- [HENRY SCOTT RIDDELL,] [1]
- [The wild glen sae green,] [49]
- [Scotia's thistle,] [50]
- [The land of gallant hearts,] [51]
- [The yellow locks o' Charlie,] [52]
- [We 'll meet yet again,] [53]
- [Our ain native land,] [54]
- [The Grecian war-song,] [56]
- [Flora's lament,] [57]
- [When the glen all is still,] [58]
- [Scotland yet,] [58]
- [The minstrel's grave,] [60]
- [My own land and loved one,] [61]
- [The bower of the wild,] [62]
- [The crook and plaid,] [63]
- [The minstrel's bower,] [65]
- [When the star of the morning,] [66]
- [Though all fair was that bosom,] [67]
- [Would that I were where wild-woods wave,] [68]
- [O tell me what sound,] [69]
- [Our Mary,] [70]
- [MRS MARGARET M. INGLIS,] [73]
- [JAMES KING,] [83]
- [ISOBEL PAGAN,] [88]
- [JOHN MITCHELL,] [90]
- [ALEXANDER JAMIESON,] [95]
- [JOHN GOLDIE,] [98]
- [ROBERT POLLOK,] [103]
- [J. C. DENOVAN,] [106]
- [JOHN IMLAH,] [108]
- [JOHN TWEEDIE,] [120]
- [THOMAS ATKINSON,] [122]
- [WILLIAM GARDINER,] [126]
- [ROBERT HOGG,] [129]
- [JOHN WRIGHT,] [137]
- [JOSEPH GRANT,] [143]
- [DUGALD MOORE,] [147]
- [REV. T. G. TORRY ANDERSON,] [158]
- [GEORGE ALLAN,] [163]
- [THOMAS BRYDSON,] [172]
- [CHARLES DOYNE SILLERY,] [174]
- [ROBERT MILLER,] [179]
- [ALEXANDER HUME,] [182]
- [THOMAS SMIBERT,] [195]
- [JOHN BETHUNE,] [203]
- [ALLAN STEWART,] [211]
- [ROBERT L. MALONE,] [216]
- [PETER STILL,] [220]
- [ROBERT NICOLL,] [225]
- [ARCHIBALD STIRLING IRVING,] [235]
- [ALEXANDER A. RITCHIE,] [237]
- [ALEXANDER LAING,] [241]
- [ALEXANDER CARLILE,] [252]
- [JOHN NEVAY,] [257]
- [THOMAS LYLE,] [261]
- [JAMES HOME,] [267]
- [JAMES TELFER,] [273]
METRICAL TRANSLATIONS FROM THE MODERN GAELIC MINSTRELSY.
- [EVAN MACLACHLAN,] [279]
- [JOHN BROWN,] [286]
- [CHARLES STEWART, D.D.,] [289]
- [ANGUS FLETCHER,] [292]
- [GLOSSARY,] [295]
THE
MODERN SCOTTISH MINSTREL
HENRY SCOTT RIDDELL.
Henry Scott Riddell, one of the most powerful and pleasing of the living national song-writers, was born on the 23d September 1798, at Sorbie, in the Vale of Ewes—a valley remarkable for its pastoral beauty, lying in the south-east of Dumfriesshire. His father was a shepherd, well acquainted with the duties of his profession, and a man of strong though uneducated mind. "My father, while I was yet a child," writes Mr Riddell, in a MS. autobiography, "left Sorbie; but when I had become able to traverse both burn and brae, hill and glen, I frequently returned to, and spent many weeks together in, the vale of my nativity. We had gone, under the same employer, to what pastoral phraseology terms 'an out-bye herding,' in the wilds of Eskdalemuir, called Langshawburn. Here we continued for a number of years, and had, in this remote, but most friendly and hospitable district, many visitors, ranging from Sir Pulteney Malcolm down to Jock Gray, whom Sir Walter Scott, through one of his strange mistakes, called Davy Gellatly.... Among others who constituted a part of the company of these days, was one whom I have good reason to remember—the Ettrick Shepherd. Nor can I forbear observing that his seemed one of those hearts that do not become older in proportion as the head grows gray. Cheerful as the splendour of heaven, he carried the feelings, and, it may be said, the simplicity and pursuits of youth, into his maturer years; and if few of the sons of men naturally possessed such generous influence in promoting, so likewise few enjoyed so much pleasure in participating in the expedients of recreation, and the harmless glee of those who meet under the rural roof—the shepherd's bien and happy home. This was about the time when Hogg began to write, or at least to publish: as I can remember from the circumstance of my being able to repeat the most part of the pieces in his first publication by hearing them read by others before I could read them myself. It may, perhaps, be worth while to state that at these meetings the sons of farmers, and even of lairds, did not disdain to make their appearance, and mingle delightedly with the lads that wore the crook and plaid. Where pride does not come to chill nor foppery to deform homely and open-hearted kindness, yet where native modesty and self-respect induce propriety of conduct, society possesses its own attractions, and can subsist on its own resources.