Collected Poems of Robert BurnsWordsworth Editions, 1994 - 635 Seiten With an Introduction by Donald McFarlan. Robert Burns, the most celebrated of all Scottish poets, is remembered with great devotion - his birthday on 25th January provokes fervour and festivity among Scots and many others the world over. Born in 1759 into miserable rustic poverty, by the age of eighteen Burns had acquired a good knowledge of both classical and English literature. In June 1786 his first collection of verse, Poems Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, which included 'To a Mouse' and 'The Cotter's Saturday Night', was greeted with huge acclaim by all classes of society. His later poems and ballads include 'Auld Lang Syne', the beautiful song 'My Love is like a Red Red Rose', 'Highland Mary', 'Scots Wha Hae' and his masterpiece, 'Tam o'Shanter'. |
Inhalt
POEMS EPISTLES | 8 |
Halloween | 18 |
The Cotters Saturday Night | 26 |
The Twa Dogs | 38 |
The Brigs of | 45 |
The Vision | 51 |
The Death and Dying Words of Poor Mailie | 59 |
A Dream | 67 |
The Rigs o Barley | 341 |
Tam Glen | 347 |
Fair Eliza | 353 |
Banks of Cree | 359 |
Count the Lawin | 365 |
The Deils awa wi the Exciseman | 366 |
Will ye go to the Indies my Mary | 372 |
Raving Winds around her blowing | 378 |
Epistle from Esopus to Maria | 71 |
The Ordination | 75 |
Address to the Unco Guid | 84 |
Tam Samsons Elegy | 92 |
Scotch Drink | 98 |
The Auld Farmers NewYear Morning Salutation to his Auld | 106 |
Natures | 111 |
To a Mountain Daisy | 113 |
To Ruin | 115 |
Lament of Mary Queen of Scots | 122 |
On Pastoral Poetry | 129 |
Address to the Toothache | 135 |
The Kirks Alarm | 142 |
Despondency | 149 |
Epistle to Davie a Brother Poet | 156 |
To the Same John Lapraik | 168 |
Letter to John Goudie | 174 |
To James Smith | 180 |
To Gavin Hamilton recommending a | 186 |
Answer to the Guidwife of Wauchope | 193 |
Letter to James Tennant of Glenconner | 209 |
Lines on an Interview with Lord Daer | 210 |
Sonnet on the Death of Robert Riddel Esq | 259 |
To Miss Logan with Beatties Poems | 265 |
The Death of John MLeod Esq | 271 |
To Robert Graham of Fintry | 277 |
On Stirling | 283 |
A Farewell | 286 |
Written on a Blank Leaf of Hannah Mores Works | 292 |
Lines written on a Banknote | 298 |
Lines supposed to have been written by Burns | 300 |
Grace after Meat | 306 |
Epitaph on a Cleish Schoolmaster | 312 |
My Love is like a Red Red Rose | 318 |
Ye Banks an Braes o Bonnie Doon | 325 |
It was a for our Rightfu King | 331 |
The Birks of Aberfeldy | 335 |
Where are the Joys | 384 |
The Sodgers Return | 390 |
My Father was a Farmer | 396 |
The Lass that made the Bed to me | 397 |
When Guildford good our Pilot stood | 405 |
The ElectionSecond Ballad | 412 |
The Fête Champêtre | 418 |
Young Highland Rover | 424 |
The Highland Lassie | 430 |
The Banks of Nith | 436 |
Lassie wi the Lintwhite Locks | 442 |
dreamd I | 448 |
When first I came to Stewart Kyle | 454 |
The Dean of Faculty | 461 |
Heres a Health to them thats | 469 |
The Banks of Nith | 472 |
Heres his Health in Water | 478 |
The Lass of Ecclefechan | 484 |
Theniel Menzies Bonnie Mary | 490 |
The Bludered Rose at Yule | 496 |
The Ploughman | 500 |
Ye Sons of Old Killiea Masonic Song | 506 |
O that I had neer been married | 512 |
Yon Wild Mossy Mountains | 518 |
On Chloris being ill Can I cease to care? | 524 |
Louis what reck I by thee? | 530 |
Handsome NellO once I lovd a Bonnie Lass | 537 |
A New Psalm for the Chapel of Kilmarnock | 543 |
On Glenriddels Fox breaking his Chain | 549 |
PAGE | 555 |
122 | 568 |
174 | 583 |
The Rights of WomanPrologue for Miss Fontenelle | 589 |
GLOSSARY | 595 |
615 | |
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Thackeray's Cultural Frame of Reference: Allusion in The Newcomes Rowland McMaster Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1991 |