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Robert Burns (January 25, 1759-July 21, 1796) is the national poet of Scotland. Since they were first published, his poetry and songs have never been out of fashion. Translations have made him a classic in other languages. In households where books have been few, an edition of Burns's poetry has often stood on a shelf with the Bible. Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, "The people who care nothing for literature and poetry care for Burns." .
Robert Burns (January 25, 1759-July
21, 1796) is the national poet of Scotland. Since they were first published,
his poetry and songs have never been out of fashion. Translations have
made him a classic in other languages. In households where books have
been few, an edition of Burns's poetry has often stood on a shelf with
the Bible. Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, "The people who care nothing
for literature and poetry care for Burns." With their writing Robert
Burns and Sir Walter Scott created an enduring Scottish identity at
a time when the Scots might have been entirely absorbed into a general
British culture. In particular, Burns preserved the Scots tongue in
literary form. The most loved figure in Scottish history and literature,
his birthday, January 25, is the annual occasion of "Burns Night"
festivities. He is celebrated by the Unitarians of Scotland as a religious
forbear.
Robbie was born in a thatched
cottage in Alloway, Ayrshire. His father, William Burnes, was a moderately
well-educated farmer who did some of the teaching of his children and
occasionally provided private tutors. He wrote his own relatively liberal
catechism for his children as an alternative to that of the Westminster
Assembly. Robbie did a lot of reading on his own, including works by
philosophers John Locke and Adam Smith. He worked on the family farm
until his father's death in 1784 and continued farming with his brother
Gilbert, 1784-86.
As a young man Burns made a
study of local religious phenomena and read with interest such liberal
theological works as The Scripture Doctrine of Original Sin Proposed
to Free and Candid Examination, 1740, by the English proto-Unitarian
John Taylor. He admired two Ayrshire clergymen, William McGill and William
Dalrymple, who held Arian views ("preaching that three's ane and
twa," as Burns put it) and had connections with the English Unitarians
Joseph Priestley and Theophilus Lindsey. Burns, known as "Rab the
Ranter," inflicted his heretical religious views on his neighbours,
some of whom shunned him as a result.
In 1780 Burns founded a debating
society, the Tarbolton Bachelor's Club. Among the subjects discussed
were "Whether do we derive more happiness from Love or Friendship?"
and "Whether is the savage man or the peasant of a civilised country
in the most happy situation?" According to the constitution, which
Burns wrote, "Every man proper for a member of this society, must
have a frank, honest, open heart; above any thing dirty or mean; and
must be a professed lover of one or more of the female sex."
According to Robert Louis Stevenson,
"a leading trait throughout [Burns's] whole career was his desire
to be in love." He was an expert at flirtation, dazzling in conversation,
and author of effective love-letters. In Ayrshire he had a rakish reputation,
which was enhanced by the notoriety of his religious opinions. However,
Burns was never able to progress beyond the romantic stages of courtship.
He had many affairs, even after he was married, and not a few illegitimate
children, the first of which elicited from him a poem, "The Poet's
Welcome to his Bastart Wean." He wrote, "Welcome! My bonie,
sweet, wee Dochter!/Tho' ye come here a wee unsought for."
1786 was the most significant
year in Burns's life. He had been unsuccessful as a farmer. His irregular
marriage to Jean Armour was legally annulled by her father. Burns felt
that Jean, in cooperating with her father, had deserted him. Because
Jean was pregnant, Burns had been disciplined by the local Church of
Scotland Presbytery. In need of a new beginning, he considered going
to the West Indies to work on a sugar plantation. To raise the funds
to pay for his passage, Burns published a collection of the poems he
had composed over several years. This printing of Poems, Chiefly in
the Scottish Dialect, the "Kilmarnock edition," made him a
local celebrity. Moreover, within months of publication distinguished
literary figures in Scotland and England had written glowing reviews.
Burns dropped his plan for emigration and traveled to Edinburgh. There
he was lionized as the "ploughman poet."
With the exception of the long narrative poem, "Tam O'Shanter," first published in the Edinburgh Magazine in 1791, much of the poetry for which Burns is famous appeared in the Kilmarnock edition. Many of the poems he added to later editions were works of lesser quality and did not greatly add to his original achievement. "The Cotter's Saturday Night," the Burns poem most celebrated during the nineteenth century, fixed in verse a style of life fondly remembered but already passing away. His often quoted line, "the best laid schemes o' mice and men/gang aft a-gley," is from "To a Mouse." In this, and other poems such as "The Auld Farmer's New Year Salutation to His Mare Maggie," and "To a Louse," he reflected on the relation between humans and other creatures, domestic and otherwise. By taking the point of view of the insect parasite in "To a Louse," Burns fashioned a critique of social class:
O was some Power the giftie gie us
To see oursels as ithers see us!
It was frae mony a blunder free us,
An' foolish notion . . .
In 1787 James Johnson, an Edinburgh
engraver and music-seller, hired Burns to collect and arrange old Scottish
songs for the Scots Musical Museum. That year Burns began collecting
on trips to the Borders and the Highlands. He made himself a student
of "ballad simplicity" and developed a theory of matching
tunes to texts. Among the most famous of the 368 songs he wrote or adapted
are "Auld Lang Syne," "My Love Is Like a Red, Red Rose,"
"John Anderson My Jo," "My Heart's in the Highlands,"
and "A Man's a Man for A'That." He contributed some of his
later songs to George Thomson's Scottish Airs and Poetry, 1793-1818.
Although Thomson commissioned elaborate and effective settings of many
of these songs from Haydn and Beethoven, they are best sung in the simple
folk style that Burns preferred. His methods prepared the way for later,
more disciplined approaches to folk music by such composers as Vaughan
Williams and Bartók.
The celebrated lyric "Scots
Wha Hae," set to the tune of an old song, "Hey tutti tatie,"
is represented as the battle call of King Robert the Bruce, leading
the Scottish troops against the English at the Battle of Bannockburn
in 1314. In 1793, the year of Burns's composition, he told Thomson he
had in mind, not only the mediaeval struggle for freedom, but "some
other struggles of the same nature, not quite so ancient." He was
concerned at the time about repressive measures being taken against
reformers by those who feared the French Revolution. Among these was
the trial of Unitarian minister Thomas Fyshe Palmer for sedition. After
only a token show of evidence, Palmer was sentenced to deportation to
an Australian penal colony.
In the winter of 1787-88 Burns
conducted a largely epistolary romance with the widow Nancy MacLeHose.
More conventionally religious than he, she engaged him in religious
discussion. She wrote: "I found all my hopes of pardon and acceptance
with Heaven upon the merits of Christ's atonement,-wheras you do upon
a good life." He wrote, "It must be in everyone's power to
embrace [God's] offer of 'everlasting life'; otherwise He could not,
in justice, condemn those who did not."
MacLeHose was torn between
her affection for Burns and her Calvinist conscience. Burns, for his
part, was divided between his sophisticated amour for Mrs. MacLeHose
and his earthy longing for Jean Armour who that spring bore him a second
set of twins. Though both children soon died, Burns was tremendously
proud of Jean's "prolific twin-bearing merit." He also felt
concern for her welfare and guilt for his part in her situation. He
married her a second time soon after, this time receiving the blessing
of the Armour family and the Scottish Church.
With funds from the second
edition of his poetry, Burns rented a farm in Dumfriesshire, but earned
nothing from working its exhausted soil. In 1791 Burns moved to the
town of Dumfries, where he worked as a tax-collector. He described his
life as "grinding the faces of publican and sinner on the merciless
wheels of the Excise, making ballads, and then drinking and singing
them; and, above all, correcting the press of two different [collections
of songs]."
Burns died of heart failure
in early middle age, his heart having been damaged when he was young
by rheumatic fever.
Burns had joined the Freemasons
in Tarbolton in 1781. His Masonic connection had helped to pave his
way in Edinburgh society when he was promoting himself as a poet. In
1787 he attained the Royal Arch degree. He was an active member for
the rest of his life, belonging to lodges in Edinburgh and Dumfries.
Among the Freemasons, whose lodges at this period were egalitarian,
democratic, and politically liberal, Burns absorbed his profound sense
of human dignity and equality. In his "Birthday Ode for George
Washington," who was also a Mason, Burns wrote of "the Royalty
of Man." In the well-known "A Man's a Man For A' That"
he sang "The honest man, tho' e'er sae poor,/Is king o' men for
a' that."
In 1788 on his application
for a post as an exciseman, to get the job Burns had listed his religious
affiliation as Church of Scotland. But he rejected Calvinist theology,
piety, and social attitudes. That same year he wrote about religion
that "it becomes a man of sense to think for himself." He
thought it would be good to believe in a God of "Infinite Wisdom
and Goodness," but was not certain that he did. He had doubts about
Jesus as well. "Jesus Christ, thou amiablest of characters, I trust
thou art no Imposter, and that thy revelation of blissful scenes of
existence beyond death and the grave, is not one of the many impositions
which time after time have been palmed off on a credulous mankind."
A friend of his addressed Burns in a letter as "Christless Bobbie."
In some of his poems Burns
mocked Calvinists, clerical and lay. In "The Ordination" he
pictured Auld Licht churchmen driving way the enemies of orthodoxy:
learning, common-sense, and morality. In the satirical "Epistle
to John Goldie," he portrays the bigoted and superstitious as sick
unto death, with Goldie, a religiously liberal merchant, and John Taylor
most responsible for this "black mischief." "The Holy
Fair" is a burlesque based on rural, outdoor communion festivals.
Burns's most famous parody of Calvinism is "Holy Willie's Prayer":
O Thou, that in the heavens does dwell,
Wha, as it pleases best Thysel',
Sends ane to heaven an' ten to hell,
A' for Thy glory,
And no for onie guid or ill
They've done afore Thee!
Burns indicated his own religious
views in other poems. He wrote in "The Kirk's Alarm," "A
heretic blast has been blawn i' the West,/That what is not Sense must
be Nonsense." In "Epistle to a Young Friend," he likened
the fear of hell to a hangman's whip "To haud the wretch in order."
Better than to cringe before the prospect of damnation, according to
Burns, would be to guide one's actions by consulting one's honour. His
"Address to the Deil" implies that even Satan has a chance
for salvation. "The Cotter's Saturday Night" contrasts the
simple Arian faith of a farmer with the display in church of "Devotion's
every grace, except the heart!" In "The Jolly Beggars"
he denounced the organized religion he knew: "Courts for Cowards
were erected,/Churches built to please the Priest." And in "Epistle
to Rev. John McMath" he denounced religious hypocrisy, claiming,
But twenty times I rather would be
An atheist clean,
Than under gospel colours hid be
Just for a screen.
Burns could not guess whether
the afterlife would be merely "to moulder with the clods of the
valley" or to some reward for "having acted an honest part
among his fellow creatures." "The close of life," he
wrote, "to a reasoning eye is 'dark as was chaos.'"
Throughout his life Burns advocated
an earthy, this-worldly religion. He believed passions were a gift of
God for human pleasure, and that a religion of love must include sex.
He looked askance at theology which he thought a life-denying tool of
priestly power. He denied original sin. "I believe in my conscience
that the case is just quite contrary," he wrote to Frances Dunlop
in 1788. "We came into this world with a heart and disposition
to do good for it, until by dashing a large mixture of base Alloy called
Prudence alias Selfishness, the too precious Metal of the Soul is brought
down to the blackguard Sterling of ordinary currency."
Burns never joined a Unitarian Church or any particular religious faction. Of large spirit, he was an eighteenth-century Scottish equivalent of the English Rational Dissenter or a New England Congregationalist Arminian. Like the God of William Ellery Channing, Burns's deity was an "object of our reverential awe and grateful adoration" from whose "divine promise" no one is excluded save by themselves. God is "almighty, and all bounteous" and Jesus Christ, "a great Personage." Burns believed that in the end it is the quality of our lives which counts. He summed his faith in Jamie Dean's grace: "Lord, grant that we may lead a gude life; for a gude life makes a gude end; at least it helps weel!"