SOME ASPECTS OF ROBERT BURNS
To write with authority about another man we must have
fellow-feeling and some common ground of experience with our
subject. We may praise or blame according as we find him related to
us by the best or worst in ourselves ; but it is only in virtue of
some relationship that we can be his judges, even to condemn
Feelings which we share and understand enter for us into the tissue
of the man’s character; those to which we are strangers in our own
experience we are inclined to regard as blots, exceptions,
inconsistencies, and excursions of the diabolic; we conceive them
with repugnance, explain them with difficulty, and raise our hands
to heaven in wonder when we find them in conjunction with talents
that we respect or virtues that we admire. David, king of Israel,
would pass a sounder judgment on a man than either Nathanael or
David Hume. Now, Principal Shairp’s recent volume, although I
believe no one will read it without respect and interest, has this
one capital defect— that there is imperfect sympathy between the
author and the subject, between the critic and the personality under
criticism. Hence an inorganic, if not an incoherent, presentation of
both the poems and the man. Of
Holy Willies Prayer,
Principal Shairp remarks that ‘those who have loved most what was
best in Burns’s poetry must have regretted that it was ever
written.’ To the
Jolly Beggars,
so far as my memory serves me, he refers but once ; and then only to
remark on the ‘ strange, not to say painful,’ circumstance that the
same hand which wrote the
Cotters Saturday
Night should have stooped to write the
Jolly
Beggars. The
Saturday Night
may or may not be an admirable poem ; but its significance is
trebled, and the power and range of the poet first appears, when it
is set beside the
Jolly Beggars.
To take a man’s work piecemeal, except with the design of elegant
extracts, is the way to avoid, and not to perform, the critic’s
duty. The same defect is displayed in the treatment of Burns as a
man, which is broken, apologetical, and confused. The man here
presented to us is not that Burns,
teres atque rotundus—a
burly figure in literature, as, from our present vantage of time, we
have begun to see him. This, on the other hand, is Burns as he may
have appeared to a contemporary clergyman, whom we shall conceive to
have been a kind and indulgent but orderly and orthodox person,
anxious to be pleased, but too often hurt and disappointed by the
behaviour of his red-hot
protege,
and solacing himself with the explanation that
the poet was ‘ the most inconsistent of men.’ If you are so sensibly
pained by the misconduct of your subject, and so paternally
delighted with his virtues, you will always be an excellent
gentleman, but a somewhat questionable biographer. Indeed, we can
only be sorry and surprised that Principal Shairp should have chosen
a theme so uncongenial. When we find a man writing on Burns, who
likes neither
Holy Willie,
nor the
Beggars, nor the
Ordination,
nothing is adequate to the situation but the
old cry of Geronte: ‘ Que diable allait-il faire dans cette galere
?’ And every merit we find in the book, which is sober and candid in
a degree unusual with biographies of Burns, only leads us to regret
more heartily that good work should be so greatly thrown away.
It is far from my intention to tell over again a story that has been
so often told; but there are certainly some points in the character
of Burns that will bear to be brought out, and some chapters in his
life that demand a brief rehearsal. The unity of the man’s nature,
for all its richness, has fallen somewhat out of sight in the
pressure of new information and the apologetical ceremony of
biographers. Mr. Carlyle made an inimitable bust of the poet’s head
of gold ; may I not be forgiven if my business should have more to
do with the feet, which were of clay?
YOUTH
Any view of Burns would be misleading which passed over in silence
the influences of his home and his father. That father, William
Burnes, after having been for many years a gardener, took a farm,
married, and, like an emigrant in a new country, built himself a
house with his own hands. Poverty of the most distressing sort, with
sometimes the near prospect of a gaol, embittered the remainder of
his life. Chill, backward, and austere with strangers, grave and
imperious in his family, he was yet a man of very unusual parts and
of an affectionate nature. On his way through life he had remarked
much upon other men, with more result in theory than practice ; and
he had reflected upon many subjects as he delved the garden. His
great delight was in solid conversation ; he would leave his work to
talk with the schoolmaster Murdoch ; and Robert, when he came home
late at night, not only turned aside rebuke but kept his father two
hours beside the fire by the charm of his merry and vigorous talk.
Nothing is more characteristic of the class in general, and William
Burnes in particular, than the pains he took to get proper schooling
for his boys, and, when that was no longer possible, the sense and
resolution with which he set himself to supply the deficiency by his
own influence. For many years he was their chief companion ; he
spoke with them seriously on all subjects as if they had been grown
men ; at night, when work was over, he taught them arithmetic ; he
borrowed books for them on history, science, and theology ; and he
felt it his duty to supplement this last—the trait is laughably
Scottish —by a dialogue of his own composition, where his own
private shade of orthodoxy was exactly represented. He would go to
his daughter as she stayed afield herding cattle, to teach her the
names of grasses and wild-flowers, or to sit by her side when it
thundered. Distance to strangers, deep family tenderness, love of
knowledge, a narrow, precise, and formal reading of
theology—everything we learn of him hangs well together, and builds
up a popular Scottish type. If I mention the name of Andrew
Fairservice, it is only as I might couple for an instant Dugald
Dalgetty with old Marshal Loudon, to help out the reader’s
comprehension by a popular but unworthy instance of a class.
Such was the influence of this good and wise man that his household
became a school to itself, and neighbours who came into the farm at
meal-time would find the whole family, father, brothers, and
sisters, helping themselves with one hand and holding a book in the
other. We are surprised at the prose style of Robert; that of
Gilbert need surprise us no less ; even William writes a remarkable
letter for a young man of such slender opportunities. One anecdote
marks the taste of the family. Murdoch brought
Titus Andronicus,
and, with such dominie elocution as we may suppose, began to read it
aloud before this rustic audience ; but when he had reached the
passage where Tamora insults Lavinia, with one voice and ‘ in an
agony of distress ’ they refused to hear it to an end. In such a
father, and with such a home, Robert had already the making of an
excellent education ; and what Murdoch added, although it may not
have been much in amount, was in character the very essence of a
literary training. Schools and colleges, for one great man whom they
complete, perhaps unmake a dozen ; the strong spirit can do well
upon more scanty fare.
Robert steps before us, almost from the first, in his complete
character—a proud, headstrong, impetuous lad, greedy of pleasure,
greedy of notice ; in his own phrase ‘panting after distinction,’
and in his brother’s ‘ cherishing a particular jealousy of people
who were richer or of more consequence than himself; ’ with all
this, he was emphatically of the artist nature. Already he made a
conspicuous figure in Tarbolton church, with the only tied hair in
the parish, e and his plaid, which was of a particular
colour, wrapped in a particular manner round his shoulders.’ Ten
years later, when a married man, the father of a family, a farmer,
and an officer of Excise, we shall find him out fishing in
masquerade, with fox-skin cap, belted greatcoat, and great Highland
broadsword. He liked dressing up, in fact, for its own sake. This is
the spirit which leads to the extravagant array of Latin Quarter
students, and the proverbial velveteen of the English
landscape-painter ; and, though the pleasure derived is in itself
merely personal, it shows a man who is, to say the least of it, not
pained by general attention and remark. His father wrote the family
name Burnes;
Robert early adopted the orthography
Burness
from his cousin in the Mearns; and in his twenty-eighth year changed
it once more to
Burns.
It is plain that the last transformation was not made without some
qualm ; for in addressing his cousin he adheres, in at least one
more letter, to spelling number two. And this, again, shows a man
pre-occupied about the manner of his appearance even down to the
name, and little willing to follow custom. Again, he was proud, and
justly proud, of his powers in conversation. To no other man’s have
we the same conclusive testimony from different sources and from
every rank of life. It is almost a commonplace that the best of his
works was what he said in talk. Robertson the historian ‘ scarcely
ever met any man whose conversation displayed greater vigour;’ the
Duchess of Gordon declared that he ‘ carried her off her feet; ’
and, when he came late to an inn, the servants would get out of bed
to hear him talk. But, in these early days at least, he was
determined to shine by any means. He made himself feared in the
village for his tongue. He would crush weaker men to their faces, or
even perhaps—for the statement of Sillar is not absolute —say
cutting things of his acquaintances behind their back. At the church
door, between sermons, he would parade his religious views amid
hisses. These details stamp the man. He had no genteel timidities in
the conduct of his life. He loved to force his personality upon the
world. He would please himself, and shine. Had he lived in the Paris
of 1830, and
joined his lot with the Romantics, we can conceive him writing
Jehan
for Jean,
swaggering in Gautier’s red waistcoat,
and horrifying Bourgeois in a public cafe with paradox and
gasconade.
A leading trait throughout his whole career was his desire to be in
love. Ne fait
pas ce tour qui veut. His affections
were often enough touched, but perhaps never engaged. He was all his
life on a voyage of discovery, but it does not appear conclusively
that he ever touched the happy isle. A man brings to love a deal of
ready-made sentiment, and even from childhood obscurely
prognosticates the symptoms of this vital malady. Burns was formed
for love ; he had passion, tenderness, and a singular bent in the
direction ; he could foresee, with the intuition of an artist, what
love ought to be ; and he could not conceive a worthy life without
it. But he had ill-fortune, and was besides so greedy after every
shadow of the true divinity, and so much the slave of a strong
temperament, that perhaps his nerve was relaxed and his heart had
lost the power of self-devotion before an opportunity occurred. The
circumstances of his youth doubtless counted for something in the
result. For the lads of Ayrshire, as soon as the day’s work was over
and the beasts were stabled, would take the road, it might be in a
winter tempest, and travel perhaps miles by moss and moorland to
spend an hour or two in courtship. Rule 10 of the Bachelors’ Club at
Tarbolton provides that 4 every man proper for a member
of this Society must be a professed lover of
one or more
of the female sex.’ The rich, as Burns himself points out, may have
a choice of pleasurable 56
occupations, but these lads had nothing but
their 4 cannie hour at e’en.’ It was upon love and
flirtation that this rustic society was built; gallantry was the
essence of life among the Ayrshire hills as well as in the Court of
Versailles ; and the days were distinguished from each other by
love-letters, meetings, tiffs, reconciliations, and expansions to
the chosen confidant, as in a comedy of Marivaux.
Here was a field for a man of Burns’s indiscriminate personal
ambition, where he might pursue his voyage of discovery in quest of
true love, and enjoy temporary triumphs by the way. He was
'constantly the victim of some fair enslaver ’—at least, when it was
not the other way about; and there were often underplots and
secondary fair enslavers in the background. Many—or may we not say
most?—of these affairs were entirely artificial. One, he tells us,
he began out of 4 a vanity of showing his parts in
courtship,’ for he piqued himself on his ability at a love-letter.
But, however they began, these flames of his were fanned into a
passion ere the end ; and he stands unsurpassed in his power of
self-deception, and positively without a competitor in the art, to
use his own words, of 4 battering himself into a warm
affection,’—a debilitating and futile exercise. Once he had worked
himself into the vein, 4 the agitations of his mind and
body ’ were an astonishment to all who knew him. Such a course as
this, however pleasant to a thirsty vanity, was lowering to his
nature. He sank more and more towards the professional Don Juan.
With a leer of what the
French call fatuity, he bids the belles of Mauchline beware of his
seductions ; and the same cheap self satisfaction finds a yet uglier
vent when he plumes himself on the scandal at the birth of his first
bastard. We can well believe what we hear of his facility in
striking up an acquaintance with women : he would have conquering
manners; he would bear down upon his rustic game with the grace that
comes of absolute assurance—the Richelieu of Lochlea or Mossgiel. In
yet another manner did these quaint ways of courtship help him into
fame. If he were great as principal, he was unrivalled as confidant.
He could enter into a passion ; he could counsel wary moves, being,
in his own phrase, so old a hawk; nay, he could turn a letter for
some unlucky swain, or even string a few lines of verse that should
clinch the business and fetch the hesitating fair one to the ground.
Nor, perhaps, was it only his ‘ curiosity, zeal, and intrepid
dexterity ’ that recommended him for a second in such affairs; it
must have been a distinction to have the assistance and advice of
Rab the
Ranter; and one who was in no way
formidable by himself might grow dangerous and attractive through
the fame of his associate.
I think we can conceive him, in these early years, in that rough
moorland country, poor among the poor with his seven pounds a year,
looked upon with doubt by respectable elders, but for all that the
best talker, the best letter-writer, the most famous lover and
confidant, the laureate poet, and the only man who wore his hair
tied in the parish.
He says he had then as high a notion of himself as ever after ; and
I can well believe it. Among the youth he walked
facile pjinceps,
an apparent god; and even if, from time to time, the Reverend Mr.
Auld should swoop upon him with the thunders of the Church, and, in
company with seven others, Rab the Ranter must figure some fine
Sunday on the stool of repentance, would there not be a sort of
glory, an infernal apotheosis, in so conspicuous a shame? Was not
Richelieu in disgrace more idolised than ever by the dames of Paris
? and when was the highwayman most acclaimed but on his way to
Tyburn? Or, to take a simile from nearer home, and still more
exactly to the point, what could even corporal punishment avail,
administered by a cold, abstract, unearthly schoolmaster, against
the influence and fame of the school’s hero?
And now we come to the culminating point of Burns’s early period. He
began to be received into the unknown upper world. His fame soon
spread from among his fellow-rebels on the benches, and began to
reach the ushers and monitors of this great Ayrshire academy. This
arose in part from his lax views about religion ; for at this time
that old war of the creeds and confessors, which is always grumbling
from end to end of our poor Scotland, brisked up in these parts into
a hot and virulent skirmish; and Burns found himself identified with
the opposition party,—a clique of roaring lawyers and half-heretical
divines, with wit enough to appreciate the value of the poet’s help,
and not sufficient taste to moderate his grossness and personality.
We may judge of their surprise when
Holy Willie
was put into their hand; like the amorous lads of Tarbolton, they
recognised in him the best of seconds. His satires began to go the
round in manuscript; Mr. Aiken, one of the lawyers, ‘read him into
fame;’ he himself was soon welcome in many houses of a better sort,
where his admirable talk, and his maimers, which he had direct from
his Maker, except for a brush he gave them at a country
dancing-school, completed what his poems had begun. We have a sight
of him at his first visit to Adamhill, in his ploughman’s shoes,
coasting around the carpet as though that were sacred ground. But he
soon grew used to carpets and their owners; and he was still the
superior of all whom he encountered, and ruled the roost in
conversation. Such was the impression made, that a young clergyman,
himself a man of ability, trembled and became confused when he saw .
Robert enter the church in which he was to preach. It is not
surprising that the poet determined to publish : he had now stood
the test of some publicity, and under this hopeful impulse he
composed in six winter months the bulk of his more important poems.
Here was a young man who, from a very humble place, was mounting
rapidly ; from the cynosure of a parish he had become the talk of a
county ; once the bard of rural courtships, he was now about to
appear as a bound and printed poet in the world s bookshops.
A few more intimate strokes are necessary to complete the sketch.
This strong young ploughman, who feared no competitor with the
flail, suffered like a fine lady from sleeplessness and vapours; he
would fall into the blackest melancholies, and be filled with
remorse for the past and terror for the future. He was still not
perhaps devoted to religion, but haunted by it; and at a touch of
sickness prostrated himself before God in what I can only call
unmanly penitence. As he had aspirations beyond his place in the
world, so he had tastes, thoughts, and weaknesses to match. He loved
to walk under a wood to the sound of a winter tempest; he had a
singular tenderness for animals; he carried a book with him in his
pocket when he went abroad, and wore out in this service two copies
of the Man of
Feeling. With young people in the field
at work he was very long-suffering; and when his brother Gilbert
spoke sharply to them—‘ O man, ye are no’ for young folk,’ he would
say, and give the defaulter a helping hand and a smile. In the
hearts of the men whom he met he read as in a book; and, what is yet
more rare, his knowledge of himself equalled his knowledge of
others. There are no truer things said of Burns than what is to be
found in his own letters. Country Don Juan as he was, he had none of
that blind vanity which values itself on what it is not; he knew his
own strength and weakness to a hair: he took himself boldly for what
he was, and, except in moments of hypochondria, declared himself
content.
THE LOVE-STORIES
On the night of Mauchline races, 1785,
the young men and women of the place joined in a penny ball,
according to their custom. ‘In the same set danced Jean Armour, the
master-mason’s daughter, and our dark-eyed Don Juan. His dog (not
the immortal Luath, but a successor unknown to fame,
caret quia vate
sacro), apparently sensible of some
neglect, followed his master to and fro, to the confusion of the
dancers. Some mirthful comments followed; and Jean heard the poet
say to his partner—or, as I should imagine, laughingly launch the
remark to the company at large—that ‘he wished he could get any of
the lassies to like him as well as his dog.’ Some time after, as the
girl was bleaching clothes on Mauchline green, Robert chanced to go
by, still accompanied by his dog; and the dog, ‘ scouring in long
excursion,’ scampered with four black paws across the linen. This
brought the two into conversation; when Jean, with a somewhat
hoydenish advance, inquired if e he had yet got any of
the lassies to like him as well as his dog.’
It is one of the misfortunes of the professional Don Juan that his
honour forbids him to refuse battle; he is in life like the Roman
soldier upon duty, or like the sworn physician who must attend on
all diseases. Burns accepted the provocation; hungry hope reawakened
in his heart; here was a girl pretty, simple at least, if not
honestly stupid, and plainly not averse to his attentions: it seemed
to him once more as if love might here be waiting him. Had he but
known the truth ! for this facile and empty-headed girl had nothing
more in view than a flirtation ; and her heart, from the first and
on to the end of her story, was engaged by another man. Burns once
more commenced the celebrated process of ‘ battering himself into a
warm affection; ’ and the proofs of his success are to be found in
many verses of the period. Nor did he succeed with himself only;
Jean, with her heart still elsewhere, succumbed to his fascination,
and early in the next year the natural consequence became manifest.
It was a heavy stroke for this unfortunate couple. They had trifled
with life, and were now rudely reminded of life’s serious issues.
Jean awoke to the ruin of her hopes; the best she had now to expect
was marriage with a man who was a stranger to her dearest thoughts;
she might now be glad if she could get what she would never have
chosen. As for Burns, at the stroke of the calamity he recognised
that his voyage of discovery had led him into a wrong
hemisphere—that he was not, and never had been, really in love with
Jean. Hear him in the pressure of the hour. ‘Against two things,’ he
writes, ‘I am as fixed as fate—staying at home, and owning her
conjugally. The first, by heaven, I will not do!— the last, by hell,
I will never do! ’ And then he adds, perhaps already in a more
relenting temper: ‘ If you see Jean, tell her I will meet her, so
God help me in my hour of need.’ They met accordingly; and Burns,
touched with her misery, came down from these heights of
independence, and gave her a written acknowledgment of marriage.
It is the punishment of Don Juanism to create continually false
positions—relations in life which are wrong in themselves, and which
it is equally wrong to break or to perpetuate. This was such a case.
Worldly Wiseman would have laughed and gone his way; let us be glad
that Burns was better counselled by his heart. When we discover that
we can be no longer true, the next best is to be kind. I daresay he
came away from that interview not very content, but with a glorious
conscience; and as he went homeward, he would sing his favourite, ‘
How are Thy servants blest, O Lord! ’ Jean, on the other hand, armed
with her ‘ lines,’ confided her position to the master-mason, her
father, and his wife. Burns and his brother were then in a fair way
to ruin themselves in their farm; the poet was an execrable match
for any well-to-do country lass; and perhaps old Armour had an
inkling of a previous attachment on his daughter’s part. At least,
he was not so much incensed by her slip from virtue as by the
marriage which had been designed to cover it. Of this he would not
hear a word. Jean, who had besought the acknowledgment only to
appease her parents, and not at all from any violent inclination to
the. poet, readily gave up the paper for destruction; and all
parties imagined, although wrongly, that the marriage was thus
dissolved. To a proud man like Burns here was a crushing blow. The
concession which had been wrung from his pity was now publicly
thrown back in his teeth. The Armour family preferred disgrace to
his connection. Since the promise, besides, he had doubtless been
busy ‘battering himself’ back again into his affection for the girl;
and the blow would not only take him in his vanity, but wound him at
the heart.
He relieved himself in verse; but for such a smarting affront
manuscript poetry was insufficient to console him. He must find a
more powerful remedy in good flesh and blood, and after this
discomfiture set forth again at once upon his voyage of discovery in
quest of love. It is perhaps one of the most touching things in
human nature, as it is a commonplace of psychology, that when a man
has just lost hope or confidence in one love, he is then most eager
to find and lean upon another. The universe could not be yet
exhausted; there must be hope and love waiting for him somewhere;
and so, with his head down, this poor, insulted poet ran once more
upon his fate. There was an innocent and gentle Highland
nursery-maid at service in a neighbouring family ; and he had soon
battered himself and her into a warm affection and a secret
engagement. Jean’s marriage-lines had not been destroyed till March
13,
1786; yet all was
settled between Burns and Mary Campbell by Sunday, May
14, when they met
for the last time, and said farewell with rustic solemnities upon
the banks of Ayr. They each wet their hands in a stream,
5-e
65 and, standing one on either bank,
held a Bible between them as they vowed eternal faith. Then they
exchanged Bibles, on one of which Burns, for greater security, had
inscribed texts as to the binding nature of an oath; and surely, if
ceremony can do aught to fix the wandering affections, here were two
people united for life. Mary came of a superstitious family, so that
she perhaps insisted on these rites; but they must have been
eminently to the taste of Burns at this period ; for nothing would
seem superfluous, and no oath great enough, to stay his tottering
constancy.
Events of consequence now happened thickly in the poet’s life. His
book was announced; the Armours sought to summon him at law for the
aliment of the child; he lay here and there in hiding to correct the
sheets; he was under an engagement for Jamaica, where Mary was to
join him as his wife; now he had ‘ orders within three weeks at
latest to repair aboard the
Nancy,
Captain Smith;5 now his chest was already on the road to
Greenock; and now, in the wild autumn weather on the moorland, he
measures verses of farewell:—
‘The
bursting tears my heart declare;
Farewell the bonny banks of Ayr! ’
But the great Master Dramatist had secretly another intention for
the piece; by the most violent and complicated solution, in which
death and birth and sudden fame all play a part as interposing
deities, the act-drop fell upon a scene of transformation. Jean was
brought to bed of twins, and, by an amicable
66 arrangement, the
Burnses took the boy to bring up by hand, while the girl remained
with her mother. The success of the book was immediate and emphatic;
it put £20 at once into the author’s purse; and he was encouraged
upon all hands to go to Edinburgh and push his success in a second
and larger edition. Third and last in these series of
interpositions, a letter came one day to Mossgiel farm for Robert.
He went to the window to read it; a sudden change came over his
face, and he left the room without a word. Years afterwards, when
the story began to leak out, his family understood that he had then
learned the death of Highland Mary. Except in a few poems and a few
dry indications purposely misleading as to date, Burns himself made
no reference to this passage of his life; it was an adventure of
which, for I think sufficient reasons, he desired to bury the
details. Of one thing we may be glad : in after years he visited the
poor girl’s mother, and left her with the impression that he was * a
real warmhearted chield.’
Perhaps a month after he received this intelligence, he set out for
Edinburgh on a pony he had borrowed from a friend. The town that
winter was ‘agog with the ploughman poet.’ Robertson, Dugald
Stewart, Blair, ‘Duchess Gordon and all the gay world,’ were of his
acquaintance. Such a revolution is not to be found in literary
history. He was now, it must be remembered, twenty-seven years of
age; he had fought since his early boyhood an obstinate battle
against poor soil, bad seed, and . 67 inclement seasons, wading deep
in Ayrshire mosses, guiding the plough in the furrow, wielding ‘the
thresher’s weary flingin’-tree; ’ and his education, his diet, and
his pleasures, had been those of a Scots countryman. Now he stepped
forth suddenly among the polite and learned. We can see him as he
then was, in his boots and buckskins, his blue coat and waistcoat
striped with buff and blue, like a farmer in his Sunday best; the
heavy ploughman’s figure firmly planted on its burly legs; his face
full of sense and shrewdness, and with a somewhat melancholy air of
thought, and his large dark eye ‘ literally glowing ’ as he spoke. ‘
I never saw such another eye in a human head,’ says Walter Scott,
‘though I have seen the most distinguished men of my time.’ With
men, whether they were lords or omnipotent critics, his manner was
plain, dignified, and free from bashfulness or affectation. If he
made a slip, he had the social courage to pass on and refrain from
explanation. He was not embarrassed in this society, because he read
and judged the men; he could spy snobbery in a titled lord; and, as
for the critics, he dismissed their system in an epigram. ‘ These
gentlemen,’ said he, ‘ remind me of some spinsters in my country who
spin their thread so fine that it is neither fit for weft nor woof.’
Ladies, on the other hand, surprised him; he was scarce commander of
himself in their society; he was disqualified by his acquired nature
as a Don Juan; and he, who had been so much at his ease with country
lasses, treated the town dames to an extreme of deference. One lady,
who met him at a ball, gave Chambers a speaking sketch of his
demeanour. ‘His manner was not prepossessing —scarcely, she thinks,
manly or natural. It seemed as if he affected a rusticity or
landertness,
so that when he said the music was “bonnie, bonnie,” it was like the
expression of a child.’ These would be company manners; and
doubtless on a slight degree of intimacy the affectation would grow
less. And his talk to women had always ‘ a turn either to the
pathetic or humorous, which engaged the attention particularly.’
The Edinburgh magnates (to conclude this episode at once) behaved
well to Burns from first to last. Were heaven-born genius to revisit
us in similar guise, I am not venturing too far when I say that he
need expect neither so warm a welcome nor such solid help. Although
Burns was only a peasant, and one of no very elegant reputation as
to morals, he was made welcome to their homes. They gave him a great
deal of good advice, helped him to some five hundred pounds of ready
money, and got him, as soon as he asked it, a place in the Excise.
Burns, on his part, bore the elevation with perfect dignity; and
with perfect dignity returned, when the time had come, into a
country privacy of life. His powerful sense never deserted him, and
from the first he recognised that his Edinburgh popularity was but
an ovation and the affair of a day. He wrote a few letters in a
high-flown, bombastic vein of gratitude; but'in practice he suffered
no man to intrude upon his self-respect. On the other hand, he never
turned his back, even for a moment, on his old associates; and he
was always ready to sacrifice an acquaintance to a friend, although
the acquaintance were a duke. He would be a bold man who should
promise similar conduct in equally exacting circumstances. It was,
in short, an admirable appearance on the stage of life—socially
successful, intimately self-respecting, and like a gentleman from
first to last.
In the present study this must only be taken by the way, while we
return to Burns’s love-affairs. Even on the road to Edinburgh he had
seized upon the opportunity of a flirtation, and had carried the
‘battering’ so far that when next he moved from town, it was to
steal two days with this anonymous fair one. The exact importance to
Burns of this affair may be gathered from the song in which he
commemorated its occurrence. ‘I love the dear lassie,’ he sings, ‘
because she loves me; ’ or, in the tongue of prose : ‘ Finding an
opportunity, I did not hesitate to profit by it; and even now, if it
returned, I should not hesitate to profit by it again.’ A love thus
founded has no interest for mortal man. Meantime, early in the
winter, and only once, we find him regretting Jean in his
correspondence. ‘Because’— such is his reason—‘ because he does not
think he will ever meet so delicious an armful again ; ’ and then,
after a brief excursion into verse, he goes straight on to describe
a new episode in the voyage of discovery with the daughter of a
Lothian farmer for a heroine. I must ask the reader to follow all
these references to his future wife; they are essential to the
comprehension of Burns’s character and fate. In June we find him
back at Mauchline, a famous man. There, the Armour family greeted
him with a ‘mean, servile compliance,’ which increased his former
disgust. Jean was not less compliant; a second time the poor girl
submitted to the fascination of the man whom she did not love, and
whom she had so cruelly insulted little more than a year ago; and,
though Burns took advantage of her weakness, it was in the ugliest
and most cynical spirit, and with a heart absolutely indifferent.
Judge of this by a letter written some twenty days after his
return—a letter to my mind among the most degrading in the whole
collection—a letter which seems to have been inspired by a boastful,
libertine bagman. ‘ I am afraid,’ it goes, ‘ I have almost ruined
one source, the principal one, indeed, of my former happiness—the
eternal propensity I always had to fall in love. My heart no more
glows with feverish rapture ; I have no paradisiacal evening
interviews.’ Even the process of ‘ battering’ has failed him, you
perceive. Still he had some one in his eye—a lady, if you please,
with a fine figure and elegant manners, and who had ‘ seen the
politest quarters in Europe.’ ‘I frequently visited her,’ he writes,
‘and after passing regularly the intermediate degrees between the
distant formal bow and the familiar grasp round the waist, I
ventured, in my careless way, to talk of friendship in rather
ambiguous terms; and after her return to--I wrote her in the same
terms. Missconstruing my remarks further than even I intended, flew
off in a tangent of female dignity and reserve, like a mountain lark
in an April morning; and wrote me an answer which measured out very
completely what an immense way I had to travel before I could reach
the climate of her favours. But I am an old hawk at the sport, and
wrote her such a cool, deliberate, prudent reply, as brought my bird
from her aerial towerings, pop, down to my foot, like Corporal
Trim’s hat.’ I avow a carnal longing, after this transcription, to
buffet the Old Hawk about the ears. There is little question that to
this lady he must have repeated his addresses, and that he was by
her (Miss Chalmers) eventually, though not at all unkindly,
rejected. One more detail to characterise the period. Six months
after the date of this letter, Burns, back in Edinburgh, is served
with a writ
in meditatione fugce, on behalf of some
Edinburgh fair one, probably of humble rank, who declared an
intention of adding to his family.
About the beginning of December (1787)
a new period opens in the story of the poet’s random affections. He
met at a tea-party one Mrs. Agnes M‘Lehose, a married woman of about
his own age, who, with her two children, had been deserted by an
unworthy husband. She had wit, could use her pen, and had read
Werther
with attention. Sociable, and even somewhat frisky, there was a
good, sound, human kernel in the woman; a warmth of love, strong
dogmatic religious feeling, and a considerable, but not
authoritative, sense of the proprieties. Of what biographers refer
to daintily as ‘her somewhat voluptuous style of beauty,’ judging
from the silhouette in Mr. Scott Douglas’s invaluable edition, the
reader will be fastidious if he does not approve. Take her for all
in all, I believe she was the best woman Burns encountered. The pair
took a fancy for each other on the spot; Mrs. M‘Lehose, in her turn,
invited him to tea; but the poet, in his character of the Old Hawk,
preferred a
tete-a-tete, excused himself at the last
moment, and offered a visit instead. An accident confined him to his
room for nearly a month, and this led to the famous Clarinda and
Sylvander correspondence. It was begun in simple sport; they are
already at their fifth or sixth exchange, when Clarinda writes: ‘ It
is really curious so much
fun
passing between two persons who saw each other only
once;
’ but it is hardly safe for a man and woman in the flower of their
years to write almost daily, and sometimes in terms too ambiguous,
sometimes in terms too plain, and generally in terms too warm for
mere acquaintance. The exercise partakes a little of the nature of
battering, and danger may be apprehended when next they meet. It is
difficult to give any account of this remarkable correspondence; it
is too far away from us, and perhaps not yet far enough, in point of
time and manner; the imagination is baffled by these stilted
literary utterances, warming, in bravura passages, into downright
truculent nonsense.
Clarinda has one famous sentence in which she bids Sylvander connect
the thought of his mistress with the changing phases of the year; it
was enthusiastically admired by the swain, but on the modern mind
produces mild amazement and alarm. 8 Oh, Clarinda,’
writes Burns, 8 shall we not meet in a state—some yet
unknown state—of being, where the lavish hand of Plenty shall
minister to the highest wish of Benevolence, and where the chill
north wind of Prudence shall never blow over the flowery field of
Enjoyment ? ’ The design may be that of an Old Hawk, but the style
is more suggestive of a Bird of Paradise. It is sometimes hard to
fancy they are not gravely making fun of each other as they write.
Religion, poetry, love, and charming sensibility, are the current
topics. 'I am delighted, charming Clarinda, with your honest
enthusiasm for religion,’ writes Burns; and the pair entertained a
fiction that this was their 'favourite subject.’ 'This is Sunday,’
writes the lady, 'and not a word on our favourite subject. O fy! “
divine Clarinda I suspect, although quite unconsciously on the part
of the lady, who was bent on his redemption, they but used the
favourite subject as a stalking-horse. In the meantime, the sportive
acquaintance was ripening steadily into a genuine passion. Visits
took place, and then became frequent. Clarinda’s friends were hurt
and suspicious; her clergyman interfered; she herself had smart
attacks of conscience; but her heart had gone from her control; it
was altogether his, and she 8 counted all things but
loss—heaven excepted—that she might win and keep him/ Burns himself
was transported while in her neighbourhood, but his transports
somewhat rapidly declined during an absence. I am tempted to imagine
that, womanlike, he took on the colour of his mistress’s feeling;
that he could not but heat himself at the fire of her unaffected
passion; but that, like one who should leave the hearth upon a
winter’s night, his temperature soon fell when he was out of sight,
and in a word, though he could share the symptoms, that he had never
shared the disease. At the same time, amid the fustian of the
letters there are forcible and true expressions, and the love-verses
that he wrote upon Clarinda are among the most moving in the
language.
We are approaching the solution. In mid-winter, Jean, once more in
the family-way, was turned out of doors by her family ; and Burns
had her received and cared 'for in the house of a friend. For he
remained to the last imperfect in his character of Don Juan, and
lacked the sinister courage to desert his victim. About the middle
of February (1788)
he had to tear himself from his Clarinda and make a journey into the
south-west on business. Clarinda gave him two shirts for his little
son. They were daily to meet in prayer at an appointed hour. Burns,
too late for the post at Glasgow, sent her a letter by parcel that
she might not have to wait. Clarinda on her part writes, this time
with a beautiful simplicity: 'I think the streets look deserted-like
since Monday; and there’s a certain insipidity in good kind folks I
once enjoyed not a little. Miss Wardrobe supped here on Monday. She
once named you, which kept me from falling asleep. I drank your
health in a glass of ale—as the lasses do at Hallowe’en—“ in to
mysel’.” ’ Arrived at Mauchline, Bums installed Jean Armour in a
lodging, and prevailed on Mrs. Armour to promise her help and
countenance in the approaching confinement. This was kind at least;
but hear his expressions: 'I have taken her a room; I have taken her
to my arms; I have given her a mahogany bed; I have given her a
guinea. ... I swore her privately and solemnly never to attempt any
claim on me as a husband, even though anybody should persuade her
she had such a claim—which she has not, neither during my life nor
after my death. She did all this like a good girl.’ And then he took
advantage of the situation. To Clarinda he wrote: 'I this morning
called for a certain woman. I am disgusted with her ; I cannot
endure her; ’ and he accused her of 'tasteless insipidity, vulgarity
of. soul, and mercenary fawning.’ This was already in March; by the
13th of that
month he was back in Edinburgh. On the 17th
he wrote to Clarinda: ‘Your hopes, your fears, your cares, my love,
are mine, so don’t mind them. I will take you in my hand through the
dreary wilds of this world, and scare away the ravening bird or
beast that would annoy you.’ Again, on the 21st: ‘Will you open,
with satisfaction and delight, a letter from a man who loves you,
who has loved you, and who will love you, to death, through death,
and for ever? . . . How rich am I to have such a treasure as you! .
. . “The Lord God knoweth,” and, perhaps, 'Israel he shall know,” my
love and your merit. Adieu, Clarinda! I am going to remember you in
my prayers.’ By the 7th of April, seventeen days later, he had
already decided to make Jean Armour publicly his wife.
A more astonishing stage-trick is not to be found. And yet his
conduct is seen, upon a nearer examination, to be grounded both in
reason and in kindness. He was now about to embark on a solid
worldly career; he had taken a farm; the affair with Clarinda,
however gratifying to his heart, was too contingent to offer any
great consolation to a man like Burns, to whom marriage must have
seemed the very dawn of hope and self-respect. This is to regard the
question from its lowest aspect; but there is no doubt that he
entered on this new period of his life with a sincere determination
to do right. He had just helped his brother with a loan of a hundred
and eighty pounds; should he do nothing for the poor girl whom he
had ruined ? It was true he could not do as he did without brutally
wounding Clarinda; that was the punishment of his bygone fault; he
was, as he truly says, ‘ damned with a choice only of different
species of error and misconduct! To be professional Don Juan, to
accept the provocation of any lively lass upon the village green,
may thus lead a man through a series of detestable words and
actions, and land him at last in an undesired and most unsuitable
union for life. If he had been strong enough to refrain or bad
enough to persevere in evil; if he had only not been Don Juan at
all, or been Don Juan altogether, there had been some possible road
for him throughout this troublesome world ; but a man, alas ! who is
equally at the call of his worse and better instincts, stands among
changing events without foundation or resource.
DOWNWARD COURSE
It may be questionable whether any marriage could have tamed Burns;
but it is at least certain that there was no hope for him in the
marriage he contracted. He did right, but then he had done wrong
before; it was, as I said, one of those relations in life which it
seems equally wrong to break or to perpetuate. He neither loved nor
respected his wife. ‘God knows,’ he writes, ‘my choice was as random
as blind man’s buff.’ He consoles himself by the thought that he has
acted kindly to her; that she ‘ has the most sacred enthusiasm of
attachment to him; ’ that she has a good figure ; that she has a ‘
wood-note wild,’ ‘ her voice rising with ease to B natural,’ no
less. The effect on the reader is one of unmingled pity for both
parties concerned. This was not the wife who (in his own words)
could ‘enter into his favourite studies or relish his favourite
authors; ’ this was not even a wife, after the affair of the
marriage-lines, in whom a husband could joy to place his trust. Let
her manage a farm with sense, let her voice rise to B natural all
day long, she would still be a peasant to her lettered lord, and an
object of pity rather than of equal affection. She could now .be
faithful, she could now be forgiving, she could now be generous even
to a pathetic and touching degree; but coming from one who was
unloved, and who had scarce shown herself worthy of the sentiment,
these were all virtues thrown away, which could neither change her
husband’s heart nor affect the inherent destiny of their relation.
From the outset, it was a marriage that had no root in nature; and
we find him, ere long, lyrically regretting Highland Mary, renewing
correspondence with Clarinda in the warmest language, on doubtful
terms with Mrs. Riddel, and on terms unfortunately beyond any
question with Anne Park.
Alas! this was not the only ill circumstance in his future. He had
been idle for some eighteen months, superintending his new edition,
hanging on to settle with the publisher, travelling in the Highlands
with Willie Nicol, or philandering with Mrs. M‘Lehose; and in this
period the radical part of the man had suffered irremediable hurt.
He had lost his habits of industry, and formed the habit of
pleasure. Apologetical biographers assure us of the contrary; but
from the first he saw and recognised the danger for himself; his
mind, he writes, is 4 enervated to an alarming degree ’
byidleness and dissipation; and again, ‘ my mind has been vitiated
with idleness.’ It never fairly recovered. To business he could
bring the required diligence and attention without difficulty; but
he was thenceforward incapable, except in rare instances, of that
superior effort of concentration which is required for serious
literary work. He may be said, indeed, to have worked no more, and
only amused himself with letters. The man who had written a volume
of masterpieces in six months, during the remainder of his life
rarely found courage for any more sustained effort than a song. And
the nature of the songs is itself characteristic of these idle later
years; for they are often as polished and elaborate as his earlier
works were frank, and headlong, and colloquial; and this sort of
verbal elaboration in short flights is, for a man of literary turn,
simply the most agreeable of pastimes. The change in manner
coincides exactly with the Edinburgh visit. In
1786 he had written
the Address
to a Louse, which may be taken as an
extreme instance of the first manner ; and already, in
1787, we come upon
the rosebud pieces to Miss Cruikshank, which are extreme examples of
the second. The change was, therefore, the direct and very natural
consequence of his great change in life; but it is not the less
typical of his loss of moral courage that he should have given up
all larger ventures, nor the less melancholy that a man who first
attacked literature with a hand that seemed
So
capable of moving mountains, should have spent
his later years in whittling cherry-stones.
Meanwhile the farm did not prosper; he had to join to it the salary
of an exciseman; at last he had to give it up, and rely altogether
on the latter resource. He was an active officer; and, though he
sometimes tempered severity with mercy, we have local testimony,
oddly representing the public feeling of the period, that, while ‘in
everything else he was a perfect gentleman, when he met with
anything seizable he was no better than any other gauger.’
There is but one manifestation of the man in these last years which
need delay us: and that was the sudden interest in politics which
arose from his sympathy with the great French Revolution. His only
political feeling had been hitherto a sentimental Jacobitism, not
more or less respectable than that of Scott, Aytoun, and the rest of
what George Borrow has nicknamed the ‘ Charlie over the water’
Scotsmen. It was a sentiment almost entirely literary and
picturesque in its origin, built on ballads and the adventures of
the Young Chevalier; and in Burns it is the more excusable, because
he lay out of the way of active politics in his youth. With the
great French Revolution, something living, practical, and feasible
appeared to him for the first time in this realm of human action.
The young ploughman who had desired so earnestly to rise, now
reached out his sympathies to a whole nation animated with the same
desire. Already in 1788
we find the old Jacobitism hand in hand with the new popular
doctrine, when, in a letter of indignation against the zeal of a
Whig clergyman, he writes: ‘I daresay the American Congress in
1776 will be
allowed to be as able and as enlightened as the English Convention
was in 1688;
and that their posterity will celebrate the centenary of their
deliverance from us, as duly and sincerely as we do ours from the
oppressive measures of the wrongheaded house of Stuart.’ As time
wore on, his sentiments grew more pronounced, and even violent; but
there was a basis of sense and generous feeling to his hottest
excess. What he asked was a fair chance for the individual in life;
an open road to success and distinction for all classes of men. It
was in the same spirit that he had helped to found a public library
in the parish where his farm was situated, and that he sang his
fervent snatches against tyranny and tyrants. Witness, were it
alone, this verse :—
‘Here’s freedom to him that wad read,
Here’s freedom to him that wad write;
There’s nane ever feared that the truth should be heard
But them wham the truth wad indite.’
Yet his enthusiasm for the cause was scarce guided by wisdom. Many
stories are preserved of the bitter and unwise words he used in
country coteries ; how he proposed Washington’s health as an
amendment to Pitt’s, gave as a toast ‘ the last verse of the last
chapter of Kings,’ and celebrated Dumouriez in a doggerel impromptu
full of ridicule and hate.
Now his sympathies would inspire him with
Scots who. hae;
now involve him in a drunken broil with a loyal officer, and
consequent apologies and explanations, hard to offer for a man of
Burns’s stomach. Nor was this the front of his offending. On
February 27,
1792, he took
part in the capture of an armed smuggler, bought at the subsequent
sale four carronades, and despatched them with a letter to the
French Assembly. Letter and guns were stopped at Dover by the
English officials; there was trouble for Burns with his superiors;
he was reminded firmly, however delicately, that, as a paid
official, it was his duty to obey and to be silent; and all the
blood of this poor, proud, and falling man must have rushed to his
head at the humiliation. His letter to Mr. Erskine, subsequently
Earl of Mar, testifies, in its turgid, turbulent phrases, to a
perfect passion of alarmed self-respect and vanity. He had been
muzzled, and muzzled, when all was said, by his paltry salary as an
exciseman; alas! had he not a family to keep? Already, he wrote, he
looked forward to some such judgment from a hackney scribbler as
this: 'Burns, notwithstanding the
fanfai'onnade
of independence to be found in his works, and after having been held
forth to public view and to public estimation as a man of some
genius, yet, quite destitute of resources within himself to support
his borrowed dignity, he dwindled into a paltry exciseman, and slunk
out the rest of his insignificant existence in the meanest of
pursuits, and among the vilest of mankind.’ And then on he goes, in
a style of rodomontade, but filled with living indignation, to
declare his right to a political opinion, and his willingness to
shed his blood for the political birthright of his sons. Poor,
perturbed spirit! he was indeed exercised in vain; those who share
and those who differ from his sentiments about the Revolution, alike
understand and sympathise with him in this painful strait; for
poetry and human manhood are lasting like the race, and politics,
which are but a wrongful striving after right, pass and change from
year to year and age to age. The
Twa Dogs
has already outlasted the constitution of Sieyes and the policy of
the Whigs; and Burns is better known among English-speaking races
than either Pitt or Fox.
Meanwhile, whether as a man, a husband, or a poet, his steps led
downward. He knew, knew bitterly, that the best was out of him : he
refused to make another volume, for he felt it would be a
disappointment ; he grew petulantly alive to criticism, unless he
was sure it reached him from a friend. For his songs, he would take
nothing; they were all that he could do; the proposed Scots play,
the proposed series of Scots tales in verse, all had gone to water;
and in a fling of pain and disappointment, which is surely noble
with the nobility of a viking, he would rather stoop to borrow than
to accept money for these last and inadequate efforts of his muse.
And this desperate abnegation rises at times near to the height of
madness; as when he pretended that he had not written, but only
found and published, his immortal
Auld Lang Syne.
In the same spirit he became more scrupulous as an artist; he was
doing so little he would fain do that little well; and about two
months before his death he asked Thomson to send back all his
manuscripts for revisal, saying that lie would rather write five
songs to his taste than twice that number otherwise. The battle of
his life was lost; in forlorn efforts to do well, in desperate
submissions to evil, the last years flew by. His temper is dark and
explosive, launching epigrams, quarrelling with his friends, jealous
of young puppy officers. He tries to be a good father; he boasts
himself a libertine. Sick, sad, and jaded, he can refuse no occasion
of temporary pleasure, no opportunity to shine ; and he who had once
refused the invitations of lords and ladies is now whistled to the
inn by any curious stranger. His death (July 21,
1796), in his
thirty-seventh year, was indeed a kindly dispensation. It is the
fashion to say he died of drink; many a man has drunk more and yet
lived with reputation, and reached a good age. That drink and
debauchery helped to destroy his constitution, and were the means of
his unconscious suicide, is doubtless true; but he had failed in
life, had lost his power of work, and was already married to the
poor, unworthy, patient Jean, before he had shown his inclination to
convivial nights, or at least before that inclination had become
dangerous either to his health or his self-respect. He had trifled
with life, and must pay the penalty. He had chosen to be Don Juan,
he had grasped at temporary pleasures, and substantial happiness and
solid industry had passed him by. He died of being Robert Burns, and
there is no levity in such a statement of the case; for shall we
not, one and all, deserve a similar epitaph?
WORKS
The somewhat cruel necessity which has lain upon me throughout this
paper only to touch upon those points in the life of Burns where
correction or amplification seemed desirable, leaves me little
opportunity to speak of the works which have made his name so
famous. Yet, even here, a few observations seem necessary.
At the time when the poet made his appearance and great first
success, his work was remarkable in two ways. For, first, in an age
when poetry had become abstract and conventional, instead of
continuing to deal with shepherds, thunderstorms, and
personifications, he dealt with the actual circumstances of his
life, however matter-of-fact and sordid these might be. And, second,
in a time when English versification was particularly stiff, lame,
and feeble, and words were used with ultra-academical timidity, he
wrote verses that were easy, racy, graphic, and forcible, and used
language with absolute tact and courage as it seemed most fit to
give a clear impression. If you take even those English authors whom
we know Burns to have most admired and
studied, you will see at once that he owed them nothing but a
warning. Take Shenstone, for instance, and watch that elegant author
as he tries to grapple with the facts of life. He has a description,
I remember, of a gentleman engaged in sliding or walking on thin
ice, which is a little miracle of incompetence. You see my memory
fails me, and I positively cannot recollect whether his hero was
sliding or walking; as though a writer should describe a skirmish,
and the reader, at the end, be still uncertain whether it were a
charge of cavalry or a slow and stubborn advance of foot. There
could be no such ambiguity in Burns; his work is at the opposite
pole from such indefinite and stammering performances ; and a whole
lifetime passed in the study of Shenstone would only lead a man
further and further from writing the
Address to a Louse.
Yet Burns, like most great artists, proceeded from a school and
continued a tradition ; only the school and tradition were Scottish,
and not English. While the English language was becoming daily more
pedantic and inflexible, and English letters more colourless and
slack, there was another dialect in the sister country, and a
different school of poetry, tracing its descent, through King James
I., from Chaucer. The dialect alone accounts for much; for it was
then written colloquially, which kept it fresh and supple; and,
although not shaped for heroic flights, it was a direct and vivid
medium for all that had to do with social life. Hence, whenever
Scottish poets left their laborious imitations of bad English
verses, and fell back on their own dialect, their style would
kindle, and they would write of their convivial and somewhat gross
existences with pith and point. In Ramsay, and far more in the poor
lad Fergusson, there was mettle, humour, literary courage, and a
power of saying what they wished to say definitely and brightly,
which in the latter case should have justified great anticipations.
Had Burns died at the same age as Fergusson, he would have left us
literally nothing worth remark. To Ramsay and to Fergusson, then, he
was indebted in a very uncommon degree, not only following their
tradition and using their measures, but directly and avowedly
imitating their pieces. The same tendency to borrow a hint, to work
on some one else’s foundation, is notable in Burns from first to
last, in the period of song-writing as well as in that of the early
poems ; and strikes one oddly in a man of such deep originality, who
left so strong a print on all he touched, and whose work is so
greatly distinguished by that character of ‘inevitability ’ which
Wordsworth denied to Goethe.
When we remember Burns’s obligations to his predecessors, we must
never forget his immense advances on them. They had already ‘
discovered ’ nature ; but Burns discovered poetry—a higher and more
intense way of thinking of the things that go to make up nature, a
higher and more ideal key of words in which to speak of them. Ramsay
and Fergusson excelled at making a popular—or shall we say vulgar
?—sort of society verses, comical and prosaic, written, you would
say, in taverns while a supper-party waited for its laureate’s word;
but on the appearance of Burns this coarse and laughing literature
was touched to finer issues, and learned gravity of thought and
natural pathos.
What he had gained from his predecessors was a direct, speaking
style, and to walk on his own feet instead of on academical stilts.
There was never a man of letters with more absolute command of his
means ; and we may say of him, without excess, that his style was
his slave. Hence that energy of epithet, so concise and telling,
that a foreigner is tempted to explain it by some special richness
or aptitude in the dialect he wrote. Hence that Homeric justice and
completeness of description which gives us the very physiognomy of
nature, in body and detail, as nature is. Hence, too, the unbroken
literary quality of his best pieces, which keeps him from any slip
into the wearyful trade of word-painting, and presents everything,
as everything should be presented by the art of words, in a clear,
continuous medium of thought. Principal Shairp, for instance, gives
us a paraphrase of one tough verse of the original; and for those
who know the Greek poets only by paraphrase, this has the very
quality they are accustomed to look for and admire in Greek. The
contemporaries of Burns were surprised that he should visit so many
celebrated mountains and waterfalls, and not seize the opportunity
to make a poem. Indeed, it is not for those who have a true command
of the art of words, but for peddling, professional amateurs, that
these pointed occasions are most useful and inspiring. As those who
speak French imperfectly are glad to dwell on any topic they may
have talked upon or heard others talk upon before, because they know
appropriate words for it in French, so the dabbler in verse rejoices
to behold a waterfall, because he has learned the septiment and
knows appropriate words for it in poetry. But the dialect of Burns
was fitted to deal with any subject; and whether it was a stormy
night, a shepherd’s collie, a sheep struggling in the snow, the
conduct of cowardly soldiers in the field, the gait and cogitations
of a drunken man, or only a village cockcrow in the morning, he
could find language to give it freshness, body, and relief. He was
always ready to borrow the hint of a design, as though he had a
difficulty in commencing—a difficulty, let us say, in choosing a
subject out of a world which seemed all equally living and
significant to him ; but once he had the subject chosen, he could
cope with nature singlehanded, and make every stroke a triumph.
Again, his absolute mastery in his art enabled him to express each
and all of his different humours, and to pass smoothly and
congruously from one to another. Many men invent a dialect for only
one side of their nature—perhaps their pathos or their humour, or
the delicacy of their senses—and, for lack of a medium, leave all
the others unexpressed. You meet such an one, and find him in
conversation full of thought, feeling, and experience, which he has
lacked the art to employ in his writings. But Burns was not thus
hampered in the practice of the literary art; he could throw the
whole weight of his nature into his work, and impregnate it from end
to end. If Doctor Johnson, that stilted and accomplished stylist,
had lacked the sacred Boswell, what should we have known of him ?
and how should we have delighted in his acquaintance as we do? Those
who spoke with Burns tell us how much we have lost who did not. But
I think they exaggerate their privilege: I think we have the whole
Burns in our possession set forth in his consummate verses.
It was by his style, and not by his matter, that he affected
Wordsworth and the world. There is, indeed, only one merit worth
considering in a man of letters—that he should write well; and only
one damning fault—that he should write ill. We are little the better
for the reflections of the sailor’s parrot in the story. And so, if
Burns helped to change the course of literary history, it was by his
frank, direct, and masterly utterance, and not by his homely choice
of subjects. That was imposed upon him, not chosen upon a principle.
He wrote from his own experience, because it was his nature so to
do, and the tradition of the school from which he proceeded was
fortunately not opposed to homely subjects. But to these homely
subjects he communicated the rich commentary of his nature ; they
were all steeped in Burns ; and they interest us not in themselves,
but because they have been passed through the spirit of so genuine
and vigorous a man. Such is the stamp of living literature; and
there was never any more alive than that of Burns.
What a gust of sympathy there is in him sometimes flowing out in
byways hitherto unused, upon mice, and flowers, and the devil
himself; sometimes speaking plainly between human hearts ; sometimes
ringing out in exultation like a peal of bells! When we compare the
Farmers
Salutation to his Auld Mare Maggie, with
the clever and inhumane production of half a century earlier,
The Auld Mans Mare's
Dead, we see in a nutshell the spirit of
the change introduced by Burns. And as to its manner, who that has
read it can forget how the collie, Luath, in the
Twa Dogs,
describes and enters into the merry-making in the cottage?
‘The
hintin' pipe an’ sneeshin’ mill
Are handed round wi’ richt guid will;
The canty auld folks crackin’ crouse.
The young anes rantin’ through the house—
My heart has been sae fain to see them.
That I for joy hae barkit wi’ them.’
It was this ardent power of sympathy that was fatal to so many
women, and, through Jean Armour, to himself at last. His humour
comes from him in a stream so deep and easy that I will venture to
call him the best of humorous poets. He turns about in the midst to
utter a noble sentiment or a trenchant remark on human life, and the
style changes and rises to the occasion. I think it is Principal
Shairp who says, happily, that Burns would have been no Scotsman if
he had not loved to moralise; neither, may we add, would he have
been his father’s son ; but (what is worthy of note) his moralisings
are to a large extent the moral of his own career. He was among the
least impersonal of artists. Except in the
Jolly Beggars,
he shows no gleam of dramatic instinct. Mr. Carlyle has complained
that Tam
o’ Shanter
is, from the absence of this quality, only a picturesque and
external piece of work ; and I may add that in the
Twa Dogs
it is precisely in the infringement of dramatic propriety that a
great deal of the humour of the speeches depends for its existence
and effect. Indeed, Burns was so full of his identity that it breaks
forth on every page; and there is scarce an appropriate remark
either in praise or blame of his own conduct but he has put it
himself into verse. Alas for the tenor of these remarks! They are,
indeed, his own pitiful apology for such a marred existence and
talents so misused and stunted; and they seem to prove for ever how
small a part is played by reason in the conduct of man’s affairs.
Here was one, at least, who with unfailing judgment predicted his
own fate; yet his knowledge could not avail him, and with open eyes
he must fulfil his tragic destiny. Ten years before the end he had
written his epitaph ; and neither subsequent events, nor the
critical eyes of posterity, have shown us a word in it to alter.
And, lastly, has he not put in for himself the last unanswerable
plea?—
Then gently scan your brother man,
Still gentler sister woman ;
Though they may gang a kennin’ wrang,
To step aside is human :
One point must still be greatly dark-’
One? Alas! I fear every man and woman of us is 'greatly dark ’ to
all their neighbours, from the day of birth until death removes
them, in their greatest virtues as well as in their saddest faults;
and we, who have been trying to read the character of Burns, may
take home the lesson and be gentle in our thoughts. |