Scott shared the indigent lot of poets. He remained in the condition of an agricultural labourer, and for many years held the office of beadle, or church-officer, of the parish. He died on the 22d of May 1839, in the eighty-second year of his age; and his remains were interred in the churchyard of Bowden, where his name is inscribed on a gravestone which he had erected to the memory of his wife. His eldest son holds the office of schoolmaster of that parish.
The personal appearance of the bard appears to have been prepossessing: his countenance wore a highly intellectual aspect. Subsequent to the publication of the first volume of his poems, he was requested to sit for his portrait by the late Mr George Watson, the well-known portrait-painter; and who was so well satisfied with the excellence of his subject, that he exhibited the portrait for a lengthened period in his studio. It is now in the possession of the author’s son at Bowden, and has been pronounced a masterpiece of art. A badly executed engraving from it is prefixed to Scott’s last two volumes. In manner, the poet was modest and unassuming, and his utterance was slow and defective. The songs selected for this work may be regarded as the most favourable specimens of his muse.[71]
[71] We have to acknowledge our obligations for several particulars of this sketch to Mr Robert Bower, Melrose, the author of a volume of “Ballads and Lyrics,” published at Edinburgh in 1853.
RURAL CONTENT; OR, THE MUIRLAND FARMER.
AIR—"The Rock and the Wee Pickle Tow."
I ’m now a guid farmer,
I ‘ve acres o’ land,
And my heart aye
loups light when I ’m viewing o’t,
And I hae servants at my command,
And twa dainty
cowts for the plowin’ o’t.
My farm is a snug ane, lies
high on a muir,
The muircocks and plivers
aft skirl at my door,
And whan the sky low’rs
I ‘m aye sure o’ a show’r,
To moisten my
land for the plowin’ o’t.
Leeze me on the mailin that
’s fa’n to my share,
It taks sax muckle
bowes for the sawin’ o’t;
I ’ve sax braid acres
for pasture, and mair,
And a dainty bit
bog for the mawin’ o’t.
A spence and a kitchen my
mansionhouse gies,
I ’ve a cantie wee wifie
to daut whan I please,
Twa bairnies, twa callans,
that skelp o’er the leas,
And they ‘ll
soon can assist at the plowin’ o’t.
My biggin’ stands sweet
on this south slopin’ hill,
And the sun shines
sae bonnily beamin’ on ’t,
And past my door trots a clear
prattlin’ rill,
Frae the loch,
whare the wild-ducks are swimmin’ o’t;
And on its green banks, on
the gay simmer days,
My wifie trips barefoot, a-bleachin’
her claes,
And on the dear creature wi’
rapture I gaze,
While I whistle
and sing at the plowin’ o’t.