- [JOHN SKINNER,] [1]
- [WILLIAM CAMERON,] [35]
- [MRS JOHN HUNTER,] [39]
- [ALEXANDER, DUKE OF GORDON,] [46]
- [MRS GRANT OF CARRON,] [50]
- [ROBERT COUPER, M.D.,] [53]
- [LADY ANNE BARNARD,] [58]
- [JOHN TAIT,] [70]
- [HECTOR MACNEILL,] [73]
- [MRS GRANT OF LAGGAN,] [99]
- [JOHN MAYNE,] [107]
- [JOHN HAMILTON,] [117]
- [JOANNA BAILLIE,] [126]
- [The maid of Llanwellyn,] [132]
- [Good night, good night!] [133]
- [Though richer swains thy love pursue,] [134]
- [Poverty parts good companie,] [134]
- [Fy, let us a' to the wedding,] [136]
- [Hooly and fairly,] [139]
- [The weary pund o' tow,] [141]
- [The wee pickle tow,] [142]
- [The gowan glitters on the sward,] [143]
- [Saw ye Johnnie comin'?] [145]
- [It fell on a morning,] [146]
- [Woo'd, and married, and a',] [148]
- [WILLIAM DUDGEON,] [151]
- [WILLIAM REID,] [153]
- [ALEXANDER CAMPBELL,] [161]
- [MRS DUGALD STEWART,] [167]
- [ALEXANDER WILSON,] [172]
- [CAROLINA, BARONESS NAIRN,] [184]
- [The ploughman,] [194]
- [Caller herrin',] [195]
- [The land o' the leal,] [196]
- [The Laird o' Cockpen,] [198]
- [Her home she is leaving,] [200]
- [The bonniest lass in a' the warld,] [201]
- [My ain kind dearie, O!] [202]
- [He 's lifeless amang the rude billows,] [202]
- [Joy of my earliest days,] [203]
- [Oh, weel's me on my ain man,] [204]
- [Kind Robin lo'es me] [205]
- [Kitty Reid's house,] [205]
- [The robin's nest,] [206]
- [Saw ye nae my Peggy?] [208]
- [Gude nicht, and joy be wi' ye a'!] [209]
- [Cauld kail in Aberdeen,] [210]
- [He 's ower the hills that I lo'e weel,] [211]
- [The lass o' Gowrie,] [213]
- [There grows a bonnie brier bush,] [215]
- [John Tod,] [216]
- [Will ye no come back again?] [218]
- [Jamie the laird,] [219]
- [Songs of my native land,] [220]
- [Castell Gloom,] [221]
- [Bonnie Gascon Ha',] [223]
- [The auld house,] [224]
- [The hundred pipers,] [226]
- [The women are a' gane wud,] [227]
- [Jeanie Deans,] [228]
- [The heiress,] [230]
- [The mitherless lammie,] [231]
- [The attainted Scottish nobles,] [232]
- [True love is watered aye wi' tears,] [233]
- [Ah, little did my mother think,] [234]
- [Would you be young again?] [235]
- [Rest is not here,] [236]
- [Here's to them that are gane,] [237]
- [Farewell, O farewell!] [238]
- [The dead who have died in the Lord,] [239]
- [JAMES NICOL,] [240]
- [JAMES MONTGOMERY,] [247]
- [ANDREW SCOTT,] [260]
- [SIR WALTER SCOTT, BART.,] [275]
- [It was an English ladye bright,] [289]
- [Lochinvar,] [290]
- [Where shall the lover rest,] [292]
- [Soldier, rest! thy warfare o'er,] [294]
- [Hail to the chief who in triumph advances,] [295]
- [The heath this night must be my bed,] [297]
- [The imprisoned huntsman,] [298]
- [He is gone on the mountain,] [299]
- [A weary lot is thine, fair maid,] [300]
- [Allen-a-Dale,] [300]
- [The cypress wreath,] [302]
- [The cavalier,] [303]
- [Hunting song,] [304]
- [Oh, say not, my love, with that mortified air,] [315]
METRICAL TRANSLATIONS FROM THE MODERN GAELIC MINSTRELSY.
- [ROBERT MACKAY (ROB DONN),] [309]
- [DOUGAL BUCHANAN,] [322]
- [DUNCAN MACINTYRE,] [334]
- [JOHN MACODRUM,] [351]
- [NORMAN MACLEOD (TORMAID BAN),] [355]
- [GLOSSARY,] [363]
THE
MODERN SCOTTISH MINSTREL
JOHN SKINNER.
Among those modern Scottish poets whose lives, by extending to a considerably distant period, render them connecting links between the old and recent minstrelsy of Caledonia, the first place is due to the Rev. John Skinner. This ingenious and learned person was born on the 3d of October 1721, at Balfour, in the parish of Birse, and county of Aberdeen. His father, who bore the same Christian name, was parochial schoolmaster; but two years after his son's birth, he was presented to the more lucrative situation of schoolmaster of Echt, a parish about twelve miles distant from Aberdeen. He discharged the duties of this latter appointment during the long incumbency of fifty years. He was twice married. By his first union with Mrs Jean Gillanders, the relict of Donald Farquharson of Balfour, was born an only child, the subject of this memoir. The mother dying when the child was only two years old, the charge of his early training depended solely on his father, who for several years remained a widower. The paternal duties were adequately performed: the son, while a mere youth, was initiated in classical learning, and in his thirteenth year he became a successful competitor for a bursary or exhibition in Marischal College, Aberdeen. At the University, during the usual philosophical course of four years, he pursued his studies with diligence and success; and he afterwards became an usher in the parish schools of Kemnay and Monymusk.