FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   896   897   898   899   900   901   902   903   904   905   906   907   908   909   910   911   912   913   914   915   916   917   918   919   920  
921   922   923   924   925   926   927   928   929   930   931   932   933   934   935   936   937   938   939   940   941   942   943   944   945   >>   >|  
d," published in 1549, further catalogues of the popular songs have been preserved. The poetic gift had an influence upon the Reformation both of a favourable and an unfavourable character. By exposing the vices of the Popish clergy, Sir David Lyndsay and the Earl of Glencairn essentially tended to promote the interests of the new faith; while, on the event of the Reformation being accomplished, the degraded condition of the Muse was calculated to undo the beneficial results of the ecclesiastical change. The Church early attempted to remedy the evil by sanctioning the replacement of profane ditties with words of religious import. Of this nature the most conspicuous effort was Wedderburne's "Book of Godly and Spiritual Ballads," a work more calculated to provoke merriment than to excite any other feeling. On the union of the Crowns a new era arose in the history of the Scottish Muse. The national spirit abated, and the poets rejoiced to write in the language of their southern neighbours. In the time of Barbour, the Scottish and English languages were almost the same; they were now widely dissimilar, and the Scottish poets, by writing English verse, required to translate their sentiments into a new tongue. Their poetry thus became more the expression of the head than the utterance of the heart. The national bards of this period, the Earl of Stirling, Sir Robert Aytoun, and Drummond of Hawthornden, have, amidst much elegant versification, left no impression on the popular mind. Other poets of that and the succeeding age imitated Buchanan, by writing in Latin verse. Though a considerable portion of our elder popular songs may be fairly ascribed to the seventeenth century, the names of only a few of the writers have been preserved. The more conspicuous song writers of this century are Francis Semple, Lord Yester, Lady Grizzel Baillie, and Lady Wardlaw. The taste for national song was much on the wane, when it was restored by the successful efforts of Allan Ramsay. He revived the elder ballads in his "Evergreen," and introduced contemporary poets in his "Tea Table Miscellany." The latter obtained a place on the tea table of every lady of quality, and soon became eminently popular. Among the more conspicuous promoters of Scottish song, about the middle of last century, were Mrs Alison Cockburn, Miss Jane Elliot of Minto, Sir Gilbert Elliot, Sir John Clerk of Pennycuik, Dr Austin, Dr Alexander Geddes, Alexander Ross, Jame
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   896   897   898   899   900   901   902   903   904   905   906   907   908   909   910   911   912   913   914   915   916   917   918   919   920  
921   922   923   924   925   926   927   928   929   930   931   932   933   934   935   936   937   938   939   940   941   942   943   944   945   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Scottish

 

popular

 

century

 

conspicuous

 

national

 

English

 

Elliot

 
preserved
 
Alexander
 
calculated

writing

 

writers

 

Reformation

 

portion

 

Francis

 

seventeenth

 

fairly

 

ascribed

 
amidst
 

elegant


versification

 

Hawthornden

 

Drummond

 
period
 

Stirling

 

Robert

 

Aytoun

 

impression

 
imitated
 

Buchanan


Though

 

succeeding

 

Semple

 

considerable

 
efforts
 
promoters
 

middle

 

eminently

 

quality

 

Alison


Cockburn

 

Austin

 

Pennycuik

 

Geddes

 
Gilbert
 

restored

 

successful

 

utterance

 
Grizzel
 

Yester