- [ALLAN CUNNINGHAM,] [1]
- [She 's gane to dwall in heaven,] [9]
- [The lovely lass of Preston mill,] [10]
- [Gane were but the winter cauld,] [12]
- [It's hame, and it's hame,] [13]
- [The lovely lass of Inverness,] [14]
- [A wet sheet and a flowing sea,] [15]
- [The bonnie bark,] [16]
- [Thou hast sworn by thy God, my Jeanie,] [17]
- [Young Eliza,] [19]
- [Lovely woman,] [20]
- [EBENEZER PICKEN,] [22]
- [STUART LEWIS,] [27]
- [DAVID DRUMMOND,] [34]
- [JAMES AFFLECK,] [38]
- [JAMES STIRRAT,] [40]
- [JOHN GRIEVE,] [43]
- [CHARLES GRAY,] [50]
- [JOHN FINLAY,] [57]
- [WILLIAM NICHOLSON,] [63]
- [ALEXANDER RODGER,] [71]
- [JOHN WILSON,] [81]
- [DAVID WEBSTER, ] [91]
- [WILLIAM PARK,] [97]
- [THOMAS PRINGLE,] [102]
- [WILLIAM KNOX,] [112]
- [WILLIAM THOM,] [118]
- [WILLIAM GLEN,] [126]
- [DAVID VEDDER,] [143]
- [JOHN M'DIARMID,] [155]
- [PETER BUCHAN,] [162]
- [WILLIAM FINLAY,] [166]
- [JOHN GIBSON LOCKHART,] [171]
- [THOMAS MATHERS,] [184]
- [JAMES BROWN,] [186]
- [DANIEL WEIR,] [194]
- [ROBERT DAVIDSON,] [206]
- [PETER ROGER,] [212]
- [JOHN MALCOLM,] [215]
- [ERSKINE CONOLLY,] [220]
- [GEORGE MENZIES,] [223]
- [JOHN SIM,] [226]
- [WILLIAM MOTHERWELL,] [230]
- [DAVID MACBETH MOIR,] [242]
- [ROBERT FRASER,] [252]
- [JAMES HISLOP,] [254]
- [ROBERT GILFILLAN,] [261]
METRICAL TRANSLATIONS FROM THE MODERN GAELIC MINSTRELSY.
THE
MODERN SCOTTISH MINSTREL
ALLAN CUNNINGHAM.
Allan Cunningham was born at Blackwood, in Nithside, Dumfriesshire, on the 7th December 1784. Of his ancestry, some account has been given in the memoir of his elder brother Thomas.[6] He was the fourth son of his parents, and from both of them inherited shrewdness and strong talent.[7] Receiving an ordinary elementary education at a school, taught by an enthusiastic Cameronian, he was apprenticed in his eleventh year to his eldest brother James as a stone-mason. His hours of leisure were applied to mental improvement; he read diligently the considerable collection of books possessed by his father, and listened to the numerous legendary tales which his mother took delight in narrating at the family hearth. A native love for verse-making, which he possessed in common with his brother Thomas, was fostered and strengthened by his being early brought into personal contact with the poet Burns. In 1790, his father removed to Dalswinton, in the capacity of land-steward to Mr Miller, the proprietor, and Burns' farm of Ellisland lay on the opposite side of the Nith. The two families in consequence met very frequently; and Allan, though a mere boy, was sufficiently sagacious to appreciate the merits of the great bard. Though, at the period of Burns' death, in 1796, he was only twelve years old, the appearance and habits of the poet had left an indelible impression on his mind.