Sir, Among men of Genius,
and especially among Poets, there are some to whom
we turn with a peculiar and unfeigned affection; there
are others whom we admire rather than love. By
some we are won with our will, by others conquered
against our desire. It has been your peculiar
fortune to capture the hearts of a whole people a
people not usually prone to praise, but devoted with
a personal and patriotic loyalty to you and to your
reputation. In you every Scot who is a
Scot sees, admires, and compliments Himself, his ideal
self independent, fond of whisky, fonder
of the lassies; you are the true representative of
him and of his nation. Next year will be the
hundredth since the press of Kilmarnock brought to
light its solitary masterpiece, your Poems; and next
year, therefore, methinks, the revenue will receive
a welcome accession from the abundance of whisky drunk
in your honour. It is a cruel thing for any of
your countrymen to feel that, where all the rest love,
he can only admire; where all the rest are idolators,
he may not bend the knee; but stands apart and beats
upon his breast, observing, not adoring a
critic. Yet to some of us petty souls,
perhaps, and envious that loud indiscriminating
praise of ‘Robbie Burns’ (for so they style
you in their Change-house familiarity) has long been
ungrateful; and, among the treasures of your songs,
we venture to select and even to reject. So it
must be! We cannot all love Haggis, nor ‘painch,
tripe, and thairm,’ and all those rural dainties
which you celebrate as ‘warm-reekin, rich!’
‘Rather too rich,’ as the Young Lady said
on an occasion recorded by Sam Weller.
Auld Scotland wants nae skinking ware
That jaups in luggies;
But, if ye wish her gratefu’ prayer,
Gie her a Haggis!
You have given her a Haggis,
with a vengeance, and her ‘gratefu’ prayer’
is yours for ever. But if even an eternity of
partridge may pall on the epicure, so of Haggis too,
as of all earthly delights, cometh satiety at last.
And yet what a glorious Haggis it is the
more emphatically rustic and even Fescennine part
of your verse! We have had many a rural bard
since Theocritus ‘watched the visionary flocks,’
but you are the only one of them all who has spoken
the sincere Doric. Yours is the talk of the byre
and the plough-tail; yours is that large utterance
of the early hinds. Even Theocritus minces matters,
save where Lacon and Comatas quite outdo the swains
of Ayrshire. ‘But thee, Theocritus, wha
matches?’ you ask, and yourself out-match him
in this wide rude region, trodden only by the rural
Muse.
‘Thy rural loves are
nature’s sel’;’ and the wooer
of Jean Armour speaks more like a true shepherd than
the elegant Daphnis of the ‘Oaristys.’
Indeed it is with this that moral
critics of your life reproach you, forgetting, perhaps,
that in your amours you were but as other Scotch ploughmen
and shepherds of the past and present. Ettrick
may still, with Afghanistan, offer matter for idylls,
as Mr. Carlyle (your antithesis, and the complement
of the Scotch character) supposed; but the morals of
Ettrick are those of rural Sicily in old days, or of
Mossgiel in your days. Over these matters the
Kirk, with all her power, and the Free Kirk too, have
had absolutely no influence whatever. To leave
so delicate a topic, you were but as other swains,
or, as ‘that Birkie ca’d a lord,’
Lord Byron; only you combined (in certain of your letters)
a libertine theory with your practice; you poured
out in song your audacious raptures, your half-hearted
repentance, your shame and your scorn. You spoke
the truth about rural lives and loves. We may
like it or dislike it; but we cannot deny the verity.
Was it not as unhappy a thing, Sir,
for you, as it was fortunate for Letters and for Scotland,
that you were born at the meeting of two ages and
of two worlds precisely in the moment when
bookish literature was beginning to reach the people,
and when Society was first learning to admit the low-born
to her Minor Mysteries? Before you how many singers
not less truly poets than yourself though
less versatile not less passionate, though less sensuous
not less simple had been born and had died
in poor men’s cottages! There abides not
even the shadow of a name of the old Scotch song-smiths,
of the old ballad-makers. The authors of ‘Clerk
Saunders,’ of ‘The Wife of Usher’s
Well,’ of ‘Fair Annie,’ and ‘Sir
Patrick Spens,’ and ‘The Bonny Hind,’
are as unknown to us as Homer, whom in their directness
and force they resemble. They never, perhaps,
gave their poems to writing; certainly they never gave
them to the press. On the lips and in the hearts
of the people they have their lives; and the singers,
after a life obscure and untroubled by society or
by fame, are forgotten. ’The Iniquity of
Oblivion blindly scattereth his Poppy.’
Had you been born some years earlier
you would have been even as these unnamed Immortals,
leaving great verses to a little clan verses
retained only by Memory. You would have been but
the minstrel of your native valley: the wider
world would not have known you, nor you the world.
Great thoughts of independence and revolt would never
have burned in you; indignation would not have vexed
you. Society would not have given and denied
her caresses. You would have been happy.
Your songs would have lingered in all ‘the circle
of the summer hills;’ and your scorn, your satire,
your narrative verse, would have been unwritten or
unknown. To the world what a loss! and what a
gain to you! We should have possessed but a few
of your lyrics, as
When o’er the hill the eastern star
Tells bughtin-time is near, my jo;
And owsen frae the furrowed field,
Return sae dowf and wearie O!
How noble that is, how natural, how
unconsciously Greek! You found, oddly, in good
Mrs. Barbauld, the merits of the Tenth Muse:
In thy sweet sang, Barbauld, survives
Even Sappho’s flame!
But how unconsciously you remind us
both of Sappho and of Homer in these strains about
the Evening Star and the hour when the Day metenisseto
boulytoide? Had you lived and died the pastoral
poet of some silent glen, such lyrics could not but
have survived; free, too, of all that in your songs
reminds us of the Poet’s Corner in the ’Kirkcudbright
Advertiser.’ We should not have read how
Phoebus, gilding the brow o’ morning,
Banishes ilk darksome shade!
Still we might keep a love-poem unexcelled by Catullus,
Had we never loved sae kindly,
Had we never loved sae blindly,
Never met or never parted,
We had ne’er been broken-hearted.
But the letters to Clarinda would
have been unwritten, and the thrush would have been
untaught in ‘the style of the Bird of Paradise.’
Transliterated from
Greek.
A quiet life of song, fallentis
semita vitae’, was not to be yours.
Fate otherwise decreed it. The touch of a lettered
society, the strife with the Kirk, discontent with
the State, poverty and pride, neglect and success,
were needed to make your Genius what it was, and to
endow the world with ‘Tam o’ Shanter,’
the ‘Jolly Beggars,’ and ’Holy Willie’s
Prayer.’ Who can praise them too highly who
admire in them too much the humour, the scorn, the
wisdom, the unsurpassed energy and courage? So
powerful, so commanding, is the movement of that Beggars’
Chorus, that, methinks, it unconsciously echoed in
the brain of our greatest living poet when he conceived
the Vision of Sin. You shall judge for yourself.
Recall:
Here’s to budgets, bags, and
wallets!
Here’s to all the wandering
train!
Here’s our ragged bairns and
callers!
One and all cry out, Amen!
A fig for those by law protected!
Liberty’s a glorious feast!
Courts for cowards were erected!
Churches built to please the priest!
Then read this: Drink to lofty hopes that cool
Visions of a perfect state:
Drink we, last, the public fool,
Frantic love and frantic hate.
......... Drink to Fortune, drink to Chance,
While we keep a little breath!
Drink to heavy Ignorance
Hob and nob with brother Death!
Is not the movement the same, though the modern speaks
a wilder
recklessness?
So in the best company we leave you,
who were the life and soul of so much company, good
and bad. No poet, since the Psalmist of Israel,
ever gave the world more assurance of a man; none lived
a life more strenuous, engaged in an eternal conflict
of the passions, and by them overcome ’mighty
and mightily fallen.’ When we think of you,
Byron seems, as Plato would have said, remote by one
degree from actual truth, and Musset by a degree more
remote than Byron.