Robert Burns |
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Page 137
... piece of gesturing for a genteel audience . We do not need the overt , sentimental moralizing of the second - last stanza to inform us that he has succumbed to his temptation to strike attitudes . The tone of the latter part of the poem ...
... piece of gesturing for a genteel audience . We do not need the overt , sentimental moralizing of the second - last stanza to inform us that he has succumbed to his temptation to strike attitudes . The tone of the latter part of the poem ...
Page 241
... piece that Burns could have composed only after his Edinburgh experi- ence is his elegy on the death of Robert ... pieces of this type . The poem is of interest biographically , too , for it is a verse account of his early affair with ...
... piece that Burns could have composed only after his Edinburgh experi- ence is his elegy on the death of Robert ... pieces of this type . The poem is of interest biographically , too , for it is a verse account of his early affair with ...
Page 272
... piece of the 1793 edition . Two slight and uninteresting pieces follow - ' On Seeing a Wounded Hare ' and ' Ad- dress to the Shade of Thomson ' - and the next new poem is that fine description of Captain Grose which we have discussed in ...
... piece of the 1793 edition . Two slight and uninteresting pieces follow - ' On Seeing a Wounded Hare ' and ' Ad- dress to the Shade of Thomson ' - and the next new poem is that fine description of Captain Grose which we have discussed in ...
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Common terms and phrases
Allan Ramsay auld lang syne ballad Bard Beggars bonie Burns's songs century chorus collection Commonplace Book critical dear death drinking Edinburgh edition effect eighteenth-century Ellisland emotion English Epistle farm farmer feeling Fergusson frae friends Gavin Hamilton genteel Gilbert Green Grow Grow the Rashes heart Highland Holy Fair Hugh Blair interest Jacobite Jean John Kilmarnock volume kind Kirk lasses letter lines literary tradition literature lively Mary Mauchline melody mood moral Mossgiel moves Murdoch Muse Museum native neoclassic never night o'er owre patriotic poem poet poetic poetry poor pride printed Ramsay Ramsay's remarkable rhyme Robert Burns rustic satire Scotch Scotland Scots Scots Musical Museum Scottish literature sentimental Shanter sing social stanza sung Tarbolton thee theme Thomson thou thro turn verse form Watson William Burnes words writing written wrote