding
and for a recitativo in
The Jolly Beggars.
In
Halloween
and in
The Jolly Beggars
recitativo, the final word of the refrain is night; in the others, it is day. In
A Dream, The Ordination
and the recitativo, he, like Ramsay, adheres to the ancient two-rime form of the octave; but, in
The Holy Fair, Halloween
and
The Mauchline Wedding,
he follows Fergusson in breaking up the octave and making use of four and, occasionally, three, rimes.
A Dream
is really a series of advices, mostly couched in semi-satirical or jocular terms, but, notwithstanding some clever epigrams, it must, on the whole, be reckoned of that order of merit to which most of his political, or semi-political pieces belong.
The Ordination
has been already referred to. Like it, the other threeas in the case of
Christis Kirk
and other old poems, as well as those of the revivalare humorously descriptive narratives.
The Mauchline Wedding
is unfinished;
The Holy Fair
and
Halloween,
as presentations of scenes and episodes in humble life, rank, almost, with
The Jolly Beggars
and
Tam o Shanter,
though they lack the full inspiration and irresistible
verve
of both.
20
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Auld Farmers New Year Salutation to his Mare Maggie
The Holy Fair
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