The Bard by Robert Crawford
Author:Robert Crawford
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published: 2021-10-15T00:00:00+00:00
V
New World
On 28 November 1786, still with the option of sailing to the New World from Leith, Burns rode into Edinburgh on a borrowed pony. In Scotlandâs capital, he wrote, âI was in a new worldâ.1 Approaching from the west, he was presented with a scene recorded by another late eighteenth-century traveller and still recognisable from todayâs Princes Street. To his left, still under construction, was Edinburghâs neoclassical New Town, then a âline of modern houses, built of white stone, upon an elegant and uniform planâ. To his right, âThe castle, on the naked rock, from its bold and exalted situation, its vastness, domineering aspect and picturesque irregularity of parts, its battlements and towers, &c. first seizes the travellerâs sight, and, for some moments, rivets his attention. His eye next slides along the antique and lofty range of buildings, public and private, descending eastward from the castle, and impending over a deep valley, called the North-Loch.â Burns was seeing for the first time this city whose architecture so strikingly juxtaposed the ancient and the improved. Eighteenth-century eyes were trained to admire the elegant, but also wilder textures. âThe whole assemblage of objects toward the right exhibits, on the uneven site of this towering rock, an air of antiquity and uncouth grandeur.â2
Burns was ready to enjoy this new world. On his journey he had been fêted by Lowland farmers, carousing with them into the early hours of the morning â âa most agreable little partyâ.3 Ayrshire contacts had helped him plan his journey, loaned him a âpownieâ to ride, and had briefed Edinburgh friends about the bardâs imminent arrival.4 Immediately he was a celebrity. Within a week he met Dugald Stewart, the literary authority Hugh Blair, and Blairâs younger assistant teacher of belles-lettres, the Reverend William Greenfield, whom Burns found warmer, more quick-witted. The Ayrshire poet also met his favourite novelist, âAuthor of The man of feelingâ, Henry Mackenzie, a lawyer in his early forties.5 Mackenzie was impressed. Encouraged by Stewart, he began reviewing Burns for his genteel periodical, The Lounger: âMr Burnsâ, a âHeaven-taught ploughmanâ, exemplified âOriginal Geniusâ. Mackenzie was well intentioned, but, Anglicised in his polite upper-class tastes, not quite on Burnsâs vernacular wavelength: âEven in Scotland, the provincial dialect which Ramsay and he have used, is now read with a difficulty which greatly damps the pleasure of the reader.â
Ignoring the vernacular energy of his work, Mackenzie still admired this ârustic bardâ so perceptive about âmen and mannersâ. The lawyer-novelist had been talking to people who knew Burnsâs Ayrshire âgrief and misfortunesâ. Pointing out that Burns âhas been obliged to form the resolution of leaving his native land, to seek under a West Indian clime that shelter and support which Scotland has denied himâ, Mackenzie hoped Burns would now find sustaining native âpatronageâ.6
By the time Mackenzieâs words appeared in the 9 December Lounger, Burns was well and truly patronised. âAn unknown hand,â he told Ballantine, âleft ten guineas for the Ayrshire Bard.â7 The donor turned out to be Patrick Miller, brother of the Lord Justice Clerk whose house at Barskimming was close to Mauchline.
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