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Robert Burns.
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Biography EssayBorn on 25 January 1759 in Alloway, Scotland, to William and Agnes Brown Burnes, Robert Burns (he eventually dropped the "e" from his surname) followed his father's example by becoming ...
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The work of the Scottish poet Robert Burns (1759-1796) is characterized by realism, intense feeling, and metrical virtuosity. His best work is in Scots, the vernacular of southern Scotland, and he is ...
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Eighteenth-century Scottish poet Robert Burns wrote or adapted one of the most instantly recognizable songs in the world, "Auld Lang Syne," which is chorused annually around the globe on New Year's Ev...
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Born on 25 January 1759 in Alloway, Scotland, to William and Agnes Brown Burnes, Robert Burns followed his father's example by becoming a tenant farmer. Unlike William Burnes, however, Burns was able ...
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In the following essay, Crawford analyzes Burns's attempt at treating local themes in a universal manner in his poetry.
Many poems of Burns's first period embody the experience of a rura...
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In the following essay, Scott details what were considered the scandalous aspects of Burns's satires.
The unanimity of praise for the satires among modern Scottish critics of Burns is remarkabl...
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In this essay, Ericson-Roos analyzes the women of Burns's love poetry, asserting that "Burns shows an extraordinary psychological insight into the feminine mind."
The majority of ...
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In the following essay, Brown examines the influence of the folkloric milieu on Burns's poetry.
Robert Burns is remembered as much for his personality and character as for his poetry and songs....
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In the following essay, Wells explores the narrative structure and didactic content of several of Burns's poems.
Almost everyone, if asked to categorize Burns's work, would describe him ...
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In this essay, MacLachlan examines Burns's varying role as narrator in the context of his literary-historical position.
Sampson outlines Burns's role in the revival of poetry in the Scot...
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In the following essay, McKenna offers a thematic and structural analysis of Burns's verse-epistles.
As a group, Robert Burns's verse-epistles have been consistently ignored by commentat...
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Here, Ashmead and Davison explore several features of Burns's love songs, noting the connection he establishes between music and emotion.
Robert Burns' greatest songs rank with the fines...
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In this essay, Bold contends that Burns's poems written in the Scots dialect are superior to those he wrote in English.
In a book generally dismissive of Scots as a literary language, Edwin Mui...
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Low has edited two well-regarded books on Burns, Robert Burns: The Critical Heritage (1974) and Critical Essays on Robert Burns (1975). In the following essay, he provides a brief overview of Burns...
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A Scottish-born writer and critic, Highet was a classical scholar and distinguished educator. His important studies Juvenal the Satirist (1954) and The Anatomy of Satire (1962) were scholarly works th...
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In the following excerpt, MacLaine analyzes Burns's use of the Christis Kirk genre, which he describes as a "distinctively Scottish genre … [which well demonstrates [Burns'...
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In the essay below, Beaty assesses the humorous aspects of Burns's love poetry.
The eighteenth-century adaptation of sentiment to comedy, as well as the Scottish vernacular tradition, afforded ...
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In this excerpt, Fitzhugh discusses several poems included in Burns's 1786 collection, Poems Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect.
Poems Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, by Robert Burns, Kilmarnock,...
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In the following essay, Bentman contends that Burns's poetry is a significant part of British literary history, despite his declining popularity in recent decades.
Robert Burns's poetry ...
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Here, White examines Burns's struggle to reconcile "the English literary tradition with which alone his formal education was concerned, and the Scottish literary tradition as he encounte...
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Rexroth was one of the leading pioneers in the revival of jazz and poetry in the San Francisco area during the 1940s and 1950s. His early poetry was greatly influenced by the surrealism of André...
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In the following essay Brooke praises Burns as the first writer to achieve naturalism in his Scottish poems, the restorer of passion to poetry, and the master of sincerity, pathos, and stinging satire...
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In the following excerpt Keith describes Scotland's Golden Age, a time of nationalism and rich intellectual life; Edinburgh's reception of and influence on Burns; and why Burns's ...
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In the following excerpt Angus-Butterworth examines the histories and inspirations of several of Burns's famous poems.
The Cottar's Saturday Night
It has often been noticed that Burns dr...
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In the excerpt below Beaty analyzes Burns's use of humor in his writings about romantic love.
Robert Burns's distinction as a love poet stems chiefly from his ability to perceive the com...
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In the following essay Murison outlines the history of the Scots dialect and examines the relationship between Scots and English in Burns's writing.
No small part of a poet's business is...
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Here, Brown describes Burns as a transitional figure bridging the two spheres of oral and literate composition.
(That Bards are second-sighted is nae joke,And ken the lingo of the sp'ritual fo...
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In the following excerpt Bold considers Burns's familiarity with the works and ideas of John Locke, David Hume, and other philosophers.
As a result of the obsequious Preface to the Kilmarnock E...
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In the following excerpt Simpson examines the myth of Burns as an uneducated peasant and the benefits and limitations such an image held for Burns.
It was Henry Mackenzie who, in December 1786, wrote ...
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Here, Mclntyre presents a survey of critical and public reaction to Burns over the span of two hundred years.
… The critics had continued to give as much attention to the defects of Burns...
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Two Hundred years after his death, Robert Burns' poetry is still read in Ireland, his homeland, and beyond. Burns' ability to celebrate life and reveal life's many heartaches captured and captivated ...
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